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~~; 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."

�Wednesday, August 13, 1986

Ul Couri Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOfED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lb

rsm~

qjv

r'T'1....J.._..,...,............,=·=

ROBERT L. WINGE1T
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
AINIIslant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE RCYI'IIGEB, JR.
News Edllor
AMEMBER of The United Press lnternatlonal, Inland Dally Press
A"octatlon and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION ar£&gt; welcome . They shwki be less than m words
lang. Allle1ters arPsubject toedlling and m.ISt be signed with name, address and
t~ephone number . No Wlslgned IPtters wUI be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing Issues, not ~rsonalltles .

The Lighter Side

Ponieroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wedn811day,
Ailgust 13, 1986
. .
.

Grand opera_________W_il_lia_m_F._.B-,-u_ck_ley_Jr.
· 1n the same week bt which the In the direction of a) the public
Senate Judiciary Committee was sentiment, and b) traditional views
grtlllng WU!am Rebnqulst, the of the Supreme Court. The two
Senate voted by an overwhelming coincide at this moment bt Amerimargin to continue to submit Its can history, and It is at the very
actMties to television coverage. least anti-democratic to assume
And no wonder. Politicians ooe that the republic is endangered by
supposes, ought not to be con- self-government, and melodrademned for acting like politicians. matic to assume that a more
On the other hand, non-pollticlans moderate court than those we have
ought not to be condemned for been used to is menacing to our
revealing disgust when politicians Institutions.
do this on the scale of grand opera.
There being no absolute fixes on
Messrs. Kennedy, Biden and Met- legislator's kleoiogicallncllnations,
zenbaum needed only Puccini for one uses those of the Americans for
their act
Democratic Action, and ' they are
To begin with, there Is the pretty rellable. The man landng
premise that by moving from his from Mars could with some
present seat, whence he has, been security look at a senator's ADA
judging the living and the dead for rating and predict how he would
15 years, to the central seat, where probably vote on the economy, on
in addition to writing opinions as foreign policy and on oocial issues.
chief justice he would assign The three senators who. are giving
opinions to a member of the voting Mr. Rebnquist the hard time have a
majority, William Rebnqulst woukl combined ADA score of :r.o.
traduce republican lnsltutions. The Maximum possible is :W. These are
premise is preposterous. It is true the gentlemen who are afraid that
thaI the court is due to swing a little Mr. Rebnqulst iS not In the

mainstream rJ. America,
Now aU of the spelunking Into
Rehnquist' s past has yielred only
one oo.rrete li"Oblem, and that is ln
two parts. Question No. 1: Did Mr.
Rehnqulst "harass" minority voters In the 1900s and 1900s? And
Question No. 2: Did he lie when he
said he had done no such thing?
For absolutely unfathlmable reasons, we have not sren Mr.
Rebnqulst's champions make the
point, nor has he himself made it,
that up untD we discovered pure
democracy bt 196i, we used to insist·
that people who voted should also
be able to read and write. Under the
circumstances, it was not an act of
harassment to hold up a piece of
paper, with, let us say, "Jobn Itt the
baseball," written on it, and to ask
the aspirant voter what was wlitten
on that piece of paper.
If Mr. Rebnquist had said that he
stood by the polls administering a ·
literacy test, It is hand to think that
anyone would accuse him of
genocidal prejudices. However, he

ByDJCKWD!T

Letter to the Editor
Words of thanks

Arms sales to Iran
WASHINGTON - The United ·
States and the Western allies
continue to conduct secret talks and
cut secret deals with Iran while
Ayatollah Khomelni's terrorist
lackeys control the fate of thrre
surviving American hostages and several Europeans.
We've reported before on tiE
secret tilt toward Iran by the
Rl'agan admlnlstratxm'stop pJlicy·
makers. We have declined to detail
the extent and exact nature of the
contactsbecausetheyaresociosely
Intertwined with til? fate of tre
remaining hostages.
Primarily at Syria's instigation,
the Iranian-controlled Moslem terrolists In Lebanon released tre
Rl'v. Lawrence Jenco, but there is
no Indica tlon that they are wllling to
give up the otrer thrre: Associal€d
Press reporter Terry Anrerson and
David Jacobsen and Thomas Sutherland of the American Universlty In Beirut Intelligence reports
sbow the hostages are moved
frequently to avoid rescue, and

Also, a special thanks to Mr. L.R.
Ford Jr. for his cooperation and to
the Kyger Creek Employees Club
alld Local 4.ll who oonated the
trophies.
· We are already looking ii&gt;Iward
lll!d planning !or next year and hope
that you wlll aU be there to support

us again. All proceeds from this
year's tournament (co.resslon
stand, entry fees, advertising fees,
etc. ) have been set aslre for
expenses for 1987.
Whetrer yru were a roach, team
member, umpire. spectator, par·
ent. or one rJ. the many volunteers,
you were greatly appreciated and It
would not have been possible
without yru .
Thanks again and we hope to see
you ail at the 1987 Kyger Creek
Utile League Tournament.
Richard Neal

Today in history
,
By United Press International
Today is Thursday, Aug. 14, the 226th day of 1986 with 139 to follow.
-The moon is moving away from it's first quarter.
The mom big stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn.
1110!11' ixlm on this date are under Ire sign of Leo. They include (ioneer
psychologist Richard von Krafft-Ebing In 1840; naturalist Ernest
'Thomp90n Seton In l88J; writer Ernest Thayer ("Casey at !he Bat" ) In
~; novelist John Galswol1l\Y bt 1867, rock musician David Crosby ln 1941
(age 45), and actress Susan Saint James in 1946 (age 411.

On this datr in history:
In 1900. 2,(01 U.S. Marines joined with European forces to capture
PKbtg, ending the Boxer Rebellion against the Western presence in China .
1n 193'1, Congress passed the Social Seculity Act and Presirent Franklin
D. Roosevelt intriiEdiately signed It btto law.
1n 19f5, President Harry Truman announced that Japan had accepted
terms lor unconditional surrender, ending World War 11.
In 1972, an East German airliner crash!d on takeot! from Berlin, kUling
156 people.
A thought for the day: Novelist John Galswortey said, "Idealism
btcreues In direct proportion to one's distance from the (l'Obl~. "
t'

'I

'

'

By ROBERTO DIAS
UPI Sporis Writer
WAITE HILL. Ohio (UPI)
Remarks accusing the Cleveland
Browns' management and cooches
of looking the other way on drug use
by players were "misquoted" and
"taken out of context," former
coach Sam Rutigllano said.
Rutigliano returned Tuesday
from a two-week trip to Australia
and New Zealand, to lind the team's
brass still simmering over a story

........

CAUGHT OFF BASE - Cleveland's Julio Franco il callect rut by
wnplre Rich Hwnpbrey after being ~aught off third base in Tuesday

By GERRY MONIGAN
UPI Sports Wrtter
Mediocrity is catching up with
the Boston Red Sox.
The Red Sox have kept their
pursuers at bay in the American
League East despite playing only
around .500slnce the AU-Star break,
because the competition has played
no better.
Tuesday, Boston dropped a
double-header to the Kansas City
Royals, 5-1 and 6-5, givbtg the Red
Sox a 4-6 record In their last 10
games. The New York Yankees,
meanwhile, beat the Cleveland
Indians to improve to 64 In their
last 10, and drew within 3Y, games
of the Red Sox.
In the nightcap Tuesday, Boston
had an opportunity to tie the score
In the ninth. Bud Black hlt Don
Baylor with a pitch, giving Baylor
an AL record 25 hlt -by-pitch on the
seeson,, Dan Quisenberry relieved
Black, and yield/:.d a two- out base
hit to plnch-hltdng pitcher Tim
Lollar to put runners at first and
second and bring up the league's
leading hitter, Wade Boggs.
Quisenberry lnducedBoggslntoa
game-ending groundout for his lOth
save of the year.
"I was thinking of the Ironies of

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

were taken recently from the
Bekka Valley to Beirut.
Meanwhile, our allies are trying
to placate Iran and two ether
terrorist states - Sylia and Ubya
- by supplying lrem with arms
and making profitable trade deals
with trem. These backdoor arrangernents give Iran, Syria and Libya
the wherewithal to support and
train teiTOrlsts- and provide Iran
with the munitions and replacement parts it needs to continue tre
six-year-old war with Iraq.
Here are just some of the rmre
outrageous weapons deals made by
Western European nations wlthtre
terrortst states bt pursuit oJ appeasement and profits:
- Franoe. The state-owned
conglomerate Luchalre has secretly shipped hundreds of thousands of artUlery srells to Iran.
Some of tte transactions have been
shielded by arranging them
through Luchalre's aftillate,
S.E.A., ln Turin, Italy.

Parlshasalsosignedsecretdeals
with Ubya dictator Moammar
Gadhafl for 128 Otomat shipborne
missiles (of joint French·ltallan
manufacture), Mirage jet fighterbombers and dozens of Exocet
anll-shlp missiles . Exocets
wreaked deadly havoc on the
British fleet In the Falklands war,
and could endanger the U.S. Sixth
Fleet ~ it maneuvers in the Gulf of
Sidra again.
- West Germany. Perhaps
prlmarlly to make travel safer fllr
Its citizens, Bonn has agreed to
supply Iran with four Type 209
diesel submarines, among other
weapons. The carnage these under·
sea craft could produce ln the
Persian Gulf oil·shlpplng Janes can
easDy be Imagined.
Intelligence sources tell us the
extent of West Germany's secret
deals with Iran has made Lufthansa safer to Oy than any other
airline- with the possible exceptton d El AI, which relies on
painstaking security measures

ratrer than Israeli appeasement of
terrorist -sponsoring governments.
- Austria, Greece, Sweden and IsraeL According to a startling
report in this month 's Reader's
Digest by senior editor Nathan
Adams, these supposedly antiterrorist countries have also put the
almighty dollar above the ethical
and humane considerations Involved in weapons dealing with
countrtes that encourage terrorist
activities.
-Italy. Nearlyhalfo!Llbya's$10
billion worth o! business with West
Europe each year is with Italy, Its
fllrmer colQnlal ruler. Last May,.a
ilrmer ·Italian bttelllgence chief
dsclosed that he had relped
Gadhali obtain arms and advised
him on Intelligence matters to
SErure better deals for Italian flnns
doing business with Ubya. Heavy
weapons provided by Italian com·
panles btclude mlssUe-equlpped
warships, self-propelled howitzers,
missiles and thousands of acoustic
mines and torpedoes.

Wby pay lor an ambassador and
staff to conduct official business
with a government that we are
paying other agenls to sabotage?
-Mr. Reagan refers to the
contras as "freedom lighters." But
don 't smators know that rmst d the
cont ras were recruited by by the
OA from the old, hated Somoza
national guard? These are for the
most part the same despised
characters that the people o!
Nicaragua were rardtlng against
when they joined the Sandlnista
revolution, which lid their country
of the late and -unlamented tyrant
Somoza.
-Mr. Reagan W(IUJd have us
believe that by backing the contras
we are combating Soviet and Cuban
communism. But are we not doing
just the reverse? It was the tyranny
and misrule ~ Somoza and his
contra henchmen that creatl!l the
conditions which gave romrn11n1sm
Its qJportunlty. People who are wen
governed and· fairly treated don't
turn to communtsm !I' require
Amerlcan·flnan&lt;led mercenaries
to carry on their strusgle for
freedom. Can't senators see that
Reagan Is playing Into the hands rJ.
oor enemies by dlscredltbtg Ameli·
ca's good name through alllanoos
with the most hated killers in
Nicaragua? The Sanclnlstas are
not perfect, but they are an
improvement over Somoza and tre
contras.
-Finally, 1 ask S81ators to
consider that fNf!rY· public-opinion
poll IndicatEs a majority rJ. the
Amerran people do not want their
government to bacol!lt! militarily
Involved with the contras o!
Nicaragua. Apparaltly manyrJ.the
. .

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Sl811fd wl* rt'Cf'!vri-punt
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C'k'\'t'la nd -

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C'lnrlnnall - Annourrf'd rK'All or slxlrt ·
stop Rar rv Larkin rrom DPnvf:'r ol tlx&gt;
Amf' rk'an A~~ ia i iQn .
Kansas Cit ~ - Pl at'f'd plt rhrr Arrt
~IFrhagpn on Ulr 21-&lt;lay disab k&gt;d ll~ t.

F-hall
Buffalo - Sijtnl"d la&lt;"kk' Will Wollord

C'hk'QJ!O a t DMrolt
Baltlmon:&gt; at Clt&gt;l•diUld. nl..:ht
fblton at Kansas C1ry. night
MJiwa uiPf&gt; at Tl•Juu;, nlaht
Mln iW'!OtB at

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...

1\MERICAN U:A.Gllf:

homer. Jack Howell Improved to
2-4.
Yanloees 6, Jml..,s 4
At New York, Tim Stoddard
pitched 4 2-3 Innings of relief to
record his first victory as a Yankee.
Studdard, 1-0, did not allow a run
and gave up two hits and t1Ml walks
while stlildng wt three. Dave
Righetti went 21-3lnnlngs to record
his 26th save. The loss went to Rich
Yeti, 4-2.
Brewers 7, Rangers 2
At Arlington, Texas, rookie Glenn
Braggs went 3-for-4 with two home
runs and Rotin Yount had a
two-run single in a five-run second
inning that powered Milwaukee.
Tim Leary , 9-11, pitched 6 1-3
Innings for Ire victory. The loss
went to Olarlle Hough, 9-7.
At Anaheim, Calif., Doog DeCinces sbtgled with the bases loaded
and no oo Is in the bottom d the 12th
to 'drtve in Wally Joyner with the
wlnrilng run iutd lift California past
Minnesota. Gary Lucas, HI, wori
and Ron Davis, 2-6, was the loser.

Wal\.'t'd llnf~ M art'U s Marek. p ~ nr
tight end.l Clint Wlbon and MlkP Siano and
"'ldr rtt"f"iVt1" Stan~· Shake:!iJI&gt;an&gt;. Dalla ~
- Del'en!" 'e tilck~ Klol·tn Brooki and taeklt&gt;
Lloyd Yalrf')' undi&gt;rwmt kllff' !UI"(l'PI)'.
Brooks tlorn t•artUai E"t 15 (')ljr('led to mts.•
!1111 to f'.ht 'M't'k.s while Yarte'E'Y (damaged
llaamtnt !. a lbUh·room draft pick from
Trmplr. Is Pllpxled to 1x&gt; out ~r the }'f'ar.

Eastern hosts Miller
Eastern will scrimmage Miller In
the Eagles first pre-season practice
tilt Saturday, starting at 10 a.m.
The scrimmage will be held on
the EHS field.

~ 3 1 JACKSON PME - RTJ~ WEST

PMno

--·524

BARGAIN MA' INEES SAT • SUN &amp;
WEDNE SDAY • All SEATS 12.50
ADMISSION EV ERY TUESDAY 11 . 50

FaL A GROCERY BAG
FOR ONlY Sl.OO AT
THE MEIGS COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIOY
SPECIAL WEDNESDAY
MATINEES
THIS SUMMER I

THRIFT SHOP
Se&lt;ond be.

Middleport

1-I ~========::::::...L.:-========: '•

.....-------------1
The Daily Senlinel

CHEVROLET-OLDSMOBILE-CADILLAC

!USPS ti~!K!ll
A Dlvlllon of Multlmrdla. Inc.
Publlshf'd pvpry aflcrnoon, Mon dav
through FridaY. 111 Court St. , PcimNoy. Ohio. by t he Ohio Vall ey Publishing Company; Mui Ti mrdla . Inc ..
Pom('rov. Ohio ~ 5769. Ph. 992-2156. SC'rond chiss postagC' paid al Pom('roy,
Ohio.

Memb er: Unllf'd P ress lntl'rna tional,
Inland Dally Prf'Ss Associat ion and th('
Ohio NPW5paper Associa tion. Na tional
Adverllslng Rep r('S£'n tatlv(", Bra nham
Nl'w spapPr SaiPS. 73,1 Thi rd AvenUE.'.
N('W York . Ncw York IOOli .

"FOIMEilY SIMMONS OlDS.·CAD.·CHEV."
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26 POINT
SAFETY IWSPECTION

ADOLPH"S
DAIRY VALLEY
"At the IIIII et the , . .,.,..... .,Migl

See ·You Theref

HARDWARE
W VA. ·

hadpro
been
IX'essured
thesalary.
demands
of
football
and abybig

story."
"I spoke to Sam Rutigllano for 45
minutes to an hour on the phone oo :
Monday (July Zl)," said Graswlch.·
"I mentioned 1 was coming to the·
Browns training camp (at Lakeland Community College 1n Klr·
!land, Ohio), and he Invited me to
his home.
. . . . . - - - - - - - - - - -·

MEIGS COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIETY

Angels 5, TwD! 4

Reggie Rogers said his brother

"I InVIted him up to tre hOUse.
andwespokefor:Dmlnutesbeforel
1
had to leave and catch a plane or
my trip. We spoke ln very general
terms. I never criticized the
Browns.
"This is just awful. I'm very
distressed about this. 1 was mls-.
quoted and taken out o! context."
Graswlch, contacted at his Sacra-.
menta home, said he "stands by the

"I've read where Marty and Art
(team owner Modell) are upset,
and they'd have every light Iobel! I
had said those things. I just didn 't,
and I'm shocked by what has
happened."
Rutigliano said he did initiate
contact with Bee reporter R.E .
"Bob" Graswich, but added that he
just wanted the address and phone
number of Rogers' motrer.
"I was told by a Cleveland wrtter
that Mr. Graswlch knew the Rogers
family ," said Rutigliano. "I called
him, and he mentioned he was
go in~ to be ln Cleveland soon.

Reggie Rogers will have drug test

'" ""'

Majors

Boston !St'a\l't

•

the game," Quisenberry said. "I
11gers 7, White Sox 3
shouldn't give up a hit to Lollar, but
At Detroit, Mike Heatlh and Chet
I should to Boggs."
Lemon each homered rJ.f Steve
Bob Stanley, making his first Carlton to spoil the left· hander'sAL
start since Sept. 1, 1981, fell to :&gt;4.
debut with Chicago. The Tigers
Boston led 3-1 heading into the scored sb&lt; runs on seven hits In
sixth, but Lonnie Smith, Willie three Innings against Carlton, 5-12
Wilson and George Brett all overall this season. Mark Thursingled. Smith scored on Brett 's mond, 3- 1. pitched eight btnings of
base hit and Wilson was thrown oul five- hit ball.
at third. Jorge Orta followed with a
Blue ,Jays 3, Orioles 0
home run into the Royals' bullpen to
At Baltimore, Jesse Bar!ield
give Kansas City a 4-3 lead.
drove In three runs with his 29th
Mark Gubicza struck out seven, home run of the season and an RBI
Including Jim Rice three times, to groundout to back the four-hit
boost his record to 6-5.
pitching of Jim Clancy and lead
ln the opener, Frank Wblte and Toronto. Oancy . 13-li, notched his
Darryl Motley combined to knock
third shutout. striking out five and
In five runs and the Royals turned walking none. Scott ML&lt;&gt;regor feU
five double plays to help Danny
to 8-11.
Jackson improve to 7-8.
A's 3, Marlnel'll 2
At
Oakland,
Calif., Mike Davis
Jackson allowed an unearned run
homered
leading
o!f the lOth inning
but only one other Boston runner
to
lift
Oakland
past
Seattle. After
reached second off him. Steve Farr
pitched the final three Innings tor the Mariner~ mded an Oakland
his eighth save. Bruce Hurst fell to threat In the bottom of the nintlh
7-6.
with their second triple play of the
Elsewhere, Detroit whipped Chi- season, Davis hit tre first pitch
cago 7-3, Toronto shuJ rut Baltf- from Pete Ladd. 74, for his 12th
more 3-0, Oakland doiWed Seattle
3-2 In 10 Innings, New York topped
Cleveland 6-4, Milwaukee beat
Texas 7-2, and Callfornla topped
SEATILE (UP!) - Reggie
Minnesota :&gt;4 In 12 Innings.
Rogers. the brother of the Oeveland Browns defensive back who
died from cocaine, says IE wlll
submit to drug tests whUe playing
football at the University of
Washington.
Reggie Rogers, a defensive
SanF'ran
00
-~11
tackle, said he has volunteered for
.'1
L\
S.' lnl)2o
59 .m Hl'&gt;
the testing to forestall any suspiCnmnt l
'2 .'"il
cions that he may use drugs.
1Jl ;,
A1!.1n1a
!12 Rl
1\ie.d!Q''K Rc&gt;sulil8
"11 I have a bad game, people wlll
&lt;llll"ago 3. P ltts~rJl h 1
say
it's because of what's been
:o.tontrral 10. Sr. Loul~ .1
Phlladf'lphla .1. Nt~-1' York 1
happening," he said, "The worst
Sil n f ranno;ro 2. finrlnJl&lt;lti I
thing for me would be to get off to a
San Diego ~ - /\l lama .1
slow start.
llou~lon 1. Lo!; A n~\t"S 0
Yl'•• lb-Nd~q' " ltan"But I've never really cared what
l' ln sb.J ~ h 1RI&gt;usdli&gt;l H J1 a1 O!lraj;!O
tSulclltrr 4-lOJ, 2:~ IJ.m .
people
thought rJ. me .I 'm doing this
St Loub tCox &amp;-91 at Montrro l tSm ltlls.ti• .
to make sure my root her and sister
~ !li pm .
Nt"W York ! Ojl'l.l~ 12 -.11 &lt;II P hUadrlphla
can hold their heads high."
•ltuffln ] .:Ji , 'i' : .'1.~ p.m
Don Rogers died June 27 ln his
San F ranr lsco !Mulholland 0- ~ ~ at
Cloclnnat! !Wt' lsh4·31, 7 : ~ p.m
bometown c1 Sacramento, Calif.,
Sun Dlr j:!O IMrCulll'l''5 ~Ii i ~ ~ Atlnnla
after attending his bachelor party
ri\k'~ an ct&gt;r 2-4 1.7:-10 Jl.m.
and later using cocaine. He was to
l.n; An~)(&gt;§ tHPrshl!if'r ll -81 at Houston
1~11 Ll -i~. R li p.m.
have been married the next day.
TIIJIMAJ'~ Gaml'fl
Reggie Rogers was at Ire
Plti SI:ufli! h at Phila&amp;-lphl a
S1 Louis at Nl'¥o' Yor k. 2. !'A' I nl~ ht
bachelor party but was not with his
('hi(-~ at Montrval. 11¢11
brother when he smoked the
Slln Ul r~ a t Atl anta . night
san FranC'Isro ar Cl rrl nnatl. ri~o.'h l
cocaine in the bedroom of his
La!&gt; An~k&gt;s at Hous ton . nl!'[hl
mother's home. He said his brother
did not have a reputation for
partying or taking drugs.
Transaclions
"! remember back when Don
"-holl
didn't even drink," he said. "He
Ch k' a~ 11\L • Ottl mt•d on Wltiwn;
p!1r-hr r Slf'\'1' CarRon; optlonPrl oolf ~tdf'r
would get mad at my dad for even,
Iva n Ca iQ:•ron 10 Buff .UO ol t lv&gt; 1\rT\C'r!ran
having a beer In the refrigerator."
As..o;ochatlon.

Sco-reboard ...

rl.t'lbrandt 9·~ 1. R: ~ p.m.

. ,a.:\ :·.

nlght'sAL game in YankeeStadlurn. The Yankees won again, moving
closer lo the league-leading Boston Red Sox. (U PI)

-= = =

same people woo voted for Mr. know OnaUy wbo was right and
Reagan disagree with his war by wrong oo that issue. But In my klng
proxy In Nicaragua. At least one congressional service there Is one
poll revealed the majority of . aspect that-gives me the greatest
Americans do not know which side pride and the' most lasting satisfacthe administration is on.
tion: I followed my conscienre and
For 10 years as a US. senator, my best judgment oo VIetnam.
and as a nominee for the preskl- That is whatl plead with IllY former
ency, I opposed wr deep81btg' and colleagues to ckJ with reference to
disastrous Involvement bt VIetnam. Nicaragua .
Only history and Providence wm

~· ,~

In the Sacramento (CaUf.) Bee.
ln the story, which appeared on
July 'll, Rutigliano was quoted as
blaming Cleveland's management
for "having their heads In the sand
about drug use" and said it was
"absolutely certain" that Rogers
was Introduced to drugs alter he
joined the Browns.
The story sparked an angry
reaction from Marty Scbottenheimer, who succeeded Rutlgllano as
head coach In October, 1984, and
team owner Art Modell. Modell
hinted that Rutigliano, who stU! Is
being paid a $:DO;IXXl annual salary
by the Browns, might be subject to
a fine.
But Rutigliano said Tuesday that
be never blamed the Browns for
Rogers' cocaine- induced death on
June 'll.
"I never accused the Browns of
anything because what the team
does is, frankly, none oJ my
business," said Rutigliano. "!never
said the Browns had their heads in
the sand - I said society did.

Boston drops pair; Yanks trip Indians

Jack Anderson &amp; Dale VanAtta

Saying no _________-,--__
Since leaving the U.S. Senate in
1981, I have not once tried to
influence the judgment oJ my
former colleagues, either lndvldually or collectively. Senators are
under enough pressure from their
constituents without ex-senators
addbtg to their rurden.
But I am breaking my own
self-Imposed rule to urge the Senate
to reexamine its support for the
contra war against the people and
government of Nicaragua.
I recognize the tendency of
senators to give the president the
benefit of the doubt on foreign
policy questions. But In this instance I urge senators to jeed treir
own best judgment and the lnstlncts
of the American majority, which
also coincide with world opinion.
Consider the facts:
-Virtually no other government
anywhere In the world supports the
Reagan admbtJStratlon's policy of
military backing for the contras.
- The World Crurt has now ruled
that the United States Is In violation
o! lnternatlonal law on several
counts in Nicaragua. Considering
the Indictment handed down by the
Work! Crurt, · how does a senator
justify Reagan's decision to drop
mbtes In the harbors o! Nicaragua
to disrupt other countries'
shipplng?
-How do senators explain to
their constituents .., oc to them·
selves, or to history - ·that c;llr
government ct!lcially recognizes
and malntalnllan embassy relation·
ship ,wltlh the Sandlnlsta government we are "coVertly" trying to
destroY? If'the Sanclnlstas are as
bad as Ire Reagan people claim,
~ do we recognize them at aU?

I

has said thathedid notevendothat,
so~ Gango!Thre! lrrught In lour
people trom Arizona who said In
fact he had oone 11. The only defense
against this fiat contradiction Is
mistaken identity, and calm observers rl tiE scene reasonably
Incline to that answer. No one has
ever accused William Rehnqulst of
lying. To lie about a point without
legal or rmral substance would be
not opnly iniquitous, but stupid. No
one has ever accused WIUiam
Rebnqulst o! stupidity.
Really, it Is a grotesque spectacle, watching Senator Kennedy,
with his background, accusing
Justice Rebnqulst, with lis background, of evasion, hypocrisy and
contempt for unfortunate people.
But the bltter~d llberals are
playing for very high "stakes.
Reagan's popularity is In the
vicinity of 75 percent. He woowery
state In the Union except Fritz
Mondale's home state. Massive
gerrymandering by Democratic
legislatures around tre rountry has
given the House of Representatives
a III percent-40 percent Democratic
lead, notwithstanding the ro
percent-40 percent lead given to
Reagan the last time he ran for
o!!ice. Even with that lead, the
Republican reforms, one after
anotlher, have been makbtg their
way through Congress. Comes now
an attempt 1D enhance the conservative pnsltkm oo the &amp;lll"eme
Court: That is, they judge, a burden
they cannot accept
It. is overwhelmingly probable
that Mr. Rebnquist will prevail,
that he wUl be named chief justice,
and that he wUI set a new standard
for eloquence and lucidity. Mean·
while, re is docile, humble, very
nearly masochistic In what he is
prepared to to take from his
Inquisitors. It is entirely possible
that the bullying, comtined with
such brazen polemical qJportunlsm, wlll catch the public's
attention in a way that Is unmistakable to pollticlans. If so, the curtain
wUI quickly come down oo the
delirium being promoted by the
senators, and historical footnotes '
wUl record that they voted against
Wl!Ham Rebnqulst a dminlshlng
and disgraced minority.

G:.._:e--or..!2.ge.:....,..M__;;_;cG:....:ov....:....e:..:....;,.:.rn

The Kyger Creek power plant
and its employees wish to express
~r thanks to weryone wbo participated and helped make the the
Little League tournament a big
success.

Rutigliano says
remarks taken
out of context

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel

Palms with ears
: WASHINGTON (UP!) -When we were children, many of us had pet
&lt;kJgs to tell our troubles to. But a talking bear?
I oon't wish the Hasbro Co. any hard luck when I say it may be barking
up the wrong tree by Introducing "the most sophisticated talking toy on the
market"
The trouble with talking it over with sophisticated toys is that they may
soon have the capacity to talk back.
Mark Twain, I think It was, once warned against going public with your
problem, saying something to the effect that 8l percent of the people aren't
Interested and :IAJ perl'eflt think you deserve it.
I would say much Uhe same ratio applies to talking toys.
· And if you think you have troubles now, Imagine what it would be like to
have sophisticated toys bending your ear. And that includes Bingo, the
Amazing Bear, created by Hasbro.
Today, Dr. Doolittle notwithstanding, the trend among people seems to
l!e to talk to plants.
If a company really wants to perform a public service, as well as cash in
011 the Christmas market, it should bring forth a talking geranium or a
~rose bush or some other kind of sophisticated plant
When Dr. Doolittle, _an English veterinarian, fantasized , "If I could talk
to the animals, and they could talk to me," I'm sure he wasn't dreaming of
bears that monopolize tlhe conversation.
Maybe Engllsh vegetarians don 't fantasize about houseplants that carry
on 0111'-Way dialogues either.
A toy Industry spokesman says talking animals "have been a oonstant in
chlldren's play and fantasy since tbe days of the ancient Greeks. Romans
and Ollnese."
"In the past 50 years," he adds, "cartoons and television have made
talking animals a most natural part of children's lives.'·
ln other words, if the Idea of such cartoon animals as Mickey Mouse or
Felix the Cat telling you their troubles appeals 10 you. imagine what a
verbal Inundation you would get from Mr. Ed. television's talking horse.
But only now, according to a Hasbro official, "has technology made it
possible to marry a child's friendship and love for a stuffed animal with tre
fantasy of communiicating."
. The Clrst talking toys, he explained , had "mechanical dev ices that made
them rulky, heavy and difficult to carry around ."
· Today. apparently, they will follow you anywhere. provi&lt;k&gt;d you are
WilUng to lend an ear.
And when teddy bears and toy monkeys start talking their heads elf, can
loquacious hOUse plants be far behind?
You may think you've heard it all from stuffed toys, but you ain't heard
nothing yet. Wait till a house plant gets though cornering you to unburden
itself.
: "My previous owner didn't plant my roots deeply enough," it might say .
''Besides that, I'm always thirsty."
- The seed buslnrss being as sophisticated as it is, it probably would be
fairly easy to create plants that talk. The real technology breakthrough
'!auld be getting them to shut up.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

'

Comment
The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

REGUlAR 119.95
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$995

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f

�The

1986

Ohio

Sentinel

Bills get permission to talk with Ke~ly

WALKER NEGonATJNG - DaDas Coacli Tom Landry helps
Hencbel Walker lry on a Cowboy Ieney Tuesday atlheteam'alrallmg
camp In Callfomla. Walker, star numlng back of lhe New Jeraey
Generalsoflhe USFL, was reless'"'andisnown"!!oUatlngwllhDallas.
(UPI)

By United Press lnlema&amp;loul
a clause in his contract with the
TwooflheU.S. Football League's . Generals gives him the option of
biggeSt stars moved closer to playing with another team If the
joining the NFL.
league misses one season.
The Buffalo BiDs received perThe BUJs are In need of a
mission from the NFL Tuesday to Quarlel'~k, coming off their
start contract talks with quarter- sesond slraight 2-14 season.
. hack Jim Kelly. And running back
Lustig met with Kelly Monday
Herschel Walker and his agent say night and said the quarterback
they will travel to the DaUas wouldllketomeetBillsCoachHank
Cowboys' training camp to open Bullough and his offensive assist·
negotiations with club president ants, The meeting will likely occur
Tex Schramm.
this weekend when Buffalo plays at
Walker and Kelly both were Houston Saturday night.
members of the USFL New Jersey
"It's a foregone conclusion that
Generals.
Jim Kelly will be the highest-paid
BUJs General Manager Bill Po- player in football. And wtth good
Han said he will begin preUmlnary reason," Lustig said Monday night
meetings "shortly" with Greg from his Akron, Ohio, ot!ice. "Look
Lustig, one of Kelley's two agents. at what he's going to mean to this
Kelly, one of Buffalo's two · franchise in terms of attendance
first-round picks in the 1983 draft, and wins. We're aware of Buffalo's
was given permission to talk with atten~ce problems."
the BUJs soon after the USFL was
WhUe Kelly appears content to
granted a $3 award in Its $169 walt, Walker seems to a want a
blillon antitrust suit against the quick settlement.
NFL.
"We'll be there this week, or
The USFLhassuspendedptayfor maybe as early as (Tuesday),"
one season, and Kelly's agents said said Walker's agent, Peter John-

son. " Herschel is very eager to get
things worked out and to wear a
Cowboys uniform."
Schramm held his third teteprone conversation Monday with
Jolmson, wro Is basel in Qeveland.
"He (John!Vn) has told me what
he doesn't want," Schramm said.
"We have talked rontract structure
in a vague way. But as far as
money, we haven't talked about
that yet.''
The Bills made a move to better
protect whoever their quarterback
Is by signing the second of their two
first-round draft choices, tackle
WW WoUord. Buffalo's top pick,
ruMing back Ronnie Harmon, Is
one of seven first-round selections
still unsigned.
The USFL was at the heart of
most r1 the news around NFL
training camps.
At Tampa, Fla.. former all·
USFL defensive back David Greenwood was among live players
waived by the Buccaneers. Tampa
Bay also released tackle Mark
Drenth, an 11th-round draft pick,

Turner, defensive baCk Reggie
PleaSant and center Ron Plantz. In
addtlon, Tampa .Bay signed former
USFL defensive md Kevin Kellin to
move Its roster to til players.
Tampa Bay also announced the
Washington Redsklns have acquired the club's rights 10 quarter·
back Doug' Will tams, contingent on
the ex-Buccaneer passing a physl·
cal. Tampa Bay wUI receive a
fifth-round 1987 draft pick, which
could improve based on Williams'
performanre. Williams left the
Buccaneers to play In the USFL.
At Miami, the Dolphins signed
guards Rich Kehr and Dan Rosado,
formerly of the USFL Houston
Gamblers. Miami had signed veteran tackle Greg Koch Mlnday. The
Doiphls have lost several Dnemen
to Injuries, the latest being guard
Steve Clark, out for the year with a
knee injury.
At Grreley, Colo., defensive end
Barney Chavous. who played in
more games then any player tor the
Denver Broncos, retired after 13
seasons. "We have lost a great
team leader," Coach Dan Reeves
said . Chavoos played in 182 games
for the Broncos, starting 177. His 72
career sacks are a team high.

approve the pact, which Is effective
immediately.
Eagleson said star players have
been "hurt" by the contract but the
new agreement wt11 "significantly
help the average player."

r----------:--

I.,.....!_~s '::~:::.,,,,"" INHL players approve n:V~;;;:e~'
General Manager BDll'llllan said
Tom Gorman, who umpired in he will begin preliminary meetings
the National League for 25 years, ''srortly" with Greg Lustig, one of
died Tuesday of a heart attack. Kelly's two agents · f .th.. Reggie
Cl
Gorman, 67, had retired aft er the Ro e""rs • the brother o e eve. 1976season.... Defendingchamplon land Browns defensive back Don,
Taiwan and Las Vegas won on who died from cocaine, sayshewlll
shutouts while Brenham, Texas submit to drug tests while playing
and Midland,Mich., each posted delenstvetackleattheUnlversltyof
vlctortes in opening round play at Washington .... Former Cleveland
"'rU~"' League B
Coa h Sa
R "Nil
the 26th annuaiSen ...
'""
rowns
c
m U..,; ano
Worls Series at Kissimmee, Fla~
returned to Ohio !rom a coaching
Basketball
trtp to Australia and New Zealand
University
of
Louisville
said
d Ia! ed he
is ted
The
an c m
was m quo
about 50 fans who accompanied the concerning a story about the death
Caidlnal basketball team to Dallas, of Browns free safety Don Rogers.
where the university won the NCAA The Sacramento Bee reported
title, owe about $aJ,(MX) In travel Rutigliano was quoted as blaming
expenses. The university has sent Cleveland's management for "havpast-due bills to fans for airfare, ing their heads in the sand about
rotelandreiatedexpensesincurred drug use," adding It was "absoduring a tour arranged bY the lu tely certain" Rogers was lntrounlverstty and a local travel duced to drugs after he joined the
agency .... The Rockford (Ill.) Browns.
Lightning of the Continental Bas·
Horse Raclnl
ketball As!K!Ciation have drafted
The New York State Racing and
former Southern Cal star Cheryl Wagering Board acknowledged It
Mllier.
mistakenly disqualified the French
Bob Brodhead, Louisiana State horse Lashkarl for lllegal drug use
athletic director, has denied with· in the 1985 Breeders' Cup Turf and
drawing a job rtfer to a man reinstated both his purse and the
because his wife was unable to llcense of trainer Alain de Royer
persuade a top girls basketball Dupre.
player to ,sign with the Tigers.
other
Testifying In a $1 million breach r1
Mike Collins, 18, of Klamath
promtsesuit,hetoldadlstrlctcourt FaDs, Ore., was hours away from
the ,job coordinating an LSU sports pitching in the semifinals of the
cable network was withdrawn Oregon American Legion baseball
because negotiations fell through playoffs when he was kllled after
with cable executives for a pro- being thrown from a truck .... Cuba
posed "1lgerVislon" channel.
will send athletes to the 1987 Pan
American Games in lndlanapolls
Football
The Buffalo Blils said they have despiteearUercomplalntstheevent
received permission from the NFL was awarded to the United States
to begin contract talks with USFL instead r1 Cuba, the Cuban government press agency reported.
Baseball

TORONTO (UPI) - The NHL
union Tuesday said players approved by a 98 percent margin a
new contract that will extend theplayoff season and cost the league
more than SID million over five
years.
The five-year contract also Is
expected to result In more movement of players and sharp curtailment in the number of 18-year{)lds
entering the league.
The agreement, reached In late
July after four days of negotiations

them."

Steyne said neither he oor Visser
were asked by ot!lclals how they
wlshed to be identified.
"We are proud to be South
Africans," Steyne saki.
A tournament spokesman said
thedecisk&gt;ntoconceal the nationall·
ties rtthe two South Afrtcan payers
was made on the weekend,
"Over the weekend there were
some backuptoomament representatives wro, in order to avoid a
possible confrontation, chan~d the
nationalities," the spokesman said.
"It was an .error on the side of
caution that Is being corrected."
The spol!esman . said the South
African flag wtll be raised alongside
the «hers, and the players wW be

properly Identified begiMing with
their second-round matches
Wednesday.
Tim Wllklson, the No. 13 seed
!rom Ashville, N.C., held off a
strong challenge from Frenclunan
Guy Forget before prevalltng 6-3,
5-7, 6-3.

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Curren, who became a U.S.
citizen in 1985, said "I am just
starting to get my game back
following Wimbledon.

WILMINGTON, Ohio (UP!) The anctnnali Bengals have
reached a contract agreement with
Barney Bussey, a ll!th round draft
choice r1 .the club In 19&amp;1.
Bussey, from South Carolina
State, has played for the Memphis
Showboats of the USFL the past two
seasons. He signed Tuesday and
reported to training camp at
WllmlngtiJn CoDeae.
"He Is an .lnslile safety," said
Bengals coach Sam Wyche. "I don't
know if,he'll make the team. Wedld
not draft him with the idell that he
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La

Limit
20

La

The clubs, wro say they lost more
than $70 mU!ion in the last seven
years, will pay over five years the
Canadian equivalent of$al.2 mllllon
in direct costs from the new
agreement, union dfi~ials said.
Much o! that will be used to fund
retiree benefits.

\® LIST£0\

Bussey signs contract

Sunday
August 10
thru
Saturday
August 16

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, AUG. 16, 1986

South African-born Kevin
Curren, playing ooly lils second
tournament since his first -round
elimination at Wimbledon, dis·
posed of Mike Leach, from Laguna
Beach, Calif., 6-2, 6-4.

In other matches, lOth seed
Slobodan Zivoj inovic r1 Yugoslavia
heat Mark EdmoD!Kln of Australia
6-2, 6-4 and Ramesh Krishnan, the
16 seed from India beat Peter ·
Fleming from Glen Cove, N.Y., 6-2,
6-3.
Qualitler Joey Blake of Ca!Uornia
eliminated Glenn Mlchibata r1
Toronto 6-2, 6-7 (2· 7). 7-5; and
Aaron Krlckstein from Grosse
l'llint Mich., defeated Sweden's UH
Stenlund, 6-3, 3-6, 6-3.

Good

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

LL

South Africans gain second
round of Canadian Open
TORONTO iUPI) - Christo
Steyn and Danle Visser, South
Alricans whose nationality was
concealed by tOurnament officials,
Tuesday advanced to the second
round of the $375,000 Canadian
Open Tennis Championships.
The tournament is also known as
the Player's International.
Steyn defeated Canadian Stephane Bonneau &amp;4, 7-13 (7-4 ), and
VIsser eliminated Scott Davis from
Bardmoor, Fla.. 6- 2, 2-6, 6-3.
Tournament officials listed both
VIsser and Steyn as Americans.
The South African flag is ootarnong
those flying above center court. A
tournament spokesman said the
move was made to "avoid possible
embarrassment and protests, and
beCause the two players live much
of the time in the United States."
At one point in Visser's match a
fan yelled: "South Africans go
home." VIsser said he heard the
remark.
VIsser lists his residenCe as
Pretorta, South Africa, and Steyn
Usts his as Potchefstroon, South
Airlca. The players said they were
unaware they had been identified
as Americans.
"We didn't know anything about
being listed as Americans or about
the fiag," VIsser said.
Tournament chairman John
Shipton, however, said: "They
were asked and they gave their
permission. We don't change peoples' nationalities without telling

between the union and ·the NHL
owners' committee, averted what
would have been a first strike in the
NHL.
"Each side made concessions in
ordertoachievewhatlsbestforthe
gameofbockeyandfortheruslness
~~k .. NHL Pr td 1 J hn
0 1 '""' ey,
es en
Ziegler said in a statement released
in Toronto.
Ala E I
t1 dl
n ag eson, execu ve rec·
tor of the NHL Players Association,
said more than 81 percent of the 48l
NHL players voted 98 pe
· rcent to

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�Page-6-The Daily Senmal

H~use

Wednesday. August 13, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, August 13, 1986

panel handing Deaver report to special prosecutor

· By 'l'D(ontY BANNON
questions about his work after
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A leaving government.
report adopted 17.0 by a Hpuse
"We bellevethallhe (admlnlstra·
subcommittee says former White tlon) witnesses ... have made a
House aide Michael Deaver lied good-faith atle!r\pt to be IJrthcomthree times under oath to the pane!, lng and provide us with all the
which will give Its findings to a facts," Lent said. "Michael peav·
special prosecutor probing his er's testlmooy was the unfortunate
possible ethics violations.
exception (0 this record."
"Mr. Deaver .knowingly and
The report said Deaver's !allure
wlllfully testified falsely," about to disclose someoontact withWhite
contacts he had with White House House olflclals suggests "an' ntent
officials and U.S. ambassadors to deceive" as well as the possibility
since leaving the White House in of stlll more unrevealed.contacts.
May 1916 to open a public relations
The panel's staff repat said
and lobbying firm, the report Deaver may have perjured himself
concluded.
when he testified that after re;tgn.
Randall Turk, a laWYer for tng his White House post he had:
DeavPr, said Tuesday the subcom-Only one contact with the
milt"" has been "desperately" executive office of the president.
engagt-&lt;1 In an attempt to lind The report said Deaver faDed to
"substantive violation of crtmlnal mention a "slgnltlcant" ronversa·
law." He predicted President Rea- tlon with national securtty adviser
gan·s long-time friend and deputy Robert McFarlane.
rhlef of staff wlll be exonerated.
-Contacted only the U.S. ambas·
But the ranking Republican on sadors for Korea, Singapore and
tlle House Energy and Commerce India, when he had In fact also met
1ubcomrnittee an· oversight and wtth the U.S. ambassadors to West
investigations, following nearly two Germany and Japan.
hours behind closed doors.
-Jnlonned a client, Rockwell
emerged to praise the 44-page staff International Corp., maker of the
repor1 as a bipartisan effort.
B-1 bomber, that he was going to
Rep. Norman Lent, R-N.Y, cited meet with James MOler, director &lt;i
"lack of candor" by Deaver in his the Olflce of Management and
May 16 response to subcommittee Budget, to discuss the aircraft.

Company officials said ' they
learned of the meeting !rom the
newspapers.
Lent and subcommittee chair·
man John Dlngell, D-Micb., .said
the pane! wlll refer 1D lndepel)c:lent
oounsel Whitney North 8eymour Jr.
re!evant portions of traJiserlpts
from Deaver's testimony durtng a
closed hearing.
Seymour, a former U.S. attonley
!rom New York, was appointed
May 29 to Investigate allegations
that Deaver may have committed
three criminal violations of ll!deral
ethics laws In his prtvate lobbying
for Puerto RJco and canada.
Federal ethics laws generally bar
smlor government r1llclals !rom
lobbying their former agencies lor
a period of one year on Issues In
which they were personally or
substantially Involved.
Deaver was out of the countcy
and unavailable for commmt on
the new allegations.
But Turk said. "We are ronfldent
that after a full and Impartial
investigation, Mr. Deaver wUl be
cleared of any wrongdoing, lnclud·
ing the suggestion today that he
may possibly have committed
perjucy.
"Some of the subcommittee's
members and Its staff have now

spent three months trying desper·
a !ely (0 find a possible perjucy
charge, whileslmultanoousJy retuslng to provide Mr. Deaver with a
copy ot lhe transcript of his
~tlmony," Turk said. ''They did
this because they oould lind no
substantive violation r1 B"lmlnal
law."
Dlngell said transcripts of Deaver's testimony would be re!oosed (0
him.
Turk said he rould not dlscu!li the
allegations regarding the McFarlane contact because It Is under
Investigation by Seymour, and said
It would have been "pointless" to

hide meetings with Richard Burt,
amtia•saoor to West Germany, or
Michal;!!
ll:'nbassador (0

Japan. He also said Deaver has :
mcuments td
his testimony :
on contacts

~

CsbeU Circuit Court Is where
Gene and AnJia Barr of. Huntington
were ruled to have legal custody of
the boy In 1983. An Ohio court had
ruled earlier tbat year that the
adoption was· Invalid.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UPI) A lawyer for an Ohio woman trying
togetber5-year-oldsonawayfrom
his adoptive parents tn West
Vlrglnla took steps this week to get
theslow-movtngcasebacktncourt.
Theat(OmeyforTammyLemley
Rulen of Proc(Orv!lle, Ohio, said
Tuesday a letter was on Its way Ill
the West VIrginia Supreme Coort,
asking the justices to Implement
their March decision that the Ryan
Barr adoption case be reheard In
Cabell Circuit Court.

Oh10 attorney
• ac("IOD
·seek mg
,•m Ryan Barr .
.·.
l d
: CU8 0 y case
0

.

0

•· ·

..

The Daily. Sentinel-Page 1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The West VIrginia justices In
November 1911 ordered lhe chlld
returned to hll natural mother, but
thel! relleard the case fn January
and sent It baCk 10 the lower court.
The justix!S tll!n granted the
Barrs a !Dday say 10 enable them

to appeal the case to the U.S.
Supreme Court. But the Huntington
couple, acting oo legal advice,
decided mt to approach the nation's
highest court and the 9tklay stay
exjired July 9.
Rulen's lawyer, Charles Burd of
Chesapeake, Ohio, said he bas
asked the West Vlrginla Supreme
Court to foro! the execution of Its
order returning. the case to the
circuit court and to lniJrm him
what special judge wUl hear the
action.

T.

COPYRIGHT
· THE KROGER CO . ITEMS AND PRICES
GOOD SUNDAY, AUG. 10, THROUGH SATURDAY, AUG .
16, 1986. IN CA~IPOLIS &amp; POMER'"
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE
SOLD TO DEALERS.

In March, the high court appointed Preston County Circuit
Judge Robert Halbrltter to hear the
case.
"The delays In this case have
prejudiced us tremenoousJy," aurd
said. "With all thesl! delays, we
must mw determine the chtld's
best Interests."
He said Ryan's natural rrother
has not seen lhe boy stnoe May 6,
1!*11. The youngster starts klnder~arten next year.
·
"It's an adoptiOn !bat has been

ruled null and void yet the people

(the Barrs) stand to benefit by the
battle raging In court all tlis tlme,"
Hurd said.
The Ohio laWYer added he
expects action by the md cl Auaust
because the assigned judge will .
probably caD for a meeting of. both
parties as !0011 as he I!I!IB the green
light !rom the state 8u(rerne Coort.
One of the Barr's lawyers said
Tuesday he did mt expect any
action before the llrst week r1
September.

ADV'ItmSED tnM POLICY

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�•

Pqa 8-TIMJ Daily Sentilel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

••'

Wedl'!esday,
August 13, 1986
.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

.

Wednesday, August 13, 1986

Foodland Now Offers

Ryan retuJ'tts, blanks Dodgers 3..0; Giants edge Reds, 2-1
B)' .JOE ILLUZD

Nolan Ryan's ability 1D rebound
season Is remarkable. Even more remarkable Is his
ability 10 111row 90 mph fastballs at
his aae.
Ryan, 39, came off the disabled
list Tuesday to defeat the Dodgers
~ In his first start since July 27'
marking the second Ume this
season he has come off the DL to
win a game. He threw a hw-hltter
over five Innings 10 beat Cincinnati
8-4 on June 24.
''The only things I wanted to do
was pitch a good ball game," said
Ryan, who Improved to8-7. "Over-

from Injuries thls

all, I felt betler than the last start. I
think that was because of the rest."

Ryan had a no-hitter for 5 1-3
Innings before Steve Sax singled to
le!t. Ryan, who had been disabled
With an elbow InJury, pitched slx
Innings, ll&amp;veuptwosb)gles, struck
· outstxandwalkedtwo. HethrewOO
pitches, 66 of them strikes.
"I'm amazed a guy who lias
pitched that long and thrown that
many pitches can stW have that
much velocity," Dodgers manager
Tommy Lasorda said. "Go ask hlm
what his secret Is and then come
back and tell me."
Charlie Kerfeld pitched the Dna!
three Innings for hls fifth save. He
allowed one hit, struck out one and
walked none.
The victory enabled the Astros to

maintain their !our- game'lead over
San Francisco In the NL West, and
dropped the third-place Dodgers
nine game cit the pace.
1n ~her actkln, San Diego topped
Atlanta 4-3, Chicago downed Pittsburgh 3-1, Phlladelphl1t stopped
New York 3-1, Montreal trashed St.
Louis lfh!, and San Francisco
nipped Cincinnati 2-1.
Giants t Reds l
At Cincinnati, VIda Blue and
three relievers comtined on a
six-hitter to lead San Francisco.
Blue, 9-6, allowed four hits over the
first five Innings, struck wttwoand
walked three. Scott Garrelts got his
fourth save. Cincinnati starter BW
Gullickson, 8-8, went seven Innings.

Padral 4, Braves 3

At Atlanta, Bruce Bochy drove In
two runs, and Rich Gossage earned
his !lth save to Uft San Diego.
Go6sage pitched the llnal two
Innings for the save, giving him
seven consecutiVe seasons, With at
least 20, and '177 lifetime. LaMarr
Hoyt, s-8, was the winner alld Zane
Smith, 7-11, took the loss.

Larry

Mc~Ullarns.

2-8, . took the

The DAaily Sentinel-iH-9~

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79&lt;

CubsS,Piratesl
At Chicago, _Leon Durham
knocked In two runs with a solo
homer and an RBI single, snapping
a nine-game klslng streak to

Name ............................................................... ~ ......,......... ·
Addr.ll ............................................................................

Pittsburgh. Scott Sanderson, 6-9,
scattered six hits over seven
Innings, and Lee Smith worked two
shu1Dut Innings for his 22nd save.

Telephone ......................................................................... ·

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PEREZ DENIEll SfATEMENI' - VM!ul
Clnclanad lint baoeman Tony Perw, ....... here
with VIda Blue ol the SaD Franclsoo GlaDis, today

denied he made a statement pertaining IAl his
retirement. (UPI)

ENJOY AN ICE CREAM FLOAT
ORANGE

Texan wins title
CAMP PERRY, Ohio (UPI ) G. David Thbb of Canadian, Texas,
Thesday shot a 200-13x out of a
possible 200-20x to wtn the Army
Cup Trophy at the National ShootIng Matches.
Tubb hit the bullseye withal! ~of
his shots, and 13 of tll'm were In the
center of the bullseye, the area with
the highest point value. Staff Sgt.
James H. Cook of Q.lantlco, Va.,
placed second with a llO- 8x. and
Robert Sailor of Cannon Falls,
Minn .• took third with a l99-14x.
1n the Navy Cup match, Capt.
Davkl Erickson, ri Ft. Benning,
Ga .. won ftrst place with a score of
197-7x. Mark Lelhetrau of Middleton, Wis., took second with a
197-6x, and Sgt. Jeffery Larosa of
Ft. Benning, Ga., placed third with
a 197-5x.
Both events are ID-shot matches.
. 1be Army Cup Is shot at a distance
of 000 yards In prone position. The
Navy Cup Is shot at aJO yards
standing.
·

Sciolo DoWII8
COLUMUBUS, Ohio (UPI) Sovereign Sam benefitted by the
declalon of driver Joe Essig Jr. to

lay off the fast ear)f pace In
Tuesday's featured eighth race.
'lbe seven-year-old gelding sat
seventh at the three-quarter pole as
r.foouuaht noble, Wlndsome Willie
B. and Leader Newt ran that
portiOn In 1: 29.
Then Soverelen Sam made a
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w1nnJng by a neck over Sdllflle
Rabbit and Jet Dream. Moonlight
Noble faded to seventh.
OJarming ~Ia!, Flamingo
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cunblllatkln.
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fllf(NM flwffidl:!dstl(t; ~ to.oct ai(OIIOll mft Ill lhiiMIIJIDITtqUI!II, \W.mt 11Qti111Mf, lllled. IIMtttl. k CUftlltt IMt
;:fa~ '*ti11IMIIIotllt,*foUt,CI$fl•.... lllOof 11. RccktmtJrn~ tD: Altlt!ri
" Ce.,2tQI(. l..lt'$fftl. ""''·

· ON~Y ONE COUPON PER REOUinED PUnCHASE

R C Cola
oz.
ans.

16

Sl 59

VELVET

FlANDERS

Ice Cream

Beef Patties

-·~ saT .

PAIL

Plus DtJIII li 'I

eCIEAMY I(RUNCHY

II-RITE

OFFER GOOD ONLY IN AREAS SERVED BY: Athens Botlllnq Co.

5th Strlet

DIT RITE, CHERRY RC
DIT RC

$399

~5LB. $499
BOX

.

SAV

"The letter Banlc"
2212 JICkSOII Avenue
Point
W. Va.

I

1
~ I
I
--------------------~----

BANK

Slt:antl Stilet

Dawn liquid

OFFER GOOD ONLY IN AREAS SERVED BV: Athena Botlllng Co.

•

MEMBER F.D.I.C.

DISH soc OFF LABEL

'-;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;r;;;--;;;;;;;;;;;;-l

---·--------------

•W. .II

•

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·'
''
' .'
:t.~

1,;.

The llljjht To Umlt 'Ouanlltlet •

•

JIF

.Peanut Butt·
. oz . .
JAR

$159

PACKER lABEl

BANQUET

French Fries

·Dinners
.

SLB.

lAG

$119

1 oz.
PKG.

·".,'

89&lt; -...

.....,..
....
~

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'

.

Prlcea Effective ThN

...•

Sat., Aug. 18. 1988

•UIOA Food l'-mo• QIICiy Ac-t.d •Not lii111f10niiiiM For Typog..,ieal Errora
,_

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...
..... ___••
_• .4.:1.
·I

�Paga 10-The Daily SenU1el

Wednesday, August 13, 1986

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

...----Ohio briefs--.. Ohio fair attendance down four percent
Expect more accusations
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Even trough the city's poUre chief has
been reprimanded tor attending a gathering where &lt;i!lcers drank
alcolr&gt;l wblleon duty, several cltycoWJCil members say they fear the
controversy Isn't aver.
"'These things certainly lk&gt;n't end quickly and witrout more

bloodletting," said Mayor Charles Luken. "We'U J!'(lbably see more
accusations, altrough I don't know whato411ey'Ube."
Councilman Am Bortz said, "There appear to be a lot &lt;t sharpened
axes In the poUre division."

Warner doesn't have to pay
CINCINNATI (UP!)- Financier MaJVln Warner does not have to
pay a letter &lt;t credit he posted to the rollapsed Penn Square Bank r:l.
Oklahoma, the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled.
Warner, who Is under lndlcbnent tor his role In the J98i coUapse of
Home State Savings Bank of Cincinnati, was a Umlted partner In
High Plains Drilling Co., one of many small energy companies
caught In the 1982 coUapse d Penn Square.
Warner bought 15 shares tor $498,150, with half the amount paid in
cash and the other half financed by a letter of credit from Warner' s
account at Central Trust Bank of Cincinnati.

Reject contract offer again
CUYAHOGA FALLS, Ohio (UP!) -A Lawson MUk 0&gt;. contract
r:l.fer has been rejected tor the second time' try Teamster's who
walked &lt;if their jobs.at the dairy plant 242 days ago.
The proposal, calling for lower wages and the right d therompany
to use subcontractors to do work formerly done by union members,
was turned down Monday ~by company drtvers and 69-16 try dairy
plant workers.
The company has already lllled the strikers' jobs, and has
Informed the strikers that they wiU be placed oo a preferred list for
lUling future vacancies If they approve the contract.

Additional time sought
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - Franklin Coonty Common Pleas
Court ottlclals have been asked to grant petltloners opposing Ohio's
mandatory · auto seatbelt law additional time to place a repeal
referendum on the November baUot.
The lawsuit asking for 29 additional days to collect signatures was
!lledTuesdaybyPhUUpM. Manogg, a Newark attorney, In behalf d
2,145 plaintiffs, mainly from northern and eastern Ohio.
The lead plaintiff was James H. Alexander r1 Newark, who lalled
earUer this year to collect the required number ol signatures to
quality the referendum torthe Nov. 4 ballot.

By SANDRA L. LATIMER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)· David
Cooper. dressed In a pioneer style
white shirt and a black felt hat,
peeled and sUced apples at his booth
In the Heritage Hall on the Ohio
State Falrgroonds.
Shelves a! jams, jellies and
preserves lined two walls ol his
booth and beside him sat a wooden
press that turned apples Into elder
and a copper kettle where apples
could be cooked Into apple butter.
Q)oper, whose family operates a
country market just north r1
Bucyrus, Is one of several craftspeople who have booths In Heritage
Hall. a new faciUty on the
!alrgroonds.
"We've been doing this for 20
years," Cooper said ol the work his

!amUy has been doll)g and handejl
First Lady Dagmar Celeste some
apple sUces. Cooper's stall was the
first stop on Mra. Celeste's Buy
Ohio tour of exhibits Tuesday at the
!air.
The tour was designed to ·highlight products "Made In Ohio by
Ohioans" as· proclaimed by red,
white and blue signs that hang on
their booths. Some 100 merchants
and exhibitors display those signs
at the lair this year.
"People slx&gt;uld know what we
have In our own back yard," said
Mrs. Celeste,addlngthatshew!Udo
her Christmas srowlng In the
Heritage Hall.
Buying Ohio ttems Is routine for
Mra. Celeste, wlx&gt; says many gifts

NEW YORK (UP!) -The longer
One researcher traced 100 cou·
coopies are married, the less ·Ume pies who had been married for five
years and found the~ spent only
they spend In the bedroom . talking - and It's lust !Or conversa· about l) minutes a week talking
" ilon that pushes a woman Into the with each other, the Journal said.
Journal readers surveyed by the
:· arms of another man, a study
· shows.
magazine In 1983 found women·s
The Ladles' HomeJoumal,lnthe second biggest complaint about
: . September Issue released Tuesday. their marriages - after fights over
; . said Its own study supported other money -was "We don't talk any
i- research pointing to the !allure of more."
Family counselors said tile fast
:· spouses to communicate as a
·• primary cause of marital pare d life and changes In lifestyles
were among the reasons why
, problems.
; Ii also said the search for new families do not talk less than they
: ·. partners was not a result of the did in the past.
. · desire lor more sex, but rather the
"People are preoccupied with
solitary pursuits - running, aero: need to rommwllcate.
·. The study was headed by Lynn bics, working out," said Richard
· Atwater, an associate professor of Dublin, associate executive direc.· sociology at Seton Hall University tor of the Jewish Family and
Community Serviced Chicago .
.: In New Jersey.

Some were Ohio's .maple pro~cts, and Mrs. Celeste stepped
behind the rounter to help Paul
Richards or &lt;llaroon sell some ol
his J!'(lducts In the mulll·purpose
building.
Between sampling sUres of Melrose apples and se1tlng maple
products, Mrs. Celeste sang
"You're A Grand Old Flag" with
the All Ohio Youth Choir, ate a· hot
apple dumpling made by Mike and
Heidi Rutana of New Sprtngfleld,
crushed cans In a machlneoflere by
Proveda 0&gt;. of Jackson ~nter,
stuck emergency saiety banrers on
a toy car and turned ribs oo a grill at
a bartleque food stand.
A crowd . ci 276,549 visitors
enjoyed sunny skies Tuesday with

By JIM SIELICKI
BOWLING GREEN. Ohio (UP!)
- The National Tractor PUlling
Championships wlll reach a milestone' this weekend when an ex·
peeled 400 competitors from
around the world mark the event's
20th birthday.
Sanctioned by the Na tiona! Tractor Pullers Association of Columbus, the homage to horsepower last
year drew a recordGO,OOllans to the
tllree- day event.
The event, Frklay through Sunday at the Wood County fairgrounds
In Bowling Green, Is expected to
surpass that number, said David
Branhan, spokesman from the
National Championships.
"This brings competitors from all
over," said Branhan. ''They just
don't miss BowUng Green."
Stock and modified tractors and
trucks. some drawing more than
6,00l lx&gt;rsepower from muttlple
engines, will compete from $106,1XXJ
In prize money in 16 classes.
"They're here to see 1( they can
compete with the best In the sport,"
Branham said.
Jim Bockman of New Haven,

Ind .. .has discovered that taking
weigh dlhis vehlcletsaslmport a
n t as adding IDrsepower. Bockman, a leading rontender In the
two-wheel drive category, said in a
recent Interview he has shaved
weight by something as simple as
cutting long bolts o!f his rrodttled
van.
The 20th anniversary championship will Include displays In the
Retired Tractor Museum and a
gathering of the event's first
organizers and competitors, Branham said.
"We're going to bring out the
puUers who have puUed In all 19
pulls and we're going to recognize
those folks," be said.
"It's a tribute to those past 20
years," Branhan said.
Branhan said the National Tractor Pullers Assocatlon is considerIng a permanent location lor its
museum that would Include a hall d
fame of tractor pulling.
The puU Is divided Into dlvlslons
for two and four wheel drive trucks
and modified, super stock, pro
stock and mint tractors.
Trucks Equipped with fuel In-

CHICAGO (UPI) - President
Reagan. sweeping through his
native DUnols with a stop at the
state fair, says his trtp carried a
"message ... of conrern and hope"

I

Market report

I

to financially strapped farmers.
''Amid general prosperity ... of
record employment, rising In·.
comes and the lowest Inflation of
more than 20 years. some sectors d
our fal'lll economy are hurting, and
their anguish Is a concern to all
Americans," Reagan said In an
opening statement at his on-theroad news conference Tuesday
ntght.
He told the news conference his
trip was Intended to "bring a
special message to America's
farmers - one ol concern and

jected drag racing engines often
resemble utilltarlan vehicles In
name orily, while tmdl!led tractors
can employ as many as six
superchargro racing type engines.
Some use jet turbines.
Stock tractors generate up to

Paying tribute

2,00l lx&gt;rsepower on alcolx&gt;l and
dlsel llel.
The first national meet In BowUng GJ'efn In 19lil drew lll,IXXJ fans
to watch 153 drivers puU fu classes
for lightweight, mlddlewelgh and
heavyweight, Branhan said.

BACK·TO·SCHOOL
PREPPY FABRICS
•45 ln. Plaids,
Checka 8o
Stripes.
•60 ln. Plain 8o
Plaid Wool
•60 In. Printed
Corduroy
•All lin Stock)
Patterns

·20°/o OFF

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer
A nice thing Is happening at the
Meigs County
Fair Friday ev·
entng in hibute to
two young people
who lost
lives during the
past year· and
who were both
active In Meigs Fair activities.
To be honored at 7 p.m. Friday
preceding the annual livestock sale
will be the late Sandra Harden and
the late Bob BUI Lee. Sandra was
active In llvestock activities of the
fair and so was Bob, who also
served as a member of the senior
fair hoard.
During Friday evening's activity
to pay tribute to the two young
people, a member d the Meigs
County Belter Uvestock !Ailry
Club wUI receive the Sandra
Harden Memortal Citizenship 4·H
!AIIry Award. This Is a one·llme
:; ·presentation. A second club
= member will receive the Bob Blll
;; Lee Memortal Dairy Trophy. and
• this will be a traveling trophy tl be
-:; presented each year over the next
:~ 10 years.
~
The awards certainly show that
:;: someone was thinking to re" · member to honor these tv.-o oot~ standing yoong pa&gt;pie.
•
•
;; And - Sandy Luc~eydoo , Mld·
• dleport, who has had more than her
': share of health problems, is moving
:~ to Virginia soon I:Alt her Ginger.. pread House for pre·schoolers wUI
; remain open.
The ,_,wowner isShlran Nuggud .
: For the next week. Sancy wlll be
·: taking registrations for anyone

...•'

.,.·
i

School Special

Sharon Thacker was top loser lor
July with TOPS OH 1456 ot Rutland
which meets on Tuesdays at the
Rutland Civic Center. She was the
best loser at both the July 22 and
July 29 meetings wth Nancy Vance
and Frances Hysell being the
runners·up.
At last week's meeting, Jo Ann
Eads lost the most weight and Judy

~ &gt;~

:.w.J

WE WILL CLOSE AT NOON THURSDAY SO
OUR EMPLOYEES CAN ATTEND THE
MEIGS COUNTY FAIR

W'!II!IJI'!f

'
•',.•.

.

.•

115 West
Second St.

'

Pomeroy

•·

Holley Jo WUHams

Nicole Marie McDaniel

;

McDaniel birth
·Williams
birth
and Teresa WiUlams of
Dwaine and Dorothy McDaniel,

, -

Bobby

: Zion Road, Rutland. are announc·
: lng the birth of their first chlld, a
• daughter, Holley Jo, born July 14 at
O'Bleness Hospital. She weighed
• six pounds, six ounces .
Grandparents are Bob and Pat
WUUams, autland. and Dorothy
• Harden, Pomeroy, and the late
•• William Harden . Great ·
: grandparents are Margaret John·
: son, Mason; Helen WUUams, Mid·
: dleport; Dorothy Yates, Oak Hill.
• and Eva Shields, Syracuse.

DON'T LET WINTER
TAKE YOUR HEATING BILLS
FORA
RIDE.

'''
i
•
'••
••

the former Dorothy Seth, Rutland,
are announcing the birth of their
first child. a daughter. Nicole
Marie, at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
July 15.
The infant weighed nine pounds,
11 ounces, and was 21 'n Inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Her·
bert and Lorna Seth, Pomeroy, and
paternal grandparents are Rita
McDaniel of Rutland , and the late
Clarcnre McDaniel Sr. Paternal
great grandmother Is Mrs. Mar·
garet Nunn, Middleport.

Orientation Sumid,y

I

•

Field service orientation wlll be
held at the American Legion hall in
Middleport from 2 to4 p.m. Sunday.
Any Auxiliary member may attend. Registration fee Is $2.

''

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'••

••
•
•

BJR'l11DAY NOTED
The
llnlt birthday ol Elizabeth MorCIVIne Moore-CardiDo wail obsen-ed recently rib a party a1
the home of Thehna Moore In
Rutland. She Is lhe daughter ol
Anlbony CardUJo and Klmall
Moore-Carilllo, Lanpvllle.

'

7

•

..

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36 MONTHS

8

•

41 MONTHS

Fin!.!!!!.!:-9
On Any New Automobile
Purchased During Meigs Co. Fair Week
"A Proud Supporter of The Meigs County Fair For 0\ler 80 Years"
'

Fa
.•&lt;&gt;
...._ ......
..
Gt
...._

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Farmers
Bank

Yow Com..,nily OwnH W
t

When temperatures take the plunge and you'll be billed that amount every
this winter, your heating bills needn't month. Your meter will continue to be
climb. Not if you're on Columbia's read as usual, and each month's bill
Budget Payment Plan.
will continue to ·show the amount of
The plan averages your bills into 12 gas you used . A review in March deterequal payments, so there are no peaks mines if your budget amount needs to
and valleys because of the weather. be adjusted because of weather.
Instead, the monthly amount stays'the , Another good idea : sign on for
same .. . higher than you now pay in the Checkf~ too. II automatically makes
summer, but a lot lower In the winter.
your gas payment from your checking
Rather than ups and downs, your account eactl month, so you save time.
gas bills stay on a smooth, even track postage and check charges.
all year 'round.
Join the Columbia Budget Payment
It's easy to be a Budget Payment P.lan. You'll take the ups and downs
customer, too. All you do is pay the out of you·r hea)ing bills ... and leave
"Budget Amount" on your August bill, the high cost of winter behind.

Mrs. Iona Hupp celebrated her
birthday recently with a dinner
party at her home. Edith Manuel
baked the cake, and other desserts
were !umlsbed by Shirley Belt and
Jeannie Bass.
Attending the dinner were Anold
Hupp, Flossie and Ernest Bush,
Don Manuel, Edle and Tim Manuel,
Ed, Sharon, Jeremy, Jamie and
Jarod Hupp, and Shirley Belt.
Calling during the day were Rocky.
Carol, R.J. and Rachel Hupp who

brought Ice cream and cake, Buzz,
Nancy. Tina and Mlkkl Hupp,
Teresa, Robert and Robert Jr ..
Lawrenre, Jim and Jimmy Hupp.
Mrs. Hupp received served gifts
and cards.
Others visiting Mr. and
Mrs.Hupp and family were Mr. and
Mrs. Dorsey Pars:&gt;ns, Russell and
Leona Cline, Clarence, Laura Hupp
and daughter. Anna Faye and
granddaughter, Laura. Norwalk.

Pool closed
SYRACUSE - London Pool.
Syracuse, will be closed Thursday
fort he Meigs O&gt;unty Fair. The pool

women's activities: and Louise
Radford, membership chairman.
The charter was draped In
memory of James Bearhs. Bunny
Kuhl reported on the community
service IJ'Oject. It was noted that a
new picnic table hal been placed In
the springs mini-park and that a
new door had been Installed rn the
sprtngs.

I

Annual cookout was held recently
at Stonewood Apartment in Mlddleport hosted by Mlnnle and Paul
Johnson, res ident managers.
Entertainment was provided by
Rita and Junior White. Food was
provided by the residents. managers and the owner. Arthur H. Winer
and Associates .
Attending were Evelyn Mains,
Cecil and Shirley Frazier. Frances
Howery, Inez Pooler. Eileen
Snyder, Clifford and Irene Christy,
Jolm and Kathryn Metzger, Iva M.
Stewart. Calvin and Mabel Lane,
Lee Reed. Walter and Pearl Bunce,
Esther Kissel. Bessie
and

M.L. Bahr.

Ic;=========~~~

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

.

'

$·

·

BULK WIENERS ..............
!!~. 1.43
SHREDDED......Ib. S2.29
BOILED HAM ••••••••• ~1H! •• ~••• S2.09 .

EGAR

HOMEMADE

~ · HAM

SALAD ••••••••••••••••••• !!~..... 89&lt;
3 LB. BAG YEUOW

IIU£HDIU 3 DOZ. PAl

SMAU .
EGGS .............~!'!.... S1.69

ONIONS ..;................. 79 &lt;
MICHIGAN 10 lb. bag

t2 Ol. t6 Sll(( PIMENTO PROC.

NEW POTATOES... S1.49

IROUGHTON-Quart

NEW GREEN
CUCUM-JRS ...... !P:..... 59&lt;

KRAFT CHEESE ...... S1.89

INSURANCE
111 Second St. 1'-roy

CIIOCOLATE MILK ..... 69&lt;

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

ORE-IDA GOLDEN IIRINIIL£ CUT

FRENCH FRIES ••••••••• 1.·.~;.!~9•• S1.79
I OZ. BANQUET OR MORTON

POT PIES ........................2 S1.09

To wed Saturd..zy

Tomato Soup ................~~.~ •••• 79&lt;

Announcement is being made 11
the Saturday, Aug. 16. open church
wedding of Helen Johnson and
Henry Eblin, Sr., roth of Route 1,
Pomeroy. The ceremony will take
place at 2:15 p.m. at the Zion
Church ot Christ. Bob Purtell wlll
officiate.

26 ttc OZ. ORANGE DRINK

TANG ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~. S2.89
15 OZ. THANK YOU

BLACKBERRIES................ ~~!! S1.59
49 OZ. CONCENTRAIE

ALL ••••••••••• ~•••••••••••••••••••• !~.~ S2.49

SPINACH •••••••••••••••••.•.••.• ~~.~ •••• 89c
INSTANT COFFEE .........!~~... S3.39
TWIN PACK
BOUNTY TOWELS ••••••••~~••• S1.39

:•

5'!J OZ. ZEST BAR

Let's al do our $hare/

:

I

Harold Blackston resigned ai;
executive member and Chari!$
Kuhl was appointed to replace him.
Members reported lll were Wll·
metta Lelthelt and Grace Whaley,
Sympathy was extended to Martha
King and her lamUy. Refreshments
were served hy BID and Louise
Radford.

SUPERIOR

4 OZ. FOLGER'S

!
,f

Singing In pW'k
GALLIPOLIS - There will oo
singing at the Gallipolis City Park;
Friday 6 p.m., featuring Saved and
the End Times. Bring lawn chairs:

D BACON •••••••••••••••!!••.... 97(
ECKRICH JUMIO
$
BOLOGNA •••••••••••••••••••••• ~!.. 1.89

!:
I

Meeting, dinner
GALLIPOLIS - 8&amp;40 meets
Thursday, 6:30p.m., home of Inez
Marchi. Bring covered dish IQ
meeting.

TOWN VACUUM PAC

27 OZ. DEL MONTE

I
•

wlll also be closed Aug. 2&amp;.29 and
then reopen Aug.ll·31. The pool will
be open iJ r the last time on Sept. 1
with free swlmmtng.

Cookout held at apartments

t

•

GRANVILLE - The annual
reunion ol the descendants of Hoit
and Mary Foster Curtis wlll be held
Aug. 17 rear Granville, on the
former site of I~ county home,
State Route 37. north of Luray.
Friends and relatives are invited to
attend.

' '

'

COWMBIAGAS

·Hicks. Singers will be the Bissen
Brot~rs. Linda Damewood and
Jan Lavender. Services at 9:30a.m.
and 1:30 p.m. Potluck dinner at
noon.

"'

I

whether patients may become
tolerant - !hat is, the medicines
lose their effectiveness - to drugs
given through the skin patches
more qu lckly than those taken
orally . Care mu st also be taken that
skin patches are used only by those
lor whom they are prescribed, for
the drugs can have toxic effects on
others.
While transdermal drug delivery
is oot practical for everyone, lor
many it offers an exciting new
alternative to taking medicine.

Snowden was runner-up. Jo Ann
Fetly was welcomed back as a
member. Winners of the diet
surprise for the past three weeks
have been VIcki Ferrell, Gerrl
Lightfoot, and Sandy Sargent.
Intormatlon on the club .may be
obtained by calling Sandy Hysell,
99'.!-7467.

Hupp birthday celebrated

992·2214
"

terl ng estrogen through sk in
patches In postmenopausal women.
for example, side effects such as
gallstones, clotting and high blood
pressure may be eliminated.
Question: Are there negatives ide
effec ts to tr ansderm al drug
delivery?
Answer: People allergic to tape
most likely wUI react negatively to
skin patches. Some people may
develop skin rashes because of !be
medication as well.
Researchers are stud yi ng

Rock Springs Grange elects new officers

TOPS holds recent meeting

•

We're Celebrating With
990f0 A.P.R.
490/o A.P.R.

Skin patch new way for medicines

Community calendar/ area happenings

SALE Sl 5900

But the long·term goal, he said, Is
to help the farm sector grow strong
enough to fuoctlon without government support.

Family medicine

By EDWARD SCHRECK, D.O.
patches releases the medicine
1\!slstant Professor
slowly, the usual side effects are
Interested In attending the ~hool.
ol Family Medicine
absent.
You can caU her at 992-TITI.
Ohio University College
of Olteopathlc Medicine
Skin patches can prove useful to
Secretary April Smith reports
Quesllon: I've beard that it's now people wiD forget to take their
that the Pomeroy Elementary · possible to take medicine through a
School office Is open now and patch applied to the skin. How does medication or who have difficulty
swallowing pills . Using skin
kindergarten and first grade stu- this procedure work?
patches to administer medicine
dents are being registered If they
Answer: Medicated patches re· bypasses the liver as well. When
have not previous ly bee n lease their Ingredients through the
drugs arc taken orally they pass
registered.
skin In a new process called
Parents are to take the chlld's transdermal drug delivery. Some through the liver and produce
Immunization records and birth of the medicines that can be used In products that are sometimes ha·
certificate to the school office which this way are scopolamine (SCO· zardous to oor health. By ad minis·
Is open from 8 to noon and from 1 to paul-ah·meen) for motion sickness.
3 p.m. ChUdren for klndergarten nitroglycerin for heart pains and
must be ftve on or before Sept. 30 clonldlne (klon ·ah~n) for high
and first graders must be six on or blond pressure.
before Sepl. 30.
Patches are worn for days at a
John Lisle is the new principal at lime - clonldlne patches, for
Pomeroy Elementary. replacing Instance, are !;'?nerally changed
WEDNE'IDAY
long·tlme administrator Bob Mor· once a week, and scopolamine
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
ris, who is having some health patches are applied at least 121x&gt;urs
problems.
before embarking on a trip. Nitro- Amateur Gardeners will meet at
the Middleport fire station at 7 p.m
glycerin patches come In various
Wednesday
for a potluck supper.
Kristl Richmond , who will be a sizes, depending on the severity of
Members
are
to take a flower
senior at Meigs Htgh this month, the heart condition. The skin
arrangement.
underwent major surgery Monday patches usually remain attached
at Riverside Metlx&gt;dist Hospital. through days of bathing.
FRIDAY
Krist! will be hospitalized for
Quesllon: What are advantages
POMEROY
- The film, "Ra bblt
several days and would unooubl· of using skin patches?
Hill,
"
will
be
shown at Pomeroy
edly love to hear from you. The
Answer: Transdermal drug deLibrary,
Frklay,
2 p.m.
address is room 9022, Olentangy livery means there Is a conststant
River Road, Columbus, Ohio.
amount of medicine In the blood
stream, rather than the high and SUNDAY
PORTLAND - The Hazel ComI'm having a blast with the low levels brought about try taking
munity
Church, between Portland
exiJ'esslon "ylng yangs" - eve· medication orally. For example,
ryone seems to have a diflerent scopolamine pills can cause drowsi- and Long Bottom. will be having Its
interpretation of the meaning ness and other undesirable side annual homecoming on Sunday
Aug. 17. Speaker wiU be Rev. Carl
"vedy, vedy" interestin g. One day effects. but because the skin
when I find time on my hands I rope
to ask a whole bunch d people what
they think "ylng yangs" are and
pass the information along to yoo .
Some of the lnterpreta tions so far
New offirers were elected at the Grueser. chaplain; James Fry,
have reen shocking - and I'm
almost shock proof. Do keep Thursday night meeting of the Rock treasurer; Frances Goegleln. seSprtngs Grange held at the hall.
cretary; Barbara Fry, Ceres;
smiling.
Elected were William Radford, Helen Blackston, Pomona; Nancy
master; Unda Broderlr;k, over- Morris. Flora: Harold Blackston,
seer: Pat Holter, lecturer: Roy gatekeeper: Rollin Radford, execuGrueser, assistant steward; Roy tive committee; Louise Raford,
Holter, steward: ~al Grueser, pianist; Opal Grueser, legislative;
lady assistant steward:' Beuna Barbara Fry, chairman of

REG. 1209.99

•

SALUTING THE 1986
MEIGS COUNTY

Page- 11

Beat of the Bend

r-----------------------------~---------------

hope."

Wednesday, August 13, 1986

.

temperatures a little lower,lhan the
last lew days. Attendance In 12 days
tbls year Is 2,5!1,593, d9wn sane 4
percent !rom last year when a
record 3.6 million pa&gt;ple paid to get
Into the fair.
Falrg{)ers heard singer Greg
Bonham In the grandstand In the
afternoon and the Pointer Sisters In
the evening wl!lle wuuams and Ree
pertonned In the Country Music
Pavilion.
Today Is Savings d America Day
with microwave cooking and floral
design demonstrations, style shows
and a rooster crowing conlest
among activities.
Bandana performs In the Country
Music Pavilion, and magician
David Copperfield In the
Grandstand.

Tractor pullers reach benchmark this weekend

Reagan says he's concerned

New study out on marital problems

last year bore the Buckeye label. .

By The Bend

..

The Daily Sentinel

MEIGS· COUNTY
LI1TER CONII,OL
"2·6360 Or
992-3371

~-

TOILET SOAP .................. 2I $1.19.

16 OZ. UNCLE BEN'S CONVERTID

RICE •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••~!~;......99&lt;

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;Page· 12-The Daily Sentinel

Meigs Fair judging results·announced
Melanie Stetbem ol Pomeroy has
the best display of garden produce
on display in the farm crops
buDding at the Meigs County Fair.
Taking second place honors in the
best display category was Joyce
.Ann Sauters, Pomeroy, with Ptiggy
Crane, Middleport, coming In third
and Ruth Erwin, Pomeroy, fourth.
Winning blue ribbons for the top
exhibit In the various categories of
Judging In the farm crops competl·
tion this year were: Bryan Fox,
Route 3, Pomeroy, six ears o1
yellow com; Peggy Crane, Middle·
port, red pop corn; Fox, best peck
of wheat; Mary K Rose, Long
Bottom, spring oats; Don Smith,
Racine, barley; !.£land Parker,
Pomeroy, best cobblers; Henry E.
Ba~. Long Bottom. Kennebec
potatoes: Sarah Caldwell, Seneca
,.

!.i .

Beauty and Idaho Baker potatoes;
Jill Holter, Long Bottom. I .aSOOa,
and Caldwell, the best name
variety.
In sweet potatoes, Fred B. Smith,
Pomeroy, took a first with yams
and Jill Holter a first In name
variety. In vegetable judging,
Hency E. Bahr was first In grren
cabbage; Macy K. Rose, egg plant;
Marlene Donovan, Coolville. red
tomatoes; Peggy Crane, white
tomatoes; Ruth Erwin. Pomeroy,
pear red tomatoes; Jo Ellen Cran,
Middleport, pear yellow tomatoes;
Fred B. Smith, tllmatoes, bl-color;
Opal M. Grueser, Pomeroy. green
pod pole beans; Keith Ashley,
Pomeroy, green pod pole beans;
Clarence T. Wolfe, Long Bottom,
Uma beans; Opal Grueser, white
onions; Howard Ervin, Racine,

yellow onions; Jill Holter, red
onions; Patty Armid, Albany,
plrn~tos; JoAnn Baum, Pomeroy,
hot peppers; MadeUne Pain tel',
Pomeroy, sweet peppel's and beets;
Jo Ann Baum. carrots; Joyce Ann
Sauters, green cucumbers; Peggy
Crane, pickle; Sheila CW'tls, !'Orne·
roy, okra; Ruth Erwin, field
pumpkins; Erwin, ,Pie pumpkin;
Melanie Stethem, cuslnu; Joyce
Ann Sauters, zucchini; Fred B.
Smith, summer squash; Tr!Sha
Spencer, Long Bottom, patty pan
squasll; Sheila Curtis, Pomeroy,
crooked neck squash; Joyce Ann
sauters, dipper gourds; Trlsba
Spencer, ornamental goW'ds. In
melons. Henry E. Bahr won !or the
best Olarleston Gray, tre best
name variety and also a first ilrthe
best name variety cantaloupe. Jo
Ann Baum won a first lor the best
perfection cantaloupe.
In the judging of &lt;ther fruits blue
ribbon winners were JoAnn Baum,
conoord grapes; Roy Holter, Pome·
roy, nlagra grapes; Shirley Sue
Sayre, Racine, white peaches.
Awards for the largest vegetables went to Madeline Painter,
IX!tato; Clarence T. Wolfe, pumpkin; Hency E. Bahr, watermelon;
JUI Holter, tomato; Bumy Kuhl,
. beet; Hency Bahr, cucumber; JUI
Holter, longest cucumber and
.largest onion; Fred B. Smith, sweet
potato; Jennifer Fox, tW'nlp; Don
Spencer, squash; Hency Bahr,
cantaloupe; Jill Holter, longest
bean.
Winning top honors for the best
freak vegetable was Pauline Atkins
with Joyce Ann Sauters taking
second.

grange judgbtg
Star Grange placed first for its
exhibit slnwlng the wock of
mema,rs In judging at the Meigs
County Fair. Annually three
granges prepare booths for the
STAUJON - David W. Com Is pictured with the grand champion
competition. Taking second place
Belglall !i&amp;alllon, "Omdorffs MaJesdc Marws" being exhibited at the
this year was RDck Sprtngs Grange
Melp CouDty Fair as a part of tbe draft horse show. 'Jltioi anbnal was
and third place went to Hemlock
judseoJ reserve junior champion at lbe Ohio State Fulr last week. The
Grange.
staiiion Is owned by Mr. and Mrs. David W. CAlm and Sons ft Guysville.
domestic arts
Barbara Murray of Pomeroy and
Marilyn Spencer of Long Bottom
were the top ribbon winners In
domestic arts exhibits In yester·
day's judging of more tban 2:1)
entries at the 12Jrd annual Meigs
County Fair.
Mrs. Murray won four blue
ribbons, seven red ones, and five
white ones, while Mrs. Spencer won
five blue ribbons, three red ones,
and tbree whiteonestotopthe llstof
exhibitors In winning entrtes. All
tbree places pay premlums.
Listed first. seconp and third,
respectively, the wlri'ners In the
various divisions of the department
were as follows:
Children's Clotblng
Girl's dress, cotton and blends:
Deborah Lee Grueser, Pomeroy;
Juanita G. Lodwick, Chester, and
Barbara Murray, Pomeroy.
BEST OF SHOW- NJne.year-oid Sheri Ramsburg, daughter ft Earl
Girl's better dress: Judith Hill,
and Mabel Ramsburg, Route I, Middleport, was loaded wlhtrophles as
Grove City; Gall Duckett, Pomethe n!Sult ol 4-H poullry juc1plg at the Meigs Fulr Tuesd:~J. Her pe11 ft
roy, and Debra Lee Grueser.
bantams were the beSt ol show and she was moerve champion poultry
Boy's trousers: Judith Hill.
showman.
Child's blouse or short: Marilyn
Spencer, Long Bottom; Ruth Er·
win, Pomeroy.
T·shlrt: Jane Thompson,
Pomeroy.
Child's shorts: Jane Thompson,
second.
Coat or jacket: Barbara Murray.
Children's miscellaneous: De·
borah Grueser, Nina Craddock,
Middleport; and Eloise Stiles,
Middleport.
Adult Clothing
One piece dress: Ruth Erwin,
Marilyn Spencer, and Ann Lam·
~rt. Pomeroy.
Two piece dress: Marilyn
Spencer, Linda Carpenter,
Middleport.
Better dress: Judy Eichinger,
Pomeroy; Ann Lambert, Marilyn
Spencer.
Lady's blouse: Judy Eichinger,
Deborah Grueser, Marilyn
Spencer.
Skirt: Marilyn Spencer, Ruth
Erwin, Deborah Grueser.
.
Cape or coat: Judy Eichinger,
' '"'"' " . Barbara Murray, Pomeroy.
· Lady's slacks: Judy Eichinger.
Lady's suit, skirt: Judy Elchln·
TOr CROP- Melanie stethem Is pictured with herdl!lpii\V ft garden
ger,
Jane Thompson, and Marilyn
crops which won top honors for tbe best dl!lpii\V at the Meigs Coonty
Spencer.
filii'·
Lady's suit; slacks: Marilyn
Spencer.
Lady's jacket, Marilyn Spencer.
Men's jacket, Barbara Murray.
Lady's miscellaneous clothing:
. Ruth Erwin, Pomeroy; Marilyn
Spencer.
Apron: Addalou Lewis, Barbara
Murray.
NeecDecralt
Cross stitch pUow cases: Nina
Craddock, Middleport
Embroidered pillowcases: Pau·
line Atkins, Rutland; Nina Robin·
~n. CoolvDle.
Crocheted triJ\1 pillowcases:
Eloise Stiles, Middleport, Pauline
Atkil)s.

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Crocheted cushion: Dorothy
Brown, Racine; Maxine Dyer,
Bidwell.
Embroidered cushion: Kathryn
' Jolm~n. Pomeory; Crystal Ftgiel,
.Pomeroy, and Jon! Jeffers,
Pomeroy.
, Counted cross stitch cushion:
Kathryn Jolmson, Crystal Ftglel.
Candl~ cushion: Nina Robin·
son, Barbara Murray, Addalou
l£wls.
.
Painted tablecloth: MerUee ~-

13.1986

Wedoasday, Augutt 13, 1986

Pomaroy-1\Kicidleport. Ohio

ant, Long BottOm; Mellssa Cole·
Dollies: Nina Robinson, Barbara
man, Long Bottom.
Murray, Paullne Atkins.
Crocheted tablecloth: Dorothy
Baby afghan: Dorothy Brown,
Brown, Racine; Esther Ward,
Ccystal Flglel, Judith Hall.
Pomeroy.
Baby wsweater set: Crystal
Pot holders: Addalou'l£wls, Joni Flgiel, Barbar Murray.
Jeffers.
Crocheted potholders: Eloise
DFeSed doll: Loretta A. Brown, Stiles, Maxine Dyer, Barbara
Pomeroy; Judith Hill. Jon! Jeffers. Murray.
Crocheted wall hanging: Dorothy
Latch rook wall hanging, Melissa
Coleman, first; Merrllee Bryant, Brown.
third.
Miscellaneous Items: Dorothy
Stuffed toy animal: Kathcyn Brown, Sarah Caldwell, Pomerov,
Jolm~n. Tammy D. Johnson, and and Nlna Robinson.
•
Loretta. A. Brown.
Quits
Miscellaneous: Kathryn Jolm·
Applique: Jon! Jeffers, Sara
son, Esther Ward, and Margaret Cullums, Pomeory, Jaunlta
DaUey, Pomeroy.
Lodwick.
Knitting
Patchwork: Allee M. Thompson,
SUpover sweater' Esther Ward, Pomeroy, Sarah Cullums, and
Rosemary Hysell, Middleport;
Barbara Murray.
Eloise Stiles.
Painted: Addalou Lewis,
Button front sweater: Barbara Pomeroy.
Murray, Marilyn Spencer.
Embroidered: Margaret Bailey,
Miscellaneous knitting: Barbara Esther Ward, Addalou Lewis.
Murray, Kitty Pugh, Middleport.
Baby quilt: Esther Ward, Sarah
Crocheted Jterm
Cullums, Allee Thompson.
Plrun crochet afghan: Dorothy
Comfort: no first, Tammy D.
brown, Racine; PauUne Atkins, John~n. Dorothy Jeffers.
Kathryn Johnson.
Quilted wall hanging: Debbie
Fancy crocheted afghans: Judith Davis, Pomeroy, Addalou Lewis,
HUI, Barbara Murray, Juanita Dorothy Davis. Middleport.
l.o!lwick.
Rugs
Vests: VIolet Hysell, Pomeroy;
Loom weave: Donna Davidson,
Patty Arnold, Albany.
Middleport.
Crochet trimmed handkerchief:
Hobby Comer
Nina Robinson, Addalou Lewis, and
Embroidered pictures: Nina Ro·
Barbara
~. .~~~V~lo~le~t~~~E;s~the~r~W~ard~.

Needlepoint pictUre: Kitty Pugh,
'Middleport; Kim Ohlinger, Pome- .
roy, Esther Ward.
Counted cross stitch pctW'e:
Debbie Davis, Deborah l£e
Grueser, Tammy D. Jolllson.
Quilted plctW'e: Sarah Cullums.
Crewel picture: Esther Ward,
Nina Craddock, Jon! J elfers.
Uquld embroidery picture: Mer·
rUee .Bcyant, Mellssa Coleman.
Rhonda MllUron, Reedsville .
Handmade purse: Kitty Pugh,
Barbara Murray.
Glazed ceramics, juniors: Becky
Broderick, Pomeroy.
Glazed ceramics, seniors: Mar·
leila Short, Olester, Melissa
Coleman.
Stained ceramics, adult: Tammy
D. Jolmson, Mellssa Coleman,
Barbara Murray.
Macrame: Judith Hill, Margaret
Bailey. Jon! Jeffers.
Stenciling: Melissa Coleman.
Other than above: Kitty Pugb,
Pam Riebel, Pomeroy; Carolyn
Nicholson, Middleport.

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Woods Mil load
2 Mllt1tro. IWw•l
from Ylllten
HOURS:
Monday· Thurstlay
10 A.M.·9 P.M.
Friday It Saturday
10 A.M.·11 P.M.
Closod Sunday

3 Mlln

"
~40

it

\11

year drew a record 00,000 fans to the
three-day event.
Tlie event, Frtday through Sunday at ta, Wood County fairground s
In Bowling Green, ls expected to
surpass that number, said David
Branban, spokesman from the
National Championships.
·"Iltis brings com pet Itors from all

STATE - Betty Jo H101l,
daughter and Earl and Glenda
Hunt, won outslalldlng for the
day .and number ooe lor lbe day
at the Ohio state Fair with her
demonstration on trail riding.
She holds a clock trophy which
she was awarded. Her demonstration Is being collllldered at a
winner for awards bebtg given
by the American Quaner Horse
As~. She graduated fnJm Eastem IUgh School this spring.

Ferry service._ _;(_Co_n_tin_u_ed_fro_m-,-P_;ag:..e_l_l- - - - - - - - - - - - - VUiage is do natin g much of the
equipmettl an d lal&gt;o r needed to
prepar'P lhP sitr 101 '""ding and
!urttl'r lmprovcrnt'nl. ThP PomP
roy Fire Department is also
assisting w lth tiM- proje&lt;·t, as well as
local boy scouts, and others.
OnlY site preparation is completed , tiP Gallla-M£&gt; igs CommunIty At-lion Agency wUI assume m sts
·for furthf'r_Improvement through
their summer youtll program in
which they provide job experience
and training lor young people.
Torn Reed, ~hamher vicepresident and a C. A.A. empio)'l't',
explained that young people in
· volved In the work wUI receive
training in bricklaying , landscap·

.,. .11: ......

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. . MArl"f JACI PAAA·
CIGE II llllMPGO •1111

.......
....
,.,.............

""'
llcb.
- ~
CtoiiOo
110-,nnllrloJ

ing, carpentry and welding, under
the guidance r:f. local professionals
In tlnse areas. Reed pointed out
that participating youths wUI not
only receive job expertence, they
wilt re Involved In an Important
t'Ommunlty project.
Nease anticipates most of the
work at the parks will be finished In
about two weeks. Once completed,
he said, the parks will be "lighted
and locked," from dusk to dayllght.
Chamber member Ron Ash. and
several other members, said they
were In support of a recent request
from Pomeroy VUiage Council that
signs and advertlsments along the
riverbank on East Main be removed In order to enhance the

appearance r:f. the bank. Chamber
said efforts bY. vUiage workers to
keep the bank clean are
appreciated.
Chamber member Mary Powell
displayed a sketch of the winning
en tcy in a recent Pomeroy flag
contest. Powell said three bY five
foot flags will be available at a cost
of $39 each. however. a minimum of .
50 flags must he ordered before
they can be reproduced.
Also on Thesday's chamber
agenda was Mary Ann Shato,
director of development for Buck- ·
eye H1lls· Hocking Valley Regional
Development Dlstrtct. Shato de·
tailed the purpose of her depart·
ment and how It can be help to
Meigs County entitles.

a

. . . . . .. .. !,

AVAILABLE AT
IIGM FARM CITY-992-2181

The Daily Sentinel

PHONE
992-2156
Or Wr1tt
Senlrnel ClaUiflfd Dtpl.

PH. 992·$682
or 992-7121

JEAFORDm
Real Estate~
216 E. 2nd St .
Phone
1·(614)-992 · 33·25 '

(:oUnty Board of Commis·

F11 All rm Ptlllilf Nuit

sionen.

'18113, ltc

POMEROY,O .
"~: m~
NEW LISTING -POMEROY
- Here os a louly nice home
011 a nice sto ee l at a nice
r11ce I''' story frame home
w1lh up to four bedrooms
full basemen! &amp; mcely de·
cooaloo Goeal yaod area lor
kods. Walk to.school. Abar·
ga uoal $29.9JO.OO.

'

RICE REDUCED - PO·
MEROY - lh os 3 bedroom
home on Pomeroy wonld

A summary of said Tax
audget may be reviewed in
~he office of the Meigs
,,t:ounty Commissioners bet·

• i\.

&gt;Ween tho houraof8:30A.M.
·. end 4:30 P.M . on or ahOf
Augull 1311&gt;. 1986. at tho
...Courthouse. Second Street,
.Pomeroy. Ohio.
Meigs County
Commissioners

Mary Hobstener, Clerk

..

NOW.
.
$500 CASH BACK
OR8.5°'
ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE FINANCING*

Card of Thanks

e wish to express our
sincere gratilude to all
that has helped in the
~ · death of our son . Don·
; ' aid Hood. and to all the
friends and neighbors of
Long Hollow Rd. We also
· Wish to thank all the
friends and neighbors
who brought food and
sent flowers.
Arthur. Donna and
Steve Hood

.

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NEW YORKER
'
CHRYSLER'S-5150
PROIIcnoN-PLAN

SUPER SELEOION
IMMEDIATE
DEUVERY

See liinitild - ~rranty'at dealer. CcNerS engine,
pciM!Itraon and against outer·boc;ty rusl·
through. Excludes leases. Restrictions apply. .'

THE WAY WE'RE DEALING~.;.QERYIHING· GOES~
·
SO HUBY IN NO:Vl . . .
·

Cooper Chrysler, 'Plymouth, DOdge · Inc•
399 South third
• Annual Percentage Rare Financing 1o&lt;
Dealer contributiOil
final

992~•421
retaol buyers
other
I

·

' Midcii.Port

Chrysler Credit Corporation on dealer stock.
terms. See dealer lor detaols,

.. .

rnake a great tnvestment or a

54 Misc. Mefchandise

NEW

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grand home. Level lot and up
to 7 ooorns tota l. Owners w1ll
sacnl1ce to sell $1 5.000 .00 .
PRICE REDUCED - PO.'
MEROY - Heoe IS a good 3
bedr oom foome pr oced to
sell Older 1'·7 tory horre
wo!lo potential to be a real
wonne o. $18.00000
NEW LISTING - Eastern
Oostrict- Acreage approx.
41 acres wolh 5 acres hi la·
blr. New one ll oor horre
w1tll basemen!, ~ bedrooms,
rnodeo 11 kolchen , lree gas. f .
A. heat. 2 car garage chain
lmk yard fence. lru 1l loees.
grape &amp; benv vmes. Great
Hunl mg1 $ 69 ,~0 . 00
NEW LISTING - TUPPERS
PlAINS - ~pp rox '" acre of
level land wrih a nice 12x65
Wondsor moble home woth a
15x21 family room additoon.
Natural gas al well heill price,
pkls gas royan~ $19. ~0.00

.

NEW LISTING - MIDDLE·
PORT - fantastic horre
with a.giganloc family room ,
with a beaut iful fireplace .
large liVing ooo m, 3 hed·
rooms. 211 baths, full basement , approx. ~ acre of
ground. $45,900.00 .

•

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Henry E. Clelond. Jr.
992·6191
Jean Trussell ..... ~9-2660
Dottie Turner .... .992·5692 ·

.---- m.· -,.
A

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NEW LISTING - Very noce
one floor 3 bedroom home.
Lovely sw1m pool. full base·
ment. dbl. carport on on e
acre secluded lot. Oak
lloors, formal donong room.
low heat bolls and shade
Asking $67,9JO.
NEW LISTING- 66 acres in
Rolland Townshop . Looooo
w1lh young t1mber and all
minerals.
NEW LISTING - 6 rm.
ranch, 3 BR, near Salem
Center. All elec., 33A acres.
LC water and carport Only
$32,500 .
MINERSVILLE - Good 3 BR
home on Rt. 124. New lor·
nace. carpeting. range, re·
lro g., basement. new roof,
garage and 2 porches. Just
$29.900
35 ACRES - Eastern
schools. Hard road , 9 rm.
home, carpeting, gas heal,
cellar, storm windows. in ·
sulated and TP water.
$48,000
$3,500 - 5 rm lrame. edge
ollown. All utiloloe s.
MIDDLEPORT- Nice 6 rm.
home on N. 4th. Lg. family
rm, 2 BR, lg. porch. garage
and Ig. lot. Asking $28,000.
LOCAT!ON - In Pomeroy
near the hospital. 6 rms.,
ooe floor home . Hot water
heat, full basement. space
for shop. 2 living r ms., dbl.
garage.
SUMNER AREA - 9 rms .. 4
BRs, tu rnace, carpeting,
hardwood, basement, 2
porches, 3 car garage and
43 acres with bldgs.
$45,000.
POMEROY :... 2 BR home
with full basement and
about one acre near the
Pim Hut for $12,000 or
good offer.
BAUM'S - Want a 200
x300 ~ullding spot that has
zoning, wonderful country
atmosphere.
TAlC£ OVER PAY.ENTS-4 .
nice bedrooms. 2 baths, car·
petinC, nice kitchen, gas fur·
nace .'" Pomeroy.

After 5 Call

742·2027

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
,
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

"Free Estimates"
InstollatiOil Availablt

2· i7 ·IMi-ttn

WANT IT SOUl? SO Iio WE.
~u 992·3325 •

Long Bottom, Ohio, 45743,

of tho estate of Clifford G.

DENNY CONGO

WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP $OIL

n•••lt•••

APPUANa

FILL DIRT

4/ lltfn

LEGAL NOTICE

August 22, 1986 at 10:00
A.M. for the purcl1aseofttw
Edna F. Welker r11l estate.

swer •••.

SPRII(G SOFT
Now A Small

Monthly Rontol
Plus lnitiallnttaltation
Puts ASoftoMr In Your
Home Today (l•se with
o,tion fa Buy!
lrKaiiJ Owno4, 20 Yn. hp.
DANS WATER R£FIN!NG
Wtst Sth Srroot
;304-812-2996 7·2 ·I

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

YOUNG'S

171 30: (8) 6, 13, 3tc

Offert will be received at
the office of Bernard V.
Fultz at11 1'h West Second
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio, until

Rusty Water?
Wt Han The An·

&amp;92-atse

Lena K. Neuelroad, Clerk

Public NQtice

Tired of Hard

SERVICE

Box 52, Long Bottom.
Meigs County. Ohio 45743.
Robert E. Buck.
P"'beto Judge

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CARPENTER
SERVICE

-

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Prices"

AddoM aJnd remodeUng
Roofing •nd gutter work
Corictete work
Plumbing and electric&amp;!

PH. 949·2801
or 949-2860

work

(Free Estimates!

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-16 -'86 tfn

992-6115 or 992·7314

Pom.,oy, Ohio

4-J5.' B6 1c

The real estate is a 2 story

•Freezers

4·5-tlc

FOUND : small IMii• gold wMf ·
ding band with initiall end dat e

REWARD offered lor ilforma ·
tion on bicycle teken from the
porCh of Henry VanMeter. 4th
Street, Mason, W. Va. contac1
J04· nJ·5538 . .

Wanted To Buy

We pay ca1h for late model clean
u•ed cars.
Jim Mink Chev.·Okt• lnr.
Bill Gene Johnson
614·446 · 3672
TOP CASH paid tor '83 model
and newer uud car1 . Smit h'
Buick-Pontiac, 1911 Entem
Ave., Gallipoli•. Call 614 -446

2282.

WANTED TO BUY uud wood &amp;
coal heater•. SWAIN ' S FURNI
TURE. Jrd &amp; Olive St. Oallipo ·
lis . Call 614-446 ·3159

Buying dait'i gokt, 1iiver coin s.
rings, jewelry, ltorling ware. ol d
coinl , large currency. Top pri
ces. Ed. Burken B1rbtr Shop,
2nd . Ava. Middlepor1, Oh. 614 -

992-3476.

Services
Help Wanted

Announcements

11021838 -8885 . EKI. 606

Oh 4663t .

3 Announcements
SWEEPER and 1ewing machine
rep1ir, part and •upplies. Pick
up and delivery. Davis Vacuum
C leener , one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Call 614 -

a,

Decoreled cakes ior any occa·
s~n . Weddings a specialty. Will
deliver for 1m1ll faa . 614· 992-

6601 .

J04-n3-6828.

Need bebysit1er 2PM to 8PM .
Pert. someone with children et
horM. Call 614- 367 -7269.
Domino'• now taking ftpplica ·
tions. Must be 18 or Qldor must
own car &amp; ha\o'e insurance, goo d
drivers record . Apply in parson
Signing up dealers oow for
Friendly Home P1rtie1. Earn your
kit by having Friendly Parties.
Toy• and Gitu. a good wav t o
make ell.tra income. Call your
Friendly Home Dealer now . Al•o
booking parties. Magno lia Nitz
at 614·992·3561 .

N"d

Wan1ad car pool to Marshall
Univarsitv on TuMdays and
Thur•d•Y•· Call Tina Gilpin,

304-875-2112 .
4

Hifingl Federal government job ~
in your area and oveufl!ll . Man y
imm&amp;diate openings withou 1
waiting list or tall . 115 ·
868.000. Phone eall refundable

Giveaway

Small lovelble blackdog, family
pet. 8 months, family pat. Sll

814-387·0644.

Sm.n lovable ~Heck god, 8
montht old . Call 614-367·
0544 .

Free mi•ed breed puppies . Call

1111111 monev1 FRIENDLY
HOME TOY PARTIES has imme·
diata openings for maneger• an d
demonstrators in this aree. It' s

easy, fun and profi11bht. We
have over 700 eliciting toy• •nd
gifts featuring the new animated
talking doll Cricket which will bo
advertised on national T.V. No
cash invastment. no colltctlng .
no delivering end no service
charge. All you need I• adesirato
mike money, h1ve fun and a few
hour• of spare time. No e•pe
rionc:e noceuary. Call 1-800

227·1610.

govtmmenl job• list.
t1&amp;,040· 159,230 year. Now
hiring . Call 80&amp;-887-6000 ht
3000

R·9806.

8t4-379·2313.

EASY

Grly and white female kitten to
give .way . Call614-992· 6919 .

$714.00 pet 100. Guaranteed .
paymW!t. No 11111. Oetail1 ·1end
Jtamp_. env&amp;iope: Elan· 716,
3418 Enterprise, Ft. Pierce. Fl

ASSEMBLY

WORK!

3 kitten• . 1 cat, 304-675·61 18 "

33482

Girls school clothn. sizes 10
thru 12 , 304· 676· 6602 .

Bebv•i11er needed in Pon lan d
area. Call lifter 6:00 . 614 ·84 3

6

Lost and Found

LOST Medium sin female ct:lg .
Black with white markings on
neck &amp; feet. Last ••an on
Kan· Herrilburg Rd . Call 814246 · 6566 or 814· 246 -5306 .
FOUND camera in hor~a barn at
Gallia Co. F1ir. C1ll &amp; ktentify,

614-388-9046 ohar 7PM .

FOUND Bltck. Lab. O.J . \Nhite

Rd. Coli 6t4·446·819e.

LOST C11h rewerd Lolt dog,
m1ie bllck lab. on O.J . White

Rd. Coli 814·0370.

LOST black aeddla bag with VHS
t1pa. Lost rew1rd if found . Lo•t
in Centenary and Gallipolis area .

Cia! 6t 4·448·4134.

Found: large white bird dog in
Hemlock Grove 1rea. ·Hal coller.
Call 614-992 -6919 .

6401

AVON , 3 open territories. call

304-875-1429.
HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES ·

11 your future 11ill un1eHied ~
Check into tho Army Na1ional
Guerd. We have good pay,
training. and up to t18 .000
available in lduc1tional benefit•.
Serve pert-time. 304 -615"3960

-or t·800·842·3et9.
- - --selling
-·OPENING AVAILABLE

Mani Mac ' • guaranteed line of
toy1. gifts, kame decor item• .
etc. NO delivering . coll ectin g or
Investment. Your houu_ Call
304·676·5758 Of 1-900 992
1072 .

REPS NEEDED for butines
accountt. Full-time. $60,000 ·
$80.000. Part-time. t12.000
118.000, no 1elling, repeat
bulln••· Set y(iur own hours
Training I)JOvided . Call 1 ·61 2
938-6870, M·F. 8am to 5p m
!cantr1lstandJMf time).

freme dwelling situated at

160 Hamilton Stroot In tho
Village of Middlopor1, Ohio.
con1il1ing of

3 bedrooma,

1Y, baths, kitchen, dining

room, central air condition~

ing ond

two .,closed

porches. lmmediate.pone•
aion . The right is reserved to
ra}ect anv and all bida.

Nova F. Ru11ott,

Executrix of the Elt•te

of Edna F. Wotkor
(BI 13; 14. t 6. 17. 1B. t 9,
20. 7tc

flEE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS
!;2 ·bi~~~~Utetizld H•rinc Air Selection
1 Swim Molds • Interpreting Servi~es

a:

.;z

L1SA M. KOCH, M.S,

'{ard Sales
f~W"-~'Il

..... :Galli'iioiii ........ .

417 Secood Avenue. Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

tfn
L....;..______..,______;;.,;;;.;;,;;..,&amp;l

&amp; Vicinity

Antiquo•. fl1twaU . dr8118fl,
stone jers, gun1, u1ed furnitura.
to~J . much more. Cent an..,.
Thurs. • Fri.

July 5tfl . yard sele 9 1dl dark
Gallipoli! Fe rrv . Rugs. bu:ycle &amp;
mtsc

S.le Thurtday August 14 . 2
mil..

from

Porter on

Cl1rk

ChtpM Road . Ewerything 26
cents. Rain. no Hie. 114 -388·
~--9 .

TOWN &amp; COUNIIY
VITDINAIIAN

CUNIC .
Paul E. Shcic.key, DVM

GREAT BEND EL!ORIC, Inc.
. N.I~C.A. CONTRACTOR

EvererMn.

SUU AMAL IIOUIS
Mon.-Wod.-Thurs. 3·5 pm
Ton. 6:30-1; fri. t-2 pm
!otur4ay 1o.tt :30 em
UIGI ANiMAL &amp;
SUIGIIY IY APPT,

For

liM•••

white houte with red blin:

Ctothtng, welder, mite.

• .,.,_ clothing. Old teo ot

365 Jack,.. A".

PH. 304·675-2441
.ND AREA CAU
Ripley .Office

Garege Salt Aug . 13 , 14, 15.
8:30·' Tum off At. 7 on
Bulavllle-Addieon Rd . First Rd .
to left behind Addt'lille School

Ytrd s"alt Thufl, . Fri . Children

PT. PlEASANT OfFICE

•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial

MHit

01110
llllil!lltkY

3 family yard 1ala. 7 Nonh Third
St. . Mason, W. Va . Aug 14 end

15. Thursdav and Frid11y. 9 .00

till ?.

Yard SAle, 102 Loeu ~ t St
Henderson. Aug 14 and 15

·······Poiii·ii;ov ·
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

on right an

463 Grent St. in Middleport .
Augult 14th and 15th 9 :004 : 0~ .

ht-'"·
RAc:t~E,

Ytrd SAle. Thurs ~tnd Fri. 9.00 1o
5:00, 50, Burdene Stroot

...

1nd Friday 11 &amp; 15 .

Cllrl1 -'~:• t1i &amp; I , awing ut, alee
more.
·

,
' Offk; t.tt-1431

Thursda y Aug 13 . 3 fam ily yst d
sale, 2 32 0 Mt Veu1on Ave
Point Pleasant .
..

1.t houeeon Q.,rgMCrMic Rd.
off Rt. 7. thura. 14 • Fri. 15.
8:001m to?

Sot. 38t LoGrondo81vd. 9,00·1

.RAYMOND E. P@OFFm (MAC;

·· · PtPieiisiillt

&amp; Vicinity

liclnsed Clinical AudiolOgist

- (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601

•,

engraved. Cell 304-875-2112
and identify

Baby1lner in my homo starting in
Sept. Send resumes &amp; •eferen
CGI toRt. 4 BoM 148 . Gallipolis

Kittens. Cell614; 446 ·3386. ·

R~DI~TOR

Newlun, deceawed . late of

•Oryen

PARTS and SERVICE

Care for the eldarlv. room,
board, laundry . 24 hour cera .
Reasonable rates. Lots T.L.C .

WE ARE TOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEAOQUARURS FOR
*ZENITH
*SYLVANIA
*SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATRUTE SALES &amp;SlJIYICE
•• HH.t Afill , ...

6263.

All Mabs

446-0294.

949-2263
or 949·2161

o•

FOUND female Dachshund ,
Rayburn Ro&amp;d area. 304 -676 -

11

•Washers •Dishwasher!!
•Ranges
• Refrigerators

ACCENT

NEW -IIPAII

REWARD, 304-678-26&amp;1
676-2267.

Empluymenl

985-3561

1/28 !11'

FENCE COli' ANY
PH. 992-6931

LOST, S1t. Maaon County Fair,
St. Albans elau rinSJ, $25 .00

SERVICE

1

ROOFING

LOST - Beagle, tri-colored,
male, 8 monthl"old. Ch.., on
collar. Nam1 Luke. CtH 304·
875-6481 . Btllemeade Arltl;

A~PLIANCE

(614) 992-7714

Howanl L Wrlt111l

F~ndonBaiiRunRd . Hondac•r :
or truck key•. Owner m1y claim · _
by calling 814 -992-3162 .

KEN'S

RBIIENCE PHONE

992-33453/2/tln

PAT HILL FORD

Probate

7-16 ·86 2 mo .

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Here
IUSINESI PIIONE
1614) 992-6!50

104 Mulberry Aw.. PDmll'ey

was appointed Aminiatrator

County

Ph. (614) 843-5425

We Carry Fishing Supplies

Copy Soni&lt;ts, fl&lt;.
m Mill St., Mioldltporo

John R. Newlun, Box 2•

Meigl

CALL COLLECT:

SALES &amp; SERVICE

hsinas Fonlllt

We can repair and r&amp;core rad tators and
heater cores. We can
also acid poi I and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

Court, Coso No. 25,19 2,

"Free Estimates''

New lo&lt;ation:
161 North !et:ond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

PLUS, Offito S.JIIOiios &amp;
Furniture, Wedding
and Groduotiaa
Stationery, Mognotk
S~ns, Rvlllotr StllllfiS,

Public Notice .

25,192.
On July 25 . 1986. in the

20 yeors

ICUT OUT fOR FUTURE USEJ

llhty

lun, deceased . Case No.

Worked in home area

No Sunday Calls
3/11/oln

CH!STEII-915·3307

LEGAL IIIOTICE
The Tax Budget for Meigs
~~ounty, Ohio. lor the fiscal
year 1987 was adopted July
16. 1986 by the Meigs

VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types

PIINT SHOP

S~·~

NOTICE OF
APPOINMENT OF '
FIDUCIARY
Ettalo of Clifford G. New·

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

PH. 949-2801
or 949·2860

6 Lost and Found

9

EUGENE LONG

THE QUAUTY

TV &amp;
Real Estate General

6-23·'86· 1 mo.

New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

Also Tr.. minlo•

RIDENOUR

Real Estate General

1-614-696-1337
1-614-593-8693

BISSRL
SIDING CO.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Dalll'f
111 Court $1 .. Pomtror. Dhro t1S169

Public Notice

Faria E•alplllelll

"VINYL SIDING
SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULA nON

6·17 ·tfC

over," said Branhan. "They just
don't miss Bowling Green."
Stock and modl!led tractors and
trucks, some drawing more than
6,00 horsepower from multiple
engines, wUI compete from $106,001
In prize money in 16 classes.
"They're bere to see If they can
compete with the best In the sport,"
Branhan said.

Serving this area
with PoweSeal seal
!oa ling and striping
and making of
Asphalt &amp; Concrete.

1 ALUMINUIII

At. 124, Pllmeroy Ohio

BOWLI NG GRE EN , Ohio (UPI)
- The National Tractor Pulling
Champlonslilps wUI reach a miles. tone this wee kend when an ex·
pectro 400 m rnpetitors from
around the world mark lhP ev£&gt;nt's
20th bii1hday.
Sanctloned by the National Trac·
tor Pullers Association of Colum·
t:~~s. the hom age to horSI'power last

U. S. tiT. 50 EAST
GUYSVIIE, OHIO
Authoriud John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Form Equipment
Dealer

1·3-'86 tfc

Roger.Hysell
Garage
Pat
Fonl of Middleport. Did
crew show oil their new vehicle at the lair?
maybe just a little," said, left to rtght; squad
members Frank Epple, Qlpl. Gary EDis and Larry
Byer.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

MIDWEST
SEAL &amp;STRIPE

Parte &amp; Suvlee

388·9\'-Pmo.

IJ

National tractor pulling championships

0

13

Business
Services
1""'--------T"---------r---------1
RED'S ..
1 CARRYOUT BOGGS

DEBur - , Emergency
Service team
members are always proud and pleased when they
gel a new squad. Middleport's new squad II just
arrived Frid:~J and yesterday at the Meigs County
Fair was Its first d:~J bt servlce.1'be new vehicle was

FmsT- The first meal pen ft rabblls was sold at tbe Meigs Coumy
Fair Tuesday altemoon. 'These Ne&gt;~: Zealand rabbits were seJecled as
grand champions daring the 4-H compellllon and then were auctioned.
Tom Stobart, Racine, left, raised the rabbits which were purchased lor
$100 b~ Gene .
·
of Whaley's Auto Parts. Darwm.

The

Ohio

Augu at 19· 24 First on e in two
years. At. 7 at Meigt Me mo'v
G1rden1 , tum on Cp. Rd . 32 • -,
Etglt Rldga Btthon Rd . go
~
mil•. Oi•h•. furniture. SJUnt."' ~·
e t 4·949· 2681.
: :

e·

August 14th 1nd 1llh. Follow

. '·...

s5gnl in Dtnville. A tin or shine .
8 :00 101 . to 4;00 pm ,

'

�" , Page 14-The Daily Sentinel
' : 12

SI1Ualiona
Wanted

LAFF-A-OAY

44

Will ..,. tor llktelty It my horN.
T,..,_. ..d.,.p. l14-992-1513
or 114-992-7314.
8p~11 ra~rsing

Clft for tllderty

3695

Room .,d bhrd lor toW iRcome

S.niDr Citilent . Ctl 114-1923595 .

2 bdr. upst-'rt apt .. untvmlshed,

c.,-p1tld. utiUtiM peld. No child·

Will duo bllbylitting in my home.
FIJI or pan-time. Ylld t.nced.

•on. no pou . Coli II 4-4481637.

Bohind Sd&gt;ool. J04-675· 2784.

Furn . efficiency •110 utiUtl•
poid. Adulu. Sh•o balh, 701
4th Ave., Gelltpolls. Call 441·
' ' 16 after Spm.

to Do

2 bdr. unfumllhld ept. In Crown
City. Coli 814-211·8520.

hp•ienoed bookkHP• t.ting
new acoountt. Call 814-448-

7093.

2 bdr. unfurn. with appl. It 111
Third Ave.. G•llipolls. t210
month plut utllltlll. C1ll I 1 4·
245-9595.

Will Clfl for lidl Of do houM
clftanlrtg P1rt time Call 814-

205-6642

C11t111 ~..., , . , ...... s,~•• •

Busine88
0 pportunity

NOTICE 1
THE OHIO VALLEY PU8LISH·
lN G co. ,.convnendt thet you
do busin•• with people .-u
,_
know, 1nd NOT to 1end money
throuctt lhe m•il until vou tlave
in"'est'; ..ld the offlfing.
I

efty, tun end profitable. We

- .r.ve ovM 100 exciting toy• 1nd

· gifttfeeturingthenewanimeted
tatking dDII "Cric*tt' · which will
beldvlf1iled on nltiontl TV , No
euh inv ... ment, no colleeting,
rp delivering .end no service
ctt IIQ8 Ally ou need it 1 delire to
make montN . hevefun and 1few
hou111 of lfJICI time. No eap•
ril!lf'IOI nece11erv . Cell 1 -800227· 1610.
Own your own jean -tportiiWitr,

ladiu apparel , childrent matemi1y, l1rge tiz:... petke,
dlnoeweer. acel!tttori.. or bridel

shop. Jord.che. Chic. lee, Levi,
!rod . Giuno. G~u . Catvin
Klein,
SergMt Vt4ente. Evtn
Picon e. lir Cleibom11, Mem~t
Onty, Gtsoline. Hethhtex over
1000 othen . 11•.JOO to
$25,900 inventory, training.
fiJtturM. gr~md open Wig eic . Can

16 days, Mr. Loughlin
18 1218118 11655

op11n

19.99 me price shoe ttore kom
liberty ftthiont.lnc. Unbeliev• bl• pr ice. for qultity thoet
m rmaly piced from t19 10

sea ov...

160 brlnd nam•·
260 uyl81 . One-time fee in·
cludtt inventory. buying trip,
.,.ppNes. instore uain·
ing, more. Ctn combine with
ovltf 1. 000 brendt of fHhton•
•· ~d .cc..IOrin Den Kostedty
501 -327-8031 .

fi•ll'"·

your own Jean ·
$.portsw .. r, ltdi .. tpparel,
duldrent -mautrnily, large tiret,
~ 'pwtite, dtnOIWsar, eccnsoires
· or ' bridtl lhop. Jordtr:he. Chic,
l ee. Levi, lrod, Oittno , Guest.
Lalvin Kletn. Sergio Vtnente.
fvtn Picone, lil Claibot'ne,
Membeu Only , Guoline ,
~ e altt.te• over 1000 otheu,
114,300 1o 126 .900 in'olentory,
treinlng, fil'll utrtll. grtnd open ing. etc. Ctn q~~en 1&amp; d-vs Mr.
Lou~ lin (6121888-4228 .
~ Own

.23

Professional
Services

Wo~ter w!Hia ser.~iced end drilled .
Free ntimll81 . Ctll 614· 992 ·
6006 Of 114 -742-3147.
Rey ' t~ Oeteil Work. Interior tnd
E Jftet"ior of autormbile at your
lnr:Jt ion tor 130.95. 304 -675·
6 771.

Rea l Estate

8
For 11le: Apartment houltl in
Pomeroy . 814-992-8022.
T1ke O\ler p1ymW1t1. 2 bedroom.
home in Syr~cul8. Cloaatoperk.
pool. 1nd grocet"y stort. Aklml·
num siding, c•rpet. tome fumi·
ture. Storegebuilding.sm~lllot .
814·992-3633 or 814 ·912·
2088 .
:----:--:-:---:---:,·lcNice 3 bedroom home. Sam,
gartge tnd orch.-d with 3ecrM
of lllld. Phone 614-742 ·2'80.

Modern 3 bedroom nome. redueed to t48.000 00. 304·
875-5047 ,"
12•80 mobile home •nd lot on
Hereford Ltne. Will conaidM"
tfldl. 304-571 · 2953.
3 bf rench nyle. famity room.
good loe.tion . New Hl\len.
304-882-3620 .
HDUM for 11le or rent Gallipolis.
Georg• Cr.- R01d, srNII
film. 25 eer... 3 bedroom
hovoo. 304-882-2714.
8 room house, b•n. 49 1cr•
1nd 7 YJ acrM of lend, Ashton, W.
Vo. 304-&amp;76-2779
Leon ere1, 7 rooms, yard. garden
1pot. School but route .
'15.000.00 . Aftor I 00 PM
304· 364-2459

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW AND USED M081LE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WEST. GALLIPOLIS, RT 35.
PHONE &amp;14-448-7274.
1986 Buddy. 2bdr.. 12•50.
12800. Cell 814-448·0390.
78 14.70 Rotemont. 3 bdr., 1
beth. AC. WB hook-up , t9000.
Posteuion 30 day1. CaH 114·
379·2SI5 Of 814-379-2508 .
12150 Shultz fully furnilhed.
Wather &amp; dryer, 1ir conditioner
on 85x171 Ill level lot. on•thirC:t
eaa g~rden IPICI. Located in
Porter. St. Rt. 110. Price
reduced for quidt nle t15 ,000
tlket 111. Term• mey ba IYiitlbe
to rtllponisble person with •u•
t1nt1al down paymenls 11 8%
intlfnt. C11h prefw1ble. Call
814· 388· 9893 it no tnlltr' call
Hunt. WVA 304-429-3395.
1981 Oekbrook 14~t70 eaplndo. electrir:l1ove&amp; refrigerator ,
furnace . woodburnar. 3
btdroorne, g•den tub, 2 full
bath1 , n.w. carpet, curtains S.
underpinning included .
114.000 Coll614-379 -2&amp;87 .

a••

3 bdr home. close to town. 2

pertty furnishiKI. Gas
Cel1614 -2•5·

h elrt . low utilitie~

9248.

-Hoose----:--:--:-:-:-:with 2-90ft. lots, 180ft.

0 " Rt . 7 go• to rivM Will t rede
for late model larger Clf. low
,.,iteege or st•tion w•gon Cell
814-894-3327 .

3 bdr . ranctte•. cond .. nice lwei
lot. fh . 7 Crown Cily. C•ll
614· 256-6762 .
Prle«&lt; to sill 3 bdr. bi-lwel
hon., locattd It 8 Willow Dr.

HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES ·
Is your future still un11«led?
Chtct into the Army Nat ionll
Gvard. We h1vs good pay,
tr~lning. tnd up to 118,000
1veillble in lducetional bentfit1.
Serve part-time. 304 -875· 3950
o• 1-800-642 -3819.
14•70 3 SA . 2 blth mobile
home. 17000 or belt offer. Will
t1he trlde. 114·941-2101 .

1 •; 1 bllhs. l•rgeflmityroom with
tirepiK I . central 1ir, at11ched

gareg•. ahown by appointment.
Cell 814 ·448-0848 .
Very IPOCi .. offer. Own• murt
sell this small but underpriced
home loc-'td on Mill Creek St
Cto•• to tha nM 1wimmingpool
in G1llipolis . C1H 81'· '46 ·
2839 .

3 bedroom. 1 h b•th home with
r1nge. refrig . woodburnet' on
1A . lot near Crow., City . Call
814 -441·1541 .
Quelity homtl, newt¥ remodeled
cholce tot:etion on Collegt Ad.
Syrtcute. new completeltltchen
end leundry. •lr condlttoned,
lergelot. 114·992·5324 .
8 room hou11. 1.2 •cr81 . Double
c• prage. Located on Rose Hill.
8 ,,glin prlc«&lt; no.ooo. C•ll
814-t78-2&amp;13 .

RHd•vllle, by owner. Two for
thl ptlce of one. 2 bedrooms,
living, eNning room. kitchen.
blttt with ••til room. All fully
c..,ettd. Lergt poreh. fenced
yerd with ntiftite T.V. Alto
ep..,m.nt which , "'etudes 1
bedroGm, ltvlng room. kitchen
aru with bath. worklhop and
heM•.own
9 .,.111. Forced sk
watlf w.. l. t1 rettot and m11nte·
nance trH akllng. t41,000. Call
&amp;14-371-115&amp;.

e••

7 room• wllh bath. ger~ge end
buikllnge. 2'h acr•. Closa .to
tehool •nd .tor•. S1titlit1 w1th
rotor end power borc . 11•·7•2 ·
2581.
Government hOmtl from t1 . fu
rtiP~r-) . OeUnq'*'t t .. prop~ .
R•passtttlont. C.. 101-117·
1000 En. H·IIOI tor cuntm

·:::::.
- 'll
:.t::..--:~-:-::-- ·lc1 bedroom 2lh bath. llf'ge
kltcl't-'· · ~ yelf'l ntw. 1 milt
0101 a1 RlllloOd- 1n.ooo. 1.11
ec:N. 11•30 'ool end dltdl.
114·"2· 3143.
4

roomo. bllh,

Fire dameged building. &amp;09
M1in St., Point Ple11tnl. 304·
882-3358.

8t

Acreage

38 ecre f1rm 6 rooms &amp; b1th,
gil well, frH 911 &amp; oil, 1100 lb.
tobecco b111e. Rurli w1ter,
teverel building lott . 6 miles out
Buleville Ad . t89.&amp;00 m1ke
off4M' ., Metvin Mooney. 814·448·
3008 .
Athton building lots with public
weter. mobile homM permitted,
304-678-2336 Of 304· 516 ·
22&amp;7.

MOBILE HOMES MOVED ' in·
aured, r..1on1ble ret•. Csll
304-576-2338
1979 Molty P•rk, with upendo.
heat pump, eJieelllllt condition,
304· 67&amp;-1810 Oftlf 4:30
1978 mobllt home, 12d0. 111
electri c, p~rt il lly furnlthtd
•noo. 304-578-2909. 304·
67&amp; -2263 .
1982 Cleyton, 12JI80, all elctric,
e•c cond. 304·&amp;78·248&amp;.
Mutt sell, 14x70. 2 bedroom.
1h btthl, carpllld, furnlthed.
porch, utility, 2 expandos. Al most 1 double wlds It t lingle
wide price. All electric .. on rented
h1lf acre. No rt~toneble off..rolulld . 304-871 -6704 .
1 2l'll18 edd on room whtl cerpet,

11 ,&amp;00.00. 304 ·518·2890.
33

Farms for Sale

10 acre farm nNr GsiUpoU1. 8
•cru tillable. 40 tcr• pe1turt•
woodland. F~rm pon1 • grHn ·
houee . Good 3 bdr. houH with
~~:entrel air &amp; Nfll Wit•. R•
duc ed price to sell. Write to
Htrold lhevor, At. 1 Box 201A.
Bidwell. Oh 4511' or cell
814-367-0135.

a..utifvl home in Fla1woodl
.,.. of Pomeroy. 17 tcr• &amp;
opring fod _.t ovolloblt. CoH
814-448-23&amp;9.
21 ecr• whh tobacco biH lf'ld
3 outbulkllng1. V. milt up &amp;ug•
CrMk n.., Crown City. Ce•
814-388-1123.
Bu1inen
8ulldina•

...,..,.,. thtvu"""". Forc:od "'
fuol 011 Jum,.., ~· conllllonod. Dtl. ltyle rtataurant tor nle
C - - ' ll!'fliO. m....... Ndlng. 0 ·1. licens1. ucllllftt bulln. .
LooMed on' ftGry' l Run Ad. C•M' opp. Locotod ot 39 Coun 8t.,
114·H7-7511 or 114· 317· G1lllpolil. Prictid to Mil. CaH
0381 . •
.e14·441· 0021.

3 rooml &amp; beth', furnished,
utilit81 turnllhed. t200 p.mon . 1200 deposit. no children.
no poll. Coil 614-441-3793.

1 bedroom apt. for rent. B11ic
reot lttrts t215. 1 month th1t
include~ 1H utilltl•. Depostt
required ot t200. Contact VII·
htge Menor Apt. Middleport.
614-992· n87. Equei Houting
Opportunity.
Pomeroy 2 bdr, Ntyk)rt Run.
•176 mo. t 1 00 deposit, y1rd.
patio, Callefter 6pm 814-9828888.
1 bedroom apt. in Pomeroy.
Completefy remodeled kitchen
furnl1hed. All new Ngs. 814992· 6216 or 61,· 992-7314.
Ap1rtment on Main St. in
Pomeroy. t121S p• month. Call
814-992·8059
One bedroom 1p1r1ment. Unfurnithed. t150 per month plus
utililie1 . Cell 614·992-5&amp;4&amp;
d•y• and 814 - 949 - 2211
1Yening1.

36

One bedroom unfurntlhed. tottl
electric apt . Wetar, sewage end
g1rb19e collection free. 614·
992-2094

Real Estate
Wanted

1 to 2 ecr11, Green School Dist
or real nice home. Call614 ·416·
4307 evening•.

For rent : 2 bedroom fumi1hed
ept. Adult• prefefted . 614-9922749.

Rentols

1 bedroom 1pt. in Middleport .
t175. per month 1100 depo1it .
114-992 -8611 dev•. 814·992·
8783 evenlngt,

41

Houses for Rent

3 bdr. houu, Spring Valley
Plan, no pelt, 1 or 2 children.
Ref. &amp; deposit. 1400 month.
Coli 614·446· 1323.
IS rooma house fO'I' rent inquire
910 Second AVe., G1llipoli1,
Oh . No phone c1ll1.

Ave illbie Sept. 1. 4 mil• from
Holzer holpital. Just off 180.
t310 dep.. 13&amp;0 p• month,
Ref. required. CeH 1ft81' 8PM.
614-446-7167.
Av1ilable Aug . 13th complertely
new interior, 2 bdr. unfurnished
haute. Gar1ge atorege building.
Ref. &amp; dep. req . C1ll 814·,48·
9686.

2 bdr. good cond .. 59 Gtrfield
A"'•· U26 mo., plua t15D dep.
Cell 814-448-1828.
2 bdr. house unfurnished, no
pets, reference needed t166 1
month. t100 depo1it . Cell 614·
448-3617.
2 bdr. houae on Dry Ridge Ad.
Patriot, OH . 1170 mo. including
water . Cell 8\l'e. 614·446 -4703.
2 mK1ut11 hom new Gt llipolil
Pool! Mint condition, 2 bedroom
house with n.w plush carpeting,
dreperill. windows. insulation,
wiring. House is spotiNsl U50
per mo. C1ll 614-286-&amp;110
2 or 3 bdr. houH In Middltport,
1ir cond., dishw11her. el'llc. loc•
tion . CtU &amp;14-448·9205 1fter
&amp;,15.
Underground home loceted old
180 in Evtf'g,.en . 2 bdr .. no pet1
or childrtn, U80, t10Q HC.
dep. Call 814· 4•8-1758.
5 room hou11 for rtnt in
Pomeroy. Cell 814 -992·15413
tfter 5:00 .
t171. plus deposit tnd referen·
c11. Loclted Southtidt, WV.
304-676-1165.

APARTMENTS. mobile hornet,
hou1 .. . Pt. Ple11ent end Oellipo·
lit. 614 -441-8221 .
APARTMENT FOR RENT · Now
accepting 1PPIIc1tions for rente!
IPirtments In Muon Apts li·
mited . Two bedroom apts It
t198 .00 ptr month. Rentel
11t11 m1y be higher depen4ing
on income. Hou1ing will be
a"'aillbla to etteh applicant nt·
gardl111 of their reca. color,
religion, till or neturel origin .
lnternted •PPiicanta ahould call
304-773·&amp;011 or confect D•
n/11 Streib or Weher Juttice ..
th8 m1in office. 1178 Brice
Ro1d. Aeynoldtburg . Ohio
'3068 or ctll 614·883·•614
Furni1hed 1p1rtment on Viand
St&lt;Ht. 304-89&amp; ·3450.

45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms and
light house keeping roornt. Perk
Centrll Hotel . Ctl1 614-4'8·
0756 .
Roomt for rent. dey . week.
month. Galli• Hotel. Call 614·
448-9580. Rent 111ow 11 t120
month.
Furnl1hed room 1,6. Utilitill
pd. 919 2nd Gall ipolia. Shlfe
b..h. Single male. Call 514·
446 -4416.

46

Space lor Rent

Mobilt homt tptce. good loct·
tion . Cllll14·448·3817.
COUNTRY MOBILE Homa Peril ,
Routt 33, North of Pom•oy .
Lergt lott. Calll14·992-7479 .
Trailer IPICft. tfNII ctlildren
tceaptld, Rt. 1, Locust Rosd ,
b1clt of k &amp; K Mobile tiome .
47 Wanted

to Rent

HouH for nle or rent. Krodel

P11k , r•ferencu. 304·882·
3745 .
2 bedroom hou1e in Leon,
references, plu1 deposit. phone
304-458-1 B06.
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

New E11tern High School pricipel~nd

wife need hou11 to rent.
Proftfabty In E1111m Local District. HIYI 7 rooms of fumlture,
need large home. Ca11114· 98&amp;·
3328 bttw"n 8:00 tm and
4:00pm ..

Ml!n:honrlise

Tr1llers for rent , Aircond., ctbte.
besutiful river view, lhnaugt.
Fo1t1r'1 Mobile Home P1rk.
814·446· 1802.
12d0 2 bdr. petio, ectgeoftown
588, n0 pet1, deposit, t1150
monthlv. Cell 814·44&amp;·7124
before 1:OOPM .
2 bdr. trtil• furni1hed. W.O..
quiet mt"ied couple. 5 min.
from town. Cell81 '4 -448-4083.
2 fully furnithed adult• only.
U1ili1i• ptid. Call 81•·•41·
4110.
2 t.droom, mobile home. t171
mon1h, t100 d1901tt. You PlY
u1llltl•. Adults, no pe1s. 114·
149-2234.

- - - - - - - -lc14x70. Two bedroom wfth room
lddiUon. Above Flecine, Ottlo on
20 ICfel. frH gN. 1220 per
month, pert c:tn be WOfUd out.
Coil 304-372-1031 .

3 bedroom unfumiMed trail• In

counlfy. 1200 .., month. t1 00
dlpoo~. You PlY goundtloctric
bltlo. CoM 114-112-2791 oft1&lt;
1:00 pm ,

2
34

-3-,o-o-mo
""'&amp;~b~o~th~.-n-.,..
-c-...,-.,-.n,:...,
&amp; clean. Clote to •hopping,
u 15 mo. All utillli• peid uc.
elec. Cell 614-448-7615.

2 cemetery tots. Ohio Velley
Memory Gardens. G1lllpolit.
Ohio, 11.000.00 . 30•· 876·
3107 Of 304-882-2476 .

A Fruna Hou11, 2 br, new y11d.

portly llfmilhod.

'I

'l ld' ngs
U
I

For Sele: 150x90 ft. r:ommtrci•l
1oned building. Irick cconstruc·
tion. Large garage doors, South
Fifth Ave. Middleport. Pttone
514-992·HI8 deyt, 814-992·
5113.114·992-2028eveningt.

35 Lots
7 rooma. Beth 'h. Ch•ter
Village. Move in before school
111r11. R.tur:ed t25.000. 81'·
985-3571 .

-~~-

battl l.

Regtncy Inc. lptrtment 2 bdr.,
utilitill partty paid. ni011. Cal
304-876·51 04 Of 304·875·
7926

Modern 1 bdr. apartmem . Cal
t-;;:::;;;;;:;;~~;::;;~=-~;:;:=~;;::;:=====1
814 · 44 6 ' 0390 ·
31
Homes for Sale
34
Business

Need eldrn montv1 Friendty
1"0 me toy pen in hat immlldilte
op .. ings for m~nllglrl and
dllmonauatora rt ttlis ,,... lt't

~

Furn . 4 rooms &amp; b.th ciHn . No
pets. aduhl onlv. A1f. &amp; dep.
required . Ctll 614-.UI-1&amp;19.

" 'Conan the Barbarian' lives
two doors down. I'm Conan
the File Clerk."

FlflitrlCiil
21

'""' ... .,.., .~· ., ..,...

br trill•. oentr.t elr, tullable

so.

... """"'' ond .... child. '1
pluo utllhiM. 304-171·4011.

-old

2 bedroom tr~l•. add on room.

(IOfogo, I milM from l'vtnl
~~~- lit. 2 Nonh
" V" , UOO.OO unrurnlh"~·
U21 .00 fumlohod oluo utllflloi
no.oo dlpooll, :1104-171·1241
oftl&lt; 7 :00.

'N' CARLYLE

Apartment
for Rent

1 end 2 bdr. epts. tor rent Basic
rent for 1 bdr. t171. l11lc rent
fo&lt; 2 bdr. U12. Allo e200 - ·
dop. roq . Cloto 1&lt;! Foodl.,d .,d
Spring Vellar Plat. Jackeon
114-441·
EIIIIO A... 3817 . fquel Housing
Opponunlty.

1n "'""'" tro ... Con 114-,.2·

18 Wanted

Wednesday, August 13, 1986

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

51 Household Goods

lAYNE 'S FURNITURE
SotAs end chain priced from·
t318 to t99B. Tlbl• t50 lhd
141 to e125 . Hide·t ·bada 1390
to t881. Redn . . t2215 to
*371. Lemps t28 to 112&amp;.
Dlnett• t108 11nd up to t49&amp;.
Wood table w·l chlirt 128&amp; to
e79&amp;. Dook noo .., to 1375.
Hytch• t600 .-.d up. Bunh
bed• complete W·mlttr•te•
Uti •d up to t395. Baby
btds •110 • 1171. M1nr•u•
or bo• aprln11 full or tWin 183,
firm t73, 1nd t83. Queen Hll
Kine 1380. 4 c~r-··
oh• *IIJ.
t89. Oun
Clblnlts I . 10, • 12 gun . 011
or alecttio rantte t37&amp;. Blby
Ul • f45 . Bod
tram• tJ;O. 130 ' King frMte
ISO. Goo&lt;l otloe1lon a1
bld1'06m tull•. m... t Cl·
"'"-''· hNdboarde t30 ll'ld up
., tel.

uza.

o,....,,
m..,_

UIOd fumhuro: WMhor •
dry1J, • • JW!gl, eledrlc renge,

bo!f-.

tmd aotor TV. wood tlble • 2
bode. droooor, •
recNner. S .mt. aut 8u111¥Hie
Rd. 0 .... lAM to IPM, Mon.
lluu Soc. 114·441-0322 .

10 1101. -

hot Wit.. h - ,
worbgood, ..s . Ctl114-3170214-l.

Kot.lnoiOr

175-1711 .

-lc

novo, 304-

urry Wright

73

Vans

8t 4

W.O.

1980 Canvwted ChrtY v1n In
excellent oondltion . a ..uttful
Interior &amp; exterklr which it
loldld with optiont. Eacellent
for cemplng. Prlnd reduced:
114-182-4255 .

K•more wuher t7&amp;, K•umre
Wleher IVOCidO Uretn t71S.
Wllklpooldryor n&amp;. -rlpool
Wllher til, Olbaon rlfrlclt~r~tor
lrGII frH 115, Pllllco rofriaoro·
tOr evoCido gr... til, Whirlpool fruit frH
*95,
rlfrlg•etor h~_, gold tide by
lkle t185. rlfrig.-ator white
by 1kle •ule. 2 electric
reng11 30 in . coppertone t125
ea .. 20 ln . u• flnge t71, wood
• coli bumlng sto\lt t200. OE
WlshlfiYOCidO green t180. 12
cuft. freuer t125. Sklgas
ApplilllCII Uppll' River Ad.
814-441-7391 .

79 Joop Chorokoo 3&amp;0 .,g.
outo, trono. AC . CoH 814-245·
&amp;214.

,.,ria•••

•'d•

74

M11~ing

81 Hond• Shadow. kJw mileage.

Green elec::. renge 1100. CeN
114-448-3059.
Pick1n1 U1ed Furnirure. Good
qu1lity u1td furniture. Open 9to
&amp; or call for eppointment.
304-815 -5493 .. 875-1450.
.
SWAIN
AUCTION llo FURNITURE 82
Olive St.• Gellipolis. Nr.v &amp; used
WOOd· COal ltGVII, e pc wood LR
tulte t399 , bunk bed• *199.
antron reclln•s 199. new •
uaed bedroom auttn, r1ngH,
wringer wuttefl, &amp; lhoM . New
livingroom tultea t199- t699,
lamps. al1o buving cot!&amp; wood
11o"'"'· Call 614-448-3159 .
GOOD USED APPLIANC£5
Withers. dryers. refrig•ators.
ranges . Sh1ggs Appliences,
Upper RNer Rd . beside Stone
Crest Motet 814-446-7398.
County Appllence. Inc. Good
uted appll1nces end TV sets.
Open BAM to 8PM . Mon thN
Sot. &amp;14-446·1199. 627 3rd.
Ave. Gellipolis. OH .
Velley Fumlture. ni'N &amp; u1ed.
Lerge tection of quality furni·
ture . 1218 Eutern Ave .,
Ge llipolil .
Check our enryday low prices
on furniture &amp; eppliancet. Mol·
klhen Furniture, Rt . 1 North.
kan1uge . Cell &amp;14-446·74«.

Cellth~n'a

Used Tire Shop . Over
1,0001ir" , litel12.13, 14 , 16 ,
18. 16.1ii. 8 miiH out Rt. 218.
Call 814 ·266 ·6261 .
Plutlc ci1tem 1t1t1 epproved,
pl11tic aeptlc tan~. piPtic
culvlftt, metel culverts. RON
EVANS ENTERPR ISES, Jeck·
ton, Oh . 814-286·6930 .
Childert Saw Suppty, Vinton.
Ohio. C1ll 814·388-8&amp;84 . August Special1. 20% off Echo
IIWI. 20% oft Echo trimmers.
Hu,qvamiiiiWI, chtlntaws18"
111 .60 . Otr oil gtl. 14 .00 .
Chein lherpening. reptir work.
Open 8·5 Mon .·S.t. Closed
Wed. &amp; Sun .
Nr.v country dream homll!l . Built
tor you . 118,995. 4 bdf ., 2 beth.
See thil model today . Call
114·888· 7311 .
For sale lower kitchen clbinets
in "'II'Y good c:ondition . Cel
614-448-6278 after 3PM .
King tiled Somm• flotetlon
mattrelllfld foundltlon. Retaill
for 1876. esking U76 . C1ll
814·448-3386.
Sellt'l10 HP g~rden trsctor with
mower 1tt1chment, used 1
1ummer t850 over t1 , 100 new .
Coil &amp;14-441· 2231 .
Air conditioning 12 ,000 BTU.
like ntw , 1200. C•ll eve. 814448-4703.
1974 Ford Mevericlt 4 dr .•
44 ,000 milll . 1979 Ford CUI·
tom \lin low mil•. new tiru.
1975 1•~~:86 trailer need1 work,
good buv. 22 treveltrtiler. Ctll
814-448-211&amp;.
Hydrtulic wood apllter
IIW .

8r dlllln

Call 81,· 388·8343 .

4•8 truck topper flb4M'gllll
1200 26 ' glrlo 3 opd. bicycle
130. Sltrt fOW'"Q IJICifCIIOr
1&amp;0. Colll14-448-&amp;271 .

Baby bed &amp; ml11rHs t30. 2
baby bedtpacka, beth tubs,
oth11 misc. blbv llems. SwMI
corn t1 .00 dol . C•lll14 · 387·
0101 .

Smith ~r~d W•aon lmm. Hmlluto piltol . Two 14 rd megs.,
cuttom sights. E•cellsn1 condition. 1380. 114· 0St2-7270from
9 to. IS.
Se110nld firewood for 11le. Call
614-98&amp;-4484.
Blua hrty Amwicen couch .,d
chair. Oood condhlon. •100.
814-185· 3&amp;37.
Color TV . 21 lndl Admlfll. For
information CIH 114-992-1123.
4&amp; in &lt;It cotor tv t800. 2recliner
bedroom sutte
12&amp;0. 814-992-8022 .

ch lift t71S ..ch.

8 ft. Fibr,IMI truck toPP•·
t250 . Ctll 14·888· ... 11.
Surplus rent II ck)thing 10 oents
and up . S1m Somrvllle't. (Mov·
ingl87 SurdetteAddn, b'ailerfor
...... 304-175-3334 .

c:tl*•·

Dinette 111 with 4 swtvet
Aefrlgar1tor. OYel full o111.. k.
Phono 304-17S-1318.

doll•••·

Flr . .ood, 130.00
ue.oo yoo ht!ul. 304-115·
&amp;839.
.

One Itt weddlnl rln11. one malt
-ding bond, vtlluod 1300.00
wll toll f121 .00. 304· 882·
3112 Of 882·2471.

6&amp;

Building Suppllel

Building Motori.W
81odl. b~ck. - • ..... win·
_ , lintllo, oto. C...do Winton, ~lo Orondo. 0. Col 114245-S121 .
lulfdlng m11erlals, oeJMnt,
*"'ookl•llslzH, y•tfor.wtv.-y.
Oolilpollo llodt Go .. 121~ Plno
It, Oolloollo. 0""' Coli 114·
446-2783.

~ONHIE

ill Gomer Pyle, USMC
(]) Ill Cil ABC News

CRII'ZV!

Pole Building• by Ou1li1y
Bulldert. Worklhops. cerpons.
•nim~l shelt111. 91fllllln. Free
tit/metes . Phone 114-189·
7121 .

63

6 yr. old regtltered grey quer1tr
horse gelding tired bv J1y
Jim•. Kid brokt. Clll614-3888801 .

-=:-:--:-:-:-----:--

1 1978 AQHA sorrel gelding hal
Blo~. brick. monar 1nd m•·
been 1hown in w11t1rn pln1ure
tonry ILIPPIItlt. Mountein SU1te Md thownmen1hip . Excellent
Block. Rt. 33. New Heven. W. youth proapect. Cell 814 · 388·
VI 304-882·2222.
8185 .. 814-388-8252 .
56

Pets for Sale

Trens port o! 11111

0Jegonwynd Ctnery Kennel.
CFA HimiiiVIn, Pertian 1r1d
Slam•• ktnant . AKC Chow
puppiot. Coli &amp;14-441-3844
1ft1r 7PM .

71

Must tell 3 ptlrl ot ring necked
dov11 with c-ue •eo. Cell
814-143-2760.

84 Chevette 4 cyt., 2 door. 6
apd., AM ·F M ca11ette. low
mileage. Call 61 •·448 ·0137
lfler 6PM.

Reg. Beegle pupt 4 mile 14
welka okf. A 2 yr. old male UO

each. Celll14-241ii-9!78
Beegle puppia1 . 2 left . Pure
b&lt;... tl&amp; ooch. 114-742- 2788.
Briuany Spaniel pupa. 8 weMcs
okt. *30 .00 etch. 304-468·
1727.
Dobermen pupa. O.C .• t1il1
docked , wormed. t&amp;O.OO tech .
304-773-5840.
57

Musical
Instruments

Autos for Sale

1983 Ford Escort euto. cruiu.
wire rima, t2,398. John's Auto

Seln. Bulaville Rd .. Gallip61ia.
OH.
1984 WV GTIIS tpd .. ak cond.
Caii8U ·266· 1203
1918 Pon1i.c Fir41bird good
cond., n-.v tir•. exh1u11 . paint.
Coll814·446· 1622 .
79 BonniYille. 2 dr., 301. V· B,

76,000 miiM. Good condition.
Air, cruite, AM·FM. U&amp;OO . C1ll
114-448-2472 .
1973 Oodge Dert
814· 448-7287 .

••oo. Cel

Special Pitno PUtch•e 1hip·
ment ju11 errhred . Chidcering,
Spinet Pi1n01, W1lnut or pec1n.
R~. 12,395. Solo t1 ,488.
whlletht'( ltat. Nor~in checktM
apecill order. C""" out prices on
.., remtining Kimb1ll Pl.noa In
ltodt . The Pltd Pip4M' toll fr• in
WV 1-800-142 -3441: In Ohio or
Ky . 1· 800-624 · 3498.

&amp;4 Ford Falcon good 1h1pe. C•ll
814-446·1388 .

Flute t100.00, bend 1t1nd
110.00. Flule pt•v• excellent .
304-882-3477.

1973 Pontiac Le Man• for ule,
or will alii perts. Cell 514-949·
3001 .

58

1982 Chevatte . 4 IIP•d. bcel·
lent condition . 11900. 614·
742-3142.

8t

Fruit
Vegetables

Red re•berri•. T1ylors Berry

Petch . Cal 614-448 · 8892 or
814-241-&amp;5064 .
Canning tom1t011 alratdy
picked, 15.00 butflal. Clll Joan
Hoger 814· 241-651&amp; .

118&amp; HDndl XR80, lltC oond.
147&amp;.00, "'" 304-615-5272

-oft~or:6:::00;;=P~M~.~~;:==
~
75

Livestock

1980 Trent AM rebuilt eng.
euto. P&amp; . Pl. elr. dh. nereo &amp;
CB, ex c. cond. Asking 84,700
bllt offer or trlde. Bookl for
•&amp;.2&amp;0. need ttetionwegon or
pullt'lger Vln . Moving 814·
441· 2745.

8oet8 and
Motors for Sale

SAVINGS
'BANK

I .IIIII Sllflfllli::,

ti LIVI'S i.ll:l\

1979 Ford Feirrnont Squire
111tion WIQOn, 304·882·2296 .

1182 VW Rol&gt;bltt L.S ., 4 door,

elr , 4 speed, AM - FM,
11 .11110.00. 304 ·&amp;75-2829 .
81

Farm Equlpmant

CROSS. 8011111.
U.S. 31 W•t. Jockoon. Ohio.
614· 281· 8451 .
M•uy fergueon, New Holland,
Bulfil Hog ••• • Service. Over
40 ~.t tractors to ahooH from
&amp; COfl1)11te line ot new • uMd
aqulprntnt. Llf'IMt •IHtton ~
&amp;.E. Ohio.
JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER. SR 3S W. GoUipoNo,
Ollio. Coli 814·441· 8777, ....
114·441· 3192. Up hnt woc10rt wHh Mrrentv over 7'5 used
•ecton, 1000 110011.

Utllly b!da: SPl 30 'a40'd '
wtth 1 8;•1' •lkl• • 3 ' ...,_
door. •1 . 288 trected . Iron
HOfto lldgt. 114· 332·1745
oolect.

'74 Ch"V pickup 1400.00. ·n
Oldo •uoo.oo. Pllono 304n&amp; -SZ72 .

'73 Plymouth Fury, 318 automlltlc. PS. Pl. t1150.00 11 l1.
Call Bonnte Durst 304·878·
1424.

72

Trucks for Sale

1978 Chovy Luv 4 opd .. radio,
..erp. *1 .489 . John 's Au1o
Solot, SutovHit Rd .. GoHipollo,
OH .
1882 Oodgo PU llgh1 duty, 221
brown whh crum
fM»ergl•• topper. Cell814·387·
0314.

4 spd .,

1170 1000 Ford d._l trecto,
bottom Int. plows
UtB. I f1. wood ..,..., hot
ltliO. New Idea ctyna bounce
mo"""u .-lnollloon- Mtl.
Coil S14-211-MZZ.

1111 Dodge~ ton 4•4 club clb
pickup, ~w mH-ae, 380 .,..
gin e. 1uto, PS . PB. eh. new dru.
front end, wH:h lodl:·out
hube, ere. cond . uklng t4.700
bMt offer or trtdt. Boob tor
e&amp;,'JOO. nllld t11'donw81Dft or
pMIInflr ven. Moving 114·
441· 2741 .

MO lntemationll tractor, Fer·
mtl wide ftont end oommtricll

1178 F-100 ford truck. "00 .
114-742-2141 .

u.•o. '

loMI•. 4 plows, 2 roM no ttl com

pllft1er, 40 toot ttl'f'etor. 1 old

w-.

corn Ilk*•. aanspon dllc,

mowing .-lno. olll'o dull
Coll114-381· 1300.

3 lllodt -frill f2,800. Col
S14-381·1111.

w.,

J .D. 4&amp;0 dozer, I
billie.
win .... c.,.py, 114· 742 -2321.
Mlohlg., 71 II 4 drtvo.
· Nbber tired lold•, ,4x24"
tlr•. I cyl, Wlglno. 21; .
ylfd - ... u .ooo. Col :1104·
411· 10,1 .

82

bt••·

1174 GMC lfUCk 10 ton, hovy
Glty. 1173 Joop CJS. Phono
304·175-1318.
1878 Cliovy C10 pldtup, outo.
trlf'l~ . Pt. pb, tltor1 whet~ ban.
mil•. bOdy .-ad. Nnt
good, .........
1-1n1
- 304-17S-3734.

•.ooo

aw...

'71 Ford XLT R.,gor, thloo
..., . 'ton, ..eo engine, eutomollo. dou... fuol,..loo, PS. PI,
304-112-JZH .
' 72 ford . plokup, Outo, gDOd
...... 1100.00. 304-171·2171 .

Wanted to Buy
73

Now bu¥1n1 lhtN CIOfft or ••

tori--.

aom. Col
Rhlor
City fort11 IOflltllf, 114·441·

210.

Vena

&amp; 4 W.O.

Chwv C·30 • - von wllh
1177 Ccnollt .,gino. A·1
ol&gt;nd. loll or trodo. Coli 114·
241·1111.

home·s-director is slandered
by an 4n8crupulous TV re·
poner . 160 miri.) (AI
Bom free
(!) Superbouts Muhammad
-Ali vs. Ken Nonon (New
York, September, 1976).
(60 min.)
·
IIl 1!1 Cil Perfect Strangen (CCI A conserve1ive
Larry is shocked by Balki's

rn

1•

ALLEYOOP

Servlct: s

free-spirited behavior after
Balki is introduced 10 the

Home
Improvements

c ustom of American dating.
(R)
fJ) IIl MOVIE: 'Follow
That Dream·
(I)
MacNeil-Lehrer

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondltklnel llt•lme guarln·
tee. Loc.l refer•cee fumtlhed.
FrH tlti~Mtet . Call coiiKt
1 ·•14·237·0488: diY or night.
Roger• 81tement
W1terprooHng.

Nowshour
(1ZJ MOVIE: 'Bon
Voyage Charlie Brown'
llll Survival Special (60

EEK&amp; MEEK

111t.

DATI~6

Sfi&lt;!JI(f. HAS

A 1\.WJ I.£GAL AF'fmb(H .

'loW Rc::t&lt; A GJ..H 'lJJ LJKf.

.. .GIVb. "THEM HIS ~S ...

Pump ..... lf'ld llf'Vict. 304·
S91 · 3802

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINrT-:H.-R_O_P_ _ _ _""""'---, ,---;::,..------""""'-,

C1ll Emle. c1rpen1ry, remodeling, skiing. roofing, concrete
work. btock, palntlnl. Fru 1111·
motM. 304-171· 11 2.

MY D.ADA5KED ME WHICH
r 1D RATHER HE qAVE ME
FOR MY B IRTHDAY...

A NEWBIKEOR
THE5TATEOF
COLORADO

MY DADHA5A
WEI RD5EN5E
OF HUMOI&lt;.

CARTER 'S PWMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth lf'ld Pine
GoHipollo, Ohio
Phone 814·.UI ·ll88 or 814448-4417

BARNEY

Good-1 E•ceveting, btllmentt.
footer~ . drl'IIIWiya, ltptic 11nk1.
llnd•c•ing . Call tnytlmt 814·
'4CS-4537, Jun .. l . 01vi1on.
Jr. ownar .

10:00

'MORNit-J'

TAl STAT!
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

PEANUTS

1163 StO. A.... Gollpoolo '
614-441·7133 Of 614-441: ,'
1133.
~

R. M FumhuroM.-..f-rlng. ',
St. Rt. 7, c - n Citv, Oh., Col &lt;·
814-211-1470, ... ,.... 814- ,.
441 · 3411. Old •
Upho-.
'

••w '

W11EN '(()U LIVE ON
TI1E DESERT, 'r'OU I-lAVE
TO WATC~ OUT FOR
RATTLESNAKES...

lflcounft-21~. Th0""" •

42 Uprising

43"-

Macahre"
44 Likewise
45 Join in

D

CD ® Phil Donahue Examines the Human Animal: Nature and Nunure
The effects of nelural and

DAILY CRYPI'OQVIl'IU--Here'a bow to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW
One letter stands lor another. In this sa mple A is used
lor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apa~trophes, the length and lonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different .
CRYPTOQUOTE

8-13
Z

Z

T

MKVX

JU

IIl Love Connection
CDBCTV
&lt;Ill Grwtest Aclventu,.:
,

M.n'oVov1111etothl~

~~

c..on

' 11':.10
Best of
· •
TOI1igltt 'a (IIHIS11 are Tori .
..
G.r, Tom Oreessn ahd
LW&gt;Ce Boman. (60 min.) IRI

... -.

, . JI

'

AJKHS

P T I

M' FQ

OFJOHF

T H H.

I P F ZE

In

Swao.

V IT CS
AJE -

VIEFFI

zu

U FE

&lt;IDIDI Nowa

e

;

I'

NZVP

P T L: S

I J

I P E .1 N

NTVIF S

T US

C F

PJ K E

v.

-- MFEUTES
MFEF U V .J[;
Yeoterda,'• Ceyptoqaote: THE 01 FFERENCE
BETWEEN PERSEVERANCE AND OBSTINACY IS THIIT
ONE OFfEN COMES ffiOM A STRONG WILL, AND THE
OTHER fROM A STRONG WON'T. -- HENRY W.
·BEECHER
Cl 11M King FeiUel Syndicate. Inc

(!)NFL Filma

~--"
-·· ~

in fumh:ure 'wptt.oiMit•;g . Cell ' ·
304 · 171·4114 lor hoo

\

40 Separated

IIl Bill Coatoy Show

-.

""""' ·~
~

Barnes attempt to work out

News

A TWO-PRON6EI'
STICK IS A GREAT
DefENSIVE WEAPON ..

r"Tl'-r.-

381181i81l
physicist

e

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

.

37 Allow

C1J MOVIE: 'The Wrecldng
Crew'
t 0:30 (}) American Snapshols
IIJINN News
(llJ lmovation: Allergy
BluH Research of allergy
1re1tmen1 is examined from
Baltimore's Johns Hopkins
Medical Center.
1t :00 .Ill CIJD (I)® . lliHlll

~;:~~;;~;;;;:=~1
87
Upholatery.
~

1

letter

wnh him after several years·
separalion . (R)In S1ereo.
(lJ
(1ZJ Ril8 Rita and Me•

. tic City
. 10:0&amp;

26 Due to get
ruler
27 Penneate 39 Cow call
29 Health
41 Sylvan
resort
deity

36 Hebrew

Matthew returned to live

e

W•ttenon' s Wa1er Heullng. :
fMIORibl~ rltH , lr:nmedil11""
2,000 gollon dollvory, clttomo, ~
poolo, woll, otc. ..K 304-178- ~
2919.
•l

34 Aquatic

31 Magicoan's
word
3~ Early
French king

em

'

bread

24 Unsociable
animal
25 Chief
38 Late Yugo.

30 Lout

own hotel in London, Billy

;;D:;;II;:Io::,d;;',:-:W;;:ot::.,:-:-:D:-t:Hv-t-'1'--~C:::Itt. ~
ems, wells, pools. Anytime but,..
Sundl'f. C.lll14-448·7404. :-;

32 Viewpoint

33 Succinct

'-:-+-+++--

hires a female security officer with a mysterious nature. (60 min.)IA) .
Soap
CIJ Flnt Contact The 1930
search for gold in New Gui{IBB is captured by rare film
footage. (60 min.) (AI.
~
llli CBS News Special: Big Gamble in Atlan·

•

20 Bound

23 Break

,_..,,.....;...,.,....,_
fiXtUre
24 Foreign
27 Devoutness "
28 Afford
29 D.C. group
(abbr.)

ders the offer of having his

Ken '1 W1ter Service. Wlfls
cittemt. poolt end w11.,.,..
fllloji, CoH 114-311-0823 .,..
114· 311 -1741 Of 304 -875 - ~·

kidding"
8 Sea cow
11 Roman
Catholic
order
14 Tall
17 "Now"
in Italy

Levin

person's character are &amp;Je w
amined . (60 mtn.l Pan 3 of
5.
CIJ II (I) Anhur Hallay's
Hotel ICC) While Pe1er pon-

J1m11 Boys W.t;., Service. Alto
poolt filled. Celll14· 256· 1 141
or 814-448· 117&amp; or 614· 446 ·
7911 .

Yesterday'8 Ana""r 11111

overflow
7 - you

23 Office

learned charcteristics on a

General Hauling

5 Infant

6 Volcanic

22 Aut.ltor

parate rooms .

A CUP OF COFFEE TO
OPEN VORE EVES IN

group

4 Poem

afresh
13 Corruptible
15 O'Neill
play
16 Feather
scarf
18 Macaw
19 Gambler
21 Me181

a family problem when their
two daughters demand se·

THAR"S NOTHII\I' LIKE

12 .. 7.

12 Begin

e

Excavating

tttlm*t•.

DOWN
I Clergyman I South
American
II Thrash
9 Dwelling
Indian
10 Ancient
2 WhiM&gt; poplar
Syria
3 Musical

alligator. (60 min I (A) In
S1ereo.
llll Firat Conlact The 1930
search for gold in New Gu• ·
nea is captured by rare film
footage. (60 min i(R).
9 :30 IICD00You,Again7Henry
flashes back to the day that

,..,.ir,

Mo ...oy'o Uphoii!Ofint

+K6 2

I

ACROSS

swamp. host to many animals, · is the domain of the

Plumbing
8t Heating

85

s

by THOMAS JOSEPH

bia Senior Tournament Pro

(I) llurnt • All!ln
(!)~

(I) WICRP' In Clnalnnall

I
.

.

I

IKU

~tW·"""'

Ootjbles '(2 hrs.)
Cil fJ Cil MacGvver ICC!
MacGvver is taken hostage
by a group of revengeful inhabitants from a desolate
lend. (60 min.) (R).
Cil National Geographic
Spacial: Realm of the Alligator ICC) The Ok efenokee

Rotary or cable tool drilliftg.

83

.7

South bad a tough decision after 1 ~~ 6
~~
East bad opeaed with four hearts. •.. .
• A K Q J 10 6 u
AnythlDfl could be right, but four t 1og 5 2
t QJ a
spades seemed the best c.boice. With + QJ 10 9 8 7
+5 4
three bearts Ia his own band, and at
least seven hearts with East for his
SOUTH
p~pt it wu likely that North
+A K J 10 5
~ould hoid spade aupport and be short
: ~~ 56
ID hearts.
+A 3
When dummy came down, declarer
Vulnerable: Both
felt comfortable until be won the club
Dealer: East
ace and played a high spade. When
East showed out, declarer suddenly
Soa..
Nortlt
bad four loeers. sun, be bad to play on. Wtst
4+
West's failure to make an opening lead PUJ
Pass
of a heart suggested that be bad none,
so perhaps there could be an eliminaOpening lead: +Q
tion play. South left West holding the
Q-7 of spades and played the king ol ' - - - - - - - - - - - - '
clubs and another. When East showed
out on the third club, South let a dia· .
. .
mond go u West won the trick. West dummy and ruff m his band, mlklag
played a diamond and declarer won '~ contract.
the ace and kinl and wu now able to ' Suppoae South bad doubled four
ruff the third ~- Only now did hearts. North would probably have bid
South play the king and IIDOther spade, f- spades but would have had DO
locking West Ia with the lead. Whatev· chance to make It, since East would
er minor suit card West led would en- Stl\rt by taking two heart trlcb.
able declarer to discard a heart from
••• lm!IPAPD- _...._

that he .and Julie move into

I

NORTH
+88132

James Jacoby

the Chief's bedroom , he
forces Nell and the kids to
face the realily of the Chief's
death. lA) In Stereo.
(l) 700 Club
C!l PBA Bowling: Colum-

Mott well1complettd umed~J.

82

By

IB MOVIE: 'Whose Uftt Ia
It, Anyway?'
8:30 Cil 0 (I) Mr. Sunshine
ICC) When Leon believes he
has inherited a large sum of
money. he sets out to tell off
the dean. (R).
9:00 U CD @ Glmme a Break
When Jonathan suggests

remov1l. CeU 304-176·1331 .

a•a

Telescoping
four into three

"min. ~

Fetty T'" Trimming, Jtump

rooting,

BRIDGE

IDJ 8

Roofing • Painting. up.
peintlng lnsldt or
' 11 Must~ng II, new paint end out. Fr• Estimate. LOCII Al'flrrlbult motor, •eoo.oo or best . onooo. 304-871-7991 .
off~r. 304-170-2864.

1185 Plymouth Voyeg4M' lolded
•klnu no.soo.oo. 3CM -175111&amp;.

u m

o••

Sterk• TrM and LIWn Stn~ke,
ltndtc•ping. 304·171·2010.

•lid

II / I'P Lit:'-!: ib HAVE
A p~p ""LJC WIT'H

1979· 18 ft . Wilderneuctmping
treiler, Temdem wheels. cere
free IWnlng.
or electric
refrig4M'I10r, good tlr11,furnec1, ,
eacellen1 aandltktn. Contect or
Odell Men lev 180 leech St.
Middleport, Ohio . 814·992 ·
7271.

1912 Chevrolet Celebrity, ••
extrll, Muih motor and trlnl·
million, excellent condition. ctll
304-11&amp;-2273 .

For 11le or 1rld1. Oir1110
bttlt, wil trtdt tor girls regular
blit or lllllor f71 or booloflor,
Coli 814-. . 2-7304.

~MONEY TALKS~

(jj Alice
@Jeopardy
7:35 ([) Major League BNeball:
San Diego at Atlan18 12
hrs., 30 min.)
a:oo
® Highway to
Heaven Jonathan and Mark
fight to save a home for
unwed mothers after the

MY MONEY.

Cenning tomttOM tor ule. C1H
&amp;14-247-3081 .

eft4M' • :00 PM to 1:00 PM.

on location for his upcoming

special, ''Don Rickles on the

loosb" .·

1980 Ch1mpion 19ft. 1rensv1n,
self-contaln.:t . 1leep1 8. rebuilt
.,..gine, ntw tires, brakea, inte·
dor. Air euto . trent., PS, PS .
CNile, ClfgG boJI, roof II'
tvlillble. Alking .9.700. B11t
offer or 1t1d-1. books for
t12.000 niNd stetionwegon or
PIIHnglf Vln . Moving 814 ·
448-2745.

1982 Chtytfer Lebaron. Sh1rp.
AC .. Pow• ••ts. power win ·
dowo, AM.fM. 814· 992·6241 .

59 For Sale or Trade

@J WKRP in Cincinneti
@ Whael of Fortune
7:05 (l) Green Acres
7:30 U (I) (I) New Newlywed

ball's Greatest Hits
f!J) IIl Taxi
0 Ill @I Wheel of Fortune
(]) Up Pompalll
Gl Gil Ent-inment Tonight ET JOins Don Rickles

RINGLES 'S . SERVICE, o•p ..
rienced carp.-.ter, alet:tricien,
mMOn. peinter. roofing (includr
ing hot tar •pplicetion) 304·
875· 2088 Of 87&amp;-1388.

1984 Chevy. 4 door, brown,

Newshour

FRANK AND ERNIE

I'

While viewing an abslract collage at 1 local art gallery,
one woman commented, "Thai just goea to prove, you
ahouldn1 throw out ANYTHING."

MacNeil· Lehf'er

Game
(!) Major League Base-

1979 Wild•n"' cemp• atlf·
contained. Call afttr &amp;. 614·
448-3918.

RON'S Telev ision Service .
HouH ctll1 on RCA. Ouuar,
QE . Sptciellng In Zenith. CaQ
304 -571 -2388 Of 114·441 ·
2454 .

YIMIDA Y'S SCUll-IllS ANSWERS

Ill Gil Divorce Coun

79 Motors Homes
8t Campers

1981 Chevette. Stand1rd. tlr, 4
door. browr- 'cyt. 56 .000 mlln.
114-949-2283.

good cond. c1ll 304-8715· 7475

'I•

Potato -- Young -- Whirl -- Jaunty -- ANYTHING

®I News

Trentmilliont. All types. Over.
front. rear, 4 wheel drWe. Pricea
llar1 t100.• Will deiNer. Ca.ll
614-379-2220.

1879 Chevy YJ ton pick·up.
&amp;14-992 ·8241 .

Ooldln Queen eotn, 1crosa from
Bo~o School or coli 304-6713246.

by lilllng In lhe missing - d t

you d....elop from llop No. 3 below.

I

Cil Jeopardy
Nightly Business Re ·

ITil

I&lt;Uf.~ '{OU'R~
RIGHT!

Auto Parts
&amp; Acce88ories

Exterior &amp; Interior stucco. Pill·
til' &amp; pl•ter rep•ir~. Low r.t11 .
Coil 814-2&amp;8-1182.

19n Pontile Orend Prix, good
running wnd. AC , PI, PS , PW,
CNilt , 304· &amp;75· 1598.

Complete lhe chuckle qUOied

1.--.1.--..1.-..J.L-....L.-.1.---J

pon

VtAH, DAD, I

C1nnlng tomttOII. 14.00 bu·
still pic:hd, U .OO you pick.
(brlng contelnerl Meuh1ll
Ad1m1, Letlrt f1H1 e14· 24 72066.

Yellow Fret Stone Canning
Peach• now tvtlhlble. Cell for
pricn 1nd varilti.. . Bob'a
Market , M110n, W. Va. 304·
773-5721 . Opon 7 doyo.

0
®

9370.

1978 COfvette. 67 ,000 miles. 4
opood. Aoklng "000.· Coil 614·
949-2102 ..,.. 5:00.

1880 Thund.-bird . Excellent
oondhlon. Can beJeeninOerwin
on St . At.33 at M1rtin res.

"the computer

Loren .

85 Honde ATC 260 R racing 3

81

t...,--.,~,...;:_,.:~

'

fill CD Hogan's Heroes

wh..ler t1 .600. C1ll 814 ·441-

76

· • ·
· ·
ate H." Now, H's
r-~-:-----, dlac- - . "

(I) Doctor Who
®I ID Gil CBS News
ITil Body Electric
@J Welcome Back, Kotter
7;00 U CD PM Magazine
(l) Men from U.N.C.L.E
(!) SportsCenter
Cil Entertainment Tonight
Interview
with
Sophia

'84 Hondo 8&amp;0 Night Howk.
304-S71· M53.

55 Building Supplies

0

Ill Inside the PGA Tour IRI

THINK!!7 I'LL
&amp;0 TO AFRICA aECI\U6'E
VOU'RE 1\LOJoiG,,. HE'!&gt;
IF

I"C· cond., t2,200. C1ll 814448-4SeO lftor 8:00.

1---------r---------i

II Cil (W NBC News
Cil The Rifleman

6:30

R

I ,~ IT I! I Ii
f
I I ~ 1~ IE Tl' Ii ml~~:; ~m!!,~'::~·':'C:
BADELG I
I '--'T:Ia-"-r.:-l,-1 0

(jj One Day at a Time

CAPTAIN EASY

1985 Hond• Shadow low mi·
exc. cond . Call 614-256·
1941 lifter 5PM . .
.,

S1let 50 percent oHI Fl11hinO
arrow stgn t20tl t.lght ... nonttrow t289 1 Non -lighted *2291.
Free letter1l Few lett. SM
loc attv . 1 · 800 - 423 · 0113 .
anytime.
Commodore Computer ktyba•d with T.V. tdept• end
instruction bookl. Al10 full tlze
W•t Bend Humidifier. CeH
614-992·7440.

(!) Mazda Sportsl.oolc

Motorcycles

IMgl,

Used Refrlg•retor. full size m111r•1. couch . Corbin &amp; Snyder,
614-446-1171 .

T

News

ffi Graen Acres
CIJ Father Knows Best
fJ) CD Slar Tret&lt;
Cil Reading Rainbow ICC)
ITil Living With Animals

Electric rang• good cond. C1ll
814·446·44153 .,ytimeor 114·
441-4347 efter I or exclt)1
1
weekands.
refrla•alor &amp; ltove.
Brend new, Hoi Point, elmound.
Both te&amp;O . CoH'814 ·441-4453
or 114-445-4347 atter &amp;PM .

I I~ i I! , I I

UCDCIJDCIJ008(D) OO

6:00

1977 CJ -8 Joop 8 cvl .. 3 opd.,
wench &amp; toft top, n~ headers.
Coli &amp;14 -448-8173.

CllOntt._ . . . .

(I) ABC Newt Nlgltilllte

Auiiin tl\y Llmlta
AlOe '

e (Jt T.J. Hoaller Hooker

.

contron1a Romano when
.. he

does not shoot a fleeing
cop-killer. (70 min.) (R).
IB T110pper John, M.D.
12:oo m Jack a.nny
C!l Major.._... llaeball'o GrwtHt Hltll
CilEntenalnmentTonight
with
Sophia
lntervltw
Loren. (R).

'

�1.6-The

Sentinel

Ohio

---Local Briefs:--- Budget law authors
Middleport firemen amwer calls
. The Middleport Fire Department answered ~ calls dlirtng July
tnclud!Dg 10 fire and 49 emergency calls, Fire Chief Jeff Darst
reports. AU vehicles ol the department were driven 1, 'Tl;.7 miles for
till! month.

Villoge police action detailed
Middleport's PoUce Department made 89 arrests during July,
Pollee Chief Sidney Little reports.
'lbe department Investigated six accidents and aU vehicles were
driven 5,562 miles during the month. Merchant police collections
amounted to $48 and parking meter collectk&gt;ns 1Dtaled $981.69. There
were 531 parking tickets written.

Pool to close Thursday
London Pool, Syracuse, will be closed 'lbumlay lor the Meigs
Coonty Fair. The pool wDI also be closed Aug. 26-29 and then reopen
Aug. :IJ.Jl. The pool wDI be open for the last time on SEpt. 1 with free
swtmmlng.

Kiddie tractor pull results
Fifty three youngsters competed In first day kiddie tractor pull
events at the Meigs County Fair Tuesday evening.
There were 281n 1he 35 to 56 pound division with B.J. Erwin first
place winner of the day and Robbie Murphy, second . Fifteen took
part In the 56to75pound weightclasswtthllrstplace going to Bobby
Roush and second to Aaron Brown.
Dally first place winners will return to the fatr Saturday to
compete for the grand championships In the two weight classes.

Middleport mayor's court
One defendant forfeited a bond and seven tthers were fined in the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Forfeiting a $450 bond posted on a charge of drMng while
lnloxicated was David L. Rose, Little Hocking.
Fined were Anna J. Wllllamson, Rutland, $425 and costs and three
days in jail, drMng while Intoxicated; Tony Hutton, Rutland, $25 and
costs, disorderly manner, and $100 and costs plus restitution,
destruction of property; Gregory A. Taylor, Pomeroy,. $19,
speeding; Jerry Moore, Middleport, $25 and costs, disorderly
manner; Rick McClellan, Middleport, $100 and costs, possession of
marijuana; Richard L. Stewart, Vintori, $25 and costs, open
container, and Sam McCloud, Middleport, $25 and costs, disorderly

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Au·
thors of the Gramm-Rudman bal·
anced bodget law want to attach a
proposed repair of the act to a bill
that would lift the federal debt
ceiling, so Congress can leave for
vacation knowing the government
will not go broke.
Hoose Speaker Thomas O'Neill
said Tuesday he would llketopassa
"clean bill" to ll!t the federal debt
ceiling untll mid-September, when
Congress gets back from Its
scheduled break and deal with the
Gramm·Rudman problem later.
But there was a move in the
Senate to ltnk the Gramm- Rudman
repair to the debt bUl, and O'Neill
acknowledged that situation also
could confront the House.
Authors of the balanced budget
law, Sens. Phll Gramm, R-Texas,
Warren Rudman, R-N.H., and
Ernest HollingS, D·S.C., planned a
news conference later today 1o
announce they would try to IJ.llthelr
repair - an attempt to address
problems in the law found unconstl·
tutlonal by the Supreme Court onto the short-term debt bill.
Witlxlut the hike In the debt limit,
now at a record $2 trtlllon, · the
goverrunent will run out of borrowIng authority Sept. 1 - right In the
middle of Congress's summer
break.
The House Ways and Means
Committee scheduled a meetln,g
later today to consider a blll 10 Hit
the current debt Umit by about $ffi
blliton-enough to last untllSept.l6
- about a week after Congress

Meigs Coonty Emergency Medical Services reports 11 calls
Tuesday.
Rutland at 3: 16 a.m. to Meigs Mine No. 2 lor David Jones to
O'Bleness Memorial. Hospital; Racine at 5: 48 a.m. to Riverfront
Road for Shirley Abies to Veterans Memortal Hospital; Rutland at
11: XI a.m. transported Uoyd Martin to O'Bleness Memorial
Hospital; Middleport at 1:41 p.m. transported David Mitchell !rom
the fairgrounds to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 2:09
p.m. to Peach Fork Road for Kathryn Hess to Holzer Medical
Center; Pomeroy at 3:17p.m. to East Main for Edna Smith who
refused treatment; Middleport at 4:06 p.m .1D Riverside Apartments
for Jason Phalin to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 4:42p.m.
to Southern High for Mike Sharp who was treated but not
transported; Pomeroy at 4:54 p.m. to Pomeroy Pike for Rev a
Slmms who was treated but not transported; Racine at 5:07p.m. to
Southern High for Jeff Sharp to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Tuwers Plains at 11:54 p.m. transported Terry Newsome from an
auto accident on Ohio 248 to Veterans Memortal Hospital.

New surgeon joins clinic staff
Dr. Allee Grlcoskl, who once
served a portion of her residency at
Holzer Clinic Ltd., has joined the
cllnlc staff fulltlme as anaddllion to
the department of surgery. .
A Pottsville, Pa., native she
received her bachelor's degree in
!Xology from Chestnut Hill College,
Philadelphia, where she graduated
magna cum laude and received
tnterdeparmental honors.
Grlcoskl earned her M.D. degree
trom the Washington University
School of Medicine, St. Louis, Mo. ,
in 198l She then completed her
post-graduate work, doing an In·
temShlp and se!'Vlng a residency in
sureery at the University of
Clnclnhatl Medical Center. She
completed the residency this year.
For the past year, Grlcoskl was
chief resident and clinical instruc·
10r In the department of sur&amp;f'ry.
She Is certified In Advanced
Trauma Ule Support by the
American College of Surgeons. 1n
June d. this year she was awarded a

S!!nate Budget Committee Chair·

man Pete Domenicl, R·N.M., said
he supports attachment of the
Gramm-Rudman repatr to the debt
blll as a way to "send a strong
message to the people out there that
we Intend to comply" with Gramm"I think this Is for real,"
Domenlci said.
The repair process Is also
Included In the Senate's version of a ·
yearlong extension of the debt limit: ·
but that blll Is also tied up in
numerous other amendments In
dispute with the House.
The law needs fixing because the
Supreme Coort declared its key
automatic budget cutting procedure unconstitutional since it called
for the comptroller &amp;f'neriil - a
legislative, not executive, officerto make the reductions.
The Senate would !Ike to remedy
the Gramm-Rudman problem by
transferrtng some budget-cutting
power to the president's OH!ce of
Management and Budget, but
House leaders are opposed, saying
that gives too much power to the
executive branch.
ln an attempt Io delay the Issue,
O'Neill said the House will pass and
send to the Senate this week a
simple Increase In the debt limit,
putting off the divisive Issue until
after the summer break.
O'Neill said he had an agreement
with Senate GOP leaader Robert
Dole d. Kansas to go along with the
simple Increase tn the debt limit,
but Dole's position was unclear.

. Prtdq ...... Su.lldaJ
OJanoe d. &amp;bowen and thunder·

ltAXins

Friday through SUnday.

Ohio Lottery

Fox
................. 8 p.m.
Shady River Shufflers .•. 8: 30
p.m.
Friday a.m.
ShoWIIHlll of ShoWIIIftl .. ... 10
a.m., show ring
Jr. fair food a. nutrition 10:30
a.m., hW stage
Pet show .. 1 p.m., show ring
Horse harness racing. 2 p.m.

Daily Number:

650
Super l..ouo:

19-20-7-13-42-9

•

Rudman.

at y

M...aly c~ tonight, wl&amp;h a
low In the upper 645. Maatly
cloudy Friday, wl&amp;h highs In the
upper 808. The probability ~
preclpllatlon Ill near 111!1'0 lonlflhl
and 30 percent Friday.

•

enttne
25 Cento

Vol.36. No.71
1986

STYLE - Kassle Lodwick, nlne'DIISlHlid cJaultlter of ~ aad
Jbn Lodwick. was lravellnlin lltyle aUite Melp County Fair TUesday.
Biding In this repBca of a covered wagon, Karen, accompanied by her
mother, a brother, Travis, and a cousin, Sarah Lodwick.

Repeal backers request time
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Frankfln County Common Pleas
Court officials have been asked to
grant petitioners opposing Ohio's
mandatory auto seatbelt law additional time to place a repeal
referendum on the November
ballot.
'lbe lawsuit asking for 29 additional &lt;lays to collect signatures was
filed Tuesday by Phillip M. Ma·
nogg, a Newark attorney, In he half
of 2.145 plaintiffs, mainly !rom
northern and eastern Ohio.
The lead plaintiff was James H.
Alexander of Newark, wbo falled
earlier this year to collect the
required number of signatures to
qualify the referendum lorthe Nov.
4 ballot.

I

Alexander and the other plaintiffs
said Secretary of State Sherrod
Brown and Attorney General An·
!bony J . Celebrezze Jr. unfairly
consumed 29 days rl. the 9&lt;klay
signature collection period In February and early March whlle
verifying that the summary and
text of the petition was accurate.
The petitioners complained that
the penple were denied their
constitutional rights to a referen·
dum CJl the matter. They also asked
that the law be declared
unconstitutional.

GRAND CHAMPION STEFlt - Jeff Parker,
Eastern FFA, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jan Parlo!r,
Reedsville, shows off his steer, whlcll cWail grand

champion at the Jualor Fatr beef show Wednellday
altemoon. He Ill pictured wl&amp;h Kevin Grueser,
Southern FFA, who had the ~ champion stl'llr.

CHAMPION PAIRS - On the rtp~ Ginger
Holcomb, Salem Center GcH;etters 4-H Chlb, shoM
her champion pair of market hop. She Is the
daulh!er of Mr. and Mrs. Everett Holcomb, Rt. 3,

Albany. With her Is Delanl Baker ~ tile AUred
Uveslock Club wllh the reserve champion pair of
market hop. Baker Ill lhe daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
&amp;hen Baker, Reedsvtlle.

GRAND . CHAMPION BEEF SHOWMAN Mldlele G - Alfred Uveltock C..b, tooklhe IJ'IDd
champion beef showman at the Julllor Fair beelalllw

She Ill the dliapter of Mr. and Mril. Michael OueM,
Tuppen Plains. 'Die reaerve champkln beef
sho'WIIIIIII In compeUIIOII was Paul Colllno ~ the
Alfred Uveetoek Chlb, son of Mr. and Mn. Charlell
Collloa, ReedsYIIIe.

EASTERN HILL
SHOP
Area deaths j 5FABRIC
miles north of (hester, Oltie

GRAND CHAMPION MARKEr HOG - Eric
Powell, Alfred Uvestock Club, son of ·Mr. and Mrs.
Ridge, Reedsvtlle, took lop
Ray PoweU,
hollll•l'lln the
PIOO!red will

him Ill Mary Parker of the Alfred Uvestock Cllib,
daugllter of Mr. and Mrs. Alben Parker, Sumner

Road, Pomeroy, who had the reserve champion hoi.

SEWING NOTIONS
QUILTING SUPPLIES
HANDMADE CRAFTS
POUND GOODS

Sherman L. Tillis
Sherman L. Tlllls of Rutland died
early Wednesday momtng at Veterans Memorial Hospital. Funeral
arrangements are pending and wlll
be announced later hy the Hunter
Funeral Home.

OPEN MON.-FRI. 10 A.M.-5 P.M.
SAT. 10·2

.-------------------------------,
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I'M BusHED - II takes a lol out of you when yw're tlree years old
and you've spent your whole day at the fatr. On the way up the WI from
Tuesday night's demoBtlon derby, Macyn Ervin of Racine catches 40
winks on Mom Patricia Ervin's shoulder, wWe dad Herbert Ervin
watches the show.

RE/TAURA

Distressed student kills man
NEW YORK (UPII - A voea· program, wielded a .38· caitber

tiona! student's distress over col· handgun and a 9mm automatic
lege ald led him to stalk through his (istol and wore a set of stereo
Brooklyn campus on a shooting headphones throughout the shoospree, killingonemanandserlously rout, said Capt. Michael Julian.
wounding the financial aid director spokesman for the New York City
and three others, police said.
Pollee Department.
Shattered glass and smears of ,------,---- - - -1
blood marked the entrance to New
York City Technical College where
police exchanged bursts of gunfire
with Van Hull, 29, before he slid hls
two handguns to pollee and ended
his 30-mlnute rampage Tuesday.

------------------··
.99C ·
,1
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Fears that the suspect had an
armed accomplice prevented
emergency medical teams from
reaching the wounded for nearly an
hour. Pollee later determined that
Hutl had acted alone.
Hull, employed In the downtown
Brooklyn school's qlhthalrnology
lab as part of a work-study

THURSDAY,
AUGUST 14

I

3 HAMBURGERS

v

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GRAND CHAMPION SWINE SHOWMAN- Amy
Hqer, Allred Uveslock Chlb, was the grand
champion swine showman at lhe Junior Fair Swine
Show held at the Meigs County Fatr. She Is lhe

I
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ELBERFELDS
WIU BE CLOSED

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2911 11n A.,._I'll Ct11a , ~ - Pt•IIIM'I: Sc.ltnl'fllflwll•: Aav•nlwOOG . WV &amp;

dauJihler of Mr. and MJ:s, Bruce Hapr, Reedlvllie;
Wllb Hager Is Tl'ent Upton~ the Melp Coualy Swine •
Club, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wli)'De Upton,lleedlvll!!, .•.
who took lite n!liel'\le champion swine
award.

.-wman .

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CcNpont 11ot •atiO wnn any olrtar atl111
0"£" VAUD THfltDUQH OEC. 31 . lMI

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CHEESEBURGER, FRENCH
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THURSDAY, AUGUST 14
9:00 A.M.-Junior Fair Dairy Showmanship and JudgIng

Dr. Allee Grlco!!ld
"Kentucky Colonel" title by Gov .
Martha Layne Collins.
Grlcoskl began seeing patients on
Aug.4.

Ohio ~~ther _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
9outlt Cealral Ohio
Mostly cloudy today with a high
In the loW IKJ&amp;, ParUY cloudy tonight
and 'lbufsday. Lows wDI be In the
loW 601 and highs In the mid Ills.
· The p-obablllty of p-eclpitatlon Is
181' ·JIJ!!I'O through 'l'hw:llday.
·WIDell wW be light and variable
1Dday and tmlibt.
• · . CM1 Exl&amp;ided Fore1:M1

Jbn &amp; Connie Pnmger ...... 4
p.m., hW stage
Kiddie tractor puB .... 4 p.m.,
sltowrlng
·
Jim 6 Coonle Pnmger .. 6:30
p.m., hm stage
Open horse show ....... 7
Horse

returns from Its summer recess.

Pomeroy court ends 13 cases

EMS reports 11 Tuesday calls

p.m.

seek to add measure

manner.

Thirteen cases were processed Tuesday night In the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler.
Forfeiting bonds were David Talbott, Racine, $11), open flask;
Melanie Mossman, Mason, W.Va., $53, speeding; Shirley Collins,
Pomeroy. $47, speeding; JoAnna Caldwell, Middleport, $43, assured
clear distance; Vincent Stone, Pomeroy, $00, no Insuranre.
Fined were Lawrence McGrew, Coolvtlle, four days in jail and
costs, only, Intoxication; David Holtls, Dexter, $43 and costs,
speeding; Steven Helms, VIrginia, $47 and costs, speeding; Dwayne
Qualls, Pomeroy, $213 and costs, !repassing; Charles Whittington,
Pomeroy, $313, destruction of property; Robert Rittle, Racine, $&amp;l
and costs, no operator's license, and $44 and costs, speeding; Ricky
Lunsford, Pomeroy, $&amp;land costs, operating a motor vehicle whlle
under suspension, and Dean Whittington, Pomeroy, $313 and costs,
destruction of property.

Tonight
Open claso sheep judging .. 4

Lows will be In the ms. Highs will
ran&amp;f' between 85 and90 Friday and
In the low to mid Me Saturday and

Sunday.

0

Vete1'81111 Memorial
Admissions - · WUiiam Young,
Rutland; Shirley Ables, Racine;
Lots Hubbard, Middleport.
Dlschargar ,... Glenn Rol:UisOn,
Rickie lcenhawer, Allnelte Boyd;
Beatrice Rearden, Ella Roush,
Karen Turley.

.

1:00 P.M.- Dairy Cattle Judging- Open Class
2:00 P.M. - Horse Harness Racing
4: 00 P.M.-Open Class Sheep Judging followed by Junior Fair Sheep
4:00 P .M. Kiddie Tractor Pull
6:30 P.M.-Jim &amp; Connie Prenger- HW Stage .
7: 00 P.M.- Open Horse Show
"8: 00 P.M.-Fox Bros. Gospel
8:00 P.M. Horse Pull - Center Field
•Grudstaad

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WINNERS -Jeff Parker, left, aodKevlnGrueaer;
who had the champion steer and re&amp;t!l'\le champion

C~mmissioners

OK closing
of alley in Chester Village
By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel SWf Writer

An aUey running e8$t and west
between lots 41, 42, 43, and 441n the
unincorporated village of Chester
was cillclallY closed Wednesday by
the MelgB County Commlssioners.
A public ltee.rlng oo the closing was
held Wednellday atternoon ··In the
!!~!minlssloner's 91flce.ln the Meigs
Coul!ty Courthouse.
·
County Engineer Phll Roberts
reported 10 the OOinmlssioners that
1\Wllllidges, ot)e oo ToWnShip Road
258Jn Bedlol;ll ToWJ!Shlp and the
other !IIi Cquilty Road 4 a.t i;lexter,
•will. be ~ apmetlme durlng
the next rmll.lh. Ted , warner,
county highWay Stll*'llltendent,

reported tbe load limit oo tlte for the Meigs Coonty Board rl.
Bedford Townsljp bridge has been Education, met with the board to
reduced pending repairs.
outline his ptogJam, wblch places
Roberts recommended that special educatk&gt;o students at the
DlxOJ and Carmen roadJ be p1t on high school ll!vei In part and
Sallsh!cy Towrtllilp mDeage. The
fuDtlme job poslttn•.
commlsaloners !JPpwed ~rts·
ln &lt;lther mattErs, the boB,rd
recolllJ1IE11datlon IIJ!d ·will lake approved an anbnal clalm of $35
steps ·to do 10 8$ soon 111 Roberts tram Sam Shain, Manuel Reid,
submits- the neceasar)o road Racine, for the loss of two aoata.
deic.t lpt:loJtS:
The board tabled an animal
ColiUlllssklner Richard Jones claim from Calvin Hawk, Tujlperl
reported that a suit ~ by Betty Plainl, l'Or the !Qss ol ill lllteejlln
Jane·Wllllaml aptnst tbe ~ t1 _ III!Veral djf!erent lncldents. HaWk, :
county commlsaloners has been wm wasp mt at the meeting, ·
settled to the satlsfactlon of both was ml by the Oli11IIIINloner that
parties.
they will CO!IIlder bill claJJp u ~
Jciltrt Foatl!r, newly )tired ciocrdl- as they receiVe the !IDal,~ on
nator c( the wcrk-!ltudy profll'8lll

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Crane, left, and Jodlllmm, tile _Melp Collllty Beef .'

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