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                  <text>. Sunday Times-Sentinel

17, 1986

Va.

Ohio Lottery

Sus~t'~ whereabouts kept secret

Quarter horse
racing at fair

rAO~VILLE. w.va: (UPi!
The sw.unl, who founded New
- One -· or two ·Hare Krishna Vrindaban In 1968, was severely
membl!r's c~tn li 1983 murder beaten about the read and back. He
or anoiher cleV'oteeJII'S been moved remalll,' partially paralzyed with

to oonvene Sept. lli in Elkins to
investigate It Krislma leaders at
New Vrindaban had any involvement wUh the deaths.
Kmllla leaders have nopeatedly
!llfne rearing loss and needs two
. denied any Involvement and say
canes kl walk.
t!Jey have been cooperating fuUy
A federal grand jury Is scheduled with authorities.

Into West .VIrP!lll tram California
authorities are ndt saying
'Where he 1s ·being ·kept.
Daniel· Reid, ·31, came east this
week f!'Oin l.4fl ~Ill% bllt Marshall .Coonty PnJsecUtoit Thomas
White wnukf'not .saY exactly when r--:--:-:---------------:----:---:'
,. or reveal w~ the man Is being
held ,tor seeurtty reasons.
Reid is accu$ed in the June 1983
murder d Krishna dEiYotee Charles
Saint lll!nJs nelr the I&lt;rlshn8s· New
Vrindaban coliununlty In Marshall
County. Autooritles have not found
TOP WINII!ER - Bob Calaway, Route I,
Saint Denis's .body.
Beedsvllle, Is pictured with his team of Uglttwelgltts
team won 11rst place oonors and lop money In the
Also dlarj!d In tre killing is
''Did! and Dick" preparmg for tiE lUinual oorse
lightweight division.
Thomas Dreschef', 37, of ~venna.
Ohio. ~er h.as yet to stand trial
but ~ently .Won a mange rJ..venue
mofun · because of . publicity.
Drescher also is accused a( the May
:,-· COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Klsselle, Bowling Grren , physical Iralth at Wlttenrerg University;
·'Fonner Ohio State football stars educatim Instructor at Bowling and Kenneth L. McDowell, Clncln- killing of Krl&amp;hn~ disslilent. Steven
~ Grlllln and Dick Schafrath Green State University; Sandra nat!, president and general man- Bryant In Los AngeleS._
Autlllritles reHeve Saint Denis
~ad the list of ll appointees to the Knott, Cleveland, registered nurse ager of WCIN radio.
was
killed · D:lr allegedly raping
~ board for the Governor's and 1964 Olympian; and Dr. Mary
Also, Richard A. Mostardi, proiiiOluncU 0!1 Physical Fitness and T. L€onard, Dayton, associate lessor of reswrch at the University Reid's wife.
Reid wUl re arraigned refore
~professor of health, anatomy and of Akron and Akron Oty Hospital;
"' G&lt;!v. Richard F. Celeste named physiology at the University of Anthony C. Novello. Onclnnatl, Clrcutt Judgli Richard Warmuth,
:;~be bQai:d members Friday.
Dayton.
manager of government affairs at but ·White did not know the date.
'!- 'lbe l&gt;-memrer board will help
Also, Dr. Vlvlan F. Lewis, San~z. Inc.; Krista F. Poe, Akron, Warmuth has been on vacafun.
Drescher an~ another Krishna
~mote and sponsor public sportWlllrrforce, retired chairman of physical fitness specialist for tre
-:lng and physical fitness events. It the peysical education department Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co.; devotre already are lodged In the
~ also recommend InfOrmation
at Central State University; James Robert Potts, Ashtabula, teacher Marshall County Jan. Michael
jllld educational materials to the J. Lorimer, Worthington, vice and coach tor 25 years; Pat Shockman, 32, of LaMoure, North
~bile, encouraging participation in
president of government relations Stempfly, Urbana, physical educa- Dakota, Is serving a 15-month
;;llports, health programs and
at Nationwide Jnsurana&gt; Co.; lion teacher; Susie Tlrnken, Can- sentena&gt; for last October's blud·~tlvltles .
Vincent A. Lucido, Beallsvllle, ton, president of Mlndset, Inc.; and gi!Oning attack on Krishna spiritual
: AlsoootheboardareforrnerOhlo United Mine Workers official; Anthony L. Whitney, associate leader Klrtanananda Swami
te hurdling champion Stepbanie Thomas P. Martin, Springfield, professor of physical education, Bhaktipada.
' glttoWer-Leftwich and former professor of physical education aM Youngstown State University.
')).uas Cowboys and Cleveland
:Jirowns running back Calvin Hlll c:J.
~!Dn, Va.
,. Otrer rnemrers of the board:
~ Richard L. Armstrong, Colum~s, commissioner d tlr Ohio High
:;&amp;hool Athletic Association; John
' E. Bickley, Columbus, director of
::p.ogramsfortheYMCA: JamesP.
Fully equipped with every option you would
;:aranbam. Portsmouth, high school
expect including astroroof. Must be seen. Last
'jlthletlc roach; Ambrose E. Brazel·
of a generation.
~ton, Columbus, retired supervisor
with the Ohio
' plzyslcal education
. and Ted
.;oepartment
of Education;
':Georgeff, Columbus, head trainer
'
:at Capital University.
• Also, Wayne H. Gibson, Oxford,
Cream Beige with Saddle Tan interior. New
:retlral associate director of athletics at Miami University; Kerry
premium tires on rallye wheels.
.:Green, Zanesvllle, exercise physloljlglst for Bethesda Hospital; John
1987
1987ftCll
1987ftCll
.Jiarris, Thledo, manager of health
:imhancement lor Owens· Illinois,
13" REMOTE
19" COLOR
:Joe.; Dr. Robert S. Heldt Jr.,
25" COLOR CONSOLES
..Cincinnati, sports medicine special·
COLOR PORTABLE
PORTABLE .
PINE, PECAN, OAI
'Jst; and Gina Johnson-Freeman,
BerUnetta model. Silver exterior, T·top, gra'Columbus, coordinator rJ. leisure
phic dash, We sold it new. showroom condi·
education at Ohio State University.
tion inside and out.
Also, Scott J . Keller, Chagrin
Falls, president of Fitness Planning
and Programming Corp. of Delaware; David C. Kiefer, Sterling,
organizer of the Ohio chapter of
1987ftCII
1987
19&amp;71tCll
National Handicapped Sports and
Recreatkm Assoctatkm; Judith F.
~t

-Page 3

•

·',

'

at y
\1~1.36, No.73
Copyrighted 1188

LANCASTER, Ohio (UP! 1-An
honorary membership card to the
Ku Klux Klan accompanied with a
crudely drawn piCture of a black
man kissing a watennelon is an
example of the racism six black
corrections officers-say they have
experienced on the job at the
Southeastern Ohio Correctional
Institution.
The olfla&gt;rs ltled a complaint
with the federal Equal Employment Opportunles Commission
Feb. 19 over the alleged racism.
Superintendent Anthony Brtgano
said oo was surprised by the
complaint, buthecan'tcommenton
the ·allegations untO the commission completes its investigation.
The &lt;.'Oft!llllsslon In Cincinnati is in
charge of the investigation and

"DEMO"

Prieed Aeeor.lnglv

1984 Olds Cutlass Supreme

HAVE ARRIVED!!

Oot't Miti This Car

ROll

1984 Chevrolet Camaro

S48800

26" COLOR
CONSOLE

Premiums given
after horse pull

20" STEREO
COLOR PORT ABLE

19" REMOTE
COLOR PORTABLE

$579°0 $388°0 $529°0

POMEROY - The annual horse
pulling contest was a feature of
Thursday night's Meigs County
Fair activities.
Cash premiums were award to
the top seven teams in the
llghtwelght class, 3:!Xl and the
heavyweights :Jal1 and up.
'lbp three winners In the lightweight class were Bob Calaway.
Route 1, Reedsvlllle, first; Denzil
Higgins, Belmont. W.Va., second,
and RJchard Douglas, Coolville,
third.
The top three winners in tlr
ooavywelgltt class were Jim
Tucker, Zanesville, first; George
Guthrie, Route I, Guysville, second,
and Ellis Derry, Zanesv1U•, third.

'

CLOSEOUT PRICES
ON All REMAINING 1986 MODEL
RCA COlOR TElEVISIONS

ELBERFELDS

Quality
Service After
The Sale

~~t.'=ng-a: ~=ns~

- 'lbere are no black supervisors
and only a small percentage rJ. the
olllcers are black. Brlgano acknowledg!!d the !nstl,tufun has no
blacks In any of the 17 supervisory
positions. · He said there are 16
blacks - 11 percent - on the 144
COITeCfuns officer foroe. About ll
perrent ol the medlum-securtty
prison's l,a!O Inmates a,re black;
.- Black ·corrections ottlcers are
consistently denied admission to
training classes;
"-White oltlcers are given preferenUal treatment D:lr job assignments and days off; ·
-Black officers have been subjected to strip searches for drugs,
sometimes In the presence ' of
female cttlcers. White rJ.tlcers have
not been treated In the same
manner;
-Black corrections officers received harsher pmishments for
rules Infractions than whites; and

1983 .Chero~et Camaro

ROll

marathon bargaining session retween Rep. Dan
Rostenkowskl, D-Dl., head o1 the House tax reform
forces, and Sen. Bob Packwood, R-Ore., leader rJ. too
Senate team
Several details remain unresolved and must re
settled before Congress can !XI t too measure to a vote,
expected In mld-Septemrer.
"We'll certainly be recommending strong support
by the president," Treasliiy Secretary James Baker
said Sunday on NBC's "Meet tre Press." "Over the
long haul It will re a real plus for·the economy."
The tax reform measure was not intended to raise
revenues, and Rostenkowskl was asked where the
money would be coming from to reduce the deficit

and whether Congress would be forced to raise taxes
next year.
"You know the old adage, 'You never raise taxes In
an election year,'" Rostenkowskl said. "But we've
done away with that. We've done It in the last two
elections.
"But I do think H we're going to focus on and oo
serious about where the deficit Is and what we've got
to do ... there's a possibility," taxes will re raised, he
said.
"I absolutely disagree with that," countered Baker.
"! don't think there's any chance in the world that
we're going to raise taxes retween now and the
electkm, and It the Congress did raise taxes between

,,

SPORTS COUPE

White, T-top air cond., another local trade. Ra·
lye wheels. Save thousands on this one.
'

1986 Olds 98 Regencys
BROUGHAM 4 DR.
"Brass Hat models". Fully equipped with the
options you want.
1-Charcoal Gray
1 -Dark Fern
These luxury autos are outstanding buys, We
purchased nine of these models and these are
the last two. Don't miss this deal.

-Blacks are subjected toderoga·
tory racial remarks, posters and
other harassment.
Brlgano said an Equal Employment Opportunities officer from the
Department of RehabUltation and
Correction answered the complaint
July 31.
The agency investigates and
determines It discrimination has
occurred, said Helen Glutz, commission Intake supervisor in
Cincinnati.
If there Is cause to beUeve
discr1mlnation has ocrurred, the
office attempts to have tlr parties
Involved resolve the charges, Glutz
said . Ifoosettlement is reached, the
agency may initiate legal action,
she said.
In recent years, according to
Brigano, there hali been an ef!ort to
recruit more black officers tor the
Lancaster prison. He said the
p)ison draws most of Its employees
from the po(XIlation in the surrounding area, which is only 0.3
percent black.
Clarence Lee, one of too six
officers, said re received the Ku
Klux Klan memrershlp card on his
time card in December 1!&amp;.
He and O!arles Riggins, another
of the six guards who signed the
oomplalnt, say the clash of ruKures
probably 1,s at tjle root of conflicts.
Blacks who work as guards are
generally from the city while the
white employees are from the
surrounding area.
Riggins said because white offic·
ers oontrol all the power, black
officers are forced to work ·under
Interior conditions. Riggins said,
for example, his days off are
Wednesdays and Thursdays, while
whites with less seniority get
weekends off.

i:

now and the election, the president wouldn't sign the
bill." Baker said Congress can avoid taxes by cutting
spending, and Rostenkowskl responded: "We have
done, at least In social programs, as much as I think
the Congress will tolerate."
In addition to slashing the top Individual tax rate
from 00 percent to 28 percent, too tax reform plan
would curtail numerous deductions and loopholes,
establish a tough minimum tax and lar!J!ly eUmlnate
often-abused tax shelters.
The plan was approved despite opposition from
some senators who were unhappy wlthmajorpartsof
the proposal because they relieved It would raise ·
business taxes too much, thereby running tlr risk of
hurting the economy and costing jobs.

-·~

PAST ROYALTY- Honored at too Meigs Comy
Junior Fair Parade on Saturday attermm were these
past fair queens lUid king. Left to tight are Tammy

Calaway, 1983 queen; Sue Clrde Hager, 1961 queen;
Larry Mon&amp;&amp;omery, 1966 king; Pam Riebel, 1983

queen; and Lisa CoDins Kautz, 198t queen.

Reagan snags some credit

ernp»yrnent
SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (UP!)
- President Reagan, settled into a
three-week summer vacation, reUed on quick action by senior aides
to snag some of the credit for the
historic tax code overhaul approved by House and Senate
conferees.
Reagan saw the top domestic
priortty of his second term take a
major step Saturday night while
relaxing al his 688-acre mountain·
top ranch, wrere lr Is spending his
days lllresback rtding, chopping
wood and attending to paperwork.
His own role In behind-the-scenes
negotiations that produced a tax
package that wwld cut the top
Individual rate to 28 percent from 50
percent and the maxlmum corporate rate to 34 percent from 46
percent -close to his target figures
of 'll and 33 percent- was minimal.

At the request of the conference
committee leaders, Rep. Dan
RostenkDwskl . D-Ill., and Sen. Bob
Packwood, R-Ore., Reagan kept
silent, giving the panel greater
freedom t&gt; hammer out an agreement in private.
With approval of a compromise
measure that could reach his desk
soon after Labor Day, the goal he
set earlier this year, Reagan
overlooked whatever objections
others In his administration might
have and hopped on the
lBndwagon.
"Wbile some may not agree with
all of the provisions of this
agreement, I believe It is in the
overall economic Interest of the
country," re said in a statement.
"In short, it's good for the economy
and good tor tre taxpayer."
The timlng and wording of the
statement had been carefully
crafted In Washington, where
White House chief of staff Donald
Regan, White House lobbyist Will

Ball and other senior aides kept
close tabs on the 22-member
conference committee through the
home stretch aver the wrekend.
Even before tlr committee gave
its stamp of ap~Z'QVal to the
oompromise, the presidential reaction had been drafted and sent to
aides in CalHomla for release
minutes atter the 11:15 p.m. EUf
voice wte.
The statement, In which Reagan
said the agreement "satisfies my
requirements for tax refonn" and
commended the conferees for
"tireless efforts and dedication"
was intended as more than just a
presidential pat on the back.
In the background was White
House cona!m, ex!J'essed on several occasions by presldenllal
aides, that Congress - especially
the Democrats- not oo allowed to
"steal the Issue" Reagan had
championed since his 1984 State of
the Union address.

Area woman drowns in pond

CHEVY S-1 0 PICKUPS
AS LOW AS

Sll 0

S6495
s1200 CASH DOWN 01 .T
TUDE 60 PAY.tns. TAl &amp;

Cll1f Apartnnents, Pomeroy, accld·
entally drowned In a large strip
mine pond on Golde!\ Ridge near
Darwin Saturday evening.

traded this week. Sharp inside and out.

$4795

nnE EmA.

FULL SIZE TRUCKS

$8799

EUROSPACE 85
2 to Choose From. Air, power
windows, tilt wheel, 3,000 to 5,200
miles. Save over $2000 on these
models.

'/

READY - Tim Stone 111111 Melllla l'l'llrlmllr ol
WUkeiYile were pdnl reedy lor. lllllurda~' ,qbl'a
lrtldor pulaa IIIey sat onlbele Olver 88&amp;. 'l1le l9ll5

ST.

Saturday nJght's truck and tractor pull ·again packed the center·

field

at

the , Rock

Springs

Falrgrowlds.

Bill Kautz, Chester, 1came

coaa·
POMEROY,

.

mdrh wllftlbe i!llbtelli Elmer Stone and -Tim
111111 Jerem, In lbe lraclor eveatA at the Melp CGwtly
Fair.

Fans ·pack field · for Saturday pulls

DRIVE A NEW
TRUCK TO THE
'.fAIR THIS YEAR!
o..-o

through with top honors In the 6,1XX1
'

.~

OPEN SUNDAY - 1 P.M. 111 f P.M.

Chevrolet
. ''FO-~

Phelps, Pomeroy; four sisters,
Denise Colil, Athens; JuU Arnold,
Warner RDbbins, Ga.; Laura Cobb,
Pomeroy, and Amy O:llil, Bidwell;
Irr maternal grandfather. John
Warner; maternal grandmother,
Evelyn Morris, Albany; paternal
(Continued on Page 6)

thlit ·lley~re' IDftt!.

restred In, and als!&gt; ,may not be the
wisest Investment to be making."
Trere is a market D:lr skllled
labor, said Bob Scarborough, of the
Greater Cincinnati lnlllstrlal
Training Corp., which develops
industrtal training programs.
"Right now there are over lJO,(O)
machinists (nationally) and the
average age Is 58." said Scarborough. "They can go rut at any time
and a lot of you~ peo!ie aren't
going into ttlat trade. It's a good
trade to go into."
Scarborough blamed tre "whitecollar syndrome" for discouraging
more :IOOJigSters from a vocational
educafun coJTiculum.
"A lot of young peo!ie think 'If I
have a white oollar, I &lt;lon't get my
hands dirty and I can make a lot rJ.
money,' and that Isn't true,"
Scarborough said.
Frank Riley, director ct voca·
tlonal education at Noribwest High
Sclllol, agrees. He cited several
cases of vocational graduates
wlllse starting salacy wu $2,(0)
higher than. that ci a starting
teacher. Riley, had one student
whose entry level job paid $lll.'10 an
hour. "That's not bad for a ldd," he
said.
Even traditional wcafunal edu·
cafun has changed. Home econom·
lcs, for Instance, Is rrore than just
cooking and sewing, said ·Jane
Caldwell, a home ecooomlcs
teacher at Pleasant Run Junior
High In the Northwen school
district

Meigs County Coroner Dr. James
Conde said that Mrs. Phelps had
gone to the pond area with a group
of trlends about an hour before too
accident.
nr. Conde said that u 1s reUeved
that soo lost her .balance lind fell
fromthebankaboutJ.0.12feetgolng
lntow&amp;terthatwasCIIlyfourtoflve
teet d,eep• Alllo there was a light
rain aild the bank to the pond was
'lbeMeigsCountyBoardofEducatlonhassetitsannu'atscboolbus
slippery, Dr. Conde stated.
driver safety meeting for all drivers In the county for 7:ll p.m. ·
Her friends saw her fall about
Wednesday at Meigs High School, County Superintendent Jolm ,
6:ll p.m. anddovelnto the water to
RJebel announces.
rescue rer. However; they were
The county board has Issued bus driver certlficales to:
unable t&gt; find her and Dr. Conde,
c. Brown, Unda C. Carpenter, Jeny G. Holley, Katlieen
the Pomeroy ,Emergency Squad
J . NolTis, JoAnn New9DJ11e, Patricia s. Pape, Patsy L. White and
and Fire Department were canal
Catherine A. Wood, Carleton School; Paul H.· Baer, Carl L.
along with Sherlll Howard Frank
Barrtnaer, Kathy A. BarriJIIer, Elnora Bernard, Ellzareth J .
and dePuties.
Calaway, Nora D. Cassady, Sandra Lee Cowdery, Fklssle M. DID,
Divers summoned to tlle ~e
Gary R. Dill,
G. Holley, Mlk:lleU C. Holley, Ruth Ann Masters,
Included Don Stivers, Ken~,~.
JoAnnNews6me,Oke)IT. PuOins,CyntiiaJeanRector,DiirleneM.
John Jetiers and a diver
Reed, Carolyn L. RJtchle, Nita Jean Ritchie, Archie C. Roae,-Mary
Mason, W.Va. Jeffers. Ru .,.;
K. Rose, VIolet G. S&amp;tte11ield, Keltha A. Whitlatch, George A, Wol~.
recovered her body from 15 to ""
Eastern District; Donald W. Barnett, rm- Cremeans. Katherine ·
teet of water at 10: 3l p.m., having
L. Deskins, Johns. Ev11nf. Danny E. Grueser, Deborah L. Grueser, _
started diYinJ about 7 p.m.
Evelyn L. Hobbs, Mary D. KlJti, Juanita Lambe'rt, Ida M. Martin;
Mrs. , Phelps, a housewife. was
Enna N. MIDer, Carrie B. Morris, Leo B. Moms, UndaJ.MOITIII,Jo
born Feb. 7,1962 at Lockbourne.
AnnNewsome,GioriaJ. OUer,AnaetaS. Sellers,EdwardE.seDen,
She II survived by rer mother,
Mtnnle L. Thorn!Dn, WWiam L. Thornton, Mont Vanm, Charles E~ ·
Ilo!lna ~ Pomaoy; oor
WWlamson, Shirley M. Wilson and James Mllier, Melp Local ·
father, Wayne Collb, Bidwell; a
DlatrlcL
,
,
...
daugltter,StacyLeAnnStewartarid
The county botlr!l has not taken action on the employmellt ot a
a 1100, Cqry Wayne S~art, both rt.
achaoi psycholDirJat to replace Judy Herllert, will retlped In July,
Paneiuy; her ;tepmotber, PattY
Interviews are ltlll btl!le condllctild tor the pollfun.
Co~.~~ller~.EUIL---------·--~---·------------------·~

M ergs
· board ·sched u les
,/ session
bus d river SaJety

1986 Chevrolet Celebrity·

A MONTH

DRIVE
ANEW
ONE/
AS LOW AS

Ronda A. Phelps, 24, Pomeroy

1985
Ford
Escort
2
Dr.
Dark blue, auto. trans., 20,3161ow miles. Just
COMPARE AT

DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) - Vocational education Is gaining popular·
ity and is no longer a "dumping
ground" for relow average stu·
dents, according to vocational
education teachers who gathered
recenlly for the first AU-Ohio
Vocational Education Conferena!.
Vocational education now offers
more than 100 career options
Including computers and high tech;
said Allee Karen Hlte, a vocational
education official. Statewide, voca·
tional education enroUment IS
Increasing, ever\ though the general
student population is decneaslng;
she said.
"People are beginning to realize
that to have employment skills;
they need to oiXaln those In higlt
school," Hlte said. "1bey're reallzthat a
education Isn't
i

road ready. New S-10 Blazer trade.

SALE PRICE

26 Canto

Teachers
hail vo-ed
system

1985
Chevrolet
S-1
0
Pickup.
Just traded this week. 4 speed, 4 cylinder,

POMEROY - 992·3671

1 Section. 10 Pogoo

A Multim~~dla Inc. New••P•

Black guards file
racism complaint

1985 Olds Toronado 2 dr.

COLOR TELEVISIO·N·S

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, August 18, 1986

By HENRY DAVID ROSSO
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Congressional tax reD:lrm
negotiators have come up with a tax overhaul plan
President Reagan calls "good for the economy," but
one nagging question remains unansweral whelller taxes will be raised.
House and Senate negotiators reached agrrement
late Saturday on a tax refonn measure tbat would
drastically cut rates and shift about $120 billion In
taxes from Individuals to businesses over five years.
President Reagan Immediately endorsed tre effort,
saying, "It's good for the economy and good for the
taxpayer."
The plan, passed on a voice vote after a day of
closed negotiations, was mostly crafted in a

Take a look at these•••

rot

predplta&amp;lon Is Delli' ErO lllnllbt

Question of increased taxes clouds accord

Chevrolet-Oldsmobile Inc.

THE 1.987

the mld60sand~~lll",
tile low 80s. The prollebl1lty 01

Lotto

·

and Tuesday.

s

~leste sets physical fitness board

Partl)' cloudy .~ ~ .
Tuelday, wllb a low t-tpt ill

1-28-23-18-22-17

~er .

~

Daily Number
244

1 .

field stock tracior competition
while Pat Barrett of Vincent came
in tor second money.
In the 5lro IJIDIIIed tractor
COOIJll!lltlon, first ~lace winner was
Bob So!llion, Akron, with ·ChUck
J

Waugh

.« q-own

second .

City taking

In ~ 1'Dl rmdlfled tr&amp;Qtnr pull,
/iOISDD toOk 11rst and Waugh was
. second: In the 6!110 truck pull
competition, first !iace went to
Ja(\k Waldron, Lopn, and Phil
McPIIer!lon of Gallipolis was
second,

The annual garden tractor pull
was held Saturday with . Bryan

Elliott. GuysvUie, winning first In
the tmi pound sltlCk rom petition for
driVers 12 and under while Anuta·
s1a Mobley; Woodlfteld, was.llrst In
the 1000 powld category for drivers
12 an\1 under. .
In the adult diviSion, Woody
Mobley, Woodsfield, was~ In the
1000 [lOillld diviSion and Din Elliott.
GuysvUle, wu first tn the 1100
pound diviSIOn.

Cordelia

.rerry

J:r

�Monday, August 18,

entary

B-'-ftc_kley_,.:.
· ___.J.__r.

111 Court Street
•
' . · ' · Pomeroy, Ohio
. DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lb ......._,.._,..., ,...,.,c:::~,=
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BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

News Editor

,•

"I guess," said New York
Tlmesman Tom Wicker over televt·
skm recently, "no one lu:is been
more opposed to this admlnlstra·
lion than I have been." But, hewmt
on to say to .the pilllel that Included
GOO~ wm, Sari\ Donaldson and
David Brinkley
had to syinpa."
thlze with the ' action of the
administration, which has gran!M
a subsidy for wheat sent to the
Soviet Union. You see, Mr. Wicker
explained to his benighted audience, In a democracy, poUtlcshas

:·lie

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

..- .· J'AT WHITEHEAD
~.
Asslstut Publlsher/ControDer
'
' ..
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
.•

Page....,-2-The Daily Sentinel
P~y-· Middleport, Ohio
.Manday, August 18, 1986
·.

Just politics ----'----__w_ill_ia~_F..;;..:.._

The J)aily Sentinel
... ,

to be taken into consl&lt;k!ratlon. And rlously, which among other things administrations that' are unguided
there are ~ Republican senators would have the effect of lessening by · an ailttlu!flng vlsioli. Nobody
coming up tor elecllon and re- Mr. Wicker's antagonism to the· ~ts ' IJ¥1, prePJent &lt;(.$W!t2A!r·
land to be elected to chase down a
election next November who will be administration.
campalgnlng tor the farm states. So · Polltical considera!Jons, as Mr. poUtlcal dream. When John

Kennedy was elected he was
startled when James Reston, min·
utes after JFK had taken the oath of
office, asked what be !nten&lt;k!d lo
accomplish . as president. The
young president was stiUck dumb.
He had run tor oftlce il order lo
become president. It' hadn't really
occurred to him that he should have
a grand design In mind .
And on the whole, we are better
rlt with caretakers rather than
mWenllirtsts, but a great deal Is at
stake In the matter of our dealings
)lllth the Soviet Union. Friends of
Mr. Reagann do well pdvise him
that his credibDity as an anticommunlts leader Is heavOy mortgaged by ruch a &lt;k!al as he recently
sanctioned, and which his secretary
rl commerce has been &lt;k!fendlng
with the kind of arguments that
would have got him his head rut olf
In a debate with candidate Reagan
IUnnlng tor rlflce an an anti·
communist ticket.
George WW made trenchantly
the Indisputable point that (II)
leverage In negotiating with any o
our allies on the matter of tend!~
loving care tor communist enterprises Is flatly expen&lt;k!d. Mr.
Reagan began his olflce by lifting
the emb8rgo m the sale rl grain to
Moscow. His secretary of agrlculthen concluded a bng-tenn
grain-export agreement wtth the
Soviet Union and guaranteed the
Soviets, In the most oleaginous
communique In the annals at
U.S.-Soviet diplomacy, that we
would. never, no never again,
interrupt wr suppltesrl.gralntothe
Soviet Union, presumably not even
If the Soviet Union launches a
nuclear strike at us.

- what can you exlJI1CI?
·
Wicker stresses, ar~ legitimate
George WW gave lltm one;&amp; his democratic co~tderallons (per·
fine no-nonsense
What he haps !lie (lay he will write a rolumn
satd was that the Reagan adminis- about the polttlcal eonsiderations
tration has been the most spectacu- that govern the pace d. desegi'EI1a·
larly anti-Soviet administration lion In South Africa). But he needs
rhetorically In the last generation, . to rernemrer that the Reagan
but that people are simply going to admlnislration Is 1tn critical restop taking .anti-communism se- spects dlstlnguls~ from other

answers.

.

A MEMBER of The United Press International. Inland Dally Press
· Assoclatl~p and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

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· LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They shoold be less than llO words
long. All letters aresubjec1 to editing and TRJst beslgne::l with name, addrE'Ss and
telephone number. No un slgn«l letters wUI be published . L etters should be In
taste, addressing Issues, not persooalllles.

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. 'c:.Qhio Policies

candidates
~ :&lt;stiain
for ammunition
.

- :· , ~_:Republican
'

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
·coLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) - Some Republican statewi&lt;k! candidates
seem to be stnmetching to find some ammunition to use on their
' Democratic opponents.
: .Vincent Campanella, the Republican nornlqee tlr secretaiy of state,
·· took after Secretary of State Sherrod Brown last week t&gt;r distributing a
brochure at the Ohio State Fair describing the duties of his olflce and
·· . · uiglng prople to register and vote.
: . . •· "'The brochure Is supposed to explain the Amctions of the secretary of
... , &lt;state's office," said Campanella. "But with Sherrod Brown's name and
· · · picture plastered throughout this pamphlet, It Is olwi&gt;us the secretary of
·: -· ·state Is using the pamphlet, paid for with taxpayers' m&gt;ney, to gain SO!J)e
·· ·:tree publicity."
. · . . 'Brown, the state's chief elections officer, is entitled to encourage prople
to register and vote. What better place than the state lair?
.· ··· As for the official duties, Brown feels he has to spell them rut because
· ·· · eampanella has been saying If he Is elected, he will rmnitor campaign
. . rontrlbutlons to make certain they are legal, and encourage economic
development In Ohio. Neither of those are responslbnltles d the secretary
··. ·.· of state.
·· Jettrey Jacobs. the Republican candidate for state treasurer from
suburban Cleveland, also stretched a long way to try to attach Democratic
·state Treasurer Mary Ellen Withrow to Indicted tabor leader Marlin J .
Hughes.
'Jacobs said Hughes, who is chairman of the bboard of Fahey Bank In
· Withrow's hometown of Marton. contributed $16,534 to the Withrow
· -campaign In 1982·. Fahey Bank, said Jacobs, received $1.8 mlllion In
· low-Interest loan money - two-thirds of Marton County's allotment- for
· small business loans.
·· · Looks fishy on the surface. but If a bank ora lahar leader were interested
In really maldng money, would they be dabbling in low-interest loans?
,· ·'

Campanella may have hit upon a good idea last week when he proposed
limiting campaign fund-raising to four months before the primary until
fo~tllufter.tlle (l!lJ.1!!!:j,l ~~lh.l.l!e~.l~ !!}ial)t 1»,
shOnened-·ii!'Well:~
·
· CampaneUa points out that Incumbent officeholders can pad their
warchests on a year-round basis. "They become full -tlmelund-ralsersand
part-time public officials," he said .
The flip side Is that if candidates have less time to solicit funds, they are
likely to go after the heavy hitters to ratse as much as possible In a short
time. It takes work to beat the bushes for the $10 and $2i contributions.
It's only fitting that state Rep. Rooco "Rocky " Colonna of Brook Park
has been asked to serve on an advisory committee for Cleveland's Rock 'N·
Roll Hail of Fame and MuSEUm.
Also fitting : A news conference was held In the Columbus suburb of
Hilliard to show a film ahout the hazards &lt;ifalllng to wear an auto seatbelt .
To get lhere, visitors had to travel on Cemetery Road .

_:~. (:orbing

P ACs

' Sen. Gary Hart refused money from polltlcalaction committees when he
campaigned lor the Democratic presidential nomination in 1984 and wound
up a loser, saddled with a heavy debt.
. . . "I'm told if I just say yes to eliminate that presidential campaign debt,
. . . .and hundreds of thousands of dollars will roll in," Hart D-Colo., said
.. .. · Tl.lesday. "''ll be out of debt.
·.. "l'm.not ahout to do that," Hart said. "But that situation speaks volumes
.. . about the fix we're In today."
.. . . . .. Hart Is leaving the Senate after this session presumably t&gt; rrount one
.. .inore multimllllon-dollar presidential campaign, in which he Is consl&lt;k!red
· ., 1t. party frontrunner.
... , ·: •He called PAC contributions the "toxic waste of American politics" and
the "single, most destructive force I've seen In 12 years In public life."
1be Senate agreed with Hart Tuesday and voted to place curbs on the
· a'mount of money PACs can give to Senate and House candidates and to
, rilse the amount that can be contributed by Individuals.
-',' The restrictions, proposed by Sen. David Boren, D.Qlda., were attached
; : as a rider to a btll creating a multi-state rompact on low-level radioactive
; waste. There was no indication when the Senate would act on the
• ' UJlderlylng legislation.
;
In addition, a similar bW was Introduced only Monday in the House,
; leading Senate Republican leader Robert Dole to say, "I'm not certain
• we're going to do anything in this Congtess."
:
1be curbs, approved lll·ll, would allow House candidates lo receive
; : ~ $100,«XXl from PACs and Senate candidates $175,«XXl to $750,(XX), depending
.; J Ill). the size of the state. Individual contribullons to candidates would be
. ;. ti!sed from Sl,OOJ to $1,500 and PAC contributions to candidates cut from
:: ! WXXl to $3,«XXl. .
.
·; ' The Senate also approved 58-42 an amendment by Sen. Rudy Boschwltz,
:·!R·Minn·• that would ban PAC rontrtbutlons to national partles and require
·:· the disclosure of Indirect contributions.
: ; , supporters called the curbs on PAC contrtbutions a "first step."
&lt; Opponents charged the proposals would not stop the rising costs ~
,-:r earnpalgntng for the Senate or House.
; •.. ; - Dole Clllled for a blue-ribbon rommlssion to propose sweeping reforms in
, · , ~ financing, and Sen. Geor&amp;!! Mitchell, D-Majne, urged public
: · · ~ iula!lctng of eongxesslonal campaigns - now In effl!ct In presidential
: - e~- Inoome tax forms provide a $1 checkqtt tor Dnanclng
pl'l!lldenttal campaigns.
Biieu ~ted his legislatiOn ts a "major step," sq11eeztng an estimated
.... ,so mJ111o1i 1ln PAC money out of the campaign process and said the
I·~ vote was a "clear ex!J'ession we want to move forward."
•'
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.TOday·in history

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-,. . ,..··
show!i horses In the first race oomln~ oot of the

FAST QUARTER HORSES- Fast Rllving to say
the least were the annual ~arter hone l'ICe8 held at
the Meigs Couty Fair Saturday allemoon. The photo

!!lartlng gate.

Green captures International
By MIKE RABUN
UP! Sports Writer
CASTLE ROCK, Colo. (UPIJ Ken Green Is so color blind his stster
has to pick out what clothes
• ' wears when h~ goes to the golf
course.
Green, however. knows the rotor
of money, whlch he now has a large

'*

supply of thanks to the impressive
finish he wrote Sunday to the PGA
tour's newest $l en and Shelley
Gteen tough! through the pressure
togetller Sunday to win the richest
one-day prize In golf - the $00,00!
that goes ·to the winner of the
International tournament.
Green shot a 6-under-par 66 over

No endorsement coming _J_ac_k_An_d_er_so_n_&amp;_~_an_A_t_ta
WASHINGTON Presi&lt;k!nt
Reagan will not endorse Vice
President George Bush as his
successor unless and until Bush
makes tt out of the 1988 Republican
Convention as the party's
candidate.
The president's reasons are hoth
·personal and political: Sen. Paul

It's been Reagan's personal
policy not to Intervene 1!1 party
primaries. But White liluse sources early last year predicted that
Reagan would rriake an exceptim
for Bush, as recognitkm at the vice
president's unflagging loyalty to the
president In defense ot his most
controversial declskms.

~·ti~~~ng~e~~~~~s - m~"f~~~~~~:S~~=:
conservative, has decided to seek
the GOP nomination.
Reagan has told his super-loyal
vice president, gently but firmly,
that he must fend for himself
through the caucus and prtmary
season and the convention itself. An
unequivocal statement from Rea·
gan that he considers Bush the rest
man would give the vice president a
tremendous advantage.
"More than once," a high-level
administration source told us. "the
president (told Blish). 'Obviously
I'm going to stay neutral untll after
the convention. and then I'm going
to work for whichever candidate
comes out."'
Sources close to both Reagan and
Bush say the vice president, outd a
sense of propriety, has never asked
the president for his endorsement.
"I just couldn't Imagine Bush
asking the presidenl for an endorsement and expecting to get It," said
one well-placed source.

have no difficulty endorsing Bush
over the likeliest Republican candidates: Senate Majority Leader
RotErt Dole of Kansas, formerSen.
Howard Baker of Tennessee and
Rep . Jack Kemp of New York . .
But that was before Laxalt
surprtsal everyone by announcing
last August that be would retire
from the Senate this year. This
aroused Immediate speculation
that he might try for the White
House In 1988.
According to close friends of the
senator, he responded aftlrmatlvely and without equivocation
more than ooce If be planned to run.
Even witoout Reagan's hands-rl.f
a?ctsion, Laxalt's- l!ltry lnlo . the
nomination race will do serious
damage to both ~sh and to Kemp,
who has beeQ . 1Duted as the true
keeper d. the ronservatlve namea Reaganlte before Reagan. Laxalt
could well rob Kemp d this mantle .

As tor Bush, his stock in trade has
been his almost slavish devotion to
the IJ'ograms of a president whose
favorable rating remains overwhelming. Asked once if he might
strike out on mJre tna?pena?nt
course and actually differ with
Reagan, Bush repUed: ''I'm too far
gone for that rm too pregnant."
Bush's loyalty has even won him
the grudging supPort of hard-core
conseJVatlves woo considered him
too "rooderate." But they were
mainly accepting him b?cause he
oo obvklusly had the pres ident's
suwort, or seemed to have 11.
Now Laxalt's entry Into the race,
coupled wit~ Reagan's non·
Intervention poftcy, has released
Bush's reluctant conservative supporters from their misery. Reagan's f\OO-endorsement d. Bush wW
be tantamount to an endorsement
of Laxalt In their eyes.
Has Reagan's royness soured
relallons with the president? Not
according to those who are close to
them both.
"Knowing Bush as well as I do,"
ooe source told us,·''I would doubt lf
the guy would ever break &lt;lown
(over tltls). You see, Bush is not the
type. If anything, Bus!) tells jokes.
He's happy. He's upbeat with the
president most of the Ume. When
they get serious, they're ~rklus. I

can't see George BuSh ever break·
lng down and crying over lt."
ARMS AND THE NEW BOY:
Brazil Is making Inroads Into the
world arms market, witch has
been dllmlnated by the SlpeJ:llOwers (and Israel) tor ye~. State
Department sources say · Brazilians have made a repu tkln for
manufacturing cheap bu lUgged
weapons tor Third World countries
Including some customers
courted by American arms merchants. Saud! Arabia Is buying
Brazlltan, as is Iraq; they supply
Brazll with oll in return. The State
Department Is u~ppy about
rumors that Brazil Is also selling
weapons to another oU· producer:
Libya. Some sources b?Ueve this
lrade Is quite heavy.
ON THE lAM: Latest ligures
!rom government law enforcement
sources report that more than
L'i,(XX) felony suspects are fugitives
nationwide. Of that number, 8,100
are wanted tlr robbery, 4,:.-ro tor
murder and2,~brsexualassault.
A recent two-month roundup effort
roped In mJre than 3,500 !llspeets In
juSt a few South~tem states.
Only 45 of them were wanted tlr
murder, but 712 were on the run
from robbery and burglary
charges, and 734 were wanted tlr
drug offenses.

a

I believe with lncreaslni conviction since first coming to the Senate
In l9(il that "the mllttary industrial
complex," of whlchJ' we were
wained by the .tate .President
Elsenoower, has ool4.the.Ami!rlcan
prople a bill of goods ever sjnce
World War II. Hungering tlr ever
greater profits and po_., ' the·
militarists have' ,time after time
Invented scares '6aaed on ' alleged
Soviet moves that · ~ulred new
American . weapons syiltl!lllll l!Dd
greater mlUtary appropriationS.
In the 1900s we were told In
!rtghtenlng language tliat 't!Je 'Russlans were conll'OIItlng us wttl) 11
"hom her gap." In the early l!JOOS
we were supposedly faced with a
calamltous "rnfssile gap." Both of
these gaps were fictitious, or "lies"
lo q110te Gervasi.
The Reagan administration has
tor the past five years iJee!t rtdlng
on ~r ~~lle" - ~ "wincktw of
wlnerabmty." 11lls m'~cat tnvl!lltlon rests on the IIJ'gutnellt that
the Soviets are clesfroylpg Amert·can nucJea!&gt; ~oe:by tlret-tenlng , wr lalld-baljld :i:rlJsltles.
Actually, IIXlBt 1 r1 wr'' mclear
detemllce II DOt buecl oolimd, but
m flllbmarlnes and In borrirers.
With the SovletJ. jultthe revene.!s
lnle; .!heir ~ are largely
land-based. 1b111, Jt !aDd-basal
missiles
beromlng iMre
vulnerable, it IS the Soviett w00
have !I~ "wlllmwrtvulnerabQity,"
mt the United States.
or course till! reality Is that both
the Soviet Union snd the 1JDtted
States havefarmorethlin they
to deter the other !rtm a nuclear

attack. Each side has known for the
past ll 'years !,hat It cOuld not attack
the other wjtoout Inviting a calamltws nuc~r retallallon. Since &lt;k!ter·
l'l!llce Is the ooJy practical Alnctlon
d. nuclear ~pons, ma;t o! the

vast sums spent by Wasltngtonand
Moscow oo pWng up more and
more nuclear overldll beyood any
reasonab~ requirement for deter·
renee is an Investment In Plt'apota,
waste and weakening deficits.

The Daily Sentinel
1US PS II ~91111 l

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Pu bl ishrd rvcry aft('rnoon . Monday

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mr r o~.

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address

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Turomo 13. texl\1 I
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C.ur

:-.;1-w York. NC'w York 10017.
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"""••
NY
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Advt•rrisi ng Represc&gt;ntaHve. Branham
N('\1, S!Jdpf'r SaiC'S . 73..1 Third Av('nue,

W L I'Lt. GB

ol8 .'iOO 6.') !if .')IIi ~

...
a.rna

w T'tw IJally Se ntinel, 111 Coul1 St .

"I guess thara aren't many of us /aft who still
go with the ot.' double martini as the recreations/ drug of choice/''

F&lt;Jc; t mo ving quarter horsP races
wen' well n~·eived at the Meigs
\ounty Fair Sa turday afternoon.

Millfield, first race.
Blx Boy, owned by Dellrr1 Roth ,
Blue Rock. second race.
Classic Bidder owned by Mar·
shall Arrington. Apple Grove,

W.Va .. third race.
Makin' Moolah. owned by Roth,
fourth race.
Comet's Chip, ownf&gt;d by Jennings
Beegle, Ra~ine, fifth race.

I

Cut-down day near in NFL ~amps

'

SNnk! 11. MJ....a~a t

......,.• a.m..

....,_....,. 18D8Io D-ll at C'levf•nd
~tlli.S l, 7::11 p.m.

lbton tSeawr G-101 at'Mirmesota tVIOia
13-81. 8:35 p.m.
,....._,... Gamm
Clll~mla

at Dt&gt;lrolt. 2, IWI· night

~Mit at

New York. niMh!
MlhwiUIII!t' II CievelaAd, night

po!noo&gt; •1'Dr'!"'&gt; """'

.c. ..Kaolu
!11-·nl"''
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TI 41 .tii..1 ~ ~ .5L1 ] 6~

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NY

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Ohio Nt•wspap&lt;'r Association. National

POSTMAST ER:

....

-_.,.

llshmg Com p;~n~· Mul!lmf'&lt;l la, Inr ..
Pomi •ro.v. Ohio ~571\9 . Ph . 992-2156. S£&gt;·

~11-mbrr Unltf'd Press Tnl t-rnat iona l,
Inlan d Dally Pn&gt;ss Associa tion an d t he

\

.ui'EI:JCAN ti::AOUE
llyU..,...,_IIil:: &amp;liiillll

through Frlda .v. 111 Coun St. , Po-

Ohi O

'

Shleidli),l\'lilllflield, ridolen by
quar1er horse
races held at the Meigs County Fair Satur~ay. ·

Ari Smith, winner of the llrst of

Quarter horse races well received

the Castle Pines course and plletl up
12 points in the unique event to
Winning ttl:- rive races were LitUe
outdistance Bernha rd Lang&lt;&gt;r and
Che1ub.
ownrd by Chuck Shields.
capture his second tour title in a
five- year .career.
Walking every step of the way
with Green was his sister, who
serves as hls caddy, cook, bookkeeper and wardrobe expert. She is
Ry United Press International
also his chief cheerleader and
Cut -down day is approaching In
public rela lions dileclor.
NFL training camps, and among
"There are propie back home the toughest decisions that have lo
(Danbury, Conn.) who said Ken · 1r made Involve quar1erbacks.
could never make it on the lour,"
On Tuesday, rosters must be l'llt
said Shelley, tlle only full time tu 60. A number of team' remain
female caddy on the PGA circuit . uncertain who will be calling
" I wanted him to prove them signals when the regular season
wrong. Now I can go back there and opens in three wePks.
say, 'yeah, yeah, yeah . he can play.'
The Buffalo Bills Ji&gt;poJ1!'dly are
''I'm not out her.., for the money.) offering U.S Football League
want my brother to be successful. I refuge Jim Kelly a five- year
want him to win."
contract wor1h a record $7 !i
Green was not the likely choice mUllan. The Buffalo News Satur·
when Sunday's champlonshlp day reported the fmmer Oklahoma
round began. Twelve players were Outlaw and Nrw Jersey General
left from an original field of 182 and has asked for $10 million over five
they all started even with a total years.
purse of $700,00) on the line.
Either figur-., would make Kelly
the highest paid pro football player
Just as th:y had · all week, the of all time, ahead of San Francisco
quarterback Joe Montana. who
players were battUng for points two being awarded for a birdie and earns $13 mllllon a year.
The Detmit Lions' quarlerback
live for an eagle. One point was
picture
is about to become even
deducted for a hogey and tlreefora
mm-.,
complicated
than it ls al ·
double bo~y or worse.
Green withstood the ll'essure by
making tiW tough par- saving )Xltts
on the back nine and then rolling in
six-foot birdie putts at the 16th and
17th holes to bulld a l'llshlon over his
WASHINGTON tUPI) - The
closest challengers.
conditkln of fanner Washington
Redsldns defensive end Coy Bacon
Langer shot a tll and Parllf'd nine was upgraded Sunday from crltk-al
points to finish alone in second for to Sl"rions. two days aft er he was
$113,(00. He had to make a six-foot shot In tiJI&gt; stomach when he
par putt at the last hole which answered his apartment door.
meant an extra $43,(00.
Bar'On. a l964 gradu te of Ironton
Joey Sindelar and J.C. Snead tied High School In Lawrence County,
for third with eight points and t try Ohio, where he played football for
each won $63,(00. The rest &lt;i four years tor Ironton's Tig.•rs, was
Sunday's finishers were Nick Price sbot shortly after mldnlghl Friday
with six points t$45,1)'0), Howard in Sllver Spring. Mel uu tside
Twitty with five ($4l,(XX)), Kenny Washington.
Knox and Bruce LieiZke with four
He Wtderwent threo:· hours of
($37,25C), Andy Dillard with one
surgery Friday morning al the
($34,(00 ), Tom Kite and Donnie Washington Hospital Cenler for a
Hammond with no points ($31,(00) single gunshot wound, and then
and T.C. CchorPS.
remained on the critical Ust for ol8
hours. The bullet entered the right
"All I want Ken to do is pay golf," skle of his stomach and exited the
she said. "I take care of everythlng left side of his back. a hospital
else. I hand!" the travpt. f handle spokeswoman sald.
the reservations.
The condition r:l Bacon, who
"When he gels up In the morning played 13 years In the NFL and one
his clothes are han(dngthereandall In the U.S. Football League, was
he has to do is get In them and go uwraded Sunday mJrnlng, a hosp!·
play.
tal spokeswoman said. She refused
to elaborate.
Pollee in Montgomery County.
Md., said Sunday they had m firm
motive and no
In the

Majors

ot Multimedia, ln r .

cu nd d ass post a~(' paid at Poml:.'roy,

are

need

ann"

c;REEN INTERNATIONAL CRAMP- Kill Gn!en rallte8bls
triumph on ~ 18th green to
.
aad SJ80,00J at
Castle Pines Goll Club near Denver,

A Di~l slo n

.Berry's World

PRESENTED AWARD - StaH members of Jim
Cobb Ohlsmobile-Cadillac·Chevrulet kJ Pomeroy are
pictured presenting the trophy blanket to Uttle

ready. The team's first dralt pick,
fo rmer Iowa All- America Chuck
Long Is expect!'d lo sign a lucrative
contract Monday. and head coach
Darryl Rogers already has a
three-way war for the position.
Veteran Joe Ferguson has a
slight edge over Eric Hippie. but
second-year pm .John Witkowski
completed 7-of.l2 passes for 12J
ya rds and one TD aga inst the
Seahawks Friday.
The Chicago Bears though! they
were set at quarterback. but the
ever-surprising Jim McMahon
missed Satur clay's game against
Indianapolis, remaining on the
sidelines in sb·eet clothes.
McMahon told head coac h Mike
Dltka Friday his leg hur1. After the
ga me. Ditka said the tnjUJy was a
mystery to him.
"He wasn't treated for the
Injury," Dltkasald. "He's got a bad
leg. The trainer dldn 't know it and I
dldn'l know it. There has been a
lack of rommunlcation.''

McMahon,!unava!lable for com·
mont a Iter ' the game. missed
practice Thursday, missed a team
meeting Friday, and Dltka says
McMahon will not play unt U he ts
well.

~J t

JACKSON PIKE · AT35 WEST
Phone 446 -4524

BARGAIN MATINEES SAT - SUN &amp;

WEDNESDAY - All SEATS 11.50
ADMtSStDN EVEPY TUESDA Y 12.50

Coy Bacon off critical list

Closing the 'truth gap'--,--___Ge_or~-ge_M_cG_ov_er_n

I have just finished reading a
book by Tom Gervasi entitled "The
Myth of Soviet Military Supre·
macy." Mr. Gervasi Is director of
the Center for Military Research
and Analysis In New York.
lf there is any one recent hook
that I wish the American public
would read and comprehend above
all others, it Is this one.
Mr. Gervasi's thesis Is that for
most o!the time since World War II,
Arn,elj:an pollcy rnak!lfS have
misled the people Into believing we
had to Increase mWtary spendln~o
"catc!) up" with the Soviets. e
reverse Is also true; Soviet po
makers have used the S8JY¥! plo In
beefing up arms expenditures to
offset American superlortty.
Using a computation of the most
reliable available studies and analyses Qf comparative mllitary
strength, Gervasi convincingly documents the sliperlortty o! the
United States tn strategic nuclear
capability as Well as In such other
areas as naval and 11,1r power.
Tl_!e autixlr gives special attention to the Reag111 adnitn\Stratlon,
which bas can1ed mllltary spend-~
In~ to record heights basOO (Jl the
false clalm .that all d. t1tta ts
neceswy to end aUeged Soviet
mllitary
supremacy.
' I
By United l"r8. ~
"We have a strong defense today,
: TodaY Is Monday, Aug. 18, the mh day ofl986 with 135 to l&gt;Uow.
and we had one five years ago,
: 'Ole~ ta .a~hlng Its tuB phase.
when a,new admtnlstratkm gained
. '111ietuoiillli stan are Mercllry'and Jupiter.
rl.fbl ch!etly by claiming we did
;. 'l1le ~ stan are Venus, Mara and Saturn.
mt. .and by p-omlslni io rearm
t1iD1f IIDIIIOII thta dateareiiJilerthesW!~&lt;tLeo. Tiley Include American America. To that end, It .lias
~~- !J~·t~Lew1l $1'174, Odcago ~~ s~ lnmiler · ImpOsed nee&lt;lleB8 and Incalculable
-=~ :.~~;~ Otto Haroach ("Simke Gets1'11 Your msts upon the llirtcan people,l•
writes Gervasi.

.

The Daily Sentinel-Page 3 •

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SanDRo
SaturdQ '~ ReHb
St . Lou~ J, Nf'W York I. U lrmlngs
LO!' Ani\"~ &amp; San Frwlsro 5

Hpuston
Sar!F'ran

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10\7
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Plt1sbJrgh 6. PhUUJphla I, 1st
PhlladclpNa 6, Plltsllurtlh 0, 2rd
Onclnnallol. S an~ 1
C'l'llra$10 5. Monrrt&gt;al n
HCIHdon i , Atlan t a~
8ulday'!l

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St. J..ouJ!; 2. NP&lt;~· Yor~ l. lst
New York 9, St. Louis:!, 2nd
Ollcii.(CO 2. Montn'al I

PtllladPlphla 5, Ptruburgh I. flw•

lnnin~

rain
AUan&amp;a .f, HOI.IMon 3
San DleaD 9, Clndnnatl 5
1..0! A~lt'! 2, San Franrnro u

~·- GIIII'M!A
San Dk'IO ILMAllnl (}.(1) 111 Clndnna U
IO.nny l}-101. TJ::r, p.m.
lbuton t~rt 12·11"1 at Plt&amp;bur~h 11A'atk
~1 . 7:.1"1 p.m
NE'W York tOjPda U-41 AI II'« An,llf'li'!
JHP rshler I.Hlt, 8 IIi p.m.
'1\iel'ldl\l''tGMM'I!
Atlan ta at C'hlr'ago
Ho.uto n at r'ltlllbJrgh, nl,t\1
St Lools at CIIK' lnMU . night
Monlrcal at San Dltlro. niJ:ht

New Yor~ at Los An .,•..os. nigh!
PhUadelpl\la at.'\an Frllndsn&gt;. nljltll

shooting.
Ba&lt;'on P!ayed eo:J!Irge football a !
Jackson State before going to the
NFL, where he spent 13 years. He
lrgan his career with the Los
Angeles Rams In 196B, rmved tot he
San Diego Chargers in 1973, the
Cincinnati Bengal' thr~ ypars
later and completed hls NFL careo:' r
with the Redsklns from 1978-81.
He played with the USFL 's
now-defunct Washington Fe&lt;k!rals
In 1983.
On .July 30, Bacon was arrested
by pollCt' In Prince George's
County, Md., on drug charges.
Montgomery County pollee said
there is no rvidence to link the
shooting with the arrest.

SPECIAL WEDNESDAY
MATINEES
THIS SUMMER I

�·-

- ":""'-

Red Sox stop red-hot Tigers;:
Indians humble Orioles, 11 ~6
By LOU RABrro
UPI !!pori~ Wr11er
The Boston Red Sox, In an
attempt to bolster their pennant
chances, SUnday acquired two
players wbo have never before been
In a playctf race.
The Red Sox, fBllowlng their 7-5
defeat of Detroit, obtained shortstop Spike Owen and outfielder
Dave Hender!lln from the Seattle
Mariners in exchange for shortstop
Rey Quinones, right-handed
pitchers Mike Brown and Mike
TrujUlo and a minor-league player
to he named later.
"With a month and a half to go
and a chance to win It all, we feel
we've gotten a couple of good
players that can help us," Boston
general manager Lou Gonnan
said. "And they're both young.
Owen, of course, will become our
regular sbor!Stop and Henderson
will batlle with (Tony) Armas for
center field.
"It'D he up to (manager) John
(McNamara) to play whoever he
wants. But I'm sure he'll use them
both a lot. HenderS~n's an excellent
outfielder with a good ann and good
speed."
Owen, a switch-hitter, was hitting
.2461n 112 games with the Mariners.
He had no homers and 35 RBI.
HenderS~n, who named Seattle
skipper Dick WUllams as the worst
manager in baseball In a survey
last month, was batting .Z76 with P
homers and 44 RBI In 103 games.
Quinones, who started the season
In the minors, was batting :m with

the Red Sox. Brown played for
Boston between stlnts for Paw·
tucket of International League and
was 44 with a 5.34 ERA in 15 games.
TrujWo, who has spent most of the
season with Pawtucket, was ~ In
three rellef appeances with Boston.
"We've been looking to improve
our pitching staff,·· Seattle general
rnanager Dick BalderS~n said.
"Boston showed Interest In David
but the thing that rnade the deal was
when they expressed Interest to
solldl!y their Infield and asked If
Spike was available."
Marty Barrett mubled home a
run and Don Bayklr doubled home
two In a three-run sixth inning that
lifted the Red Sox over the Tigers.
Boston has beaten Detroit In ftve ot
seven games In the last 10 days.
Calvin Schlrald!, 1-0, hurled 3 2-3
Innings In relief for the victory. Eric
King, 3-3, was tagged with the loss.
Elsewhere, Ollcago edged MUwaul&lt;ee 7-4, Toronto tipped Texas
8-7111 lllnnlngs. Cleveland bumped
Baltimore 11-6, Kansas City
blanked New York 5-0, California
clipped Oakland 7-3 and Seattle
shellacked Minnesota 11-1.
White Sox 7, Brewers 4
At Ollcago, Steve Carlton earned
his first AL victory and the 3'!Jth of
h1s career. Carlton, 1-1 In the AL
and 6-12 overall, struck out four
over 7 1-3 Innings. BobbY Thigpen
pitched 1 2-3 Innings for his first
save. Bryan Clutterbuck, 0-1, absorbed the defeat.
B~e Jays 8, Ranlf&gt;rs 7
At Toronto, Ernie Whitt's solo

.,

Kruk

'.

paces SD
•
VICtory

.WEAVER EJECTED- Baltimore manager Earl
Weaver was ejected from Sunday's game In
Cleveland by homeplate umpire Larry Young alter a

verbal baUie ensued on strikes Weaver thougbt
outherwlse. Cleveland went on to win the game, n-a
(UPI)

ClNCINNATI (UP!) -

Braves slip past Astros, 4-3
By MIKE TULLY
UP! National Baseball Writer
Only a half-gam£&gt; removed from
last place, Atlanta manager Cluck
Tanner nevertheless has found a
reason to appreciate this season.
"Our guys have done a t remendous job all year," the everoptlmistlc Tanner said Sunday
after his relief crew preserved a 4-3
victory over the first-place Houston
Astros. "I couldn't be happier with
!hOse guys." Atlarita's 'bullpen
looked !Ike a potential weakness
with the absence of Bruce Sutter,
whO p!tched only 18 Innings before
being disabled. Instead , a team of
rookies and veteran Gene Garber

'

has responded.
"For the most pan we 've been
very consistent ," said Garber, who
picked up his 18th save by gettlng
the final two outs. "I think this
game was a pretty good indication.
All three of us did the job."
The Braves still trail first - place
Houston by 11 Y., games.
"I hav£&gt;n't given up on anything,"
Garber said. "Some things are
pretty much sU!cked agalnstw;, but
lf one of the top teams goes Into a
five-or six- game losing streak, we
could take advantage and pick up
some ground . Anything's lXJSSible."
Bob Horner's sacrifice fly in the
£&gt;ighth inn ing drove in Rafael

' .

BengaLs lose., 28-17

•

John

DO YOU WANT
FULL-TIME
SERVICE WHEN YOU
BUY A HEARING
AID?

.'
.'

BE ALIFESA~ER
'

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'·

'

GIVE BLOOD THRU
RED CROSS BLOODMOB.ILE
WEDNESDAY, AUG. 20
SENIOR CITIZENS CENTER
1:00-6:30 P.M.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jewell and
Cheryl and Mrs. Pautlne Atkins
spent several days visiting Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Hlll and Mrs. Allee
Holfman at Madison on Lake Erie
recenty.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Welsh and
famUy and !'Ms. Stella Atkins
atten~Ed
the !urEral of Mrs.
Welsh's cousin, Martha Jewell

'

'v

NO
CHARGE
CHECKING
ACCOUNTS

I

a-.

s.t.lloml

Becky Thoma of Newark and
Aimee Mitch were Monday afternoon visitors of Stacy Jo Worley.
Mrs. Howard Thoma and Becky
spent a recent afternoon with Mr.
and Mrs. Charley Smith and Stacy
Worley.
Mrs. Elaine Downs of Trimble
has been here visiting Mrs. J _R.
Murphy, Mrs. Iva Johnson, Mrs.
Joseph Evans and famlly, and Mr.
and Mrs. Greg Davis and family.
Becky Thoma of Newark was the
overnight guest Sunday of Mrs. Ida
Murphy and Peggy.

Games were played under the
direction of Carolyn Collins with
prizes being awarded.
Attelldlng were Rick and Cathy
Edwards, Laura Harrison, David
and Roma Hesch!, Olarlotte
Hescht, Max Smith, Wendell Hill.
Margaret, Larry and Mike Edwards, Giles and Beatrtce Smith,
Edgar and Sarah Smith, Bernice
Swan, Garnet Swan, Nikko Serlo,

will he honored next rronth.
Olester King noted that Howard
Stars wlll he holding ladles night m
Aug. 23 and all Estern Star
members are guests are Invited to
attend. The group will go bY boat to
tour Blennerhassettlsland and then
wll return to the Point of VIew
Restaurant for lunch.
Bob Reed had the blessing before
refreshments were served by Luke
and May Gllllan, Joe and Ida
Stanley, Audra Well, Louise Well,
Donna Branhan, and Larry and
Judy Well.

••

~

can ensure your hot-weather pleasures remain just that, and not
occasions for medical tre~tritent of
a se.-lous condition.

lAyette shower conducted

The Brewer famlly reunion was
held Sunday at the Portland Park
with 35 famlly members and guests
attending. The Lord's Prayer was
given In unison before the picnic
dinner.
An offering was taken to buy
Dowers for Memortal Day for the
graves of deceased relatives and to
pay other expenses for reunion.
Recognlzed and presented gifts
by the president, David Allen
Brewer, were Edgar Brewer, Mrs.
Audrey Brewer, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Brewer, Jr., Mrs. RIU!
Garrett, !'Ms. Lula Brewer.
Youngsters recogn tzed were
Branoon Fitch, Kyle Lynn Dobbins.
Kenneth Brewer In, and Mandy
Flesher. Aget-wellcard was signed
and a gift sent !D Rodney Beegle
who Is home from the hospital.
Attending the reunion were
David Allen Brewer, !'Ms. Audrey
Sluumoa Lyn Glbno"'

Former resident a rompetitor

in national talent symposium
Shannon Lyn Gilmore, daughter
of Joe and Linda Gilmore, Wal-

worth, Wise. former residents ct.
Pomeroy, recently competed In the
Sympnslum Talent Contest National Finals In Rodchester, Minn.
Shannon Is a sixth grade student
at Walworth Grade School and will
be starting her lOth year of dance
with the Kim Kalla Studio In Lake
VIlla, m., next month.
She Is a member of the dance
team called Dance Magic and A:&gt;r
the past four years has quall!led to
participate In the national finals In

Rodchester.
Shannon did a tap routine to
"Rock Around the Qock" In which
she placed fifth and also did an aero
rilutlne to "Stay", placing fourth.
She choreographed the aero
routine.
She Is the granddaugher of I'M.
and Mrs. Gardner Wehrung and
Mr. and Mrs. Elza Gilmore,
Pomeroy, the great-gradndaughter
of Mrs. Georgia Wehru~. MlddlelXJrt, and the great-niece d. Louise
Gilmore, Pomeroy.

OES chapter has meeting Missionary society meets
Plans for a reception on Sept. 11
honoring Stella Atkins, grand representative to Flortda and of District
.25, were made the Harrisonville
Chapter, Order of the Eastern Str,
met at the temple Tuesday night.
Karen Facernyer, wcrthy matron, and Larry well, worthy
patron, presided at the meeting.
Mrs. Atkins was Introduced and
SEBted In the East. The birthdays ot
Helen JohnS~n, Frances Young,
Charles King, Olester King, and
Neva Nlchollson were noted. It was
announced that the grand organist

water.
By following these few tips, you

Others attending and · sending
gifts were Ann West, Ju~: West.
MOdred Grimes. Susan Cletnents,
Patricia Grtmes, Tammy Dlllon
and son, Stevie, Linda Hudson,
T!lfany Hensley, Jamie Blaettnar
and Jessica, Ellie Blaettnar, Mary
H4ggerty, Tammy Taylor, EllzalEth Harrts and Pat Harris. .

Brewer reunion held

Warrm , at Marietta Sunday.
Mrs. Frances Young spent several days with her brother and
sister-In-law, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Ballin Columbus recently .
Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Alkire were Mr. and Mrs. Dan
Sydenstrlcker, Mason, W.Va. and
Mrs. VIrginia Burke, Pomeroy.

Rick and Carolyn Collins, Amy
Kelly and Tom, Jerry and Sandy
Witham. George, Sally, and Kevin
Serlo, Mike, Elsie, Laura, Aaron ,
and Richard Smith, Dlck and Vl
Woodall, Letha Woodall, Ray
Smith, Unda, Brent, Chad, and
Dustin, Lewis and Helen Sauer,
Mts. VestaSmlth,RobertandFllda
Wiley, Binda Diehl, Bobb and
Eloise Diehl, Amy Satterfield, Carl
and Janet Morris, Pat Anderson,
Debbie Angle, Brenda and Andy
Lehman, Eva Crabtree, Grace
Smith, Marvin and Mildred Morris,
Oliver and Gale Smith, Clifford and
Clara Smith, Raymond and Joan
Nelson, Dan and Angie Edwards,
Jack, Clara Mae and Tarra Morris.
Get :well cards were signed for
Fred Morris, Ralph Junior Swan,
and Myrtle Wilson. Next year's
I'EIInion will be held on the second
Sunday In August at Lonoon.

ment Is provided at once,lt Is beSt to
av&lt;id falling victim to them In the
Orst place.
To avoid heat stroke, exha_ustton,
and cramps, here are some s~es­
tlons : wear light-colored cJbi!Ung,
(l'eferably cotton, when rut In a hot
sun; do not play or do hard work In
direc t sunlight for more than :lJ
minutes at a time; take frequent
rest periods; and drink plenty of

A report on White Cross work for
overseas and overland missions
was given by Mrs. Emma Adams
at the recent meeting ct. the Bertha
M. Sayre Missionary Society held In
the feUowslllp room of the Racine
Baptist Olurch.
The love gift program was
conducted by Florence Adams with
Grel U! Simpson and Noami Stobart
presf'!ltlng the clferlngs.
The meeting followed a dinner
served by The Ruth Circle with
Barbara Gheen pesk!lng at the
meeting. The group sang the theme
song, "God Who Calls Us On a
Journey.' Martha Lou Beegle and
Mrs. Stobart had a skit on the
Lord's Prayer entitled "When You
Prayer, You Say ... " A:&gt;Dowed by
group praying ct. the Lord's Prayer.
Officers' reports were glvf'!l

along with roll call shoWing 10
members from the Ruth arcle and
10 from the Esther Circle.Scripture
was from James L II was mted that
the 1986 theme Is "Celebrate the
Journey" , with books of the Bible
for the next quarter Ill be read by
members being Deuteronomy,
Alms, Joohua, and John.
Games were ~ed following the
meeting.

Brewer, Portland; Sylvia Brewer,
Columbus: I'M. and Mrs. RoDin
Lawrence, Peorta, Ill.; Earnest
Brewer, Racine: Harold Brewer,
Long Bottom; Marilyn Beall,
Mandy Flesher. Columbus; Tlsha
Simerol, Emma Lu Brewer, Reynoldsburg; Edgar Brewer, Por·
tland: Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Brewer, Sr. Columbus; Rita Garrett, Worthington; I'M. and Mrs.
Kerry Dobbins and Kyle Lynn,
Athens; Mr. and !'Ms. Kenneth
Brewer. Jr. and Kenneth In,
Westerville; Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Close, Waterford; Ruby Brewer,
Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Fitch, and
Brandon, Long Bottom: Mr. and
Mrs. Michael Wood, Columbus;
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Close, Watertown; !'Ms. Leonna Beegle, Racine;
Mrs. Lula Brewer, Belpre; Ray
Brewer, MarletU!; !'Ms. Ethel
Cozart, Portland.

Meigs property transfers
Leonard E. Dailey, Helen Dailey
to VIrgil Cazart. Lona Cozart.
parcels, Olive.
Ronald E. Vance, Linda Jane
Vance to Drexel Van&lt;l', Parthenia
Vance, parcels, Scipio.
Drexel Vance. Parthenia Vance
!D Larry A. Vance, Sharon L.
Vance, parcels, Sc!plo.
Ellsworth 0 . Edwards , Gladys
Edwards, Emmett R. Edwards,
Dorothy Edwards !D Robert L.
Wingett, parcels undlvkled Y, Int.,
Sutton.
Ellsworth 0. Edwards, Gladys
Edwards, Emmett Edwards, Dorothy Edwards to George K. s~ ,
Ruth E. Strode, parcels undivided
Y., Int., Sut!Dn.
Kimberly Lynn Phillips nka ,
Kimberly Grueser fka, Gary Alan
Phillips nka, Gary Phlllps fka, to
Kimberly Lynn Phillips, Gary Alan
Phillips, lA, Bedford.
Gary S. Aspln, Karen S. Aspln to
Clarence E. Evans, Delores A.
Evans, par&lt;l'ls, Salem.
Paul E. Smith, Gloria A. Smith to
Paul E. Smith, Gloria A. Smith, lot
467, Mldd. VUl.
Lola Louise Cross, Dec.. to Judy
A. McGuire, Cert. of Trans., Salem.

-

James H. Bearhs, Dec., Pbyllls
M. Bearhs, Aftld., Olester.
WtuTen D. Black, EstheT M.
Black !D R. Wesley You~ . .140A,
Rutland.
R. Wesley Young !D Warrm D.
Black, Est~r M. Black, .!Dl,
Rutland.

Starry crowds
WEMBLY, England (UP!) Prince has been attracting big
names to h1s Wembley shows In
London.
Among those In the crowds have
been Phil Collins, Elvis Costello,
George Michael from Wham!,
Dwight Yoakum and Bob Gelddt.

Winner
Juanita Humphreys, 39149 State
Route 143. Pomeroy, ls the winner
of the Aug. 10, Times-Sentinel
Mystery Farm Conies!. Mrs.
Humphreys was one rt ·seven
persons to correctly name the fann
as that of CecU C. Hellman,
Hemlock Grove Road , Pomeroy,
and will receive the S5 prize &lt;(tered
In the contest.

Golf results
Winners of Tuesday's ladles day
at the Jaymar Golf Club following
18 holes ot play were Margaret
Follrod,lowgross; Sue Arnold, low
net; Debbie Sayre, low putts, and
Debbie Sayre and Carol Crow,
chips-In-hole.

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PEOPLESi
BANK . ,,ri
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THE BEnER BANK
f.OO·I2o00

ture; nausea; extreme tiredness;
and headache.
To lreat heat exhaustion: have
the victlm lle mwn In a cool SlXJI or,
(l'eferably, get S~me bed rest; after
victim Is rested, give her or h1m
sips of water with a teaspoon d. salt
added to each glass to help replace
salt lost through sweating. Usually
with rest, a victim d. heat exhaustion will recover on his or her own.
H not, though, a doc!Dr should be
called.
Heat cramps are also !alrly

common during summer, though
mt as serious as stroke or
exhaustion. They can, however,
cause very uncomfortable and
painful conditions for the victim.
Symptoms Include sweating, weakness, nausea, and muscle cramps
In the legs.
Treatment consists essentially of
getting the person out of the sun,
providing h1m or her with something cool to drink, and letting him
or her re;t for a whlle In a cool or
shady SlXJI.
While these heat-Induced lllnesses generally can be treated
successfully, especially If treat-

'.' .''

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MFMRFR Fn11:

Heat exhaustion, a condition of
extreme weakness caused by a
Iarw k&gt;ss of body Ould through
sweatlng, Is charac_terlzed by: pale,
sweaty skin; normal skin tempera-

Sandy Johnson West' was honored
with a layette shower recently at
Trinity Olurch hosted by Delores
Johnson and Cathy Johnson.
Games were played with prizes
going !D Cindy Sexton and Jenny
Adams. Lort Hensley won the door
prtze. A pastel color scheme was
carried In decoratklns and refreshments for the shower.

:·

c.,,.,.

DIU$ HEAIIItG
AID CENTEI
Ill
Jt4·3S71

victim's assistance at once. While
walling for medical help, though,
certain first aid measures should be
taken for the victims 1 ease and
safety:
Have tbe vlctlm lie down In a cool,
shady spot - Indoors Is preferable;
Remove any outer clothing, such
as a jacket, sweater, a heavy shirt;
Soak a towel, shirt, or cloth wtth
cool or lukewann - bu I never cold
-water and usetowlpeface, arms,
and legs;
Give the victlm a drink of water If
he cr she Is alert.
Unllke heat stroke, heat exhaustion Is more common and less
dangerous. SIIU, It Is serious enough
!D warrant Immediate attention.

.,•,

rocontly oatd when lhl dlooovor_. tho !Ul-timo •rvlco ond dtdlcotod
profoootonot help IVIIIIobt. ot 01111 Hoortno Aid

326 W. Unlool,
.....fri. fiQO.JaGO

urer.

.

.,•'•

'I loot ••• t hovo 1 newloo•on~." Thot'owhotone heortngoldwNror

ENI' DEPARTMENT
JE'ACH WEDNESDAY 1·3 P.M.

A basket dinner was held at noon
with Mike Smith giving grace.
OfDcers elected were GOes Smith,
president; Mike Sllh, vice presldet;
Debbie Angle, secretary and treas-

.

NO GIMMICKS! NO MINIMUM BALANCE!

Ulllwel .

OALUPOUI, OHIO

The 40th annual reunion of the
Smith family was held at the
Rutland Park Sunday with 74
persons attending.
Recognized and presented gifts
were Garnet Swan, the oldest;
~mlth who traveled the

"

dunlng ond chocking oft he lnotrument. blnlfloo forolt mokoo, minorropolro, ond rotated oorvlcoo. Wo lloo pravldo toanor oldo when youro muot
go In for motor ropolr. Mony of thl•llfVIooo oro tnctudod In tho ortglilot
purchiHrloo l~hough Wtlrlhoppy to helpthoHnotorfglnilly litttd by

SEE US AT HOLZER CLINIC

most dangerous perk&gt;d of the year
for falling victim to heat stroke,
heat exhaustion, and cramps. All
these result from being In the heat
or sun too long, especially while
Involved In active situations.
While aU three are serious
conditions and require Immediate
first aid or medical attf'!ltlon, heat
stroke Is the most dangerous. Ills a
condition In which the heat-control
centers of the brain have become
unbalanced.
Symp!Dms of heat stroke are:
skin red and dl)', body temperature
of 104 degrees or more, dizziness,
headache, nausea, and confusion.
Heat stroke is ~xtremely serious
and a doctor should he called to a

Smith reunion held

FOR

SENIOR
CITIZ:ENS!'

Heat wave poses several health problems

Harrisonville happenings

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'.

!'Ms. Howard Thoma, granddailgher, Becky Thoma, and Stacy
Worley were Saturday evening
guests of Mrs. Iva Johnson.
I'M. and Mrs. Guy Sargent,
Jonathan and Krlstl, and Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Reed were last week
guests of Mrs. Carol Sprouse and
Kim, St. Louts, Mo.
I'M. and Mrs. Jerry Holley and
Calvin Lee were recent visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson and
Tammy.
Jed Russell of Oregon is spending
some lime here with I'M. and Mrs.
Robert Russell and other relatives.

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Monday, August 18, 1986
" .
Page-&amp;

Wolfe Pen community notes

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In other games, St. Louis and
New York split a double- header,
the Cardinals winning the opener
2-1 and the Mets taking the nightcap
9-2; O!tcago edged Montreal 2-1;
Philadelphia ripped Pittsburgh 5-1
In a game shoriE!Ied to ftve Innings
by rain; San Diego whipped
Cincinnati 9-5; and Los Angeles
trimmed San Franctsco 2-0.
Canllnals Z.2, Mels 1-9
er's 3-yard touchdown run that
By JOEL SHERMAN
At New York, Danny Heepdrove
drew Cincinnat i to 21-14 in the third
UP! Sports Writer
In
three runs, two wlt h a home run,
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J . quarter.
helping
the Mets snap their longest
Harper faces a similar sit uation
(UPI) - A pair of long shot
losing
streak
of the year, four
free-agent wide receivers used the with New York. AI Toon, Wesley games, and earn a double-header
New York Jets-Cincinnati Bengats Walker and Kurt Sohn will make
the ~ner. John Tudor and
exhibition game to better their the 4"-man roster. Coac h Joe split.ln
two
relievers
combined on an eghtWalton has said he will C&amp;rl)' only
chances for a roster spot.
hltter.
M!ke Har!X'r returned a kickoff four receivers because Bobby
Expos 2, Cubs I
'if/ yards for a touchdown and took Humphrey is being converted from
A!
Montreal,
former EX!Xl Terry
back another 52 yards !D set up a receiver to co rnerback and can
Francona
srored
fotmer EX!Xl
score that helped the J ets to a 28-17 return kicks in an emergency.
Manny
Trillo
with
a
sacrt!lce fly In
That leaves Harper competing
victory Saturday night . Cincinnati's
t ~ ninth off reliever Jeff Reardon,
Ira Hillary grabbed six passes for Yooth Jo .Jo Townsell and .Johnny 6-8. Reliever Lee Smith, 8-7, pitched
"Lam" Jones for the finallXJsilbn.
116 yards.
two Innings of two-hit ball.
"Ira Hillary had some fine TownS€11 is com ing off adisaplXJint
Phlllles 5, Pirates I
catches, " said Bengals coach Sam ing first season wit h the Jets after a
At
Philadelphia,
Gary Redus
Wyche, whose team dropped to 0-2 good showing In the U.S. Football
homered
to
highlight
a four -run
ln the exhibition season. "Some- League. Howt"Ver. he Is ha ving a PhiUies first. Rookie left-bander
times In a preseason game a guy strong training camp.
Jones, a track gold medalist In Bruce Ruffin, 5-3, allowed only four
gets Into an advantageous lXJSitlon.
He ts In the right place at the right the 1976 Olympics. missed all of last hits. struck out four and walked
oore before the rain came. Redus
tlme, and he made the most of It . season because of a ruptured !Inger hit
the first pttch !rom starter Rick
tendo n. He has misSI'd much of
We've liked him al l along."
Reuschel,
7- 14, over the left-field
Hillary has a stiff battle for a training camp with a hamstrtng renee for his lOth homer cttbeyear.
roster position. Incumhen ts Eddie Inju ry and a frac tured finger.
Dodgers 2, Giants 0
Brown and Crls Collinsworth and Despite lEing the second pick
At
San
Franctsco, Rick Honeyfirst-round draft pick Tim McGee overall In tbe draft six years ago,
are certain to make the team. Mike Jones is in danger of missing cutt pitched a two-hitter over eight
Innings, and Alex Trevino homered
Martin, a fourth-year pro, returns Tuesday's cut !D 00 players.
10
lead the Dodgers. Honeycutt, 9-7,
"l have no idea (about his
kicks. Hillary entered Saturday
struck
w t slx and walked two. Tom
night's game as a third-team c~an ces of making the team) ,"
Nledentuer
finished for his lOth
Harper said. ''I'm not overly
receiver.
save.
Vida
Blue,
9-7, gave up 12 hits
"I hOpe this put some ptusses In concerned with that. r have no
before
leaving
In
the etghth.
my column." sald Hillary, an control over lt. To bu rden myself
eighth-round draft choice who last with that would be no good . I'm just
year was cut by Kansas City late In ll)'lng to do my best."
Harper was outstanding Saturtraining camp. "It puts a lot of
pressure on you (when a team Is day. After the Bengals took a 7-0
well stocked at one position). AU I lead 5:17 Into the game, tbe 5-10,
can do Is go out each week, work l!ll-lXJunder fielded the ensuing
lilckoff at the three, cut back at tbe
hard and oo the best I can."
The 5-foot ·11 and 190-lXJunder 25 and outraced McGee tbe ftnal :fJ
from South Carolina was particu- yards to tie the score.
With the Bengals having drawn
larly effective on the Bengals'
second scoring drive. He grabbed within four lXJlnlsearly ln the fourth
Diane McVey,
· CCC·A
Ken AnderS~n's passes over the quarter, Harper grabbed a kickoff
Audiologist
middle for 20 and 31 yards. The at the six and nearly duplicated his
It the .,oworio yH, Dileo Hoorlng Aid Cent.-lo the ..,,_ _Wo provide
31-yarder set up Charles Alexand- earlier run
COMPLETE heortng old llfVIco ouch 11 .,How-up counoetlng. portodlc

I,

Dome Economlc8
Most of us wait long and hard
through the year lor the pleasures
of summer- gardening, landscaping, outdoor recreation, and excur·
slon with family or friends. But be
advised: a certain danger may be
following close on your heels heat-Induced Illnesses .
We've been expertenclng some
real heat spells this summer. These
warm weather tips may be helpful
to you as you plan A:&gt;r famlly rulings
or are working ruts Ide.
According to AI Pugh, safety
leader, the Ohio Cooperative Extmsion Service, summertime Is tbe

plans of the San Diego Padres when
the 198i season got under way.
His minor league credentials
were very good but the 25-year- old
Kruk had to prove he could hit big
league pitching. He finally got his
chance when manager Steve Boros
Inserted him Into the startlngllneup
on July 22. He's been the club's top
hitter and starting left fielder ever
since with a .356 average.
Sunday, Kruk . went 3-for-5, Including his third horner d. the
~p. ,as he paced a 13-hlt attack
tha't caiTteif the Padres to a 9-5 w1n
over the Cincinnati Reds.
"The ball Is just dropping ln there
form-," said Kruk, who Is batting a
torrid .57lln his last six games. He
has gotten hits In 18 of a&gt; contests
since being lnstalled a a regular.
"I've been hitting very well and
I'll take those hits."
"He's been struggling, shutrung
and doing a fine job for us," said
Boros.
The Reds, apparently out of It ·
when San Diego rolled upanS.llead
behind LaMarr Hoyt after 5Y,
Innings, threw a scare Into the
Padres with a three-homer, fourA FA'111ERLY TIP - Cincinnati Reds player-manager Pete Rose
run barrage In the last of the sixth. dlspe~uu a UUle fatherly advice Ill - · Ty, 2% montlll, before the
"We battled hack, kept tl)'lng yoUJ~~t!r Rose went up Ill bat lor the llni time ma lathe1'11011 game
and had a shot at them," said Reds belo"' the 11tart of Sunday's game against San DleJO. (Ul'l)
manager Pete Rose. "But It's tough
coming back when you get that
many runs down and don't get good
middle relief.''
Buddy Bell. rookie Barry Larkin
and Ron Oester rupplled the lXJwer
''
that knocked out Hoyt, 7-8, In the
'
sixth.
Bell, whO extf'!lded his hlttlng
streak 10 15 games, slammed
''
homer No. 13 and h1s sixth In the
•••
last 12 games, while Larkin, called
'
up from Denver on the American
Assocla~n last Wednesday, had
''
'
Ills first in the majors and Oester
hammered No. 6.
••
It marled the Drst lime Cincin••
nati has hit three lllme runs In me
Inning since Dave Parker, Nick
Esasky and Tom Foley did It back
on June 7, 1985, at San Diego.
"You don't k&gt;se many when you
••
hit three homers In an Inning,"
I
added Rose. "But we did lt today
and the game wasn't even close."

Cliff Speck, 2-0, who relieved
starter Zan£&gt; !'rolth In the sixth,
earned the victory with 12-3 1nnlngs
of hitless relief. Garber relieved Ed
Olwlne in the ninth. Larl)' An~l..·,look&lt;lhe ·"-a ..

By CINDY 8. OUVERI

eoo.ay EJdenlllon Agent

Royals 5, Yankees 0
At Kansas City, Mo., George ·
Brett, Frank White and WUile ·
Wilson homered In suwort d. Mark : ·
Gublcza. GubiC711, 7-5, gave up six · ·
hits and struck rut a career-high lQ . ·
In earning his fourth stralgl).l ·
victory and second straight shutout: · ·
Ron Guidry fell to 6-10.
Al)gelll 7, A's 3
At Anaheim, Calif., Doug Deeln- · · ·
ces and Bobby Grlch dellvered· key
sixth-Inning singles In suplXJrt of ·
Don Sutton's :JJ6th career vlc!Dry:
By sweeping the three-game serieS,
Call!ornla stretched Its lead to 4 1-2
games over Texas. The lead Is the
largest for the Angels this season·.· ·
Mariners 11, Twins 1
At Seattle, Alvin Davis belted.his .
third homer In three games .and ·
Ken Phelps and Scott Bradley also ·
homered, backing Mike Morgan~s
six-hitter. Morgan, 9-12, earned his
first victory since July 30. Mike
Smithson fell to 9-11.

I
!

'

In the spotlight

Kruk didn't figure heavlly In the

Ramirez, who led oft with a single,
stole second and went to third on an
errant throw by catcher Alan
Ashby. Ramirez had three hits and
scored two runs.

d!&gt;.....,,

homer In the bottom of the .llth · . ·
Inning lXJwered the Blue Jays:
Whitt's 11th homer came on a 1-1
pitch from Jeff Russell, 4·2. Mark
Eichhorn, }0-4, hurled A:&gt;ur sill b:lut
Innings for the victory.
lnciiiiS 11, Orioles 6
At Cleveland, rookie Cory Snyde~ . ·
&amp;mashed two home runs, lncludlr!g ·
a three-run shot that capped •a ·
six-run third Inning, to spark .the
Indians. Bryan Oelkers, the llllrd ol ·
four Cleveland pitchers, Improved , ,
to 2-2. Mike Bocillcker, 14-7,was .the . ·
loser.

The Daily Senti~el

By The Bend

51h Street
2212 Jackson Avenue
New Haven, W. Va . Point Pleasant, W. Va.
882-2135
675-1121
_., ~ '"'

r: .
Second Street I} •

Mason, W. Va.
773-5514

'

'DIE SMALIBIT ENJOY- Sbe ~have JUIII bMI a year del, but

11tt1a J1r1tWv Nicole Sltambln, daulhler cj EllabelbSitamblln, look to
the 1tldtlle rldellllke a duck taket1lo water. For Iter the canoe ride - a
favorlle•

J-2209
842

I

,,

" ''""P0NDE~INC.

•

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�,Monday, August 18, 1988

Page 8-The Daily Sentinel

.

Winners named
.
for t~dent show
,

.~

.

I

'

.I

..
,I

.•'!

.-

.

:t11~: .~ i/i ed Jlllf(e~

cover the
following telephone exchHnge.~ ...

.,,'

Jarrod Vanlnwagens' red hamster, Mark, best
rodent: and Eric Waters wlthSu..., the CockatoO, l)eot
blid. Second row, left lo right, Me._ GUeu wllb '
Boolser, best dressed pet; Rod Newsome with his red
hellled piranha, best fish; Shawn Waters wllbBaollt
the !enol, most unU8U81; Meigs Fair King Brian ,
Freeman, MeiKS Fair Queen Donia Crane, and visitor
Karla Click, thef986MasonCounty, W.Va.falrCJ~een.

WINNING PETS- First place winners in Friday's

llllllual Pd show at the Meigs County Fair were, first
row, left' Ill right, Kelly Ridenour wKh Wrinkles, the
moot lalented pet In lbe owner age 12 and under
category; Terry Lewl!i, holding Mica Jones' Bandit,
the ~ :talented pet In the owner age 13 and over
calegory; Mariy Hofler with Buster, hesl cat; 'JY!Iln
IWse wll,ll !$lr Buster, best dog; Lisa Holbnan with

991 ~ Middleport

985l43247949742667-

GREAT BEND El£t1RIC, Inc.

Pomeroy
Ches.t er
Porlland
Letart Falls
Racine
Rutland
Cootville

•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial

'

992-2156

Office 949·2438

..'
...
,.

'
,.

BOYS - Out of the many. many cortestants in this

,•

Cheryl Roush; Corey Woods, lt-18 months, wllh
mother, Alicia Woods; and Kochel Ashley, UUie Miss
Meigs County Fair. Second row, lefllo right, JGshua
Napper, 18-24 months, with mother, Pam Roush;
,Joey Manuel, two years, with mother, Denise
Manuel; David Michael Camp, three years, with .
mother, Vlclcy Camp; Tommy Leroy Roush, four
years, with mother, Rhonda Roush. See additional
photo on Page 10.

year's pretty baby contest at the Meigs County Fair,
!hese eight Ultlelads were chosen thc winners in their
""''J"dlve categories. In front, left to right, are.
David Tiemeyer, little Mr. Meigs County Fair;
Zaduuia Collerlll, winner in the 0·3 months age
group, with his mother, Thebna Cottet"ill; Branoon
sturgeon, 3-6 months, with mother, Terri Sturgeon;
Matthew Wandling, 6-12 months, wHh grandmother,

Area deaths
"

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3 1974 tnto\no1ionot bus

• D0822EHB37756

..•

.,
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•1JB620H346044

Correction

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:~
,•

Tracy Michael. this year's Meigs
County Fair co-winner of the Eskev
Hill award for outstanding ho rSi'·
manshlp. is a memher of Ihe
Pleasure Riders 4H Club, and not
tl)e Country Clovers Club. Pam
Ash. who also shares the award, is u
member of the Country Clovers.
The award was presented bv
Rachel Downie during Youth Night
actl\ltties at the fa ir.

Al l Kirts of the Eastern Junior
High School interested in playing
volleyball this fa ll should attend a
meet lng at 61hls Pvenlng In the high
school gymnasium.

P:trems meet tonight
Parents of Southern High School
ath letes wUI meet at 6:30 this
evening for a cleanu p session at the
booster building.

!Continued from Page 1)
grandparents. James and Pat
Cobb, Thousand Oaks, Calif.; a
nephew, Zachary Arnold, and a
bmther·in-law. Steve Aroold, both
of Georgia, and several auntg,
uncles and cousins.
Private funeral services wUl he
held with Mr. Bob Melton offlclat·
ing. Burial will be- in the Wells
Cemetery. There will be no visita·
lion. The Ewing Funeral Home is in
charge of arrangements.

1913 Internatio nal bus

6

66 pas11nge'

nCSE522 V1 13604

group Saved. from Point Pleasant .
W.Va., will he singing Friday, Aug.
22, 7:30 p.m .. at ttl&gt; Mount Olive
Communit y Church. Pastor Law·
renee Bush Invites the [J.Jblic.
Reualoll'i
LETART. W.Va. - The annual
Johnso.n family reunion wiU be held
Sunday, Aug. 31 on the West
Virginia side of the Racine Locks
and Dam. A basket dinner will be

9 . 1965 GMC Handi-Van

served at noon.

nG1001PE3718A

POMEROY - The annual Ours
family reu nion will be held Sunctay,
Aug. 31 at the Meigs Olunty Senior
Citizens on Mulberry Heights in
Pomeroy. Dinner at I p.m.

I

!lees.

10 1966 CheVTolet 2 Ton
S tal!. e Body huck
t 1.

TOP SOIL

lir•

II- ply
tr-~ CDollr

•TC V143F702259
Add itional information on
these ... ehicles may be ob tained at thai Meig• Local

_

Said Board rea•rves the
light to wal\18 informalittes.
to acce pt or reject any and
all or parts of any and all
bids.
J ane Fry, Treasurer,
Meigs Locet
S chool District

16141992-6660
1811 . 8, 16, 18. 4tc

EAR,
NOSE &amp; THROAT'
'
GENERAL ·ALLERGIST

- -::-:-::-=-.--Public Notice

.

304 675-1244

Lena K .

FREE!

· COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
.
DINING ROOM ONLY
Served with whipped potatoes, chicken gravy.
cole slaw. hot roll. butter and coffee . Sotry,
no substitutes ucept beverage with addi-

FOR JUST

$3.25

CROW'S FAMILY ·RESTAURANT
PH. 992·5432

,.

Clttttor, Oh.

PH.

IE Mtin
,

NOTICE TO 810DERS
Tho Board of Educttlon of
the Meigs locel School Distrk:t dnirn to reuive
sealed bld1 for the following

V. C. YOUNG HI

,.,..,.,,Olio

992·62U or 992-7314

odloot

4·15-'86-fc

y81r:
Gesoline .nd Dll Products
Tir" and Tubes
In order to be aanJkiered ,

Nen elroad, Clertc

cefved in the Tr•turer'a Of.
Ike. 821 S. Third Avenue.
Middlep·o rt, Ohio. on or be·
'fort 12;00 o'clock noon on
The Boerd of EduCitton

reserves the right to ICillpt

Sond to:

....
The Daily Sentinel ,
Alllllr IIIH

'1 ~' ~

Silo,--·

NT 11377.

If,

Prlnl-.-.,

books, supplies, crewel ,
cross stitch, needlepoint,

Seller

ANNE ADAMS

SMALL .
WANT ADS
.
'

PH. 192·lllllo

,
'

Pom•ow. Oh.

{;.:.· l

•

'

·'

Cell 81•-448-0370.

9

dateop.-.lngs formMag. . end
dtmandrltolll h thil ..... lt'1

euy, 1un .,d profheb... We
.._.., over 700 pelting toyt lftd
glftt f11turlng thl RIW an irnlted
tlllklng dol Cricktl whh:f1 will be
ltdvert•ed an netlonll T.V. No
e~lh inv81tmlnt, no coiKtlng.

no dtNvlring tnd no HfYict
c:hargt. AU you need ilad.. lrtW ~,
m8kt mon-v. hevtfun .net tfew
t..urt of IPift time. No , exp• ...... ~ ,;•
rlence nece..ary. C•H 1 ·100·
227-1610.
3000 ep;tvemnMint jobl litt.··
1111,040- 151 ,230 ye•. Now
hiring. Call 8015·187·1000 E•t:
R-91106.

EASY ASSEMBLY WO .. KI .
1714.00 per 100. Guer.nt_.,.
paym.,t. No ••1•. Detlill-llf\CI
11:1mpad anve'ope: El•·111.
3418 Em~ri11, Ft. PiMc1, R.
33482

REPS NEEDED for buein• ,
acoounts. Full -time, 110.000.
180,000, Pert·ti!M, 112,000118.000. no ulllng. f'IPHt
busln••· Set vour own houra.
Trlinlng provkltd. CeH 1-t1Z·
938 ·1870, M-F, 81m to lpm
(centrelatandrad tlma) .

··~

Ptlny Trudl Stop Rettaurllnt • ·~ ·
now accepting e.,pNcltton for •
cook-waitr•s. Phone 304-717· ·
8357 between 10 1.m. • 3 p.m.
01' 1pply at rHtlurlnl.

12

Situationa
Wanted

Speci•l nuning care for tld•iy
in P'ivete home. Cell 114-992·
3696.
Room ... d bo•rd for low Income
S.,ior Citlzent. Cell 114·9923595.

14 Business Training

Wanted To Buy

........ .

We P.IY cash fOr lite modal ciNn
Jim Mlnk 'Cfl.v.-Okfl lne.
Bill G~na John.,n

45760

814-441 -31172

SALES &amp; SERVICE

TOP 'CASH paid for '83 mod•l
end newer usMI cars . Smith
Buidl-Ponllac, 1911 Eaetem
Ava.. Oellipolls . Call 614· 446·
2282.

Wa Can'Y Filhlng Supplies

Pay Your Cable t!o
Phone Bills Here
IU!INISS PHONE
16141 9'12-6550
liSIOEN&lt;E PHONE

WANTED TO BUY ustMI wood.
coal haatert. SWAIN 'S rURNI lUAE, 3rd. 6 Oliva St Oenlpo·
lit. Cell 814-448 -3159.

rings, jewelry, atwling w•r•. old
coMls. llrge cunlflcy. Top prl·
c•. Ed. Burkitt B1rbar Shop,
2nd. Ava. Mlddl..,ort, Oh . 614·
992-34711.

TIE QUAUTY
PIINJ SHOP

Fu .A"

y,, Plltlllf Nlflt

enca you •r• receiving bMed on
the fllmlty

Se t v rct~s

and Graduation
S101ionory, Mognoti&lt;
Sign~ Rubltor Stomps.
lusinMs Forms,

*•· AM mat• born

after 1-1-eo multhtve ••tf.C·
tiva lefVice number E.E.Q.

Employ•r .

EIIIIJi ll y 1111~111

PWS: OHict 5uppbs &amp;
furnilure, Wedding

.
·

Schools
Instruction

L•e m to preplfe Income Tu: "

retuma •nd l1uncll

11

cop, s.,.,icn, Etc:.

ISS lilt It, -ltport
104 ......., ••• '"""'''

Help Wanted

MARITIME TRADES

1 nt'W and
eliciting ClrMr. Ci111.. lllft
S~t•mb• 8th throughout 1ht •
Tri·St•ta. For mora inlornt~flon,
phone OenTu In Qalllpolt,
614· 44&amp;· 8178 .

'1iB'\Yimt8dtoO.tl-

SaJking 10 applicants to fill
lmmediat• openings with lnllr· 1 ·
t
national org~~nb:etlon. On·thl 0
job training. good starting II·
lary, a•ctllant Mnefita pechge.
wortd trwel. Appliunta mutt bl Experienced bookkeep• tHing
in good phy&amp;lc.sl conditton. nM accounts. Cell 814·441betwaen 17·24 .,..,.. otd . Call 7093 .
toll tr .. " OhM» 1-800-21J2138A. Mon .-Thur1., 9.m· 2pm .
Profanionel Sign P1inting.
Signa ol qullity end d'-tlnctlon,
B•byaltt•ln my hom~ater11ng in A lrbNih , pic1orilll, ICfMn ptro-·
s . .. Sand r•u mu 6 raf•tn· ens printing. Cal aher 3 :30
ces to At. 4 lox 148, Oelllpolia, PM. 304-175· 5027.
.
Oh 411831 .

992-3345

3/UHn

core
heater cores.

~;;,~~~~f~~~:~

MoootO
ol
addr;s,
or
llcanu, bring your btrt:h
Cl1t or voter'e r11J611retlon urd,
.oclelttcurltv cerd. dlack stubs
that kldie~~tethesmount of groas
tamlly noome forpaetl monthl
.nd the type of welfare •slat-

16

can

P.,.·tlfM uerNrv and fuNtima
babylittw (combhldl in my
hOme In Qalllpolla. R•l••'*
end 1xpertwl ce a mutt. Call
11.t-... 8-1422 aft• 5PM.

PAT HILL FORD

hb., sittM naed.S Park Oriv•
ArM, I~ 1nd 41-'1 yaM' okl. daye
and tvlflktP lhlfts. Sand ,..
.. ,.. Wid ret•enon to Boa
C-11 cera Po lrn PIMitnt Regiater, 200 Mlln St., Point ,....

26 06 0

•

Ft nonr:1 .11

Need blbyolittar 2PM to 8PM.
P•rf . .,meone with dllktren at
home. Cell 614-367-7289.

also acid boil and rod
out radiators. W.ealso
repair Gas Tanks.

'.

21

Buslneas

0 pportunity
I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLtlt:t·
INO CO . recommends thet you .
do bualn•• with peopll "u
know. lfld NOT to eencl Money
throu~ the mill untM you h.Ve

=:.

. , .~-=··:w:.v:•:·:=~~- ;~=i~:·:•:''"~.,=..~ttoosoll:'""r:•~·
'{ard saleS

. C. GRIMM

Syracuti:.lN~O
paned away
on a yair ago ·
. today.

....... Pomiirov ........ ..

· ·Gamiiolis ·

Middleport
Ill Vicinity
...... -.... --- ·- . ·-·-. ·-· ..

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

&amp; Vicinity

-~·-· ·

: !cUt IIUT ... fUIUII

U511

., KIJC'S
Gtr~t• lit•:

' •Gilft&amp;IS
, ,, 'C,Ij)~IJIPQUt.

ttouMhold 1tem1. 401 4th St .

Rec"'•·

Palrltli\8'; . ·

..

i

• FREE' E8'1;l~TES

.........,,

94t~lt.J·.

2·17·..1flt

•

't

•uv. 18· 210l.,..o.
~ • ·• ·

Bloyclt." clothing, bib¥

, Gun•r CIHnfng ,.

·•

N... Mtrl monl¥_7 FfiiiEHDLY

HOMETOY PAftTIE8hMhnm•

Lo1t: Mila blecll cat wurlng
white n.. collar. Closa to
Be•chgrova Camatary. 614·
992 ·2764.

IN MEMORY OF
CHRISTENA

'

I

Mike Davit, a14·211-4117 ...
Bm.tlcl.. Ohio Inc. , Jt8 het
Main St.. Jtcklon. Oh 411.0.,

In Memoriam

CLRSSIAED RDS

~· I ~"­
r\ 1/&lt;iO,

LOST Cash riWerd. Lon inO .J .
White Rd. trN. M1ltbltck Llbb.

742-20!7

Read tHe

'

Lost and Found

FOUND Contact lenset. 4'h
Ave. by9C)IIcour11. Glrlsglu•e•
Eettem Ava. ecrou from U.S .
Merine. C•ll614·4411·7338.

6-17-t!c

' Af,., 5 Call

latch hOOk, quilflng , and .
:nore.
··

family

'

6

AUTO.&amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
AI .. Ttltlllllllo•
PH. 992-5612
or 992-7121

FEliCE
CO.ANY
I'll. 992-6931

1

2

~

2 kittens, 304-675 -76151 after
6.

Middlaport. Ohio
1 -13-tlc

NEW FOR ONLY $1
96-page, hill·color clog of Cr11t1 - patterns.

Read the

Mix lid breed dog to glve IWIY lo
good home. Loves kids. 4 111
ya•s old. Call614 ·892-2772 .

992-2196

52•~BML. Wn~rltk,

Sadly mlaeil by
children and other

l1rvict

Optn NIQhlt m I

Y!Nn &amp; ALIMIN
Camp- GutW )M&gt;rl&lt;
Ccittlfllfft Rtlllo'*'llng
Floollnt of ott Types
Warltecl In home • •
' 20.._ ,_.,.

-·-·

•nv end ell bldt.

18141992-6660
j8J4, 11, 18, 31C

SUPatOI
SIDIIG CO.

skirt. A great value . MIS-

ses Sizes t 0 to 20.
$3.25 for each pattern.
Add 75f each pattern tor
POstage, handling .

Auguot 19, 1988.

Jane Fry, Tr111uret'
Meigs Local School Dlnrict

Pert Beagle pup . 5 month• old to
grva away . See Frank Clal~nd or
Todd TIYior It RICin I.

..Uiil,

4044- Four options in
one dress pattern : cap
sleeve , three quarter
sleeve , slim skir1 or full

all olllilod btdo lhtlf bo ,., .

or reject

eltctr~ll

work

PATTERNS

------------------ ·
.

- Plumbing .nd

!Fret E11lmo10o1

·,.

FriM~dly

-Concttt• work

Public Notice

Card of Thanks

Chtrlll Ailtl\11. IU'h,

PAUCRIPT IONS

SERVICE

64 Misc. Merchandise

Pharmacy
ROIIIId Hr.nlng, It ~ .
MM lflru Stl. 1:00 1m. tot p.m.
SundtW 10:30 to 12 :30 tnd S tot p m

CARPENTER

91)·~tiY

- Addona .and remoclallng
-Roofing end gutter woril

5 WISHER LOHSE
A.Ph .

YOUNG'S

C&amp;L PAIIITING

-- -----:---··

POMIIOY, OH.

Feoturing· Kenturky Fried Chichn

rill StripMtiC.a. O.p.ldro

Compare us with the other guy ...
Shoot, we're not afraid!
·
DISC, 110, 126, 135 FILM ONLl '
' '
~~~--- ....

Me~C~o~Uouon .

388-9338
8-7·1mo.

Buying deify gold, al tv.r coins,

18111 . t8 , 26 , 3tc

1~88·87

Sunday

CIIIJlllt1• Cor Painting 1375

the right to ~ecept arretectanv
or 1M bidl.

tho

3 dogl to givl IWIY to good
hom1. 2 femsl• 1nd 1 milt.
Pert Shepherd. Cell 1114· 9927458.

tO A.M.- 11 P.M.

IOOY WOH $10 P.- Hr.

Clarence and
Ma11aret Andrews

K•nntth

10 A.M.· 9 P.M.

I.UI

lioud on tho 28111 cloy df
August, t988, at - · o'cltod&lt; rmon. It tho o11ict of
Leading Crooi&lt; con ....,cv
Dittric1. Tho Board ..... .

ABSOLUTELY FREEl
GDAVS
. We often hear people compleln about "dogdaya" in Auguat,
but few people knowthatthe p!:ylae "dogdeye" NftNtothe aea·
10~ when Slniua, the dog atar, ~•• with the sun. Meny ltrenge
behela rovotvecl oround tl!li!*lod - thetrelo onthefiratdogday
foretold forty daye of rein. that dop were morellk•lv to go med
during ~heoo daye, end that • W81 •pecleHy dengeroua to go
awlmm~ng then. Todlly, "dog dllya" u~uetly' mtene jult that it' a
mlaorably hot!
.Call the Meiga County HumMe Society ot 992·8606 if you
have any qullltiont penelning to your
.

SMAU ANIMAL HOUIS
Mon.·Wod.-Thurt. 3·5 pm
Tun. 6:30-1; Fri. 1·2 pm
Hanf
Soturdoy 10-11 ;30 om
IU11y, Wottr'l
Wo jtan '(he An·
·. LA-·-A - l &amp;· ,· t-H..
,,
SUIGIIY IY AJ!ff.
• irlll6 SOfT' ·
PH. 304-675-244.1
Haw A.SmaH
'
c
Monlhly .....
BEND AREA ALL
Piw ln1tiel illstalofl011
Ripley .Office
Puts A Soft- In y.,..
For Hours
H... l'*r IJ.oo. with
Opfioo to .. ,1

,-or

Full blood..:! Siberian Huaky, 1
old. Good with kids. Call
614-.WII-7907 .

Friday 8r Saturdlly

c-

special.

Simply bring In your roll ol Color Print
Film tor processing, and we'll give you
a roll of Colorcralt Film to play with ... '

Ne SunHy (ails

~

ve•

305 Jackson Ave.

bids will bo .....ad ond ' - '

We 1111uld like to thali
our many special friends
for all the beautiful
canis, flowers and aifts
giwn to us dtlifll 011
Golden Anniversary
celebration. Your
presence·, your wann
thoiJI(Jts and pra~rs
made our day very

We'll even :..:rnlth
lho lltm

E. Shodcey, DVM
PT. PUASANT OFFICI

'"·-9.49-1101
or t49·2160

tU~

Free llitt•• lon_g hlired mlico.
Cell Bt4-MB-&amp;263 .

Monday-Thurodly

28th do'( of Augul1. t9a8, by
lin o'dodc JtO:OOI A.M. AI

t81 t1. t8 . 25 3tc
1

"Free EstirNtee"

I

Two bags of v•rd uta, leftovara
to ;Nuwey. Cell 814 -3888M9.

2 MHos fro11 Bltlwol
3 Milos f,.m Vlntao
HOURS :

Closed

Giveaway

aorqu-.h.....,. trMtlfttl., •·
JII'IPft
·
them
lor • ltnllkllll.fMI:IIII·
m~nt ce.-r.
Qffefa • - ·:
rewerding •lilY II~N. and
.., outttllncilrtO N!;ltlltl.~~
to tM "'""""' .-ndldale.
lmmedl.te oonaid•adoft. MI.
1

progrtm . .lan .. . ·•

Free puppl• pert Airdele Terrier,
part COllie. Call61 4 - ~9 - 2313 .

Woods lliU load

Cm..vonc:y Dilbict by 1he

for

sity Mon 1nd Wad. 304-1176·
15499 or 67&amp;-48611 .

RED'S
CARRY OUT

AI silled 1*11 ,..,. be fled

.. ""' office of leading

On August 6, 1986, in the
Meigs County Probate Court,
Case No. 26141, Barbara L.
Nease, 627 E11twood Ct., Al tamonte Springs, ftorid.l
32714. was 1ppointed Executri• ofthe estate of Mildred
C. Phillips. deeeeled, late of
43038 State Route 124, Po·
meroy. Oh;o 45769 .
Robert E. Buck,
Probate Judge

CALL :6141 992·2104

Ntttw Ho1111s Built

TOWN &amp; COUN1RY
VETEIINAIIAN
CUNIC
Paul

rocolvor1ype hltdl
automl1io lodcO\g flont hub

NOTIC OF APPOtNrMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

"WE HAVE HEARING AIDS"

SIDING 'CO• .

18113, t4, t&amp;. 17. t8, 19,
20, 7tc

.... . - ..doll

Wanted rid a to Marhull Univer-

11. 124, P...ray Ohio

Autul1 22. 1988 11 10:00

H.D. blnory
cergo light
ttlndy apple rod
troilor10Wing pecllage

j8 14J742-2990.

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

10-8-tlc

A. M. for the purchase of the
Edna F. Wilker rul Htate.
The reel estate it a 2 story
frame dweiUng skueted at
180 Hamilton Street In the
Vllltge of Mlddlepon, Ohio,
contitting of 3 bedrooms.
1Y, ba1ho, kitchen, dining
room. central air conditioning and
two .,dostd
porchea. lmmedilte possession. The right Is retlf\'ed to
reject any and all bids.
Neva F. RuaseU,
b .ecutrht of the Ettate
of Edna F. Walter

Reduce 11fe end fatt witll
GoBne Tlbleta and E-Vep " WI•
ter pills" Fruth Pharmacy.

Roger Hysell
Garage

Stroot: Pomeroy. Ohio• ..,tit

..... fuoltlnk

1 Te1ms of ule will be ouh
or check w ith politnie I. D.

CONSTiUnoN

FILL DIRT

Offers will be received at
the office of Bernard V.
Fultz at 1 11 Vt West Second

H.D. lin- vO\yt .. . t

Bus Garage.' Rutland. Ohio

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.

...
and-

iair'S·

992-3410

LEGAL NOTICE

161 NlOX16mudondonow

•CONCRETE WORK
25 Yoera l!ic,erience

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

NOTICE

...._..,

OC6536F 132745
1973 GMC Chevrolet
'h lon Pk:kup

DARWIN - The LaudermUt
family reunion wUI be held Sunday,
Aug. 31. beginning at 9 a.m., at the
road side park on Rt. 33.

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions - Mary
Wallace. Middleport; Benny Dent,
Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges - Peggy
Taylor, Sue Bentz, Mary Wallace.
Suooay Admissions - Russell
Cullurns, Pomeroy; Elizabeth
Hepp, Pomeroy; Virgil Roush.
Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges - Jonathan

•'rRE~ TII~MJNG

Public Notice

tr.,......,n

8 1976 Dodge Tradesman

Van - #821 BB6X046288

MONDAY
RACINE - Racine Merchants
Association will meet Monday. 7
p.m ., at The Club. All members
urged to attend.

ALL TYPfS

Public Notice

SPECIFICATIONS
t987 'II 1on otyteaide 4ll4
pidwp
302 engine "' -ivllont
.,.om11k:
limited slip r•r ukl
rMr ltfiP bu"1)•
bright low mount west.-n
mhTOrt
H.D. fn&gt;ntlf'ld ran lhodls

7 1972 Ch8vrolet bu s
66 paasenger

Community calendar / area happenings

I

Area woman

19 72 Internatio nal bu1
66 paJitoger

•SICiiNG ·SOI'FlEn

•REMOD&amp;LI'fiG OF

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND

Leading c ... Con181V.,CV
Olotrict will - 1 oealod bids
ot ill office loco&lt;ed It 34481
Com Hollow Rood; Ru11eld.
Ohio 46776, for 1he ....ell_
byleadingc-c ........cv
District of one new mo1Dr
""'icte .. follo-=

Care lor the elderly, room.
board, laundry. 24 hour care.
Aauonlble rate&amp;. Lot a T.l.C .
304-773-6828 '

4

1-3-'86 tic

I1-::=:;:~~~~==t:::~~~~;~==-1

• t JB729HA19920

Jl

6&amp;01 ,

4-16 ·'86 tfn

farM Equlp111ut
Parts &amp; Servlee

66 puseriger

PICK OF 'l'HE POULTRY- Howle Lawrenoo &lt;i the starJit8.. 4-H
Club was a big wlnqer with hl!i poultry exhibit at lbe Meigs County
Junior Fair. He recel'ved two trophies, two rosettes lor grand champion,
and one lor reserve champion, along with a $00 bond for hl!l buff-faced
polish and mo-line 362 chickens.

Decoreted cek• for any occa·
Weddings 1 specialty. Will
deliver for tm~ll tee. 614· 992 lion .

Day or Hight
NO SUNDAY &lt;AilS

Aulhorizttf John D•ro,
New Holfond, lush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dtoltr

GARAGE-FUL
OF STUFF
992-2156

4 19 75 lnternat rona l bu s
66 passenger

3 Announcements

PH. 949·2801
or 949-2860

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVIllE, OHIO

THANA

2 . 1972 Internatio nal bus

Blood appeal i.r med

,.

BOGGS

OF CASH
BETTER

#t 38820H348030

66
passenger
#t 36820H346036

AII liD till ce llieII Is

"At boson able Prices"

'A HANDFUL

• 13662CHA20793

Amanda llusseU. Medina; a
Curtis Dale Johnson
brother. Thomas, Omar Russell.
RACINE -' Parents of Southern
Grove City; a sister, Frances
BesldPs
his
parents,
he
was
Curtis Dale Johnson , 8.1, 29430
High
athletes wtll meet Monday,
Stover.
Chillicothe:
a
special
preceded
in
deal
h
by
a
son,
Clyde
Oak Grove Road, Racine. died
6;
ll
p.m
.. for a clean up session at
friend.
Adeline
Snowden.
Rutland.
Johnson; a grandson, Ricky John·'
Sunday night at his residence.
the
booster
building.
and
a
son·in·iaw,
Pat
Neutzl
ing,
Mr. Johnson wass hom at Racine son: a brotlrr and two sl&lt;ters.
Services will be held at 2 p.m. Long Bottom.
on Feb. 15. 1903, a son of the late
RUTLAND- Rutland Church d.
Besides his parents, he was
Phillip and Della Reeper Johnson. Wednesday at the Ewing Funeral
God
wUI have Vacation Bible
He was employed by the Valley Bell Home with Ri'v. J. Emmett Ferrell preceded in death by his wife, Elma
.Jr. officialing . Burial will be in S. Russell; a sister, Emma Pullins . School for children all ages, Aug.
Dairy for several years . He was a
18-22. !rom 6:00 to 8:30 each
LP!art Falls Cemetery. Friends and an infant brother.
member of the Racine M. E. Church
evening. Closing program on Aug.
Services
will
be
held
at
I
p.m.
may call at thP fur¥lral home from
and was a member of Carpent Pr' s
24.
7 ~thi s evening and from 2·4 and 7-9 Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral
Local Union 350. Pomeroy.
Home with Mr. Nell Proudfoot
, Survivl~g are his wife, fl&lt;'rtha F. p.m. Tucsda) .
RACINE - Southern Junior
officiating.
Burial will he In Beech
Ealon Johnson; HuT'£' sons and
Grove Cemetery. Friends may call High Athletic Boosters \Yill meet
Truman A. Russf'll
daught ers· in·law. Harry an d Doris
al
the funeral home from 24 and7·9 Moooay, 7 p.m., at the junior high
Johnoon , Columbus; Roy and Bet 1\'
school. AU boosters urged to attend.
p.m
. today.
Truman A. Russell. 68, Union
Jotm!lln, CarroU. and Da le ami
Avenuf'. Pomeroy. di«l Sa lurday
Linda Jotmson. Wadsworth; thrl'&lt;'
EAST MEIGS - There will he a
daughters and sons·ln·law, llu th nig ht In thecardiac care unit of the Clinton H. McNamee
meeting
Monday, 6 p.m., in the
HoizN Medical Center.
and Delbert Smlt h, Racine: Eiiem
Clinton H. McNamee. 84. Racine. Eastern High gym. for all girls
Mr. llusscll was born In Middle·
and Glen Cartwright, Steversv il iP.
fXll1 on DPr. 21. 1917,a,onoftheiate died Suoo ay at the Pomeroy Health Interested in playing junior high
Mich .. and Della and J .P . Sauer.
"'Ueybail.
Milton E. anrt HPien Autherson Care Center.
Point Pleasant. Nineteen grand
HuSSf'l l. H(• was a s1eelworker at
A retired farmer. Mr. McNamee
TUE'!DAV
th(• K aisf'r Aluminum Corp., Ra · was born Jan. 28.1902, at Carmel in
LONG
BOITOM
- The Long
\l' !l ~\1,'()00. W .Va .
Meigs County. a son of the late
Bottom Flame chapter meeting
Hr wa s a mcmlx&gt;r of the William and Sarah Johnson MeN a·
wUI be held Tuesday. 7:30p.m.. at
Pomeroy
Church of Christ . and was mee. He was a member of the the Mt, Olive Community Church.
An appea l for blood replacemen t
is being made by the family of Mrs. .:1 veteran d Wo rld WarJL He was a Carmel United Brethren Church.
Long Bottom. Speaker will he Mary
Surviving are a sister, Sadie Dimond from Cheshire. Everyone
Elsie Cii"E"ie. who has used ovrr 10 memt»r of Meigs Aerie 2171 ,
units amns still n:ceivtng two unit s F ra! Prnal Orc:Fr of Eagles, Drew Trussell, Bashan, and several welcome.
a week as she recur.eratf'S from WPhstPr Post .'E, American Legion. nii'C&lt;'s and nephews.
Besides his parents. he was
and thr United Steelworkers of
heart SU!'I,'I?IY·
preceded
In death by lour brothers WEDNE'IDAY
Amtric'a
Local
5668.
The bloodmobile will br at Ill&lt;'
and three sisters .
SurY
iYing
arc
a
daughter.
Anit
a
Senior Citizens Center. 1·6 : Il p.m.
POMEROY - The Red Cross
Services will he held at 11 a .m. Bloodmobile will he at the Pomeroy
Wednesday, and residents may Sue C&gt;J eutz in g. Parkersburg,
gtve bl&lt;¢ at that time to br W.Va.; a son, Jay llussell of Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral senbr citizens center on Wednes·
credited to Mrs. Circle. Mrs. Circh• Mrdina ; t hrt'l' grandchildren, Ja y Home with Rev. Carl Hicks official· day from 1:00 to 6:30p.m.
is recupera ting at the homr of her NPut?lin~. Long Bottom ; Sa ra and lng. Burial will be In Carmel
Cemetery. Friends may call at the Special singing
daughter. Sue Hager. Box 44.1,
funeral home from 7-9 this evening.
LONG BOTTOM - The gospel
Racine.
Volleyball meeting set
c hi ldren and 20 great ·
grandchildren also sun•ive.

(rne,raet1nc'949·251

The Daily Sentinel

-·raJ

.•

~~==:=~f=J

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

LEGAL NOTICE

'·

\..

BISSELL
BUILDERS

675·1333

Public fl!otice

..

cefvt

(614) 146-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 12l3 .
Galipoll$,.~ 45631

SALES &amp; SERVICE

...

tlc.,da.,_ . _...ln.,.idUII. • ""

I. kOCH, M.S.

RA(INE, OHIO

Md

·

the eppllc.nt 1tltDttld , wiN ,.. ,..,.

SWEEPER ~nd ~ewing machine
1 '---------,1"""'-----;.::~~ repal!r.
and atppliet. Pick
..., end deNvery. DIVII Vecwm
Cleener, one half mila up
Georg• Creek Rd. Call 614 ·
«8-0294.

In Mason County

ENTERTAINMENT- Being
enlertallled lspartofwhalevery
county fair 1!1 about and at
Meigs' l23rd there was plenty of
mulllc aild dancing ·to he enjoyed. Besides the featured
Jl'lllldSiand enleralrunent, the
hWslde stace offered something
for everyone during the week.
Bands and vocalists, lnclutlng
locaJ group!, wKh gospel, oountry and western, rock,
and easy flslenlng mwic entertained, alon3 with two gn&gt;llfll of
cloggers and shu!llers. SlnKfng
gospel for a large crowd late
Friday aflemoon was the laJ.
enled Johnnie BeUnda of Mason,
W.Va.

•·

,.....,., a moth-.,........ ..... ~

Pll'tt.

Notice i1 hereby given that
the Board of ,Education of
the Meigs loc'al School Dll ·
trict , Meigs County, Ohio,
will offer for sale by seeted
bid1 seven {71 tchool buses.
two (2) vans , and twa 12~
ttudu. at the Trea!lllrer's of·
ti Ce, 621 South Third Av·
en ue. Middleport, Ohio , on
Augu5t 19, 1986 . at12 :00
noon .
The vehic les ate as fol·
lows:
'
1 19721nternational bus,
86 passenger

.flo:-

thtlltll_ ..... ....., ..... ... '
tlon•and ..,,............. Wlft"

LiteiiSid Clinical Audiologist

In Meigs County

cannel apple whUe deciding whether to go for one last ride before
calling II a day. She Is the·daughtor of Mr. and Mrs. ~e Swisher.

con~·

•
in " ' c.nvv. ..,._,..
orfert • caNir·ntlrtdld- ~·

·~ • • ·lntllrpratina SeiYices
·f'LIIlA .

TO PLACE AN AD CALL

Co unty

,..,int

mer h .. dll ...,._ com,. . .

~~=~,~: ~~~~:,w

N.E.C.A. CO.NTRACYOR

173- Mason

TREATS TO EAT - Good thing&gt;~ to eat are alw"Yff a port of a &amp;Ood
day at the lair, and here efght-ye&amp;NJid KeUy Ann Swlsher1111ndtes m a

Join one of tiM

ual111 inn ldlltl ;r 11u..,. PI "
IIMinwach. . . .MJtU'IIoft}R .

812-New Haven
89 S- letart
931- Buffalo

..

'

Business Services

Mason Co ., w. \/a
Area Code 304
675-Pt . Pl easant
4S8- leon
, 7,- Apple Grove

ir1 G,Jtli.a

The Daily Sentinel- Page .' 7

Meigs Co. Area Code
614

Gallia Co. Area Code
614
4-1 6- Gallipolis
367- Cheshire
388 ~~ V1nton
245 -- RioGrande
2S6- Guyan Dist.
643 - -Ara bia Oi st.

446·2342

.. ,I
.

'

POMEROY - Misty Powell with
a ciQgglng routine was the first
plaCe winner In the talent show
staged by the Meigs County Junior
Fair 4-H m the hlllslde stage.
Taking second was Kristen
H\!nsler and An\Y Northup, a baton
duet, and third went to Jessica
Hatfteld, also a baton routine.
In the 4-H Dower show, the
winners were Amber Davis, grand
champion, ages 8-12, and Sherr!
· WoH, reserve champion. Tara
Clark was grand champion in the
age 13 and over category in the
Dower show.
·
The booth award winners were
the Alfred Angels, first; Eight is
Enough and 4x4's, second place,
and Meigs Marvels, tldrd place.

..
'

'

Pomeroy-IMiddl·apbit; ~.

Monday, Aug\11118, 1986

'

=••
Aaad. Wiii"IVtlehHta. cUrtelnL

.......P't;pliiiil'i'n f ·····
8r VICinity .: · ·
.......
.
--· ~ ··; ··· ·· · · · ····· -- · · --·

•

•

Wedn•dev 1nd Thu.r .UV, Augull 20th. · :Z1et. Fl•t.

July

dlohM. 10y1. bolly a - . mite.

miK·
QtlllpoHo · - · " " " ' ·

•

61ft. ""' itiO ' tilt dork.

-~·.
~

•1•

�.•

_,

21

.

'

Bllllneu
OiiPortunity

. .

46

-

-

i

•

Fu,:.;lahed R doin1 '.
•I

-,

•

,

.. "

For llloplng ~- ond
light ~ ~il
Perk
Contftl '' ~oteli CoM 814·448·
07111.
..

roomo.

NHd extru money? Fri~
ho nw toy pertill ... lmmedlm
op•ll'loe ·t.r men..erl- end

•monltmori 1'1
•IIY.

th• ,,.., It~•

'

chlfl'!. Allyou...,.li ,,..,.,.
mek_l money, hwe fun and 1 feW

coui.rniotn11••_.L m· ,,~
..- .., no
-~ .
Routo. 33,'. Nl&gt;itti c\1 p , . _,
._.... ....
, .:.call.,._._,2_'·774477t.. .
'

lpoce tlmo: No .,....

ri.... .~Ary , CIH 1.1()0..

...

227-1110. :..

'

47 Wailted

Very tuCCMI!U;~. unique bUtinHI In Pal!!jiollo,' Ohio. Woll
estlblllhtd M oOi'IV..Mint dowrt-

l

10w

'

hmitld only .m yaur an.itiOn.
Eam • very anracttve lnoome
while being your own~ and
fotetping or community. &amp;end

location. No food; 'liquor or
clothing. O"'wth •nil -•ian

(

)

rooma of ~mnur1.
nold 1oroa ho- Coll81 4-911·

trlat. ,HIVe 7

3321 ~Mn 8:00 am and

4 :00pm.

Open your own bMuttful dll-

cone, Andrew Geller. I W•t.

r--------...;.--r---------~

329-2362 .

23

41

Mobile Homes
for Sale

I\IEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KES8E~' QUALITY
MOBILE HOME
LEI, 4 MI.
WEST, OAWP S, RT 35.
PHONE 114-448-7274.

Professional
Services

Water wella 1erviced and driled.
Free ettimat•. Call 114-882·

5006 .. 814-742-3147.

11188 Buddy; 2bdr.. I 2x50.
UIOO. Cot1814·448-0311CJ.
12xll0 Shultz fully Jumilhod.
W11hor a dryer. olr eondltlooor

on 8Sx1 71 ell level lot, on•llllrd

1cr1 g•d• . .ce. Locl'l_. In
Ponor. St. Rt. teo. Price
reduced fol qulclt 1111 t1 1,000

R ~o l Es 1.11:·

tak.. ell. Tll'rN miY btiValllbe
re~ponllbla ~Mr~Q.n wHh ..,..

to

31

Homes for Sale

3 bdf. home, ctoee to town, 2
baths. pertty furnilhtd. Ou
hest. low utiliti11. Clll814-24&amp;-

9248.
Very apeclll offar. Own• mullt
1ell thi1 small but uncltrpric:ed
home locl1ad on Mill Cr... lt.

Clolt to th• nM twimnWna pool
in Gallipoli1. Call 1514-4482539.
3 bedroom. 11ft bath home with
renge, reftig. woodburn• .on
1A . lot near Crown City. Call

614-446-6541 .
2·3 bdr. hou11, 1tormwlndowa.
garege, GrHn School dlltrict.

S19,000 . Cell 814-4*8-2025 or
Wood• Agency.
House with 1 1cre close to Rio
Grende. 3 bdr ., 2 b1th1. Cell

614-245-9248 .
For u le by owner, 716 Third
Ave. 3 or 4 bdr. 2 blths. N.w
kitchen c1binet1. Gtrage,

garden spot, within welldng
distance to Oatlipoth tchools •
shopping. Call814·2·t6· 6846.

tlnti•l down

~ment1 .. .,,

lnttrMt. CMII Ptef•ablt. CaR
814-388-1193 If no on• colt

Hunt. WVA 304-428-3311.

1881 Ookbn&gt;ok 14x70 u ·
ponc19- olootrlcotovoanfrlgon·
tor, Qll fumtce, woodbumw, 3
bodroorno, ........, tub, 2 lull

c.rp•.

blthl, new
curtaln1 •
underpinning Included ,

tl4.000. Coli" 4·379-2587.
12xii0VIndolototolotoc., 2 bdr ..
nM CM'Pel. IXCeiiMI cond. Fr•
delivery a HI up. Call II 4-441·
0175 t5910.
1182 14x70 Flootwood. 3 bel• ..
2 betht. total alactric. For mora
lnforrnotlon 814-388-8833 If·
t•4PM.

choice location on College Rd.

la'lfolot. 814·892-5324.

34

home, newly remod~ed

Syracun.
new complete
kitchen ~~;'"';::::8:8·~8;9:23;.====~8
and laundry,
air condhioned.
8

Busines1
Buildinw•

hou••·

lar;ain priced •20.000. Clll
Reedsville. by own•. Two for

DIJ. 11yll I'HtaUrlnt for Nla
D-5, llcen11. u:cell•l bulint11
opp. Loootod 11 38 Court St.,

the price of one. 2 bedroom1. Oolllpolls. Prtood to ooll. Coli
living. dining room, kitc:hen. 814-448-0021.

b1th w ith tJCtre room . All fully
carpeted . ltrge porch. fenced
yard with lltilllte T.V. AIIO
apartment which includll 1
bedroom. living room. llitchlrt
aree with bath, workthop 1md
garage. Forced air gaa ht~t , own
water weoll, large lot 1nd m~int•
nence free 1iding. 845 ,000. C1H

749 Third Avo. 1800 oq. ft.
Commerci•l or werthOull.
Parking on side. AdJacent to
thi•d a Plno St. Call II 4-4482H2 for eppoklamWit.

For Sele: 50x90 ft . commerclll
1oned building. Irick aonltnlc·
614-378-8158.
tion. IMge
doorl. South
Fifth Aw. Middleport. Phont
Government hOmee from t 1. 1u 814-992·8888 deyo, 814·882·
repair) . Delinquent tix pt'OpllrtV . 5113. 814-992·2021ovonlntto.
Rep011811iOnl. Cell 801c8876000 Ext. H-9801 for cunant Fire demaged buldlng, 609
repo list.
Main St .. Point P ...... l. 304882· 3308.
7 rooms, Bath "h. Ch•ttr
Village. Move in before school
starts. Reduced t2&amp;,000. 814- 35 Lots Ill Acreege
986- 3671 '

•••ee

3 large bedroom•. 1 'h b1th, XL

living room, XL ~Jtch.n, utility 30 acrea. 814·992·7016 1har
roo m. garage. Arbaugh Addition 5:00.
in Tuppen Plaint. Cell &amp;14-617·
Athton building lots whh public
62 39.
water, mobile hom• perlntntd,
For salecrrent. 3 bedroom home 304-578·2331 or 304· 878·
in Cheltar. Remodeled kitchen. 2287.
Prefer oldtr couple. 1200. rent
plus utilitiea and aec:urity. Se- 2 cemetary loti. Ohio VaH-r
riou s caller•
7262 .

o~y .

614· 992·

House fer ule. Reduced tor
qui ck sale. For more informa·
tMm, call614-992·72*4.

'

BaiUIIful home In IYfiCUH. 3

bldroon, llfll IIWn and otrport, Rlflrii'ICII rtquired. In·
qulro 9:()0.5 :00 11

814·912-8298.

2 bodro-. full dry b-ont
Uncoln Ave., 3 bldrooniL full
dfV ba1tment Lincoln Av·e ~, .3
. -..orno rfow houoo. fuH dry
boHrnlrit Mt. Vernon Avo.. otl
exc cond. welllnauler.cf low fu-'
lilllo. Rent llorting t2711.00.
ref4H'enoe requfrld, 304·1715·
1882 or 175-4580.

l·
' ~~
H Olilehold G ooda

42

Memory

Oerdenl ~

01IUpoH1,

Qh;o, t1 ,000.00. 304·17&amp;·
3107 or 304-982-2478.

36

Real Estate
Wentad

5 rooms, bath. celler, oiltumace,
large stortge building, 1creltnd,

Trell~nt for rent. Air cond .. clbl1.

t..euttful river vltw, Kanauga.
Foet.,. 1 Mobile Home Park.

814-448· 1102.

2 fully fumlthod tdulto only.
utllltl.. pold. Call 814-44··
4110. '
2 bdr .. fum., • • eorpot. AC, In
OoHipollo. Catll14·448·1409.
3 bedroom unfumilhtd tNM•In

Apertment
for Rent

I lftd 2 bdr. - · for nnt. loolc
rent for 1 bdr. •171. l•la rent
for 2 bdr. nu. A~~ooc.
..,.: •NIIl CtOMo'D P
W
JSpring Valley
EitN Apwtmlnti,' 814·441·

PI••·

3187. Equal
Opportunity.

Houelng

2 bdr. ••taii'IIIJ1., unfum•hect.
corp-. utiiHIII f&gt;Oid. No chlldr•. no petl. Ctll 814-4481837.
F..n. garag• apt.. 1 bdr., •2315,
utiliU• pekf, 21Yt Neil Ave.,
Oolllpollo. Coli Ml-4418 oftlr
Spm.
2 bdr. unfurnished ept. in Crown

City. Call 114·218·1520.
2 bdJ. unfum. wHh appl. at 881

Thi•d A.... Oolllpoilo. 02&amp;0
month plue utllhi•. Call 114·
245-9685.
Fum . 4 roo"" • bath dMn. No
pett, adultl only. Ref. &amp; dtp.
•oqulrod. Coll814-448· 1119.

Regency Inc. lplf'trnent 2 bdr.,
utlUtl• partty plld. niee. Call

304·871-1104 or 304·875 ·
7828.
3n&gt;omolobath, nowc..,at, nloo
• cltan. Clo11 to thopping.
t2115 mo. AM utilities peld tKc.
oloe Catll14-448-7118 .
3 n&gt;omo a both. lumlshod.
tumilhad, 1200 ptr

utilltH

mon. 1200 dapollt no chiklren,

41

Houus for Rent

''"Oft·
w ................ a -. NIIvlngiOom oultoo ttte-0181,
' - ' · lllo lluylng ooal a waod
otovoo. Cal1114·441·3158.

Croot Motel. 114-448-n9a.

CountY ·A.ppll8ft01, Inc.· Good

UIOd illlnOM and TV ..u.

Open
M'to, UM. Mon thiU
Sot. II 448-1181, 127 3rd.
Avo. Oaltipolia,., pH.

f ·

'

oo•et•

rr••· couch. Corbin • Snyder

114·441-1171 .

'

Green tlec. ranee t100 . C1ll

814·441-3111.

"4·241-11817.

Uke new counter top bull it
elec. atove Am.,... •no. 17 cu.
ft. Gibson refrig•ator aoppenon
e100. Clli514-441·2470.

1 bedroom apt. In Pom•oy.

304- ~5· 8875.

56

ctoclt e30 c~1 30• -e 41 92
· •
~•• ·
·
Gold IWIYol rO- U5.00 .
lrawn rldin«•31,00. 15tt book
....
t30 00 30 4- ~·•112.

*

Build.ing Suppllll

-L

8u-gMitorloil·
ala... brlok. - • plpoo. win·
llntolo, oto. Cloudo Wlni
tora. Rio OrOndo.· D. CoM 814•
'
241-5121. '

..

1- - -- - ---

54 Misc. Merchandise

Butldl~l rn•terl1l1, . oemilnt.

.......... ·~"- yerd .. dollvtrY.
Ooltipol!o 'ala'* Co./ 1231&lt;1 Plno
St .. IJollipollo, O~lo Coli 814448-2783.
;

Two 1tag1 HI'ViCI ltatton type
air COqlriJhOr. 814-112·6314

doya, 814·892· 7314 nlghto.

130.00 daUverad
121.00 you houl. 304-~a:
3:-9_·-:--:-::c--- - - FINWOOd,

"-dint

1-------.,..-----

~:;-:"'"'-'-:-:----:-:-­

!'Hoe
t!e'/.' . "·

Polo lulidlngo try Ouollty
lulldon, IWOtb""'"- ~

enimll ,lltlttera, ~- Frt1

11tlm1tu: PhoM 1-14-eee.
7121 ' ". _,

66

Pets for Sale

w-

..

r,P•

81

,

pupa.··-

lrltUny' ljtonlel
ct!d;
1727..30.00! - • - 304-481·
~

-·

Colt ' 1
·
1111 Hollypark; 14x7o. 2 ~ro:~- · I ..,..-~.:---:-----rc&gt;Ornl, fri apjlolnt"10ftt Oftly; 3 - m 2 otory homo In
304·811-3854.
•
'o""'"". 114-882-3438.

' ... _

····-~·~

_...

.. -.-

-----·-

; - ·"'"'*'"'
en~. Adlttlrol

FurnloliOII room t111. Uditfoo
c:;.,111 and o~~ • • -

4441;Jleill•

. • ......,., - •

'!'elo. Col •1"'..

rt
. lrlg
.:

- ·· ~o . · ~- ~ ,tf,~eretor
..__- •• 00::::0 tt • 2

'iiiii":'' .. . · -

• ,: ·

MIU'o Auto 1111• lpoelalo .
1911 Ply Chomp 113.o®rnll•4
t~~d . .
only e1.HI. 1879
Muatong 4 "''f,. 4 tlld.. tlroo, thorp, l&gt;nly e1,181.1179
Otilct Cutlitll V·l auto PI, l&gt;Oiy
e1,11tl: 1118 OMC 11&lt;1 ton
I loot )&gt;o!l, Pl. 4 111d..
ez..... 19121:iwoookl motor·
t12,98
cycle ICZ 710 thorp .now fill. 44 lyoomon St..
OoiiPOIII. cal 814-~1- 2800.

ot-.

:Itt""

1971 Dodgo Colt wogon, now·
point ........,. ....... tlroo.

r.&amp;ulft iri ..t. wu·•1.700 now

.

oom. CllforlatMtquotN. Rtver

""'

· P'ttmouth

11eo

Horizon . C•ll

Spl~t
304-~1·11174 .
'14 cav- w01on. 4 cyl,

a
lllood. ai' ond oodla, -twhoel
II,IIOQ or
No
trllle. 304-a40 end It••

bolt-·

Livestock

12 mlxod hono .t1 .711-. 10
' 11:,.0 .... u.oo " ' I ....
robbltl. H - floa. Btwl.... broad .• , .•. 4 oholto 41&lt;1
'old. 4 '1orgo brudo OOWI.
Colt 814-211·- ·

•12.000 need 1tetionwagon or

79 FINtwing 8
camp•. 3 way

-~ 441':11'48.

Autoa for

Sale

ft.

- Movlntt 814·

pickup

SHOPPING

refr~eretor._

dove, oven, tumaca,

M~Ll

Slkl•tn pop up camper tor 8 ft.
truck. Stove. heat.,, ice box.
link. Excaltnt for hunters. Call

11nq~1oot ldolo.h'Hton.
lt;own. ·AM.f!M rodla, PS. Pl.
301 v. e. IQ4-17a-est3.

V•n•a -4w.o.

&amp;

I!Jd., 40,

puppy; MCR..~,W.,
lhott' _.1 wauwfl, -...:-.7~
aJ02
I, I
•"
t• '
.. _ ' '

ra;.
·• ·
illlll

volu • .toO).

.

i*t~

oto ~ !illoa

·~i:ollll~~ -

''

'

.

&gt;,

1976 Ford Lei1ura Time
C1mper, good cond for Hie or
trlda for Clu1 A motor home,
phone 304- 576-21&amp;4 after

&amp;:00 PM.

Game
(!) 'Inside 86seball
f»(!)Texi
0 (I) ®I Wheel of Fortune
(I) Butterflies
II) CI2l Entertsinmont Tonight ·Rob Re.iner telks
about his latest dirac1orial
effort in tha film . "Stand by
Me" . .
(B) Alice
1]11 Jeopardy
7 :35 ([) Sanford end So'n
8 :00' D (2)'' rB1 Velerie The flu
bug hits the Hogan household, throwing David's big
date into jeopardy. (R).
Cil Father Murphy ··
(!) Beat ·of the Superstars
(90 min .)
I]) CJ (I) Molor league
Baseball: Teams to be Announced (3 hrs.l
fj) {!)@ AII.star Tribute to
General Jimmy Dl&gt;OIIttle
Bob Hope, Jimmy Stewart
and many mOre stars help
celebrate the ninetieth

... .

'

81

Home
Improvements

f.

birthday ot the World War
Two genar4J who led the
f irst bombing mission on
Tokyo on April 18. 1942.
(2 hrs.)
·
® MacNeil-lehrer Newsh·

.:e

- ,
''

our

I

eASEI\IIEI\Il
'•
WATERPROOFING
•
Unconditionat lifltlme guarantM. Local rllf•enc• furnllhed. '
F,.. •t1m1t11. Call collect
1·814-237-0488, dey o• night.
Rogers laaement

EEK&amp;MEEK

I

AON ' S Television Serviee
HouH caU1 on RCA, Ouuar.
OE . Specieling in Zenith. Call

•.
•.
•.

•.
. '·

..

carptnter, alectridan.

m110n. pllrn•. roofing Unctud·
ing hot tlr applicetton) 304·
175-2088 .. 175-7388 .

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Stlrkl Tr• end Lawn Service,
londacoping . 304·175·2010.

WE

FINALLY.QOT' A

VCR, BUT r'M NOT
iOO CRAZY ABOI.JT IT.

Aoury or clble tool drilling.
MOlt wella compl1ted11meday.
Pump Ilia and Slf'Yica. 304·
985-3802

00 YOW 1-V\VI;f A

Lor OF TAPE6'4

cJU6TONE OF MY F;&lt;I.THER
DoiNG Hl5 JOHNNY
CARSON JMPR56510N-

Plumbing

Heating

1 ---~--~--­

BARNEY
TATER' S

CLIMBIIIfSTAGE
DRIVIN'ME

Excavating

FRITIERS

Good·1 Excevedng, bllemtnts,
footert, dtlvawayt, uptictlnkl:,
landtc•ping. Call enytime 814·
4415-41537, Jtmll l . D1willon.
Jr. owner.

WHV
VOU CLIMB
IN HERE, HONEY· POT?

10:00 ([) MOVIE: 'The Disorderly
Orderly'
II) (!) So•p
®I II) CI2l Cagney &amp; Lacey
(CCI While Mary Beth prepares to give birth. Cagney
team s up wi1h lsbecki to
break up e dangero us gam-

bling syndicate . (60 min.)
(AI.
(B) Newt
10:30 Cil Taking Stook
II) (!) INN News
· llll From BII11Hrieg to the
' lk&gt;mb (60 .!ri_in.j
11

86

:oo

General Hauling

(I)

·:

,-

•
.I
'.,,
'

87

Upholatery

and Vanity. (~O min .I(R) In
Stereo.
·
Cil Burns &amp; Allen
(!) SportsCe:itt:r
()) WKRP In Clnoinnttl
fJ) (!) One Step aeyond
Ill CIJ ABC News Nlghdlne
(I) In the Tridltlon
I!J Allee 1
llll S..aon Preview
.
(!}) t,-lagnum. P.l. A 12·
. year-old Amernlsn orphan
bocof11&amp;S lnvolv,ed wl1h
murder when he hire' Mag·
nur:i tQ locate hla V.let~ e""
vet' fathei. (70 min .l (RI.
(B) Tre- John, .M.D.
12:00 Cil Jeck Wny
· ID MaJor League
IM:II'~ Grutt:e1 ·H~
([) Na11onei ~;ephlo Explorer · , , . , · .
'(I) EntMtllnment Tonlght
ET joint pop . superstar
JoHn Den- on the road.
durin~ hla U.$ . . coricert
.1.
to~r. (RI.
,.
•' (!) RaWhide
1
..

.i

e

' t

• •M~ CuiRO"It, ~ouc'h11. 1nd
Reupholdtry; $t. At. 7. Crown
CHy, _Oh. 814·2·8-1470. Eve.
814-MI-3438 . Opondollyato
I , Sot 1:30 tol :30; Old • now
Upll...~ .

"

s-

.'

-."'I I

:...,
•...•

furfti'IU~ 'upholstering, tall ,
I04 f._1•i -~ 184 tor tro 1.

k'l

'

..

r
:
1

1

-.

~

.

"Were you ever young. Grandrna?" quizzed lhe young lad.
Wisely, the grand ma a nswered,
"You are young at any age If you

7

.

HE L 0 0 R

ara p lanning

1---T~,;-:;I...;;.,IF--TI

-~ ·

'

I,

for - . "

Comp lete the r huc kl e quo ted
.
•
.
.
.
by f 1lling in the mi5smg word s
L--L-~-L...-.1:.-.1-...J you develop from step NC' . 3 below

8

P~INT NUMBE~ED

.,

SQUA~E S

lETTERS IN

8 ~~~c!~~~lR LETTERS I

IIIIIIII

YESTERDAY'S SCRAM-IllS ANSWERS
Astern - Meter - Vixen - Impair - EXPENSE
A boy had been making tun of a s m al ler c hild . "Remember this," scolded the mom, "thera Is no happiness tor people at the other person's EXPENSE."

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

----

Anguished play
gives it away

.Q 9 5

By James Jacoby

+3

NORT H
• 10 3

EAST

WEST

When you are playing a tough contract, an opponent's anguish can give
you a clue. When I recently held the
South cards, my partner wisely a sked
for aces with his four-club bid after· I
had jumped to two no-tnimp1 and then
bid six diamonds. How wise' I W'l" to
overrule Nortb and bid six no-trump
would be determined in the play. West
was very deliberate In selecting · an
opening lead, finally hitting tlpon the
six of

8-18-U

tA KJ98 1 2

...

+K 9 7 6

t J 8 52
,J8 ,42
• 7 65
. , 2

'A 10 6 3

+K 986 1

SOUTH
+ A Q4
' K7

• Q 10 3

+A QJ 107

Vulne ra ble: Ne ither
Dea le r South

sfJ::~b:R After I

won the spade
a heart would give m e
12th tr ick would apparently , depend upon East's holding
the club king.
At trick two I led a heart toward
dummy's queen. When thf\1 won, I
played the spade ace. Only the n did I
begin the parade of diaDJOnd tricks.
My last three cards were the heart
king and the A· Q of clubs. West had
thi'own all his spades and WBS down to
the A-10 of hearts and the K-9 of clubs.
As he p(indered his play to the 1Oth
trick, I kftew the contract was home. If
he discarded a heart. I would put him
in with the ace to lead into my A-Q o f
clubs. If he blanked lhe club king, I
would play my club a ce and drop t he

~

West

North

Eas t

Pass

1t
4•
6•

Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

South
1+
2 NT

4+

6 NT

Opening lead: • 6

key cards against a sla m contract, you
must pre pare in a d ~a nce for the pain
of ungua rdi ng a king. II West had
blanke d his cl ub king in a casual and·
easy manner, I would ve r y like ly have .
taken the club finesse a nd been defeated in the sla m .

lesson: When you hold

t'itt.tdll"
elf'
b, THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

2 Roman

1 UnopC' nl"rt
5 Astonishf''d
9 Nost• -

3 f (&gt;dNal

gnddl•sst.·~

l a w rnt~ n

••

( ~1 . )

10 Cut

4 Arvt•ragl'

12 Rit· hanl

5 Tlt•r lan·
6 "I -

k !Ck

out

13 Annou n('c•cl

111'

yuu"

15 Indian

7 Cggs
cymba l ~
H Bw1
n
16 TurmNit
.'lomrOJw
17 (J'l\t•ill p lay II F)Prtam
18 Wobhlr
14 lltndt•r
20 Insert
16 W n~~t
2 1 Lack
fwm

22 By h••af1
23 Pla nl

20 Complain

3 I NnLt'tl

23 Exhaustt•d

Pilgrim

24 CoupiPd

33 L1sLt•d

25 Ve n&lt;'llan

r dihlc·s
:U) ,uul doL-..11

tw&lt;.~ch

27 Lil el• •-;-;

H• ('nrn1p1

:)0 f\·t'l
:l7 Slulli n).!
.,.._,.......,......,.r;r--r,-,.,--,-,,-

inset'!

25 Ocean 26Anagram

of "na il"
27Era.w
28 Enume rate

·'

29 Texas cily
32 Exasperall'
33 Byre sou nd
34 Child
of lok1 '

35 R:&gt;quired
3 7 Orchestra
38 Hummin~
sound

'

'

39 Fn•nch
rivE'r
40 Astonish

41 Rritish gun

DOWN
I lit• played
"Patto n"
DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTFS - Here' s how to work it :
AXYDLIMAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

, I

One letter s tands for another. In this sample A 1s used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, e tr S,ngle letters,
apOstrophes the length and fonnation of the words a re all
hints. Each day the code le tte rs are different

CRYPTOQUOTE S

Chase. Maureen Murphy

•••
•

·i-!

.

'

r.

. TRt .TAT~
~- ..
UPHO.J.8TERY SHOP
I 113 '"""~ A&gt;iro.. OoUipolla. - 1
II 4-.448· 7833 or 8 I 4·416- , 1
l.f33,
r:, 1'

. .... -

1 1:30 D (]) \lldl Best of Carson
Tonight's guests are Chevy

,

':1

~

@~~~,':. .

I

paola filled. Colll14 ·251-1141 ,,,, ...
.. 814·441·1178 .. 614-448· • •
7111 .
"

•

. &lt;P
_
_

1 f.\f..~ ~· ® mCI2l
CIJ, Bill C.by Show
fB (!) ~ovti' Conhectlon
_..

Jtmee Boya Weter..Sarviee. Alao

5 1 16

ntm

Stratford Inn leaves Ste·
phanie, the only survivor. in
charge. (R) .

.•·

Ii

.~ ,.IT:. .:1O;,; D:.,U:. OT.-1 !
I
..;.;..T.IB,..-i O
I
.

Uttlo Glorie...Happy at last The true
story of th e notorious
19 34 chilq-c ustody case of
10-year-old heiress Gloria
Vonde rbilt (2 hrs.) Part 1
of 2. (R) .
(I) 700 Club
(I) MOVIE: 'The Carey
Treatment'
® II) il}l Kato &amp; Allie Kate
and Allie find t hemselves
possess ions. (R) .
·
Track and F;eld: Welt·
klasse Meet From Zurich .
(2 hrs.l
®I Ill il}l Newhart (CCI A
measles epidemic at the

I;;:=:;,::::::;::===
CARTER'S PLUM811\1G
AI\ID HEATING
Cor. Fourth end Pine

I

Harris

Ill

9 :30

out. Froo Eotlmota. Local Rof.,.
. . _. 304-875-7981 '

8r.

MALER

Stereo.

at odds over their personal

a•a Roofing &amp; Plinting . txp
roofing, rap1lr. pWttlng ln1ideor

82

1 I

~-::-!~~.;.;-I=-rl~~.:----~

D ,(]) ®

9:00

0

RINOLE8'8 SERVICE. oxport~nCid

in a playwright'6 .new play.
!80 lftin.l (RI.
·
. ,:05 ([) MOV E; :Who's M.indlng·
the Stoior . ·
- o
8 :30- D
Ama~ing Stories
I
The emotio~ Guilt is s.o nt ·
on a v~~tion crtJise. where
Ita falls In love .w ith a mos1
unutuef woman. (R) In

'W:\lll

Celll14- ~51- 1182.

Fetty Tr• Trimming, dump

2

inllltra1e the , allant-garde

EKtlrior • lnttrtor Jtucco. Pl••ter a plllter r8911rt. low rates

remov1l. Ct11304-87&amp;-1331 .

II

I

l

theat re to inv.estig•tt the
interet1 of. Russian ag~nts
•'

304-178-2398 o• 814 -441 2454.

II

e (!2)· Soerect~ and
Mrs. ,Kinti 1\menda.end lee

.9

Waterproofing.

I.

.

..

·•'

1wll J.., ·CJ -.7 ftenegid• ' MowN(• l.J;bollt•rlng serving
l:ortiiDD . ~ttfl
crvl., ll • 1·trl-tt~Vo"o21yearo. Thebaat ,

,!II...Oror:or

'

1982 Coachman, 18 foot pop
up Clfl1t•· 304-87&amp;-8292.

kin'l W1tlr 8MYice. Wells
ptolcup, · 380 on g. ~ ton. - . ol1tern1, poott end Wltlrbed~
filled. CaN 114-317·0623 o•
•nil. Colt 114-211· 1808 :ritor' 814·
387-7741 •• 304-175·
1,.
1247.
.
1118 Ford FIOO ft- truck.
Wetteraon's Weter H1uiin g,
uoo. Celll14!742·-·
rHIOn.le rat11, immediett
''i'l Fold XLT Roneor. thrM 2,000 g1llon delivery, cistarna,
pools, will. etc. call 304· 678·
·tllllli'W•n.410 ......
motlc. ili:iltto fliot toltl:o, Pl. PI, 2818.
30\f-.2·1231.
.
'

~

A

814·881-3353.

II b1tio Cho.Y loonadoto

'

~ rN&gt;NeY ·WON'T lhJY
t
e-yS:.I2Y'T'HING.
'
.
TfiAT~ WHY: I HAvE
5o ·MAN'( C:::~GI! . CA~PI'.
"

---?

'•

a..,..

14 , ... , ..... ;..._,...._ ,._.
814·441..,1. ..,.--~rr ,

~f'Me'MBEP, f:/lNIE,

TO.

446-2741.

Truck• for Sale

-••:700!
·- .
. .....
Mid
llt&amp;donwe;Dn for
or

11111 l.i[lilll

Lv,:;-:o~~wfii&gt;i;-!.,~;----.!!!!l!
([) Groen Acres
FRA
-'":..:....J L.:__:l;~~::.....:..::::z~~LJL.L'---__:~~ ~7:05
7:30 D Cil iil New Newlywed

PfiiMngtr Yin. Moving 6 14·

83

1182 Ooclgo PU light duty. 225
'llloio- Arlblon horoo.lttock. 4 tpd .. brown with crt1m
Coli 114-387lltro nloo. Col 114-31S·· flberal-toppor.
0314.
, 1a ni:rntho old hoi! llmmonlll a
•ftoltCh- bul. Coll814·241· 1•7t llodso !I ton 4x4 cllbcob
plokUp, lOw mil- 310 en·
11348.
glrta.'""'. PI, Pl. ijr, now·- .
- - front ..... ....out
hubo1 ... oorid. Mldnl..tti700

I I ,Ill

John De.nyer on the road
during his U.S. concen
to~r.
, ..
fll (!) ·Hogan's Horl&gt;Os
0 (I) Jeopardy
® Nlgh11y D_usiness Report
®News
llll G.l. Jive: A Salute 10 1he
En18rtsiners of World War
II Van Johnson hos1s this
musical tribute to the en·
tertainers and service organizations that helped
boost morale during World
War II. (3 hrs .. 30 min .)
II) CI2l Dlvo""' Court
@ WKRP in Cincinnati
1]11 Wheel of Fortune

•aep•

l

WOOWWP

_

(!) John Fox Outdl&gt;Ors
(I) CJ (I) ABC News
(I) DI!,C10r Who
®I II) CI2l CBS News
1lll Body Electric
II)) Welcome Back, Kotter
8 :35 ([) Gomer Pyle, USMC
1
: 7:00 D (]) PM f't1egazlno
Cil Mar;,from .U.N.C.L.E
(!) SflOrtiCenter
()) Ent•~lnmerit Tonight
ET ·· j\)int ' flOP superstar

Campers

1110 Iuick ll&lt;ylorl: 4 door.
Oelipolll, Ohio
•1400. NMd tranemhlion , . Phone 114·441•3888 or 114·
polr. Col 304-~1 - 1283.
. 448-4477

72

(]) 1]11 NBC News
Cil The Rifleman

Extra

1111

PB. PI,

8:30 . D

1980 Champion 19ft. trans van.
..lf.contlined ,
&amp;. rebuilt
engine. naw tlrn. brakes, inte·
rior. Air auto. tr1n1 .• PS , PB,
crulla, c1rgo box. roof air
IIVIIIJble. Aalllng •9.700. Best
offer or trade , books tor

mMIICie on miChlne.

63

71

8t

condition.

73 Terry Clmper 26 ft. AC,
•nk1g. good cond .. t3.000.
Coll814-441· 7371 .

a

boVIna tholl oom or ••

Very good

C. ex
cond. Cotl814-441-1352.

Muotong
AC.
tlr:tod giool, - t oondltlon .
CoN 114-317-0184.
II C-.ol
l.al
'"' •
or blue. ••·
oond .. ol; cond .. rur dofroot. 5
1t1d- es.ooo. Coli 814·387·
0828

Stereo.

318 EAglne end tren ami11ion.

euoo. 4 cyl . . . .d.Jotoofpap,
...., ...... c.n ,, 4-448· 7298

t~i1 JMe CJ-1. ,4 crylind•.
illt4 ' NOO - . Col
t!4-·l-1111.
' .'
,,

I

(!) Mazda Sportslook
fB (!) .S18r Trek
Cil Reeding Rainbow (CC)
llll
Healthy
People/
Heel1hy Bueine"
(B) One Dey at a Time
8:05 ([) Down to ~rth In

typn.

! R;.

·

CAAAMai$~ ...

Tren1mi11tons. AU
Over,
front, rear. 4 wheel drive. Prices
ltlrt •100., Will deliver. Call

79 Motors Homes

73

• · ,fOR .tM:i .- _

Cil Gr"n Acres

;--. "\
. • ..t

1178 Oldl CUIIIII 280 V-a
ongltta. high : mH•III•· good
oondHian. Cell, 114·441·3758 .

r.od·

Nl&gt;W

8:.

uto a
Accessories

614·892-7Za9 .

Farln Equipment

ron . . . -· --·

.....-' . . .• '

TART!;

-;;;::=;;::=:;====
...
..
A
p rts
· :"&lt;

~76

u wCll mCll ® mCI2l.
1]11Newa

8:oo

; : ~~

n.110o.oo. 304·882-3463

D'tnlmlllion for 318 engine.

No-"""

-w
..•
'
-444-3870.

66Llli:~,

lhiP•·
8t1rcrlftBolt.
withmotof
trailer,tnd
real trailer
good . ..

Bl Chry... Lolloron, laldod.
Coli 814-318·8189.

1178 OodgoAapen. • M.. vlnal
top, IIOOd -d. 11500. Coli
114-445·3170.

Rog. Enotioh. Iotter ... pplol 7
-otilwlthpap. .. 4F118M
oomo hi oolarod . ' e1a. M..- bo
Mort II II). 1 !wlnfiiOii !II oal
114·.311·11 U. Ooorgo

Twyman

EVENING

•

114· 378·2220 .

a

Rog. '""""
4 melo. 14
old. A . yr. old rno1o tao
- · CoN 114·241·118'll8. ·

Neoclo homo AKC L,hooli Apoo
mole I 1 - · old. Flrot ohot a
wo.-, e78 . Col 814-448·
0701.

SAUT~AU

.

..

8/18(~~

lnbo1rd and outboard 1 8 ft . .

18114 Oodgo Chorvor 2.2 outo·
modo, PB. PI, good tlno. Coli
814·379-2728.

814· 448-7142.

City Form Supply, 114-441·

l::"-

•

3. ••lx% liven ptywood •a.ae
,_diU.IB.
4. 4xb04 ond
WI&gt;Od · Art• Guitar with Clle. L•• ""'·
paniJMg woodilr•ln end prints Mull ooll. t1110. 0110 . CoN
et.ll8 ond t7.8 l l - M .M. 114-812·1717 .... 1:00.
5. 4x8xil blondll!l - • boortl
llCtorior uluod T piUo 8 fi.Hu. Fluto e100.00, bond atond
8. Wood thot:mol pllln bow UO.OO. Flute ptoyo ucillent.
304-112·3477.
pc:tun wln:lowo lxl t249.
7. Double JtMI lna~lft.:l en·
IYan• door aet'1 with Y.t giMI
Fruit
58
1350.
B. Double aide Ught door 11tt
8r. Vegetables
wHh 1&lt;1 gl•lnouloted t310.
B. Double' cammerclll .-tr8nce
door 111 '1 bronz aluminum
t5S8.8&amp; 101. olngiM t388.oo 1 Rod r l l -. Toytoto I"'Y
eo.
Potch. Cot 814-441-1812 or
10. 8 or 8 ponot otoollnouloted 814-248-IIOM.
prollung doon e89.115.
I 1. Stool prollung inouloted COMing oomatoclo. t4 buohol
d0c&gt;r1 lftd Jernl 11&lt;1 hr. flro n.
t3 you ptclt. Iring
tt89.ltl.
contolnor. Mo.,ell Adon:o, L•
12. Sower ond droirl plpo 4x10 tort Folio. Oh. 814-247·2088.
PYC proterohtd U .89 M.
13. I' picnic table 2 t.nctl• Yellow Fr• ltDne Canning
m.dl from 2x4x8 redwood PHcM1 now welllbla. Cel tor
ltllnld *29.11.
PriDII end verlat181. Bob'l
14. '14Tphlol,.-lohodbruoo Morbi. M-n. W. Yo. 304oa1t , _ r-m length bundloo 773-1721 . ,Open 7 :loy a.
, 711 It
Ill• •
15. llr9wn 2Sxl0
trill• underpin MCDnde •3.88

!luv

co...,lotoly ......... ed kitchen
2 bcb. good eond .. 58 Oorflold fumlohad. All now nrp. 814110
912 "12115 or 114"112•7314 ·
1976 Nuhua 1 2x80 with ~=~· e~'lf.Ln:;·t:a~
dep.
Onesatwedd Wi vrli1gs. c:ytemllt
10 x16 room, $8,600 neog . C1ll
1 bedroom apt.' In Mklchport. wnddlng bind, valued '300 00
814· 368-9050.
2 bdr. houoo on Dry Rldgo Rd. 1178. PI&lt; month ., 00 dopolit. wNI oo11 t12a.oo . 3o4-si2--::2-·2:._:,
47.:.
1·_ _ __
Potrlot, OH. •170mo. Including 114·9U-8I1l doyo. a14. 112. 1_38::-8::-2_.,_ 18
19 73 14~~:66 Herrli mobile hOme wet•. C•lleva. 114-441·4703. 1783twnlnga.
1.
2 bdr.. 1 bath, a• fumace,
Cartop carr._, •30; Que1n alae
stove. ret ., w 11 h"' a dryer. 2 mlnut• from new GllllpoUe APARTMENTS, mebila ~ hkl-.-bed UOO. 'hone 304·
lncludll underpinning, 1wnino, Pooll Mint concllllon, 2 bedroom hou. .. Pt. Pl. .antendOelllpo= l-:
8_71:-·-2-28_7_. - -- - ·- - block. ctntrel AC, price 17,000. houn with new pfulh CIQ»eting. MI. 114-441·1221 .
c on 814· 446-1780 or 814· draporioo. win- lnoulatlon,
8olollll0 por-t tiffll Fioohlng
wiring. Houaolo apotl-1 f350 APARTMENTFOR RENT . Now .....w .lion tZIII! lighted, ..,n.
448· 1724.
por mo. Coli 114-288·11 10.
oocoptlng ....,lleotlono for nntel t2511 Nonliifited 122811
1972 F•eodom . Good oond .. 2
oponmonto In M - Aflll L~ F - iottlnll FrNt loll. IM
bd•.. &amp;lxt4. Potlo, -nlng. 3 or 3 bdr. houooln Mlddl_,, mHed. Two bodooom oilia 11 ~~·. 11100)U3- 0183,
Washer • dryer. New W\darplncond.• dilhw11h•. txc. loe•
t188.00 per month. -lilentel _ •., ......
n;ng ;neludod Coli 814·245· tlan. CoM 114· 448-11108 lftor rot11 moy bo hither
15 866 .
1 :1&amp;.
on Income. , HOUIIng Will ~ be 7 •1100 btu elr oond. Compound
I'VIhlbla to each IIPPUC8ft1 ,.. bow. 304-171·1174.
1 zxel Grtywood. 3 bedrooma. lMae. IPicioue z bdr., Wlndlor, g..tlel• ot their l'act. ao1or
C1ll 814·742·2795 or 814· 2 bath. dlnlngro-. -vonlont ........
rol .......,· 1187, 211 Fetd Motor, •on•·
742-2777:
looo-l&gt;nRt. 7. Coll814·241· i;;tw.."tic!':.,;.;..'!"....i;id~ ntiOalan. I · J .R. - ·
1819.
304-n3.11011 or Do- """'" ~18~·2011.
3 bodn&gt;Ommobllohomofolaalo.
nloo lt•otb or Waitor Uu - ot
CoM 814-182-1118.
Oupl• for rent 841 locond mo moln oftloa. 1l7ll'
Mcllor!lol C-m lutoh-g.
Avo.. Oollipotlo. '3 . .. llvln- Rood •oyno'da~u
"lo 0 - b ......,_ • dlyo 1
ldt·
' "
'
··-181·:1221. · '
MOilLE HOME I MOVED: In· g..,.m, dlninlrOOin. aurod, •o._onllbto , 11... Call ch.,, ......,..... rofrttt. a rongo. 43081 or ooH 814· .. :4'1 4. .
,
~ .
.
304-578·2331
u1o p 1 u o - l. -lty 2 ~
oa:f:::
·
Guilt..,., 7".tol.-illt; •148.
-~.. A-•
-room apt. or 1 8&lt;17113.
· '"""· ,. _ _.._
d.,.....
~· tl.- ••t·-AO- ·
304-171·2541
· ._.,..,, .1 ·· ._
, 11711·
1882Cioyton.12xiO.aN-c.
;;~~~~~;;;~·
~
1311.
.
.
.
oxc oond, 304- 178~~415.
Ria 0~ ·- · ' 3 bldooom
',."
homo. -.uoorontot......r- 411 Fuml1hed Rooml 1,8 71 Pord LTO.
Muor ooll. 14x70: ~ bodraom. lty dopoolt ond roloronooo, no
olcrol, e75. SO!I. e1o.L - . 1\'o botho. c..,;otod. turillohod. potoll Coli 814· 448-4201,
no. Choir, •10.. 1-ontlltiro.
IJO•ch. utility, 2 oxplfldo~ A~ .......
~00
for
~
'
•
moat o dollblo wldo II • alnglo 1 -:-:::-~:-:-:-----.,.
ront,
' · •• 0
.._,_I 1 W ~ •10
"'-od 112 Thlr4 Avo. 2 bdr. • - a month. Oollo Hotel. ol 814- ~·· ,;. . .--•
• . •·•·
.
Wldoprioo.
·' Aloloet~·
·
~
rolrltl tum
448-8110. Rom oo10walt120 AM· FM I treall p._,
121 0
1
110
~~lfi"30
· No48,-,.:7n0 4blo ' t71 ~
- ·
~urniomontll.h-• month.
·
· ·
- • • Aj111qoj• fl!oOcl• ·•100.
for Sale

Instruments

110 Toyoto · Colloo vory good
oond. 47,000 -~~ ..-.
U.IIOO. C.. 814-441·9385.

117t Eld•odl&gt;•. oil ovoHiblo
Ollllan. ti,IIOO.OO or boll ofter.
..
Looo than 1 box- a..; •od. M•.., '-vuaon T 10 tractor _)04-~1- 3141 .
•100. Cl&gt;Otoot Rolph Prlttt 227 . aoc&gt;t1 -lon. Cal 114-387• .
S . lth MlddMport:
11U Fard Coupe. 2 door, 1uto
?liZ.
,
302, U . IOO.OO . 304-871·
1144.
ComonchoSHtronlx 1011 D. CI
bloo lllllon. t2110. Coli 814· 62 -Wanted to .
892·3208.
1e110 AMC
•uoo.oo.

Sk\gar Touch and &amp;.w. good
Oold twlvel rocker 131 . Brown
recNn• US. 1 ,ft. bookcae

Opportunity.

==---=......,,--.,--117
~11110111

Autoa for Sale

I HIIA22callltu•71iln. bomllt . ;~ ;:::r.r;'M'.Col 814-318shot rovolvor. Proc:ticolly now.

Plckana Ulld Furniture. Good
quotlty ualdfurnlturo. Open 910
I « cell tor eppointment .
304-871-8483 or ~5- 1410.

Z bdr. 2 btths, kitchtn. fuml·
turt, t 1 Court St. 132&amp; per mo.
ptuo utHIIIOa, morenoo • dop·

roqulrod of 1200. Contac:t Vlt·
ll!le Menor Apt. Mldcl_..
114-982-7787. Equot Hou~no

Q_.,..,.d Cattery Kennel.
CFA Hlntotoyon. Porolon ond
&amp;lorn• klttono. AKC C ""pplol. Call 814-448-31144 "
liter 7PM.

71

pi,..,"

AafrigarltOr. IIOve. ltvlngroom
.,ite, 2 place bdr... Itt, woodburn., • VICCUIIm cluner. Call

•!o"'

Pets for Sale

-::-=----_;___

UNCI Refflrg•.tor, fuii1Re m11·

..,..d, ua.oo .

1 bedroom aPt. tor lint. a..1c
r.nt d.rtl 12115. 1 month that
mctuda ell utllttl•. Dapoait

118

..

AppiiW1011 Uppw Rivlll' Ad.

FD131&lt; ct:;S CHAMP;&gt;1POMME6

··.;"'

~~====:;:=::::::;::::::::•:•:•:or:"'::;.~

711 LTD. 71 Thundorblrd. 814·
CROll a SONS
812· 7011. Col oflor 5:00 .
U.l . 38 WOOl. Jookoon. Ohio. 1882 C
814·281-MI1 .
hoolatto. 4 apold. Exc:ol·
M
F
N H
lent condition. tl 900. 814·
_
, --- olond. 742· 3142.
Buoh Hog 1o1oo • lomco. o4 0 - - to c:t:oooofrom 1171 Corvottl. ~ ,QOO mil•. 4
• a:""loto llr:o of now uoo:l IIIOid. Aof&lt;lng tiOOO. C.ll8l 4 ·
aqu!Pmont. Largoot ioloctlan In seg.21 OZ oltlr I:OO.
S.E. Ollla.
--------Jl M'l FARM EQUIPMENT 1181 Cttovotto. Stondord, olr, 4
CENT!II . IRs w. Oolllpoh. :loor.bnr-4cryl.l8.000mlln.
. Ohio. Col 814·44•- ~n. .... 114-1141· 2283.
re4""a.ae2. Up nm ••.,.
tora wtth Wlft'lftty OW« 71 Ulld 1871 Chw¥4whMidrtve. Runl
•-ro.10QO-Io.
e1100 . 1982 ChiVV
om on:. Pood oll!!f'O f5000.
UtHity ltldl. 8PL: 30'x40'xl' 1984 Pot. FINblril. Exeollont
with 11'xt' ::lid•
3' ...,, oond~lant7400.Coll304- 273·
door. t5.281 orooted. l"'n 4411.
Horoo lldga, 11•·332·17•8
oolloct.
1118 M.Q .B.O.T. Coupo. Cot·
- - - - - - - - - - llctol'l ttern. Alltored, nM
880 lmin:o-.. tractor, For- .,...,._ utorlor. lnlorlor. ote.
mal wtdo front ond oomrnorloot 814·112·8384 cloyo. 114·882lood•.4i!lowa.210wno-tiloom 7314 nlghto.
pllftt•. 40 toot t1w11or. 1 old
...., ptd!or, tronaport dloo, 11~ Chevy Novo. 4 door, outo,
mowt.,. .-lno. oxtro tlttot rely ......... 8 oyl. Call 8146 ft . Flbrogl- toppor. whoolo. 1871 OMC Dump H2·11111ftori:OO 11-m.
U50. Coll814·811·4411.
Tncclt, e11100. Col .814-318· ·
1300.
11n Pontloo Grond Prix, good
ncnnlng C!&gt;~ AC , PI, PS, PW,
Salol 10 - · oftl Ploohirlg
orrow olan 12111 Llohled, rn&gt;n· . 3 blot* _rrill 12.1100. Coli crulu. ~4- ~1-1191.
arrow t21111 Nl&gt;OIIghted e2211 81~3111·1188 .
FrN lattlrll Few lift' a..
1971 F•d flirii'IDM SQUW.
locolly . 111001423·01 83. Parm - n . 1 tobol&gt;OO - - o n , 304-182·2211.
•nvtlmo.
·-tow plowt.
. buohh.,
hog,rakt.
111rey•.
bot- ·,v
- MultMg II , new paint and
hey bll•.
2 Kero1ane He1 t 1 r1 . One com
row com plenter, rebuilt motor, •100.00 or belt
1 I .000 BTU. UO .: other :leo, mowin1 mochlno. CoH offor. 304-~8- 2814.
14,000 eTU wHh blo-r. t75. 814· 843-2101.
Uoad 2 """"""· Colt 114-112·
1982 VW Rlbbltt L.S .. 4 door,
lnt-ol chopp• wHh both olr. 4 opood. AM · FM .
2517.
h. . .. lnternotlanel-. 2 ti ,IIO.OO . 304-871· 2828.

114·448-7381.

1184 Hondo Twlnotor 200. Coli
814·448· 8241.

1981 Honda C B 76.o. ·,. t,.
•1.100.00. Pho"e 304·882 · · . ,. ;...,
M42 .
· ' '·
.'
'·
i
76
Boats and
.,.i
Motors for Sale

.~
- II

"''* ,_

i'ti:

'
~LA
~t-)(;A L~, LAPII.i
A LA .I/OUTAACe , e;,&lt;..~

1881 K11N111kl KX 1215 , Nnl
good, good ~aPe. t1,300 .00.
304-882-3715.
'.•

For ootil' 10- i:ltChon cobin'ots
In very aood c:ondltlot:t.· Cal
114·441·1271 ..oftl!f. 3PM.

~~- ll)and 2pc. tlblr1flllltubon
lhower combination ucandl
ttl8.88 ll&gt; e111 .1111.
.......... D........... o... 17. 17x19Whhogolt!vonltyond
-lnlb 8, 10, a 12 gun. Goo
m"blotop t3t.ll8.
or elactrl.a rmge •3715. Baby
, a. wooc1 trench door~ - •
mltlf- 131 • US. Bod
151110 • 10 lito tal.ll .
fromoo ~0. e3ii iO; Kirlg fromo
18. 7 pc. proflnilhld vinyl
150. Good aoloatlan of
wrop
doortrim
ti .OO oo.
bedroom 1utt•. metel ca·
brMofowtbo•
blnoto. -boerdo no ond up 20. 4Solid o*ond
et9 to 018.
... pc..
·- ...
21 . Tomporld lhormol ...,.
!'uolix32x78 e21.11 "·
UHCI Fumtture: W•het &amp;
2. Oc:togon tHII!ftY 111dryer, gu r1nge, electric range,
win- MI.H oo. 124).
IINIII color TV. wood t.tlla • 2
23. lnoul- otool tlooro btonko
bench•. btcf.._ dr. ..,, 6
...... U5 .00M.
reel..,•. 3 mil• out l~l.vllle
24. 21i4Jc'Mo oculllcel ooHing lllo
Rd. 01&gt;01! 8AM to II'M. Mcln.
ombo-flroroted U.28 " ·
thnr Sat. 814·441·0322:
2a . .I 1'!:· hluh.fr" bath tub kill
•~'"to
~,.
'tt~rt_..,if.
Klfurwne d \...-..
28. Coal lftd wood fireplace
atovolhlototoelt51.81or-211"
Whirlpool
dryore71.Wlllrlpl&gt;OI
· .• 711. t1 00.
wt~ttilf 1815, Gibaon rtfrlg.-.tor
27. 8x8 indoor or out door orne
frolt fr11 •ea. Ptllloo rafriger•
tor oweodo gr- tl8, Wll~~ eorplltllonc-bo:all4contoto
a c;onto ••.
pool frolt friO
t91.
28. Prolinlohod 4x81ilimooon~o
rofrlgomor
h'"'"'"'"''
- gold aide
by
POD boord ... 118 ond . . . . N .
aide 1111. ,.,..la.-.tor white •
Penn WarehouM. Wllltton. Oh
lido bv lido eue. 2 -trle el4·314-3841.
''"""
ln. -tn.
· Wl&gt;Od
eua
••
.. 20 30
~- g•
...,..
2r-•
a oool bumlntt 111&gt;110 1200. OE 0IInclloolorTVell00,
t7111Cf1, bedroom 1Uht
wuh•IVocadolrwn •110. 12 ct.lirt
cult. frooror
125. Skoggo U50. 114·912-1022.

'

85 Honda Shadow. low mileage,
uc. cond .. ·U .ZOO. Cell 814·
441·41180 after 5:00.

0

pl-.

Sof11 ond cholro priood fnr m
eua to eeltl. Tlbl11 e110 ond
""to tiZ5, HlciO.o--1310
10 t515. Roclln. . U21 to
1375. Lompo 121 to t1 21 .
OinottM t101 .,d,ut&gt; to Mil.
toblo w-8 cllolra Ull to
f718 . DIH ttOO' ilp to 137&amp;.
Hutcll• UOO ind up ,' lunk
Hdl
w-meftr.....
t215 ond up to f311 . Bilby
bode tl1011 e111. Mattor box rprlnilo lui ., '""' 183.
firm e73, 110d tl3. au- t225,,11ng e310. 4 - -

I ·~ SOiJf'B ~ ~ "4

...

1·1•1111

Upper f'Mw ·Rd. bNkle SlOne

..,

4,1100 ..u.. •1 .000. coli 304- · .aaa-32a7 oflor a PM .
· ·

IICCM'Idl.

0000 U8EO APPUANCES
Wooh.., *YMo. rolrla.,.ton.
'•no••· .~kt111 Appliance•.

no poto. Co!lll4·441·3793.

porlo, Clillftor lpm 81•·812·
8868 .

32 Mobile Homes

.m:ran rtCHn. . •st. new •
uMid blrj~m . . . .

Television
Viewing

.

Ytmllhe 1sao. e&amp;o cc Spec:t•l.

Now counlty dr:oom horM. lultt
fol'you . tl8,818 . 4bdr., 2bt!th.
1M tt11• motlol todoy. con·
114-988·7311 .
'

7t OoclgoColt IW. s:roc1 -.1..
noo. 81 Hondo IO·CC ..,.,.,.
cycle good - d· UOO. Can
814·441-~151 .
.

Motorcycles

1981 Hondo CB 710 K pu•·
chll.. nM e.,.t yelt 270 ICtufll
mllet, excellent condition , was
tl,700 now t1,800. Call814·
448-7289

W.:

Sooond'o- Claooouto- luplua.
I . 4x9 end '4 xlx7·18tha otue·
aota ~n~ 11d~D or p.,ellng'
- d 1 t9.81· l .tepc.
2. 4xSx% m-nlto untlortey·
mont ez.H ••. 4• 4 ., ·00 oa.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Pomeroy 2 · INir, Neylora Run.
11715 mo. t1 00 dfPOI:tt. yard,

820,000 304-675-7881 .

SWAIN
AUCTION l · JIIUIINITURE 12
OUvo St.. Oollpolo. Niw ·a uold
wood·oo•h--. I powaod LA
oulto Ull, bunk bodi t198.

Oalllpolll.

oolt. Coli 6U·448·4928 .

LEtOn area, 7 rooma, ya'JI, garden
s po l School but route .
$1&amp;.000.00. Aft" 5:00 PM 1 to 2 acr•. Green School 0111.
30 4 - 364 ·2 4 ~ 9 .
or reel nice home. C1ll 114-4414307 ....enlnt~~ .
3 bedfOOm hou... half acre,
304-17&amp;-1279.

- ---------

-Ia•

Mobile H om111
for Rent

44

Plootlo oltl .... -ed.
llt..lc ooptlc tinlll. , Ploitlo
C!ilvoru. motol oioilvo!tl. RON
EVANS ENl!RPII1118, Joait·
-'"::n-::._011_._81.;.,
· "'-•-•,..·.:,
18:..,3 0----,.
·
•
·
Chf!dorl 8ow Sut&gt;fil¥, Vinton,
Ohio. Col 814-318·1184.,_ Au·
gutt· looelolo. 20ll "" .....
""'"· 2011 .o" Ecllo _......_
lllioqVI!nll--l.-oilwo'18"
e 11 .A 8
•~
· -~; or oH ·M .oo.
Choln ihorp.,lng, l'lflolr - .
~- 5 Mon.·Sot. Clalod
. . a lut:t.

oummoresao.- t 1 .100now.
Colt 114·M8•2238.

Volley Fumltur.; naw a uold.
Lorge
of qulllty fuml·
ture . 1211 E81tern Ave ..

3

6 room
1 . 2 ICtal. Double
c:.r garege. Locltad on RoM Hill . - - - - - - - - - -

614-87a·2613 .

Hou• far rMiin MkldiiPDft. 4
IR ., 2 bath, fenOOd In yord, largo
kitchen. F.R.. formol -.a
room. loundry, b....,ont. Uti
plus dopolit. 114-112·7177.

ooun...;. ezoo por """""· flOO
1874 Sto• Duot good eond .. 2 dtp01tt. You ~g..,andllecttic
bdr.• 2 blthl, OR, LA, np1ndo, bltlo. Coli 114·912·27t1 lftor
n.w· fum~a~. hot water tanll • 5:00pm.
carpet. Cell 114·448·3817
P.M.
Two 2-btdroom motMia homee,
2 mil• ·~ AddiJon..BuiiMIIIa
Road. 011 hoot. no pota. UOO
ptuo utHkiiO. .-rity .,_ij
•oqulrod, 114·448·8848.
33
F erma for Sale
21 80,.. with toblcco bMeend
3 outbuHding~. ~mile up Sugar
Creak n. . Crown City . Call

Qullity

Houses· for Rent

61

74

Merchendlie

...._ ' ............. UIOd '1

''I

'

32

114 Miac.

44l·~lf,,

'

,. '

18. 1986

"

11 ....
.. ,
·
s..i1o~P _..tr-rwHh

Mi'li . IJd lill iS I ~

Burnout in cubicle 23!"

brandt-Liz Clalboine. lEvan PI-

'

King .oilod ...... ftotetlon
mettr. . Mdfounclltion. RMIIIII
lor ••?1. uklng t471. CeU

"Burnout in cubicle 23!

count thoa ttore . Ladill·
Childrtnt·M~nt. All fint quality
mtrc:handlll. Nltion_.ty known

inventory - training -fixtures
~~•tall.t - grand _cptnlnt promotiOns and round trip lir fare. C ..
today . Prestige Fahlons 101-

to Rent

N!IW Ei!it. . High Schl&gt;OI prlciPIII end wife n_,. houM 10 rent.
,.._lilly, In e..... Loool Dl"

nquirN to: 8,, ,8,. P.O. lox
1227. Gallipolis. 01148831 .

Btndolino. Am81fi. Nlke and
many more. •18.800.00 to
U9.900.00. includttblginning

~-

·
•
TraHo(~ tor ·roni. 2 lftlllll '
ftom ~ on lt. Rt. 881.
Coli , 814'448·3413. or 114-·
,
441-3212. .

c:Mh lnvt~tmem. ··· no co........._
1'10 dtliv•An g encf ·no HtVIce

·'

Sp~~r.e 'f or Rent

46

fun ll'ld profttlbte. · We

' \

c_.,'iUHdl'll'olhop. OV.·
1,000 tlrol, elhl 12. 13, 14, Ia,
II. 1.1.1. I ...... out Rt. 218.
Ceiii14-288·12SI .
.,

It

htw onr 100 u.ctllng tc~~ye end
glflo-ring tho now .. - . .
tolldng doU "C•icltot' ' whli:ll will
be Ml\lertilld an MllonlllV'. Na

ho~ ~~

Monday,. A~uit

Pprne!Qy-Middteport, Ot,io

.,

8·18

LIA R D I.
O I P R
0 T f' L
EWo'ID)

lA W DR

L 1· H N R

ENYLRN

II R

Q RU Y DZ

,.'

\illllWL

0 I II

1 W N

t. l: ll

t.JWWP .

'
'

-

NIAB U

E

I!J MOVIE:

'Whos o lila Is
lt. Anyway?"
12:30 D (]) 1]11 Late Night with
Dilvid letterman Ton'lght's
ouaata ar&amp; comedian Gutiert Gottfried and boxer
Wimpy Hal•l•ad. (60 min.)
In Stereo.

.

1.•
'
'

•

-o

R .O'R~FWD

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE WOR~T KIND OF
REDUCING PILL IS TilE ONE WHO KEEP~ TEl.LII'G
YOU HOW SHE DID IT. - KATHRYN ·GRA \' SI 1\ ·.

II IIl Hawaii Five-0

. ''

I]J Bast oPGrouchO

00

R o.~ d

Rac:lng!' Puma·

Fa lmou th Road .Ra ce (6 0
min .)

()) ,ABC Na )VS N;ghtUne
,.
fJ) (!), A4wh;d, '
'-·
@ Lifestyles Salutes 1he
...
Superstars (2 hrs.(
·
1~ 12:40 Ill il}l MOVI E: 'A Summer
W ithoiJI Boys'

.

'

.."

......
.,

�Pomeroy-Midd'1e~\~!io

Page 1o-The Dllity Seutilltl

~onday, August 18, 1986
1

--Local Briefs:-__, Cincinnati whts reputation as .JM)m battle center
Grqnd champions named at pul~
l _
Following a week c1 competition, grand champions of til! annual
Meigs County Fair kiddie tractor pull were named following final
events on Saturday a1temoon.
First place In the 35 to 55 pound category went to Eric Wagnerwtth
Chad Sloan taking seconcl. First place In the 5611! 75 pound category
went to Aaroo Brown with Paul Smith taking second.
The top four winners received trophies and cash awards.

Chain saw conte~t winners
Sawing their way 1D cash prizes Satufday afterroon at the Meigs
County Fair In the annual chain saw contest were several Meigs
County residents.
First place winners In the stock chain saw competition were: 0.2,
John L. Ridenour, Chester; 2.1.J.5, Ridenour; 3.~.5. Cecil Midkiff,
Hemlock Grove; 4.6-5.5 and 5.6 and up, two firsts, Ed Werry,
Pomeroy.
In the modified chain saw competition, Mldkl!f won first place In
the ().5 competition and Ridenour was first In sawing In the 5.1 and up

category.

Patrol tockets motorist
Eric Taylor, 19, Racine, was cited by the state highway patrol
Sunday for failure to maintain an assured clear distance, resulting In
a two-car accident on County Road llln Suttoo Township.
According to the patrol's report, Taylor was eastbound on :ll at 1
a.m., tralllng a car driven by Randall Simpson, '!1, Rllclne. Simpson
slowed to avoid strtklng a deer crossing the road and was struck In
the rear by Taylor, who was unable to stop In time. Both cars were
damaged moderately.

Divorce action filed in court
Connie Kay Chevalier, Racine, has flied for a divorce in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court from Allen Keith Chevalier,
Reedsville, charging gross neglect of duty and extreme cruelty.
Granted a dissolution of marriage were Jeannie D. Nease and
Stephen H. Nease.

KC pool closes Tuesday
The Kyger Creek pool at Cheshire will close for the season
Tuesday, according to a spokesman for the Gallla County Local
School Dlstrtct.

' ·"l

Iii¥! liA ~leaded Into an
unbj!Uevable era of repression,"
Slrklti said,
...
Klr~ say•lhe restrictions placed
on pQmoa;rapey In Cncln!l&amp;tl gave
hope 1Q .~her antl·po~grapey
~pi " the nation. .
·
"QI!r alm'fl'om the beglnnblg bas
~ · ~n · dlapense inOre light tht
heat,'' fllld tbe fol1ner pastor of
CoUeae J{IU Pfesbytel:lan',Cburch.
"We'Vf. w~~ . to let ~~ ·

CINCINNATI (UPI) -Nota day
goes by without a call to Cl!idMati's National Coalition Against
Pornography from anti ·
pornography activists In other
cities who need Ideas on how to
exterminate from X-rated book·
stores, movie houses and nude
dance bars.
"I feel as It we've been riding a
whale through til! ocean," said the
Rev. Jerry Kirk, president and
founder of the three-year-old coall·
lion. "We can't keep up with aU the
phone cails and requests for
assistance.''
Moral activist from Pittsburgh to
Atlanta, from and Columbia, S.C. to
Little Rock have learned to use the
coalltiop as a powerful source In
their local llghts against
pornography.

citizens know what can be done to
Interpret the First Amendment and
re$lst the harm of violent and
degrading pornograpey," he said.
A substantial flow of cash will be
needed If the National Coalltlon
Against Fl:lmograpey Is to achieve
Its 1\Qal d. ridding the land of
hard-core and chlld pornograpey.
To attain' this, the coalition has
hired Russ Reid, the publlc rela·
.lions agency that promoted Moth·

ers Against Drunk Driving Into a
housdlold name. Initial plans call ·
for a nationwide direct-mall cam·
paJgn to poll attitudes about
pom0grapey and solicit funds from
mWJons of homes.
Countering the project Is 11
$900,(0) CIIJllpalgn proposed by,
Gray and Co., a Waslllngton, D.C.,
public relations firm to the Councll
lor Perkldlcal Dlsll'ibutors Assocla·
tlon, wmse struule Sirkin relates

Jim Kelly signs
with Buffalo Bills

Partly cloudy tonight, with a
low In the mid 80s. Mostly cloudy
Wednesday, with highs In tbe

418

PICK-4
0523

•

Vot.36. No. 74

low 80s. The probablllty of
precipitation is 20 pereent
through Wednesday.

•

at y

enttne
1 Section. 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 19, 1986

Copyrighted 1986

26 Centt

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Group seeks merit selection of Ohio judges

Kirk says he's heard other
anti-porn activist respond saying,
"every time we gl!tsomethlngfrom
Cincinnati It give us a shot In the
arm. We're up and on a high for
weeks. It makes us know we're not
alone."
But It receiving' advice from
coalition leaders such as Kirk and
execut!Ve vice president Richard
McLawhorn Is Uke getting help
from the masters, talking to H.
Louis Sirkin Is a warning.
"It's . scary to me. What's the
dl!ference between this group and
Rev. (Sun Myung) Moon's cult?
They're a dangerous voice scaring
people with mind control," said
Sirkin, who has earned national
recognition for successfully defend·
lng retailers of allegedly pomogra·
phlc materials from criminal
charges.

GIIWI- Eight llltle 11r1s were nained the wtnnen
clurlll« Saturday's ..,..., preUy baby conlelt at the
Metp County Fair. In froot, lett 1o II~, are David
Tiemeyer, uttle Mr. Melp Counly Fair; Amanda
Priddy, &amp;-3 monlhs, with mother, Tamml Priddy;
'Dffany Manley, U months, with lather, Mldlael
Manley; Je881ca.Cwfman, 6-12 montM, with mother
Brenda Curfm• Rachel Cbapman, 1:1-18 montbs:

public service' organizations represented In Citizens
for Merit Selection of Judges.
The the petition supports the creation of a merit
system of. appointing and retaining Ohio Supreme
Court and Court of Appeals judges. It would be added
to ballot as an Initiative.
Jacobs said the amendinent would take partisan
politiCs out of the selection of judges and substitute a
bi-partisan system In which a commission of dtlzens
II,'Oukl oorrilnate a group of judges for the 1\Qveroor to
consider as appointees.
After an Initial term, judges would maintain their
seats It they receive an affirmative vo~ from at least
55 percent of the voters.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPii -Citizens for the Merit
Selection of Judges and the Ohio State Bar
Association are urging Ohioans to support an
amendment to the Ohio Constitution that would
change the prooess of electing Supreme Couri and
Court of Appeals judges tn the state.
·
.
Bar President Leslle W. Jacobs and Diana
Winterhalter, president of the League of Women
Voters In Ohln, held a news conference Monday to
launch a petition drive that will attempt to gather
400,(XX) to 500,(XX) sfgnatureS over the next several
months -to place a the amendment on til! ballot
sometime In 1987.
Jacobs urged the 18,500 members of the bar to help
circulate the petition which Is backed by 23 Ohio

wtlh mother, 'Ialrut\Y Olapman; and Rachel As~MJ,
UUie Mils Melp CauDty Fair. Second row, letllo
right, are Krllllm Napper, 18-:U IIIOIIIbs, wtlhmother,
Sllella Napper, Sara McDaalel, lwll years, wllh
mother, Rhonda McDaniel; Celella DUiard, tine
years. with mother,lmo JeaulllevU; 0w1a Burp;·
four years, with grandmother, Rosemary Hysdl.

The plan would not affect on local judge seats unless
voters tn a particular county vcte to extend the merit
system to their local elections.
Jacobs said tr Is Ironic that 34 other states and the
Dlstrtct of Columbia have adopted some form of
judicial merit selection over the past 45 years whlle
Ohio - the state where the merit plan was first
proposed In 1938 - still doesn't use it.
"The Ohio State Bar Assoclatlon has worked for
adoption of a judicial merit plan for nearly 50 years,
and we are proud to join moll' than :Jl other publlc
service organizations working to place this Issue
before the voters In 1987," Jacobs said at a news
conference.

"Lawyers have an ethical duty to aid In Ire
'!;election of judges who are weU qualified and who wDI
place legal principle above potitical expediency," he
said. "We are convinced that adoption d. this
carefully designed merit system will Improve the
administration of justice and insulate Ohio's top-level
judiciary from partisan potitics and special-Interest
money."
Jacobs urged bar members to contribute time anq
money to tl¥! petition drive and public educatloneffprt
about the amendment. He said he and other bar
leaders plan to speal\ hefi:lre civic groups across the
state durtng the coming months to expaln the
proposal and seek public support for Its passage.

Pomeroy
acts upon
ordinance

Racine endorses
merchants festival
Meeting Monday In recessed
session, Racine VU!age Councll
endorsed the Racine Merchants
Association's annual fall festival for
Oct. 4.
Assisting the merchants In the
sponsorship of this year's festival
wUtbetheRaclneAmerlcanLeglon
and the fire department.
Papers for the village's Commun·
lty Development Block Grant are
ready to be mailed to Buckeye
Hills-Hocking Valley Regional De·
velopment District for Input before
the papers are submitted to the
Meigs County Commissioner's. The
vlllage will put an additional $73.ro,
besides labor, Into the park development project which Is being funded
through the CDBG program.
The Shrine Park Committee
reported a number of groups have
~the Pl\l'k's shelter hotise for

'reu~tlf~elfll!ier.
On Saturday, Sept. 14, the park

committee Is sponsoring another
free evening of entertainment with
rnuslc to be provided by the Bend

River Boys Band and others. The
firemen's auxlliarywUJhavean Ice ·
cream social that evening at the
park with activities to get under·
way at 7 p.m.
Council extended the probationary appointment of Joe Kirby as
deputy marshalllr six months.
In a related matter, a new
resident to the village, Joe Drasko,
has exiJ'essed his desire to councll
of obtaining pollee training. CouncU
suggested Drasko check to see It Ills
veteran's teneflts will pay for the
required schooling. Council lndl·
cated a wUUngness to have Drasko
commissioned and bonded so he
may attend Peace Officer's Train·
lng School.
Council authorlzedenterlng Into a
contract with Bill Parsons for tree
removal within the vlllage. Work Is
to begin Saturday.
Council discussed several Inter·
sections In the vUJage that shoUld
havelefUurnsbanned,however,no
action was taken.
· (Continued on Page 10)

· " ·. " • ·- •
TEMPORAKY KOAO -A temporal)'
11811
been COIIIItructed on Ohio 124 at Racine where a
culvert UDder lhe highway 'Is being n,~laced by the

•· ..
Ohio Deparlment of

A culvert on 1%4
betweenPortlaadandLonglloUomhasalreadybeen
replaced. A third culvert at Syi'IICIIlle wm also be
replaced this summer.

Pomeroy Vlllage Councll approved the second and third
readings of an ordinance to vacate
a portion of Third Street when It
met Monday In regular session.
The street Is no longer main·
talned for traftlc and after It Is
officially abandoned, the property
may then he sold for development.
Council approved the ftrst read·
lng of an ordinance il allow the
village to sell at public auction a lot
behind the Sugar Run Mlll. Council
wlll then use proceeds from the sale
to purchase a piece of property
which adjoins the vlllage's park 1n
that same area.
In other matters, council dis·
cussed the need for about $2,000
worth of parking meter parts to
repair village meters. It was noted
that many of the village's meters
are either broken or mJsslng and
til! vlllage has no extra meterswtth
which to replace them. It was
decided that parts slvuld be
purchased only as needed In order

New buduetary
estimates signal sp·ending
cutbacks~~:~~~s;:$:::ft:
e
.

New

~
WASHINGTON (U!J,i'
- To·
day's estlrnates~the budget
dell.clt, requtrea under the Gramm·
Rudman balanced budget law, wlll
mean major spending cuts unless
Congress.can reduce the red Ink,
says the head of the Senate Budget
Commlttee.
Congressional efforts to cut the
deDclt, however, may get a boost
from the tax reform bill. Prellml·
nary estimates show It wtil ralse$11
billion next fiscal year, although It
is supposed to neither lose nor gain
over five years.
In a letter to colleagues on the

KOS

etition!

South Central Ohio
Partly cloudy today, with highs tn
the low 80s. Partly cloudy tonight
and Tuesday, with a low tonight In
the mid 00s and highs Tuesday In
the low 80s.

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12 mg "tar:' 0.9 mg nicolino av. per cigarette by FTC method.

'

OMB and CBO planned to
formally release the joint deficit
estimate for flscall987 late today,
but most of the 111mbers have been
known 'tor weeks. The COO est!·
mates the deficit at about $173
bllllon and the OMB's projection Is
expected to be about $154 bllllon.
Social Security and other l!deral
retirement programs are exempt
from Gramm-Rudman cuts, and
cth:!r programs, llke Medicare, are
partially protected.
Co~ has a month to avert til!
across-the-board cuts. Under
Gramm-Rudman, another report

on the economy Is due in Ocbe
to r,
and If lawmakers are within $10
bUUon of til! largl't, no cuts wUJ be
required.
"This Is not an Impossible task,"
Domentcl wrote. "We can enact
legislation that wlll allow us to set
priorities for spending and avoid
~:.. mechanical and mindless

II Congress falls to enact deficitreducing legislation, however, 11
would be forced to vote on the
UJ1l01lular across-the-board cuts
just before the November elections.
TheSupremeCourtthrewoutthe

partnership.
"It was an opportunity. for
several open and frank. exchanges
of views," Celeste said. "Til! joint
communique wDl continue to buUd
oo a strong bond between our two
peoples."
Celeste said the 1\Qal c1 the
communique Is to conUnue to work
ioW!lrd expanding trade cpportunl·
ties In Ohio and Huhelln a way that
will be mu tuall)l heneflclal.
"Tog!!ther we apect to maintain
a strong commitment to build on
our sisterhood and bring about new
areas d. ecooomlc oooperatton,"
Celeste said. "It Is a close example
d. the IJlodrelatlonshlphetweenthe

(lt'Ol)le of Ohio and the people of
Ollna."
'The communique also says the
Ollnese plan to Iring the Wuhan
Acrobatic 'Iroupe to til! fair next
year. CelestesaldHubel'sexhlbltat
this year's fair, the IJ'OVInce's fifth,
Included sales oftextDes and small
machinery.
· Ohio Is also to participate In a
trade ahlbltlon In Hubel sometime
next year.
Guo Invited Celeste to visit Hubel
again at the earliest and most
convenient tlme.
"We have enjoyed warm hospl·
tallty here and we feel as If we are
living among oor friends," Guo
said .

Tax refortn may be complex for some

Regular &amp; Menthol.·

SURGEON GENER.AL'S WARNING: Quitting Smoking
No~ Greatly Reduces Serious Risks to Your Health.

Senate budget panel, Sen. Pete
Domenlcl, R·N.M., said a joint
report due late today from til!
administration's Office d. Management and Budget and the Congres·
slnnal Budget Office wUJ show an
average deficit of slightly below
$165 bllllon - $20 bllllon aver
Gramm-Rudman's $144 billion
maximum deficit for fiscal 1987.
"As a result (this will require)
across the board cuts d. 5.5 percent
for defense and 7.5 percent for
non-defense to meet the 1987
target," Domenlcl wrote.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)- An
Guo Zhenqlan, 1\Qvernor of the
agreement pledging contlnued rela· province, said a seven-member
lions between Ohio and the Chtnese trade delegation toured factotles,
province of Huhel has been signed schools and farms during alive-day
by Gov. Richard F . Celeste and til! mission Just ending. It was Guo's
leader of the communist first visit to Ohio.
government.
Guo, speaking through an Inter·
Hubel. Ohio's sister province in · preter, said delegates on the trade
the People's Republic of China , and mission were Interested In soot
Ohio agreed Monday to continue a blowers for bollers produced at the
relationship formed seven years Diamond Fl:lwer Co. In Lancaster
ago.
and ftttlngs made at Mid-State
The communique guarantees Bplts &amp; Nu1S Co. Inc. In Columbus.
that merchants from Hubel wlll
He said no contracts were signed,
participate in the 1987 Ohio Stat,e but added that meetings With
Fair and It sets reciprocal trade rej,resen tatives d. 100 Ohio commissions by delegates from til! two pan les were part of the developgovernments for 1987 and 1988.
ment of a long-term trade

Taste breakthrough,

The probability of precipitation Is
20 percent today and near zero
tonight and Tuesday.
Winds wlll he tight and from the
northeast today and Ugh! and
va riable tonight.
Ohio Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
Achan&lt;l! &lt;t showers and thunder·
storms each day, with highs In the
Ills. Overnight lows will rang!' from
the upper !'ils to the lower 00s early
Wednesday and In the 00s Thursday
and Friday mornings.

hazard at the bottomc1LinootnHlll,

Celeste inks pact with Chinese province

Ohio weather

CLEVELAND (UPl l - A jack·
pot of S1,3ll,l'!l awaits til! ooe Ohio
Lottery Lotto player who holds a
ticket with the numbers 1. 17, 18, 22,
23 and 28.
The numbers were drawn Satur·
day tor thelottecy'sweeldygameln
which $3,358,125 woi:1h of Uckets
were sokl.
The number c1 players who chose
four or nve of tile six winning
numbers, along with the amount of,
money they won wUI be announced
Moni:lay. Tile mtlmated Jaclq)Ot for
next Satuida)''llottery 15SlmWJon.

Daily Number

-Page 3

Emergency nms
Meigs County Emergency Medl·
cal Services' workers were busy
over the weekend with 11 calls on
Saturday and six on Sunday.
Saturday at 4 a.m., Middleport to
247 North Third for Mary Wallace to
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 11:49 a.m. to 1667
Lincoln Heights for Michael Grlf·
flth to Holzer Medical Center;
Syracuse at 9: 13 a.m. from the
fairgrounds with Paul Collins to
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 12:23 p.m. to 1665
Lincoln Heights for Margaret Karr
to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Racine at 2:ffi p.m. to Bashan for
Charles Bissell to Holzer Medical
Center; SyraCUSf at 5:48p.m. from
the fairgrounds with Rose Plants to
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 7 p.m. to til! strip mine
on Ohio Glllor Rhonda Phelps Who
was dead on arrival; Middleport at
7: 19 p.m. transported Rod Manley
from the same strip mine to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syra·
cuse at 11: 09 p.m. transported
Terry Roush from an aum accident
oo Forest Run Road to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Fl:lmeroy at
11: 11 p.m. transported Mike Bar·
trum from the same auto accident
to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 11: 24 p.m. to Ohio G!l
for Ru~ll Cullums to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Sunday at 12: 20a.m. to403Sprlng
Ave. for Ellzabeth Hepp to Veterans Memorial Hospital: Racine at
12:28 a.m. to Fifth Streetfor Randy
Tucker who was treated but not
transported; Racine at 9:31a.m. to
Bashan for Charles Bissell to
Holzer Medical Center; Middleport
at 6:19 p.m. to Story's Run for
Nancy Plants who was treated but
not transponed; Tuppers Plains at
6:40 p.m. transported Christina
Goldbu I)' and Denzil Hudson from
an auto accident on Ohio. 248 to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Ra·
cine at 10:50 p.m. to Oak Grove
Road for Curt Johnson who was
dead oo arrival.

Ohio Lottery

I

•

r

I

WASHINGTON (UP!) - For
many Americans, simplicity Is not
one of the virtues they can apect to
find In the new Income lax system
approved by H011se and Senate
negotiators.
Even though one of the original
goals of tax reform was to come up
with a less confusing system, many
taxpayers who Itemize deductions
may, under the new plan, ftnd
themselves facing surprising new
degrees of complexity.
.
At a quick glance, tht! ~appears
to be amazingly simple, dropping
the cuiMlt 15 tax brackets to two
and slashing numerous deductions .
However, sprinkled tlrouihout
are provisions that could oompli·
cate matters, especially In the ftrst
few years of the plan when certain
tax breaks are gradually lncreas·
lng and decreasing and new

calculations will be required.
Even when the bill is fUlly
effective, taxpayers would have to
try to determine whether they
qualify for certain tax breaks or
how much c1 those deductions they
could use.
For example, therewtlitd be new
rules for Individual retltement
accounts·thaHwukl allow lite IUD
deduction for some pmpe, dltfer·
ent partial cleductlobs lor others
· &amp;!ld 111 deduction at aU for stUI
others .
"If Ws tully Implemented without
changes It could he simple," said
Henry Bilch, JI'I!Stdent d. H&amp;R
Block, Inc., wHch hamles tax
matters mostly for middle-Income
peeple. "But In the next tlve years
there are phase-Ins and phase- ·

oom."

Other accounting experts added passage."
And Sen. BDl Bradley, 0-N.J.,
that for very sophl5tlcated tax
planning, the problems muld be del'ended the blll, which stUJ must
be apJrOVed by both houses c1
even more complicated.
But President Reagan supports Cmgres,s.
the bill, although II! might have
Lar!lely because d. the Increased
designed some elements ol It standard deduction and personal
dltlerentzy, Wblte House apokes· exemption, he said about 15 million
man Lany Speakes slid Monday. people Who 'Itemize deductions will
Whether or not Reagllil will tJy Ill m IOnjierdo so and will ftle a "short
revile the measure after expected tmn" return. Also, about 6 ntlllon
pas•age by Congress, •'w!ll!ld de- poor people would be takl!ll ott the
pend m what's In the analysis" tax rolls and not m}ulred to ftle any
being done on the measilre, return.
Speakes said.
Bli those will continue to llemlze
"But I think "(Treasury I Secre- maytlod It lou&amp;b todeta'mlneeven
tary (James) Baker has Wll'lled eo what tax rate they are paying.
clolely with tliat confertllce comFor example, the much-heralded
mllfA:e m bplh aides," said Speakes, two-rate'structure In the bUI wookl
"that li!IJTing any iltal surprlle, I notbejpn Ullt11l988. Nextyearthere
think the JI'I!Sid!mt's behind the bill woukl be fllie' brackets between 11
and certainly wUI work tlr Its pel'cent ~d 38.5 percent.

'
I

'~

automatic spending reduction
procedure that was supposed to
leave the distasteful budget-cutllng
task to the comptroller general. An
unsuccessful attempt was made
last week Ill restore an automatic
deficit-cutting process.
Final congressional action on
many spending bUis has been put
c1f untO Congress returns from Its
summer recess In mid-September.
Among the bllls 10 be considered Is
a detlclt·reductlon measure total·
lng about $7.3 . 1llllon, and some
budget experts have suggested
adding more to that as a way to
meet Gramm-Rudman's targets.
Gramm-Rudman, passed last
year, requires the current $2ll
bllUon deficit to he cut In annua t
steps untD the budget Is balancedthe deficit Is cut to 11'1'0- In 1991.
Under til! law, each year's annual
deficit Is to be estimated by the two
largest government economic
agencies - the OMB and CBO.
Congress' Joint Tax Committee
projected the lax reform bill, on
which House-Senate conferees
reached IJ'ellmlnary agreement
Saturday, will raise $11 bllllon In
fiscal 1987 but lose $17 btlllon In
fiscal 19111.
It loses $15 billion In fiscal 1989,
but raises 119 bllllon In flscall900 and
raises $12 billion In ftscal 1991.

Law lncame lu Breakdawn"
·EIIllmples conSiruCied from rypal

r••,.,..3fj.

ra~ ~anos

Jolnl to~!ngo~Ra~

~~;- $0200
,.,....,. ,n.eeo 1n S2 aeo

"'*"en

[[

~no~~~~~~
vlate
the problem were decided
upon .
Pomeroy resident Bob &amp;ck was
at the meeting to request permls·
slon to oolld a permanent drive
from the street to property on
Mulberry Avenue, which he recently purchased. Buck said he
would have a drain Installed
beneath tl1e drive. Council ap·
proved the request.
Present for the meeting were
Mayor Richard Seyler· CouncU·
members John Ande~n. Larry
Wehrung, Betty Baronlck, Henry
Werry,BruceReedandBUlYoung;
and Clerk-Treasurer Jane Walton.
Council mded the meeting In
recess.

EPA slates
hearings
By United Press lntematlonall
Aseries of public hearings will
he held by the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency on a
controversial proposal by Mead
Corp. to use paper sludge
containing small amounts c1
lethal dioxin In land-reclamation
projects.
The Issue has generated a
flrestorm &lt;t protest In southeast
Ohio, especially since thi! EPA's
public notice anoounclng prell·
mlnary approval c1 ·the plan
faUed to mention the p-esmce d.
dioxin In the sludge.
Darlene Barrett of the Hock·
ing- Valley Land!UJ aeanup
Committee In Hocking County,
said the Mead sludge, called
Bypro and produced at Its
&lt;l!UIIcothe plant, has been used
experimentally In eight sou·
theast Ohio counties since l911l,
without EPA approval.
Mead was told by El'A
d.flclals last year to·stop usiJti
the sludge for reclamatbn c1
strtp.mtned land aftEr federal
authorttles found dioxin l1udae.
from paper mills h Maine and
Wl&amp;consln.
·• '

REFORM EFnCDJ- TN1

Mead's proposal calls !M',
using a sludge-dirt mix COIIIaln- .
tng up to 10 parts per trillion ol
dioxin on un acres c1 ~p;

H-e Senate conference com-

mined lands In Jack.;on, Hook·
lng, Lawrence, Perry, GaWa. .
Meigs and Vernon rountlei. •

ll'l(lhlc lhlrn • breUdowu ot
the locome lax biD that the

mittee appi'OV1!d over the weekend. (UPI)

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