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                  <text>Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

---Local Briefs::- .....,

Area deaths

Starting Tuesday, Aug. 26-29, ti-e Middleport Pool will be q&gt;en
from 2:30-5:ll p.m.
The prtce for people without a season pass wiD be 50 cents. Aug.
30-31 will be regular hours at regular prtces. Monday, Sept. 1, wlll be
a free swlm.for the public since It wiU be ti-e last day for the season.

2 ro_uples get marriage licenses
Marriage licenses have been Issued In Meigs County Probate
Couri to Charles Larry Hanis, 22, Middleport, and Jennifer Jo
Llevlng, 21, Middleport; Rodney Dean Roush, 18, Pomeroy, and
Kristen Jane Bailey, 19, Pomeroy.

Danny Howard

Sylvia A. Wigel

Zeb Danny Howard, 41, a resident
of 4822 Cadillac Ave., Detroit,
Mich.. and a native of GalUpolis,
died unexpectedly at his home on
Aug. 11.
Mr. Howard was born in Galllpo·
lis June 2, 1945, to Edna Howard,
who survives, and the late Zeb
Howard. Hisfatherprecededhimln
death on May 7, 1978.

Sylvia A. Wlgel, 68, Prospect,
formerly of Meigs County, died
Friday at her home.
Sre was born May 12. 1918. in
Reedsvllle, a daughter of hte late
Curman and Josephine Jaccaud
Bailey .
Suiviving are rer husband, AI·
bert J . Wigel, whom she married on
Oct. 16, 1940; four sons, Jack of
Mount Gilead; Bryan, Marlon:
Harry, Green Camp, and George of
Prospect; two daughters, Mrs.
Judy Smith, Taylor, S.G. and Mrs.
Phyllis Klein, Marion. and nine
grandchlldrEil k.
Besides rer parents. she was
preceded In death by a son and too
sisters.
Services were held MJnday at the
Emanual Lutheran Church of
which sbe was a member. Officiating was Rev. Arnold G. Wulff.
Burial was In Prespect Cemetery.
The Gehm-Balllnger Funeral
Home was in charge. Friends may
make contributions In her memory
to the Emanuel Lutheran Church.

While attending Gallla Academy
High School, Howard led ti-e GAHS
Blue Devils to two Soutlleastern
Ohio League football champion·
ships (1960 and 19&amp;l) . He was
named the Blue Devils' MVP in 1962
and was an All-SEOAL performer
for tl!ree years from his fullback
position. Howard still holds the
school's all-time net yards rushing
record of 2,229 set during the 1900,
1961 and 1962 campaigns.
He attended Wilberforce University and was a Vietnam Veteran.
Mr. Howard was a transportation
station employee for tre City of
Detroit.
Surviving besides his motrer,
now of Detroit , are one brother,
Francis Gregory. also of Detroit;
three sisters, Mrs. Joy Anderson.
Lemon Grove, Calif .; Mrs. Karen
A. Buffington, Gallipolis, and Miss
Shelley H~wa rd, Detroit; several
nieces and nepl'ews.
Funeral arran~ment s were
under ti-e direction of Swanson's
FuN2ral Home in Detroit. Services
were reid Friday, Aug. 15 at the
funeral home. Burial was In Trinity
Cemetery, Mt . Elliott, Detroit.
Pallbearers were members oft he
City of Detroit Color Guard.
Cards may be sent to Mrs. Edna
Howard, 4175 Burns St .. Detroit.
Michigan, 48214.

Area woman seeks divorce
Jennifer Michael, Middleport, has filed lor a divorce In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court from Terry Michael, Chester,
charging gross neglect of duty and extreme cruelty. A restraining
order has been issued against the plaintiff pending ti-e court's Hnal
decision in tlle divorce action.

Sheriff probes 3 accidents
Sheriff Howard Frank reports tltree traffic accidents in Meigs
County over tlle weekend.
At 11:04 p.m. Saturday. a 1981 Dodge Challenger owned by
Michael Wolfe and driven by Michael Bartrum, 16, Pomeroy, was
traveling east on County Road ll at Forest Run. TI-e vehicle went dl
tlte right shoulder of the road and rolled ooto ti-e driver's sided the
car. causing heavy damage. Bartrum and Terry Roush, 17.
Middleport, a passenger In the car, were Ulken by Pomeroy and
Syracuse EMS units to Veterans Memortal Hospital. Bartrum was
not cited by autl!orltles.
At 7:10a.m. Sunday, Allred H. Lyons Jr., 42, of New Matamoras.
hit a deer while traveling on Ohio 7. Damage to the front of Lyons'
1978 Buick was moderate.
And at 6:30 p.m. Sunday evening. Christina Goldsbury, 18. of
At !'ens, driving a 1970 Plymoutll Duster. was traveling west on Ohio
248 at Chester when she went off the right side d. tre road , hit a dirt
bank and then a culvert. Goldsbury and a passenger in tre vehicle,
Denzil Hudson, 16, of Syracuse, were transported to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by Tuppers Plains EMS. Goldsbury was cited for
failure to control her vehicle. Damage tot he front and passen~r side
of the Vfhicle was moderate.

Salem trustees set meeting date
Salem Township Trustees will meet tre last Friday of each month.
9:30a .m.. at the Salem fire house, fo r tre remainder of tlte year.

Cline f1 Columrus, Dorothy Sti·
mentz of Lancaster, Mae Rood of
Commercial Point, Annie Qulvey ri
Pomeroy, and Rose Hoskins of
Chilllcotre.
Servlces will be 2 p,m. Thursday
at til! Blgony.Jordan FuN2ral
Home In Albany with Rev. Donald
Shue officiating. Burial will be In
the All-ens County Memory
Gardens. Friends may call at tl1e
funeral home on WednPSday from 2
to 4 and 7 to 9 and anytime prior tu
services on Thursday.

Samuel Pickens
Samuel (Sam 1 Lewis Pickens, 86 ,'
Syracuse, a patient at the Pomeroy
Health Care Center, died Monday
at Veterans Memorial Hospital. .
Mr. Pickens. a . retired fanner,
was born at Cottageville, W.Va., on
Nov, ll, 1899, a · son of the late
DeWitt Clinton and Nancy Ann Cain
Pickens. He was afflllated with til!
Church of God and formerly was a
grange member.
Surviving are five sons. Elmer
Lewis Pickens, Letart Fa lis; Emmett William and Hubert Wesley
Pickens, both r:J. Toledo; Eber
O'Dell Plckens, Syracuse, and
Shelby Nathan Pickens, Racine; a
daughter, Oara. Frances Smi th,
O:llumrus, and several nieces and ·
neprews. Also su rviving are 33
grandchildren and 36 grea t·
grandchildren.
Besides '- his parents. he was
preceded ln deal h by a son, five
grandchildren, three brotl'ers. two
sisters, and his wife. Ma bel Clara
Pickens.
Services will be held at I p.m.
Thursday at tre Ewing Funeral
Home with Rev. Glenn McMillan
officiating. Burial will be in Letart
Falls Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home from :Ito 5and7
to 9 p.m. Wednesday.

William H. Cheadle
William H. Cheadle, 77, of Rt. 2,
Albany, died Monday evening at his
residence following an ex tended
illness.
A farmer his entire life, he wa~
horn in Athens County to the late
Naham and Ellen Wilson Cheadle.
He was a member of the Carpenter
BaptL't Church, the Columbia
School Board and the Athens
County Farm Bureau .
He '' survived bv his wife of 56
years, Ida Jeffers Cheadle; one son,
Rex Cheadle of Albany; one
daught er. Llnda Morris of Stoutsville; eight grande hildren; six
greal grandchildren; two brotrers.
Fred and George Cheadle of
Lockbourne; five sisters, Helen

BE ALIFESA~ER

Units respond to Jour calls

Present for tre meetihg were
Frank Cleland, council president;
Robert Beegle, Richard Wamsley
and Carroll Teaford, rouncllmembei'S; Jane Beegle, clerktreasurer; Glenn Rizer. street
commissioner; and Robert Johnson, fire chief. Absen t wercCcuncilmen Scott Wolfe and Larry Wolle.
Cmmctl adjouned until 7 p.m.
Thesday, Sept. 2.

Divorce granted
A divorce has been granted In
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
to Marcella Casto from Donald
Eugene Casto.
Dismissed was a case by Teresa
Carr against Ronald L. Carr.

Veterans Memorial
Adm issions - Linda Cozart,
Pomeroy; Darlene Hicks, Pome·
roy; Gladys Robson, Pomeroy.
Discharges - Ben ny Dent.

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Plus TaK &amp; Deposit
Open Mon. thru Fri., 6 A.M. til 10 P.M.; Sat 'I A.M. til 'I P.M.

BA K TO
SCHOOL SALE

WIN UP TO $100,000.00

Avarlable In These Sundry Stores'
Eaton. OH
Wapakoneta, OH
Pomeroy. OH
Washrngton C.H.. OH
Wellston. OH
Waverly, OH
Wrlmrngton. OH
Portsmouth. OH
I

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WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.

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Vot.38, No.75

SCALES

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POIYFOLIOS
,
ASSOITED' STYU:5

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Wrller
Meigs Local School Dlstrtct
students In the seventh through 12th
grades wiD have required six weeks
testing In all their subjects of study,
according to a spilt l-2 vote by the
' dlstrtct's board of education which
met Tuesday ~ht In Middleport.
Superintendent Dan C. Manis
l recommended that six weeks ex.} amlnatlon be required for the
students, and durtng the discussion
' reported that many teachers do not
~ glv~ the six weeks tests at the

J

'
t

p~nt time.

The test will count up to ooe-lhird
, on the student's six week period
grade and will be given In each
subject the last week of each six
weeks grading period.

Board PresldentRobertSnowden
OKs recommmcltiUan
commented that It does not seem
The required testlngpa•sed when
logical for the board of education to
the vote came, however, with board
dictate what a teacher must do and
members Larry
Dick
teachers who wanted to could toy
Vaughan and Rupe approving the
wltll tile required testing In making
superintendent's request, while
tests extn,nely simple.
Snowden and Barton voted against
However, Manis said that
the testing.
teacher evaluation methods would
Another recommendation by
prevent any teacher from doing
Morrts on attendance by au stu·
tbat. .Board member Larry Rupe
dents passed with a 4-1 vote wltll
Indicated that regular six weeks u Snowden voting against that meatesting might Improve study habits,
sure.
but Snowden took exception to that
Morrts said that 22 students In the
and said tbat tile testing will oo1y be
elementary schools last year
a loss of Instruction time. Board
ml5sed ll days or more It classes;
member Bob Barton lndlcated that
22 In the junior high missed ll days
he tllought the required testing
or more and 88 In the hiBh school
throws an extra load on the "C"
missed ll days or more Indicating
student who works hard au six
that altendanoe requirements be
weeks to maintain tllat average.
tightened.

Powell;

\ WIC program aids famllies
fighting D1:Jtritional problems
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
As explained by Ms. ·Lavalley,
. Senllnel Staff Writer
WIC Is a supplemental food proIf you are a resident of Meigs
gram. "This means that the foods
County, tau Into low Income yoo get are not au ti-e foods a
guidelines, and are pregnant, or •pregnant or nursing woman, a baby
bave a chUd or children with some or a chUd needs to eat. WIC foods
nutrttlonal deflclen~les, you proba ·
are not meanttobeatotaldlet," she
bly quallly to participate In the WIC ex!llalned. "rut add to rather than
(Women, Infants and Children)
replace the foods y111 should
program of the Meigs County
already be eating or providing lor
Health Department.
your chUdrEil."
Debbie Lavalley, R.N., the WlC
.1'he llrogram ~ coupons
cllteCtm&gt;, •advlaert- that · there •·are
for milk, eggs, c~.julce, peanut
WIUiruted Opim~ In the program
rutter, arid iron tortlfle.d cereals lor
untU Sept 30.
women and ' chUdn!n, .e alld Iron
Currently,l,050 tamUies In Meigs
fortltied formula, cereal and juloe
County are receMng asslstanoe
for Infants.
and there Is funding for another 150
Onoe a tamUy qualifies, they are
farnUies.
•
screened ilr nutrttlonal problems,
· The income guideline:; were
are educated about eating habits,
revised In July to allow more
are given medical evaluations, and
participation and currently a fam - are Issued monthly food· coupons
Ily of three can have an .annual
that can be redeemed for specified
income of $16,87'.! or a famUy of five
foods at participating grocers.
can have an income ct $23,828 and
The WlC director pointed out that
stW quallly on the basis ct financial . the emphasis Is mtroducing strong
need.

·

chlldien by providing
their nutritional needs. "It Is a way
of stopping problems bellre they
start, kind d a preventive medi·
cine, like a shot Ill protect you from
and he&amp;ithy

getting measles or mumps." she
said.
As Ill the Importance d the
program, which Is recterally
funded, she pointed to the Agrlcul·
ture Department's repcrt releued
in January ~the resu1ta rl a ,pye
year evaluation
Laval·
ley lild that the report idbwecJ'tlld';"
''WIC'hu bet!n di!teimlbed to play
an bnportant role in the succesaflll
outtome ~ p-egnancy and In
Improved health status tor babies
and yamg children.
Further lnfonnatlon on the program may be obtained by caDing
the Meigs County Health Depart·
ment located In the Meigs Multi·
flln1xlse BuDding on Mulberry
Het,hts In Pomeroy. The telepmne
number Is !11U616.

According to the new regulation,
students mlsslng over 15 days a
semester for a one-semester course
wiD lose credit for the course while
tboee mlssiiJg more than ll days on
a two-semester course wiD lose
credit tor that course.
There will be admlnlstratlve
exceptions, however, which wiD
allow students to miss over the
designated days and st!U receive
credit tor their courses. The
building principal wiD wor1! with
students In ~t area and there will
be up to five makeup days
permitted tor students who are over
the designated days of being
absent.
Snowden said that In !llme cases
the IXJUcy pun1slies a
parEnts "don't

,

make no effort to secure doctor's
excuses for absences.
Poley questioned
MJrrts explained the role of the
attendance !tflcer and the juvenne
court when excessive absenoes
occur and the fact that parEnts will
be more Interested In their child's
school attendanre If the 'OOwt Is
Involved. The new attendance
policy also cuts from the &lt;id pollcy
the detention halls for cutting
classes and study halls.
Iva Powell, a parent, at the dose
It the meeting rommented that
there are times that !llme students
nwst miss a lot of school for
mediCal reasons and said that the
new policy will punish these
childrEn. She cluirgl!d that the new
In reprcl to days missed also

..,.
'

'

an outline tllan a bill, and when
lawmakerstookthelrvotetheyhad
no1 seen many crucial details,
lncludlng such basic things as wren
single people would miwe from a
top tax rate of 15 percent to 28
percent.
That question has since been
answered - at $17,850 of taxable
lnrome. But many other parts of the
bill that could change tile pocket·
books of most Americans are still

sii Q!I' '""·

being worked on by congressional .
aides.
In Santa Barbara, Calif., wbere
Presilent Reagan Is vacationing,
White !:louse chief of stat! Donald
Regan quipped that the admlnlstra·
tlon Is as uncertain as WaD Street
about the tuU Impact of the tax bill.
However, White House olflclals
reiterated Reagan will support the
measure as Is and fully intends to
sign tb! bill soon after Congress

TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - Ohio
must make special efforts to assist
I~ i'Olnority businesses, which Gov.
Richard F. Celeste said provide a
comerstone for the state's economic d~elopment.
Celeste told 400 participants at a
mtnortty business oonference ln
Toledo Tuesday that the Ohio's
empklyment rate grew fast11r thaD
tile national average because Ohio
placed a strong emphasis on·smaU
rosiness development.
Using a Biblical retelel!oe, Celeste said once-rejected mlnortty
ruslnesses have become Ohio's
comerstooe.
"We want to reach out to those

stooes that have been rejected In
the Plll't," Celeste said. ''That's
what this conference Is aU about."
The state has~ed as ~atalyst
lor minority ruslnesses and. hu
obtain more than $274 mUllion
worth Of gov(!mment and private
contracts for them In the past three
years, Celeste sald.
"The torus &lt;11 minority rusl·
nesses·ls ilnportant." Celeste saki.
.''TIIrtle years ago We were Uke a
hOuse runt ~ sand, and IIQwwe are
on a solid fOundation," he saki,
W&lt;lrig a pljrase trom his state~ til!
state addrl!ss last January.
Celeste defended his tax mcrease
bei!ause It prevented a projected

defldt and turned the state's
a:oromy around.
"In tile last three yean we have
had a balanced budget tor the ftrst
t1meln 10 yean." Celeste said. ''We
had tD act firmly and !~ugh. We
raised taxes once, fair and square."
~'siChooll have been placed
on a flml footN and have
been clOIIEd beca~ of financial
ptoblems, he added.
The daY-~ rorlei'E!ICI! ·at the
Sheraton Westp~ ~ 'intencild to ·
belp ii!W and l!llt,lbllabed buill·
nesaes in nortbwest Ohio and lhow
what UllstaMe Is avaUable.
"Getting down to ruslnes8, that's
what It's all about," Celeste sald.

Miller as an alde effective Aug. 26
and maternity leave ilr TWIIa
ChUds, a teacher, tllroogh Oct 3,
was approved. Leave wllllut pay
tor April Smltb, secretary It
Pomeroy Elemmtary School, was
refused because board members
said It Is against board policy.
Donna Clark, JeiUIY Manuel,
Uretta Jo Dum, Charles Hammons
and Michael Edwards were named
tD the substitute teacher Jist.
Employed as substitute rus driven
were Danny Grueser, Deln J.
Bums, Jack King and Bruce
Stewart.
The bids of Lester Slxil!maker 111
· (Continued &lt;11 Page 14)

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Insurance Industry !t!lclats are
expected to tes~ against a
proposed refonn ~ Ohio's Insurance laws, one that woultllncrease
greatly the powers rl the state
Insurance superintendent
Legislators say the proposal Is
likely to draw Intense crtUcilm
from

IIEAL'Dil' ~~. - I'll ilrill

heal_. cl6lrea lillie w!IM

WIC .IIIII ....... piUil'am IIIIVI!II llw-iualille pi i ... - ·
............, • l wMil • "' a' .........., COUll'* lor
rt" loodL llllre DeiJIIIe Lam' J, B.N., MCDlledor, wei11w
lk-m atfMrltl AJa llldlw.. farphr ~ Mr. a!ld Mrl. Steve
J111c1nre11. ..e ~MelpCouiltj'al,• famllea pu1l! 't$ n"''l ... lbe WIC

••r•

plOII'IIII.

Tax overhaul supporters confront unsettled issues
By JOSEPH MIANOWANY
WASHINGToN (UPI) - Because congressional negotiators
approved tbe new tax reform blU in
such haste, tile measure has a host
ot details that are st!U unsettled
Including who will get almost hatf
the estimated Sll billion In special!zed tax breaks.
::rhe pia!\ approved in a rush by
the House-Senate conference commlttee Saturday night was more of

will allow discrimination.
in other actions, the board
accepted the resignation It Mal)' B.

Opposition
expected
to reform

reconvenes Sept. 8.
·
Ammgtheltemsuplnthealr!Jfe
the "transttlo1t rules." . ~ .t•rt
special tax bnab ilr speci11C
Industries, businesseS or other
projects and are deslgned tD help
them rope with tile changing tax
laws.
The transition rules are also
politically verj sensitive and are
&lt;ttai usedtowlnthevotes!tcruclal
lawmakers who want to protect

"I lillY that's becallle Ohio Is &lt;11 a
solid lowldatlon." he said.
More tbaD2,!lOO bu~ have
received manfll(ment and technl·
cal a.uilt.ancll! lince'J983,' and 15,00)
Jot» baYe been retained cr created
tor mlnortty nrma becallle d. state
help, Celeste sald.
Human rtglrts ndlvJst Dick are.
FlY· wiJ&gt; opeMtl the conference,
lntnxluced Celelte.
The fiVII'llOr llld afterward his
~p with Gft!IOI)' began 10
years ago at.a crou OOIIIIIIY race
whell Celeste wu lieutenant governor. Qleste. aid bll !tflce wu
lnltnlin!lltal kl Gn!IOry's partlcl·
patlon at' the meeting.

Tax wmdfaii·may help c~t budget

~pqrtant Interests In their states.
The bill puled la8t year)Jy the

week
you'U aee the'
flreworlis," Chalnnan Mike StJazl.
ano. D-Columbus. ~ Tuelday
after a subcommittee ,liearW; m
the Insurance Refonri let fi 19116.
"I expect very heavY. ~n
from the lndustl)', Iron) the (lnsu·
ranre Federation It Olllo)," said
Stlnzlano, who sponsort!tl the IEefs.
latlon. "They're very, very
unhappy."
The bW "s~ltlcantly Increases
tb! dvll and criminal penil!les that
Ire superintendent all\ uae"
against companies wt»':.vblate
Insurance laws. Stlnzlano ~·
Stlnzlano, wiJ&gt; has refem!d to the'
Department ~ Inauranre as a
"toothless tiger," said CUITEIII lw
pennlts a civU penalty of only
$l,lm for each violation, wltich
amounts to oozy "a rtdlcubus slap
on the wrist" of offending
companies.
The reform ~W~~ld Increase the
civil penally to SS.tm and 'MIIIld
allow the a~perlntendent 1D Initiate
criminal p:oceedlngs.
The bW also WCJIId subject
ccmmercial lnsuranoe ratea 111
prior approval bY the state, require
property and casualty ampanles
tD obtain state apJI'OI'al before
adopting policies, elllbl1eiill!llta or
rtders, limit the reaaona tor wJdclt
COillllll'I'Cial policies may be canoeled and require a &amp;Mey notice ri
cancelation.
Stlnzlano said the oommlttee's
lackdacceutcilntl~ndil~ ·
Insurance reform 1ieartn&amp;s p~
ted a requirement fft the 'bill that
property and casUalty Insurers file
supplements !!) their annual,reports.
wllli the state.
. '
A similar requirement tir ~wyc
ers who handle pemnal lnjul)'
cases may be dlailenged, Stlnzlano

Houle Includf'l.l transition .NleJI
wqrth about f/a bUllon ln. the next ·
ftW yean, .Wblle the legislation
pauecl by the Senate had about S6
billion wtrtll, belplpg businesses
ranilne f.IUn ateel to rosmetlcs.
Some, bUt nol au, of the Senate's
s~ tax breakl'· were also In the
House bill.
lnpleclngt•therthecomprom·
1se plan, House and Senate ~tla·
m teclullcally agreed to accept au
of the Senate's transition rules,
alt!Kiugb lflluae tildes ooritended
~ that CJ!e&amp;tlon was stUl
opea. Tiley also said the S6 bOJion
figure may not be ecact and would
have to be recalculated.
In addltlon to tllat amoun~ the
Houle . and Senate JM!IOtlators
agreed. tllat anotll!r S5 .billion In
~ tranlitlon i'lale!J' smuld be
lncNded In the final bW. aides saki.
ilowever, 'the taW!lllkers passed
the biD With such haste and with so
mBIIY detalia left ope,. u,at they did
not deddt! ·wiJ&gt; amuld eet those
special bra!~~.
.
ThOee declsloris are aiDDili those
to be made In the oext tewweelar by ac~ .
co~ statr membe\'1 writ·
Under the legislation. pre.pakl
the actual
dental plans and health maintenance organizations would be.
Included under the Insurance department's jurisdiction for the first
time.

Area man hurt

liT IHT

1-a~r

wreck
I

An Athens man Is ~ In
Clitical condition In Intensive
C&amp;J'Il in Grant Hqspltal, CO!umbul, wtth multiple IQJunes be
suffered after Ire vehicle he wu .
driving on Ohio 14,1 in Cdwnllia ·
·rowi~a~i~p. went out ~ 0011tro1
and ltniclt: • bam ....... this

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Meigs board approves required testing policy

in
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Poe-a
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2 Soctiona, 14

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday. August 20. 1986

Copvrtphtod 1988

Celeste urges minority business support

~AfiiiC

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H Ol. ••rt 01 , IIR

NOW

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Wl!IMUtE

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Daily Number

-Page 3

Racine
(Continued from Page 1)

OPENING SPECIAL

OHIO THE HEART OF IT ALL

Reds thump
Cards

man. Charles W. Curfman, William
B. Downie Jr. BObby J. Duddlng,
Wendell J. Ervin. Millard J .
Frederick. Ne llie R. Frederick.
WilHam M. Hannon,fWger E. H!IJ,
Thomas C. Hill, JoAnn Newsome.
James R. O'B1ien. Dan!elP. Rlffle,
Debora Rizer, Delbert A. Smith,
Larry C. Smith, Ernest E. Sl!eflcer
and Dan Smith.

BASHAN, OHIO

Gii01 PLAY TilE
~
01110 LOnERY

Ohio Lottery

,i viously. wrrr Tammy K. Chap-

ROSE'S GROCERIES
PEPSI COLA

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All school bus drivers are tb
attend the annual school bus safety
meeting to be held at 7: ll p.m .
Wednesday at tile Meigs H!g~
School.
,
The Meigs County Board of
Education has Issued rus driver
certifica tes to driVers In all tl!ree
local school districts plus the
Ca rleton School.
Issued certjflcates In ti-e Soutllern District. not reported pre-

NOW OPEN

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

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports four calls
Monday.
Rutland at 1:5.\ a.m. to Meigs Mine No.2 for Nel&lt;;an Null to Holzer
Medical Center; Rutland at 10: 12 a.m. to Meigs Mlne No.2 for Steve
Mitchell to Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at 7:09 p.m. to Meigs
Mine No. 2 for Lloyd Sayre to O'Bieness Memorial Hospital:
Pomeroy at 7: 15p.m. to the Pomeroy Health Care Center for Gladys
Robson to Vrterans Memorial Hospital.

Celrna. OH
Chillrcothe. OH
Jackson. OH
McArthur. OH
I

Bus driver
meeting set

I

Middleport pool hours listed

.I

Tuesday, August 19, 1986

Pomeroy-Middlm Ohio

. bft $1.MIII '

iakan by UlefllalltloGrant.lfts'
tbe veljlcle . he ' .~ clrt\?8
80Uihbcilutl pn 143 at ...~&amp;
lpei!Ciat 2: tO a.m. ~ l!IJ lhi! , .
road lri • cwve.
!C) 111e ,
state. hiiJtwQj patroL .1111 e.r ·
· =.~VIly, ~ I a , .

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(llfl) '

aceonJbi

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••""" 111Klay, August OlU,

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1986

Pomeroy- Middleport; Ohio

·R.RO·U·a-. ·BUY·E-RS·.· O·F .THE

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W8driesday. August 20, 1.$ 86

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The Dailly Sentinel

•

lll Courl Slreel

Comes ~w the Nattmai 'Aca·-" 37• million ~x-clsarette smokers

Pomeroy, Ohio

demy of SCienCes with a r~
that reminds us that eYf!!r'J ~w
and tllen scientists tend to foraet
that human beings aren't squeaky
wheels or guinea pigs. What the
learned academy recommends II
that cigarette smoking. be l:lrttdden In airplanes;
I wish that everyone 1n the .
woole world (my wife Included~,
would stop smoking. Perhaps someday they wut, however unlikely tills ts. But 1n the meantime
we need to remind ourselves of
what smoking Is, and what smokIng does for, as well as to, some
people. There are an estimated

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
,.

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'"""-'._...,..., ,...,.....,.c::~,=

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslslaol Publisher/Controller

.. . .MEIGS. C~O-N~Y, ·f~l·~·s
.
. . ,Q.IAwD: EHAMPI.~N STEER
·"' . ·:"- f~lltt:EEF AVAILABLE·BEGINNING
THI-S FRIDAY

Page..:...2-The Q8ily S.t~tel

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

News Editor
AMEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Assoclatlon and t he American Newspaper Publishers Association.
,LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome . They should be Jess than :IXJ words
· tOng All letters are su bject toediting ilJ'Id I'TIISt beslgned with name, address and
. · ·· telephon e number. No Wlslgned IPtt ers wU!'bf&gt; (Aibllshed . Letters should be In
:. : .
good taste, addrPSslng-J.ssues, nol persma!Hies .
·

In America, but, strange to say,
many of them appear not to remember how It was In the goodbad old days. .
I kicked the habit at age 26, but
even so I remember what smok·
lng did to me. In the Army, five
seconds after reveUe, a clgaal'l!tte was In my mou\h. At col·
lege·during Le!!t I gave up smok·
tng untU sundown. I would find
myself, notwithstanding an overbearing academic and extracur·
rtcular schedule, two and tlree
times a week at a movie house at
about 4 p.m. Why? Because my
generation had been trained not

..

to smoke at movies: It was Diegal to do so, and long years &lt;&gt;f ha·
bit quieted the Itch 1n the lung .
while Greta Garbo or Humphrey
Bogart distracted us from our
pain. But when the movie was
over - the sun was dQwn (1) and
I could resume smoKing.
'The ·puJpOSe of this autoblolp"a·
phlcal exerejse is to remind wr
scientists, 50 many of them removed from the irafflc ol human
experience, that one r1 tbe reasons
we so much deplore cigarette
smoking Is thalli Is an addlcfun.
'The doctors teU us that If smokers
could be penuaded to Umlt tllem·
selves to 10 cigarettes per day, the

,

GM&amp;N

6\t-\llte ~

1.!!

C.!!

·/ Report card

: Breathes there a student woo wouldn't rush tosignupforSenate 101 with
profl!s!IDr Ken Uston?
·· Just look at the man's credentials: graduate of Harvard Business
School, made mllllons playing blackjack, wrote a best seller m oow to beat
videO games.
And, best of all, Uston Is a soft grader. He does not fiunk his students.
Unfortunately for students 1n general. admission to the professor's
course Is limited.
To get It In, you have to be a member of tbe U.S. Senateandlfyou area
member of the U.S. Senate you also can't get out.
• • The latest project of this multl!aceted man Is grading liE performance of
• senators oo televisiOn and tbe first report cards have been mailed out. They
; show what a soft touch Uston Is.
·•
In the entire 1()().member class, no one fiunked. Sen. John Melcher,
: 0-MOnt., tried but Uston gave him a 0-plus, which is nothlngtowrtte oome
· • to Montana about but Is a ways from rock bottom In Uston 's grading
· ·system.
· A fiat D translated Into "bad" and !here Is always the well-known F
which IS "reanJ&gt; bad."
Altoough the grading period covered tbe month of July, which features ·
such major ls~es as tax reform, overrtdtng President Reagan's veto, the
Manion nomination and !he urgent supplemental appropriations bill, there
were some truants.
Unable to keep up with tiE pace of the Senate, !he grades were actually
based on the first week of Jur&gt;! when television began, the final week before
the July Fourth re~s and several days at random.
: During that period. Sens. Jake Gam, R-Utah, Paul Ulxalt, R-Nev ..
'James McClure, R-Idaho, andPaulTrlble,R-Va., "never said a word" and
Sens. David Pryor, D-Ark., Warren Rudman, R-N.H., and John Warner.
R·Va., ''appeared only brlefiy" and did not get a grade.
Us\011 sent to tbe media only the Individual report cards r1three senators
WASHINGTON - What nor- Sens. Bob Packwood, R.Qre., PhD Gramm, R-Texas, and Mark mally would be an obscure presl· .
Hatfield, R.Qre. - and they all did well.
denttal appointment to one of the
~. Packwood, who put on a masterly pe!ormance pu shlng through
sleepiest agencle!i In town has
!he tax reform bill. was the mly senator getting an A-plus. He got an A1n aroused heated objections rom
··substance, a B-plus 1n presentation, and A-pluses for putting national -.Influential senators 81\,d revived
-' Interest above state and spec;lallnterest.s and for Senate efficiency, floor Internal ·pollcy'battles 'l:llhln the
:~ management and abiUty to Ulllfy the Semite.
Reagan administration.
&lt; Uston gave Gramm an A-minus and Hatfield a B, with Gramm getting And that, mind you, Is before
'; hls .hlghest grade, an A-plus, for stressing national Interest, and Hatfield the nomination has even been de·
,-_ doing best, a B·plus, on Senate e!flclency, floor management. etc.
clded on.
In addition to Melcher, the Senate durx:es were Sens. Quentin Burdick,
The man woo P'OVed capable ol
•• i&gt;N.D.I, and Err&gt;!St Holllngs, 0-S.C., woo were given C-mtnuses, or just stirring Washington out of Its Au: belOw what Uston calls an average performance.
gust doldrums Is George Bentson,
, That may be unfair to Hotungs, · woo Is colorfUl, Incisive and a professor at the UD!verslty of
~ well-grounded on his Issues. The trouble may be that he Is often hard to
Rochester w~ Is !he leading can; understand.
didate for appointment !IJ the
: .As for Burdick, It is amazing Uston found enough r1 him oo the tapes to three-member Federal Home
·, arilve at any grade. Burdick Is truly one r1 tbe Senate's stlent members. Loan Bank Board. What mao:es
; Uston plans to grade the senators rmnthly and the results, as the major Benston's Ukely nomlllatkln more
: Issues shift, soould be Interesting.
than a big yawn Is that he Is an ar·
tlculate advocate of abolishing tiE
'
savings and klan Industry - and
!be bank board, which regulates it.
It's not just a light between mon·
eylimders
that has no effect on the
UNLIKE MY oPPoNENT,
public. The nation's 3,ll0 "tlrlft.s"
provide 111011t of the mortgage
klans to American homeowners. If
PRof~~IOHAL PoLITICIAN !
they vanlsbed from the scene,
some economists !IOilbt that tbe

111man system could ab~f,,the
pcitson. Unhappily, even lalilw,tng
lhls tD be tbe case.- t!MI oveJ:hiillelin·
lngmajorityofwrsmokenexceed
this limit by a factor of 100, :xlO,llO,
400 - 500 percent, and m:&gt;re. It Is
one thing to deplore that they
soould do so, quite antrer calmly to
Inform them that effective tiE first
day of next month they are ill give
up smoking on a seven-hour filght
from New York to Anchorage. You
simply cannot do that to people woo
are smokers, not witoout turning
airplane travel Into tortune.
When the news was given out
that the academy was going to
make Ibat recommendation, there
were Interviews taken on the
streets, and many rejoiced. One
woman said on televlskln, "It's
about time!" But that Is to eliP'etsS
a dlstaste .for smoking, .which Is
perfl!ctly legitimate. One harbors
a distaste for many things - !lOme
people don't like dogs, cats, obes·
lty, bad grammar, film violence,
Him non-violence ... But the AmerIcan protocol is to let people do
what they want to do- which Is to
cast bread upon the waters, given
that the same protocol permits us.
to be our petty little selves. ·
On what reasoning do the
scientists rely? Well, they tell
me, air circulation Inside an airplane Isn't sufficient to contain
the smoke within the . narrow
area of the smoker, and therefore some of It drifts out to annoy
passengers, and to damage, po·
ten Mally, flight personnel. Tile
first problem is rather easUy
coped with: toose with high allergy to $make can recommend
seats far removed from the
smokers" section. As for the
flight attendants, the study by
the academy Is not Hkely to document a noxious Impact on the
health of passengers by passing
through an area In which people
are smoking 15 days per month.

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commercial banks would do the
necessary lending, especially durIng lean years In the oouslllg mar·
ket.
According to what he has said
and written, Benston disputes
the need for ·s&amp;La, and thua the
federal regulatory agency set up
to supervise them. He has sug·
gested that banking regulations
cause failures Instead of p-eventlng them. He has also urged
repeal -of some financial anti-discrimination laws, wblch he feels
are unnecessary.
The S&amp;Ls, with their mlillons of
depositors, have considerable 1!1"&amp;5·
s-roots clout 1n Coqress. Senate
Majority Leader Bob Dole, R·Kan.,
nn!lltly wrote to Senate Banking
Conunlttee Olalrman Jake Garn,
R-Utah, woo would preside at Benstoo's confirmation hearing. Dole
noted that his state's thrift execu·
lives are "vehemently and unanimously" opposed to Beaston's ap·
polntment. In the letter, seen by au
associate Michael B\D&amp;teln, Dole
said:
"I am sure you are quite famll-

tar with tbe views held by Profes·
sor Benston regarding the future
of the S&amp;L Industry. Suffice It to
say that the Kansas S&amp;L League
Is of the belief that his policy be·
llefs, If fully Implemented, would
result In the dewtseofthe S&amp;Lindustry as we ltnow lt. It Is sug·
gested to me that Professor Benstan has expressed considerable
doubt as to the viability and ·necessity of (thrifts) In this coun·
try."
Garn reportedly voiced his
doubts about the expected Benstan nomination at a recent
meeting wltlt White House Chief
of Staff Donald Regan. In addl·
lion, one source told us that Sen.
Alfonse D'Amato, R-N.Y., has
quietly passed the word to the
White House to kill Ills constituent's nomination.
The fight over Benston Is
another skirmish 1n the trillion·
dollar turf war being waged be·
hind the scenes In the admtnlstrtlon over whether the S&amp;J.;s
should remain separate or be
swallowed by the commercial

banking Industry.
Beryl Sprinkel, chairman of
the Council of Economic Advls·
ers, Is the chief advocate of let·
ttng the thrifts. merge fi fall the
way out of existence. But as a
former commercltt "lianker: Ills
views are suspect by S&amp;L defen·
ders.
Of all Benston's mntrov~nlal
views on the S&amp;L Industry, perhaps none Is so radical as his assertion that tllere's !IIH1asual Hnk
between thrift faUures and the In·
dustry's sometimes harebrained
Investments 1n projects Uke fast·
food restaurants and sperm banks
for Arabian horses. The Federal
Home Loan Bank Board put a ceU·
tng on such direct Investments by
S&amp;Ls.
'
But that rEll!ulatlon expires al
the end of this year. A new bank
board with Benston as a member
could let It die, triggering a wave
of speculative ventures by highrolling thrifts.
Footnote: A leadhig compro·
mise nominee Is Mark Moran,
general counsel of Tile Hannaford Co., a public relations ftrm .

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Several reports appearing re-

cars and drove off with him. It was to do the job adequately.
suggest where tbey could get !IDme
mt untll .9 o'clqck that' night that
D'Amato ~He~ quick relntlrcement.
Sanctuary WOIIuets and tiE Gomez the INS r1 dellberately avt»dtng
It would Indeed seem that with
Gomez, althoulib he has no dlrE£1 attorney were ootUied that he had narcotics cases and concentrating the narcotics traffic the national
connection with the aabject rtlhe beentakenlntocustndybyagentsrt on les8 serious and easy 1D hancle problem It Is, the I~ COUld .put
FROM BECOMING ONE,
Times' stories.
the Immlgratlon and Naturallza· crimes: "They are making a sham what llllinpower It has to better use
Alejandra Is a Salvadoran, a tJon Service.
of the sylllem.''
than In lhe 'lllntlngdown of Central
refulll!l! from .!he vlolence In his
Not that there had been any
Right on, Alfonse!
American refulll!l! famlltes.
oomeland that h8S claimed tens of doubt. The agenta were known to be
11 the INS fellows down · In
Someone 1n autoority !IDmewhere
thoUsands of Uves. Untn 1"6!e11Qv, In town, and can had been Manhattan actually are under clearly has a problem with
he, his wife, Leticia, and their l:lur obse!ved Clulllngthe vicinity oftbe strenllh, tllere are some folkS up 1n priorities.
chUdren, the
8 and !he church apartment, keeping the Rochester Mil would be happy 1D
oldest 15. were living In Rochester, Gomez family under constant
N. Y. 'lbey had received shelter surveillance.
from six religious 111'011.. partlcl·
Sanctuary W88 able to
patlnlli In the Sanctuary m:&gt;vema~t, Alejandro's rlene by posting
the nationwide eftlrt asalsUng S5l,(O) ball, rallal by colltriiKIIDn
Central American refuiiJ!?S.
1n tess than 2f hours c:a a holiday
Malt such reflliteell ·eater !he woekend w~ aU llnandallnstltu·
country meptty, and tlle·f!ileral t1ons Wl!n!cillled. The family Is now
government Wtes :~ poaltlon that In c.nada.
their pl1nwy imtlvatlon II ecoNow ab&lt;XIt those Times' reports.
,
By Unked l'rEMinlenllitioMI
nomic, that IIIey are therefore not 'lbey' concern efforts to curb the
eiiKible forJ!Illtr~uylum anda_re qtrafllc, eapa:lally In crack, the ··
·Today Is Wednesday, Aug. :11, the 232~ dlw e&gt;f 1986 with 133 1D follow.
:Tile moon IS ·moving away from Its fu,ll phase.
.
su,blect Wl djlpar.ta~ The Sat!du· _~' 'l:lnn of,.,..._.,.,.. .
:ne morning stars are Mercury and Ju~ter.
ary peaJile dllqree. ReeaiiiDg ,the ,• La" eubcement aaenaes are
tradition of. an earlier Ume when unhappy with the role ~ tile
· 'Ibe evening stars are Venus, Mars and S.turn.
:'Ibose born oo this date areundertlJ!'!sl!PitfLeo. 11Jeytnclude Benjamin relliiOOJ premiMI Wen! 1especl«&lt; llnmleralkln and . Naturallzltlon
HarrJson, 23nl president of the United Sla\f!l, .lill8a1; pOet E!lpr Guest In aa life havtlll, ~ have apened SeMoe In the ·joint ca~.
!heir, doors to. !be refVI ea. ,. ,
Many traf1lcken In New York aty .
1881; oorrorwrlter H.P. Lovecraft 1n l!Bl; ·archJtect EeroSUrlril!n In 1910;
autiJ:Ir Jacqueline Susann 1n 1921; sln(ler·ltlllgWI'!ter Isaac Hayes 1n 1942
The Rochelta" beiMfactAln of.~ are alleu. Ulldlrr li!dlral law,
Gomez families ·(1111; mted six forelpen coiiVIctal of II8I'OJticl .
($ie 44), Indian Prime Minister Raj tv Gancllltn ]944· (Ill'! 42), aild rock
mulllclan Robert Plant In 1!N8 (age :II).
contesajons - RDmall Ca~llc, vlolaiiDi'. may be atpelledl It here
Presbyterian, FrleDdtl, . Blptlat. li Illegally, \lEY. can·be cleplirt.lm
'
On tlllll (late Ill history:
.
.
non-deDtlmtnatlllaaJ ~ COli- · druK ciiariN wltlllut the ilriNlhy ·
. In 170, 001111 navigator Vltus Jonas
c)lscovered what 11 J!O)¥· llfl!lallila ,lllld' l 1 Jewtah len;IJe. of. tliiiiYII:tiDII •
~JUlie of.,lJIN, tJie famly had
It II tbe bntril .ot. tilt INI.m
Alallta.
""
'
'
'
llvl!d tn an ap••hueut owned by tbe fOllow throu811m ftliUI'I!IIIeua.
· in 1966, 3,~peoplewerecounted dead In the alteqnathof an
l'r!llbyt8rtlil . · ,
It II put ., dolq· Molt dlpoi111ble
ln Tlltkey.
.
•
f. '·
At the ........ . , of. the MeiUOIIII alleDI '~ •~JeW~~ alloWed lq remain
· In lm, tlle" llrst Voyager spacecraft wai laundted 'from cape.
Canaveral, Fla., bound for Jupiter, Saturn lllld the 111ara.
'··
·
. Day w I _., Alejandro lllld l.«&lt;· · .Ill ~tllll country. , UKI JMtY are ·
cia GCJma .W811 ntllrtlq Ill. the · IUbMqtW'I,Iy anWiel!' tJr add!·
: Inarl, Pn:Aiellt Re.-n ~that a mN-.mt of u.s.~
llpll'tnl[lllitldterlitldlaJiMiiMit- ' _.crbl&amp;
. '. '
would jejm'Frencb lmlllti!IID troops as ~ teepe s In Beirut:
tnawtlhthelratktlll)'tndi)Watown
NeW· Y~ City jllllkle are ua·
: In ltlll; ~ Maje&gt;rltY Ieeder the Rev. Jerry Falwell, returJqtrom
RQch•tlll'. · Suddtilly, 1 man ·• hlppy•aboiit,theidlu&amp;IDIL 'l.beU.~.
~~~~ Atrlca, cane&amp; NObel ~ Ptl:le laureate BIBhoJI DancD1 Tutu of
qa..:...~
*PJlld up to theli!Jild •
·weu
...
dlllltct atllliiiij!'JI!IIippy. ~ou.s, · ·
~ ··-phony" Mxlla:lred support from his aatlin's Wl:k
'
1-e.
_, .
.
rna,... •..,.. ·..
, ,;
,
£,
. heJlO; Aiejlll$'0.'1
·
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"Not ~LREADYI" · .
Another )lalf 00. 1111111 quldclf•\t, 0.
!'.!.;"II~ li'JW•' ·
"'
AtlloU&amp;litfortllfday: EdprGuest:.vrote, "Let me belillttleklniler, let IUlTOUIIded the ""!p!e, ......, 'lbe uw ltllqb IIIM'I·a Jli"ObAiejandro Into 111e of. tine \lldlna . lein, but ll)'llt II mo llllllerltded
""be a IIIII!! blll!cler to the(aulta oflhoaearourxl me,let me p-aise a little.

AtlD T~ERE '§ ottL'1' ONE
VIAV To KEiP HIM

EN GUSH

cently 1n The New York Times
made · me think of AleJ~~tdro

you...

secure

•

Berry's World

\.f~ay in history

Berl!li.

-

PURINA

DOG CH()W
30 II. lag

.

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.... . . . . . . . .. f t .

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2°/o
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FLEA
TICK DIP

'

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SNACKS
·'

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'

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'

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51 '19

..

2 Liter
Btl.

40( OFF LABEL

CRISCO OIL ,

$2'4.9

64

OZ. ln.
-

...

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.

'
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HELlMAN'S

., ·liNG ,SizE FOODLAND
•

- 4~9(

DOG

SEVEN-UP

$1.59

~,~d

ASST .I.Oz. lag

ORANGE CRUSH, CITRUS 7
. Diet 7-UP or Reg.

VIVA

.1

eartbq-

.

•

101111 PACI

,3:
.

WHITE BREAD
2o·'oz. s· ,
. ~vs.
:1 -,i
,,

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.

.

:$ ]·~9

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Price&amp; EffiiCtlv• Wed., Aug., 2(1" thru Sat., ,t..!Jg. 23, 1988
'•

I •u .1&gt; ~·j\1•1.&gt; .11\l.,.;. •

r.~

.t.

MAYONNAISE

·•

•I

•·

32 OZ. JAR .

BACK·t04CIOOL
UnlE QEIBI

OATfAEA~ CAKES.
ft( .

7

I~OZ.

•USDA Food ltampe Gledy Acc~J~ed •Not R11ponllble For . Typogre~lcal Errors

'

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From
the Wild...
'
.

Mea
rerilindk~
·
. . . hun•~
"""'~~
. . ~new
ti~ tlu~· by.Septelnber

1

· · ByWIIW...
lilt COUI'III. EWI')Ioae completlnr
lba coune 1114y-lnr till tat will
lllelp Coiiii.IJ Galllt
All hunter~ are rtri'a tad tllat ralve a 1!eJ ll&amp;atlon card, plua
a new 1986 huntlnrl. .ell ftl· ... embloldlftd, hunter llfety
qulrl!ll 011 Sept. 1. The Dlv .. Jon.ol · patcll, 1bla OOWM .. reqlllrtd ol
WtldUfe reportJ that t)!e JiiW II• "'YOIII Wlllllnl to purchue I
cenaet are In place and ivaUible lluntlnr UoeUe 11r lht ant Ume.
for · sale at many of Oblo'II!Unt·
Tali:lllll IWIIII to U.. 0.~01
lng llce111e outli!IS. The ll\llltlnl
llde II a 1004 proapect thl• Ume
license coats t7.7ll tor r•ldenta · of the year by baltlill your bool!
nd $30.7ll tor non-realdenti. Per- ·tor c:atflah. The jlayU~ fllhllll
sons who are 6!i yean of qe or IUC:Ctll of many daytjme anrt·
older may purchue a perma- m baa beell alowecl by aummnent huntlnallcenaeatanyoutlet er' a heat. Some ftabermen have
sell ing retldent huntlnalk\enJell. chanaed tactlca to dityote their
The hu ntlng aafety cuurae . eftortJ to fllhiDI at nlpt lbr cat·
planned wUI be conductl!ll at Terry
flab. Catftah feed moatly at lllht,
Brown's Taxidermy Sbop·on Po· and catfllb fllllllll l(ve,a fllhtl'·
n1froy Pike Rd. near Olelter. The
men a chancetoealwthelr aport
dates wUI be Aua. 21, 27, 2t, llfrom
Ill the comfort of cool aummer
~p. m . tO 9 p.m.Interst«&lt;I*'IIOIII
eventnp.
The Ohio River otfera aome ex·
need to pre-register by caUina ~­
sell at 1115-4400 or John Colt.IIIIZOaf· cellent opportunltlel to catch
ter 6 p.m. at 1143-MO!I. The HuntEr channel and flathead catfllh,
Education Program rover. hunt·
Flthln1 techntquea Include 111lng
!nil ethics and l'l!lponilbllltlet, chicken liver or nlfhtcrawlen
wildlife man111ement, ftrearma
for bait ftahlna on the bottom tor
and ammunition, 111n aafety In the
ehannel catfllh or bullheada.
field and In the home, bowhuntlna, . Alao tbe trout have been hitting
personal aafety and field care of on nl1htcrawl'" at ro~ked Run
game. All aesalo111 mUIIt be at·
l:.ake near Rledlvllle.
lt'llc»d to IUOCHI~Dy romplete
"Flah" the heart of It all
··ohto''.

'*"••ct•

We Reserve The Right To
. Limit Qu~ntities

STORE HOURS
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

1

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

,
·

.·

By GENE CADDI!l!l
tJPISporltl Wrler

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) .. Ohto State Coach Earle 81'11Ce
· says he has a "(ll'tal !eelinl"
about his 1986 Buckeye footbaU
team.
S\1 rc, Bruce has aome holft to
nn1n tM offen.llve line and aoea
Into t11e Aug. 27 opener qalnlt
Alabama In the Klckol! Clullc
without a proven replacement
for placekicker Rich Spanater,
but things could be a lot worae
for the Buckeyea, picked by
most to battle It out wtth
Mlchtallll for the Bla Ten
champiOnship.
"I have a IJ'I!It feeling for tbtl
· football team," Bruce aald. "I
felt goocl about laat year' a team,
but the thin&amp; about thll year II
the attitude of 111011 of IM
ptayen has been excepllonal.
"They really WOI1Ied hard In
· May and June to aet the Job
• done, we're deeper now and
"' we',..a'Y8J'oldei'i

• "The of!enJivellnetathelley."
·. added Bruce. who has elflht
sta!WI returning on both ol·
reose and defense, "the often·
stve line and finding a placek·
. : lcker kicker.
.• ·'We have three playera com·
: lng back on the cttenslve line,"
· said Bl'UCe, "Larry Kottennan.
.Jet! Uhlenhake and Bob Maw.
but ln the spring, the only one ct

thole

•

'

a...,.,

Uhlenhake."
Kotterman, a 6-foot·7, 28'pounder, It lht only retumtna
tackle letter winner, With lht
other ltarler likely to be either
Joe Stay.matc or 11m Maxley,
both l'Ed·Jtilr!ed ~· !Jc&gt;.
phomore Grea ZickeroGJa the
likely ·~at lilt olhtr l\llrd
alona with Ultlenhlke, with
Mqp at center.
The kk:ker wUl come from
1m01i1J tcphomore Je!f eomp.
ton, junior •Mike Morton, a
tranater from the Unlvenlty of
Clnflnnatl, and lnoominl freah·
man Pat O'Morrt!W.
The l'tlt ol the cttenae, led by
quarten1llck Jim, Kanatol, II
pretty mueh let.
'
kana101 eatabllahld Ohio
State recorda ror Plllinl per·
oentaae (61.2, and touchdown
pt11111 (19) lUt aeuon In INdtna
lhl Budceyea to a IJ.3 record.
lllcludiJrt a 10.7 win rNer
· ~ · Y~ Iii tha Cltlua
BOW!, andlflrforlburthJ'IICtlll
the Big Ten.
Back a!IO are Vlnoe Workman
and John WOOidrldee, who had
II cany lht load at tailback lut
year when Keith Byara, one of
the tavorttet for the 1985 Hellman 'I'ropll)o, went down "
~with a lrokenbonetn
hll foot and never did 61Uy

-The Daily Sentinel
tUSPB IIII-. . )
:

A Dlvlllon of Multlmedta, Inc:.

Publ lsht'd f'v£'r}' ath•rnoon . Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St., Po-

mrroy. Ohio, by lht Ohio Vallry Pub·
1\shlnR Company ! Mull l mE'dla. lnr ..
eumt&gt;roy . Ohi o 4~769 . Ph . 992 · 2 1~. S('·
oond rlass posta~" paid at PoiT'I('roy.
Ohi o

Mf"mhl'r: Un ltfd PrPis lntPrna tlonal .
1nland Dally Press As aoc latlon and thl'
Ohio Nc-~·spaper Aasorlallon . National
Ad vtfr tl s tn ~
N('W~PIIfWT

Representative, Branham
Sale-s, 711 Third AvrnuE',

N('W York . NPW York 10017.
Jlo&gt;'TMASI'ER: S..nd addr.., &lt;hanllft
te ~ £&gt; Dally St&gt;ntlnt"l. 111 Coun St.,
~meroy. Ohio 457fS.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By CarrtH t1t M•or &amp;outt
Onf' Wf'f'k .. ........... .... . ... .......... $1.25
Onr Month ... ....... .. ... .... ,.... ... .. .. .. 15 . 4~
Onf' Y(•ar ..... .. ........ ..... . ............ ~.00

HINGLE COP\'

PRICE
..... .. ........ 2~ Cents

Ort!IV .. ..

Subsrrlbrrs not df"'lrlnJt: to pay thteu·
rh •r m;•y rrmlt 1n advance dlr«t to
Ttu&gt;Dally Sentinel on a 3, 8 or 12 month
~~1!1

Crfflll will bl&gt;gtvmcarrltrNeb

wrPk .
No !iUbsrrlpt lons by mall permlttt"d In
hom~ carrier ~e~rviCf' Ll
IWallablr

.

·

recrNer.

JC names new
athletic diredor
CLEVELAND (\)PI, - WrestUng coach~ DeCarlo, who hu
1811 John Carroll to :10 ro111eCUtlve
Presldenta' Athletic Conference
titles, Tuelday wu named athletic
director of the prtvate liehool.
DeCarlo wUl remain thlachool'l
wrestJini
roachJerry
and Schweickert
ilrmer At·
hletlc Director
wUI remain chairman of tbe
Phyllocal Education Department
and coach ollht baleball team. ·
School ctflclala cleacrlbed the
ehanJ!s In the athletic department
as part Cit a "reorilaJjtratlon."
Schweickert did not restan u
athletic
otrlcllllllld.
John Carroll hu Will till All·
Sports TI!JPhy In tbe Pl'ealdenta'
Athletic Conferenoe tbe lilt five

B)' .aiUAJZZI

reliever Dale Mohorcle with btl
16th lloml! run.
"l'mnotahome-runhltterbutlti
can get a pitch In a certAin ZIDIJe,l
canhandlelt,"saldWhlte,whotled
a club record with the~en RBI. "I
jullt wanted to be IQI'I!Nive. I
dldn'tevencareltiiiruck'OUtWbea
1 hit the three-run homer. I Jllll
wanted to be agrea1lve." ·
In othlr pmea, Toronto ripped
Chicago H Seattle topped New
York 7·3, MUwaukee wlipped
Cleveland 5-3, Qakland cUpped
Baltimore H Mlnnnoia cllllat«&lt;
BOlton 11-1, and Cllltomla ap1tt 1
double- header with Detroit, wbl·
nlnltheq)ellerll-21ndcl'opplnathe
nightcaP 8-3. ·
lillie .Jaya.a, Willie 8ox 1
At Toronto, Dave Stleb acalttred
nve ldtJ (1VI!!' seven lnnlnp lor only
hll NCOnd W:tory In Ida lut 1•
. atartJ and · Lloyd MIINby went
HoM 111d drove In I pair ol runa to
daJtat Otlca&amp;o· Stltb, '-10, ltnldl
out tJve imd walked llur. Joe
Cowley •Upped to &amp;8.
Mllrlllera 1, Y•._ S
S-7,
At New York. Danny Tartabull
''He (Loynd, 1t1rted yelling at smaahed a thn!e-run homer and
me after he atruck me out, like he Mark Langston ltruck out 14 while
wantl!lltolllowmeup," Whlteaald. toulna a five-hitter to lead Seattle

r;:=========ti

"It flrecl
and I think It !Ired 1
the
l'l!lt o1metheupeuy1.
"I felt like Yelllna IOIJiethlna at
him lhtn, but 'I dldn' t want to drop
to that level. I guesa I'm Old·
falllloned. I Juat don't think you
shou)d try to lllow IOiileOne up.
That' a why I didn't come out ol tl»
dUfiOUt after I hit the three-run
honw!r.''
Texu tlecl the
8-8 In the
~th 011 Ruben Sierra'• one- out
• trlple and a llnlle by Don Slauflht.
After belna walkecl with a runner
on HCOnd Ill tbe elfllth, White led
off lht bottom ot the 11th agalnll ·

acore

1

MEIGS COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIETY ·

Outsklo Melp Coo•'J
tJ WN'ks .. .. ............. .......... ....... m.zo
26 W""ks .. .. ...... .. ....... ............... ~. IO
12 w..ks . .. ............ ................ . $61.60

.

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Smoked Hocks •••••• 69

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$1 19
Tv;Dl"'NE'··· '
· n &amp; 24 .oz.·•s. SIITII'S .
.
·YIUIT
',
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·············~······-····
'

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••••••••••••••••••••••••

FRESH' RIPE

•

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16 OZ. QUMEUAPUit .CRUNCH

•'

,·_'.,. ~········~··········
·' . , ·• IOK $2 .29
CEREAL ..........

..16 :~. ~·~~,,

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'

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.CRIS(
~•..•,•••.••..•....~~~... Sl. 1S
,,,,. 0 ·~~•••Es
..
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MilES.~~~~.•.. ~......!~~ ... s1.29
CHI•trs
" .•••.,...,.............!~~ ... $1. s9

SWEEPSTA~ES

1s oz. CAN

.

SUNSHINE .

"••
•'

.0. g··,·f·. 0··od. ...20~•.........
Lr. BAG
~:2·· ~~4 ·9
~
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JELlOW PU_DDING P~PS AND

Gelatin P.ops •• ~!!; ••

~

&gt;

=
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c

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0

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$1.00

• oz

•.

HOUSE

,

COFFEE

•

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$ :
.
Pot Ptes •••••••.••• ~.. 4·1 1

MORTON . .
. ' •

'

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•The total value of the dou·
ble coupon may not exceed

Spread ••••••••••••••••••
2· . l $ ·1
Mackerel............
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.

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0
0

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'

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F.l.ci~orite

·~

EV.ERYDAY
7 ·QAY:S .A W-EI(

.

Cantaloupes••••'!~~ ... 79
'·
BROUGHTON'S :
$
2°/o Milk •••••••••~A;•••. 149

•'

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I

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12

•••
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2

s·l;iced Bacon •••L!-•••••
·:suP~RIOR FRANKIE
$
oz.
Wle.ners ••••••••••••••••

CHOPPED ..HAM:•••• ,.•••.ali...... S1.47 .
KAHN;S
WIENERS •••."•.'JP...... $1.69
EGAI
SHREDDED .....$2.39 lb.
BOILED ·HMt~.........f£'11....~•• S2 .19

'l
ADOLPH'S
DAIRY
Y
ALLEY
"At tllaiW If file,_,_, ••u• •'\

.

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0

HORMEL VALU BRAND BULK

•

,

.

Sppelal.of the ••••

~
·

LUNCH

flo}

''
•

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Ill!'

+00

LB.

,ft. .

2
(
.Chuc.k. Ro.ast ••,L!-......9. 9. .
Sirloin .Steak •••L!·••••

!

•

.• In lor pi0Ctliln9.

WAN1 ADS

$. 29

.

·.l:o

THRin
S.
H
OP
Stcen4 Awe.
lltNII,.n

wllh ....,ydlsc or lOll ol
color prkll film~

1

.~.S.D.A. CHOI~E

·

•

•

'

DeCarlo, 1&amp;, ltarted the John
Carroll wrestUng prorram In 19M.
In 1975, John Carroll WO!I the NCAA ;
Division ID national champlonlldp.

'

JOWL BACON or

I

HUUNISOCm

yean.

I ' .

P~RTIONS

U.S.D.A. CHOI_CE

FIL A GIOCEIY lAG
fOI•GaY 11.00 AT
THI MIIGS COUIITY

director:

1

$ 09
Cod Ftsh ••••••••••~·.... 1

·BREADED

r-----""""'--------~--~---,

Mall Subo&lt;rlpll.-

lulde Mflp Cwlll)
1J WN'kS............. ... ......... .. ....... 1!1.29
26 Wl'&lt;'ks ................ ....... .. .. ..... .. $34.06 .
12 w.. k, ............................... t66.56
~

·.walldnathrea· ·~k · Qearnotclled
·btl 12th aave, JOII Romari. 1·2, took
· the ·loll. A'a" Orlolel J
. At Baltimore,
~
. drove In one
1 liiclrltl
anothar,
a

three-game losing streak . Daw
Stewart, &amp;1, struck out five, walked
one and Bnowed only four singles
rNer 7 2-31nnlngshls bellfohre JayHSo,well
relleved for
I save.
orm
Davia feU to 9-10.
Twllll G, Red Sox I
At Minneapolis , Gary Gaelll
smacked a two-run Ill mer and Kent
Hrbek and ·Kirby Puckett each hit
10lo ~~~ to help tl1e Twins snap a
four;lame lOsing streak, Mark
Pbrtugal, 4-8. was ...~ thwlnner.
Georae Frazier reco......... e save.
B&lt;»ton'1 AI.Nipper fell to 8·8. The
twlna · the majors wlth 154
home '

a

areu when
•

to Itt foutth ' lll'lllht victory.
J..an&amp;IIOII, 10-10, IIIJPil8llaatrlnact
ftw lltrallht IOIIel. Tommy Johll
feU 1D ~2.
I
IINwaal,
At Cleveland, Paul)folliCJ' went ·
'-!or-4 with ~ ICIIo homel'l, tiWI
.doubles, tine RBlll!ft.d tl!l'ee runa
. aool'Ed to IPII'k Mllwau""; Ted
HI&amp;Uera, 16-8, '"went tpe ~ 7 1-3
lnntnp. IIJ1klnl out Ioiii' and

..,

5199
Cube Steaks ••••L!.••••
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS
9
4
51
Ul
Chuc.k Roast .•.L!~ •••

Frank White paces · Roy~ls· ·past. Texas
Vl'lllporta Writer.
Charilnl the mound 111 baseball
II taahlonable today. Frll)k White,
however, prelen taJdni revenae
qalnat'pltcherl with btl bal
While, anaere4 by remarla
rookie Mike Loynd made, belted
two home runa and drove home
seven runa 1'llelday nllht to lead
lht Kanau City RD):ala to a g.s
vlctDI)'rNer tbeTexa&amp;R4nlll!l'lln
lllllnlnp.
TheKanaucttyii!COndbaseman
capped hll Hor-' perfonnance
with 1 pmeo w1nn1na homer
leadinl oft the 11th.
loO)'Jid ICnlted Whlte'l Ire when
IlNCk him out In the third lnnJna.
The rookie taunted White, which
embarruMd White. Hll next time
up, \Y!III.e llllUbed
two-run
double In the Mh that started
Kanlu City' a comeback from a 7·1
delicti.
·•
Ill lht seventh liinflll, White
capped a five-run alxth lnnlniJ with
a tJirae.run homer aaalnst Jett
Ru•U that put tbe Royall ahead

Limit
20
(oupons
.•

BUCKET

TttiiQ't' ' b.li ....... JetUa. N 111M pvir tbe Royals a
CCIIIHINI~ N ...,, at K., 7 City. While wu four-for-five
wlllllwll home - ... -IIIJJL(t!l'l)

BIG NIGtrl' - A Ja11U1i1t ll'nllk Willie pili
01 iuiJ1111rom
leluiuilateeafteri*UIIrthe pme wln...... ..,m-.lnlhe Wlilillllnllll

•
three we had wu

SATU~DAY,
'

THRU
•' -

.Bruce feeis. gooil[
despite some holes

Good
Wednesday,
Aug. 20
thru
Saturday,
Aug. 24

.· ~·7.~,~
Ptr Cust-

s..n-11•1
U, lta6
S

. '

•Any manufacturer's cou ,
pon greater than 61 ¢will be ·
redeemed at face value
only.
•Only one manufacturer·s ~
coupoJl par item.
•The total value of the dou::•:
ble manufacturer's coupon
e~nnot exceed the purcha,..
price of the item. Money
will n11t be refunded .
•This offer does not apply to
Po)Nall'a Super Vatu Coupona. 1free coupons, or any
coinpetitor's coupons.
•This offer excludes ciga:
~tt·~· or any other items
· prohibited by law.
·

'.'!Ohr Ia only good for pro~uct

on hand. No Rain-

l:hecka.

,

'

�/.~

'•

:

..

~,

-

Wednesday, August 20, 1986

... .

The Daily Sentinel-Page.-:7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

0

Annual reunion of the descend·
ants al Levi Earl Jacks and
VIrginia Morris was held recently
at the old Jacks place in Rutland .
Following a noon luncheon, a
oomemade qullt was awarded as a
door prtze to Gary Jacks. Recog·
nlzed and presented gifts were
Sylvan Cleland, the oldest man. and
Dolly Cleland, the oldest woman.
Among those a ttendlng were Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Mozingo, Athens;
Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Kessinger,
Florida; Mr. and Mrs. Bob Whar

Z0,1986

,.

·. stop$.· S:~ .,~ Lou~•;

Jacks reunion

nin~l~ :~

is conduaed

CINCINNATI {UPI) -Tile long 1'11118 tonlght," acMed Browulng, it 17 In a row," satd Bell "But
Is !M!!f for Nick . wm aeenied to get ltl'OIIger as the frankly, wlnlllng the game ts IIIICh
~ and Tom BrownlDJ.
game went on. "I'd bei!D lllrt by, IJ!Ore ~~__~;_u just have to
· ~ theBe facts:
bDme ~on ~ey olf·speed stuff In st¥'t anotber.
. ~. !be ClnclnnaU Reds' I'I!ICI!IIt pmes ~ I dedded to stay
''fbi! Reds moved'Into tJI!i'd pace
• solu~
, i~sluggerwlloentered~ wi!h~eyfastba.Umore.I'dalmOSt In tie National League WI!!SI. a
. pffl!! ,with a puey .221 average; , flugotlm how It lelt b be 111t there ··half11ame ·a!MIId of !AI AnJeles •
law!Cbea bla flrit homer 111nre July for lieven or eliht lnniDgs."
·
wbell tile ~ ~t to the New
' . 'n ~-· iel!d b1a team to a 6-1 victory
Loser nm Conroy, 3·7, ,1weot tile Yol'k'Mell! 64 'J'Uetidaynlghton the
·aver tile red·bot St Louis Cardinals t1rst seven IMinp tor t)le Cards West Coast. ·
"•iy !light.
betlre departing tlr a pnch bitter
With ~ $)to'~ sbDul&lt;l!r act·
Alld Bl;'ownlng, a 3).game winDer and tum1ng tmr the pltchiDg to , lng up ag~ Wbell he threw on the
11 &amp;roolde last Be8JOII, pltcbed hls
rookie Ray Solf. Soft was i'ockedfor side two daYs ago, Reds Manager
fli'lt complete game siDce ,111111 4, 3l'IIIIS In tbe eighth op Eric Davis' Pete 1\?se·anmunoed a chanlll! ln .
llmltllli the Cardll to 4 b1tl 1D even 17th miner, Bo puit'. clluble and his pitching plans for the anal two
his !IBCO[d at ~111. It was U weeks ToJ\V Perez' triple and a sacrifice games against St LAlllls that wDl
aeo 'tbat ~ blanked the Cl!Jcago 11y by Eaasky.
.·
, · end the J&amp;. game home stand. BJJl
Cubl·2- 0 on a l·b1tter l:lr. biJ onty
"We just don't give Conroy many . Gullickson, 9-11. wDlgo against,the
ot11er route,golng eflort of the yell!'. !'IIIII," ~ St. l..Alllls: Man· Cards' Bob Fonch, J2.6; ton1ght
"It'll been a longtime," admitted ager. Whitey,Herq, "bat Brown· and Chris Welsh, H wDl oppose
Esaalry a1ter hls tape. IIII!BJII1'I! lng painted the ~k (til!! edges of Greg Mathews, ..9-3. Thunday
elibth borne run traveled abOut Cl · the plate) aU nlght ' When rur night.
teet OVf!f" the right center tleld wall · .bitters looked rulslde, he came
HOuston man8aer Hal . Lanier
to break up a 1-1 tie In the. Sixth Inside 111 them/'
· declded ·an lnnlngahea!Jof·tlmeto
IDIIIn&amp;.HIBearUerblast.No. 7,g1Ve
AUIIdlng to Eaas!IY's lll!lleo playcomp\ater~latllenlnth
tlleRedla9-7wlnovertlleMonlreal winning bomel', Conroy mted that TUesday nJght because he did not
Expos over three weeks 811'0·
"~ey tast' ba.U had beEn sinking· want his conscience second·
"Maybe this wm him things away from the batten, bat that gul!sslng him afterwards.
8.l'OWil for me," added Esaalry,
time It sailed and be really b1tl."
who went two for three with 3IWIS
Alrrost lost In tile slruf!le was the
With two wta In the bottom rl the .
batted In to bike hls average six
tact that Cmroy halted BOOdy ninth In Plttsbargh lmd left-bander
points to .227. "I've been worlGng Bell's l,S-game b1ttlllg streak, walk· Jim Deshaies working oo afoor·hlt
hard, and lfrel tine physically 1fgbt 1ng him In tile first Inning and then sllutout, Lanier waved In right·
mw."
, gelling ~ll to b1! the ball In the air han&lt;l!r Dave , Smith from the
Browning, who had been tag&amp;ed three straight lltnes tor a ll!ro for wllpen lp protect a 1.0 lead with
for 10 earned runs In hls last two three nlght.
. ,
right· handed Jim Morrison romlng
starts, broke out of a three-game
"Surerdlllve1Jiit!dtohavema4e to the P,ate.

dr!lui!lt ftaal4'

ton, Rob and Jenni, Lancaster;
Richard Junior Jacks, Langsville;
Ms. Patty Capehart and Tammy,
Pomeroy; Mrs.. Wllllam Van Meter
and daughters, Middleport; Mr.
and Mrs. Loraine P. Aelker, Penny,
Patsy and Patrick, Pomeroy; Mr.
and Mfs. Tony Chapell and child·
ren, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
Rlchanl Chapell and children,
Middleport.
Mi. and Mrs. John Geaslng,
Wellston; Mr. and Mrs. Larry

Pierce, SCott, Middleport; Mr. and
Mrs. Leland Wade, Sprlnglie!d;
Mr. and Mrs.. Roy Priddy, Middle·
port; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rife,
Teresa, Chucky, and Shane, Well·
ston; Mr. and Mrs. Jack D. Cleland,
John Justin, Rutland; Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Jordan, Pomeroy; Mr.
and Mrs. Sylvan Cleland, Rutland.
Mr. and Mrs: Dannie Lambert,
Brtdgett, Danielle, Melinda , Daniel
rl. Langsville; Mrs. Da1·id Lucas,
VIrginia, Michelle, Sb ·;. and

Davil, Langsvllle; Paul E . Moore
and Polly. Springfield; Danny
Jacks Jr .. Cheshire; Gary Jacks,
Langsville, Carol Jacks, Langs·
ville; John Hankla, Eric and I:ean,
Rutland; Tony McGrath, Rutland;
Estle Johnson, Langsville; Mr. and
Mrs. Chester Jolmson, Langsville,
Mr. and Mrs. Dannie R. Jacks and
children, Pomeroy; Jim Wllls,
Wellston; Mr. and Mrs. Rocky
Jolm!l)n and !l)n, LangsvUle: Mrs.
Debbie Borak, Angel, Ryan, and

.m-now."

losing streak
In holding
StLouis
In
check
att.er tile
Cardinals
had IWII
23 out of 32 since the AU.Star game

~r~~.:O~t!~~tle
"I

went right at them

wH11 ~

fast ball," said Brovmlng, who

struck rut 3andwalked4. "It's been
alongtlmeslnoeltlnlslledapnie.
"We went out and scored llliTie

IJAVJS PICKED OFF-- :St~LDI~·~~~Ih='lli~"'t:::
Alllll Knicely applies !alto Cl
a pickoff play from pltdter Tim CGaroy Ia ab:lh

B~g

Scoreboard .. .
CleYa.t - Sent ~ Don 8eblllr 10
Maine otlhe lnler•tklDal J..elll'lt;IM-\l oa
a lktay re•bllltath bllll. · ,. .

AMERICAN lEAGUE
By U•l&amp;ecl Prell Ilks "

....

&amp;stun
NY

Toronto
Detroit
HI. tmr

Clv lnd
Mlw\IP('

u. Ana*~- ~ lllltJibl:rtltop

Mariano Dwlc111 wlll be UieUDed for 1
1
11'1010 wtm • twalllll IC.'ItvlitH
sl"llrtlklp Dl~ And!nJa.

W L Pd. Gil
.49 1ll8 65 5li .M2 5~
6f !iii .5.13 6~
&amp;I $7 ~Z9 7
62 57 MJ. 8
62 511 ~17 ~~~
, !5 «&lt; .4!&amp; 11

Th- (ILl - Elldol afrlllatton Wltb MiarftcM.

61 "

KC

.513

5

Sl 65 .61 12
~" I&amp; .... 13
Sf-ani£'
M Ill .UJ 14
Oakland
53 68 .o&amp;JB 14
M~"
:.2 111 .m 14 ~
1'\IMiay'l ae..b
C£1Uomia 5, Dftrolt 2. lsi

"''
:

'

~IQ''MGalnat

!at'attr tMooll' 7-101 at New York (Drabl;ok

'11.$\, 1 p.m.
: ... 't:a nromta (Candelaria 6-h at Detroit
. f'fel'll'll 10-91. 7:.li p.m
• Mllwpukl.&gt;f&gt; IWCRI"ttiOn 3-91 at Ot"Vrland
. {&amp;.lies 9·7 1. 7: .YI p.m
Chlr¥.'0 fl)pLeon l-ll at Toronto tJotu\oion
·a.n. 7" l'i p.m.
' Oakland tRJjo 5-9\ AI Blllbno~ !Dixon
7:1"1 p.m.
· • Boston tOemPm 18-41 at MIJlnP90ta
· O..Iikln 4·111, 8::Ji p.m
1\.&gt;M.~ tHOURh ~81 at Kansu City
1uinktlf'ad ~I. 8: Ii p.m.
'nlllnld~'a G.mM
•

M

:»jl,

OllcaiU

at Toronto

SPank&gt; a t Nt"' York. night

California at Detroh. ~aN
TcJCas at Kansas Chy, nlgtll

NATI)NAL LEAGUE
Eut

st.

W L Pet. GB
79 ~I .Sill !19 S7 :at iK
Ill !18 !AM lalf.!
~ oo .es 191fl

Lou

Cbl

Houston

.m 26Y.!

52 fi1

.....

Pl:tbr.irh

t1 1'.1 .:15 ll lf.!
Ell 51 .5'15 ~l

7•h

61 .487

1~

&amp;lnf'ran
C'ncnntl

61 !R

"'

!ll 62 .Col 11
5(1 62 .475 12

~

AtlaniJI

"""""'

56

~

.4fi7 lJ

'1\M.tQ"a ~

kJ n)llll!d reamoe.
Dallu - P\.ced on injured Iat'IW
rumtna bact. Norm Gnlll!'l", 1\111'(1 Kun
Petenen, llneblder Br1art Saklml, WldP
r!'t'f'lvtT Jeff Jones, 4efenslyeo lineman
Cieol'l(e Me~ llld l'\lMIDa beet Carl
MllloPr; uled pernUslon to pllce lineman
~bko lo

~vtr - CUt d&amp;ht end Jll'nl!l \lt(i&amp;fltand
comrrblck Err FWPt.

1-800-632-6900

H~.

NMlna 'Dick J.lloC!IIW'
A.ntll:lny Dlckerwon;

New Yort (FI?m&amp;llde'z 13-41 at Lot
An,!ifPies tJ'or,woll2-4\, 8:al p.m
Maatreal t nta &amp;-&amp;l at San otego
!Dr&amp;\ll'C~ 8-101. I}:(J5 p.m.
n.r.a.,'IG..._
Atlanta ar Chira,5J
Phlla\elphla at San Frat'laro

_ .,.;',·..

Transadions

%" Trim On All Beef
'

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE, GRAIN FED BEEF,

·'
·

Boneless
Round Steak.

Bank·BY·Maill.
1

COLUMBUS (UPI) -

A

~"

TRIM

lb.

We ·Pay The
Postage Qoth ·W~ys!

Northern
Bathroom Tissue

,. Stdkely
Green Beans ....

Huggies
Diapers........

$

12-P•k

ALL WEEK
AVAILABLE ONLY IN STORES WITH DEll DEPARTMENTS

6 DELICIOUS VARIETtfS

Double
Coupons
Manufacturer's

Fresh Baked
Cookies . . . . . . . . .

MEMBER F.D.I.C.

00 . .

4-Roll

~

.-: ·$'
· 16-oz.

"AS ADVERTISED ON TV"

$

88

66-CT. SMALL, 48-CT. MEDIUM, 40-CT. EXTRA ABSORBENT OR 33-CT. LARGE

PICK UP ASuP~Y OF·PitEPAIO 'EJtVEl.(lp,Es." .
AT ANY OF OOR THR~ CONVENIENT' lOCATIONS

.'

. . 00 00

00 . . 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

CONVENIENCE PACK

Diet Pepsi or
Pepsi Cola ......

Doz.
.__ _ _ _ _ _ 2 DOZEN . .. $1 .u" · - - - - - - _ .

WITH $10.00 PURCHASE
This week your manufacturered products "cents off"
coupons are worth double at Kroger with $10.00 or more
purchase. limited to manufactur&amp;d products coupona
worth up to and including 50¢ Off. Coupons wonh more
than 50¢ are redeemed at face~o&gt;alue only. limit one coupo11

for each product purchased. Limit one coffae coupon. No
beer, wine or cigarette coupons will be doubled. Not valid
on free coupons, Kroger coupons or retail food store
coupons. The amount refunded cannot 8)(Ceed the price of
the item. You muat purchase product in sizes specified on
the coupon . This oHer applies only to manufacture(
producta "c~~ ~tf" coupons for items we carry. To assure. ·
product avatlab•lrty for ell our customers, ontv one couJ)On' per shopping family, will be doubled on any brand item •
during each store visit.
•

JUMBO 12 SIZE .

ealifornia
Cantaloupes ..

~clvf!l"' Mike Norl.hc\111; l'\llll'lbw back
Th:lmu Raoa and krilll!r Dlw Jacobl.-ft

nmp.

-·--~-~.

Bnx:t: ~wkirrwrtverC.'111onw.a.

ttfenltv. Iackie 'lbqy Btowll. dell!aM! bilck
Jlmmle 'ltawb and W1dl!! ~WI)'JIP
Cdfl')'; piat.ftOD ln)t...:! ....rwtllb: ena.

00 . . 0 0 . 0 0

00 0 0 0 0

00 00 0 0 00 0 0 0 0 00

each

Un D.twlonan4Bo~ "*ftCetver

····-·

w..,

C-.ll,
klo:....
llon)di.~
Gmld ·Ctorio
. . ' """"'
lftrnen l.IJonlrd
and 'lbmti.NQey

a... -

""'
r.Jlbodo
New Orte... - CUt

~

WITH Tonowns
...,d beautifully

Jot.

~

1

doolpod r.norol
.,,... .,,._....... C!lll

.,

Merkin

As ¥any

Times As You

. like.

~.,r

IOSI'S
GIOCEIIES .
.
' . IAIHAN.

-(If

OHI~

'

· .

; OH-MOIPJO~

PEPSI COIJ· .
,

,

· ·

-· ... '·

8 ~~u $1,
1.9 .
a
.. ,lUI Tax

...........,';~·....... ~+ ... '

Dllloell

Ul. ~· ~~...

..

Sl'O
S25

'sso
. ,CASH

NOW OPEN.'

RED, BLUE OR

Anytime and

IMRI Ron Zealln'.
.
NY Gllnti-P*'«t~t.. ewtll
~
•cli'UIIIIftl blid1: b lrn.ctl ""
lnj
_
_..,,

new

%:!; .

LIMIT ONE PLEASE

"AS ADVERTISED ON TV"
CUT, FRENCH STYLE OR SHELI,.IE

12-0Z. CANS, MTN. DEW,

'

'

Gal.

"AS ADVERTISED ON TV"

F . EE

-

c,lorox
Bleach .................

Y." Trim Means 10-30% less
Fat And Fewer Calories

t-p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
·

"AS ADVERTISED ON TV"

5¢ OFF LABEL

TRIM

05.00 ADVANCE . ·
•7.60 AT THE DOOR
(SET UPS AVAILABLE)
FOR INFORMAnON CALL 992-7111

.

Scioto re&amp;ult&amp;
slngJe-letiiOn record for two- .mtn·
Ute miles at SCioto Duwlll wu 1/el
1\lesday nlght wlltn SCIJIIII Rabbit
. became the as.th ltaiiiJudlll'ed to
r'nake tile time In t$
tacbta
so tar In 1986. '
'
' SCburu Rabbit li!d gate to wtrela
deleatlng Sban110n ~ by five
lqtha In the felturld . I3,IDI
condl~ned.. pace. ,DriVel
~ \11m Faby, the wiriDl!r ltli'
• 111·1:591-5.
'

Pound

TICKETS:

''The ._,,._. ·aanfri•

JC41ea, centtr Gnea Lollerl. wide *"""er
Mike Mlllfr, liDebldc« Scott Pellutor and

-boll

.

y4,

Mlnn!!101a - watved I'IIWnJ t.ck
Maurb 1\irner, dt&gt;ten.lve bck John
~trona . 8\Wd Rklt Hflehtnlf!r, p.uttT
Jut'! NleiHn, lldety Mike SIHin aftd Wldt

tackle Sbe&amp;don Andnal,

Boalon - Restructured trade with Se•!Ur
:.... lblton M"qulrfd oulftMI)!r Dave Render·
mn and atmmp ~lkr 0Me tJr lhll1llop
Rey QulrkltJK, I P\1)11!'1' to ..
and

----

"PROUDLY PRESENTS"
R,ll '·
TDRY ~STAII (ST.AINMEI)
FIIDAY, AUG. 22'-f.-GO P.M.-12;00 li..ight

PEDPtE·S:
IAN.K .

f'OIIltade md wldl! ~ Jfn')' WhHier:
~!d on lnl\lred rwei"YYe' linl'bc~ Tim
Jobwor, 'tlo1dl! t«.'ffver GWdo Ment~, IDit

~&amp;fit

Boneless
Ribeye Steaks

Call This Number Toil Free With
Questions And Talk To Our Trained
Meat Experts!

1-~' ROYAL OAI .:C.AMPGROUND ..:•

Cl'l'l'l'1 lay - Walvl'd ~ 0\u.ck
C\l.ntoo: plaocfd on lnjtm'd ~ deflon.
stvr back Da~ll JCftt, tlibt ood Mike
Momn, wldl! ~ Nolan Franz and
llnfb8ocke' BrPnt Moore; p!IIC'ed oo nonrootb&amp;ll lnJu"' list o&amp;niM tactlf' Dan
Knll(ht; allftl!d !Jaht - Dan Rols.
lndllnapotil - CuT llnet8ckmROOIII'!'VPh
Ba 1111 and Keith 86I(IE'!'I.
LA R~n - WaiVed ctnter DaVfo Dalby,
runrdni lack Omirk Jemen. ldc!kfr Vlllt't'
Abl:nn . IIcht 1!1\d Earl Cocloper,l\lard Doui
M.,.,., ......,., Larey sr..,...,i,
and deklw taclllt&gt; Brian O'NE'!Il; placed
Wid&gt; I'P(ft\IH CUfl Ehndl '"Otl ln~l't'd
rewrw and wllk' T't'C.'elver Bl'ld Thbbl m
unilir kl pttl:lrm lllt ·
Mllrnl - Cllf dl'hl!v~ 1111emtn Roy
H.anU tnd 801
qll&amp;1'lelbadl Jtff
I~

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE,
GRAIN FED BEEF,

Meat Information Hotline

plaMt 118111 end Joto ROieonlnjvredi'aerw.

~

7:3!) p.m.

'·

games l:lr an average capacity per
stadlum of 93.9 percent
Twenty eames are already an·
· nounced as selbuts, elgltt more
than last year at this time.
Otber.t1c1cet sales throogh Aug.l5
Included Indiana, :13,000; MJnne.
aota, 51,®, Michigan State, 49,500;
Purdue, 47,!:00; Wlsco111ln, 40,000;
Indiana, 23,000; and Nol'lhwetern,

disclosed ..
Hayes Will compete with tree
agents Rick Wani and Ricky
Anderson for tile Job created by the
retirement al Pat Mclnally. To
make room 111 the 60-man roster l:lr
Hayes, the Bengals waived tree
agent wide ~lver Stan Jolll!K&gt;n.

PErlrm lilt.

Robhuon.

1Q't G~YnM

,MbntrMI ar San o.e-.,
St. Louis at C lndn~tl .

Lut ye.v, tile coufel'l!lla! avera&amp;l'd rt,513 ilr each r1 tile 00 'llolrU!

Bengals sign USFL player

BankS from pllyliea.lly unable- toprrtorm Uat

Whall!r! M Ole pi\yliellly

::~~~:ra:

tickets so far. k&gt;wa 1s next with 6,«)().

Plaftd oa Injured raerw
rome ~"back En~ Jackton and~ ~er
Alton A.ieltla; moYfd wldr receiver Fl'l!d

Mark

"'Ib!a OI)Ce again siD\IoS that J;Jlg
Tell l'ootball Is America's most
popular apectator sport," Blg Ten
l'Olllllllssklnr Wayne Duke said.

entitle you to purct..ae 1t1a Mtwertiled itam at the adv~trt\aed p r.c aw~hin 30
dayt . Only one ylfldor ooupon will be accepted pt~r nem purch818d

'

'Nk'kenham, dlentlvfo

Allama !Palml'r 11-8) atChic&amp;RO tEckPnlt&gt;y .;.71. t :al p.m
Phlladf'lphla tC8rman ~~ at Sin Franclsro rKrvkow fl-61, l(l p.m.
Houston (Knfpper U-8) at Plttlbul"'h
(RhOden ]J. 7)' 7:~ p.m.
St. louis tF&lt;M"k'h 12-6) at Clnclnnall (Soto
~ 10) ,

of IIX),(D). plus crowds.
· Ohio State, tblrd nationally In 191!5
attendance, bas sold 'IO,(D) season

&amp;eaSilll

J""""'
•
CIL'Ye&amp;and -

safeTY Urton

Nt&gt;W York 6, Los AniP'" 4
W t

appears Wr.ely to reach a 67th

rumme

62,(D) l:lllowed by Illinois at OO,(D),

81Ch KIOQ&amp;I" SIOrt, llCIPIHIPf(:ifa(ly noted In thil ad !I w e t:lo run Oo,.1
of an t~IHCI irem, we w-1 ofter ~01.1 vour chOice ole comparable nem
when available. rtflflc:ting tht ume 11v~g1 or 1 ramchec~ WhiCh w1lf

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT O!,IANJITIES. NONE
SOLD TO DEALERS .

a..,..,..,Ul¥mlll1 C\11'1 &lt;ior£.,

At!anta 7. C'hlcaeG 2

Houston l. PlnDil'Jttl 0
('lnrlnna11 6, St . Louis 1
San OK&gt;go 7, Monlmal1
PhlladelptU 6, San FranciJro

wUI---

. Jot
Buffalo - Tra&amp;!d
~.s
Cribbs to SID F'raDcilco b draft ~
cielen.J~ end Ben wuuams retlrfd.
Cincinnati - Sl.amct ~ IID:l ell!
Ayala of Houstm of I.JSn.llld al)plled for
ro&amp;lt'r e:vntpt!On: tut ~ l"«'ftver Stan

Detroit - Waiwd auant Don Greto and
placed roo10t running back Otcar Sm.l!h on
InJured rt'll!'rW.

Da.kland at Baltln'IOrf, n.lgtu
8a;lon a t Clt-vel ar~d , nlatht

NY
Mfttrt
Phlla

pre-

straight national attendance dlam·
plonshlps, has sold 93,(D) season
tickels~student tickets and

track Mdt"J"o.o COilJib"y aliCtL
Ml.ouM- An~ IJUIMbaU ~

lno1n

strong

reported

A survey rl. conference ticket
managers Indicated at 1eut 502,(X)()
tickets tO 1111&lt; Tea Co6lblll
games had been sold u of Aug. 15,
tile confel'l!lla! reported. .
Mlchlgah, wblch has won. 12

----BillSqWm

mfl'l's

Byron

' • Mllwa ukl&gt;e 5, CWvl.'land 3
: • toronto 5, Chica.go I
.• .Oakland 4' Baltlmol'lC' 1
, • ..)'tlMI!'SOta 5, 8oston 1
• ! ~nsas City 9. Tcxas 8, U lnnlnlt'l
'~

'IU~

sEason ticket sales.

._

Oetro\1 8, Caltfornla J. lnd
Sfanll' 7, New York 3

4

-

Wuhiqton ., a tJnt. )ftr l'CIIIIlC'I·
Ntw Yoft - ~ lftlxlu Mlkn
. . .&amp;1111 COld!,
I
...,.._,. .. ~-l llnO;
SrniUIIId ~F'rln.:U.. F4wardl:·..a·Wter.n
swlnamaa Jwt»r ~ trorft tbt Loll
.,.... ~ . . Ml .. l.uTy
Drt'w and t12 kiql' No. 1 draft c:tiCb In
,. . ond No. I pl:~ ~ IJII.

16 53 .510 -

Texa ~

'

Nt'W~!~,...m~

~·

M'flll

eaur

SCHAUMBURG, lll. {UP!) The Big Tell Cooterenoe, whlch has
· led tile nation In college fpqtball
attendance every year 'since records began being kr!pt In 1951,

Etch ol th. . ~Ad ilemll1 r«~Uirttd to be r•.aMv av1~1ble lor Aiel in

DAY, ~UG. -23, 1986, IN r.Att iPDltS UOME~DY

I ''

TICKETS AVAILABLE AT SWISHER • LOSHE, FOOD SHOP
CAR WASH • DOWNING CHILDS MULLEN MUSSER INS.

advance ticket sales

CMh.

Majol'8

I 0 reports strong

.·. .

ADVUniiD 1TE11 POliCY

COPYRIGHT 1986 • THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, AUG. 17, THROUGH SATUR ·

r;::::;::·:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:;;':::;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
~

Zack, Bremen: Ru,sty Moyln~: •
Rutland, Eric M:lzlngo, Lancasteri·
Randy Mozingo, Bremen, Mr. anQ.
Mrs. Russell Mozingo, Rutland =
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Will and PalilJ,i
Pomeroy: Sue Greatoouse 3J!O-~
oons, Sprtngfield; David Jl!C~:­
Springfield; Mr. and Mrs. BQb:
Jacks, and children, Pomeroy, M[::
and Mrs. Danea Jacks, Pomerey;-Mr. and Mrs. Randall Gibbs, G~;
Rhonda and Randall, Pomeroy.·- :

,,..,,,btl,.,,
i

AM ·nc:10 PM

MONDAY:Ti:!!IIO f'RIPAY
li30 AM,'TII; 10 P.M.
IA1URDAY • lUNDAY
'

Thompson White
Seedless Grapes
· Pound ,

SPECIALS
foOR'oilas'''~ .
BI"•IOI '1 012 •• SJOI

........
IHbiUilfiis ·

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Wednetdey,

:.

By The Bend

The Daily Sentine~
Wednesday, August 20, 1986

..·

::·;Bea
__t__o:-;f-:;the::-:-;:Be~n~d~-----------._........__~----....;..----------..:.,:=:

~~:::~ f'!u~i~~!~~n ~n~

:Sprucing up the school .
By BOB HciEn.Jm
Se::&amp;mel !!Uif Writer
Sunday Is the day when Dan
· Adltng, new

· clpal ot Easllem
High School, wW
be expecting you
• to report to the
• high school 1Je.
: : tween 12 noon
· : and 6 p.m. with
; : your !avortte work tools to sharpen
· • up the school lor the opening of

· classes.

: · There Is painting to he doll! : like railings and that type thing . · weeds to be cut - junk to be
· : collected and hauled away - and
: : other chores.
· : Patrtcla Blakeslee Circle and
. · daughter, Marianne, ot Wichita
: Kansas, were In tor a few days _:
: calncldentally at county falr lime
. : and that was good tor Patty woo
; was so active In the junior fair
-during her teen years In Pomeroy.
And - Patty took In the fair with
her dad, C.E. Blakeslee, and she
appreclatal that because he knows
everyone and let's face it, people do
fade from your memory when
.you're away from the Bend for a
Jew years.
-~ Mr. and Mrs. Rick Werner and
· •.l heir twin sons were In from St.
· •Louis, Mo., for a few days with his
•parents, Mickey and Paul Werner,
·Pomeroy. Rick and his wife are
•;I'E80y enjoying their IDns, wiD are
.:three rmnths old now. The lucky
;kids surely found a couple c1 good
,_parents.

· How about that new paint ):lb on
.the King Builders Supply, Inc.,
. ·.building in Middleport. It really
·looks great, setting a good tone as
'you enter Middleport's business
.section. Such a big building - a lot
of lime and expense was undoubt.
edly involved in that project.

. · The Twin City Machine Shop in
Pomeroy purchased the oog of
·Quis Hoffman at the annual junior
·fair llvesiDck sale Friday night.

Through a slip of the dngers, the

purchaser was llstal as the French
City Machine Shop.
And while were on sUps of the
linger, Olive Weber wrttes that
NormanWeberwasthel986Weber
Family Reunion president and not
Roger Gaul.
Margie Harrts Blake advises that
a video has been prepared of the
good old days at Middleport High
Scmol along with actlvlles of the
1986 reunion. The video has beeri
placed In the Middleport Public
Ubrary and can he checked out by
resklents wiD want to oo a bit of
remlnesclng.

More rmney than sense?
Camp Mlni·Ha·Ha has been
established In Minnesota tlr those
of you who want to send your dolls to
camp. The price Is $:fi a doll lor
three days and $55 tlr six days. The ,
dolls travel to the camp In shipping
cartons patterned alter ruses and
go via United Parcel. Photos are
taken each day soowing the wee
ones dressed in tiny Hfe jackets out
sa!Ung; !ltted out in backpacks
hiking along a lakeskle trail or
lishlng from a tiny dock.
Do people really do these things?
Every year about this lime I get a
big charge out of golngintothe back
yard every now and t!Pn to gather
the IDmato crop from rey four or
five tomato plants. Sometimes, I
like to imagine that Don Richard
Hlll, Jlrn Adams and some of the
other expert tomato growers would
really turn green with envy at rey
produce even tiiJugh realistically
It's not that great This year,
oowever. the pleasant expertence is
gorv&gt; and that's because all of the
rtpe tomatoes, and even the green
ones over ttr size of a golfball,
mysteriously disappeared. Friends
tell methata groundhog or raccoon
Is probably responsible. I'm
oonked. I had even talked to those
plants- guess I soould have talked
to the animals. The situation Is what
I call a real Ying Yan~ Do keep
smlling.

FEATURED AT SING - Dan llafman and 'lbe F'aWI Trio will he
IIIIIOIIIIhe &amp;QIIIel P'OUJIIIIeatured at Sunday's Bend Area Gospel Sing
at ibe Wablma HIP etMiurn In Million, W.Va. 'lbe sing w11 set
IDle: •111 II l!le Md co::ll::uetlroup8thatevenlug. Admis!llonls free
and every- hukedtobrlngalawnchalr. Otherilalured (p'(IU(Il will
be Rellec:tlo::a Trio, Homeboulld, Sincere Gaipel Quartet, W.Va.
Ceudera IIIII llu:utlle. III caae of rain, the !Dg wD1 he held In the
Wal:auna HIP 1)'111.

~eigs County property transfers
Peggy Wandling, nka Peggy
Stobart, Jerry Stobart to Carolyn F.
Altlx&gt;use, Charles F. AltiDuse, 10
ac., Scipio.
Thomas W. Tucker to Ollumbla
Gas of Cll1o Inc., Columbia Gas
Trans. Corp., agreement and easement, Scipio.
A. J. Hagerty, Bessie E. Hagerty
to Southern Ohio Coal Ol., 12 A.
(Coal &amp; Mlnlna:.rtabts), Salem.
Jerry E. RDught, Ellen J . Rought
to EllzabethFranoes Du!l)i, parcel,
Pomeroy Village.
Richard W. Vau81Jan, Ruby
Vau81Jan to John A. Schneider,
Elizabeth A. Schneider, ll'! A.,
Pomeroy VWage.
Dana H. VanMeter, Annabel R
VanMeter to Harry F. Johnson.

Delores Johnson, 74 and one-third
Acres, Olive.
Dennis L. Palmer, Jessie L.
Palmer to Wanda June Lambert
'
paroel, Salisbury.
Keith Ashley, Emma Ashley to
Dixie D. Bealr, paroel. .
Thomas Allen Mtklovltch to
Edwin M. Aderer, tracts ,
Columbia.
Roy C. Herrmann, dec., to Gall
Herrmann, cert. of trans .,
S8.ltsbury.
Sylvia Gall Herrman, aka Gall
Herrmann, aka Gail Herman aka
Gall Herrman ID Pauline Thompson, aka Ruth Pauline Thompson,
Maxlne Uttle, aka, Lora Maxine
Utile, WUma Parker aka WDma
L., Karen S. Austin, Peggy TID-

,Yeauger family gathers
for recent reunion
The 16th annual Yeaugermulion

was held Sunday at the

WINNER - Middleport resident Dorothy Baker was lhe Hiner of a
Sean Kenmore ps pill given away Salurday (which, by the uy, wu
her blribdly) at tile Meigs Qluriy Fair. BW llaplonslall, owner of the
Pomeroy Sears Slore, presented Mnl. Baker wllh her grill on Tuesday
,altemoon.

!lou~ l'!
Roadside Park with a potluck
dinner at noon.
Attending were Alan and Ella
Mae Yeauger, Flortda; Pearl.
Lena, Wayll!, Bev and Heather
Yeauger, South O!arleston, WVa.;
Keith and Pam Pacello, Ollumbus;
Gene and Sanlea Yeauger, Enon;
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Yeauger,
Dublin; Paige M. Yeau(&lt;l!r, Oxford;
Don and Marlene Yeauger, Canal
Winchester.
·

Community calendar / area happenings
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - The Red Cross
Bloodmobile wtll be at the Pomeroy
senior citizens center on Wednes·
day !rom 1:00 to 6: 30 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Associ ation of Retired Citizens annua l
piCnic , Wednesday. 5-7 p.m .. Mid·
dleport Park.

Community Action Agency free
clothing da y, Friday. 9 a.m.·noon ,
in the old high school building at
Cheshire.
SUNDAY

R lJ'ILAND - A hymn sing wlli
he held Sunday, l ::JJ p.m., at the
Rutland Freewtll Baptist Church .
All proceeds wlll go to a needy
family.

POMEROY - Open house for
students and their parents at
Pomeroy Elementary School. Frt·
day, 1-3 p.m., at the sclx&gt;ol.
STIVERSVll.LE - Free clothing day at Freedom Gospel
Mission Church, Bald Knob, on
County Road 31 betwEen Bashan
Road and StlversvDle, Friday, 9
a.m.-noon.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Ipdependent Holiness Church
closes out AIJ8USI with a revival
starting Frilay and lasting until
Sunday, Aug. 31, with Wayne States
~ evangelist. Special vocal selections each evening tor services
~n!ng at 7: JO p.m.
CHESHIRE

-

Gallla·melgs
~

Dan Hayman and The Faith Trio,
the West VIrginia Couriers and
Sunrise. Master of ceremonies wt11
he George Hoschar. Admission
free. Everyone welcome. Bring
your lawn chalrs. In case rt. rain,
tiP sing wlll he held In the high
scmol gym.

Reunions
LETART, W.Va. - The annual
Johnson family reunion wt11 he held
Sunday, Aug. 31 on the West
V lrglnla side of the Racine Locks
and Dam. A basket dinner wt11 he
served at noon.

Dance l e - ·
MIDDLEPORT Shirley
Quickel, Danre Company lnstruc·
tor, Is accepting new students for
the oomlng year. Dance lessons will
be given on '1\IE&amp;days and Thursdays at Carleton School, Syracuse,
and on Wednesdays at the Gingel'
bread Preschool, Mlltileport. For
information, call 992-'1'756.

POMEROY - The annual OUrs
family reunion wlll be IPidSunday,
Aug. 31 at the Meigs County Senklr
Citizens m Mulbeny Heights In
Pomeroy. Dinner at 1 p.m.

Bake llale
RUI'LAND - Rutland Freewlil
Baptist O!urch Is sponscrlng a lake
sale Frtday at the church, starting
at 10 a.m.

FJUDAY

LONG B01TOM - The gospel
group Saved, from Point Pleasant,
W.Va., wtll be singing Friday, 7:30
p.m., at the Mount Olive CommunIty Church. Pastor Lawrence Bush
invites the pobllc.

DARWIN -

The Laudennllt

POMEROY - The Belles and

Aug. 31. beginning at 9a.m., at the
road side park on Rl. 33.

Beaus Square Dance Chlb wW

(

mas, aka, Peggy A., Cert. rt.Trans.,
Salisbury .
Dewey F. Smlth, Jr., Sharon K.
Smith to Mary A. Shoults, Roger J .
SHoults, lot, Racine.
Jeffrey W. Marcinko, Peggy J.
Marcinko to Columbus &amp; Southern
Ohio Electrtc Co., easement. Olive.
Lettie L. McCain, Norman D.
McCain, Gale Lee McCain, to
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric
Co., easement, Olive.
Bernard F. Shrlvers, Patricia E.
Shrtvers to Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co., easement, Olive.
Thomas Wllllam Timm, Vera
Levette Timm to Bradley B.
Johnson, paroei, Bedford.
Orland Laudennllt, Jr. , Shari a
Laudermllt to Belle Reeves, lot,
Pomeroy vtllage.

Returns home

Sherman I. Roberts who spent a
week
visiting his mother,
John and Beth Schneider, Pome- Dorothyhere
Roberts,
has returned to
roy; Chrts, Chrtstlna, Jennifer,
his horne in Moore, Okla. He
Christopher and Jeremy Yeauger,
Pomeroy; Delma Halley, Bob, attended the Melg County Fair
Gerry Halley, Cheshire; Betty durtng his visit. VIsiting at the
Mcintosh, Marvin, Lucille, Sue Roberts oome were Mrs. Esta
Ann, Matthew, Eric, Ray Jr. , Roberts, Pomeroy, and Mrs. Glenn
Tracey and Jacob Smith, O!esh.ire; Hensler, Middleport. T. Sgt. and
Greg France and daughter.
Barry Alan Yeauger, Kenneth Mrs.
Kelly,
Scott Air Force Base In
Yeauger, LawrenC(' and Charlie
Mrs. John Mygratt. Mrs.
Yeauger and Brett Spires. llllnois,
J:&lt;aoml
Varga,
Bidwell.
Chesblre.
Marcelia
Custer
of Columbus has
Reva Beach, Zandra Well, Steve.
been
here
visiting
her• daughter,
Oleryl and Ashley Halley, Middle·
Carolyn
Charles,
Minersvllle,
for
port; Kevin , Terrt and Nickolas the past two weeks.
McLaughlin, Middleport; Dick,
Ruby, William, Pam, Do~er.
Ashlee and Cassie Vaughan, Mid·
dleport; Mlck, Amy, Robert and
Joshua Haning, Cheshire; Altred
Edith Cook, fonner resident, is
and Hilda Yeau(&lt;l!r, Mlnersvtlle;
John , Ruth Ann, Ryan and Misty confined to tiP McPherson HospiCarsey, Athens.
tal, Room ~B. Howell, Mich.,
48843.

Hosptialized

Teny, Racine; Mr. and Mr. Lee
Bwngarll!r, Troy and Lori, Muton,
W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Raymonil
Grinstead, Francis Stewart, T1rl1
Stewart, Usa Crump, James anp
Nikki, ~. W. Va.; VernO!l
Grinstead, Linda Fields and Casey
Lee, Hartford, W. Va.
:
Jack Stewart and Jackie, Wal4HJ,
W. Va.; Mary Fowler, Susie
Grinstead, Summer, Toby ani!
Charlena, Point Pleasant, W. Va.:
Mr. and Mrs. WWie. Grinstead,
Dorts Yonker, Danny RDush, Mr.
and Mrs. Gary Stewart, Mlssie,
Ti!!any and Crystal, Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Roush, Jamie and JodiE!,
Letart, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. David Van Metei,
Eddie Van Meier and E.T., West
Columbia, W.Va.: Ella Roush, Jo
Ann Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
VIckers, Ken, Ann, Aaron and
Sharle, Mr. and. Mrs. Danny
Rickard, Kent and Rodney, Anna
Grinstead, Richard Sines, Kathleen
Roush, Phll Hoffman and Susan,
Patty and Jackie Paugh, Stephanie
Barton, Mary Fry, Larry Jo. Fry,
Ralph RDush and Jason, Mr. and
Mrs. Cecil Duncan, Stephanie and
David, Mr. and Mrs. Pete Grlnstead, Mrs. Thomas Grinstead, Mr .
and Mr. Blli McFarland.

~-Ohio

Briefs:-- Candid,a te '·s tresses insurance refonn -

GM joins venture corpor:ation

·~

DAYTOJ&lt;i (UPI) -The Inland Division of General Motors Corp
and NHK Spring Co. Ltd. of Yokohama, Japan, have agreed
~ a joint venture corporation In Japan, It was announced

u;

The joint venture company, named NHK Inland Corp., wW
manufacture automotive suspension springs made of !lberglass
relnfpreed plastic, inll!nd said.
Operations will begin Oct. I at a facWtynear Yokohama, theslteof
~.~tlni NHK Isehara plant. NHK IniaDd wW seJ.l springs to
..,..,(e manufllcturen In Japan and ~r countries In the
Asla·Paclftc regiOn.
Using technology ortglnally developed by lnland Dlvtslon, GM
Introduced the .!lberglass relntll'ced plastic spring In 1981 on the
Chevrolet Corvette under the tradename UTEFLEX. Since then,
the sprtng has beeri used In other GM models.

Goodyear buys British firm
AKRON (UPI) - The Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber Co. Is rmvlng
toward a new era ct. tire manufacturtng.
Goodyear announced Tuesday the acqulsltkln ct. a British 11rm said
to be capable r1 revolutionizing the tire Industry. .
Howdlns Ltd., tonnerly a Dunlop subsidiary known as the
Engtneertng Coosuitancy Service, has ~t 10 years developing an
automated rubber comPounding and tlre-buUdlng system.
The purchase price was not disclosed by Goodyear of!lclals.
Goodyear purchased the finn In January from the Brttish firm BTR.
wlllcb had acquired the 9UbsldlalY wheillt gained oontrol ct. Dunlop
In ~. Goodyear o!flclals said.
, '"'be .&amp;C9ulsltlon ct. ECS emphaslmi Goodyear's determination to
, ~ ~ technological leader worldwkle In the tire and rubber
, .. lnduSt1'Y r Goodyear Chairman RDbert E. Mercer said.
1.~&lt; .

The Daily Sentinel-Page 9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

l

.....,

A ~pronged eUort Deewi'· to he
mounted by the Ohlo legislature to
meet the growing problem r1
llabWty · CIM!I'age, IICCOI'dlJJg to a
candidate tor the 9tth House seat
representing Gallla, Meigs and
Athena counties.
''One etrort needs to be dlrectal
towards Insurance refonns wblch
will address the way premium
ratES are set." said Garry E.
Hunter, Atbenslawdlrectorand the
GOP candidate for the seat.
"Another effort needs to directed
toward tort ll'e!onn within the clvll
Justre system," he added.
Wldle InSurance oompanles have
beeri hit hard by the loss c1
sovereign Immunity and clecllnlng

Interest ratES, drastic rate In·

$43,152 premium rebate tlr Athens
after he Died a complaint with the
Ohio Department of Insurance. He
said he belll!v.es this victory Is an
Indication that some Insurance
reform Is necessary. &amp;ch refonh,
Hunter added, might include requlrlng Insurance oompanles to
submit their rate cltanges to the
state lor approval.
Tort reform, Hunter continued, is
the rmst pressing need.
"Tbe clvU justice system needs
reforms that wW mt Umlt access to
the courts by prople with real and
genuine dlspotes, but that wni

creases need to be justified In
relation to to an Individual's and
lnsuree's loss experience, Hunter
explained. U this Is not addressed,
Hunter said. southeastern Ohio
stands to lose essentlal services,
sucli as OOctors woo wW no lo~r
practiCe In tile atE&amp; because of
skyrocketing lnauranoe rates.
"Southeastern Ohlo has a great
need tlr 00ctora and It Is a shame
that a lttlgatlon-consclous illCiety Is
damaging the ability to jnVtde
adequate m!dlcal service," he
oonunental.
Hunter high
saidrates
hiswas
position
on
justl!ylng
supported
by his recent success In OOtalnlng a

rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:~

JUST ARRIVED!

Astronaut fetes Ohio youths
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(UP!) -Astronaut Robert Crippen
Tuesday night honored seven high
school science studenls, Including
one from Cuyahoga County, Ohio,
for space science projects that were
judged the best armng 1,500 entries
nationwide.
Allred B. Cawthorne ill, a

student at North Quincy High
Scboolln North Quincy, Mass., won

discourage the !lllng rt frivolOUs
claims.'' he said.
•
This goal, Hunter said, can be
best achieved by:
-Permitting the award d attor·
ney fees and expenses tl lrlv~
cases;
. ,
-Reducing awards based,on '11 •
clalmant's receipt of ooDat.'a!
benefits such as Insurance II!.~:
- Llmltlng the principle Of joint
and several llabWty;
- Requlrtng parties to exctian&amp;e
pretrial &lt;tiers ot settlement;
·
-Placing a statutory maximlim
on punitive damages.
·

GOOD &amp; FlESH

CANNING SPICES

a $3,1XXl scholarsblp from World
Book Inc. tor the best overall
project In the Space Science
Student Involvement Pl'Oglam.
His p-oject was titled "Low G
Osteo(&lt;l!nlc Abnonnallty" and the
scholarship was named In honor or
Chrtsta McAuU!fe, the New Hampshire hlgh school teacber wiD was
killed aboard the sial tt1e Challenger

S"t '"

c..,,,.-0, Pnm A, l••'

Ohio Valley Bulk F

m Jan. 28.

514 EAST MAIN

992-6910

POIIEROY

WtAca,t
F'*'S......

.' '

BusiNEss REVIEW ·

IU!ADI!R AD8
· IN 1')118 SECTION 'PitEI\\IIED IIY
CONTI!Acr ADVER1181NG, INC.
Al.l;UGHI'SIIESI!aVI!ll, I -

Fashion Board
is announced
I

The 1987 4-H Fashion Board~was
named althe style revue held ·. the
Meigs County Fair.
On the board are Greta Riffle,
Donna Curtis, Michele Young,
Renee Kaylor, Michele Laughery,
Mellsa Calaway, Heather Finiaw,
and Beth Clark.

Advtrt l'&gt;tmfnl

1Many Hearing
Problems Can
Be Helped.

Chicago, IlL-A free offer of
special interest to thosd who
hear bu1 do not undeJaand
words has been announced by
Beltone . A non·operating
model of lhe smallest hearing
aid Bellone has ever developed
will be given absolutely free to
anyone requesling it.
ll 's yours for I he asking, so
send for it now. II is not a real
hearing aid , but it will show
you how Iiny hearing help can
be . The aclual aid weighs less
than aneighlh of an ounce, and
il fits completely into the ear
canal.
These models are free , so
we suggesl you write for yours
now. Again , there is no cosl,
and certainly no obligation .
Although a hearing aid inay
not help everyone, more a!)d
more people wilh hearing
losses are being helped. For
your free sample write today
to: Deparlment 69477. Bel·
tone EleCiron ics Corporation ,
4201 West Victoria Street.
Chicago, IL60646 .

r.;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;========-----.....l---------..:.

!iq!:lre . . _

famlly reunion wW be held Sunday,

Go8pe!M:g
MASCX'I, W.Va. - The Belld
Area Gospel Sinr -wtll be held
Sunday, Aug. 24, from 1:30 1o 6
p.m., at Wahama High School In
Mason, W.Va. Featured flnlers
wlll he the Reflections Trio, Homebound, the Sincere Gospel Quartet,

reunion was held recently at the
New Haven City Park.
Sharon VIckers was In charge rt.
the day's events with Kenneth
VIckers gMng . grace before the
picnic. During the business meet·
lng, Dorts Yonker reported oo the
Sunday School ' paper which Bet
Grinstead bad put In the memory
box recently opened at tiP camp
meeting. Several births were announced by Sharon VIckers. Max·
ine Arnold Wagner was appointed
hlstortan, and the same o!flcers
were named for another year.
They are Sharon VIckers, pres!dent; Shelby Duncan, vice pres!dent; and Anna McFarland,
secretary-treasurer. Recognized .
were Richard Grinstead, the oldest
man; Mrs. Thomas Grinstead. the
oldest woman; James Crump, the
youngest; Betty Rice and !amOy or
Marlon, Ill., the family traveling
the farthest: ad Ella Roush, the
person with the most famOy
members present.
Games were played In the
afternoon. Next year's reunion was
setforthesecondSundayrt.August.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde Rice and Jonathan, Marlon,
DI.; Mr. and Mrs. David Grlns~ad
and Mehgan, Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Grlns~ad, Richard Grinstead,
Canton; Mr. and Mrs. Dick Grin·
stead, Mike, Wendy, and Jeff
Grinstead, Albany; Hany Knapp,
Peggy Harless, Columbus; Alice
Mlller, Jackie West, Marietta;
Shlela Roush and Craig, Gallipolis;
Maxine Wagner, Lancaster; Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Grinstead, Sr.,
NeiiDnville.
Robert Grinstead, Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Grinstead, Lori, Paula and
Amy, Mike Brooker, Belpre; Mr.

August 20. 1988

sponaor a Wl!ltern style square
danre at Royal OlkParkSaturdiiY,
from S.ll p.m. Caller wDI be Dale
Eddy. All weslt!rn square dancers
welcollll!.

MUCpiclllc
MIDDLEPORT- Melp As8ocl·
atlon tor Retartal ClttD!ns wW mid
their annual l*inic Weclneaday, ~7
p.m.. at the Middleport Park.

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Wedn--'•y,
A........
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1988

Ohio

Ma&amp;rietic Springs telnfnlbers the 1800s by festival

P~Ladlhorities hold Ohioan

..

~._L Jil~rder- related charges

.

By SANDRA L lATIMER
Uded 1'..- IDierna&amp;loaal
1be Union Coonty communJty of
~Springs used to draw a lot
~visitors In the late llms because It
:Was 'said the mineral waters there
1\ad a tll3gnetlc quality.
That was the tlme thai water
cures were In vogue and the
mineral waters were said tn have
had such a magnetic quality that a
knife blade was charged with with
enough power ID pick up a pound rl.

halls.
1bls Saturday, the community
comes back to life wtth the Spring
Water Festival at the Magnetic
Sprfnils achool. Arts and crafts, a
nea market, games and parade are
Qn the agenda.
· RJVerfes~ one of the largest
single-day events In the countty,
will be held SUnday In down town
Cincinnati along the Ohio River.
This festival has been singled out as
one of the top 100 In North America.

It otrers firelwdts, riverboat rides. the Palace Theatre bt Canton.
water shows and music.
ActiVIties this IJlOflth sponsored
Ripley, BroYm County, Is the by the, Ohio Historical Society
largest tobacco growing area In Include:
.•
Ohio and that community cele-An Ohio llomet'Omlng at Adena
brates Friday through Sunday wtth In Chllllmthe Saturoay wttb music
the Ohio Tobacco FestivaL
by "'nle ~ County Farmers,"
Also on this week's schedule:
-Special Summer Weekends at
An Antiques Fair wDl ~ held
the Ohio Vjllage in Columbus
Saturday and Sunday at the Bob SatllrdaY,,and Sunday.
Evans Farm ne,!lr Rio Grande.
-Family Afternoon at Wah·
Gallla County.
keena Nature Preserve In Fairfield
A Farmer's Festival wUI ~ held County Sunday and a Fall WildflowFriday through Sunday In Caledo- ers Walk at the Pre$erve Aug. ll.
nia. Marlon County.
Activities sponsored by the Ohio
The Backwoods Festival wUI be Department of Natural Resources
held Friday through Sunday In the this rmnth Include:
Guernsey County community of
-Flowers of the Rim at Clifton
Kimbolton.
Gorge State Nature Preserve bt
A Folk Festival wUI be held Greene County Aug. 31.
Saturday and Sunday at the
-A Beach Party and Bon Fire
Cultural Arts Center and River- Music at Rocky Fork State Park In
front Amphitheatre In downtown Highland County ~ug. :.1.
Columbus.
- Hermit of the Hollow at
AMusical Tribute to Glenn Miller Cookies Hollow State
Preis on the schedule Friday night at
~klng County S3!Wrday.

==·
'

- Indian Lake RlngctFireat the Amphitheatre near Xl!nla through llcothe. Perfonnanres ari
·~
Indian Lake State Park Aug. 31.
Aug. 31. Pelt&gt;nnan&lt;l!s are nightly through Satunlayevenlnp
Aug.
ll.
For
tickets,
~
614-115--:
-''QuDts and Coverlets" Is the except Mondays. For tickets,
0110.
•
exhibit this mmth at tbe AsiDbula Ohioans can can 810-2%1-BLUE.
-Music In the Alr Is the SUIIII!II!f ~
Olimty HlstoJy Museum In Geneva·
-Melodramas are performed
program
of free outdoorooncertslfl ';
on-the-Lake.
aboard the "SirJwboat Becky
-"Our Ohb li&gt;mes" Is the Thatcher" at Marietta through Columbus Qty Parks tlllWill Se!Jtr:
exhibit at the Q!ntel' ct Sc!enre and Aug. ll. A sclledule of pelt&gt;nnan- 17. 1be schedule II avaUable ~ •
, .:-:
In&lt;lastry In mwntown CoiiDnbus ces and ticket lnfonnatlon Is calling 614-221-:rol.
-Ponderosa
Park
near
Salenl
:
this month. The ·Slper Summer available at 614-an 6Cl13.
Science Show '87 at CO!II tlti'ough
-''Trumpet In the Land" at the hosts tnp Nasltvllle stars every::
Sept. 1 llruiii!S on CO!llputers.
Schomtrunn Amphitheatre In New Sunday throogb Sept 28. Fol;_:
-The Waym Thiebaud Exhlbl· Phlladelpltla plays through Aug. 31. tickets and schedule, call 2lfl: .•
.·~
tlon is on display at the Cohunbus Pertlnnan&lt;l!s are ctfered nightly 312-0044.
-Magic
Waterrheatre
In
Ball!::
Museum d Art Sunday tlti'ough except Monday. For tickets, call
lrldge In Ross County p-esentl:;
Aug. 3~.
216- 36t-5ill.
-"The Cream It the Crop"
-"1be Uvlng Word" ootdoor Broadway Shows tltrough Sept 6:'~
Exhibit at the Southern 01t1o drama near Camlrldge Is In Its 12th For a schedule and tickets, ca1r:
MustUm and Cultural O!ntel' In season with pertonnances offered Janice Brlzlus at 614-471·1141 II'~ ·;
•
Portsmouth is a Jurled exhibition ct Thursdays, Fridays and Saturoays theatre at 5l3-365-1388.
-Music
In
tbe
Park
Is
a
free
·
work by area artists. 1bls exhibit Is throulih Aug. ll. For tickets, caD
concert
every
Thursday
evening
ID
.
qJell through Sept1.
614439-'1161.
On the theatrical aclleSie
-"Tecumseh!," an outdoor the Municipal Center tn the Colum· :.
-"Blue Jacket" outdoor drama ·drama, plays at the Sugarloaf bus !llburb It Upper Arlington
plays at Caesar's Ford Park Mountain Amphitheatre near Chll· through Aug. 28.

~11~(10(;

._..

PL (UPI) . .....,lllen&amp;m!lltdlnthe

~~~~llf.WIIIIIinA~m.

f • , lJkflllli'i: Couuly, Pa., 11'88
llelq,. ~ ;\tllliaul bond today Ill
c&amp;'.idiillli:lmlclde. robbeiy and

-

dllqjlla,.. ·· .

Allij!l1_111er; 22. RaW!IIII8, Ohio,
waa ·~ T\a!!lday nlaltt tJe.
tore Dll!ik:t.tu.blePauJPolmsky

~Mcl'ltle~: .l'l.;andheltl\illllllut
bentS, ats-tilt.· Wulllapm ·lbulty
(Pa.). Jill pm!lna 1 Pl'l!llmliW'y

t.ldal.

·

SlatePQb llld lleCUiid IUSped, ~ Hllty,19, Roatltown,
Cillo, WllUitS be_ntumaUoPeolllyl·

Tuesday In a statement announcing
the bids.
Fruehauf has lx&gt;en lighting the
Edelman group In favcr of the
Merrtll Lynch group. which InCludes mem~rs of Fruehauf

By GAYLE

YOUNG
NEW YORK (UP!) - A new
study declaring childbearing is
"hack In vogue" shows the odds are
1/lcreaslng that American women
wDI have at least one baby during
their lifetimes even though the
numher d childless women is on the

Dare to be sexy
NEW YORK t UP!) - It takes a
lot ol courage to sustain passion In a
love relationship, but the bravery
wDI pay off because "sex will never
he boring," say two experts on the
subject.
Sex specialist Dr. Otto Kernberg
said married couples must dare to
share their youthful sexual passions
and unleas~ Inhibitions that can
elevate lovP-maklng to an artlorm.
And they must fight societal
pressures that condone and even
encourage disinterest In one's
marriage parbler, said Susan
Rabin, a lecturer on sexuality.
The specialists' advice appeared
Tuesday In the September issue of
Glamour magazine.
Passionate love-making, coupled
w!th erotic, y~&gt;t sensual stimulation.
"can provlde an Internal wildness

~

management

The Merrill Lynch merger agree·
ment provides for a joint tender
ctfer for up to 17.5 mllllon shares at
$48.00 cash per sl!are and the
acqulsltbn o!tbe remalning shares.

The Daily Sentinel
I
I

i

said .

I I , 1, r t
·I I ,. .
I

.

!

-•.

\

\

...J
'

Phone

1-1614)· 992-3325

~. ·

NEW LISTING -

992-215
1 Card of Thanks

..~

,_

.; Tl

"THAlli( YOU"

GONE FI!HIN' -Jason Kovach,ll, waQcs m a flllen tree at WIMer WIIIParlr. oirlled bJ tile~ of Wllllamlbaf'l,
S.YI!I~ sllrlf!r, llealller, C811aJII. (UPI)

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
1UPI l - Astronaut Ro~rt Crippen
Tuesday nlghl honored seven high
school science students, Including
on!' from Cuyahoga Coonty, Ohio,
for space science proJects that were
judged the best among 1,500entrles
nationwide.
Al!red B. Cawthorne m. a
student at North Quincy High
School In North Quincy, Mass., woo
a $3,001 scholarship from World
Book lnc. for the best overall
project In the Space Science
Student1nvolv~ment Program.
Ills project was titled "Low G
Osteogenic Abnorrnallty" and the

scholarship was named In honor of
Christa McAuliffe, the New Hampshire hlgh school teacher who was
killed aboard the shuttle Challenger
on Jan. 28.
Kelly C. Dixon, a student at
Panna Senior Hlgh In Parma,
Ohio, won a $2,101 scbolarsltlp !rom
World Book for a proJect titled "The
Effect of Mlcrograv!ty on In VItro
and In VIvo Chick Os~nes!s.
Timothy D. Beacom, a student at
North Hlgh School In Sioux City,
Iowa, woo a $1,101 scbolarsltlp !rom
the Natbnal Science Teachers
Association for a project on "Ion

MIDLANDPARK,NJ . (UPllHorror novelist Stephen King's
chill-a-minute best sellers have
scared the wits out of many of his
readers, but few have been quit!' as
shocked as Jennifer Mann.
Mann was just reaching the
startUng climax of King's "The
Shining" when a bolt of Ughtnlllg
burst through the wall of her room
and engulfed her bed In a ball of

fire.

Mann. 14, who was spending a
gl0011y Suooay afternoon Indoors
reading the tale of a boy with
supernatural powers. said Tuesday
the room exploded In a fiasbofllgllt.
1be lightning bolt ripped a hole
through the bedtoom waD, destroyed M'"n's mattress and
burned her Cllllll't, she said. Mann

~

WILUAM c. 'ftWlT

,Ulllll!d p,_ llm'rratloall
WALK DOWN THE AISLE: Paraplegic NIB O.Vh wW use her
miracle legs tor a walk down the Qlsle Dec. 'lT. She wDliii8JTY GNI
~errall. 1\ recent graduate d iJte University ct Dayton, whom w
met through mutual fr!ellds. ''We play aolf ~... says Davis,
who 11p0rts a dlarrldliJ ellpgemenf,rlng. ·
'
1
'1 !'lan to walk down the ala~ butl'm 10 stow, Greg says he'D nrn ·
ctr,cles around me." Davis, 26,, and ber ~ at Wrliht State
University In Dayton made ·a medical bree1tthroulh tour )tean aao
when they used compute'r-controDed electrical stimulation In her
legs tn Jllllke b~ walk. ·
.
Davis was left j)!II1I)yzed tram the waist down after a car accident
the night~ l!er~ sC!i9oJ gtaduatio!l- Davll, now •amilidatratcr
at a reha&amp;Wtatlon
In Olilo, aniDIIJicled Tuelday t11at Wrllbt
State IJ otterlng an exetc1se jJrOiraJh tir peope with pcubleusllke

hers.. . . . . ·~·~ ~ ~

.
·
. PIRS'I- G~~~ .M\INCPIN: Mlrpnt P ... 111 waa
the nlaln atttaetlbft at "'"' recent lbutth annual Oz Fe811valllr the
Clilklren.'s 11\elitre Ill SOuth Hadley, Mal&amp;, becaulectlier.Wtlcllldn

JJr8 Ia Revue,"

~-- ,

r hr.,.hll 'qtirld!FrMIIFemnle,r!pa,IIWrhllalllellllerele.
W.... bJ Artlmr Man, lei, GI'OIIdwi'IIDIF, a10a« .Hill tlolleit llllller,
llle piiiJ ...,.. llle ramed oomedlan'• lfe opms ofl·8r'oallwll,y ID
~

r
'

NOriCE OF
AI'JOOINTMINT OF
FIDUCIARY
...... ol Oon*l R. Hlrril.
D I~ 1t C.. Na. 211.224.
.. On Auault
In lltt
Mtlgl Caunly ""'.... Caurt.
C.. Na. 211,114, llhllloJ M.

NASA honors students' space science work

center

Ii i

large

brick home w1th 4 bed .
rooms. central heat, full ba·
semen!, 2 car level lots. 2
ca r garage. $35,000.
IOJIG BOTTOII - Nice one
lklor modem 2 BR on Rt. 248.
(Ntbulldilgs and 2 acres.
IAUNOROIIAl- 21 washet&gt;
and 12 dr;eB. PomerOj. On~

$6.000.

Bombardment on Ice."
The other four finalists In the
seven chosen from across the
country received s:Dl prizes. They
are:
.Jeltrey A. Roberts, San Ramon
Valley High School, Danville, Calif.
·AmY L. Larson. Uncoln Senior
High Schoo~ Sioux Falls, S.D.
·Lisa Olow, 'Illlmas Starr King
Junlor High School, Los Angeles.
·lnna S. Bateman, Lee-Davis
High School, Mechanicsville, Va.
In addltbn. Christine A. Ander·
son o! Nonh County High School,
Desloge, Mo., won a $rlOO scholarship as the wtnner It the Space

Science Student Involvement Program's student newspaper
competlllon.
1be students were congratulated
by Crippen, a veteran It three
shuttle flights, and Thomas Uts·
man, acting director o! the
Kennedy Space Center.
1be Space Science StudentlnVQI•
vement Program Is a joint venture
hetween NASA and the National
Science Teachers Association
aimed at giving secondaly school
s~udents a chance to devise ecpert·
ments that might one day be
performed In orbit.

u. ,....

:
:
·
·
·

said she was knocked from the bed
and left temporarily hard c1
hearing.
When she returned to her room,
MaM found a thick piece d wood
from the wall bad punged through
her bedroom door.
"It looks like a hatchet," said
Mann, noting that "The Shining"
Includes a scene In which the boy's

put. ·
,-, ,. '
Pel!lrrlnl was 1~ '!'hen sbe was cast as ~ ct,the dlmlaullve
lnhallltants cH the 'mag~c&amp;l iani!ln the 193&amp; 'c llulc ~111e Wizard ct'
OZ." '!At tile tlme, 'we·dldn't know It' wu IIO"a k:l be acllrure:•
Pelllgrlnl said. "I went ID one It the jirenileJW, a.,Saft ~
when lt opened and stood In the
and qned auiOiriPiw. But .

............ 2.~
""'!::~~;...;'""'!:~-"!"" · Oltlo 41723, ~~~~a In!Ill
Rill.hUM O..rll ,.. ....... ollllt,... oi
.Dantld II. HllriL lila r 1,
lllfollba2.CCia ..... Ohlo
41721

·
.
:
'

after that It just died mwn."
PeJUarini played one of.the aleepy·heacled munchk!ns who PQpped
WI It an egg wbell the llod witch lllnp during an q&gt;enbtg scene ln
the Land It Oz. She II one It abOut «l of the crlglnal118 munchlcln$
stW alive and 1111ke1 her home In Glmcille, Ariz. ·
. -.
DEPiriTs J'BR..QI; 1be water deUveryman who saved
actrea.'ftao I 8 plft dt'um_!.'el18indeath ai the hands d a~
fan 1lrolai up~ llltbtilnlln his role as a deputy In Temple City.
Calli. But this time he wu too late to aave·the victim.
· \.
'•
Depu~ ~IIJNJ r.. wu orr duty when be saw.a man attacking
the cltlver It a Crashecii/IJI at abOut 3 a.m. F~n ordered the ll,llpect
ID drop the knlte and held blm at gu.,mt 1111111 deputies arriVed. He
declined ID talk about the 'l'lladay Incident.
.
Femr was a·del1verymlra llr Siwldeta bottled water In 1982when
he was awarded a Clmelle Medalllr ~ br saving Saldana
from Arthur JN k• 11\, wm IIi llllW .m&amp; a 12-year prison
He
later ·b!carne a deputY ·lberlfr, ~lUling what he called a lollat~m~: ·
1
drMri\. ,
, 1·'
E
1
.
~ IIUGGII . OK:
10n. A hw, ?, If
reJlllll&lt;!i In&amp; lllc!!lY ~ bebw 1111$In lllzam! highway Incident. The .
c.wntl)' fililaii!r iWbetl frlm a iJ1i!w at Fali'le8, W. Va., to RoliDokit! .·
Va.,~Ybe!i be beiwd &amp;bautt!ieSIJ!c!aY qllt lhoottn, lnd the buy gave' --.
the &lt;llllll!tiY liar I ~I Oil.tiJ&amp;.,ann Ill .ibow .Ill! was Olf:. . · , ,
Alidrll!w lllillll wdlt ~~~~ atter tJemn.hot 1n.t1te bead Sunday·
lll&amp;bt u ,lw! aid 1111 mottier, the c:ountl)' star's ex· wUe, puaed
traclllr-traller. .
•
.
'

term:

llk\llr ....
a

a.

We wish to thank
the wonderful
people who helped
with our food booth
at the Meigs County
Fair this year.
The dooations of

food, pieurll ti11less
hours of time in cook·
"· se1Vi11, clean-up

and nilht watchmen
we11 J181Uy appreciated.
What rewarding
hours of fellowship.
Thanks to all of you
- SEE YOU NEXT
YEAR! May God Bless
You.
Sutton-Carmel
United Methodist
Churches

BRADBURY - 4 BR, mOO.
kitchen, cook and bake units,
natural gas lumacce. garage
and liNe! lot.
ASSUIIE - Pay the balance
and own your home in
AlmerOj
POMEROY - 5 rm. ranch
about 20 years ok!. 24x50.gas
lumace and lg. lot.

13 ACRES -All milera~. On
Rt. 33 at Peach Fark

ROOFING

s..... .
SPRING son

Now A Smoll
Monlhty ltntot
Pl111 lnlliallnstalation
Puts A Softtner tn y...,
Horne Todar lloast with
_
Optian to luyl
L... Nr Owno4. 20 Yn. hp.

DAN~!As~h·s~!~lNG

POMEROY,O.
ft2;22S9·

lllW Umtll .. IEEOS.
WIU£ .- A,neet 2·3 bed·

r110m llofN Cit. tia!tt IMI
lot. Btlllllilll., 1•11 2· ctr

; 04-112·2''6 7-2 .J

RADIATOR

lion. OII.TS23.GOO.II&gt;.

SER.. CE

We ~n rt~ir and r•
core r1chators and
he1ter cores. We cu
also acid boll and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas T1nlls.

PAT HILL FORD
992·2196

Middleport. Ohio
1·13·1fc

14 MIIC.·MerchlndiH

.-------"'""'1

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

-A-

ond r - I n g

-lloofltlt ........... -

-

-c...- -

_ ,.,...., ond ol-1•11

I f,.. Elllmllll)

Y•.C. YOUNG Ill
M2-621S • •992·7SI4

r-oy, Ohio

4-15-'86-fc

......... .

PIU.IIIIIIUIING
161 tlltlh Seclltll

Pin lll'ipinJ/c.tor Cltlllp btro

C&amp;L PAimJIIG
Chnter, ott.

PH. 915·•101

l-1~·11110 .

Paul E. $htcktJ, DYM
PT• .PIIASAJIT OffiCI
305 Jack... ln.
SIMU AllltiALIO.S
Mon ..Wtll•• fhurL S·S pon
r- 6:.10· 1; frl t-2 ""'
Sotunloy 10· 11.30 am
lAIGilr.All
MGIIY IY APPT.

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENIIH

•SnYANtA

•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERAIOR
•SATELUTE SAlES &amp; S!RVIC(

w.She~""Jhchalolea
Ahll TIM
u D•ty

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

CHESTER-915-3307
4/1/tfn

...........

3o4-372-sro~1.ttc

SUPEIIOI
SIDING CO.

YIIYLI J,liiiiiM

SAlES &amp; SERVICE

Compllte Gutt• Woill
Complete Remadot[ng
Raotlng of oil Typeo

Your Clbte •

!lila Here

HART'S
CONSTIUTION
1 / 15/1

882-am.

11

Help Wanted

Ptrt-dme ..cret..-y 1nd tun time

honw In O.llipolls. Atftrtnoil
.nd uperilnce 1 rnult. Cttl

"VINYL SIDING
• ALUMINUM SIDING
"BLOWN IN
INSULAnON

or 949·2860
No Sunday Calls

)/11/tfoo

RIO.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL

FILL DIRT

10-8-ttc

SWEEPER and MWinSJ midline
rap•ir. parta. end wppl•. Pldl.
up end dehlfY, Dl'f'll YICWm
Cluner, one Ntf mile up
Oool'fl• C - Ad. CoN lt•-

UI-029• .

ofl:orated cak• fDr MY occ•·

lion. Weddingt I II)ICialty. Will
deliver fDr ~mall fee. lt4-•2·

1101 .

bo.-d, IIUnd~. 24 hour Clf'l.
Raaeonlble rat•. Lott T.L.C.
30.-773-IIZI .
lesson•. Lucy Jane

lulr,..,, H.rtfurd, W. Va. 304·
812-2385.

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

FEJIIa CO..ANY ·
PH. 992·6931

'c•

Afhr
742-2027

•Ranges

•Refrigerators

•Oryen •Fr•zen

PARTS end

SERVICE
4·5·tlc

THE QUAUTY
PIINT SHOP

F11 All y,, PrlrltJ.f Nrdt
PWS: OH!ct Su"li" &amp;
Fur-o, lhllilint
... Gr.......

1l

"Fr11 Estimat11"
lnrt1llalion A•ailattlt

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM llllT

HOMt:S &amp; GARAGES

ltolio-y, Mognoti&lt;

"At leasonablt Prictr"

Signs, Ruilblf St..,pr.
lusinHr fO&lt;ms,
Copy Sorwit11, Itt.
2S5 Mitt St .. IINtlhport
t04 Motllorry a•.• Ponroy

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
·Day or Nigh!
4-16 -' 1&amp; lin

312/~n

SALES &amp; SEIYICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSYlll, OHIO
Authorirod Jalln DHrt,
How Holland, lush Hog
Farm flttipmtnl
Doalor

•••t
,.,•• &amp; s...,••

fe1111 E~•IP

I&lt;FI&amp; tic

Woods MIH load
2 .... '""" 1111. .1

s ... ,_ VhiiH
HOURS:
Monday· Thundoy

10 A.M .·9 P.M.
Friday &amp; S1turday
10 A.M.·11 P.M .
Clooed Sundoy

388·9\"mo.

-loog
.. keep•
gon~-·
ildy hoUM
to live
iQ
polit:ion op.n now. C•ll 114-

""1·,.18.
Lo01l Glltipolit mlf'Chant needt

.,.,..on to do ,.._Itkin• in theW

Giveaway

Nood Mlrl -noyl FRIENDLY

UIO.

1 young duckl. C1ll 114·441·

HOME Tat PARTIES hal..cfiete epen~ga for man11. . end
dlmonllmOrt ln. thlt ,,.., lt'j

To good honw mother cit • 3
kittMs, t tam cat bloth pd
mGUHN. Smell houtt dot Gor·
,., • Plktn•e. ello chk:ll:lnt.

- · fun .,d pro-. Wo
tlfllfoiOtrtngtho-Mimol..
toldn9 dol Cricket wllldl wiM bo
atv.rtiMd an n.tlonel T.V. No

Colltt•-2111-1118.

·

Female G•man lhorthliW Poln·

old

''·

•IY · eon
..

•

814·64&amp;-20. . tv.,lnge.

hwe O¥tll' 700 tKCtting IGYI and

~h ~nwnt,

no collecting,
.., d&amp;lts i•g .-d no IIII'Ytoi

.., _ _,uy... -loodlllroto

mlll•man.y.hM'efunendl~
time. No expe-

hourt of .,.,.

11'1•11 box11 of dothlt. Mull rilnoa '**MfY· Cll 1-80ollko ol. Coli 11•· 318-1201 1 22
_:.7;_-1;.:.1.:.:10_.- - - - oftoriPM .
,.

gavemment jobt list.

3000

1 m• puppy n.... chlldr• to
piiY with. Coli 11··378-2103 .
Hopolut H'"'nd hltnto hoppy

Ftm ... houN dog to .;v 1 .,_.,
,. good ho1111 . Hou• ...,..,_ ¥o
M.,..,_,., .,d l'o Torrlor. 8

months old. Cell 814 · 742 ·
2311.

r••·

t11,040-tll,230
NoVI!
hlrtng. C.IIOB-187·1000 bt.
A-1801.
j_::.::.:.:_ _ _ _ __
UIY ASSEMBLY WORKI
t714.00 p• 100. Ou•antHd
...,.., .. t. No.-. Dotoilo-- d
••mplll envelope: Elan· 7' 15.
3411 Enterprltl, Ft. Pl.rce. Fl.
, 33
_411_z.....,._____
,.
LPN or RN to OOIT1'tele mobile
.,.,,... exem In Pomeroy
liM. hCIIIIIftt parl·timt poll·

Frt1 pupp... to goo4 ho,. . ¥t
Calllo l'o 0 - lhiplfd. 11
wilt. old. Mutt be given .,..,
lhil WHII. 114-Ml-1421 .
2 ldtt8111, 304·f71· 71151 lfter
15
.

6 Lolt 1nd F.o und

tlon. lend riiUme to PM, P.O,
lok 2217, Huntington, W. Yo.
2l72l .
Yllagl of PomtfO·; Wei• Dept.
II•CCIIItW!t wrllt•ipPICetloll•'

from Jto,.roy

to.

lend .,.UalttDna to Vllege Hall
320E.Molnll. C· OWIII&lt;Dopt,

...........

Inter••

...

Wlll'led: Adutb
In
dwlloplng tob ... Ill thiU
LOBT Clllh rowo•d. Loot Ill O.J. h.,dt-.., tnllllllg. Thoro wiN bo
Wlllbt Rd. OIM. Mole block Lob. 0 -~on llolandoy, lop~. 811

10o.m.: iMolatComnatnlly

Colll14-oMt-ono.

ott17W. 2nd.lt.
14 PfOII'Imallld
btlclt • white. fl•erd. Cll ftn•alll ekl wlit•te et The
11··311·1031 .
Adu~ Educotlon Com•. Tr~:
Lott:lm.a blewn end white bul County Vocetton1l School .,.
Cliff. Lost In lh..e Rtv• .,.., co::.,endflndoutwhetwehewe.
Coiiii.·IMIZ·81•7.
-"'--·-----AVON , 3 open territorii&amp;. c..l
LOST bro..., oord • - 3M-171·1•21.
wlttl
· Col Moty own•
Ohio - I -11•·311-1411
wll phono bin .,d glvtt
REWARD.

- - - - - - - - Actlorl
LOIT flmlltW. . . dDgborwn, to dltcu•

w-. 1-----------.

8

Public Sale
• Auction

Pliny TNal IIDp R........
AUCTION. Arbucllo C•ook . _ IC-Ing IPIIMCIIIon r..
Cam,.,ntty Cent• •lr'Y a.., .
Phone 304·717dly Nlghl7:00 PM.
1317 bolww1 10 o.m. · 3 p.m.

.-.'Miflrlu.

or IJIPI'I et , .....,....

9

Wanted To Buy

El••llnatd Nr¥iDI
hoot1111.,lllkL

for•.
!'l.
,,.
p.zo.
PI
Register;
rnll'l

______

~~-~ ...... -.&amp;.....- cere
.,,
WI PlY C..n"""
nuu .. .,.,_, 200 M..... II .. Pt. Ph.
.::.:.::.....;.

0••

Ill
Johnoon
114-611-3172
TOP CAIH pold tor '13 ond
lmllh
10
I ,~•,...•-:;_ 11ao
11 ·E-

•-· - ·
-t':i
Oolllpollo. Col 11··611-

107 SJ(-rl
PH. 992·7075
PotlllroJ, Oh.
1:00 A.M. to 1:00 A.M. Montlal thru Saturday

merch•••

ICCIPI llld recefve Wiler bill,

-..

BLUE STREAK
CAB CO.

offer• a

4

Jim Mink Chw.-Oido Ina.

NEW HOURS

1811111~1 ..

coro of tho Oollpollo OollY

Crav11 country. cr•ll,. oomron. 11•·1192-11201.

•Washers •Dishwashen

ment c•rwr.

,_,lrdng NIII'Y •Ncture. end
• aumendina btnlftlt peckege
• the tucceuful cendldlte. FOr
lmmedllte oonaideretlon, ~~
Mike Davit, 114-281-4t8'J..
..,tllclll Ohio Inc.. 311 Ent
Moln St., Joclloon . Oh 461140.

Trlbuntt, 12&amp; Thkd Avo., Oo·~
polio. Oh 41131.

ho . .. Loutooloonlodo,iooola.

985-3561
All Meb1

ooJ•.

hDI'III. lind ,_,. ... to T40 M

3

ACCENT

mer ln.nci.. Mrvioel co~ in':.
._ In the Country. Benefid'l
ofttr1 1 r.r..,·mlnded lndtvidull ., lmmedilte opporturuty to
. . . . . . I chll1nging polition In
tho . . _ Gl crtdtl.
colloo·
Ilona end lldminittration. We are
........ mottv..... enthullll·
tic lftd .... oriented indlvklua~
lhe eppNc.t HIIC1ed will receive a CDrqJMh••iv• tl'lllnlnl
prognm dl...,.ld ID prepare
ttwm for 1 . . cc"tful mtnll&amp;-

Towftomltm.,.concem lnY dol
found on my farm wHI bl thot.
Jim ltMarl.

ter

t&lt;UT OUI FOR FUIUitl USE)

Join one of the l._.lng mnat-

3 Announcements

Piano

WANTEDTOIUY--1
c o o l -. IWAIN'I FURNI·
TUAE. 3rd. I Ollvtt lt. ClolllpoNo. Coii14-441-J11t.

HIGH SO!OOL OAAOUATES·

..... ..,._
Jn tho Army.
-nol Ouordl •d Ilion~
•••• t.tl tlmo. Wo pn~vldo up .
01 111,000 It -colluliol ..
p.,_, PWI, provldoaoodpiY ,

•d IIIOd ........

:111•-ns:.

.10 "' I · IOO.M2· :1111 .

Situ tl
I Onl
Wanted

12

TAXI TOKENS ON SA EAT

SENIOR CITIZENS
HARTLEY SHOE STORE
VILLAGE

SWtSHER·LOHSE

PHot.RMACY

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS

CJ Co•erized H•rirw Air Selection

z

-

Swim Molds · lnttJP11ti111 Selvices

a:
~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
·::c Licensed Clinical Audiologist

-z (614)
446·7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Set:111d Avenue, Box 1213
GIHipolis. Ohio 45631

.......GaDTp0ITi........ ..

-------p·onferov.... ----··

8r Vicinity

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

...... lomlly. off lit 7 ..
.r.ldllon ...... l!lJ. Ill. rd. to
IMhtftd _ _ , __ ....,
lilt -· •• bolft,
oc-ooiiOI, ocllool oto-.

----mto.

Au..

11·22. 1:30-7

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

3 flllllly Vord lolo II 1M ho,..
Gl DOflt H-lwtntton . ....._
20.21.MM·-·

-

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

0-o -

-

· I Tllun ..

1 : - "' hm. Glrl'o - ·

oar.-.

YordlololnlrodburyThur. Md

Fri. 1 :00 .. 1:00.

.. ..... PfPIUaiiiif' ....
&amp; VIcinity
Joiit llh. yord -

.....

t 1111 dork.

Golllpollo F....,. A,... bloyclo.

•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial

Walkellln home • •
20 .,....
••free E.eimetee"

CALL COlLECT:

Ph. (614) 143-5425

1·,1·11 2 mo.

6-17 -ttc

Care tar the llkterty, room.

992-7111

IIIGINILOIIG

. Ml,.lptrl, Olrle 45761
WI ClltY filhlnt lupplioo

•ROOFING lo
GUTTERING
New &amp; Repair
•SIDING SOFFIETT
•REMODELING OF
ALL TYPES
•TREE TRIMMING
•CONCRETE WORK
25 Years Experience

PH. 304-67 5-2441

lEND AliA CALL
· llllley OHice

colno.

bobyoittor lcomblnllf) In my

An 'll&gt;llll lt:rrr&gt;'ll l '

IOWN &amp; COUNIIY

YETEIINAIIAN
CUNIC

ollvar

114-441-IUZ olt1&lt; IPM .

RED'S
CARRY OUT

IODT WOII SID P• Hr.
c..,lttt Cor Paintin&amp;S37S

992-7121

or

2· 17-86-tfn

BOGGS

Hou siny
Headquarters

PH. 992·5612

949-2263
ar 949-2168

and 2.47 acres young ~u!
trees.
.DDLEPORT - 6 RM one
lklor plan, gas turnace.lg.living
rm .. 3 BR, full basement. 2
porches and river liew On~
$ll,OOO.
WANT IT &amp;llD'
so 00 W£1
CALL 992·3325
The R£Al ESTATE STOOE

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
AIn Tru••lnl••

FREE ESTIMATES

NO SUNDAY CAUS

rm. 2 full baths. !Xlt. garage

·-·--·Old

t-

colno.
ou""'CV·
prlc•.
Ed. lurUtt
..,._Top
Shop.
Znd. A... Mldcl~ 011. 81•-

111 124

Guners
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

992-3345

Business Services

..,..••,.....Mti.Aiuni·
nu1 $11!inl.,.. GOGd·i:IMtdi·

NEW - HPA•

NfAR CHESTER - Excelent 3
BR ranch, lull li16hed basement, stone fireplace in lam iy

E. Moil~

father used an ax IDchopthrougha
door whlle chasing his wUe.
"1 thought later, that was kind ct :
weird," she said.
Mann, wlho was reading "'lbe
Shining" as part of a high scllqol
summer assignlnent, said she
enjoys King's novels 811.d plans' to
continue reading them. "At least 1
think !II," she added. .

r----- People in the news--------... , .

' &lt;k$Dber. (VI!)

I

AHANDFUL
OF CASH fEAFORDm
Real Estate~
IS BETTER
THANA
GARAGE·FUL
OF STUFF
Real Estate General

216 E. 2nd -St .

Stephen King novel even scarier this night

' I II I

~ BEGIN- ''G~: A

Public Notlce

Roger Hyse II
Garage
_ , ,_,.,Ohio

Howard L Writt•l

Tiretl of Htnl
lusty Water?
Wt Hawe Tht An-

PH. 949-2801
'' '

Wanted To Buy

~:;::;:::;:;::;:=::r;::::iTt=======:;rr=======:::;i tluyine
doll' gold.
It
rtngo, jowolry.

New Homes Built
" Free Estimatea"

Clus•htd
Ill Coull $1.. Pclm~rgy , Oluo 4!17li'!l

9

Business Services

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

PHONE
992-2156
Or llfJite Da1lly Sentinel
Dept

I

Public Notice

that preserves marriage," Kernberg said . Such unihibited expressio ns can st rengthen a couple's
mutual commitment because d the
power of their secret ti fe ~ther ,
he said.
"Sustaining passion In marriage
takes courage," said Rabin said.
"But if you can do It, if yoo can
break the rules and share your
uncensored self, sex wDI never be
boring."
Sat!sf!ylng sexual encounters can
help a relationship last a l!Jetlme if
a couple resists "the conventional
standards that stifle passion,"
Kemherg said.
Couples must break the "wall of
Inhibitions" and not ~ afraid nor
feel guilty about admitting what
reaDy turns them on, the doctor

Paco Aguirre said HUty and Baer
were arrested separately over the
weekend with Avera's car and
credit cards and charged with
unauthortzed use of a rooter
vehicle. They were held In Ueu or
$100,000 bond each.
Hilty was taken Into custody after
the two stopped at a truck stop near
El Paso and trled to pay for their
mealwlthacredltcardbelonglngto
Avera, Aguirre said. ,
When Hilty was unable to
produce Identification matching the
nameonthecard, hewasarrested
onamlsdemeanorchargeoftheftd
services. Baer left the truck stop
before officers arrived, Aguirre
said.
"When be (Hilty) was lnjall here,
he tried to use the same credit card
to post bond and get out of jail,"
Aguirre sald. "That's when we
found out the card was stolen and
that he was wanted In the Pennsylvania kUling.
"He must really have been
desperate to get rut (to use the
stolen card)," the deputy added.
Baer was arrested the next day
when he came to the sheriff's dflce
In an effort to arrange his friend's
release.

.
F. rellhOf
Corp. receives COmpeting bids
. .

!3reak out the diapers!
are not at odds wlth each other.
"More women wtll marry than
will have babies," he said. "And, of
course, you obvbusly don't need to
be married to have a baby."
The trend to delay childbearing Is
evident In other ·figures, he said.
Thirty-two percent of childless
lise.
women mw age 35 will fP en to have
. The study released Monday by at least one baby. Armng childless
David Bloom of Hatvard Univer- women over 40, an estimated 17
sity said 84.5 percent of women ages percent will become rmthers In the
25 toll wUI give birth at least once, next live years.
~mpared with a low of 82 percent
Despite the apparmt turnaround,
In 1981.
American wompn today have the
· Bloom, a profes51lr of economics, highest rate of J)'rmanmtchlldlessalso predicted that !'Yen though
ness since the Great Depression,
there are more childless women Bloom said. Twenty percent o1
now than In 1976, more young women of that era never became
women wtll eventually have babies mothers.
later In their lives.
The num her of permanently
According to his study. the childless women dipped to ?percent
average American woman will In the early 1900s but has lx&gt;en
have her first child at age 25. climbing steadily since then, Bloom
compared with an average age of 21
said. He attributed the trend to
ageneration ago.
contraceptives, which became
"Child~arlng Is coming back
widely available In that decade, and
Into vogue," Bloom said. "I think advances women have made in the
It's a result of changes that have workplace.
made It easier for women to
The peak In childlessness may
combine children and ca reers."
have been reached by women who
·- Bloom was one of several are now ages 31 to 36, Bloom said .
Harvard stalls tic fans who pre- An estimated 18 percent of those
dicted In February that a record 11 women wtil never have children,
percent of American women will compared with 15.5 percent of
never marry. The group also women ages 26 to ll.
pl'l'dlcted the chances of marrying
He said 11.4 percent In the Orst
fcir single women over 40 rivaled age bracket and 12.3 percent In the
odds of becoming , a victim In a later group will never marry.
terror!." attack.
Bloom . said he used statistics
from a 1985 nati&gt;nal census and a
Despite the Implied contradiction statistical model refined over 10
of . fewer marriage• and more years to make his predictions on
babies, Bloom said his two studies women and childbearing.

vanlaatalaterdatetofacecharges
In Avera's death.
Baer and HUty waived extradlt1on Monday In El Paso, Texas.
Avera's body was found Aug. 12
In his home by a sister after he
faDed to show up tor work at
Findlay Refractories Co. In
Washlngtm.
Washington Coonty Cbroner FarreU Jackson said the former Navy
pilot and ex-attorney died from a
fractured slrull caused by a blow
!rom a "heavy Instrument." Pollee
theorizedAvera,o!Amlty,Pa.,was
slain after a robbery.
El Paso County sheriff's Capt.

1

The

.. .

.

�..

. ,.. •... .
.

... - -

.... ,

..

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

" ·.

•

.

~·· ··'

...
o "'

12-The
44

1 bldroo'm, aariQeapttrtment in
Mlddlepon. •1s0. per month
plut utlitl•. For further infor·
m1tlon, c11l 814-687·0988.

Special l'l.ltling Clre for elderly
In P'ivate home. Call 614-992·

31595.

14

2 bedroom furn'ilhed 1p1rtment
for rent. Adulta preferred. 814·

Business Training

992·2749.
2 bedroom. t17&amp; per month,
•100 depolit, vou pay utilities.

HIGH SCHOOL DRO~Q~f, ~·
EA~N WHILE.. VOt,l· LEARN .,
If you ,,. eco~o"'coiiY.· ,~'d··

No poto. 814-949·2234.

APARTMENTS. mobile homes,
hou.... Pt. Plusanund Oallipo·
lit. 814·448-8221 .

vant.g&amp;d betwHn die' 19M of

18to21 years~dandwouldllke
to receive your GEO contact the

Employment Security office at

APARTMENT FOR RENT · Now

226 6th Street, Point Pleasant,
Augult 18 ttlrou"' Augutt 29
between 9 a.m .-&amp; p.m. for
eligibility certification . If inter8111ed you mult be a rMident of
Ma~ on Countv and provide proof

of addreu, Ul:ility bill or driver'•
licen1e. brin g your birth cenifl-

cate or voter '• registration card.
social :security card, check stubs

that lndicatethv amount of groas

family income for past 6 months
and the type of welfare auist anca you are receiving baaed on
the family size. All males born
after 1-1·60 mu11 hiVe a aelective service n!Jmber E.E.O.
Employer.

15

Schools
Instruction

P'8P'" Income
and launch a nEI'JII

Loam to

Tax

returns
and
excitin g caree r. Classes start
Se pt ember 8th throughout the
Tri-State. For more information,
phone DanTax in Ga llipolis.

61 4-446 ·81 78 .

KIT 'N' CARLYLI ®by urrr Wt lghl

Apartinen\
for Rent .

"As you can see, this ventriloquist is drinking a glass of
water while I talk... this
would be more amazing if
this wasn't just a cartoon ... "

t";3~1~·::;H;o;=;m~a~s;=;fo;;=r;S~a;le~1~4~1;:~H;;:ou=s:e:s:f;o:r~R;e~n~t~
3 bedroom house , halt aere,

304-676·1279.

Hou se 2 baths. carpet. washer&amp;
dryer, references 1nd depo1it.
Cell after 6. 614-446-4682.

acceptinti •PPiications for rent•l
ep.n:mentt In Matan Apt1 Ll·
mited. Two bedroom apt1 at
1199 .00 per month. Rental
ratet mey be higher depending
on income . Houaing will bt:
•v•lllbfe to each applicant ~ ­
gardles• of their race1 color.
religion, tex or natural origin.
lnter•ted applicent1 should call
304· n3· 6011 or contact 0&amp;nile Streib or Waher Justice 1t
the m1in office, 1 176 Bri&lt;$
Road. Reynoldsburg , Ohio
43068 or ooll614·863·4614.

2 bedroom •PI· Galllpoll• Ferry,

304·876-2548
45

01

676·6783

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms and
Ught house keeping room1. Park
Central Hotel. Call 614-446·

0716 .

Rooms for rent, day. week.
month. Gallia Hotel. Cell 814·
446·9580. Rent as tow 1st120
month.

5 rooms. bath. cellar. oil furnace,

020.000. 304-676· 7681

$36.000. Call 614-446-3718.

Fumished room $115. Utilities
pd. 919 2nd Gallipolis. Sh1re
bath. Single mela. Call 814·

3 bedraom house. ell electric. 2

3 bedroom 2 story home in
Pomeroy. 614-992-3438.

446·4416.

Sign Paint in g.
Signs of quality and distinction.
Airbrush, pictorials. screen pro :Cess printing. Call aher 3;30
l'tofenional

House for rent in Middleport . 4
BR .• 2 beth. fenced In yard. large
kitchen, F.R .. formal dining
room, laundry, basemltlt. t336
plus deposit. 614-992-7177.

46 Space for Rent

.PM. 304·676-5027.

Piano lessons in your home , call
Martha Reed. 304-675-1379.

'

1\low open br bus iness, J Ill J
:G arage one mile up At. 36 from
Hender son. James Stew1rt, Ste·
wart Hollo w .
Nursing assis tant ills it elderly in
~orne, hospital. Eight-ten hour
periods, Fri thru Sunday. 304676 ~ 6967

lots. 2 car carport, 207 Fourth
St.. Malon, W. Va. 304 -8915-

3453.

North Park Drive, two bedroom.
basement, central air cond,
forced air gas heat. detached
garage. alumn siding, good
location. close to hospital. bank.
drug end grocery s tores. 304·

676 · 1999.

114-992-6298 .
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW AND USED MOBILE

HOMES KESSEL'S OUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST, GI.LLIPOLIS. RT 35.
PHONE 614-446·7274.

. . F.inancial,

1966 Budddy. 2bdr.. 12x50.

21

$2 800. Call614·446-0390.

Business
Opportunity

1982 14 ~C 70 Fleetwood. 3 bdr ..
2 baths, total electric. For more
information 614-388·8633 af·
ter 4PM .

I NOTI CE !

rHE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
)NO CO . recommen ds that you
d o busin ess with peop le you
ttnow. and NOT to send money
through the mQil until you hawe
twestigated the offe ring.
Need l!lctrl'l!l rrioney1 Friendly
home t oy parties has immediate
o~ooings
for managers and
demo nstrato rs in this area. It's
UDsY. fun and profitable , We
'h8Vf over 700 exciting toys and

9ifts featuring the n&amp;.v ani mated
talking do ll "Cricket' · which will
beaHvertlsed on national TV . No
cad1 inveatment, no collecting.
119 delivering end no nrvice
cf1 erge. All you I'Mied is 11 desire to
make money, have fun and a lew
hours of space time . No e~epe­
ri90ce ne(;essarv Call 1 -800'127-151 0.
V ery successful , unique bu,i.
nest for sale in Gallipolis. Ohio
Well established in conven ient
downtown location. No food,
liquor or ck&gt; thing. Growth and
e.11 p11nsion limited only to your
ambition . Earn a very anr active
ina&gt;me while being your own
boll. and help1ng or convnu nity.
Sond inqu ires to : B.F.S .. P.O.
BoM 1227 . Gallipolis. Oh 45631 .

1972 Freedom. Good cand., 2
bdr., 56xt4. Patio, awning.
Washer &amp; dryer. New underpin·
ning included. Call 614-246·

5B66

19 80 14x70 Kirkwood porch a
underpinning. on rented lot, 3

bd•. Ca11614· 388·9718.
3 bedroom mobile home for sale.
Ca ll 614-992-3666 .

14 x70. 3 bedroom. 2 bath .
Good condition . 88000. Will
take trade. Call614-949 -2801 .
MOBILE HOMES MOVED : in·

sured, reasonable rates, Call

304·676 -2336

1 982 Clayton , 12x60, all elctric,

exc cond. 304-676-2486.
Two trailers. 1 .2x60 each. add •
room and 10.1150. Both 2 bed·
rooms . Phone 304-896 -3062 .

33

Farms for Sale

Small ftrmfor lale3 bdr. houn,

3 bdr. trl'liler. tobacco bau. Cell

614·266 ·681 3.
Own your own $10.99 ooe price
d esigner shoe store. A retail
price un believable for quality
shoes mrma lly pr icad from S19 .
to S60 O'ler 15 0 bran d names
250 styles $14 ,300 to 525,900
inventory . training . fi xtures,
grand opening . Cnn combine
with ewer 1,000 brand• of
!pparel. acce•sorv. dancewear·
aerobic , chi ldrens shop. Can
opEil 15 days. Mr Sidney

14041262 4489
23

Profess ional
Services

Mini Farm for sale. 4acres mora
or leu. Older 1 1h story home all
now carpet. New furnace, new
roo f, satellite dish, new bath and
4 bedroom. AU farm equipment
2 tractora. with plows. disc
brush hog, blade and ICOOP
bucket. boon pole. Naw all stee1
2 car garage, new 14x1 8
building with woodburning
stove . 68 Chevy dump truck. St.
Rt 1 24 2 1h mllel from Southern
High School . •so.ooo. For more
info. Cl ll614· 949-3014 .
106 acres for sela M11on
Cou nty, mineral rights, no build·
ings. plenty of wanter. 304-937-

2726.

Water wells serviced and dr illed,
free es timates . Ca ll 614-992·
5006 01614 -742· 3147 .

Real
31

Estate

8usiness
Buildings

34

749 Third Ave. 1600 sq. ft .
Comme rcial or warehouu.
Parking on side. Adj.teent to
third &amp;. Pine St. Call 814-448·
2362 tor appoinement.

Homes for S a le

3 bdr . home. c lose to town . 2
bsthl, partly furnished . Gl!ls
heat, low utilities . Call 6 14 -245 ·

9248 .
2 -3 bdr . hou1e. storn1 windows.
garage. Green School di strict,
•19,000. Ca11614·446 -2026or
Woodl Agency.

For Sale: 60M90 ft. commerci al
zoned building . Brick connruc·
l io n. large garage doors, South
Fifth Ave. Middleport. Phone

6113 . 6 14-992-2026 evening s
Fire damaged building. 609
Main St.. Poin t Pl eaunt , 304-

Quality home. newly remodeled

6 roo m hou s e. 1 .2 acres. Double
car garage. locatlld on Rose Hill.
Bargain priced 820,000. Call

61 4- 678 · 2~ 13 .
Reedlvllle, by owner. Two for
the price of one. 2 bed!oom1.
llwlng. dining room, kitchen,
bath with extre room . All fully
clf'Peted. Large porch, fenced
ytrd with 11till"e T.V. Alto
ap~ttment

which includes

614-378·6166 .
GoVernment homes from 11.1u
repair). Delinquent tax property.
Repotllltlons. Call BOB-887·
OOOO Ex:t . H·9806 for cu rrent
repo lilt.
3 large bedrooml. 1V:t bath, XL
living room. XL kitchen , utility
room, gar1ge. Arbaugh Addh~n

in Tupparl Plains . Calll14· 117·

8239 .
3

4 bedroom home on 12
i1 Po,.roy. City wlter,
na1ur1l gat, FH furnace. gardtn
apeoe and lots of woodt.
Of'
ICrH

1 1o.epo. 614-992-2633.

For Nle bY owntt, 1'15 lnri_G
Ave 3 Of 4 bdr. 2 baths. N.W

klt c'h~tn ClbiRitl . 0·~~¥!:
wdon 119 o~ wHIIin w j;J
1111... to Oolllpolll och:::8
ahopplng. Cell614-24~·
·
~

8o

Acreage

120 acral 1 mi. from court·
hou se . Call614-446·2991 after

and houses in
Pomeroy area. Deposit required.

Apartmenh

Pay own utilities . 1-614-992 ·
2381 days.
3 bedroom home in Che1ter.
Prefer older couple. 8200 . plus
security and utiliti•. Serious
calli only . Call 614-992-7262

'

2 bedroomt, full dry basement

Un coin Awe., 3 bedrooms, tuM
dry basement lincoln Ave.. 3
bedrooms new house, full dry
biJement Mt. Vernon Awt .. 11

exc cond, well insulated low fuel
billa. Rent starting *2715 .00,
reference required. 304-87&amp;1962 or 676-4680.

Cottage, 2 rooma and b1th,
turnithed . utiliti• paid, 166.00
week . 304-875 · 3100 or 876·

6609.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Trailara 'ror rent. Aircond.. ~~:ebfa,
beautitul river ~t~iew , Kanauga.
Foster's Mobile Home P~rk .

6,. ·446· 1602 .

2 bdr., fum ., new carpet, AC , in
Gallipolis. C1ll 614·446·1409.
12x50 edge ol town deposit, no
pcrtt, 8UO mo .• p1rtielty furnithed, patio. Clll 614-4467369 or 614-446-7124 .

3 bedroom doubl e wide. 3 mil•
out of Pomeroy on AI. 143
Garage and large yard. P1rtially
furnit hed . 61 4 ·992-7401 .

2 bedroom. In TuppMI Pllins.

1175 per month plu s utilities.
Call 614-667-3487.
Tr11iler for rent in Syr~uae . Can
614-992 -2728 . Must have

11ppointment.

Two 2·bed room mobile home1,
2 miles out Additon-Bulaville
Road . G11 heat, no pets, UOO.
plus utilities. security deposit
requ ired. 814 -448-9646.

2 b9droom trailer , furnished,
fanc9d in yard, garagut Gallipolis Ferry. No calls tfter 8:00PM.
deposit. 304-676-4044 or 4681781 .
'

44

Apartment
for Rent

1 and 2 bch . apts. for rent . Basic
rent far 1 bdr. 1176. Basic rlflt
tor 2 bdr. 1212 . Also 1200 sac.
dep. req _Close to Foodl ..d and
Spring Valley Plaza . J1cltaon
Estate Apartments , 814· 4413997 . Equal Housing
Opportunity.

Fum . gar~e apt .. 1 bdr .. 1236,
utilitiet Plid. 29"h Neil Ave ..
G111tpoli•. Call 446-4416 afttr

Furn . 4 roo !Til • blth ct .... No
aduh1 only. Rtf. • dep.

.-t•.
ooquired. Coll814·441·1118.

Regency Inc. apartment 2 bdr.,
utililiel p1rtty p8id, nice. Call

304·176·1104 ..
7926.

1 to 2 acrM, Green School Dl1t.
or rHI nice home. Cell614-446·
4307 evening•.

304 ~ 676 -

2 bdr. 2 baths, kltchiP fur·

niohed, 11 Coun St. U21 PI&lt;

mo. plus utlllti11, rlferen01 •

dopolh. CoM 814·441·4121.

Renliil s

1 bldroom apt. torr rent. 8etlc
rent nan• •211. • month that
ktcludtt 111 utiNtltl. Oepoalt
requir4d of •200. Contact VII·

-=--;;;::-:=::--.:::-;;=;- 1111111 M- Ao1. Mlddlopon.
41

Houan for Rent

Large, apacloul 2 bdr., Wlndlor,
2 blth. dtnlngroom. convenient

locotlon on At . 7. Con 614·245·
1818.
Duplu:

tof.

rent 646 Second

676·4044 0&lt; 304•468·1781
49

•a.ll· l.llpc.

2. 4.118JI% mMOnite und..-11\'·
ment •2.99 ee. 4r4 11 .00 ••·

4. 4x8xY• and 15· 11tht wood
pMeUng woodgrlln 1nd prints

For leua large unfurnished 1st
floor 6 room apt. adjtc:ent city
p1rk, 1 11.1 beth1, t 326 par mo.
plut utilities. Reference~ &amp;
deposit reQuired. Clll614-448·

lf4-H2-ne7. Equol Houoino
Opponunl1y.
2 I:Nir, Nayton Run,

noo ·dopooh. yord,
plllo. ~oil otter lpm 814·812·
1111.

Avo.. Oolllpollo. 3 bdr. llvln·
groom, dinlngroom. new kit·
chi!", b.c:lcyard. refrlg. • .""P
131 (I pluo ulllhloa lo ....,rlly
dopooh . Con 114-441-otiO.

1• bl«oom lpt. in Porrwoy.
co....,~e~o~y - • ldtah.,
fum- . AN t OM NQo. 114812·1211 or 114-182·7314.

112 Third Ave. 2 bdr. 8t.,.. I
rlfrlt, fumllhld . 1210 month.
171 dopool1. Wotor lumlohld.
Calll14·441-3870.

110&lt;1· UnfUmlohod. f 119. •pit

1 bodroomOIN!rtiNIIIIIIII!Iddl•

""'""'
p1uodoyo
114112·
1141
ond· con
114-841·
221 hvonlrigo.
'

cAPTAIN EASY

n.R - d 14.95.

5 . 4xB~eiA blandex water ~erd
exterior glued T plual•9.9&amp; 11.
B. Wood. thermal ptln bow
picture wlndowt 15xl *248.

t.

·1871 Hondo ea ~eo
uoo.oo. 010. 304-PI·mS.

trence door •et'l with 'Y.r glnl

1380.

8 . Double 1ide light door 11ts
with 1fl91ul intulat• 1350.
9 . Double commercl•l antranc.
door sat' s bronz tluminum

•••

10.
6 or 8set,
panel
JtHI inaullt.:l
•&amp;99.95
tingl•
1399.00
prlhung door~ *89.915.
11 . Steel pooltung ln..,lotld
doors 1nd ieml 1 'h hr. fire n.
•189.95.

~~~~~~~~;~~r,~;;~~~~~~~
66

Building Supplies

12. Sewer 1nd drain pipe oblO

PVC preterated 82.99 ea.

13. 6' picnic table 2 benc:htl
made from 2x4.118 redwood

otolnld U9.95 .
14 . '.II T plu1 8 preflnlthed bruce
oak floor random length bundl•
176 tq .ft.
16. Brown 28x60 rock teee
h'ailer underpin aecondt U,99

•••

shower combination secondl
$169.96 to ·$179.96.
17.17x18whhegoldvenltytnd
marble top 139.915.
18. Wood trend't mort aeeondt

16 lho I 10 lite U9.95 .

19. 7 pc:. wood preflnleh• vinyl
wrap door trim •1.00 ea.
20. Solid ollk and brus towl._r
let 4 pc: .. *19 .96 el .
21 . Temperld thermal pane
glaullftx32x71 829.96 " ·
22. Oetogon tiffany lud gleu
window •49.96 e1. (24).
23. lnMIIeted ltHI doors blenkt
secondt
24.

•ze.oo ...

2~e4xV.

acuttical ceiling tile

embo1Hd tlreflted 12 .29 a1.
25. 6 pc. high gl•• bath tub kits
with shelves 129.915 .
26. Coal 1nd wood fireplace
stove eheet et"l 869.96 Of 2 for
1100
27. 8118 indoor or out door o.zita
carpet tile rubber back 4 cents to
8 cents ea.
28. Prefinished 4.118x 1.1'4 maonile
peg board •&amp;.96 and 19.96 ..
Penn W1rlhoua. Wellston. Oh
AM·FM tumtlblec••ette Pane·
sonic ttere with 2 speekert.

•100. Colll14·367-n81.

Pole Building• by Quelity
Builders. Worttehops, cerports.
•nimll thehers, gtragea. Fr"
e1tim1te1 . Phone 814- 889-

7121.

n...

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Waeher1. dryers, refrigerator•,
r1ng11 . Skaggs Appliance•.
Upp• ANer Rd . belide Stone
Crest Motel. 614 -446·7398 .

Sofes and chain priced from

f395 to

•&amp;~6.

Tobl• 060 ond

up to 812 • . Hide·•·beds 8390
to t595 . ReeiW.era 1226 to
1376. L•mp• 128 to 8126 .
Oinett• *109 and up to 8496.
Wood llble w -8 d\aira 1281S to
•796 . Deok •too up to 1376,
Hutehel •400 and up. Bunk
bedt complete w·manrntes
t296andupto •396. Bebybeds

For s•le good ueed floor and
portlble color TV . Call814-448-

1149.

OE dllhwuher harvnt gold very
good cond. Ooubl11telnlwa1i'lk
whh teuceta, garbage
1hnott new 'A HP. Q.E . .-,ted
ahlult ttave fan hlrvllt: g61d
very good condhlon , honrhe
ironer like new. whhecomrnodl.

d••••

Coli 11 4·317· 7117.

·

fuuo Z·21

C.............,.

I.,..._

114-181·3837- 1:00.

84 Chovono 4 oyl.. 2 ·I
puppioa. Coli 61 4·448· •44 IPd.. AM·FM a•Htto. low
"'loogo. Coli 61 4·448·01 37
lftar 7PM.
oltar 6PM.

Reg . English Setter puppi• 7
WHkl old with papers. 4 F &amp; &amp; M 1984 Chevy Cavall• 1lat:ion
101M tri colored. 8715. M•v ba wtgon. rurw engine wtth only
seen at At. t Ewington or call 15.000 mil•. very good condl,

114 · 388 · 8132 . Qoorge •4.200. Cal 814·241·11401
614· 441· 0212 .
Twyman

3 yNr old, AKC registlt'.t, Red.
male Chow Chow, excellent
P•P••· 28 chempion• In pedigree, call after 6;00, 304·17&amp;·

8799.

SALE

FOR

-

Weimaraner

puppy, AKC Registered, tamale.
shots and wormed, 304· 937-

01

whoe!l .llld·:·*-, Ctl1

It

IBM DodgoChoovor 2.2 ...,..
motic, P8, P8, good tlroo. Col
8141378-272..
..,
1971 Dodgo Colt wogon, - ·
polnL bon.-y, - · t~.
rebuilt .,glne, w11 11.700 now
11.500. 4cyi .. IIPd, lotoofp-...
ol .... C.lle14·448·7281
1881 Mu11ong PS. Pl. AC,
tinted zl•s, ••• oondldon.

Coli 61 ·3157·0194.

Registered male Pit BuN Terrief,

81 Chrytl• Luer blue, ea.
cond., air cond., rNr detroit, I

AKC register.:l Beegles, 2 fe·
male, 2 mal•. 3 n19ntha old.
ahott and wormed, 1715.00.

0829.

1....,o1o. 071. Coli 114·881·
11,.,

Will,...,. 2a tt. """'

A· 1 ohopo.. 11000. 114·141·

2234.

('lOW ~I:Mf:Mi"ER,

DISARMAMENT
CONFERENCE
•

.

/

&gt;

Ludw'6g Snare Drum and

Call614·256-6211.

4113.

Girlt 261nch 10 tpeed bous#tt in
April 840,
portable B&amp;W
N uc. cond. with lt8nd U5 .
Ctn be seen •t &amp;36 J1ckton
Ettatas BB-8 1nytime.

S•••

14,000 BTU •lr cond., good
cond .. •140. Inquire It 808
Scott Lene. Northup, Oh .

Locutt potts

a

rabbits. Call

Nearly new Oettarsheepthearer
•s&amp;. See at 1824 Elltem Ave ..
Gallipolie, Oh.
Salol 60 percent oft! Flashing
arrow sign •289 1 Ughted , non·
anow 82691 Nonllghted 12291
Free letters! Few lah. See
to c ahy . 1(800}423·0163 .
anytime.

ct••·

Vory good oond. 111.00. 304·
888·3690.

68

Aug. 21. Thursdey, 1 :00 public
bkt1 will be taken on following
marchll'ldt,e. 1 Julent ••eo
wi1h apHker. 1 Bundy tN...,It.
At Crldlthrih of Ameri_cltn,
1312 E•ttam Ave for more
inform•tion . Call 114-441 -

614-266-1902

Pi1no and bendt •20.00. 304·

Fruit

&amp; Vegetables

814· 248·11084.
U.S. No. 1 potato• 10 lb
e1 .00. Fenn Market Rt. 3&amp;. 1
mil• wes1 Spring Vallev ehop·
ping center.

tom•to•. 84 bu1hel

plokod. t3 you pick. Bring
conlainer. Mershlll Ad1m1, Le·
tart F1ll1, Oh. 814-247-20155.
Yellow FrH Stone Canning
Peech• now IIYalleble. Call tor
pric11 and w•rletiet. Bob' s
M•rket. Maton, W. V1 . 304·

n3·6721 . Opon 7 doyo.

C1nninu

tomatoes

304-871·3308 .

tor

ule.

dollvorod. 304-896 ·3590.

S ii ppllw

~ L:v1:~t11d

14,000 BTU with btower. 17!.

Uold 2 montho. Coli 114·982·
2~17 .

Adm~ol

8·W TV. •10 .

AM ·FM 8 track llerto player,

810.

Antique

pi1no,

1300.

Phllco copplrrtOne r.trlg..-ator·

freezer . 176. Admiral copper·
tona tide by 1kt1 refriger110r
freezer, 126. Call 1514· 992·

6539.

Four 14 ind'l Chewy wheel• wfth
Monte Carlo hubctpl, •40 . Two

15 lndl Chovy whoolo. 111 ..
baby hlioh ....... u~ . ond
C:lf· telt, •11. C1ll 114-992·
6116 .
79 Ford 4x4 wheel drive. lA ~n .

81

Farm Equipment

M...., f"'UIOn, NJ¥11 Hollen d.
8Uih Hog Sal•. IIR'h:ti. Over
40 used trltCtorato dtoouftom
&amp; C0"91Me lint of n..UHd
equlpnwnt. Lergeet telection In

a

S.E. Ohio.

JIM ' S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER . 1R 31 W. QollpoUo.
Ohio. Coli 114-446-8777, ovo.
114·445·3692. Up front •oo·
tort wtth werranty.OVIf 71 ueed
trlletofl. 1000 taoll.

160 lntamltk)nal tractor, Far·
mal wide front end oornmerical
lo.:ler, 4plow•. 2rowno-tilcorn
plenter. 40 foot etw1tor, 1 old
com picker, trtntpOrt disc ..
mowmg m1ct11ne; llltr• dull
wheels, 1171 GMC Dump

Weed tatlt' and bruefl cutter.
Mlde b¥ Troy Bulh. Ptid 1310
•k 1200. Uted 1 eummer.

Farm wtgOn, 1 row toblcco
bulh hog . .,..,.... bot·
taw plows, hy rake, hev be..,,
com t**•, 4 row com plentlf,
dllc, mowlne m1Chi1•. Call

ftoof furntce for •le. Cel

814-812-3821.

lmprovt~~~~anh
' .,

ONEWHOCAN
DO THAT IIET1'ER
THAN N.L£Yr

:'1'

1

~Jtlrior,

7314 nlghto.

1887 Chovy NoYO, 4 dooo. outo.

lettlf,

EEK &amp; MEEK

rally wheell, I cyl. Call 114·

182·111911tori:OO p.m.

A BUIJD ~~
LAST MGHT

For Nlo: 1981 lluo Dodao

rr

lA£ PAD t:&gt; HWG:
· IT A~~UW.D !

Chtreer 5 IPMd owrdrlvt,
32,000 mil•. ElC811.m: condl-

tlon. Mi200. Cell 814•982·
%728 .
1979 Eld•ldo, 811 •v1H ...1
opdan, •a.aoo.oo ( I ben offer,

304-f76· 3841 .

FottY T- T..._., .........

- o l. Col 304-IJI-1331 .
"'
RINQUI'I IIRVICI, up•

-

rfenOid . , . . , .( • .........

tpMd, air lnd .redio, front whllt
drive, 11.1100 ct · No

...... 304-878·4140 lfld 1 -

........,. _,. ~­
304-

lng hot 18r lpt~ll

don)

171·2011 .. 171·'7381.

1 - T.0. ond l.-.ro ......._
~-....... 304-178·:1010.

1890 luldl lkyl... 4 - ·
*1oto0. NHCI tranlmit;lion ,..
,..,. Col 304-871· 1213.

Rotari ·or - - .........
~_...aon._tlltdiMie..,.
,.,. . ~ ..... ......... J04.

,.71 MQI.-topiiiiOd-d.
u.ooo.oo. 1171 zn c .......
T : top , 49 . 000 mlloo ,
13.000.00. 304·871-1113 .

. .,.'1102'
.

.

'·

1181 Ford E-rt. llllht·-

'17 Cutl•• Supreme. Midi
_ ..... 304-871-124,1.
18n Gron4 Prix,

cond , 1nd ._.,
lincoln An., Poi'lt

Truckl for

AMANWHOI5A
KABITLI&lt;'.L CI&lt;IMINAL
1501-L~~

82

Plumbing

It H•tlng

CARTIR'I I'UIMIING
ANDHIATWG
. cor. F011rt1&gt; ono1 Pint
G......_ Ohio .
Pltono 814-oMI·HII or 114441·44" '

83

opd.,

brown -

Dlta~n

LOLJ1!:'4 RATSO':i

IR).
(() MOVIE: "They Only Kill
ThelrM_,..
(!]) Natlon1l Geographic
Speolel: RHim of the All~
gltOr (CC) The Okefenokee
1wemp, holt to many ani·
malt, it 1he domain of tho
alligator. 180 min.)
tO:OO (JJ • (() Arthur Halley'o
Hot.! (CCI Chrittina IC·
of 1 prominent buslnoas·
man while 1 famous ac-

tru•· daughter writet a
scathing account of her

BARNEY
Excavating

childhood with the star.
(80 min.) (R).

" .
I KEEP FERGITTIN'
TO PUT UP MV SiGN
DOWN BY WilLER
CREEl&lt;

Sale

e&lt;DSOIP

(!]) Nov1: RI1Um of the O•

prey The o1prey w11 a vir·
1ually extinct bird of prey
b1fore the rtllont behind
it. population decline were
brought to ligh1. (80 min .)

....,..

fibqiMit-. Collt14·3117·
0394.
M

LEFTY~ SPIKe";M~Y"?

ceptl the engagement ring

1112 Dodgo PU lltht duty, 221
4

AND WINTHROP

:2

10.000 ...... 02.000.00. 304·
8112· 3171.

72

MORT¥ MEEKLE

00'101-1 KNCMI WHAT

1813 lui'* C.,try, 4 - · VI
30 Iiiio ""too, AC, Pl. tilt

doon, 4 ayl, 4 . . .. ... -

Clyde'

(JJ MuNei~Lahrer NtWih·
our
llD.I!llMOVIE: "Sophle'o
Choice'
(!]) N811onal Ologrtphlc
Speol1l: Ch-fllllkellome
iCC) The Cheupeoka Bey
and tho people who live on
ill ohoroo areleatured. (80
min.)
9 The Thorn Blrdl Batod
on tho novel by Colleen
McCullough, this story
epano thrtt generetiona of
a wealthy Auetrailian familv end centers on the for·
bidden love of a beautiful
woman and an ambitious
priett. (2 hrl.) Pert 2 of 5.
8:01 (() MOVIE: 'Okllhome
Crude'
Weblter (CC)
B:30 (JJ
McGrull tho crim•figh1ing
dog helpo Webtter come
to gripo with his lear of 1he
ochool bully.
1:00 (]) 700 Club
(]) Bowling: PBA Keatler
Open From Dublin. CA. (2
hro.)
(JJ • (() M10Gyver (CC)
MacGyver pleceo his lila
on the line when he is im·
pritoned in an effort to
help a woman's convicted
brotlter eacape. (80 min.)

e (()

truoll Nftl pel

1290. Colll14·441·4171.

.'
811

I)JNIWto

Ganwal Hiuling

KEELCH

, ••• ,;[,1

72 ford PU Nno _ , j, ooocl
body. 11,000. Col 814·211·
1281.

11:00

114·843·2103.

I MAll-

ORDERED
FOURL.IM&amp;S
F~MYOUR

COMPANY

V

LETTERS IN SQUARES

A

UNSCRAMBLE
ANSWER

V

FORI

YEmiDAY'S SCIAM·IITS ANSWERS
Knotty - Queeil - Drawl - Modify - YOU DO
Politicians ahould leem that tact Is the art of convincing peo-

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

.,

The cue-bid
told all

NORTH

• 976 2

• 10 72
.AKQ65

By Jllllft Jacoby

EAST
The Michaels cue-bid usually sllows WEST
.K4
five cards in both major suits when ! • Q J 8 5 3
'J82
used over an o~nent's minor suit · • K Q 10 6 3
tJ9~ 3
opeaiog. In today s dell the use of the t K
.J972
8
4
bld impelled South lnlo a precarious •
contract that was made with an over·
SOl!TH
Irick because of the information given
• A 10
.A97i
by the opposing bidding.
tAQB64
South sllould bave passed three ,
•10 s
cluba. Wben bls three-diamond bid was I
railed to four, however, it was OK to
Vulnerable: Botb
10 oa to five, IJid declarer justified lbe
Dealer: North
blddiuc by the play. South considered
North Eul
It likely that West held a singlelon dia· w..t
Pass
Pa98
mood. To Jllllrd against that card bePass
lac the king, he tabled the diamond 2 •
4t
Pus
ace at trick two. Next be played A·K-Q : Pass
Pass
Pa98
of cluba, wblle shedding a spade, and Pass

3.

ruffed a club. He now look the spade
ace, ruffed a heart in dummy, and
ruffed a spade in bls band. Wben he
ruffed another heart witb dummy's
tnunp 10, loe was left with the Q-8 of
diamonds IJid a lollng he,art. East was
bolclintl the J-i-5 of diamoads. Wben a
black card wu played. East could ruff
with the five, in which cue declarer
would acore the el&amp;bt. U East trumped
ill with the nine, declarer would Blmply shed bls bwt, leavilla the.Q-8 of

diamonds lo make two tricks over
East's jack and five. Note that lf
West'ssingleton di811l011d bad not been
tbe king, the play would go the same
way, but declarer would now make
OGiy lllrl~

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I Actress
I Without
Janicr
experiE' nrf'
2 Swiss
5 Edged
10 Parched
cani.On
with heal
3 All one's
II Football
days
pass
4 Noble (t;er.l
12 Nora
5 Seedlik e
body
Charles.
1.0 Nick
6 Concealed 22 Vocalize
13 Up till now 7 USSR
24 Manumit
14 Elsie's mal&lt;' inland SPa 25 Heavy blow
16 Grassy plot 8 EvaluaiR
(sl )
17 Ran into
9 Entreaty
26 llalian
t9 Russian
II Harsh
ri ve r
rity
15 De batahl&lt;• 28 lnsin&lt;·erc
21 CompleLP 17 Slipper
oalk
accord
18 Oklahoma 30 "Love in
23 College
city
Bloom" man
in N C.
20 Tragic king 32 Memorize
27 Capacity
28 "Alfie"
soar
29'Early
garden
30 The I.OWn
"cut-up'"
31 Secluded
valley
33 Memorable
period
34 Light brown
37 Join In
391ndlli·
dually
run
41 - bank
44 Religious
beads
non
46 Made
or cereal
47 Boundary

34 Corrida
bea•l
35 Celebes
ox
36 Hotbed
38 llutch
cheese
40 Daisy Scraggs
42 Tyke
43 Copy

J.r+-+-t-t-

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
!)JIOfltrOphes, lhe length and formation ri the wo~ds are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CKYPI'OQUOTE
8·20

@Soap

ID hot of Clroon
Tonlght't
gueltl
a"
Buddy Hicken, Honi Colli
1nd lpelling btt chomp
Balu Netorejan. 180 min.) !
In S1ereo.
lum1 It Allen
i\

11:30 • ·(I)

I

L----------~

for .lhe

(!]) Home F - Return of
the Blld Elgie

IPGrtiCintlr

Opening lead: • K

~f'!MA 'tJtta/

l

i

Complete the chuckle quoted

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

(l)CIJ.CIJIJJIII(!JI
NIWto
(]) 1111 Colby 8how

()) Amerloa"o Cup ChalllngeOownunder
~ ~ Con1MC11on

lnternltlnel chopp• wtth both

I8

DAILY CRYPI'OQVOI'ES- Here'• bow lo work It:

10: 11 (() MOVIE: 'Montanl"
10:30 (J) Anllrican Snipeho11
(lJINN Newa

CanoP earrl•, 130; que• Me

-If

~ i::IDO!t.JG 1
WA~ SO BAD...

1\WJTOOTOO

1874 VW Supor - ·· Oood
oondi11an. 1811 . .Colll14· 742·
2121 momlnp ct -lngl.

Ill••

Truck, UIOO. Coli 614· 381·
1300.

Gas

... .t.NP I CAN'T
THIIIIK OF AN'f·

H~

ttem. AlitO..-., MW
•Din•.
inMrtor. lte.
114· 182· 1384 doyo. 814·•2·

CROSS I SONS
wheel, Front whMI ch'h!'e.
U.S . 31 W•t. Jtck10n , Ohio. nM. 34.000 mil•. t l . -.00
61 4· 216-8481 .
firm. 1· 304·112·2147 ..

.4000 . 080 . 79 OdyiiOY
Hondo, 1800. Dltdl WMdl Rood
Bunch 111d .c:cetiOriM. 14500.
Coli 614·941·2283 ovonlnp.

614·948·301 • .

81

1871 Corvllto. t7,000 ntl... 4
. . A"'lng MOOO. Coli 814oftori:OO.

mlllegl ~ mechinl.

f .1r 111

(JJ • Cll PerfMt S1ronge"
(CCI Bllki eelobrates his
new checking account by
buying Larry a gift- with a
check that bouncot. (R).
• (lJ MOVIE: 'Bonnie and

.

tion. Coll814·182·3242.

'84 Ctvaller wagon. 4 cyL I

Red pot1to•. l&amp;.eo per &amp;O lb

11,000 BTU, •40 .; other

min.J

1918 M.G.B.Q.T. C001j&gt;o. Col·"

Red reebeni•. TIVIo,. Beny
Patdl . C1l 814·441· 8892 or

C1nning

. , ..

74 Ctmaro 1.200 good condl·

lector~

2 Kero11ne Hauera . One

•10.

1984 Chryolor 6th A - low
mlluge, c...n. one own.,.,
10,000 firm. Coli 114·318·
5771.

• v

ple that they know more than YOU DO.

(J) Jeopenly

•(l)Texl
• (() (JJ WhHI of Fortune
(() Up Pompelil
())I En-lnment Tonl0h1 ET goet on location
In lereel with Fred Dryer for
the meking of his upcom·
ing film, " Deeth Before
Diahonor".
1Bi Allol
(jJI Jeop~nly
7:31 (I) Sl~ford and Son
1:00 • (I) (jJI Major LHgue
111111111~ New York Me11
a1 1.01 A. . . . (3 hrt.)
(])Born FNI
(1)8uperbau11 Aaron Pryor
vt. Alexlo Arguello (Miami,
November. 1 982). (80

114-446·3170.

3 :00PM.
Full lire boll apringt &amp; mettrua
firm. Like nii'N, onty 2 months
old . Coat 1800willsell tor S400.

LAY OFF THE!"f\IU~E • NUFI:" &amp;JOfCE$ f
••

1980 Plymouth Horizon. C1ft
,14-446· 7142 .
top, good cand. •1100. Call

Musical
Instruments

j

.&amp;\ PRINT NUMBERED

e

FRANK AND ERNIE

opd. 19.000. Coli 814·317-

304-57e-2394 .

16

I.

•
•
•
•
•
by tdl ing in th e missing words
L-.....1-...L.-JL-...L-.._....J you develop from step N o. J below

(I) NFL Fllmt

Tr"ck Clmper. ·Very . ·alan.
81oopo 1. Muot 0111. 71 Chevy

•••

I

0.1111

Camper~

73 Torry - · II ft. AC,
..."'"•· good
Colll14·441o717J.
.
' .,

I. I:~.·

D0 0 V I

1--~~?rilr,,'i:e-li'""'TI-1

.cas

7:08 . (I) Green Acres
7:30 • (I) (() New Newlywod

M~~~~ Home•
-d.. u.ooo.

3302

2 VII old. 304·171· 24 71.

79

It

CTIWH

(JJ Nlgh11y Bualnen Report
&lt;mNewa
(!]) MuNIIHehrer Newsh·
our
el!ll Divorce Court
(jJI WKRP In Clncinneti
(jJI Wltell of Fortune

Oroy ........ loo . . . 'CIII1 114-

Slam•• kittens. AKC Chow

9 mo. old tong haired Chihuahua
female. Ctll614·268· 1911 .

•

. 982•f717.

~

I

• &lt;D Hog111'1 Heroeo

lftd

0 A RB NY

After watching a troupe of
trained
dogs, my uncle an ·
5
. •
.
nouncad, "My dog cculd do 1hose
1ricks; it's just that he doesn't - ·
, . . - - - - - - - - - , to-."

(JJ EnMrUinment Tonight
ET goes on loca1ion in lsr'tlol with Frod Dryer for 1he
mlklng of his upcoming
film, '"Death Before Dish·
onor".

't..,.m.loion.

3 • - pooto.
ond tlrol.. Chfi'Y
trudllor
four

holdo. lntomotlonol • 2
ollogo wogon•. Con 11 4·381·
hld·•bld 1200. Phone 304· 870111ftar 8PM.
875·2287.
Young bulla llmmontol • ...,.
304·176·1413 .. 876· 1410.
881ell 150 Ptf cent oflll FIMhlnl lord. Blrld by IUI-IIgnol. Wo
arrow llan 128811 llthted. non· hwe one r.4 and one ~ blood.
lfiOW 02111 Nonlliohtld 022111
boollono hood bul,ll, totromoly
FrM ltttlf'lll F.W teft. IN _,..,, Rlldy lor fol oorvlco.
63
Antiques
locolly . 1(1001423· 0113,
- · · ..... lt4-211·1402.
enytlme.
2000 t o - 11 ._ ..
OLO ORIENTAL RUQS McDeniel Cultom Butchering . ...., I ono llolktg box. Col
WANTED. Any llzaorcondhlon, Op• fpr bue'n-. I dtyt 1 814-21.. 1,111.
WHI&lt;. 304-112•3221.
Coli tolllooe 1·100·433· 7847 .
D - 380 dolor. In good
Quilt 101&gt;1. 7 tolll. ollloo 1141. John
oondhlon. Coli 11 4·•2· 7401 .
. . . . .toly. 121 · 304-871·
1311.
380 Jchfl 0... ••· I wov
Cut Iron bath tub on IJII, vt1y blldo wlllllh, Go0!1 ..- n. .
. 114·141·21.21 ~· ....
flOOd 09nd, 304-JI2·2771.
PIMtlc cletem l'llte IPPIOvid,
NIWH-d417...,.,..o.,_r.
ploollli ooptlo lonlto. p l _ , 1210 ........
c~o.to. mtlll culnrto. RON . 66 Qullding Suppllea
-H-d717'7'-~o·EVANS ENT1!11PRIIEI. Jock·
tor. AM good ilond.
·273·
oon. Oh. 814-211·1130.
'
.
.
4211.
Bulldlllt:rltlolo .
lkJdl,
pip-. Will·
- .. lntoll..... Claodo Will·
toro, Rio Orondo. Ci. Con 114·
241·1121 .
t'ICIIena una f"urn•ture. .;Ooo
quality • • fumtture. Opan 9to
I or call for appointment.

31 I Englllo ·ond

Dr~gonwynd Cattery K.nnel.
CFA Hlmal~yan, Pereien Md

882-2062 .

Two 1t1ge 1ervioe Jtatlon type
air co~riiMJr . 814· 892·8384
drts. 814· 992· 7354 nights.

•100. Coll614-446 ·2470 .

Au~o Parte
It A~.-q"-"

78

buck rlbbltl. HorN Reg. 8tancl- Very good conMion. Eatra
•d breed. I ODt•. 4 1hohe 4'h ...11mllliDft 'for :111 ' qlne.
month old. 4 large bnlde aow&amp; · 61 4'882· 72...

Pets for Sale

Remington 870 full choke barrel
•200. Artley flute like nww
1260. C811614· 44G-9744 lfttr

U•td Furniture; W11har &amp;
dryer. eleetric range, wood

Like new- counter top built ft
elec. stove Amana 1260. 17 cu.
ft. Gibson refrkltralor oopperton

12 mixed hint •1 .11 ac:h. 10
, . . &lt;Ndlo f3 .00 oo. I doo •

Coli 5t4-2111-1108.

66

67

1972 Ford LTD. No tranlmlt·
tion, *76. Sofa. 110. lowe seat.
110. Chelr. t10. Seml·entlque
rocking chM whh ottoman.

a

Livestock

the

,..;...;1r-:-1.;:-:.IT.--11·

(]) Spor18Cen1er

1979 Dodga ,...,.,. 4 dr.. Ylnol

1110 • 81711 . Mattrftlu or box
tprlngt full or twin tel , firm
173, tnd •&amp;3. Queeneft'l• 1226.
King uso. 4 dr~er dt•t •e6.
DrMsers 189 . Gun ubinets 8.
10. &amp; 12 gun. G11 or electric:
r~nge 137&amp;. Baby mattrlltlt
836 &amp; •4&amp; . Bed fram• 120.
830 • King fr1ma 160. Good
eeleetion of bedroom suIt as.
metal e~binett. helclbolrdsl30
and up to 186.

table 2 bencftet. beds.
dreuer. • recliner. 3 miles out
Bul.... llla Rd. Open 9AM to
&amp;PM, Mon. lhN Sat.
6t4-440-0322 .

63

!·

I~~

(JJ RIHing R1lnbaw (CCI
(!]) Living With Anlmelo
•
&lt;1J1 0,. DIY It I Time
1:011 (JJ Fllher Knowo Bla1
8:30 • (I) (Ill NBC News
(]) The Alflaman
(I) ln.cde the PGA Tour (AI
(JJ • ([) ABC Newo
(JJ lloclolr Who
tD
Newt
(!]) Body EIIC1rlc
IBI Weloome Back. Kotter
·1:311 (I) Oomll' Pyle, USMC
7:00 • (I) PM Mqazlna
(J) Man from U.N.C.L.E

:m •

M e rcho11111se

01/we St., O•lllpollt. New &amp; usld
wood·coelatov.., 6 pc wood LA
suite 1399. bunk beds •199,
1ntron n~clinen t99, naw &amp;
used bed~~ ..
rang11.
wringer we.herl, 6 tho•. New
INingroom tultet •1 99-1699.
1emp1. alto buying coli &amp; wood
ltovea. can 61-4· 448 · 3169 .

THEY'RE 8RINGING U!&gt;

MORE FOOD, CH

7. Double otetl lnoulot_. on·

1819.

51 Household Goods

,

lentrs of

four scrambled words below to form four simple words

• (lJ lhlr TNk

aaaondl •3.98.

~eorrange

•

(])OreenAcr•

3 . 4x8111 14 ltvtn ptywood II. 98

WOlD
IAMI

----~- ldltod ~y CLAY I. ,OILAN - - - - - -

(I) Mlld1 SporULook

1econdt.

set: \\&lt;1\\lJ- ~ t.~s~~

fliT HILT
PUIILII

EVENINg
1:00 • (I) Cll • Cll &lt;m . , ())I
(!JI Nawa

1. 4a8 end 4xlx7· 11thl atuc·
cote muonHesidmg or paneling

18.95 ond

•

8/20/88

.

Second't · CloiiOUtl· Suplut.
•eoond"s

"

WEDNESDAY

•1 I .HI. 4 bdo.. 2 O.th.

614·384·3646.

Countv Appliance, Inc. Good
· uted applianen and TV sets.
14x70 Bayview 2 bdr., unfur- Open BAM to &amp;PM . Mon thru
nished. werynice. locatld 2 mil• Sit 1514·446 ·1699, 627 3rd.
hom G111ipolis, priv11e lot . Awe. Gllllpolit. OH .
Adultt only, no pets. 1260 mo .
Coli 61 4·446· 2300.
'Jelley Furniture, ne~N &amp; used .
large IIGtion of ~11ity furni2 bdr. trailer tumlthed , quite ture . 1218 Eastern Ave .,
ma"ied couple . 6 minute• from Gellipolls.
town . For information ean 614·
446·4063.
LAYNE ' S FURNITURE

2 bdr. unfurniahed 1pt. in Crown
City. Call614· 26&amp;· 8520.

Real Estate
Wanted

Trailer k&gt;t for rent at Gallipolis
Ferry. well water. $75 .00. 304-

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62

Alhton building lou with pubtic
water, mobile homes permitted.
304 - 676 - 2316 or 304·1576 -

36

COUNTFIY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33. North of Pomeroy.
large Iota. Clll614-992 -7479.

1080

8pm .

2287.

For rent large..,_ studio space
downtown Gallipolis. Call 614·

3 bedroom 2 story home, big
yard. 8200.00 momh. *100.00
deposit 304-175-4622 or 876·

6PM

1

bedroom, living roo m, kitchen
1 ,... with blth, worklhop and
gar.ge. forc ed air gil hatt. _own
Wltlr well, large lot and malntenenoe free aiding. $415. 000. Cell

9

35 Lots

Call 614-446-3413 o• 614·
446·3262 .

448·1819.

614-992-6668 deyl, 614 ·992-

882-3366

choice location on College Ad
Syracuse. new complete kitchen
and t.undrv. air conditioned.
\argalot. 61 4·992-6324.

Beau1iful home In Syracuu. 3
bedrooms. large la'Nn and clr·
pon. References requireJi. Inquire between 9 ;00-6 ;00 at

Trailer space for rent. 2 miles
from Galipolis on St. Rt. 1588.

MOLL,I'M CfF 00 MY VliATtO~!
'ttl v.tt.I'T Si:E.ME'. FQf{ lWO

See trill model today. Cal

614·811·7311 .

• •

Television
Vi'e wing

New country drHm ho .... Built

~uu.

11 . (11and 2 pc. flberglus tubll'l
3 bdr. home 1109 Adriln Ava.

larg e storage building, acre land.

18 Wanted to Do

. B(1RN L!).~~~

Collolton'o Uold Tiro S~op. Ovtr
1.ooo,t,_, "''" 12. u . 14,_11.
t8, 1o.l . 8 mlloa out 111. 211 .
Coli 114-216-1211 .

•· '

•

1988

LAFF·A·DAY

o".,,.:.~

'

0

s

(I) AIC NIWto NIOhtllne

S TIT F

QllV

VY F
YST

WKRP In ClnOinnatl / .
&lt;D One 11ep Blroold

VXB · HAZTF

DAJ
,I

YV

DOB

A .I

Y S T

llY

XVYN

BOEPDHTF'

i,JOTS

D A .1

.J

I)

A ~, II .I

Q 0 .J

ZAJJASP . - V.O
' CO HHA.JHO
Teete~'o Ceyptoquote: IF YOU DON'T LEARN TO
lAUGH AT 1ROUBLE, YOU WON'T HAVE ANY11UNG
. ,10 LAUGH AT WHEN YI!_U"RE OLD. - ED HOWE

Allltln City LJmltl: John
~
OllkvTqnlght'o gu- ere J.ohn
Alldtrton and Lin Gllky.

110n.

lDAIIol

·

• ()) T.J, .Hollker Hooker
1nd Romeno trY to con·
Yl,~ I bCI~ Wf!lme~ to ·
help thelit:r~r crlmln~~· WhO
I ~~ Of•

. flot~~~ •HRI'•·
~
D• .
t:IICJ(J)
!: 'lrin 'MillrWI'
··'·-- ..··-

au

....

·.

12:00 (]) Jock ilennv

()) Mljor Llque Bao.
·ball'a ~ Hlta

(() ·i~IMI11 :Tonltlh1

IT jOIIII bciti Rlckleo on lo.
· OMI6~ fpt, ~11 up&lt;;11mlng
'ljllclal. ··~011 ,•Rickie• on
tho LOOII"". (R),

I

..

• &lt;D Rawhide

.....

• (() H1Wtll FI....O
(iD. MOVIE: ·"1111 Borrow·

t2:30 • (}) 1Bi Lata Night wl~
•OIVId Lttte.r men To~lght I
guH1I are autfior , T11111 •
Jenowitt and r~t~t~•• .. n. , ·
gor Rita Marley. (60 min.). '

.,

�..
20,

Briefs:----Mason woman to lead event
Mrs. Sharon Mc:Doogal wW cbalr a St. Jude Clllklren's Research
Holpltal blke-a·tmn ln Mason, W.Va. Ploceeds from the e'lent wW
help provide funds lor St. Jude Hospital, founded by entertainer
Danrzy Thomas, to combat ca\85trophlc diseases which alnlct
children.

Racine Legion post to meet
Racine American Legion Post 002 will meet Thursday at 7:30p.m.
Members are asked to attend to discuss plans !or the v!llage'saanual
fall festival. Refreshments w111 be seiVed following the la'etblg.

CAA free clothing day Friday
Gallla·Melgs Community Action Agency w1ll have its tree clothing
day for low-Income people Friday from 9 a.m. untU noon.
The agency clothing bank is in the old schoolhouse wBdlng bl
Cheshire.

.

.

.

~

Mary 0. Armstrong

.
· Frankie A. Mumaw

· Miss Mary Opal Armstrong,
Route 2, Biueneld, Va., former
Meigs ~ Jl!lddent. died Mon·
day at a hollpltalln Abingdon, Va.
Miss Armstrong.was born ln Pike

.

.

Frankie Allee Mumaw, 97, Syraelise, died TUesday at the Dixon
Heillth Care Center, Wintersville.

Born on June 5, 1889, she was the
daughter of the late Jobn WUllam
Camty, Ohio, 00 March S. 189l, a · Mumaw ani! Mary Ann Broderick.
da\llhter of the late Dennis A. and She was a retired nurses aide at the
Melvina Jane EbUn Armstrong. Ga
S1Je was a member of the Rutland
Dlpolis State Institute.
Metllldlst Church.
She Is ·survived 17y a niece,
&amp;lrvlvlllg are two cousins, C.C. Maxbte Carter, New Alexandria,
Craven, Route 2, Bluefield, with and a nephew, Albert Mumaw,
whom she made her IDme, and Mingo Juncltln. Miss Mumaw was
Mrs. Althea Tarta, Mfamf, Fla.
a member of the Syracuse Presby·
Graveside services w1ll be held at terfan Church.
2 p.m. Thursday at the MDes
Cemetery at RuUaod with Rev.
Gravesfdeservlceswtllbeheldat
Amos Tillis t111clatbtg. Friends l0:30a.mFrldayattheLetartFalis
may caD at the Cravens-Shires Cemetery. Arrangements are be·
Funeral Home, Route 52 North, !rig completed by the Ewing
Bluewell, W.Va., from 6-8 this Funeral Home. Thereareoocalllng
evenblg (Wednesday).
hours.

~ei~ ~r(l ___!_co_n_tin_u_ed__fro_m__P~ag_e_t_l______

Area man fined on 4 charges
Greg Cundiff of Rutland was fined on four charges when he
appeared TUesday night bl the court of Fl:&gt;meroy Mayer Richard
Seyler.

He was fbted $163 and costs on a charge o! reckless operation; $63
and costs, no operator's licence, $63 and costs on !allure to have his
vehicle under control, and $00 and costs on the charge ri. Ill fbtancial
responsibility.
Also fbted ln the court was Willis Davis, Jr., New Haven, $46 and
costs, speeding; David Landaker, Route 2, Pomeroy, $46 and costs,
no operator's license, and Richard Icenhower, Pomeroy, $150 and
costs, disorderly manner resultblg from an Incident on the Pomeroy
parking lot.

Two fined in mayors court
Two area residents were fined and two others forfeited boms In the
court of Mkldleport Mayor Fred Holfman on charges of drtvlng
whUe bltoxlcated.
David H. Bleeding, LangsvUie, and Warrm Reeves, Albany,
forfeited bonds of $450 each on the charge; whUe Paul D. Fife,
Middleport, and Donald J. Stelmmetz, Columws, were fined $425
and costs and sentenced to three days In jall on the charge.

Fire damages auto
A repo6Se5Sed Bank One vehicle being drtven north on U.S.33
caught fire Tuesday afternoon and was completely destroyed.
Pomeroy firemen, called to the scene at 4:41p.m., reported that the
car was fully engutted in flames when they arrived.

several vehicles no longer needed In
the d~trtct were accepted as was
the bid ct BUI Green m one vehicle.
The supplying of tire;, tubes and
recapped tires lor the next school
year went to the ~lgs Tire Center.
· Assistant &amp;ipl!'lntendent James
Carpenter was authorized to pro·
ceed wfth SECuring gasoline and oil
products through Ashland 011 untU
the next board meelbtg. A bid by
Ashland was not received on time
lor last night's meeting and Ash·
land was the only company to
submit a bid.
The board renewed the district's
membership In SEOVEC for the
new school year at a cost d$1811.00.
Jodie Wells was approved for early
graduation. It was agreed to
designate specific personnel w act
as board representatives to acquire
leileral· suJl&gt;lus property from the
Ohio State Agency lor Surplus
Property under the terms and
conditfom es!abllshed by the Ohio
Department of Administrative
Services.
Teachers hired
A Meigs Junior High student
han&lt;I!Ook and a ~lgs High student
folder were approved for the next
school year and the board acknowl·
edged a proposal br the relocation
of the Meigs High School Stadium
from Charles H. Bartels.
Teachers. Kathy Carter, Gallla

to

2 calls

Melp County Emergency Medical Services reports two caDs
TUesday; Rutland at 1: 12 p.m. to Meigs Mine No.2 for Bob Barrett to
O'Bieness Memortal Hospital; Pomeroy at 7:01 p.m. to Ohio 7 t:&gt;r
Sandy West to Pleasant Valley Hospital.

County receives license revenues
Ohio Motor Vehicle Registrar Michael J . McCulllon reported the
July 1~ distribution of license tax revenues totaling Sl8,!ro,510.81
are ready for disbursement. MPigs County will recelw $61,077.64 of
the total.

Couples get marriage licenses
Marriage licenses have been Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Ronald Dean Arms, 30, and Brenda Sue James, both of
Pomeroy; Kevin Dw&amp;yne Teaford, 19, Portland, and Becky Jo
Michael, 20, Racine: Clell B. Wood, f!l, Syracuse, and Agnes Eleanor
Blackwell, 62, Fanners, W.Va.; Raymond L. Andrews, 25, and
Megan L. Cole, 20, both of Long Bottom: Terry Lee George, 31.
Rutland, and Vonda Annetta Pauley, 16, Pomeroy.

Court grants divorce decree.~ ·
A divorce has been granted In Meigs County Common Pleas Court
to Marcella Casto from Donald Eugene Casto. Debbie F. Cartee,
ReedsvUie, has been granted a divorce from Greg Cartee, Fort
Myers, Fla .. and the court has restored her to her fonntr name of
Dalley.
Di~lssed was a case by Teresa Carr agalnst Ronald L. Carr.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - More
Americans died in 1916 than bl any
previous year, the Census Bureau
reported, attrirutlng this to the
country's increasblgly aging popu·
latlon, whUe noting that Americans
are llvlng as long as they ever have.
The bureau, fn a new report
estlmatblg the population of the
United States and the reasons for
the changes, put the total number ri.
people ln the country at 240,468,txXI
on Jan. 1, 19ffi- an Increase of 0.9
percent or 2.2 mllllon more than on
Jan. I; 1985, an mcreaseol13,922,195
s~ the 199l census.
· The wreau also reported that
2,0!3,&lt;00 people died during 1985 Ill!' inost ever lit a sblgle year- but
stressed that the large number had
nothing to do with any higher
mortality rate.
"The recent incrmse In the total
number of deaths was due to both
the growth bl the size of the U.S.
IX&gt;pulatkln and Its continued ag.
ing," the report said, "and oot to the
deterklratlon r1 mortality coruli·
lions which have Improved over

Between 1970 and 1985, it said the
death rate declined by more than 7
perrent - from 9.4 people per 1,00)
to the 8.7 people per 1.!lXJ -and that
life expoctancy at birth was 74.7
years In 1984, the latest year for
which figures are avaUable

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lefVed.

:Admlaslolll- Richard Herman,
f!J!cldleport; Ellulbeth Roush,

Ibis, Tim Sloan, Fred E. Smith,
Kermit Walton, Ron McDade, Tom
Hairston, James Quivey, Brenda
Roush. Rodney Chevalier, David J .
Koblentz, VIrgil Wbldon, Ronald
Whittington, Ann Barrett, Clarence
Norris, Harry HUt, William Fran·
cis, Alvin Reed, N. Darlene Cas·
sady, Elizabeth Hobstetter, Flor·
ence Barrett, John Colwell, Ruth
Powers, Fred L. Hoffman, Dorothy
C. McGumn, John Mauiey, Evelyn
Clark, George L. Harris, Nathan
Biggs, George Nesselroad Jr., Lola
Clark, John E . WUllams, Emmo
gene H. Congo, Jame; Carnahan.
Betty J. Fultz, Larry E. Spencer.
Ron Ash, Jennifer Sheets. Carson
Crow, Bernard Fultz, Fred Crow
Jr .. Steve Powell, Roger and Mary
GUmore, Dr. Wilma Mansfield,
Brure Reed, Kathy Cumings, Bill
Wickline or George N. Collins.

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Barbara Williams,
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. .1 ~ ..,.. Linda Cozart,

8 TO 5
308 E. MAIN

·

lwmt COUPON I

By NANCY YOACHAM
AlsodlscussedweretheirQblems
Selltlnel Staff
of costly llabWty Insurance and the
The Melp County Commission- possible loss of the revenue sharing
ers took advantage Wednesday of program which the federal govern·
an q&gt;portu1l!ty 10 make suggestions ment has had plans to phase rut
to Sen. Howard M. Metzenbaum,
Jones said ~ would not want
Democrat, via Metzenbaum's as· revenue sharbtgfunds at the rost ct
sistant, Jerry Brown of Toledo.
less natlonal.detense, rut he would
Brown.met with the rommlssion- lfk!l,.to see tile program contblued
ers during Wednesday's regular with the funding · ~big to areas
meeting bl an effort to galn l:&gt;cal · which really heed the money. Jones
blput as to how federal agencies noted a bill developed by U.S. Rep.
and officials are succeeding or Bob McEwen, R.Ohlo, In which
falling Ohio's 88 counties.
needy areas wwld !XJnllnue recelv·
Among concerns discussed by the lng revenue sharbtg dollars.
ct:mmfssloners were erosion probAt · the presiiJI!t· time, Meigs
lems along the Ohio River and the County's revenue Sharing lunds
lack of urgency ln completing the amount to about $1JO,!XXl annually,
new Gallipolis Locks and Dam.
of which the majortty Is used for
In regard to riverbank erosion, social programs such as senior
Commissioners Richard Jones and citizens and crippled chUdrens.
Manning Roush explalned that
The lawmakers are •cuttblg out
. Meigs County has 62 mUes of river the money b.lt not the mandates,"'
' frontage and that contlnublg ero- Jones commented.
. ·slon problems "could become
Brown noted that authorization to
devastatbtg In years to come." continue revenue sharbtg already
Jones noted that erosion along East exists "If the mOney can he found."
Maln In Pomeroy is of prime He said an attempt w1ll be made oo
concern to the county.
Capitol HW to act on the revenue
As to the Gallipolis Locks and sharing matter before the Labor
Dam, Jones said he could not Day.
understand "why ft would take
When 3$ked l7y Brown If Meigs
years to acquire rights of way to County has had difficulty In SECUr·
buUd the facWty If the rmney's lng federal dollars for local proalready there to pay for the jects, Jones explained that the
. construction." Jones IX&gt;Inted out county "has been unsuccessful bl
that the lftSEI!t Gallipolis facility~ obtaining federal fums with the
outdated and "the biggest bottle· exception of the annual block grant
neck" on the rtver. He and Roush allocation" through tiE Ohio [)e.
reiterated · that the project "needs partment of Development.
Immediate attention and should be
In closing, Jones told Brown that
speeded up," polntblg out that not "Southeastern Ohio has been the
only would river tra1flc problems stepchfld of the state for too many
he alleviated, but many jobs would years. Our· area ls consistently
. be created through the 00!6tructlon passed over of everything of
process.
sfgnlflcanoe, be It highway~ Indus-

w....

Lottery profits to assist
Meigs County's schools
The State Controlling Board has released $83.~ . 85ln0hio Lottery ·
profits for Meigs County's l'llucatlonal system, according to State
Sen. Oakley Collins, R·lronton .
"As a member of the Senate Majority Caucus that guaranteed all
lottery profits would go to education, I was very pleased to sre those
funds released," Collins explained. "Securing the money for
educa tlon was a top priority for Senate Republicans in the last
budget, and It's rewarding to see the work paying off now."
"Spoclficalty," Collins continued, "the money allocated to Meigs
County wlll be divided up as follows: $483.44 tor the Meigs County
Board of Mental Retardation, and $83,505.41 for the three school
dlstrtcts located In the county."
Collins said that the Meigs County allocation was part of a total
distrtrutlon of more than $34 million in lottery profits. The total lump
sum was divided among 614 school districts, 49 joint vocational
schools, 47 county boards of education, 154 oon-publlc schools and f!l
Mental Retardation and Developmental DlsabUity boards.
"The approval of these funds will seiVe to enhance tiE educational
and career opportunities for those who attend Meigs County
schools." He concluded, "as chairman of the Senate./'ducatlon
Committee, Improving our schools ~ one ct my top prlorttles."
The break~wn of profits shows Meigs Local School District wlll
get $48,121.13; Southern Local School Dlstrtct, $18,556.76; and
Eastern Local School District, $16,827.52.

tries or federally funded projects.
One only has to come to the area to
know that statement ~ reality and
oot fiction," Jones added.
He thl!n suggested that Brown
ask Metzenbaum to vtslt Southeast·

em OhiohlmSelftoseetheareaftrst
hand."
Brown said he would carry that
message, and the other sugges·
rtons, back to the smator.
Other rosiness blcluded:

•.0

"'

~

· ·~

..., · .... '

..........

~'---•

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

-Tabling of three animal
claims;
-Passing of a resolution aulbo·
rfzfng application for 191!1 Utter
control funds for the county;
-Appropriation of $19 ,:W9 In

federal revenue sharing money to
pay public assistanre costs for the
second half of the year:
-Appropriation of $3108.!ll Into
contingency for paying additional
workers compensation.

Energy
•
pnces
decline

CYCLIS'm - Tbls poop of aver 110 rnotorcyclillts
from Meigs and aearby ooundel ptbef\ld ad the
lower parking lot along tile Ohio River Ill Pomeroy
Wedneeday prior to ping to lhe MefpSenior(Jtlun•
Center, MUlberry Avl!llue, Pomeroy, where 113 of

t11em reported as donors to an American Red Cross
llloodmoblle. The blood was pm to the local blond
program ln memory to Roada Phelps. Pomeroy, who
drowned ln a strip lake pond near Darwin Saturday
evenlllg. Aller giving blood, the group was given a
pari)' ad lhe Rlverboad Inn, Middleport.

Motorcyclists from Meigs,
area donate to bloodmobile

WASHINGTON (UP! I - Retail
prices remained unchanged in July
as fallblg energy prices offset gains
bl the cost of food and shelter. the
Labor Department reported today.
The department 's Consiimer
Price Index for July showed energy
costs declined 4.1 percent durtng
the month, led by a 6.6 percent tau
in the prtce of gasoline. Excluding
energy costs, the seasonally ad·
justed bldex advanced at 0.5
percent for the month.
The Consumer Price Index ad·
vanced to 328 ln July on a scale that
began ln 1967 when the government's "market basket" of goods
and services cost $100.
For the first seven months at 1986,
the Index has declined by 0.2
percent. the steepest dl"JP slnre 1949
when prices feU 2.4 percent during
the first seven months of tile year.
Food costs overall advanred by
0.9 percent In July led by a 3.2

.
Lane, Jay Clark, Carol. Mc.QQ: . ~Qila:Cg~~··)~~~~(Q!ll.a,,. •pei!!!fot.tc~Yartoellllllemsnttrri!at,
....,......., 3....,.;
qu~ L~
"
' ""'na
' .
g n oor; ..., o pencer, · poultry, fish and eggs. Fruit and
Tennant, Joseph GUIUand, Larry live gaUons; Mary E. Davidson, six vegetable costs rose 0.8 percent and
VInings, Natt McTarthy, Joyce gallons; Virgil Windon and Homer dairy products were 0.5 percent
Jenkins, Billy J . Trout, Becky Baxter, seven gallons; Edward more rostly than they were the
Trout, Linda Fraley, Kay Cullums, Durst, eight gallons; Henry E. previous month. Alcoholic bever·
Brenda Davis, Mark Hudson.
Bahr, Sarah J. Bowler, nine gallons ages rose 0.3 perrent.
A total ct 167 persons reported to and Harlan A. Ballard, 14 gaUons.
Housing costs overall remained
Dr. James Witherell and Dr.
the unit to contrtwte 144 pints of
but the cost of shelter
blood to the local p-ogram with 74 ri. WUma Mans tleld were the a11end· unchanged,
rose by 0.4 percent an d renters'
them gtvblg blood Iii appreclaltln lng physicians and nur.;es were costs rose 0.7 percent ln July.
lor blood received by a relative or a Ferndora Story, Beulah Ward,
Fuel rosts overall decUnl'll 2. 1
friend.
Lenora , Leifheit, Joyce Thoren, percent as fuel oil. coal and bottled
First time donors were Dan Mary 0 Brien, Sharon Wright and gas fell back 4.9 percen t In the
Follrod, Mary F . Bush, Robert L. Mary Jane Talbott. Makbtg up the month. Gasoline pump prices
Miller, Roxie S. Marcinko, George clericalstaf!fortheunltwereMary declined 6.6 percent as did the cost
G. Connolly, Goldie G. Geiser, Nease, Jean Nease, Joyre Hoback, of motor luels.
Kimberly Follrod, Dottle Hatf!eld, Arizona Stewart, ~ggy Harris,
Transporta tion costs dec lined b)·
Martha Lowe, Joyce Frye, Dudley Dorothy Johnston, Linda Warner·
1.2 percent overall and the cost of
Meadows, Kathy Mel!dows, Dan C. Eason, Wanda Imboden, Pam new cars rose 0.4 percent In July.
Ward, Joseph E . Rife, Debra Imboden, Jeanette Radford. Huey Used cars fell back 0.5 percent.
Albertson, John C. lnge~. Beppl Eason, Tammy Wright, and Lucy
The cost of apparel and upkeep
Cole, Barbara A. Fridley, Jay White. Retired Senior Volunteer overall Increased 0.2 percent as a
Clark, Rena L. Musser, Carol Program workers helping were 0.6 percent rise in women's an d
McDonough, Gwen D. Sheets, Marton Ebersbach, Virginia Buch- girls' apparel was partially offset
David Lane, Charles Smith, Joseph anan, Dorothy Long, Emma Clat· by a 0.5 percent decline in the coslln
L. GUIUand, Terry A. Smith, Sue A. worthy, Phtlomena Follrod, Berna· men's and boys' apparel.
•
Douglas, Thomas Karr, WIUiam dine Meter, Jessie Curt~ . WilHam
Peck, Fonna CuUums, Doug Burns, Hoback, Jack Sorden, Joan Sorden
The cost of medical care rose 0.5
Danrzy Robson, Donald Icenhower. and Thelma Dill. The canteen was percent In July. Entertainment
During Wednesday's vtslt, Cha· servl'll by women of the Asbury costs gained 0.2 percent and ow
rles Bush, Kathcyn Johnson, Lisa United Methodist Churc,h.
Reporting to the unft as dooors In broad category of other gOOds and
Parsons, Anna Baxter, Gerald
services rose 0.9 percent.
(Continued on Page 4)
Anthony and Kelly Ginther became

Flfty·thf!!e motorcycll!;ts from
Meigs arid lli!arby ' eountlej ~re­
ported to an American fled Cross
Bloodmobile at the Melp Senior
Citizens Center Wednesday evenIng to contrtw te blood to the county
blood program.
The cyclists gave blood In
memory of their friend, Ronda
Phelps. who drowned Saturday
evening in a sbip mine pond near
Darwin. Following the giving of
blood, the motorcyclists were feted
to a party at the Riverboat lnn,
Middleport.
The motorcyclists reporting to
the bloodmobUe unit Included Earl
Phelps, Ron Starcher, Dottle Hat·
field, Rick Hatfield, Joyce Frye,
Patsy Price, U.N. Dugger, CecU D.
Frye. Martha Lowe, PhU Watten,
Jeff Davis, Daniel R. Taylor,
Michael J . Brown, Ann Fridley,
John Ingels, Charles Bailey Jr.,
Lena Bailey, Danny Robson, Lee
Bing, Dennis C. Clark, Joe Rife,
Debra Albertson, Kathy Meadows,
Dudley Meadows, Patsy Ward,
Donald Icenhower, Gwen Sheets,
Beppl Cole, Jerry Chute, BW Peck,
Tom Moldren, Mark Dempsey,
Reva L. Musser, Frank V. Musser,
Debbie Pridemore, Charles R.
Smith, Lawrence Pollock, David R.

-·""'

re

Police seek cause behind nation's third-worst mass killing
By WILLIAM H. INMAN
oversized '"wad cu tier'' bullets used
EDMOND, Okla. (UP!) -Pollee for target practice bJt which could
today looked for the tripwire (\lat . tear a fist-sized hole in a man's
snagged a hidden rage deep blsfde chest.
Patrick Henry Sherrill, a reclusive
His first victim was one of the
ex· Marine bl danger of losing his supervisors who had threalened to
maUman's job, who emptied three fire him the di!Y bel&gt;re; SherrUI
automatic pistols blto a mass. of held the job a~t 18 months. He
IX&gt;stal workers, killing 14 and had lost many jobs; mostly because
himself.
he could not handle them.
"You look at the carnage and you
But he rould handle guns. He was
look at the dead people as you walk a crack shot, who taught bl the
through," sald Oklahoma County National Guard. And be used the
Dfstrtct Attorney Robert Macy. weapons, popping rtf shots pa·
"You become so angry, you'd ifke tlently, methodically, like a hunter
to walk.through and shoot him,
In a warren or cornered rabbits.
"What makes a man do someHe did not waste many wDets
thing like that ? God only knows. and he did not speak. The ordeal
That's what we:re trybtg to fbtd lastl'll less ihan 20 minutes. The
out"
victimS were found jammed up
America's third-worst killing against the edges of. plastic cub!·
spree by a lone gurunan began . cles, pUed five high bl me spo~ one
shortly after doors swung open br man died bl the parking lol In
• the wl!dne$day morning shift at the addition to the 15 killed, seven were
Edmond post office, where the wounded.
ftyear-old Sheri1Jl was a part·tlme
One of the wounded, Wllllam
carrier. ··
·.
Nimmo, was. In critical condltkln
Sherrill hlld beell cliewfd rut the today. '
·
clay before, cillletd·&amp;.,slacker.•Th1s
1bree ,:employees locked · them·
day ~ ,WU tl1ere !)II time, enterlnR selves Iii a vault, listening to the
tltrltuih t~te•ldclor,pne,!VI!tefew ,. moan1 IV the ~g. : .
left .uniOclced.
' .,
~·· . '·.. Momilata befOre tJOlb! bulilt'blto
But he clil'rled ,a ~~. ~ the. bulldlni, -Sbeirtll . poaltloned
~ loaded pistols J. one, a· hlmaelf bl . !!»!~ "inlddle \i of a
.45-callbei' lell)l-automatlc be had ' honeshoe-shaped aortlng li!'l!ft and
checked Qljt the day before from Ills put a bullet In his head, (lnfsblng at
OklahomaMrNatlonjiiGuardunlt. the Clllltel' of;the drama.
Th¢ ~ he ·lilil'·lD his :teatller '
"He just ' s\arted shooting peocarrtet;s jicUch, alOng wltl! cUps of pte," rec~
Furlorig, 32.

Vblce

"He sbot the supervisor (Rick
Esser) almost poblt·blank. He shot
one ol my best friend'! almost
polnt·blank.Andthenhejusttumed
around and started SJrayblg the
room. "
·
"He was an evU man
' '"saidblMike
Bigler, who was wounded
the
back. "He was never going to do
wellinhlswork.Heknewlt. Hewas
a loner, a stranger even to his
closestfrlends."
He was more than a loner, frfends
and nelgbbors said. He was a time

explode," sald pollee spokesman by Charles J. Whitman.
Shader, 31, Mike Rockney, l1, Pa tty
Mike Wooklr!dge. "We know the
Huberty and Whitman both were Gabbard. 47, Johna Gragert Hamil·
killing Is done, but we want Ill know killed by pollee.
ton , 30, Patti Welch. 27, Judy
wi\Y . We'retalklllgtohlsnelghbors,
Besides Esser, 38, pnHce klenll· Denney, 39, Pa tty Chambers, 41.
his friends, anybo&lt;IY wiD might
ffed Sherrill's victims as Betty Kenneth Morey, 49, Bill Miller. 30.
shed some lighl That's why we Jarred, :W, Patty Husband, 49, Tom Lee Phillips. 42. and Jerry Py le, 51.
searched the home and seized the r;:;;:====-::-=-:::-:~;::-:--;;::=~;::::---:======guns."
For SherriU, guns .gave him an
~',':;'~·:· ~~· .
innportance few other things lm· :
"''soc' "'•'''' · ..----------,-~ ~ """ '·s: ..
parted. He tried and faDed to
I 4 · :a·· · g '"
_
establish a relaltlns~p with a
Toono.·sa,_.,,:c, , ;:;ga ··
,
e
'
l
woman. He trted and failed to go to
•
g"'mao "0! aoc • ,•:" 0 ~;&lt; .
VIetnam as a Marble. He trted and ,
~
4
boinb.walllngto~o:tf.Hehadlosta failed to get a college degree - --1
A
'
I
series ct jolls since leaving the attending Oklahoma University,
Marbles In 1966. At the pnst t1!loe ln Central State University and &lt;ltla·
I 6
Edmond, a sub.lrb otai,9XI oorth ct boma City Southwestern.
A ~
1
1'
&lt;ltlahoma City, he earned less than · He tried and tailed to hold a
$14,(01 a year.
steadY job. In rapid
he
....,
·"Nothing seemed to suit him," had wor~ lor the Air Force' the
I
said Ken Goddard, a fellow ham Federal Aviation Admlnlstrat~n. ~
POST OFFICE
',,
I
radio operator and associate r:l. 15 the Postal Service - the earlier
FLOOR PLAN
years. "He used to gripe about this stint lasted ooJy!lldays-andwith
, - - ..- "T'\ ~\
'l I
1
1
or that. Not big things, rut gripes the city of OklaiKlma City where he
r
1
1
nevertheless. He was somethlui d was briefly employed flidng stop ,
66
&amp; &amp;
I
a pextecltlntst"
.
Ifglits.
·
;
I&amp; &amp;
I&amp; &amp;
I

'1\,,socs&lt; •· •c . post Off'ICe Sh00t'mg

e

I

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13

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g~ccesslon,

a:::r £!:::!

~~;.~~~::!:0':~
i
•. '•'"-ta he ...11." '

co:::S

'.a.~veu
- - ' gilDS

more •~u ... , people,

neighbors sale!'. · When :wUce
S8fii'Ched hJI loQe bl lllrthWeit
OklahomaCitytheyfoundstacksr1
anim,wdtlon. ·gun liloka ·of fNe(y
type, a fancy'engraved sbolglin, an
M·l military-~ rt11e, and~ ·
of target p!Jtdl.
·
··
"We're loOidni lor reasdla why
all tltla raae wruld iudden,!Y..

II

e
e

~,
11111

uan:u

a:

I

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i

._....,.-ID--i::J---cJ-"-:1
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2 G~o.~'1man ~nterea oav. ,
1

•

The~ was thew~ .t1 be 1
• " 7' './:1 '
- •• ..,., olfiu. . '
' .......
1
commltfl!d by ~ . . . 'lila . . .
'
I I
1f¢~ ~~ ,,,12!'4:..~~i!.,.\\·...J"ft ;:-~ =~"'~ ~
JulY 18, llM.' .wben James p. uPI G••P"''
Huberty Cipelled llre:at the border·
~WII ~·· i'I!Q~~f~Dt In San
MASS SIIOQTING·,_: AOIIihlll, on tiE verse rllielnR !Ired for poor
Yaldro, Callf.,ldlllill ~people.
wodl . .tea.. ,.......rejiOated to wetbt Edmond, OldaJ, on Wedbesday,
· In 1986, 16 ~were Jdlled and
lllat IDd kllell ~·people IDd InJured le\'1!11 cAen. 'DIIi Dve luJuri!d who
31. wouldedbla~ba~trooia
Mllll fOaadlll U.. poll~ ant repn.ealed'by ~In tH8 UPI
b!Texai ID'M!I'InAu.stln
II'IJPiilc. 'l1li ii'IIDP. repu r?'i tile
ldlleoi..(Uft)
0 ,'

'

1

'"

peo*

tMiVenlty

4

'

2 Sections. 12 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, August 21. 1986

\llllll ·t'~Du.b.

l

enttne

Dana Rinehart

' REGULAR $44.50

Soulh Central Oblo
Tonight, mostly cloudy wlth a
sUgbt chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Low bl the mid 60s.
Light and variable winds. Chanre
of rain 30 percent.
Thursday, partly cloudy. High In
the lower ~. Chance of rain 20
percent.
OhiD Extmded Forecast
Friday llnlllh Sunday
Chance r1 showers and thunder·
I(OI'ffi,!l Friday with fair weather
Saturday and Sunday. Highs
thrOUilhout the period will range
from the upper 70s to mid 8ls wlth a
low between 55 and ffi.

•

Officials outline needs to senator's assistant

You'll like our reasonable prices and our prints
have a lifetime guarantee.

Population of the United States and
Components ol Chanw: 1970 to
1985," sald therewere8. 7deaths per
1,txXI population In 1985.

Shade River. Lodge No. 453,
thester. w1ll meet Thursday, 7:30
p.m., to wolit In the fellowcraft
deiiJ'I!e· Refreshments wlll be

•

Vat.3S. No.'71
Copyrighted 1886

subject of government flnanre and
tax re!9rrn. His published works
Include his 1981 co-authored book.
"Ohio In the 21st Century ."
This past January, Rinehart was
asked by President Reagan to seiVe
on the Presidential Advisory Board
on Private Sector Initiatives. He
was also elected w seiVe on the
National League o! Cities Board of
Directors. Away from the mayor's
office, he ~ a captain In the U.S.
Marble Cor~ Reserve, a Little
League coach, and a member of
Chartty Newsies and the North
Broadway United Methodist
Church.
A Phi Beta Kappa graduate bl
!X&gt;Utical science from Ohio State
University in 1970, Rinehart also
received his Ia w degree cum laude
from a;u in 1973.
The mayor resides bl Columws
with his wife, Carol, and their three
children.
Tickets are $al per person and
may be purchased from the
following people:
Maxble Goeglein, Susan Jones,
Larry Thomas. Dorset Larkins,
Rich Jones, Sara Gibbs, Sharon
Swindell, Cora Beegle, Scott Pul·

time."
The report, "Estimates of the

41-35-17-9-3-5

at y

WbUe se!Vlng as treasurer, R.iJ1e.

Mostly cloody tonight, wUh u
low In the mid Mi. Parlly cloudy
Friday, wlth hJgbs between 80
and SS. The probablllly of
preclpbllon Is 40 peroent today,
20 percent tonight and near zero
Friday.

Super Lotto

•

hart was a proOtic wrtter on tile

Ohio weather

Veteran8 Me~ial

- Page4

in attractive outdoor settings.

'

Daily Number
002

the Bend

Columbus Mayor Dana "~k"
Rlnel\art wUl be the featured
speaker at a fund-raising dlnnerfor
state representative candidate
Garry E. Hunter set for Wednesday, Aug. 27, at 5:30 p.m. at Royal
Oak Resort Club, Ohlo 7, Pomeroy.
' Rinehart, a native of Tuppers
Plains, was elected mayor of
Columws In 1983, and prtortothat,
he was Franklin County treasurer
for two tenns and a partner In a
Columbus law firm.

NO .... .IT'S NOT YING YANG!

U.S. population rises
by nearly 1 percent

Ohio Lottery

Beat of

County, Janet Holfman, Chester,
and Elizabeth Story, Middleport,
were hired for the next school year.
·
The Blue Streak Cab Co. was
named to transport an handicapped
student to the Bradschool School
.
during the next school year and
·
agreements for transportation ct
:
handicapped students to other
schools were renewed with Ed
Baer, James Reynolds, Gary Fife.
.
and Debbie and Danny Grueser.
It was agreed to pay $144 a year
:
for the transportation ri. Richard
:
Ellis to the Gallla Chr~tlan School
·
In the Cheshire area after Carpen·
:
ter ex~alned that the district is
required to pay tor or provide
:
transportation to other schools
:
when the other schools arewfthln ll
minutes travellng time from the
district school which the student
would nonnally attend .
r;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~:
Junior and senior high teachers II
manuals were approved . A new
yearly work schedule for April
Smith, secretary at Pomeroy Ele·
mentary, was adopted. Mrs. Smith
We ARE - as usual - making appointments
wlll work 183 days, the regular
for those precious High School Senior Portraits
school year, plus 10 days before
classes start and 10 days after
which mark a milestone in your life.
classes are dismissed each school
year.
We give you personalized attention and your
Following the open session the
board moved lntoexecutivesesslon
preview set will include 9 to 12 different poses,
to consider personnel, negotiations.
not only before traditional oil backdrops, bur also
finances and pending litigation.

~

EMS units respond

Rinehart will speak
at Hunter fund-raiser

,., . ... ..

- ...

)-' .~ 1 ·-·

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