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'-ge

D-8-"fhe Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant.

w. Va.

August 24, 1986

·Mass killer's body unclaimed; Okla. town buries its dead ·
,

By ROCKY SCOTI'
EDMOND, Okla. (UPI) - The
body of a part·tlme letter earlierwho killed 14 co-workers and
himself- remalned 1unclalmed the
weekend hls victims were being
burled, ~ medical examiner's

··
,.
.:
- ~said.

Prellmlnaiy medical examlna·
lion of ~ body of Pat Sherrill
' revealed no traces of drugs or
alcohol, a spokesman for the
medical examiner's office reported
! Friday. However, burtal arran~• ltlei!IS were on hold because oo ooe
bad claimed the body.
"T9Jdcologlc examinations of
~ - and urtne were negative for
BJCOml and all common drugs, "
said a spokesman. "The urine
tested positive for" a common
•

component of over-the-counter anlihlsta!Jllnes. "The blood was negative for this compound."
Eulogized and burted Frtday
were Patti Welch, Patricia Ann
Chambers, Janna Hamilton, Rick
Esser, the supervisor wh:J received
the first buUet by Shen1ll wiD
feared he'd lose hls $14,CID-a-year
job.

Welch was burled early Friday In
her hometown of Lawton, Okla.,
and Esser and ~milton were
burled later near Edmond. Services for Chambers were held In
Wellston, Okla.
A wake was held Frtday night for
Mike Rockne, grandson of famed
Notre Dame coach Knute Rockne,
with a mass held for him In
Edmond at 11 a.m. Saturday.

scarcely kilew ~ reclusive ex·
Martne.
Maj. Gen. Robert Morgan, commander of ~ state Air National
Guard, said Sberrtll, a member of
the guard, checked out the weapons
and 500 rounds of ammunition to
take part In a Natklnal Rifle
Association sponsored siDotlng
match.
Morgan said Sberrlll, an expert
marksman and one d five shooting
Instructors In his guard unit, had
never given any Indication of
mentallnstab!Uty and had recently
roce!ved a GOOd Conduct Medal
and a citation for hls attendance at
guard meetings.
In Edmond. postal worl&lt;ers Involved In the massacre attended

"Wby this? Why this?'· asked the
Rev. Frank Ridgley durtng a
eulogy for Esser.
"To understand why this hap.
pened and to cope with It requires
an wtusually heroic courage,".
Ridgley told about 500 mourners at
the St. Charles Borromeo CatiDUc
Church In Bethany. an Oklahoma
City suburb.
· "How Inscrutable Is (God's)
judgment," Ridgley said, quoting
scripture, "How unsearchable his
ways. Who has known the mind of
God?''
Sherrill shot his victims during a
seven-minute rampage, using two
Oklahoma Air National Guard
.45-eallber pistols. Many of the
victims were women, and most

Calif. officials reunite drug-tom.family
SANTA ANA, Calli. (UPI) -A
girl whose parents were arrested
because she told pollee they used
drugs was released from a county
shelter and reunited with her
~r and father after officials
were convinced they would not
hann her.
"They were tearfully overjoyed."
Gary Proctor, a lawyer representlng the famUy, said Friday. "She's
an only child and she desperately

wantedtobebackwlthherfamllY." ·
J?eanna Young,l3, of Tustin, was
released to her parents Thursday
from the ,Orangewood Children's
Home In Orange, a county shelter
for abused or abandoned chlldren,
where she had been for more than a
week against her wishes. ·
The girl captured national allenlion Aug. 13 when she walked Into
the Tustin Police Department with

a plastic trash bag containing
cocaine worth nearly $3,000 and a
small arrount d marijuana and
pills she sald belonged lo her
parents, Bobby Dale and Judith
Ann Young.
The parents were arrested and
Deanna was taken to the county
shelter.
Juvmile Court Referre Betty
Farrell agreed In a closed custody

Relocation decision cheers
leaders in W.Va. cottuttunity
WHEELING, W.Va. (UPI) -To
say Wheeling clty .officials are
overjoyed would definitely be an
understatement.
PoUtlclans ranging from the
mayor to city manager were
bubbling Friday with the announcement by Wheeling-Pittsburgh Steel
Corp. that It would move Its
corporate headquarters from PUtsburgh to Wheeling.
The steelmaker, struggling to
reorganize a multlrnUI!on dollar
debt and reduce costs, already
owns the building which company
dftc!als say they hope to move Into
within a year.
"I think everyone in the city of
Wheeling Is just on Cloud 9," Mayor
Stella Koerner sald. "It's Uke
having New Year's, Christmas,
Thanksgiving and ~ Fourth of
July all rolled Into one."
The anoouncement came during
an afternoon news conference In
Wheeling from Wheeling Pittsburgh Chief Exocu tlve Officer
George Ferris and West VIrginia
Gov. Arch Moore.

" It Is a signal that Wheeling, the
Upper Ohio Valley. indeed aU of
West Virginia Is a good place In
which to do business and create
jobs," Moore said.
The new Wheeling headquarters
will employ :m people, primarily In
executive and staff positions. A $2.4
rn!lUon renovation program of the
company's existing downtown office building, financed by a lowinterest package worl&lt;ed out wtth11
local and regional banks, will begin
(llce design plans are Hnallzed
officials said.
'
Wheeling-Pittsburgh, the nation's seventh- lar~st steelrnaker,
has been In Chapter 11 rrorganlzatlonal bankruptcy slnre Aprtl 1.9Ri,
trying to restructure a muH!mWlonooilar debt. The company survived
a !1!-day strike last summerbyS,:.nl
workers In three states over wage
and rene!lt Issues.
The move to Wheeling is subject
to bankruptcy court approval and Is
expected to save the sleelmaker
hu ndi'OOs of trousands of dollars,
officials said.

Mike Nau, Wheeling's city manager. said ~ economic impact of
~ move on the town wlll he
significant.
"When ~ headquarlers was
here before, the do~mtown was just
always packed," he said. Many
executives were moved from
Wheeling to Pittsburgh In 1968 with
~ merger of Wheeling Steel and
Pitts,_·
uurg h stee·1
"(The move) will help retailers,
restaurants, real estate and It will
mean lrnmedlate dollars for the
.. N
comrnu nl ty,
au added. "But the
lmporlan
I
thing
Is th8t W.Va.,
when we
now market Wheeling,
to
other oompanies, we can say we
have the seventh lar~st steel
company ."
Officials of Ohio, Pennsylvania
dw v
an
est trgtnta had been vying
for the corporate headquarters.
Each state had submitted a Ust of
ecooomic Incentives. But West
VIrginia alreaqy had most of the
• ad In
oompany
s Wheeling.
m lstrat!ve offices
In downto~m

Pennsylvania had offered
Wheeling-Pittsburgh $5 mUlion In
tree rent lf It rooved to a
Washington. Pa .. location. A spokesman t&gt;r Gov. Dick Thornburgh
sald the the company was the ,
recipient of the largest Pennsylvania Industrial Development Autblrtty klan d the Thornburg
ters work during the day, several administration- $10 mllllon tn 1979
crews weartng light-equipped hard- tJr Investment in the Monessen, :
hats attack the lire line overnight. Pa .. plant.
Press Secretary David Runkel '
After the ftre Is contained, there
will re no "mop up," which is said Wheeling-Pittsburgh Is curroutine for roost small llres.
rently In default lJ1 the loan because
"This lire is much too big to roop
ct bankruptcy and owe Pennsylvaup," Smith said. "We'll contain It , nia $II rnllllon.
and watch It, but It w(ll't be
But a spokesman tJr Plttsoorgh
completely out untO there's kits of Mayor Rlthard Callgulri said whUe
rain or even snow In Cktober."
the city obviously Is oot happy
Elsewhere In the West, a massive about losing a corporate citizen,
demobUlzatlon of fire crews was any move that might help the
underway as the majority d the company and the region survive Is 1
18,00J !lreflghters who were on the needed.
lines early this week prepared to
Former Wheeling may~r and
head home.
councilman William Muegge says
Smith said none of the rnn-Idaho the relocation d the oorporate
crews would be sent to his tire headquarters will be a pyscholog!because he had mough men &lt;Jl the calllft tor the town.
firellne.
"It's a blessing to the city," he
Including the Idaho fire, ooty said. "It's a psychological boost for
32,100 acres of uncontalned !Ires the city because (up to now) there
were reporled In the West Frtday has been a steady stream d
night, less than half of Wednesday's reversals."
total ct 87,!XXJ acres.

l

•

.

: sUndaY·

"The good news Is there's a
chanCe ·Of a wetting rain Monday
· !llld 1\leSdlly," Boise Interagency
:- Fire Center spokesman Lee
;·: f'OI8Ue said.
_. White roost of the Idaho llref!gh-

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WH0-0-0-0

can help
you?

CLASSFIED
ADS

Betz rejoins

I

r-------------------

500 mark

Daily Number
440

-Page 3

Lotto
14-13-12-38-27-30

at y

enttne
1 Section. 8 Pages

.

Vot.36. No. 78

Death toll unknown from toxic ·gas disaster
YAOUNDE, Cameroon (UPI) -A deadly natural
gas seeping froiJ'l a volcanic bike In remote western
Cameroon kUled an unknown number of people, and
estimates ranged from 40 to 2,(0).
A report. broadcast once on state-run Radio
Cameroon and quoting the Information Ministry, said
2,(0) were believed dead but the radio withdrew the
report and later broadcasts used the official
government figure of 40 dead.
Western diplomats said travelers !rom~ remote
area 2iO miles from the capital reported up to 1,500
dead but said that was a speculative llgure.

"TheofflclalsarestUiwaltlng!ora final word on the
death toll from rescue teams who went to the area,"
said a Western diplomat in Yaounde.
Radto Cameroon sald a 15-member lsraeU rescue
team reached the site and would report back to the
government later today. The lake Is In a rnounlalnous
region reachable only by unpaved roads rendered
nearly Impassable by the current rainy season.
The dlsas•er occurred Friday at Nlos Lake between
the towns of Wurn and Nkambe, 250 miles northwest
of the capital city of Yaounde. Officials said the toxic
gas escaped from a volcanic fissure that opened from

the bottOm of the lake.
A correspondent for Radio Cameroon, Fidel
Tchlnda , said, "The figure of 40 deaths announced
Sunday has been largely surpassed. They are
speaking close to 1,500 dead.
"President Paul Blya bas given instructions to put
measures In place to avoid the risks of an epidemic
and Isolate, ,the population from the dangers of
Infection arid 'contamlhatlon," Tchlnda said.
"At'tlje scene the rescue t~ms are having trouble
reaching the area becau$e they lacked technical
equipment. The government has asl&lt;ed for interna·

tlonal aid," Tchllida said.
There was no volcanic eruption. The area is located
In a old volcanic chain that is still semi active. A
similar incident In the chain four years ago killed 50
peopl£'. In that case, a heavy gas formed a cloud and
killed those who walked Into It.
·
"The gas comes up out of the lake, and It it's a
heavier gas, It sit! around the surface and rolls
around. People think Its a log arid walk right Into It,"
said one diplomat.
He said he would be surprised If the toll reached
2.(0) unless the gas hit a populated village.

....---

Learning _income taxes now could offer you money -making
opportumlies and save you money on your return at tax time
•Morning. afternoon, evening classes
•Reasonable course fee •Classes begin September 4
•Held at several area locations
Send for more information today or cal l now'
Contact our neares t office .

-

-

needy.

An audit by the Department of
Agriculture alleges that ~ state
misused $710,(0) In a contract with
a Cleveland truck rental firm used
to dlstrtbute the food.
Federal offtclals say the contract
between the state and Ryder Truck
Rental Inc. is under crlmlnal
Investigation.
"We expect to re talking to the
proSECutor about It ~ry soon," said
Constant Oleval!er, USDA regional
Inspector general mr investigations
In Ol~ago .
The recommenda tlon to recover
the ~.100 was made last rronth
by Thomas Heideman, USDA's
regional Inspector general for
audits.
Heideman sald the USDA Investigation found the Ryder oontract
was signed In October 1984 Instead
of by the deadline for the fiscal yoor
which ended Sept. 30, 1984.
He said any rooney the state had
received had to be spent before then
or be returned to the federal
government.
Former Ohio Agriculture Director Dale Locher has said that he
signed the contract Sept. 28, 1984 .
but did oot know when Ryder
signed it.
George Proctor Jr.. former
director of Ryder's Cleveland
offtce, said he did not recall when he
signed the contract. Ryder had a
verbal agreement with the state
retore Sept. lJ, 1984, he said.
The audit also ftlund the state did
oot follow "applicable federal and
state procurement procedures"
because it dld oot advertise for bids.
Sylvia Cullg, who was cwerseelng
the program for Gov. Richard
Celeste's offtce, said the state had
oo time to advertise mr bids and
went lo Ryder because It could
supply 22 trucks on siDrt notice.
State ct!lclals said they were
under order from Celeste to spend
the rooney rather than return It to
the federal government.

,

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Feds seek
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The federal government ts urging
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spent Improperly In a program to
supply surplus federal food to ~

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A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, Au ust 25, 1986

Copyrighted 1988

PartJ.r cloudy tonight, with a
low In the low 608. Bec:omlDg
cloudy Tuesday, wllh a chance
of showers and thundel"!!torrn8
and blghs In the upper 80s. Tbe
probabutly of preclpllatlon Is
near zero tonight and 30 peroent
Tuesday.
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income taxes
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1. 6000

clinic staff
GALLIPOLIS - J . Timothy '
Betz, C.F.N.P., M.S .. has returned
to the staff d Holzer Clinic Inc. as
director of the Spqrts, Industrial
and Rehabtlltatlve Center, located
at the clinic's Sycamore Branch.
Dr. Raymond Jennings d the
Department of Famtly Practice,
and a member of the clinic's hoard
of directors, will be ~ center
chairman, according to Robert E .
Daniel. clinic administrator.
A Gallipolis native, Betz is a 1970
graduate of Gallla Academy High
School, received Ids undergraduate
education at Ohio State UniverSity .
In 1973, rocetvJng an aasoctate
degree In nursing fran Central
Ohio Technical College in 1975.
Betz was the assistant coordinator of the Emergency Department
nursing staff at Doctor's HOdlpltal
North In Columbus from 1975 wtW
1976. He roceived a postgraduate
cerllflcate as family nurse practl- ·
tioner from OOU In 1977, and
rocelved a bachelor of science .
degree In nursing from Ohio
University In l9ln
· His prevloUI exper~ with tile
clinic was ~ a family nurse .
practitioner fran 1976 untO 19M,
when he left tl pursue a master of

•

the Qrst of what I&gt; expected to be has now entered the rew.~rd of her
several counseling sessions de- faith and lives forever."
A oontlngent of Edmond postal .
signed to help tl)em deal with the
emotional trauma of the siDotlngs. workers and about two dozen
Therapists and counselors from Lawton letter carriers In uniform
San Ysidro, Calli., where 1M! :,ears attended the services.
ago a berserk gunman killed 21 at a
Welch, who was born in Lawton
McPonald's restaurant, also ar- and attended high school and
rtved Frtday In Edmond to help college there, had been married In
dist resse d workers a nd the same church in Aprtl. She
townspeople.
worked at a post office In Duncan
At Hamllton's funeral at the First before moving to Edmond.
Baptist Church In Edmond, pastor
Hamm, pastor of Htllcrest Chris~
Alan Day called on the citizens of tlan Church in Oklahoma City
the entire city to p!ll together where Welch bad been attending
durtng Its pertod .of emotional trial. church, told mourners that life Is
"I predict Edmond, Oklahoma, fragile. "It lies on t1 thread," he
will be stronger as a result of this sald.
nightmare and catastrophe. No
After the 30-minute service, the
matter IDw dark the. night, h:lw mourners - led by a ront!ngent of
deep the water. God Is there.
Welch's co-workers- flied rut into
"Everytxxly has reen emotion- the warm morning sun and waited
ally ijhaken durtng the past several sUently as the gray and silver coffin
days. We're being called upon to was wheeled Into a waiting hearse.
use all oor resources."
Her husband, Ranqy, was helped
Welch was the first victim burled from the church and Into a
Frtday. Services were ~ld In the limousine.
southwestern Oklahoma town Or
At graveside services, the First
Lawton, where her father Is a Baptist pastor, the Rev. Ben
27-year veteran of the U.S. Postal Lortng, told about 100 people he
Service.
remembered a time when Welch
"Patti (Welch) is at home mw," and her husb3nd were talldng with
Dr. Del Hamm told about 2iO people hlrn about their marriage plans.
at First Baptist Church where the
·I roc all Patti questioning her
services were held. "Her falth In faith," Loring said. "!told her ootto
God can never be destroyed. She worry that her redeemer tives."

_
r---:--------....1..------------------=-==

Firefighting contingent
combats major blaze
. CROUCH, Idaho (UPI\ - Sev. .enty fire crews, taking turns
· battling an 18,Cffi.acre fire in a
round-the-clock e!for~ hope to have
the last major !Ire In the West
contained early Monday.
The commander of the 1,400
firefighters met with residents in
the Crouch area Friday night and
sald that lf the weather does not
change, the Anderson !Ire will
expand by no more than ~acres
and will be surrounded by !Ire lines
Monday.
The Inferno, In extremely rugged
terrain 40 miles north of Boise, Is
me d hundreds that started In the
Northwest durtng a fterre Aug. 10
lightning storm.
Forest and ran~ nres th1s ~ar,
nationwide but rrostly In the West,
have charred 1,153 9:1uare miles, an
area lar~r than the state of Rhode
Island.
Anderson Fire Complex Incident
C&lt;mmander Doc Smith told about
~ residents of the Garden Valley.
which Includes Crouch, his crews
are on~ ftrellnes :ll hOurs per day
trying to encircle ~ blaze In an
effort that Is costing ~ government $3117,(0) per day.
"It apJlE8rs we can herd the ooge
of the !Ire Into the burned area and
have It contained Monday," said
Smith, who Is based In Artzooa 's
Kalbab National Forest.
"The oountry Is Incredibly ~teep;
It's Incredibly rugged ," he said .
"The C!'I!Wli are worn out so we're
gMig aome d them rests.
"But we we've turned the comer
on the !Ire," he said.
_· The latest weather forecast
•· called foradrylngtrendaccompan: : led by lightning Saturday and

heartng Thursday to allow the girl
to beteunlted with her parmtsa!ter
deciding they would oot harm her In
reprisal for her actions, Proctor
said.
"By talldng to the two parents,
yoo can see that would not be the
case," Proctor said. "They all love
each other. The parents wanted her
IDme. We're going to get them Into
counseling the first part ot next
week."
The girl told pollee her parents
Ignored her ploos to stop using
drugs, and she finally decided to
tum them In after attending an
anti-drug lecture glv.en by a deputy
sheriff at a church.
Pollee arrested the couple within
several h:lurs and oonflscated a
small amount of marijuana, about
$2,(0) In cash and a [:lstol at their
home. The parents, who have no
prtor criminal records, later were
released on their promise to return
to court for a Sept. 23 arraignment
on cocaine possession charges.
Deanna had been In protective
custody slnre her visit to the pollee
station, despite her m:juest to be
reunited
wlth.her
On
ndlt parents.
fo
e co
ion
r the girl's
release was that the family not
discuss the case among themselves
untO It Is resolved in court, Proctor
ld
saProctor
·
declined to say whether
Deanna regrets her decision, but
salnld hedsheby!ebelt Ins~ . was wrongly
pu s
g locked up."
"I think she Is acting as a typical
13-year-old girl would," the lawyer
said "Sh , 11 11 d ed
·
e s a t e ~ by the
publicity, and she feels she was
punished tor what she felt was ... an
act of corisclenre."
Deanna's mother Is a bankruptcy
court clerk and the father Is a
bartender.

Ohio wttery

}teds hit

Employment
Research Associates. a Lansing,
Mich., non-profit organization that
specializes In analyzing the Impact
of military spending on the economy. also said ~ 25 major
agricultural states carried a Pentagon tax burden of $163.1 bOlton.
They received $126.8 billion In
by

EDMOND, Okla. (UPl) - Post
o!ftces nationwide set aside a
moment d silence today to hooor 14
postal workers killed In Edmond as
townspeople prepared for the final
funeral in a tragedy that has left
~m "alone In the dark and
- afraid."
Thousands of people gathered at
a football stadium Sunday to
remember the workers siDt Wed·
nesday morning at the Edmond
post office by Patrick Henry
Sherrlll. a lonely and tormented
part-time mailman whO then took
his own lt!e.
Sherrill's

his mother and father In a family

plot In his hometown of Watonga .
Services for~ last of his victims to
be burled, Betty Jarred, were
scheduled for today.
Flags·flying at ·half-stall at post
offices nationwide In horor d the .14
people kiUed will be raised to
tuB-staff at 4 p.m. cur today,
followed by a moment of silence,
Postmaster General Robert Tisch
sald.
At the service Sunday- dEClared
a day of mourning in Oklahoma by
Gov, George Nigh, - 4,:ll0 p€ople
stood trembling and tear,y-eyed for
. about an IDur at the Central State
University field, clutching Bibles

and one another.
They prayed mr the victims , lor
Sherrill and for their town.
"Night has fallen upon us," said
the Rev. David Egbert, a pastor at
St. Mary's Episcopal O!Urch. "We
are alone In the dark and afraid. We
have felt powerless .. . all feel we
have been vkllated."
Egbert urged townspeople to
pray God's presence "might flU rur
emptiness."
In his remarks, Tisch spoked the
Postal Service workers who survived ~massacre and returned to
work the i&gt;Uow!ng day.
"We can follow the lead of the
surviving workers at the Edmond

post ofllce." he said. "At 1:15a.m.
Thursday morning, as yoo know,
~ night tour Insisted (ll reporting
to work. They dared 10 walk the

sameworkroOmfioor~erethelr
colleagues had been cuI down ~

day before.
"Their return to work was an act
d defianre - defiance d evil and
the Irrational . It was an act ct
aftlrmatkln - afflrmatkm that life
will go on."
Michael Bigler. a survivor of the
massacre whO escaped by "playing
dead," broke Into tears whUe
reading Bible verses. "Believe In
Jesus Christ and love - another
as he commanded us," he said.

"It Is vlrlually Impossible to
make a persuasive argument that
the U.S. farm sector Is ra::eivlng a
net subsidy when Its l,:.nl principal
agricultural counties are exJXlrtlng
at least $12.4 bUI!on roore In ftlnds
for military and lli!IiCIIIIural purposes than is being returned to
The audit also found the state
them," the study
Among the 25 states, the study laDed to follow proper procedures
found that 17 co.ntlnued to slnw an In spending $94,!ro for a re!rt~ra ­
overall net tax loss after all tion unit for the Grooteer Cleveland
payments lo farmers had been Food bank Inc.
Included.

said.

Nation's governors give up
pos.sible tax refonn battle
HD..TON HEAD. S.C. (UPl) The nation's governors, despite
pleas for one more fight on tax
refonn legislation, are ready to
suJTellder.
"It's like•trying to catch a train
and It's already left the station,"
Oregon Gov. VIctor Atlyeh said

Sumay.
Altl:Dugh the focus of 78th annual

meeting c1. ~ ,Natlqllal Governors
A.mclallon Is ·eilucatton. ~ talk
quickly turned · to ~ tax bill
approved· by a House-Senate confereooe commllllle and awaiting
congressional passage In
September. ·

"not winnable" and warning "we
may pay a higher price for a
fruitless attempt to chan~ It"
Larnm's panel Is scheduled to
meet today to make a final decision
&lt;Jl whether to press mr a chari~ In
the bill, but the Colorado governor
Indicated that the lkely decision
will be tl forget about a blitz on
Was~ .

"J penonaUY thlnktllat·me bas to

undel'ltand that Oll.'e It's over, It's
over," he saki. •utt illl'tlncement,
~ cement Is hardentne."
Lamm strene~ tbat Ill! goverool'll backed many ofthe ji'&lt;Mslons
- Including towered tax· rates ·aU of us \rollld
The governors were stasgered· and saki
wte
yes
on
the
biD."
.
when the tax refonn negot!aton, at
North Carollna Gov. James
. )he
momen~ denied deductiOnS
for lllet IUA!I, • big soorce of Martin, wllo &amp;e!Ved on the House
Ways and 1'!feans Committee, said
rev111ue b' !be
. But Colollldo Gov' Richard the squabble was bet\101!1!11 the high
Lamm, blWII ,ia always, told hla tax and low tax !PijiS and lidded~
collequeli Ill' ~raet about a last- ~ wu a compromise. ·
Notlnl that Ill percent d the
ditch flllhl, saying the ·eflort was

J. 11uiJCII)' Bet&amp;
science deglee In exercise physiology at OU, willch he received tn

19111.

•t

"We are erauely
II
pleued to ·
have nm back and by ao doing
h~ the opportunity Ill ~
rehabUitatlve services Ill the restdents cl. the area," Daniel said.
Betz Is man1ed Ill the fonner
Janet Holtm, and lD&amp;ether with
tJielr two 10111, Adam and Andy
tbey l'l!lllde on Cedar Street .,;
GaDipnlls.
, I
. .....

·•

·-···

.~

.. ..............___·- · ...........
~

~

-· ·· ~·

·:a1m011

•tli• . .

people in North Carolina "will ~
better dl," Martin said the fight "Is
oot a big issue for me.
Most of the demands for (lle
more try at restortng the sales tax
deduction came oot from the
governors, but from rEPresenta ·
lives ol the National AssoCiatlon·o!
Counties, ~ National League of
t;:ltles and ~ Conference of
Mayors.
The first formal session d. the
conference, devoted tl the goveroors' new proposals for Improving
America's schools, drew such
disparate d.llclals u Education
Secretary William Bennett and
firebrand Al~rt Shanltl!r, pres!·
dent of the American Federatkln d

Teachers.
But the session· turned Into a
mulllal lllmlratloft ,sx:lety, with
Bennett, Shanker ·and Mary Jlartwood Futrell,. prestdent of the
NatiOnal Eldu~tion Allioclatkln,
giving the governors ~ highest
possible grades.

�Monday, August 25, 1~§6

ru ummentary

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO
Monday, August 25, 1986

_,

By United Press International
Even though Jim Kelly and
Herschel Walker did not play this
weekend, other former U.S. Foot·
ball League players did have an
Impact on the NFL.
Quarterback Doug Wllllams and
tallback Kelvin Bryant, two former
USFL standouts who had not
played in more than a year, played
key roles Saturday night as the

•

·Pressing·. the· Sovie~~~___w_ill__iam_F_._Bu_ck_Ley_._Jr.

The .Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE

~IEIGS-MASON

AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
AsslsiWII Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

News Editor
A MEMBER of The United Press Interna1ional, Inland Daily Press
and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

Associ~tlon

LETTERS QF .OPINidN are welcome . They should be Jess than lJO words
long. AI liNters arf' su bjN't toed Iling and !l'll st bP s igned with name, addres s and
telephone number. No Wl sign6i lett(lfS w!Jl be publlshro . Letters should be In
good taste, addresslng Issues, nor personalities .

Once again, we have tmse counset for uie State Department)
blg·name adviserS CO\IDSellng the who read it otherwise, the ''permls·
president In effect to abanoon his · sive" reading, The questlol\ of
Strategic Defense In!~tlve. ,But which ol the two readings lscori'ect
this time around there are two would of course be moot If Mr.
names not usually associated with Reagan were to exerCise his
prerogative, which is til call an end
the soft school on Soviet diplomacy:
·
Melvin Laird's, and most conspicu- to lhe treaty.
2:
For
reasons
. of his own
ously, Brent Scowcrofl. They In
(certatnly
not
for
reasons
that IU'e
effect signed a 3,500-word paper
obvious),
Mr.
Reagan
has·
oot
address to the president by Harold
exercised
his
prerogative.
Instead,
-Brown, who served President
he has said he would go along wtth
Carter as SE"Cretary of defense.
the restrictive reading for the
What is going on?
1. The ABM treaty concluded In simple reason that SDI has oot
1972 is variOusly Interpreted. There reached the point where it becomes
· are lht5e who read in it a relevant to ask finally which &lt;1 the
prohibition against testing lhe two meantngS'ol the ABM treaty is
technologyappropriatetothedevel· binding. Along comes the Soviet
Union, in thecourseofthoseendless
opment of a space shield (SDI) the "restrictive" interpretation. disarmament talks. wtth one of
There are !hose (including lhe

tmse modest proposals It specializes in. Why not, say tlr Russians,
a) accept lhe restrictive interpreta·

tlon, and b) extend the treaty !oral
years? 1t is only surprising that
they didn't add, and, G) give us the
Statue of Liberty.
·
Mr. Reagan said no, no. But he
did say he would ~ wUling to
guarantee not to dep)ly any SDI
weapon ii ll'ss than 7~ years, but
that he would wish to be free to test
anddevelopdurtngthat period . The
Soviet Union has fl. course taken the
position that Mr. Reilgan's alterna·
Uve 1&lt;&gt; outrageous. In a w~y, the
i!'ovtlit Union Is correct; Mr.
Reagan ShQuld not give the Soviet
Unioriwhatlhei!'ovietUnlOnlshotly
engaged In transforming into a veto
power over plans devised by

Third tenn argument
Suddenly we arr starting to hear talk about repealing the 22nd
· Amendment, which limits presidents to two terms. It is prooobly a good
Idea, but it is complicated, If not doomed, by the motives ollts current
supporters.
Led by Rep. Guy Vander Jagt, chalnnan of the House Republlcan
ccampalgn ccommittee, Wid Max Hugel, a New Hampshire ruslnessman;
lhe new campaign is being put forward as a way to keep Ronald Reagan In
the Wl)ite·House for four rmre years alter 1988.
The president says he favors repa~l of the two-tenn Omit, ~t oot for
hlmBelf. Some people believe him and some oon't, oot lhe very idea d.
changing lhe basic ground rules of polltics In a way that could benefll a
particular pollticlan distorts lhe deoote over the i'&gt;sue ol a Umlt on
· pnesldenttal service.
Changing the Constitution to permit an Incumbent president to stay In
; office beyond the time permitted when he was elected sma:ks d wit at used
· to be called BanWia Republlc politics, -the kind of tactic used In Haiti by
· the Duvaller "presidents-for·llle" - or the arrogant "boss rule" games
• stlll played In some Arrerican cities and states.
• If the 22nd Amendment is to he repealed, It should be effective ~ alter
: lhe incumbent president has lert office. ln point of fact, it is lltl!ly lhat a
: repeal amendment probably couldn't be rattried in tJmetobeneflt ReagWI,
• who leaves ofllce In 28 rmnlhs under the p-esent arrangement
: Constitutional amendments require approval by two-tlllrm majorities In
• bolh the House and Senate and majority approval ol both houses of the
• legislatures In 38 states, a process that frequently takes rmst of the seven
· years Congress usually provides for ratification.
Reagan might be long gone from Wasltngton before.the two-term Umlt
. could be repealed and, If by chance, a Democrat or a llberal Republican is
• elected president In 1988, Vander Jagt and Hugel might be far less
· enlhuslastic about junking the two-term limit.
: Putting the Reagan issue aside, !here are some good arguments for
repealing the two-term limit.
The first is properly advanced bY lhe VanderJagt-Hugelcampalgn: The
people should be allowed to elect a president as many times as lhey wish.
Members of Congress and with trost other elected officers at the state
.and local levels may serve as many terms as they can win and trerels no
logical reason to llmlt lhe president True, some states limit the !'limber d.
terms their governors can serve, but there Is no averwbelmlng evidence
lhat they have better government lhan states with no limits.
A second reason for ending the two-term limit is that u ttten hamstrings
pnesldents In !heir second term. The so- called lame duck Effect- the loss
of a public official's Influence in his final term- means !hat the [resident
oow really has only one fo"'·year term to govern at peak power.
Reagan won his second term with a smashing landslide, but because he
was on the way out alter taking the oath In 19~. the 1984 victory didn't
ootlceably impress Congress.
If there had been no two-term Hmit and Reagan wanted to use the
posslbUity of a third temn to prod the lawmakers, he mlghtbe having a lot
less trouble with Congress now. And maybe that's what Vander Jagt and
Hugel had in mind in lhe first place - ju!t talking about a third term i:&gt;r
Reagan may give him lhe clout he needs in his second.

America for 1he protECtion of
America and AmeriCans. '
3. '!'he BrownSco~oft !llemo·
random advocates a ban m testing
for SDI for up to 10 years. WI\Y? The
reasons given are presumably lhat
any precipitate success with our
anti-m!sslle technology would destabUize the current baianCP of
terror. But this is one of those
orthodox projections we have been
following for more than a genera·
lion, dut1ng which we traveled the
road from massive strategic superiority to strategic inferiority.
Two aspects of the space shl~ld
.program should stand out The first
is its emancipating vision: the idea
of liberating America from threats
of massive destruction by creating
a space shield as an alternative
preferable to blowing up 100 million
Russians. That is the visionary
approach. and the principal engine
behind the idealistic ascendancy of
the SDI.
The Sll'ond aspect of the space
shield program is Its awful vulnerablllry. It Isn't vulnerable directly to
Soviet pressure against it. But
Soviet pressure hasn't in recent
memory been as Isolated as !haL
Soviet pressure equals a comblna·
tion of Soviet plus American
pressure. Now, one expects the
fellow travelers and lhe softheaded
set to rustle when a Soviet wind
blows, but one mesn't expect it of
such as Gen, Scowcroft, who 1hree
years ago headed the commission
that told us we needed 100 MX
mlssUes for the national security.
Of ti-ose we have got none. And
nolhlng in political life is surely
more predictable than that what is
happening- what has happenedto lhe MX will happen to the space
shield If we ~NI cit financing It
vigorously (lhe [resident asltl!d lor
a 75 percent Increase this year, got
:ll percent; Brown.Scowcroft want
10 percent), testing it at AID-speedahead, and moving as fast as
possible toward deployment.

Washington Redsklns beat the
Buccaneers 21-13 at Tampa.
Kelly missed Buffalo's J3.6 victory over Kansas City Saturday
night, and Walker sat out Dallas'
41-28 loss to Pittsburgh Friday
night.
Wllllams, who played for the
Buccaneers from 1978-82 before
bolting after a contract dispute,
completed 13 of 17 passes for 94

WASHINGTON - A blizzard of

private individuals. But there are
times, we think, when lhe medical

questioning our journaliStic etltlcs.
At the heart of lhe controversy is
the question: If an accused public
flgune seeks sympathy from the
public and clemency from lhe
courts by claiming be is suffering
from a specific disease, should tre
press have the right to use his
medical records to determine
whether he's telling the truth?
That, we confess, is what we did.
We reported !hat an embattled Roy
Cohn - who has since died - had
AIDS. Quoting from his medical
records we proved !hat he had lied
when he insisted repeatedly lhat he
had "liver cancer," not AIDS.
Most readers conceded, as one
put It, lhat "Roy Cohn is a hateful
man and has been guUty of
monstrous deeds." But, lhey con·
tended, In the words of a New York
City reader, "this is no excuse lor
getting hold of and publishing data
from highly conllden ttal medical
records." Was this, the reader
suggests, a media abuse !hat
"lhreatens the rights of aU &lt;1 us?"
We agree !hat lhe rnedia has no
business obtaining or publishing
conlidenttal medical reconds of

ailments of a public figure need to
be aired.
Roy Cohn was a superlawyer who
spent rmst of his llle In the p~bilc
spotught. In the- 19005, when Sen.
Joseph McCarthy was rummaging
~ ~~ clo~ts t.
search r:i communists, Cohn was at
his ear, whispering. He went on 10
become an attorney for the rich, lhe
famous and notorious, Including
mob figures.
A pattern &lt;1 legal misconduct
finally caught up With Cohn last
October. A New York judicial
dlsc1pllnary panel recommended
he be disbarred for "dishonesty,
fraud, derelt and misrl'presentation." Court testimony alleged , for
example, !hat Cohn had Down tot he
hospital bed &lt;1 a eying ITilltimllllonaire and Induced him to sign a
document naming Com as trustee
of his estate. According to the
testimony. Cohn told tits 84-year·
old man - who was partly
paralyzed, nearly blind, semicoma·
lose and drugged - tliat the JIIPer
had to oo with his divorce
prooeedlngs.

Cohn denied It all, offering a trore
benign version of events and
blaming his accumulated enemies
for hounding hbn on his sickbed. In
a plea for clemency, he presented
affidavits from ooctors that he 1\ad
a "llle-threatenlng" disease.
Thus began a spate d stories and
interviews with Cohn. As lhe
Washington Post aptly reported
last December: "Loathed or Uonlzed, the legendary Roy Cohn is
&lt;t,ring a very p~bllc death." He
vocUerously denied his aliment was
AIDS and threatened to sue anyone
who said !ll.
It was legally defensible to report
"nimors" lhat Cohn had the dread
disease. This is what "00 Minutes,"
for eKample, dld. We decided to
publish the story only If we could
obtain lncontroverilble proof. After
weeks of eftlrt, Dale Van Atta
obtained confidential melical records that provided lhe proof we
needed. So we reported that Cohn
had engaged In a public fraud;
contrary to denials, he had AIDS.
But there · was an even more
Important issue that troublro us.
The National Institutes of Health
are required to chot5e !heir
patients for medical, not political

By MIKE TULLY

overrated."
Deshaies may learn othernoise if
he walks the bases loaded against a
team that can hit for power. The
Mets tn the playoffs come to mind
as a possibility. Instead, the
Cardinals left 13 runners.
Houston manager Hal Lanier
said he would have changed
pitchers If Deshaies had not retired
Ozzte Smith to end the fourth
Inning.
'1 was one hitter away after he
walked (VInce) Coleman," Lanier
said. "He pitched himself into jams
and out of jams."
Jim Pankovits sparked lhe As·
tros offensively with four hits.
Tim Conroy, 3-8, lasted just 3 1·3
Innings In falling for the eighth t lme
to earn his fourth victory. He hun
him~lf with two lhrowing errors.

UPI National Baseball Writer

Rookie left·hander Jim Deshaies
is challenging ooseball's ancient
warning that "bases on balls wUI
kill you."
Deshaies pitched the Houston
Astros to a 5-1 victory over the St.
Louis Cardinals Sunday and his
walks proved more boring than
lelhal.
"I fell asleep a couple of times,"
St. Louis manager Whitey Herzog
said. "What a game."
Deshaies, 9-3, went five Innings.
He allowed four hits but walked six
in winning for the eighth time In his
last nine decisions. Aurello wpez
finished for his fifth save.
"I had brain spasms," Deshaies
said of his control problems. "I was
trying to pitch too fine and ended up
walking some batters. Walks are

·. TO!fay in history
' TodaY Is Monday, Aug. 25, the 237th day of 1986 with 128 to follow .
: The moon is In Its Ia st quarter.
"The morning stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Venus, Mars and Sarum.
ThoSe born on this date are under the sign fl. Virgo. They include Czar
Ivan IV ("Ivan 1he Terrible'') of Russia In 15Jl; Allan Plnltl!rton, founder
of the •private detective agency, In 1819; aulhor Brei Harte In 1836;
'dancer·actress Ruby Keeler in 1910 (age 76); "Pogo" cartoonist Walt Kell,y
ill 1913; actors Van Johnson In 1916 (age 'lll) and Mel Ferrer t.1917 (age
'69}' composer-ronductor U!onard Bernstein In 1918 (age 68); Alabama
:~. i:;eorgeWallace in1919 (age67), and actor Sean Comeryln l9ll (age

.s;:)

;· on tlill date tn history:

.
In 1718, lhe city of New Orleans was l:lunded.
In :1944, Arrertcan troops liberated Paris fran the Nazis In World WarD.
: In ·1967, a sniper assassinated Arqerican Nazi leader George Llnooln
Rockwell tn Arlington, Va.
'.
n' 1n' l981, the spacecraft Vuyager-2 came within 63,(XX) miles rl.lhe panel
'saturn and sent back brlllant pictures.
In ]98;, 1J.year-old Samantha Smith was ldlled wtth her falher !l"d six
,ether people in a plane crash In Maine. Her l983letter to Soviet Ptesident
-Yurt Andropov about her fear of nuclear war earned her a visit ID Russia.
A thOught for the day: BorTOwlng from naval hero Oliver Pel'l')/, Walt
Kelly's cartoon hero Pogo said, "We has met the enemy, and It ls lis."

Indeed, many European ob- lhe CIA has recruited, armed and
servers believe that lhe Reagan trained are now blowing up roses,
administration has, from the begin· destroying cooperative settlenlng, vastly exaggerated the terror- ments, killing innocent women and
ist danger. Europeisnwchcloserto cblldrm and generally harassing
UbYa, Syria and a her alleged the poo'ple and government of
terrorist centers !han i! the United Nicaragua. To the poople of
States, but ooe moounters llttiefear Nicaragua, Ronald Reagan is the
or discussion among Europeans
about Ubya, Syria or International
terrorism.
In Its opening days the Reagan
administration announced !hat,
henceforth, comooting ti!rl'Qrlsm
would replace concerrl over hiunlin
rights as the lteystone ct~an
policy. Such a tleclslon could only be
AC~PEMIC
the product of minds .' larlll!ly
Ignorant about the central issues c1 .
foreign policy.
Only a h;mcllll d. poople have
experienced all)' nllll danlll!r from
terrorists In reeent years. Vast
multitudes of people have'sutfered
oppression, degi'ada~n, torture
and death because rl.lalman·rlghts
abuses around the globe. Reagan
1111d 1U asaodates are plllying a
:· '
game ct Holl,ywaod charades when
'.
lhey contend that 111~ Ubyan
terrorist Is a siee.ter lhreat to
lalmanlty than those Who abu8e
human rights, such as Plmchel m
Qllle and.Botba lh Solilh AtricJ.
The Reagan admlrilstratlon's
curious flxatloa 011 teuorimlls aU
lhe more lroJIIC In its vll!wrl.ltsown
"terrorlsti' llleticll!l NlcaJ.'I!aua.ln
tills [)(M!rty~ little countty,
Arriertcllll arms, I1IOIIl!)' and &lt;$
agents are waging a secret\$' (the
'
wocld's worst·kept El!rej) to • • ·
aae the pel'lll)lel\t we rfi:!illy
•\
I
~md pibllcly 1'I!OOgiiiJl! 1!1 Nlcarll·
gua. The Contra~ ·tllat ':

reasons. We frankly were skeptical
that Roy Cohn, whO had powerful
fliends in the White House, just
happened to heoneoflhe28 patients
wbo would be admitted to the
taxpayer·funded NIH ~am and
be administered a prom!singexperimental drug ca ll ed
azidothymidine.
Discover magazine In its current
issue describes 1he efforts by
desperate AIDS victims and their
families to beg, borrow or !teal this
drug. Yet of an estimated 10.~
victims who are dying c1 AIDS,
Cohn just happened to be ooe d. 28
patients wbo were ~lected at NIH
for this llle-prolongtng .program.
Now the Wall Street Journal has
char~d !hat the White Hou~
intervened to rmve Cohn ahead fl.
other potential candidates.
Every expose means disgrace for
some human being who i~ being
typically weak rather than evll.
Most of the lime we are convinced
that the trade-off is necessary to
maintain a free ooclety. But there
are ~sons when It seems a close
ca ll. In lhe case of the late Roy
Cohn, we helievethetruthneededto
be told.

ALMOST PICKED OFF - Eddie Milner make6 it
back to !lr!it bse In tbne 011 a pickoff atlenlpt by Cubs

Finally, during final·round play
Sunday In lhe $700,&lt;XXl Worjd Series
of Golf, Pohl said he and the other
members ol his threesome had a
"Heckle and Jeckle and a Jekyll·
and· Hyde type round. "
"We weren't sure who was who
and who was doing what," he
added.
But afterwards Pohl patted his
pocket, which held a wallet that
contained a $126,&lt;XXl check that
represented his biggest payday
ever.
"I always thought playing go~
was great, but playing winning
golf's even better," he said .
"It wasn't pretty out there, but It
was good enough."
Po hi carded a see-saw 1-over- par
71 In the final round to win by one
shot.over Lanny Wadkins:
Pohl, 31, of Mt. Pleasalli, Mich.,
whO qualified for this select,
43·player field by winning the .
Colonial Nationallnvttatlon In May
for his first title ever, had rounds &lt;1
69~ 71-71 for a total c13-under·par
on lhe 7,139-yard Firestone
Country Club course.
Pohi also earned a 10-year
exemption on the PGA Tour.
. "That's great for peace of mind,
which I didn't have out there
(Sunday)," he said.
"I tiCratnbled all day klllg., Four
birdies and five bq'dles lsn11exa,:tly

COUNSELING PROGRAM
SLAMOU"KU.
I

l

'

'

,.;.·

anybody's Idea~ liteady play.~' ·

.., ..
;

.

•

Wadkins, Whowm lhe,l9T7World
Series, mls8ed l:irdle putts on fhe
three clotilna holel m route to ia
2-over 74. HlJ IQQI'I!I of 6&amp;8-'11).72
gave hlni a '12-b:ile tOiai ci. ~r
m, worth
"I played fairly well, buUriuued :
too many lXrdie chances," said
WadkinJ, of Dallu. '"!'he doot wu
open, ooti didn't go ln. I dlc)J'teven
. knock.
"There's satisfaction, though,

' ·i h

m.m

' ~~·~. .·-·~--------------~-----------J

I

I

A sand wedge to lour feet gave
Po hi another birdie on the lith hOle,
i11t he bugeyed 1he 14th off a bad
approach and lost another stroke on
lhe 18th when his drive sailed into

=======:::;-!

Cole was alone In third place after r-tree-;:s:
.
his 74-67-68-70 put the South African 1
at L-under 279 and gave him a
LEGAL NOTICE
$47,100 payday. He had won only
$19,221 prior to this week.
The Public Utilities Com"I sort of snuck In there." said the
mission of Ohio hae set
38-year-old veteran in his 18lh year
for public hea.rtng Ca.se
on the Tour. "I won't kid you -!he
No. 86-02-EL·EFC, t.o
review the fuel procuremoney Is nice. For a chan!J'."
ment
pra.cttces and
Pohl, Wadkins and Cole were the
pollcles of Columbus and
only players to better par . John
Southern Ohio Electric
Mahaffey carded a l-over 71 to
Company, the oper&amp;tton
finish In fourth ploce at even-par 280
of its Electric Fuel Comand win $33,100.
ponent and related matFour players tied at l -over 281ters. This hearing Is
Donnle Hammond (a closing 741,
scheduled to begin &amp;t
10:00 a..m. on September
Aney Bean (66), Rodger Davis of
22, 1986, a.t t.he o!floas of
Australia (711 and Tim Simpson,
the Public Utilities Com·
who closed with a 5-under ffi for the
mission, 180 East Broad
tournament's best round.
Street,
Columbus. Ohio
Pohl ~ed up three-shot lead
43215.
by the seventh hole but closed his
front nine with two bo!J'YS to drop
All Interested parties
Into a tie with Hammond after the
will be given a.n opporfront nine.
tunity to be heard. Further tnrorma.tlon me.y be
"After !hose birdie p~tts (d. four
obtained
by oontaottng
and 14 feet) on the fifth andsevenlh
the
Commission.
holes, I Dgured 'Wow, Ffrestone's
easy today," he said. "But I hit a
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
lousy drive on the eighth and I had a
COMMISSION OF OHIO
brain seizure or somethin(t on ·ffle
BY: Mary Ann Orllnskl,
ninth and missed .l\11 .eaSy !Nit.
Seorewy
·Bogey le!1ltory both times."

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

knocked In 1he go-ahead run with a
double and Ron Oester added a
two-run single in a six· run eighth
inning that carried the Reds. Blli
Gulllckson, 11·8, benefitted from the
upri'&gt;Lng to. get the victory. Ron
Davis, ().2, took 1he loss.
Giants 10, Mets I
At San Francisco, Caney Maloonado drove in five runs with a
homer, double and single and Mike
Krukow, 13-7, pitched a four-hitter
to pace the Giants. Maloonado, who
has driven in 58 runs on his 65 hits
this season, hit a three-run homer
off losing pitcher Rick Agullera, 6-6,
in the first Inning.
Phlllles 6, Padres 5
At San Diego, Milt Thompson
drove in three runs, two with a
ninth-inning single, to help the
Phlllles complete a comeback from
a 5.0. deDcit. Kent Tekulve, 7-3,
pitched two Innings for the viCtory.
Steve Bedrosian worl&lt;ed the ninlh
for his 18tl! save. Rich Gossag~. 5-6,
took lhe loss.
Dodgen 3, Expos 2
At Los Angeles, Dave Anderson,

making his first start since coming
off the disabled list last week,
doubled home Mike Scioscia with
one rut in the lOth inning, lifting the
~ers and rookie Brian Holton ,
1.0. Tim Burke, 8-6. took the loss.
Wayne Krenchickl singled home
bolh Montreal runs.

CLOGGING CLASSES
STARTING TUESDAY,
SEPT. 9
POMEROY VILLAGE HALl
AUDITORIUM
ADVANCED 7 P.M.
BEGINNERS 8:30 P.M.
GIG POWELL. TEACHER
FOR INFORMATION CALL

992-2622 - 992·6720

We'll even :..:mlsh

the

film

FREE!

A benefit softball game featuring
the WKEE Jox Sox and AdvaCare
wUI be held Thursday, Aug. 28, at 7
p.m. at 1he Kyger Creek Power
Plant field .
Proceeds wlll benefit Big Broth·
ers and Big Sisters of Gallla,
Jackson, Meigs and Mason counties, an organization dedicated to
providing positive aduh companionship to chUdren from single
parent families In the area.
The KEE RadloJox Sox !sa team
of disc jockeys from a radio station
in Huntington, W.Va., which does
benefits as a community service.
AdvaCare is sponsored bY the
new Health Maintenance Organlza.
lion formed jointly by Holzer Clinic
and Blue Cross of Central Ohio to
provide prepaid health care services In the area.
A concession stand wOJ be
provided and admission Is by
donation.

Simply bring in your roll of Color Print
Film for processing, and we'll give you
a roll of Cotorcraft Film to play with ...

ABSOLUTELY FREEl
Compare us with the other guy...
Shoot, we're not afraid!
DISC, 110, 126, ll5 FILM ONlY

,.-----------------~
I
SWISHER LOHSE
I
I

Pharmacy

~----~'

l
~

!

KOiflnath Mc:Cullough. R Ph

~----~

. Chlrln Ri111e. R Ph

Ron1ld H1n•n g . R Ph

Mon rhru Sit 8 00 • m to 9

p

m

Sund1y 10.3010 12:30 and 5 tot p.m
PAfSCRIPTIONS

PH 9$2 29151

Fmtndly Strvtc:e

E ,.,.. ,"

P"mouov . Oh
0p9fl Ntl/hU tol 9

He's not up there alone.
Rain or shine, day or night, whatever the problem, the people
who bring electricity to your home are always there.
In the coal mines, generating plants, on poles and in offices,
we're working to make sure you have electricity when you need it.
And, our job doesn't stop with reliable service. We can provide
you with valuable free information on choosing efficient electric
heating and cooling sys~ms, electric safety, and the equal payment plan. Call us. We're happy to be ofservice.
Electricity ... making sure you can get the
most out of life. - - - -

DO YOU WANT
FULL-nME

SERVICE WHEN YOU
BUY A HEARING
AID?
poiro, ond rototod
~In for mojor repolr. Mony

-uw•

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· purchiHprice•lthaugh we•r1h1ppyto

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,.

· .'i IIMII•ot h"''' o now IMMontlft ."Thii'•whotont hHI'IngaldwNrH

rocantl'l' lllid when tha dl•oov•id tho lul·tlma Nrviat ond dadlcoted
prolooaionol http ovolloblo ot' Dllu Hollring Aid c.ritw.

SEE US AT HOLZER CLINIC
GALUPOUS, 'OHIO
ENT DEPARTMENT
EACH WEDNESDAY 1·3 P.M;

AID

I

·,

It

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I
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--------------------

a

m.

.

'

\

"He had good stuff but he got
some of it up high and they got
hits," Herzog said.
In other games, Pittsburgh de·
feated Atlanta 4-3, Cincinnati
ripped Clllcago 7-1, San Francisco
routed New York 10-1, Philadelphia
overtook San Diego 6-5 and Los
An~les shaded Montreal 3-2 In 10
innings.
Pirates 4, Bravt'll 3
At Pittsburgh, Joe Orsulak went
4-for-4, stole two bases and scored a
run, helping the Pirates complete a
three-game series sweep. Jim
Morrison had an RBI single and
Barry Bonds an RBI rouble, but tlr
Pirates also scored two runs,
including lhe game-winner, on
errors by right fielder Omar
Moreno.
Reds 7, Cubs I
At Chicago, Barry Larkin

pltdler Rick Sutcll!fe. Leon Durtuun 1!1 the Chicago
flr.!t basemWI. Cincinnati rallied In the late innings to
trip the Cubs, 7-1. (UPI)

since Danny, Bobby (Cole! and
myself were the cnly guys to break
par. Those new Firestone greens
are tough, particularly when it's
sunny and dry like It was today ."

By ROBERTO DIAS
UPI Sporis Writer
AKRbN, Ohio (UPII -Having
an Identity crisis is ood enough, but
Dan Pohl admits to several.
One stems from his name, and
the nine-year PGA veteran has
heard "all the jokes about Pohi
vaulting Into the lead, blah, blah,
blah."
Anolher lies in the fact th~t Pohl
oo longer wants to be known as lhe
long hitter that blasted booming
drives from the tee in the tate 1970's
and early 1900's.
"I've changed my swing," he
says. "No more moon shots for

ch let terrorist - not M:&gt;ammar
Gadbafl. ·
Instead of urging his fellow
citizens to avoud Europe, Mr. ·
Reagan could best reduce the
terrorist menace by reconsidering
his own terrorist activities against
the people ci Nicaragua.

I'

to activate Bryant, Wllllams, wide
receiver Derek Holloway and
linebacker Angelo Snipes for tile
game. All fnur were signed by the
Redsklns after the USFL released
them earlier this month.

Pohl wins World Series golf title

Berry's World

.

"Kelvin's a bli·play guy, an
explosion," Gibbs said. "He's
simply got to get back to being used
to getting hit."
The Redskins, in off-the-field
transactions related to USFL singings, waived last year's $P('Cial
team's captains and members of
lhe 1982 Super Bowl champions,
Otis Wonsley and Greg Williams.
The mcves allowed the Redsklns

Benefit tilt to be
held on Thursday

False alarnn ____________________G_e_or~~_M_£__oo_er_n
As 1he summer draws to a cioselt
becomes Increasingly evident that
the Reagan administration vastly
overreacted when It urged Amelicans not to travel In Europe this
summer because of the possibllity
of terTOrist attacks. So f;l.r as 1 have
been able to determine, none c1 the
thOusands of Americans who ignored this warning and traveled in
Europe encountered· lhe slightest
evidence of terrorl.sn).
Traveling In Italy, Ausb1a, Belgiwn and Ireland lhls summer, I
have never found Europe more
pleasant and secure. The one
positive benefit for travelers nesulttng from the administration's warning is lhat it so drastically cut down
the nwnber of lravelers It made
travel easier for those who did go
abroad. There may also have been
a second beneDt for the tourist
business In the United States,
Russia, China, Japan Wid other
countries: These nations received
some of lhe lravelers whO would
otherwise have gone to Europe.
But for tlJo!le Pll!JoJ;lCans who,
over the years, haye had oothlng to
oo with terrorism and have wocked
hard to earn the patronage d.
American vislton, the .Reagan
warning was costly. Europeans
also felt hurl lhat tbelr couiltrles
were, tneffect,declaredoffllmltsto
AmericWIS.
1boughtful EIIJ'OPI!8IIS explained
to me time after time that they
could not UJJ!erstand how WI
Arrerican [re&amp;ident- aware of the
dWIIII!rs on the streets ct American
cities - could urge hla fellow
AmerlcWIS to avoid Fllrope &lt;ilthe
grounds that It was tJo danlll!rous.

twice as eoc h team committed four
turnovers.
Bryant, who helped the
Baltimore-Phlladelphia Stars win
two USFL titles, clinched the
victory with 4:58 remaining on a
22-yard touchdown run.
Despite tumbling twice, Bryant
impressed coach Joe Gllils wtth
four catches for li yards and his TO
scamper.

Astros, Giants end slump; Reds, Pirates·winners

me."

GIVE G£NERO~LY TO THE WAR ON DRUGg

yards in relief of starter Jay
Schroeder.
"We took what the Bucs gave us,"
said Wllllams, who signed wtth the
Redskins two weeks ago after !hey
obtained his NFL rights from
Tampa Bay. "''ve learned more In
lhe past seven days !han I have In a
long time about pass offense."
Schroeder hit 14 ci 26 attempts for
IJ9 yards, but was in tercepled

Confidential records __J_ack_A_n_d_ers_on_&amp;_D_ah?_~_a_n_At_ta
mall has swept into our office

The Daily Sentinei-P&amp;ge-3

Doug ~illiams, Kelvin Bryant see NFL weekend action

'

..

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiQ

•

Ohio Power

Part of American Electric Power

,

�Sentinel

Ohio

·,

Monday,

25. 1986

'

'

Tribe hands Bosox second
los.s in row; Yailks ·also ·Iose
(

..'

TAGGED our - Slldln1 head first Into mme
_plate, Cleveland's Mel Han Is taglllld wl by Boston
_catcher Rich Gedmln. 'I1Ie Indians wml on to hand

the AL 'tast Division leaders their second loss In as
many days. ( UPI)

:·Wilander says golf helps his
By MICHAEL BURNS
MASON. Ohio (UP!) - Mats
WUander credits the game of golf
with helping his tennis game.
"! have to enjoy my outside Ufe.
and here I've always enjoyed
:myself," Wllander said. "It sounds
:tunny, but golf is important to me."
. "Here" Is the Association of
, Tennis Professionals Championship at the Jack Nicklaus Sports
Center, where Wilander defeated
Jimmy Connors 1&gt;4, S.1 Sunday top

win the tournament lor the thin!
time In the last four years.

Wllander, the No. 1 seed, played
five~ on the golf course that's

part of the Complex this week. and
said-It helped relax him.
II iriust have done something to
his serve, too. WUander fired 12
aces and three service winners In
defeating the second-seeded Connors In 1: 18 to pocket the $48,00J
winner's share.

..,.

,
•

•

'

''
ATPCHAMPION -MalliWllanderholds..,hlsarrnsm vlcloryaftw
-deleatlng Jlnuny Coanors, 64, IH, to win the ATP Ouvnpioll!lhlp m
' · Muon, Ohio Sunday. It was WUander's third ATP crown. (UPI)

·"

Scoreboard ...
Majors

•

-

AMI.JUCAN lEAGUE

8ot;1on

NY

6757

Ton&gt;...
OeU'OI!

"'""
MJwk'.-

.~ . ~6

67 58 .5.Ji

~

67 59 532

7

64~

8

5~

&amp;t6I .m9'f.!
li2 61 . ~ 1~

Clvlnd

c.••

tl:l ~ -~~2&lt;1
~111452

65 il

TrillS

KC

3
!1

0.1

55 Ill .444 13
5.1 Ill .&lt;134 1.

St&gt;attif'

MTI

Oot&lt;lan&lt;l

Sit..,......n
SJ

Mtnn

. Ul14 ~

m ts

CleYt&gt;land 5, btorl 4

MUnvJ!rr 8. Kansas Cit~ 4

,

New- Yor1t 4

~~--2
9t'"*
~ lioudt I
t , BIJttncft I

Ql~
'nii'O..o7, ~5. lOinnln~

--·.......
-It

,. Mlwt\ltiH 3, KaMH City 2.
-~01~. . 2
01U111'1161lCMdelarll
~ ,,..... H), 7:30 p..m.
p:.t~,

n

'

New York

[)p(roft 11'm'ell

T:315p.m.

~City

• J

U lllnlllp

6.2~ 11

Ollllnd (1\ijo 5-t) .,

(BMkhNd 6-7! at Chk:ago

1DtfADtl :J-2,, I p.m.
a.tDn ICI!rnenll9-4) at Texas iWtu6-9t ,

.,

T

I

, _ ,, Clevobll4: "'""'
Potrctl~
"'""' .
. . . . . ••
MiJWa.lll!lt,

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NATI»&gt;ALLIAOW

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IXOD

WL .... QII

ID42J11-

~

u.s.

tbe
Trottlng
A,..,...b, hal been Inducted into
!be' Ohio Harness Racing HaD of

•

Sonlla&lt;&gt;
Atlanta

m~

J)~

..5lli-

636l.D1
&amp;! &amp;! .Sll 8
8) &amp;I .tiM 10
59 66 .ffl 11 ~

8.......,......

58'"

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Monlrfal7. 1...a1 ,_.~, 4

PtrtstAII'I" 4, At18111.13

Houston S. S! . l..cW; 1
Clndnnld 1. Chk'ago 1

6-11 'at Houston

IKnfoppPr M), 8: :fi p.m.
Phllldelphla !Cirnw.n~l atl...aiAiliiP~
lVI~ Th-91, 11:35 p.m.

.._..,.,G...

Ontinnltsat Pltt:argh, nlpt
Atlanta at St LoQ, n!Pt
CblriiO at HOUitorl. ntpt
Ptl1lmetplia a1 l.ol Aft&amp;Hs, nleht
New york. It San ~. nl&amp;fll
r.bltrftl at S• Franctlm, Nabt

Transactioll8
Pltt.ttl.l rJh - £mad rontnlt't ol
Manllft' Jlrn Llyllnd.

ed tile IJIUia

Dmver - "'••

~

llnfmll , FrHdle C1brt
lft1rl o('-"~ ......... .

By RICK VAN SANT
CINCINNATI !UP!) - Cincinnati Bengals' quarterback Boomer
Estason has found his passing
touch, but the Green Bay Packers'
defense is missing in action. ' .
Estason, ineffective his first two
preseason games, finally got rolling
Saturday night by passing for 241
yards and three touchdowrts topacP
the lll'ngals to a 34-12 Pxhibltlon
romp ovPr the Packers.
"It's about tiinP I got going," said
Esiason, who had completed only 12
of 25 passes lor just134yardsandno
touchdowns In his first 'two games.
"Our ofiPnse Is gpttlng b!'tter, but
we're still making too many
mistakes."
But the mlstakPS made by the
Green Bay dPienSP Saturday night
were too numerous for unhappy
Packprs' head coach Forrest Gregg
to count.
"It was thl' lousiest defensivP
pPrformanoe In the secolid baH I've
I'Ver seen," complained Gregg.
"Cincinnati ran over us, through us,
around us and underneath us.
"They tPacker defenders) com·
plPtely quit. I don't know if anybody
out there wanted to play loothail,
but I'll tell you this, it won't b!' hard
to cut thPm."
Altoough it was just an exhibition
game, Cincinnati Coach Sarti
WychP was thrllled to get a victory
at hom!' afler two straight road

25 yards to complete Cincinnati's

yards.

scoring barrage.
Esiason played the entlrP first
half, took a break early In the third
quartPr, but re- enteroo the game
and played much of the sPCond half.
"I told Sam I wanted to kl'l'p
playing," said Esiason.
.
Two of Esiason's TD passes
camp In the final quarter and he
was much sharper the second half
than the first half.
Green Bay, 1·2, got a 67-yard
touchdown run from rookie KPD·
nl'lh Davis, a 40-yard field goal
from AI Del Greco and a safpty
when Timothy Harrls blockro a
punt out of thP end zone.
"Thl're werP only two positiVI'
things for us," said Grpgg. "ThP
blocked punt and Davis' run.
Outside of that, we didn't do
anything. We had absolutely no
pass rush.
"SomP d. oor poople played vpry
~rly, and that includPs somP
regulars. We just didn't perform. It
may only be an exhibition gam!',
but I'm concerned. I'm ticked off."
Regular Green Bay quarterback
Randy Wright played ooly the llrst
half and hit 14 of 24 passes for 148

~31 JACKSON PIKE · RT.J~ WEST

Phone 446· 4524
BARGAIN MATINEES SATURDAY I
SU NDAY- ALL SEAfS 12.10
ADM ISS ION Ei[RY TUESQJY 12.10

AUGUST 2 2 thru 28
FRIDAY thru fHURSOAY:

"It's a big win, a pressure win,
~ause losing isn't tolPrated In this
town," said WychP.
Esiason, who completed 15 of 28
passes, had 'I'D tosses ol24 yards to
Rodney Holman, 11 yards to James
Brooks and five yards to rookip
Eric Kattus. Brooks also ran 20
yards for a touchdown and Jim
Breech kicked field goals of 35 and

exhibition loss to the Cleveland
Browns.
"That really helppd mP
confidence-wisP and I think it
helped the team gain somP confldeDCP in me," said Archer. "I did
play some quality minutes."
Schonert, only S.d.-23 lor 102
yards In the Falcons 11rst two
preseason games, showed vast
tmprowment Saturoay night when
he was 10-of-15 tor 103 yards. But
there was ooly 1:18lpft in thP half he
played beforP he could get the
Falcons on the sroreboard.
"You've got to remember this
was only the tlflh week I'd run this
offense," Schonert said In his own
defense. "I'm starting to feel mo~
comfortable wt therP. It wW
come."
Hl'nnlng, rPiuctant i:&gt; admit that
Archer made that point Saturday m ore has come forward to unseat
night when he he rompi!'ted 10 ol14 1\rcher, also came to Scbonert's
pasSEl for 1'18 yands and a defense, noting, "Thrk again had a
touchdown and ran ftve times tr :18 rouple &lt;:t balls dropped &lt;11 him and
yards aJIII another toochdown,aU in re wasn'tworklngwith oorstartlng
the ant halt of the Falcons' 27-21 receivers.''

mI

dedicated II!I'VIce ., the ..,ort. He .
was Inducted (llitq' oeremonles .
Saturday nJgbt at SciOto Downs.

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.

Nlxoo, 72, has been general
Farr.e.
manager Lebanon RIK:eway s!noe
,'
Its eatabllslu'ftent In ~. It has ·
·' 'Nixon. R-Lebanon, ~arne the remained one of the mist consistl.2thperson selected by members &lt;:I · ently profitable tracks In the state.

-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Community calendar I area happenings
MONDA\'

POMEROY - Mary Shrine No.
37, White ShrlnP of JerusPlum,
practlcp lor Inspection Monday at 7
p.m.
RUTLAND - Rutland Gard!'n
Club open meeting Monday at 7: ll
p.m., Rutland Methodist Church.
Guest night. Mrs. Paul Curtis on
home decorating. Mrs. Donovan
MacCumb!'r, regional dlrPCtor, guest. MPmb!'rs to take door prizes.
BASHAN - Guy Mallory, of
Winter Garden, Fla., guPSt sppaker
at special :!ervices 9: Jil a.m. and 7
p.m. Monday through Thursday at
Red Brush Church on Bas han Rd .
'ltiESDAY
CHESHffiE - Cheshire Chaptpr
OES meets Tuesday, 8 p.m.; past
matrons and past patrons to be
honored,

POMEROY - Meigs County
Litter Advisory Board meets Tues·
day, 7:30 p.m., Ohio Bureau d.
Employment S!'rvices building.
HARRISONVILLE- Harrison·
ville S!'nlor Cltizl'ns Club meets
Thesday, 7 p.m., town hoUSI'.

TB testing
SYRACUSE
ThP MPigs
County Thb!'rcubsls Office wlll be

The Daily Sentinel

Public Notice

M~I Sfildgo from The Moad
CotpOrotion. ChiHiootho, Ohio.
The draft pl111 woo Public
Noticed on July 18. 1988.
A Public Mwmg to conllidar
commentt oo the drltft pion
will bo teld 01 shown bebw:
Dota: September 29, 1986

{Caletoria). 50 North S1r'"'t
t.Dgon . Ohio 43138 .
Arry iltermtad penon is
antithd to att111d or be rqJrasentad .-.d give writta~ or [J'af
comments at the Public Meet-

W1g. Wrinan conmentJ may
1t1o be unt to: M1. Vtvian

Davis. Acting Heoring Clerk,
Ohio EPA, 381 East BrotKI
Street , Columbus.

Oh io

43216. {6t4) 466-8037. by
the close of businou on
Oe10ber 14, 1986. CoiTITiontt
receivtKI lifter this date will not
be oonaidored to bo plOt of the
official record of this mwmg.
!81 25, 1.1c

BLOt .

tr-rniuion Q)ofer
gougn, ammeter '"'d oil
H.O. knitted vinyl seet
aux. fuel t.,k

64 Misc. Merchandise

VETERANS
MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
•

NOSE &amp;· THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
''WE HAVE HEARJNI,AIDI"
CAll (614) 992·2l04
304 67
4

:.. 'i'

Stotioilfi'y, ..,otic
Signs, lultbw Sttattps,

luArtlts FarrN,
Copy Sonicn, !ft.
2SS Mill St. -.tdltpOJt
104 Mulllorry Aw. Pomoroy

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

wirh &amp;VIPfY dbc or roll of
color prlnr fllm brou9ht
In for ptOCeHing.

trailer towing ~*~tau•
receiver type hitch
automatic lockinu ~~ont hub
All sealed bids rftllt be filed
at t h e - of LBading Cra
Ccnaerv.ncy Oiltricl: bv the
26th day ot Au~11t, 1988. by
t., o'clock !10:001 A.M. AU
bids will be optlled and rtlld
alood on tho 26th di!Y of
August. 1988, at twelve o'c·
lock noon, at tho DffitJI Of

CHEmR-985·3307
4/1/tfn

and SERVICE

~5- tfc

ofiOOFING So
GUTTERING
New It Repair
•SIDING SOFFIETT
•REMOOELING OF
All TYPES
•TREE TRIMMING
•CONCRETE WORK
26 Veers ExperientJI

RADIATOR
SER~CE

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

HART'S
CONSTIUTION
992-7111

PAT HILL FORD
992·2196

Mid~lept:~rt. Ohio
1-13·tfc

411 ARCADIA

TYs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
lnstaUation
Service
TV·614·143-S241
APPL.-614-949·2145

8-20-'86 tfn

6 Lost and Found
FOUND money In Odd lata
vicinity. Coli 814·245 ·1832 .
Found on County Road 18. 2

amt~ll

Wanted To Buy ·

We PlY CMh tor late model cl...,

utad c:trl.
Jim Mink Chw.·Oidl Inc.
1111 Gtne Johnton

St4· 448·3172
TOP CASH peld for '83 model

1911 Eatttm
Ave.. Golilpollo. Coil 514·441·
2282.

Buick· Pontiac,

coli hallttlfl. SWAIN'S FURNI·
lURE, 3rd. • OIIW lt. Gott~o·
1~. Coi1114-448· 3119.

Old Oriental NQI wanted . Any
1in Of condition. Cal toR fr•

t ·800-433-7847.
luyinq deity gold, allvar colna,
ring~, }twetry, tt-'lng w..-e. old

Woods MIH load

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

$25 . ~.0. 00.

RACINE

NEW LISTING - HYSELL
RUN - Really nice ranch
wilh a ~orgeo~s lutchen,
huge lamily room, big living
room with lireplace, plus a
trailer hookup. All Qltiet and
_ __.__ _ _ _ ____, peacelul on approx. 20
acres. $53,000.00.

NEW USTING- A14x66 mo.

bile home with 2 bed11X1111!,
equiJ)PI':I kftchen, and ip real

IJI(Id conditim. inmedi111
pos.lessiort $10~,00. . .

.

E: Citl•d. Jr.
992-6191
JNn rruutll ..... 949-2610
Dottle Tuintr ..... 992-!i1652

IIIIwel

CARPENTER
SERVICE

colna,

•1•urkett
currency. Top prl·
Barber Shop,

2nd. Avo. Mlddii!IOn. Oh. 514·
882-3471.

f IIIPIIIYI ' II:Ill
St: t vtt;t:'

- Rootingond gutti&gt;WOrk
- Concrete work
- Plumbing oncr otoctticol

(Free Eotimotoo)

Y. (, YOUNG Ill

ltKaMr Owno4, %0 Yn. hp.

992-6215 or 992-7314

DAN S WA Ttl llFINING

Pomeroy, Ohio

Will Sth Slr•t

:304·182-2996

BODY WOIIt( SID Per Hr.
c.,.leto Car Paintlrtg S37S

7· •

Howard.L Write• I

Pin Slripiltg/CoW Chcllgt htra

ROOFING

PLUMIING &amp; HfAnNG

C&amp;l PAINnNG

Now 18catian:

Chester, Oh.

161

PH. 915·4101

1-15-1 mo.

North

NEW- IEPAII

Socand

Middloparl, Olio 4S76D

Guttera

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Downspouts

We Carry Ftt.hiru~ Supplin

Gutter Cleaning

Pay Your C1ble &amp;

BISSELL
BUILDERS

P,aintlng

Phone Billa Here

FREE ESTIMATES

IUSII!IS "'ONE

949-2263
or ~49-2168

16141 HH55G
l'ft()NE
(6141

CUSTOM BUILT

a!51D~CE

"'':'L'•.•

PH. 949-2801
or 949·2860

2-17·86·tfn

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

4-16 -'li tfn

10 A.M.-9 P.M .
Friday &amp; Setur... y

Roofing of ell Typeo
Worllad in home oree
20 yetttl
"Free Estimates"

.BISSELL

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SEIVICE

New

llo11111

r

PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121
6·17 ·tfC

--------•--------"1!
FREE HEARING TESIS WEDNESDAYS

Dealer

CJ 1'4"'*'erized H•rirw Air Selection
SWim Molds • Inllrprelill Services

z

FirM E••IP••••

ii!

Pert• &amp; Serwlet

~ USA M. KOCH, M.S.

1-3-'86 tfc

:X: Licensed Clinical Audioqist

"Free Estlme181"

TOWN&amp;COUNIIY

or 949·2160

VnDINAIIAN
CUNIC
Pattl E. Shoc"'y, DVM

No S111day Calls

REPAIR
Alto Tt.. tMI~tlo• ·

Ph. (614) 843-5425

-z 417(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-t601
1213

luilt

PH~ 949~2101

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

CALL COLLECT:

U. 5. RT. SO fAST
GUYSVILLE, DHIO

SIDING.CO.

II. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

v111Yt aaw•u•

Monday- Thurs ... y

•YINYL SIDING
• ALUMINUM SIDING
•ILOWN IN
INSULAOON

..Roger Hysell
Garage

EUGENE .L'ONG

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALlS

Authori1od lohn Dllrt,
Now M·al.. nd, lush llog
F.,. Et)uipmtnt

PT. Pt.IASAIT OffiCI
1111 w ... aw••
SIUU AlfiiUL lOWS

......w&amp;.n..L 3·5 pm
r.... 6:30-11 Frl 1-2 ,..

s..vr•r

IO·II•JO 1111
- ulllla.ALI

••nnafPT.

PH. 304-67H441
liND AliA CALL
· IIP!ey Office

.......,.

38110 .. 1-800·1142··1··

AS SEMBLERI WANTED: -1 upto I~P"-~ · - g
chplay clowno. MOtirtalo"""'
llad Sen4 "IIBped ttlf·
add~eaaed erlvelo,.: Hawb
Lond.,g, P.O •IOtt 134ta. Or·
IWidoFL 32818.

Wtnted experienced f:louH·

kllfl "· Plool• cal 304-171·

7717 Jfter I p.m(

.,.

Baby~n• .lor '3 y - dd. ( rl•ce. refeNnOH. Wllkd.,l.
.oma weni'tgt. 304·171-2111

OPENINGS AVAILAIILE. - ·
Mtrrl Mtc'• guerantMd Nne of

'"''·
..... - DOl ~
s.etc. gllta.
NO dllliv.,tlllt.
tlftl
or .,v..tment. Your·tloUfl. Nil
304· 175·1718 0&lt; 1-800-M2·
1072.

L.P.N.o noadad for part prlvatt duty In Point: ......,.
•r• . call HC8 Nunlnl ,III'\IIGI.
South Chtrl•tDn. 304·711·
3895, 9:00AM to 1:00PM. ·
Southw•t~m Commuftlty

Ac--

tion Council, Inc. ts ecoiptlng
appllcatiana IDr a flllllly ..,.,...

•d.,.......,

worker t.r the chid
dcwelopment proeram It . Mt.
Ollv• School, nuet hM ~
.Oooi d~tomo « QED. ~
car with valid driving .Yolnlf.
App"' ot 1140 Fifth Aw, Hundntton. W. V1. no let• thlft 1:00
PM, Aug. 29. 1988. ICAC, lno1.

ioEEO

_to.,...

Soulhw•tom Community At&gt;tlon Coundl, Inc. II ~lnt
epplle~~tlon• for • tlliiCih•for the
child end flmlly deulaJI mllll
prog,... ot Mt Olivo lt:I!!IOI
mJil hiVI _ , . . ·In aMd
ditvaktpnwnt • e.ty •llcthaad
educetlon or CDA crtd. . . .
with 3 yean ........ DI In
ptOgram for pretdlool ahlktrln.
App"' ot 540 Fifth Avo .. tlngton, W. VI. No liter th•
5o00 PM Aug 20, 1U~.
S.C.A.C, Inc. II EEO -loyof.
Tilting ..,ilc:atlono for Cllhlort,
ttot* a.y1. produce pll"'lin.
Stve·A·Lot Ditcount Food.
Pl.... tpply 2t01 J•. I R
Avenue. luetdey an4 Wtdn•
dly. Augutt 26 end t11NtW•
. . . d4.
I

12

Situations
Want•d

Second Avenue, Box
Glftipolis, Ohio 45631

L ------'--.,-------•-·,.U..;tf.,•-l

NEW

BLUE STIEAI
CAl CO•
lENlOR CITIZENI·
HARnEY BHOIITOIIE.

VIlLAGE PHAIIMM:Y

18 Wanted to DeWWI t*' b .... oittlng In ""' honlo.
a.t.OO _, hour. IIIII Lynch.

Middleport. 114-8112· 3723
Nurtlnge~aiiUnt llatt

lid-"·"'·

1711-M17,

"

n1Uonel Of'Qitlllatlon . On-th•
job training. good otlltlng II·
lary, excellent benlfitt peeklge,
wol1d trwel. A,plic.nt• mutt be

r.

good phylical oondl11on,
bolw- 17 -24 r&lt;l"' old. Coil
101 fr• -. Ohio 1 - 100 ~ 282 ·
13M. Mon.-Thun .. 8em-2pm.

MlddtooviCI gamlom111 noodo
l.dy hou,. keep• to llve In
polftlon op., now . .Cell 814441-3418 .
W~t~ted ; FuU~time HY•k'l hou ...
menQif Cmominp andevenlnga.
drttlme ta:Jurw off, M·F) for an
lnt•med'-'• cart fadtty for
dlvoloo_,.tly dloabild ldu"•
In • -· High ochool degrN,
currtnt •fwer'alicenM and good
driving NOOrd requJrtd; up•
rl1r101 5n wortdng with pilrtOnl
wtth mtntll r..1rdttlon lftd

diYoloo......
diiiiiiMIIt.. ....
tered . A on•¥'. .

commitment

polhion reqund. lafery
rongo: 110,400· 14.1110 ro•·
&amp;cell ant 'I8CIIdon 111d ln.,,.noe
b.,,."~ s1o pold holldortllld a
..kl periOf'lll dav•ve•· w..
k•dl off. Parson hired will bl
provided with I minimum Of 80
hour~ of formal trelning r•lted
to tho Job whftih lo 011d bw tho
10

~eney.

Bend r•1.un1 ·to Robin

Eby. BudtavoCommunltylorvi-

I NOTICE I

TilE OHIO VALLEY PUIUBH'
tN'O co. ,_......,. th1t yoo/

do buoln . . with - l i .,.,.
know, and NOT to aend mon•
thrauQII the mil until you· hiiiM
lnvtltigated the offerino.

NNCI utr11 moneyl Fri..,
home toy penlea ••1m~
optn r.os for menaglfl end
damonnrltOI'I a, thll .,.., 11•a
....,. fun ~t~d profttabla. . W•
h - -100 •cltlngtiiYIIIIII,

otft• featuring the nM eniftltW
tllldngdoM"Cridtot''-wt!l

=

be ed'lflrtlled on nltJon~.lV ,_"'

cath lnwatmant, no co~ . ·
"" dlllvoring llld .. ooMoit
.,...,.. Alrou-10•-~
tnlke money. h•e ''"' lnd
hou" of IipKe lime. No •
rl'"oe nece~,.ry . C.. 1227· 1510.
. ·'
Dlltributorah~ . High voluMf
route for llle In Gallli:H&gt;Nt. Ott
A11erage lnc:om1 •14,ooo1
t11.000 plus. One day WDftl
- k. 8ott to• 113,1100 ~~
CoN 1·100-128·8273 ..,111'"'1;
dolly.

AMtiUrent end taV.., for ....;
down to'MI arH or ..... Cal•
toft• e,oo PM. 30&lt;1-17S-'111Zl

coo, P.O. a .. S04,J -. Oh
411140. Doadllno for -lconto:

9 · 1·81. Equel Opportunity

Employer.
Sitter tor t• end 15th grad• aftlf

ldlool, _.ow.day, etc. Contld•
your ho,. If wtthln welldng
dlttlftoe ot Middleport El_._,.
torv. Co! 114-"2· 7144 a ,30PM .

·I• needed

b¥ everyone in vour

-lt.-arantMCI by 1h IMIIDn •• ,.. .
Co.
•
·Now bo;ng Ulld
Corporation n Nei:ton; F_ltler8f

a City
Aw~s\N~o,u~AT:

State.

Nlld 8 good poopto.
No e.tpttltnce neu~•rv. Mull
be tvlillblt for lmmedlltt tm-

ptorm.,t.
Houro1PMtii10PM,
t300 per week.
Ctll Monday or
TI.MI. 10am to 3pm for penonal
InlorvloW. 114-441-744t .

Mlkt Chr._,,., mon-w. Mil
A...,. Molto 41 e14·441· 33H .

....

1100,000 PEII
YEAR !POTENTIAL)
WOULD YOU UKl
TO OPEN YOU II
OWN BUIINEII
HANDLING A
PRODUCT THAT·

by:r:=
' ',

Help W1nt-=i

Ntld

·

8uainea
Opportunity

MARITIME TRADES
Seeking 10 appllcenu 10 fill
immedlete op~nilg1 whh lnt•·

· CoM

Cou~

-Raquir• nD

:

uevet '

-H• immHiate lnoome
,
-Will cr•t• • r•lduat~noo,.. far

,....

'

.

will . . • , . ...... ~
buM~•• In your OOIMWIIIIy.
,
CAN YOU :
.
-lnv11t t5.000 • 411.000 ...;
ftv•tory ct.p~ndlnt 4Ift ,...,,
·That

....

.....

•tr• mon.-,7 FRIENDLY .,.,..,

·LIYo "'mlombty 011 1100,000•

HOMETDV PAIITIEI h•l..,....
• • openlngt tor menag~r~lftd
dtmonlh..,. ~ thll ,,... lt'e
e..-. fun and profitable. We
hiVfl ov. 100 excftlng tO'fl end
gllto ,..,ring tho""" .. tmo....
toltolnt dol Crloltlt wltloh wll bo
ICIYIIIIHd t01 notionol T.V. No
Cllh tnvlltnwtt, .. GOIIKdne.

"

.ftun abulin-.IMICMMtYf14J'

th .. ldnd of moa~_.

.

IF Y.OUII '!NIWEII
IIVB,CAU
DAYIO Alllt.!Y
i8141H4··41

.

EnllllY 8 - ol Am.-ftta.·lfte_

.

·'

dlltuuu;lng end no MrVIce II:;.;::;~;;;;:;::::
~~~-,uy., -loadoolroto ·
- -. h-lunllldatow 23 ProfelltOiieJ
houra of . . . tkne. No ..,.
S ..,a.-

.

nt)

rllnCII ·R

llllf'"t · C . . 1 ·10().

·--~·

3000. . . . . . . . jobo lilt.
t11,04o-tU.210
- · - Elll.
hfltnt.
Call 801-M7·8000

1

,...01.

107 SJCOIIIM
Oh.

,...,.y,

7100 A.M. te 1!00 A.M. Man~lay thru Saturdoy
l'AXITOKENS

ca,. tor elderly in my honw.
TrolniCI. ••porlonoad. Cal 814992-111183.
·~

WIH

Help Wanted

:127·1.10-

PH. 992·70·75

&amp;pedal r1.1 rain a cue tor tld.ty
In Jl'iYoto Ito,... Cal 114-8112·
311911 .

21

Maosthly lonlol
PI• Initial lnsto.. tian
Pull A SofloMr ., Your
M- Today fllasa with
Opti• to lurl

work

HOURS :

388-9338
1-7-1!110.

p.,_,
""""".-.l,r.!
Wid good . . . ln.. fb4o4

ho,.., hoopltaL Eltl!n·!!O 'lOUr
....... . F~ tiiN ,_,.,, 3M

swer....
SPIIIGSOn
Now A Small

- Acldon• •nd remodeling

Complete Guttll' Worll
Completa Remodeling

10 A .M.- 11 P.M.
Clooed Sundey

ooilovo htl tfnlo. Wa ""~"""
to 11I,QOO In a*" lion. ,..
PWI.

c... Ed.

11

rirod of Honl
Rusty Water?
Wo Hawa Tht An-

"At Reosonablt Prices"

RED'S
CARRY OUT

:ft'.

1nd newer UHd c1n. Smith

1115/1110.

YOUNG'S

HOMES &amp; GARAGE'S

t IIIH frertt

2 bedrooms, dinilg room,
full basement and a one car
garage. $12,000.00.

H111~

J.R.'s REPAtRS

Electronic Organs
Mobile service

borhood close to school.
2.36 acre lot - beautiful
newer split Ioyer home. 3
bedroom s, 2 balhs, full ba:
sement - woodburner lllo·
kups in lamily room, garage,
central air and heat pump.
All electric. Assu me loan.

.

Ktnmore bonia gu 110ve. oven
·~· worfl. 304·171-1123 .

9

HtQH 804001. QII-'¥JUA1'1is... pill-- In . .
Nttiontl OUifdl .nd
:-

WANTED TO BUY uHd wood.

servtces
•

!

-One floor plan home wtth

SMALL
WANT ADS
PACK

trail• on Silver Ridge uphill,
from Eutlm H lgh School.

A~E YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

We Hm AFill Tl•
Shp Tt~hltlll
NO.ty
RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

therightto~o:ceptorraject.,y 1~=====:::::::::::;;r.:=======:il.-----.;.4·.:;15:.;·8: .;6·1c;,o
.;.

or all bids.

NEW LISTING -

Khtent to give any. 4 monthl
o4d. M11• end feme!•. C1n
814-181-38U· or 111 •• tlrst

loll: 2 purtll, 1 black lrld 1
brown. Contain•lmportent papera. lolt on Rt. 7 r. front of
King• Arm1 Tavem. Augutt 21tt
eround noon . PINtl retum 't&gt;
eddrHI In purn.

•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERAIOR
•SATEUJIE SAlES &amp; SERVICE

•Wethers •DishwatherJ
•Range•
•Refrigerator•
•Dryers •Freezefl

8 USiness
.

IBading Crook Conservancy
District. The Board nBerv•

MAKE OFFER

4 femolopupplll. Vwy plorful &amp;
cute . Mother bhck Leb.
wormed. CoM 114·44e-8319 .

•ZENITH

985·3561
All Malru

PARTS

4 fr• klttena. Ctll 814-4410132 or 814-440 · 0680 ah•
5:00.

bladt Cocker Spaniel
puppln. Ona wearing coli• ~nd
h• &lt;lll&gt;r&gt;ICI toll. Coli 114-992·
ltc11 01 814· 992· 3812 .

•SYLVAlftA

'·

Help W~ntMI ·

11

""" uo.

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
WE

ICUT OUI FOI FUIUI£ USE)

(614j 261 -7092

SYRACUSE AREA - High
on a hill, great for CB or
hand rlld io operator. large
yard area and a newer mo·
dular with 3 bedrooms.

A111 PlJDil

E~l,

'' 992-3410

tqMI. Gltiiltktlion

FIRST SCIOTO

:::,~:Iered

SYRACUSE - Anice ranch
type· home in Ruslic Httls. 3
bidrooms, garage, electric
B.B. heat Palio and nice lot
In good condition. $37.000.

~

Supp~os

Giveaway

COllfMBUS, OH. 43202

MAKE OFFER $52.000.00.

~

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

&amp;
Furniture, W.ddjng

Public Notice

··

H.O. bottory

992-22S9
POMEROY - Good neigh-

.

4

mo.

y,., Plltlltt N,..

PWS: OHica

specialized in this field lor over 10 yea~. Call collect for a quote. Ask for Brad Smith .

1517:00 X 15 mud and snow
tir• and - · 8-plv

E. Matnltoiiill
POMEROY,O.

.

Fu All

VIII·MIIttr~rd

trtoftindolllol 1·118·

459·3548 0111 C·18BO 24 In

949-2516

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP

WANTED:
BANK
STOCKS
We pay top prices for your bank stocks.' We haw

rear epringa

Rent TIPN Sit. or Sun.
Glt llfiN Monday
at Half PrieN

.

REFUSED!

RACINE, DHIO
Office 949·2431

3 Announcements

H.O. front and r•r ohodts

lion . Weddlnga 1 tpeclttty. Will
deltver for 1m11ll tee. 814 -892-

Into coil

RAYMOND E. PROFFm (!\'AC)

NOTIC OF APPOINTMENT
C. PhNtlpa. doceolad, ~Me of
OF Fl DUCIARY
On August 6, 1986, in tho 43038 State Routo124, PoMeigo County Probote Court. meroy, Ohio 46769.
Robert E. Buck,
Cue No. 26141. Borboro l.
Probate Judge
Nuse, 627 Eutwood Ct. , Allena K. Nosaelrood, Clerk
tamonte Springs.
florida
32714, Wei IPDOinted Exe- t8) 11, 18.25 3tc

minol'l

Decorated calc• tor any occa·
GIIOt .

•Residential
•Commercial
·•Industrial

cu1rfx of the eotato of Mlfdntd

NOTICE
AMENDED
LBading Crettlt con ......,ev
PUBLIC NOTICE
District wilt occapt ...tad bids
MEIGS COUI'ITY
OHIO ENVIRONMENTAL at its office locatad M 34481
Com Hollow Road. Ru~.,d.
PROTECTION AGENCY
Draft Sludge Manll(lemtllt Ohio 46 775. for the purchae
by leading C..,.kConseovaney
Plan
Mead CO!pOI'otion Chillicothe District of one nMN motor
lll!hicla as follows:
Division
SPECIFICI\TIONS
Public Notice is horoby giv.,
1987 v, ton llyieoide 4X4
thet the Ohio Environmental
Protee1ion Agoney !Ohio EPAI pickup
302 engi'le Of equivalent
win conduel a Public Meeting
automatic tr.-tamiuion
in r8iponu to 000111enta
limited slip r•r axle
received on the draft Pion
rear lt8p burt1&gt;•
Approval For land Appication
bright low mount western
of Dioxin Contaminatad P -

Cleener.
one Rd
half
milt&amp;1up
Georg• Creek
. Call
4·
441·0284.

NEWCREDITCARDSI NOONE

PHONE
992-2156
Or Writt D1illy Sentilltl Clmilitd Dept

Public Notice

SWEEPER and IWtlng miChlnt
repllt', Plr11, and IUPPM... Pick
up tnd delivery. Davit Vacuum

lucy Jtnt
Bulmer. Hartford. W. Va. 304·
882· 2395.

Ill Ccutt St.. Pameroy, Oh•o 45759

Public Notice

A1111uun t:e 111 1: nl o

Plano lessons,

992·3345

Real Estate General

-

N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

dents work at their own pacP and
can preparE' for tre GED or just
improvp basic skills in math,
reading, English, sciPDce and social
studies. Thl're Is no charge ilr thP
sPrvice, according to Amnl'il Aleshire, ABE Instructor, wbo notes
that students may attend all oc part
of the classes.

10:15 a.m to 2:15 p.m. Evening
classes will b!'on'fllesday, Wednesday and Thursday, 5:30 to 9 p.m.
The Middleport Center Is located
In the basement of the Middleport
Library and oflprs daytime classes
on Monday and Tuesday,10 a. m to2
p.m.
Instruction Is individualized. Stu-

m.

GREAT BEND.ELEORIC,

312/ tln

Time: 7:00 p.m.
Place: logon High School

EVERYDAY
7 DAYS '·A WEEK

t,

ABE classes ·to re-open Sept. !2
The Adult Basic Education
Ll'aming Crn ters will rp.open on
S!'pt 2 for nPw and returning
students. ThP Pomeroy Center,
located In the Community Action
JTPA BuDding at 117 West S!'cond
St. offers both day and !'VPning
classes.
DaytimE' classes will b!' on
and Thursday from

The Daily

Business
Services
;:::::::;::::;::::::lC:::::;::::::::;1

County map updated
POMEROY - Meigs County
Engineer Philip M. Rob!'rts Is
announcing the updating c1 tre
current MP!gs County Map lor
reprinting by the Meigs County
CommlssionPrs. The public is
Invited to submit any additions,
delPtions or corrE£tlons of this map
to tre rounty englnrer's dllce at the
MPigs County Highway GaragP
b!'lorP S!'pt. 1. Changt&gt;s are subjPCt
to approvaL

Revival
MIDDLEPORT - ThPrP will b!'
a revival at Middleport Independ·
en t Holiness Church through Aug.
3! with Rev. Wayne States. S!'rvl·
CPS at 7: l) p.m. nigh lly. Special
singing to be fPatured. Everyone
welcome.

18)11 . 18. 26. ate

'

conducting a corrununlty · skin
(fstlng clinic at the Syracuse
Municipal bulldlng on Monday
!'Vening from 4: ll to 6: ll p.m. Joan
Tpwksbary, R.N., wW b!'glvlngthl'
skin tests which are available to all
residents of the community, tncludIng school chlldren, free &lt;!charge.
In addition to the skin tests, the fir!'
department will b!' holding a blood
pri'Ssure cilnic durlng the same
oours.

POMER\)Y- PomProy Chapter
186 Eastern Star meets T)lesday,
7:30p.m.; lnlatory work. Of!lrers
wear chapter drPSSes.

losses.

(l

the Ohio chapter of the U.S.
. Harness Writers A.sloclatlon tor

r

Bengals thump Green Bay Packers

25. 1986

Archer

M:&gt;ntreoal lnlill 6-'71 at San FraaelloJ
/LaCou 9-81 , t05 p.m.
Cb:-lnnad !Welllh s-41 at PlttKill'ltl
~~ l4·7l,7:~p .m.
'
New York. f0ar11na D-41 at San DW!8)
lSD t-!1, till p.m
'
Atlanll (P'alrrrr HI at SC . Loull tForsdl
tl-11. B::m p.m.

--

Alfredo Griffin had a basesloaded trlple in a lour-run eighth
Inning as tre A's prPVentro the

carrer victory. Niekro, 10-9, held
the Red Sox to tour hits over thP
first seven innings and rei!Pver
Frank Wills earned his first save. AI
NippPr, 8-9, was the loser.
Brewers a, Royals 2
At Milwaukee, Paul Molitor and
Robin Yount hit consecutivP one·
oot doubles In thP llthinningtolpad
the 'BrewPrs. Loser Dan Quisen ·
berry. 1·5, pitched three innings.
Mark CIPar, 4-4, hurloo the 11th for
til? victory.
Mariners a, Tigers I
At Detroit, Alvin Davis hit a solo
hom!' run, Phil Bradley doubled in a
run and Danny TartabuU singlro
hom!' a notll?r to !pad the Mariners .
MarK Langston, 11·10, was the
winner. MaN Young notched his
lith save. Dan Petry , 4· 7, went 7 J.3
innings in only his second start
since ret urning from eloow
surwry .
Blue Jays 7, Twins 5
At Minneapolis, ErniP Whitt's
RBI single in the top of the lOth
inning ignited a three-run uprising
ID !Pad Toronto. Loser KPith
Atherton, 5·8, pitchoo onP·third of
an mrling. Reliver Tom Hpnke, 8-3,
pltchro 3 1·3 Innings, allowing four
hits while striking out four for the
victory .
Ranger.&lt; a, White Sox 2
At Arlington. Texas, Charlie
Hough , 11·8, survived a !XJ. minute
rain delay and thrPW a four·hittpr
ovPr 6 2-3 Innings to lead the
Rangel'S. Don Slaught singled home
thP go-ahPad run in thP fifth. giving
the Rangl'rs their ninth straight
victory over the White Sox this
seasen. Dave Schmidt fPII to 1·5.

A'I'LANTA , (1JPI) - . David
Archer has been havlhg to prove
hlmseit ever since he joined the
Atlanta Falcons as a tre&amp;agent
quarterback In 19&amp;1: .
DesPite b!'ing the siartPr for the
last two-thirds of last season,
came Into this one with no
assurances - lacing tre challpngt&gt;
d. lorm!'r Cincinnati quarterback
'1\ut Schonert, woo was acquired In
an &lt;:ll·season trade, andformPrSan
Diego quartl!rllack Ed Luther, who
was picked up from the USFL
(Jacksonvllll') .
But ArchPr, a S.2, 203-pound
scrambler out at Iowa State,
appears to have PIUVl!!l·he'U b!' the
Falcons starting quarterback when
the regular season begins in two
weeks.

Plttsb.lrvft 4. Atlan1.13
St . LAlu1s 7. 1baston 1

~Eckmley

us."

speond-place Yankees from gainIng on the first-place Boston Red
Sox In the AmPrlcan League East.
The Yankees .remain six gamps
b!'hlnd Boston, which lost to
ClevPiand 5-2.
"This is very, very frustrating,"
Pagliarulo said. "Boston keeps
losing and we , can't takP , any
advantagp of It"
The A's werp trailing 4-3 whPn
they scored lour runs in the aghth,
aided by third baseman Pagllaru·
Io's error. Yankees reliever Rod
Scurry allowed successive slngiPs
to Mark McGwirP and Dwayne
Murphy b!'lore bl'lng ·r~ laced by
Brian Fisher. Donnie Hill hit for
Lenn Sakata and rpached basp on
Pagll&lt;~rulo' s error to load thP bases.
Fisher thPn walked TPitlPton to
Ioree home the tying run and
Griffin tripled down the 11'11· field
line to knock In three morp runs.
In &lt;Xher games, California !'dged
BaltimorP 4-3, CI!'VPiand beat
Baston 5-2, Milwaukee shaded
Kansas City ~2 . [lptroit got by
S!'attle 3-1, Torontodeleatro Mlnne·
sota 7-5, In 10 innings and Texas
edged Chicago 3-2.
Angels 4, Orioles 3
At Baltimore, Kirk McCaskill,
14·7, allowed fivp hits over 8 2·3
innings to lead the Anwls. Donnie
Moore reliPved McCaskill with
runnPrs on first and second In the
ninth and, after giving up a
run·scorlng singlp to pinch hlttpr
John Shelby, got the last out for his
16th save. Storm Davis fell to 9-11.
Indians 5, Red Sox 2
At CI!'Veland, Jop Cart!'r and
Jullo Franco beltoo two-run homPrs to hPip Phll Niekro to his 310th

~rown,.s ~ge Falcons 27-21

u~

Clndnnad 7, Ctdcaao 3
New YOl'k 3, Sa~~ Frandlm 2
San Dlelflt. Philade~a 3, 12 mM!p

Chk:IIO

' '.'Against Conriors It's tough to
serve ~ause he gets most d. them
back. Today I kept my speed and
rhythm the whole match expect lor
a couple games," said Wllander,
winner of the ATP In 1983 and 1984
and a runner-up to Boris Becker
last year.
"He played well," Connors said.
"He ran down a lot of balls. I could
have been more aggressive at
times, but when I was aggressive I
rushed too much."
The match statistics rEflected
Wllander's dominance. Wllander,
woo lost only seven points on his
first serve, had only six unforced
errors to Connors' 21, and Wllander
broke Connors' serve five times,
while Connors managed only one
service break.
"It gavp rne so much confidence
to break him to win thP first set,"
Wllander said.
Connors broke Wilander's serve
to pull ID within 4-5, but Wllander
responded with a service break of
his own In a slopplly played gam!'
by Connors ID win the set s.4.
Wilander raced to a !1-0 lead In the
second sl't, as hP won 16 d.19 points,
and the outcomp was n!'Ver in
doubt.
Wllander has now defeated Con·
nors all four times they have
played.
Known lor his topspin styli' of
pii!Y. Wilander said a change IDa
slice backhand helped neutralize
Connors' hard, flat shots.
Connors said Wllander's sUclng
backhand was the only difiPrenre
he could detPCt In Wllander'sgamp
since they last played in tre thp 1984
Davis Cup finals in Got£&gt;borg,
Sweden.
"I don't know why he did that,"
Connors said of Wllander' s changl'
in tactiCs. "He always usro to come
OVPr the top. He's always SPrvoo
well, had good legs and hit good
passing shots."
Following his victory, the Swoolsh Wilander took offenSP to Connors' statpment made earUer In the
Wl'l'k that Swedish players nl'ed to
be morP thl'atrical while playing.
"I think that's really easy for him
to say. He's a little bit down the hill,
re's rmrP rPlaxed," Wllander said.
"I would lUre to see movies d. when
hP was 22 years old (Wllander's
age) . I don't think he was a big
showman then. MaybE' when I'm 34
I'll say the sarnp thing."

.J

Ohio (UPI) Jll!p. COrwin Ntxoo, ll!neral
·r r c:t ~Raceway and

,1!UIJ'mlll

LA

5I 7l ....

inducted into racing

~UMBUS.

•
~ in

San FrAn
ChcMd

-.o-

. ~ at New von. nl&amp;flt

11

-

"""'
"'
Hoosron

....,..o....

....

.....,..
o.ks.d n.

6ll 61 .6 ~
61 Q .Bl %1
5.1 71 .«l1 29

San l'randlco II, NE'w Y011t J
Priladt!lpN.a fi, San DtPto s
r&amp;ntil'llll. Los Av~•t J&gt; lllrinal

Bltun'a'l! 4. Clllt:lr'TH 2
Qakllwld 2. Nt&gt;W York J
Drtrott lt, &amp;&gt;ank' o
Tetu 3, Olk'afi'O 1
'hro..-o7. Mlrw'SOU4

.

Monlh"al

Chi

W L PIS . Gl
7.1 51

&amp;J 61 !lE l'J

~ - Lou

8)' u.w rn- ... rMI......

"

PhUa

.
tennr..s
' .

By soorr NEWMAN
UPI Spotts Writer
Dave Stewart Is extendlrig his
major-league pitching career In a
nPw capacity - as a starter.
Stewart, mostly a rellevPr during
his lour-team, seven- year career In
thl' maJor leagues, has becomP a
starter ·and perhaps the Oakland
A's stopper. He won his SI'Venth
game In eight decisions Sunday to
IPad Oakland to an ll4 victory over
the NPW York Y81lkees at Yankee
Stadium.
The victory marked StPWart's
first completE' game since S!'pt. 24,
1984, when hP pitched for the Texas
Rangers. This is StPwarfs best
sooson since he won nlnP games as
a rPUI'Ver with the 1982 Los Ailgeles
Dodgers.
Stewart gave up an RBI single to
Davp Wlnlleld In thP first Inning and
Mike Pagliarulo's 28th homPr d. the
season In the second and trallro 2.0.
But thP Oakland offense, which
scored only four runs In the first two
gamPs of the three-gam!' rerles,
came allvP. Mickey Tettleton, who
Pntered thP garnP when Manager
Tony LaRussa sent him up as a
pinch hitt£&gt;r In the sixth, drovp In
flvp runs with a pair of bases·loadro
walks and a three· run homer.
" I told Tony, 'Thanks for thl' day
off.' I was going to enjoy it,''
Tettleton sal\~. "I just want 1to
colltrlbute. You nevpr rPally know.
We want to finish as lllgh as possible
and this sertes.ls a good impetus lor

Monday,

Ul'l' AI tEiiiiLY WORK I
1714.00 por 100. Gu...moad
- 1. No-0Maiii-...S
........ llhlliJI: E._.,711.
3411 Ent..,...., Ft. Ptor. Fl.
33412.

31 H~tori•

'•

�/

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio
51

Household Goods

Valley Furniture. niMI &amp; u1ed .
Large uctlon of quality tumi·
tufl 1211 Eastern Ava .,
Oallipoli1.

3 bclf, honw 1101-'*ian Avo.
c·au 1,.·441·3711.

ue.ooo.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
SOfll and ch*rt priced from
1395 10 1888. Tebleo 180 end
up 10 *126. ·Hkte·a-beds 1390
to *69&amp;. R•cllners 1226 to

Smll 2 ........,..... ~· by
owner. Aurtl .....,, olootrio.
b.th. new oatP•IftCI n.W .ww
1'/lltm. 8 mM•-o!Oollipollo ooKrtnorAold,llrtt'-loon
right, f14.000 . .Ctll 114·441·
2817.
'

1378. Lampo 128

4 ml• oullldt city llmlttt 32

1cre1 .• corg. H¥tn room.

1 rtory
home. Papul1r Addl1011 School
dlot. Flolllng pond, bam; outbuilldlng. McGu~o Rtlllly Co ..
1402 4th Avo.. H-lngton,
28701 0! 304·829·1033.
Htdg--.odtDrive-3 lir. bride
homt, 2 fl 1-. 2'11 bolhl,
tJdre large lYing room. dining
room with 2 bultt ln corn•
cupboords. lol'llt Nl In kltch ...
wood ctblnots. DW. dlo-1.
rofrlg., doubl1 oven otow,l•nlly

w•..

room. tuM b•ement. Hot
h - . 2 tlr condHionoro, W·W
ClrPit dr•p•, wah•. di'Yt' •
cholt lnotu-. 2 ••
d.....,ld gor1g1. Thlo homo 11
bolng olfendlortht flnlllmo by
origlnoll . DWftlll' who II
r.aCJCitlng out of lltltt. CtH

thl

814·448·0141 oftor 4 p.m.
Qulltty home, newly NlftOdtltd

cholco locttlon on CoR1g1 Ad.
SyrtcuM. ,_complotokltchon
M'KI laundry, -'r condltlonad.

"I work like a dog because
my boss expects me to work
like a dog. When I need a
break, I go out and chase a
fiew Cars. "

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

l~r~~lot. 81•·892·11324.

44

c•
8orgtln

A-vlllo. by owner. Two for
tha prlca of one. 2 bedrooma.
living, dining room. kltch..,,

bllh with utro room. All fully
C"'!'otld. largo porch, lonold
y1rd whh tttiHitt T.V. Alao
IPertment which incku:t. 1
bedroom. liVIng room. kftchen
• • wfth bath, worklhop tnd
g. .gt. Fon:od 11r gu hoot, own
wetef w.H, ~·tot end l"nnint•

...... trw oiling. 141.000. Coli
814-378-1111.

3 l~~ge bldroon. 1 'h b.th, XL

living room, XL kltchtn, utility
rocm, gor~gO. Arbtugh Addition

in Tuppen Plains. Call 114-887-

8239.
3 or 4 bedroom home on 12
.crM In Pomeroy. Clty wttw,
nn.t ..l gu, FH fumac•, gtrden

1p1ce and lOti of wood1.

uo.voo. ., 4-992·2133.

e room

houle, beth. 1 'h acre.

For quick Hie. U4.000. Cell
814-992-74&amp;3.
For 111e or rent houN on Vine
St., Recine. 2 bedroonu, living
room, kitchen, bath, yerd,

· g - . Col 814·992· 2758 or
814·988·4231.

41

Houaea for Rant

Duplex for rent 841 Stgond

Avo.. Gollpolll. 3 bdr. llvln·
groom. dinlngroom, new kit·
chen. b~ekyard, refrig. • ranga.

1310 pluo litHhllill • oocurity
Ctll 814·448-0IVO.

-•It

Hou11 2 bllttt, Cll'pel. wuhar II
drytr, ref•encn and depollt.

Ctll tfttr 8. 8t4-441·4882.
Nice 3 bedroo"'1lg. Ylfd. 314
3rd St. K1nMJga. Celll14·448·

7473.
Availala now 2 bdr home
co mplettly rtmodeled. extra
nlee. ret. neighbOr. large front
porch
nice yard for faU
weather 1321 par month. CeM

a

814·211-1447.
How toon can you move Into 1
bett1r ._ ... niW' home1 2 bed·
roomt. LA. OR, kit .• blmt., 1 11
floor laundry, gtr. tnd lovely
yard. Vlrgk'llt l. Smith Aell

Elltto. 114·30·8828.
Furnished hou11 2 bdr .• 1191,

131 ... 4th Avo.Oolllpollo. Coli
441·4411- 8PM.
Aptrtmentt and hou111 in
Pomeroy arM. DipOiit required.

3·4 bedroom houH nMr IChool Pty - n utllltlol. 1·81 4·892·
and ho1pltll. Priced to 1111, . 2311 dt¥1·

f23.000. Colll14·982·8010.

Thre• bedroom home on 1 5
acrH. Firiplace, fully carplltld,
nM kltchlll'l with epplilf'lcet
lnctudld. Urgt pond tnd yard
with childr.,· 1 wooden play
center. Mutt 1111. M•. . offer.

814-949· 2803.

2 bedroom hoult in Pomeroy.
Unfumilhed. Fully Insulated.
ttorm door~ and windowl.
carpet. Nice 1nd dtan. D..,otit

roqul'ld. 814-892-3090.
AvoHiblt Sept. 1. 2 bldraom.

unfurnlth8d house. Elactrlc
heat. Vine St. Racine. CaH

3 bedroom houte. ell electric. 2
loll, 2 cer e1rport. 207 Fourth
St., M..on. W. Va. 30.·895·

114·848·28481oro-lntm""

3413.

Cottage. 2 roon11 and bath,
fumllhed. utllltt. paid, •15.00

North Perk Drive. two bedroom,
balem.. t. c~t~tral .. r cond,
forced P gM halt, dltllched
· g.-IQe. alumn tiding, good
loc:otlon. clolo 10 hoopHII, blftk.
drug and gf'ootry IIOfll. 304·

87B-1t99.
For Sal• (188,0001 or rant
(t480.00 monthl1'11t miltl from
Point PIIManl on S.nd Hill
Rold. 3 bedroom•. 2112 blths,
llvingroom with fk'eplace. larp
country kitchen with brelkfut
b•. hobby room, utility roo,m. 2
car a•raa•. bu.m1nt. dtdi:·. 1lr
cond, 5 tcrll. Call 304·882·
2481 ~ening1 .

32

Mobile Homas
for Sale

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
M081LE HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WEST. GALLIPOLIS, AT 36.
PHONE 114·448·7274.
1tl0 14•70 Kirkwood porcll &amp;

underpinning. on rtnt«i lot, 3

bdr. CoM 11"'388·8nl.
1981 Olllbnlok 14•70, t2•7
u:p~ndo. rMW' carpet. 3 bdr., 2
bath. ~ fvrnece. woodbumer,
tlr condHiOn•. tloctrlc otove •

Nfrlg...m;, underPinning, r•
•12. 700. wu

ducad to

114,000. Cll 8U·379·2187.

1OklO Marl.n 2 bdr. a lUng
•1.100. For mora lnformnlon

colll1 4·211·184&amp;.

188114•12 FeWmont Encore. 2

bdr. UIDO. Cell 114·1B2·
14&amp;9.

1•x10. 3 bedroom, 2 bath.

Good con-n. •eooo. WIN
toko uldt. Col 114·949·2801.
MOilLE HOlliES MOVED: In·

lUrid, I'UIOnlble ratll, Cal

304-171·2338

If lnttrMted.

- · 304·175·3t00 or 171·
1108.
3 bedroom, 2.2acrwJeny1 Run
Aold. refarencu 1nd depo11t,

304-671-2838.
Hou11 in Leon, phone 304-•68·
1808. Call before 12 and after 8.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rant

2 bdr .. tum .. n~ Clrpet. AC, in
Gallipolis. Call81•·448-1•oe.

12d0 ldga of town depo11t, no
pett, 11.a mo., partlllty fur·

nlohod, pttio. Coli 814·441·
7380 or IU-448·7124.
14k70 layvtew 2 bdr .. unfur·
nllhld, """~ nica.locatld 2 mil•
from OaHipolis, prlv1t1 lot.

Adu~l ooly. nc - · UIO mo.
Coli 814·448·2300.

IPPOin1mM'It.

Nice 2 bedroom trail• for rent
on Routh lane In ChMhire. On
nice lot. Cal 304· 773·15821.

1 OklO. 2 bedroom mobil ttome
on Union Ave. In Pomeroy.
1200. per momh pluo depooll.

'83 Doub&amp;Mide. 24x48. •ere
lll1d • .......toldlng. ftropltco, ooll·
lng fin. out building. near
Hannan School, 304· 7•3·

Ctll 814·1112·3789 OVMingt.

7211.

Aold. Gto htot. no poto. UOO.

33

Two 2·bedroom motMI• homa.
2 m/111 out Addlton· Bulavlla
plus utllltt•. 1ecurity . . . ,it

FIFRII

for Sale

Unfurn. 1 bdr. 1pt., c:arpeted,
utilltiee paid. no ch11dren. no

16 cubic ft. frea1er. Almond
color. Exceftent condilton Call

pt1lo. Coli afler 8pm 814·992·
8888.

304-676-8483 or 675·1450.

1 bedroom 1pt. in Pomeroy.
Completety remod .. ld kttchen
lumlthld. All new NIJI. 814·

53

892·121&amp; or 114-992-73t•.

1 bedroom IPtnment In Middleport. Unfumllhed. 11&amp;0. per

month pluo utllhlol. Coli 6t4·
982·1141 dl'/1 end 81 4·949·
2216 w..-.1ng1.

2 bedroom fumilhtd apartment
for rent. Aduh1 pr.ferrtd. 61•·
992-2741.
6 room unfumi1had apartment

Cell 114·992· 8434 or 304·
882· 2&amp;81.
2 bedrooms, unfumilhed. Utittl• pertlallyl:aid. No pea. Call

F-

3 bdr. troller, · - - · c.n
814·211·1113.

••ofP.-.

1-1!111 llomt In
17tcrll •
19ring foci IM!ftd ovtlllblo. Coli
114·441· Ziil.

34

Buelneu
Building

a

748 Third Ave. 1100 "'· h .

Comnterclal or werehou1e.
Parking on lkla. AdJ111ent 1o

third • Plno lt. Cfill e14-448·
2311 lor oppolnom....

For Solo: IOaVO .ft. _.morcltl
zoned bulilln• lrlok -IINctlon. L.... ~ - . . Iouth
Fifth Avo. Mlddl-rt. Phont
814-HI·IIH _,., 114·H2·
11 u. ""'1112·2021 ......,..
Flro - . c l bUIIIInt. 801
Mtln II..
PI-~ :J04.
112·3JII.
"

,oint

Apartment
for Rant

1 and 2 bdr. apu. tor rtnt. lealc
rtnt for 1 bdr. n11. IMIC rent
lor 2 brlr. UU. Allo UDOdop. roq, CioN to F-11111 ond
Equal

2 brlr. ..,fumlohld opt. In c ......
City. Ct11114·211-l820.

cl-.

Fum. 4 -~~~~• both
No
- · tduHI only. Rol. I dop.
roqulrld. Collt14-441-Jill.
Rog•ay Inc."''""""' 2 bdr ..
utMMiol portly ptld, nlol. Coli
304·171·1104 or 304-~71·
7121.
.
2 bdr. 2 - · ldtoh• fllrnllhld. 11 Court ••. t321 ...
mo. pluo U1Uitlol, nol-oo I
dopooll. C!ll 114-441·4121.

-

bU-1011- pulllla

- · mobile lio- jllrmlttld.

1104·171·2131 .,. J04·171·
2217.
'

111. 114·441-822t.

APARTMENT FOR RENT · Now
1eceptlng application• for rentll
IPirtmtnta In Muon Apt• Li·
mited. Two bedroom 1p11 11
1199.'00 p• month. Rent11
ret• may be higher dep .. dlng
on income. Hou1lng will 1M
.v..able to 11th applet~nt ,..
o•dl•• of their rac:e. color,
r-'tglon. au or neturel CH'6gln.
lntereetld applicants ahould call
304· 713-5011 or con11iet D•
ni11 Strlib or W11ter Ju.tlce at
the main office, 1876 Brice
Ro1d, Aeynold1burg, Ohio
•3088 or call 814-813·•&amp;,..

2 bedroom..,,, Golllpollo Forry.
304·675· 2648 "' 876·&amp;783.
Fumi1hld 3roomapt. 400-2111
St. 1225.00. Heat 1nd water
JN~id, referanc:e • depotit. No
chUdren . No Pd•. 30•-175-

2851 .
In Middleport, Ohio. 2 bed room
furnithad 1pt. 1 · 304· 882 ·
2&amp;88.
One badt'oom ept, Convenient

iocttlon, 304-875·2441.

46

F urniahed Rooms

0781.

Misc. Merchandise

Calleh.,'s Uted Tire Shop. Over
1.000 tirM, sizes 12. 13 , 14 . 16 .
18, 18.6. 8 milt~ out Rt. 218

Call 814·218·8261 .
Plattic cittern state approved,
pl11tic septic tenkl. piatie
culverts, metal culverts. RON

EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jock ·

Roonw for r~t . day . week.

Fumi1hld room t115. Utiliti•
pd 919 2nd Gllllpolil. Share

bath. Single male. Call •••·

44tl .

46

New country drMm horN Built
for you. t18,9915. 4 bdr., 2 beth.
See thi• inodel today . Call

814-888-73t 1.

Second' I- Closeou11· Suplu1.
1. 4x9 1nd 4k8x7· 16ths slue·
cota muonhe 11dlng or peneiing
IICOnd's U .96· B.95pc.
2. 4k8xV• masonite underlayment 12 .99 ea . 4x4 11 .00 ea .
18CORdl.
3. •xBJCV• la~Jan plywood 16 .98
18CORdl U .98 .
4. •dxv.. ai'ld 5·1eths wood
p1neling woodgrain end prkm
16.95 end t7.95 second 14 .96 .
6. 4x8x 1A blandex wattr board
e:~~ttrior glued T plu1 6 19 .96 ea .
15. Wood thermal pain bow
picture windows &amp;d e249 .
7. Double steel Insulated en ·
trance dqor set's with 16 gla11
•3&amp;0.
8. Double 1k11 Ught door Mtt
with Y, glall insulated 1360.
9 . Double commercial entrance
door tet ' l bronz. alumtnum
1599.95 set, 1ingles 8399 .00

•••
10. 8 or B panel It eel insulatld
prlhung doors 189.96.
11 . St~iri prehuno iniUIItld
doon lnd jaml 1 1f2 hr. fire rt

t169 .91.
12. SIWer and drain pipa 4x10
PVC praterated 12 .99 ea.
13. I' picnic table 2 benches
made from 2x4d redwood
atainad t29 .95
14 . ,.. T plu1 8 prefinilhed bruce
oak floor random length bundl11
176 .. fl.
1&amp; . Brown 28x60 rock face
trailer underpin ..cond1 U .99

...

18 . 111 and 2 pc. fibergla11 tuban
1hower combin1tion 1econdt

Spece for Rent

S10 ahort bed topper 1300.
Riding lawn mowtf 11 is $100 .
Delta 24" Scroll saw 1150.;
Toolkrefl Sander Bl grinder
1126.: RouterTeblel16; 6KW
lndu1trial unit halter •&amp;O. ; 26
JoSam Floor dMines bre11 &amp;
catt.; 12 ft . American Fibrelite
canoe, 2 paddle~. 2 life jacketa
1166.: Mi1c. electrical fitting•.
misc. old tooli. 304-882-33159 .

'-----------r-----------i

for rent large ltudio apace
downtown Galllpollt. Call 8 1•·
448-1818.
L.ergelot Additon Ad. 8. IITIIIIIot

AI. 7 . Coli 8t 4·441·4265 .

17 . 17x19whhegoldvanityand
marble top U9.1&amp; .
18 . Wood fr.,dl doort 18conds
16 IHo 1!. tO Wto 189.96 .
19 . 7 pc. wood preftnllhed vinyl
wrep door trim 11 .00 .. .
20. Solid oak .nd bfas tow I ber
001 4 pc., 118.96 01 .

COUNTRY MOillE Home Park.
Route 33, North of Pomeroy.

For Lease

21. Tampered th1rm1l pane
glau ~x32x78 $21 .96 ea.
22. Octogon tHfanv )eld gla11
window 149 .9&amp; ea. 12•1.
23. Insulated 1teel doora blenkl
•ec:ondl 126.00 ea.
24. 2x4x% IC:Uitical ceiling tile
'e mbolllfd fire rated t2 .29 ee.
28. 15 pc. high glua bathtub kits
whh 1hetv• 129.96.
215. Coal and wood firepl•ce
dovtlhllt 11..1159.95 or 2 tor

For le111 large unfurnished 111
floor 5 room 1p1. adjecenl cily
perk, 1'II bothl. f328 per mo.
plu• utllltl•. Aafar•CIIt

27. 9JCI indoor or out door 01it1
tile rubber beck • cente to
I Clnll Ia.
21. Prlflnilhed4xl.11 1/4m•onhe
ptg boerd 11.91 and 18 .96 ...
Penn Warlhou11, W11hton, Oh

Lo111oloh. Coli 814·992-7479.
TreNer ap1ce for rent. Letart,
good location, adul11 only.
140.00 month. 304·871-2V02
IYenlnge.

1100.

a

,.,.,

d-oll roqul•ld. Ctlll14·448·

c..,..

814·384-3841.

Full 11ze bo• tprfng• • manra11
firm. llkt n.w , onty 2 rnontha
old. Cott l800wllllllfor•400.

Coli 814·28e-ean

61

Houaehold Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 12
00... lt .. Otlllpotlt. Now • ulld
WOOd•ooolotovR,Ipo-dLA
tuito Ullt, bunk bldo •111.

..,._

---·.-.
...... -.,New

Otld ,b ool,..m a~ltot, rongH,

WrlnfO'
llvlntjloom
MliiM tltt•I!IIH.

LOCUit polta &amp; letgll rlbblt
dog. Clfl f1 4·288·1902.
Trl·ttar Ilea. Wlldlr AC· DC
230, rodl &amp; woldlng hot 1ft.
cklded, likt new, 1200. Purox
C·W 200 torch, gau.. 111., new
n..,., been ulld •100. CaH

114-371·2701.

211n. r-..ote control Megn..,oa
con10le TV axe. oond. 1225. Cal

""'441·0148.

n Fo•d 4•4 whttl drlv1. 1&lt;o ton.
~. . buylnl
- · ...... 44000. 080. 83 Odyoooy
.
. ..
...Coli
'14·481·31et.
GOOD UIED APPLIANCES
· 1111111
*Ytrt. rolrignton.
rengea.
Appllencee,

u,.
c-

Rhlor lid. bMido '""''
Motol. 114-448·7311.

Avw. Gllllpoflo, .OH.

61

old,

304·675·

John Deere 360 dozer. In good
condition. Call &amp;1•·992·7401.
360 John Deere dozer. 6 way
blade winch. Good condition.

814-949·2829 oflor 4pm .
Tobacoo

stlck1,

t16.00 per
Woodlawn
Farm, At 36, 304·675·2276 or
ta.lndred,

Morgan

Tobacco Stick• . 2.000 10c·
each. 30•· 675· 5604. Glenrldge
Farm.

246·6t 2t '

27B3.

Pole Buildingl by Quality
Builder1. Work1hops. carports,
animal shelters, gsr-un. Free
estimates . Phone 814 - 669 ·

7t 2t.

Pets for Sale

Dragonwynd Canary Kennel.
CFA Himalayan. Persian and
Siamese kittens. AKC Chow
puppies. Call 614· 446-3844
after 7PM.
Bilek Doberm1n. female , 4
months ell shots, $100 . Call

6t4·448·0845 .
Female Chihuahua non-reg .,
smell, 2V2 months. red fawn
color. Mostly paper trained.
966 . New csge. Both for t75 .

Call 81 4·446 ·4676.
Mcleans Poodle Grooming .
Grooms poodiM for 18 00 with
bath 88 .00 Flea dipping
•10 . 00 . Cocker Spaniels
$15 .00. All large dogs 130.00.
Groom all breed1 . Hours 9 1.m. ·
9 p.m. No Sunday work. C1ll
Coolville 61 4-667 ·391&amp; . Wei·
come nrN bu1inen.
Cocker Spaniel puppin; Part
Himalayan Persian female kitten: Miniature Schnauzer pup1.
Call 61 • · 992· 2807.

62 Wanted to Buy

1974 Olds Della 88 2 door.
engine good. body ruty. 1973
Pontiac Ventura 2 door, 8200
each . 614-985-.a268.
1980 Pontiac Pheonix V6 sunderd • apeed •1200. 61•·9923348 after 5 p.m.

Now buying 1hell corn or ear
corn. Call for latest quotel. River
City Farm Supply, 61•-446 ·

2885.

63

Livestock

"'""" 100. Oltoh Whoh Rotd
""'"" •d ........... lo\IDO.
Colll14·1148·2213 -iigo,
121nih POI'Iolli&gt;ot Dloh. Trockor
Ill M01or Drive. Gould D..ol
1300 R - . •1100. firm.
Coi1114·H2·1111 tv.,lngo.
Commodoro M with 1141 cllto
*lvo plue toflwt,., Prlao nogot·
lillie. C.WI1"'H2·NI7.

12 mixed hen• 81 .75 each. 10
large duck• U.OO ea. 6 doe &amp;
buck rabbits. Horse Reg. Stand·
ard breed. 6 gcHes . • sholts 4%
month old. 4 ltrge brude IOWI.

3 club calvu Chianina Simmental- Hereford, full S lm·
mental Slmmentai · Santa
Gertrudil· Hereford. Gertrudia·
Hereford. Call 81•·379·2805.
Young bulls KBJ Simmental x
Hereford Sired by KJB-Signal.
We have one %an done '12 blood.
E.cellent herd bulls. &amp;Jitremely
oorrttel. Reidy for fall service.
Phone eve. 61 4· 266-6402.

9 •ringer Holttein heifers. Ca"
614·388-9333 .

8:00

6:05

FOOD I ~ PA Cl&lt; cD,
CHILPRcN.

Auto Parts

6:30

Two gahed 11ddle hor1et. teOO
ead1. Call 614·388·9060
13 year old black mara. half
quarter. half Tenne11ee Walker.
Complete with 11ddle. 1460.

Call 814·3117·0298. ·
20 u:cellent feld• pigs. Call
81 •·2•15·9398 anytime.

Goat for 111e. Call 614·992 ·

2985.

7175.

57

Pony for sale . Black and white. 7
yelf old Geldk'lg. Gentle. $76.

Musical
Instruments

Soddlo 150. 8t4-986-44t8.
.,.. Simmental bull calf. ?months
old, good 1ize. Call Gayle Price,

1978 Cutle11 Supreme. 80,000
milt1. Good condition . local
owner Dot Neut11ing. 11600.

Calll14 ·982 · 2860.
1977 Plymouth Volafi . 31 B
engine. AC. Make good work
car. 1600. or but offer Call
'84 Cavalier wagon. 4 cvl. 5

IPeed, air and rldio, front wheel
drive. 15,600 or belt offer. No
trade. 304·676·4840 and leave
me11age on mechlne.

1980 Buick Skyl•k 4 door,
t1400. Neild transmission repair. Call 30•·676·1293 .
1983 Buick Cantry, 4 door, V6
30 6tre rmtor. AC. PS, tilt
wheel. Front wheel drive. like
nCMt, 34.000 miles, 16.600.00

'n

1964 T·Bird co nvertible, exc.
cond. 13,200. 2109 lincoln
Ave. 304-676-2454 .

1981 Escort Pony, exc. cond.
t6.000 or bat otter. 304·&amp;75·

6700 .

'74 Chev Caprice Cl111ic, •
door. AC. PS. PB. clean inside,
Lynn Dur~t 304;175·2415.

72

Trucks for Sale

68 OatiUn truck runs good
1200. Calll14· .. 8 · ~78 .
1979 Dodge 4x4 pickup lAi ton
club ceb. air. auto, PS, PB, new
tir11, braket. lock-out hubl. tx.
cond. Mutt sell 1•.400. Be1t
offer ortrlde. Bookl for •5. 700.

Wanted One regi1tered young
Nubian Doe • 3 youth. 304·

Trumpet and can. t60. Call

676·7717.

1980 Dodge 0-150 with topper
t 1,999. 1A79 Dataun 11 .199.
1978 Luv 11.399. John's Auto
S1le1, Bulaville Rd. Glllipolft.

6t4· 985-4418.

Fruit
Vegetables

Tra nspurlttlion

1984 Ranger XL 4 cyl., 4 IPd.,
good oond .. low miletgl, must
IH to apprtcllte 1•.600. Cell

6t4· 218·1328 .

71

Autos for Sale

8t4-246·56064 .

Half runner beans, first picking.
Pick vour own. Call 8,.-266 ·

8839 .

YeikJw Frte Stone Csnning
Peachn now availllble. Call for
price1 and varieties . Bob's
Marke1 . Mason. W. V1 . 304 ·

84 Chevetta 4 cyl., 2 door. 5
1pd ., AM·FM ca11ttte, low
mileage. Call 61•·448-0137
after 6PM.
1984 Chavy , Cavalier station
wiQOn, new tngine with ontv
8.000 mil•. very good eondi.

84,200. con 814·246·5406 or
814· 441·0212 .

773·672t . Open 7 dtyo.

1984 Chryaler 5th Avenue tow
mllu9r. clean. one owner.
10.000 firm. Call 614·38B-

Ear Com for llie. 304· 876 1888 evenlng1.

9776.
74 Camero 1,200 good condi·

tion. Co11814·V92·3242.
For Sale or Trade
1980 Trllli·AM ex . cond. Mutt
ull •4. 200. hit offer or ueda.

8ockl fo• 16,200. Cfll 8t4·
448-2746.

18ft. Sh81tl travel trsiler. 1970
Pontiac Catalina. Call 814- 266·
1141, can be seen at Eureka,
Kenny' 1 Carryout. .

197&amp; M11ibu Clllsic. · 1973
Plymouth Dutter. Call814-448-

3324 """ 6:30.

Sup pl1es

1975 Chtvollo Mtllbu Cl••lc
11.800. t842 Wlllyl JtiP M81
1800. Clfl 814-317·0348.

I&gt; l1ves1uc k

1948 Coupt, ttrett rod .

13.800. Coli 304-1711-8144.

Farm Equipment

1918 Volvo 1tationwegon, good

CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S. 36 W11t. Jaclcaon. Ohio.

614 ·281·8411 '
MIIIIY Fargu•n. Ntw' Holland
Bu1h Hog Still Service. 0~
40 .... tr•ctort to dloo11 from
I Gantt lett IIna ot ntw a Ultd
aquipmant. Llrg11t Mllclion tn

a

9.E. Ohio.

JIM ' S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER . SR 38 W. Golllpollo.
Ohio. Call 81•·448·97n. eva.

114·441·3192. Up lroftt treo-

cond .. 12,100. Cell 814·441·
4447.
81 Dido Dolll II. 2 door, Y· l
lftalno. fully oqulppld, low
mlfqge. 1 owner, Pclllent

condhlon. C~ll 81 4·388·8840.

1977 OldemobHe Cutl111 Su·

prtmt P.I.A.A . good lhiPo.
Nnl good"•!!IIY whoolo, 14&amp;0.
ClfiiU·441·4803 .

1979 Toyota Pick· up and 8 ft .
truck topper. Call 614 ·992·
8617 .tier 7:00' p.m .

1879 ChiV)' C 10 pickup, body
good, runs good. 30•· 8715·
3734 .

73

Vans

&amp;4

W.O.

F-260 4 wheel drive 360 4
speed, •1.200. Homelita super
eesv chlinuw t125. Call 614-

38B·91116 .

7&amp; Chevy Blazer need aoma
1450. Call 11•· 388·
9888.

work ,

82 Dodge 4x4 customized van

2t.OOO mllft . Cl 8t4·448 ·
1882 llfttr e.
82 Chavy Convar~lon v1n.
lhlrp, priced to 1111. 15,996.
CaU 614·2415·&amp;1 31 or 814·

248·111111.
88 ChiV\' 4x4. I'll lt. bod. 30&amp;
VI. 4 ipetd. am·frn lterao. tih
whHI, running bolf'dl, IUbt

l

••zoo.

10 ft slide in truck camper. ref ,
stove with oven, furnace;
1hower. commode. jack 1tands,
good cond, make offer 30•-

882 -28B7
1967 DeCamp 17 It $1200;
1972 Starcraft 22 ft . t1900 .

upcoming

(1 • 111111••..:~

chael's Air Force mentor

visits. Willie and David
adopt his macho attitudes-·
which enrages Valerie. (A}

In Stereo.
(J) Fothor Murphy
Cil Best of tho Superstars
(90 min .)
® Ill liD Major League
Beseball: Teams 10 be An·
nouncod (3 hrs.)
f1l (!) Sex Symbols: Pest

....

Present. and Future A look

Home
Improvements

at sex symbols from past to
present, Including Clark
Ga,ble, Don Johnson. Mae

18M Honda Twlnttar 200. Call

Motorcycles

814·448· 8241 '
ltM Hondt llbro 1tee. h•
,... g. 2 ht-11 • ..,..,, A·1
1h111o. CtH 81"'441· tl11.
1111 Hondt lnt•ototo 1100oc,
12,VOO. Ctl 304-178·1844.

Millo olrlr. Ctl111 4-448·V084. 1871 Hondt Gold• wing 1000
782 Cho- with mlltl·tlort • :-:-:-:----:---:----:-·la- mota ;cycle. 2,100 ·mill, ..c.
2 rowhlld •14,100; DotModtl lo 111~ you il., buy Joopo 1o&lt; oondltlon. 811 ·ot call It CMc
30 lvr~ge · blow• 1,000 RPM •44. tllruuflh the u .s. govom· 8tvlnl lonk. 114·448·3832 or
12.1100:: Dntuold No. 1 bo•. 2 m•tl Ott lho !octo todl'/1 Col ·11"'441·711'7. '
.
blltw wtth 10 ton rUnning~- 1·312·742·1142 bt. 40et.
12,800; Onoutld Modol707. 3
1tl1 Ht~ Dov-n Clooolo.
pi hfll:h ohapptrwllh_h_
Phono 11 4·811·41~.
,
11,800; Dnoullld Iuper 1.7 ·17
1tM Hondt ltJ. Atklng 1171.
ohoP,or t1.800: Frotlln•olnt
..,,113·1·17.,. a .1 .,._, 1or
Coli
,, 81'•·.117·7181 •
24 month~ 8.8poralftlf9&lt;Hor 1171 Cldllto 4 door H.T: Full,
48 monthoordlo-mofor-. ..... t.thlr llllt.., .... ooo ~~- . - - 1 KX 121, Nnl
Ktot_.. a . .~ooc..... ••· At mHoo. htrd 10 lln4 dlooio. oldo~· vood.;lf.'J. lhope.
oor. 12100. 010. t14·H2· ,.,... 2·3711 .
87 Lien. WY 304·811·1174.
'
'
'

....

&amp;MEEK

Evergreens. lhade &amp; fruit treel.
tree &amp; dump ramov1l, mulch.
nnd &amp; gravel, ltone dt41vet"ed.
Don'• landlcap ... Don Waugh

Plop. 81 0·448-9848.

MMff

RON ' S Televi1ion Service .
Hou11 call• on RCA, Quuar,
GE. Sptcllling in Zanilh. Call

A LADe.. HAD A 100
AT A~ ... ME.T A00(
HIM AIJD HAD

304·116· 2398 o• 814·446·
2464.
Fetty Tree Trimming, ttump
remov11. Call 304-876 ·1331 .

RINGLES'S SERVICE, t•po·
rlenced carpenter. llactricien,
ma1on, painter. rooting (lndud·
lng hot tar application) 304 -

876-2088 or 875· 7388.
Stark• Tr" and Lawn SII'Vice,
landacaplng. 304·670·2010 .
Ro11ry or cable tool driHing.
Molt wlllscomplltedllmeday.
Pu"1) 11111 and tervice. 304·

•uoo.oo.

I

I'M TIZYING TO FIND
A qcoo HO'AE F'LP.
MY PLANT.

MY .MOM WON'T

WHY

IT's A

LET ME KEEP IT.

NOT:?

MAN· &amp;4-TI Ncr

DAISY.

5445 or 675·1182.

Plumbing

I

~

....,~,A
~,.v-'E,......,I
s 16 1 1

.

@

Greatest

Hero

Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio

9:30

Phono 114·446-3888 or 114·
448·4477

WHAR VOU
BEEN FISHIN:

(Jood·1 Ekcavating, blltm.,tt. .
footert. drlvewayL 11ptlctank1,
l111d1eaping. Call anytime 1144U-4137, J1m11 L. Davilon.
Jr. owner.

SNUFFY?

·- BUT CALEB :&gt;L' DOG
GOT TWO OR TH.REE REAL
GOOD NIBBLES .

OVER ON CALEB'S
''PRIVATE-KEEP OUT"
PON~ AN' I DIDN'T
GIT NARY A BITE

e

Cil

West Point cedet accused
of 'cocaine possession,
while Lacey confronts her
father. who deserted her

Watttnon'• Water Hauling,
re11onable rattl, lmmtdleta
2.000 gallon dell"ry, c11111ms.
pool1, wall, t1C. call 30•·1571·

2919.

OalllpoUI.

A world
of difference

MV 6RAMPA SAYS THAT
:AfTER ALL THESE YEARS
ItS SE61NNI~ TO FORGET
JiiE .¥»1.TIPLIC-mON TABLES
~~~/,

THE NINES WENT FIRST..
NOW THE E16fiTS AND
SEVENS ARE 601N6 ...

11:30 IJ &lt;D (jJ) BHt of Coroon
ToriiQhfl gu .. tt are Tom
Conti, franklyn Ajaye and
Roger Bobo: (60 mln.l (R)
In Stereo. .
Burna &amp; Allan
I]) SRoiuCenter
()) WKRP Ill CI!!Oinnatl

'

eli

trlaourtty1re121 ~IPI , Thtbell ,

In furnllu,. uphOttterlno. Coli •
304 -171 · 4114 lor frio
:

•'

.I])
•

"

'

I

\

ill

('lJ One •

Beyond

ABC N~ Nlghtllne
Blueoren Ramble
'

~OR TH

8·15-86

+ QJ 9 B

.. A J4
t 9 H; :1
• .~ h

By James Jacoby

.

WEST
EAST
When more than 70.000 players are
• .1
. K7b ~2
simultaneously competing around the .• K 9 s 2
• 10 I :l
world, there is no way for one person' s • J l ti
:\ ~
result to be sole best. In th e Epson • J !iJ :) :\ ~
• k ~ 1
World Championship held last June 14 .
SUL TH
each possible result was assigned a
+A Ill 3
score as a percentage and was an·
..
Q8 6
nounced as soon as a hand was over. AI
t K Q 111 1
the end of the 24-dea !tournament. the
Q8 7
results were tabulated on a central
Vulnerable Both
computer in France, and the world· ·
Dealer· Soulh
wide winners and rankings were
known within 24 hours. Here is one
South
\\' t.•s t
North F.asl
s uch deal.
It
The final contract was almost a l· Pass
Pass
I NT
I+
ways three no·trump When East won p;J 5s
:1 NT
Pa ss
Pass
the king of clubs at trick one and re· ra,
turned a club . declarer invariably led
dummy's spade queen . unblocking his
Opentng lead : 3
10. A second successful spade finesse
left dummy w1th the lead. and now de· L...------------1
clarer played a diamond to his king. A
heart to dummy's Jack followed by an other diamond netted declarer 10
tr icks for a score of 66 out of a possi·
ble 100.
ronttnue with 1he c l ub king. Declarer
No doubt someplace in I he world a would now have to play carefully JUSt
defender started with the club jack. to lak e n1ne lrtck s . working out an e nd
East might now assume declarer to play agatnsl West. who must guard
have Q-x·x of c lubs and allow declarer both the dtamond Jack and the heart
to win the club queen at the first trick. k1ng . And makmg three no-trump
If declarer now led a high diamond would be only worth 27 o ut of 100, a
from his hand. East would w1n and poor sco re

+

+

~HfM~t&lt;,t
by THOMAS JOSEPH
3 ll umillaJt•

ACROSS
1 Capt• -.
Ma.o.;..
4 Farnur
7 l'l'nll'r
8 Affmn

10 "'Turantlot "
h1·rn
11 T1tlt&gt;

4 Squanllt·r
5 C'Jcero'..,
~rt·t·tin).(

6 Uv&lt;·rall
7 Amt'rkan
rc ,mpl )S(•r
9 Mi.:hy
Moust'. t'.).( .

111

PampltJn&lt;l
13 In lht • past
14 llPstiny
16 llutrh dly
17 lmhll&lt;'

10 Top off

12 Prepat&lt;'
15 Ptwm
181mm£&gt; nSt'
21 Potnted
rt&gt;mark
19 TurmPrk
20 rnnsumed 22 To piec&lt;•s
23 Qui(•k
21 Endrch•
reply
22 Asrrndt•d
211 flriny
26 .launty
27 Spoil
28 "One Tlay
- Timf'"
29 Ruhh"h
33 Spuilag&lt;'

Yesterday's Answer ttt2:l
24 Keynolf'r' s
addrrss,
e.g .
25 Tinnt•d fish
27 Marsh
or Wl•sl
29 Hail

30 Prizt·
31 Britis h
genf'ral
32 English

river
37 llikint part
39 My (Fr.)

34 (;ell &lt;"olor
311 flee
~·l · rt•l inn

36 Clan
38 Mirror

40 Ran·d m'oclh·l r . + - t - t 41 EngliSh
ri\oW
42 lnsur
rP&lt;'Ii (lllist

,.

Turnt•r

',.

43 St 'OJlf'

DOWN
1 lluP
2 Moulh ...

II .all

OAILYCRYPTOQUOTF.S-Here's how to ~&lt;nrk it :
AXYDLBAAXR
isLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sampk A 1s used
for the l.hree L's, X for the two O's, etc. S1ngle le tters,

• I

,.

•

apostrophes, the length and fonnalion of t~r w" rds are all
hints . Each day lbe code letters are diffen nt

CKYPTOQlJOTES

.'

8-2~

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I.

fM

s

R Z T

A H M

RMfiFilZ

Z ,I

PFIIRW

~I

I

It

H II

\

.1 Z T

.,
,'1.,,

Z T lJ

W .) .I

t:

KRJDRMiliiZ

M A
NHit \

.".,..
I

I ' BZ

,
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E .·

WTUHZUOZ .IM

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... ~

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Y\!8Urdtlf'&amp; {:eypWquote: THF. nt:ST II A\ f&lt; t KEEl'

-!

CIIIJJiREN 'HOME IS TO MAKE TilE II• &gt;M 1-: ATMd. '

IIHoeli

Mowrey'• Upholottrlng llfVIftg .

lltlmMN.

PRINT NUMBERED
LfTTERS IN SQUARES

James Jacoby

([) SCTV
,
liD Flrtt Contact The 19.3 0
search for gold In N.W Gul·
nea io captu'rod by rare film
footago. (60 mjn .)

TAI8TA.TE
UPHOL8TEAY SHOP

Complete th e chuckle quoted

BRIDGE

IIi Bill Cosby Show
Ell (1) Love 'COMOCIIon

Upholatery

Ie

Midget - Bigot - Lathe - Emetic - BED TIME

(lJI ·Now•

UphOIII,Id.

.

Teenage girl1o another: "The people hardes1to convince ·
they're a11he re1irement age are 1he kids I babysi1 for atthelr
BED TIME."

when she was a child. (80
min.) IR).
liD@ New•
10:05 tiJ MOVIE : 'Cat Ballou'
10:30 (J) Taking Stock
&amp;II (!) INN News
liD This Old Houoe
t 1:00 . . il) Cil Ill ([) ® Ol il])

o,..

.

YESTERDAY'S SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Track end Fi&amp;ld: Weltkluse Mott From Col·
ogne, Wes1 Germany (2
hrs.)
® QJ llJl Newhart (CCI
When Michael leaves town
for a job interview. he appoints the station's recep·
tionist as producer of
Dick's show. (R)
10:00 ([) Na1ionel Downhome
Blues Festival Taj Mahal .

Ken'• Wettr Serviea. Willi,
ol•temt, pool• 1nd watarbedl

City, Oh . 814·211· 1470, Evo.'
114•448· 3411.
dillY •••
I. ht. 1:30 to I :30. Old I n - ,

.

"Your conscience," explained
lhe mother to 1eenager, "is the
small inner voice tha1 doesn't
speak your--."

8 ANSWER
UNSCiAMBtE FOR

A,morlcan

lanta. (60 min.)
® Ol @ Cagney &amp; Lacey
(CC) Cagney investigates a

A • M Custom Couohts and·
Atuphol11aty, lt. Rt. 7, Crown·

.I

:!

•
.
by fdl 1ng in the mi~ing words
L-....L-..L.-L-....1.--'--' you develop from slep No. 3 below.

'

poolo flllod. Colll14·288· 1141
or 814 ·441·1175 or 8t4·441· •
7911.

8t4· 448·7133 ar 114· 448··
1133.

.

I

Sunnyland Sltm and Rob·
ert Junior Lockweed are
among the performers featured in a spec1al three-day
blues festival held in At·

General Hauling

1 183 Sec. Avt.,

Tl:::...,;:1~_,.1_,

AUSQEY
~-T-~:......;,,.7~~T8-;.I...:....rl--i

in front of a udien ces when
she and Kate are asked to
be on Dick Cavett's talk
show. (A).

CARTER'S PlUMBING
AND HEATING

I~

GELUI

([) [1) American Masters
(CC) Sam Waters1on nar·
rates this portrait of painter Thomas Eakins and ac·
tor Kevin Conway ponrays
the painter in scenes from
Eakins· life (60 min.)
@ 0)@ Kale &amp; Allie Allie
needs hypnotism to con·
quer her fear of appearing

~----------~-.

Alhbv Conlt. Carp ..try, remo·
dtfing, room lddilion, p1inting,
roofing, concrete. tiding, bloclt
work. frH lltlmate. 304-176·

E11cevating

USNADE

3 +I
1-:-

~r

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

898-3802

87

low

@ Dampsey II&lt; Makepeace
(60 min.)
8:06 Cil MOVIE: 'The Jeyhawk·
ers'
8:30 II Cil @ Amazing Stories
An old man revived from a
40-year coma shares men·
tal commumcation with a
comatose 7·year-old girl.
(R) In Stereo .
9:00 0 (I)@ MOYIE : 'A Time
to Live' (R) .
CIJ 700 Club
f1l (!) MOVIE : 'I'm No An·

Sundl'/. 814-448· 7404.

79 Oldo Dtlto H 71,000 mllol,
loldld. bUrgtndy.CtH 814·24S.
&amp;131 or ,1 14: 241·111188.

RM tlrll, RIW bltt-v. good
.,ttrlor. Ntod1 10mo I!Odywort&lt;.

Ex1erior a intarlor ltucco. Pla•ter &amp; plAter repairs. Low retel.
Csll61•-266-1182

1tn1, pool, • wall. Any1•m• but

N...., Holland 487 hlyblne. lnter·
na1ionrl 1210 grinder mlx•r.
New Hollend 717 "''"llthorvll·

FARM EOUIPMENT· Now Hoi· ' t819.
•
land Forego Equip.,.m Bolo. 1
No. 8 · - btller forego box • Cedlftac C111111. Runt good,

min .)

® MacNail·lohrer Nowshour
® Ol @ Scarecrow end
Mrs. King Lee and Amanda
face a secret agency in·
hou'tt ·...Yigilante organization. 160 mln .f (Rf.
iilJ Survival Specfel: Wild
Sees. Wild Soala (CCI Film·
makers Tony and Liz Bom·
ford document the activi·
ties of Britain 's two seal
species. the common and
1he grey . (60 min.) (A)

Unconditional lifetime guaran·
tet. local referenc• furn .. hltd.
Free ettlmatel. Call COIIICI
1-61,·237-0488, day or night.
Roger• Basamen1
Weterprootlng.

loldod. 24,000 miiM, 19,700. · llllld. Call 8t4·387-IHI23 or
304-171· 1138.
114·367·7741 or 304·8711247.
t980 JHP CJe . cell 304·178·
2738 or 178·2741.
Dillard'• Water Delivery. Cill·

1810 Chevrolet Citation auto.

81 Chryol• Loloron 11. nlco,
lotdld, •8.aoo. Cell ~14 - 388·

Wes1 and Bo De•ek. (60

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Loodod. Only GOOD mll11 .
111.1100. Ctii814· HI-4418. I :::--:---:---~---..;
1114 Oodgt PaaHngtr Van.

"Fire·

@Allee
@Jeopardy
7:35 ([) Sanlord and Son
8:00 II Cil@ Valeria When M i·

Services

Jam11 Boy• Wa1er Service. Alao
1885 OMC luxury convlftlon
v1n. Plulh .,_tarlor. Ukt nM.

film ,

walker" .

THAVI!!S 8 · 25

304-676-2953 .

rUI. Porfoct lhopt.
Coli
14·11111·4180 oft• 8:00.

74

...

.I'M AFf?AID lj WA5
A WA,S'i!? Of SPACE
io IN,S'i'ALL T'tiAr
)INGLf.S'" fA~.

5685

86

II (I)

his ' tough guy' image in the

1972 Jsyco 20ft. camper with
extra. 197B Bitzer. Both eJCc .
cond. 304-675·3346 or 675-

83

In

in Cincinnati
(15) Wheel of Fortune
7:05 ([) Green Acres
7:30 II (I) ® Now Newlywed
Game
CIJ Inside Besebell
fll(!)Taxi
0 ®®Wheel of Fortune
([) Buttorflies
&amp;l il]) Entertoinment To·
night Chuck Norris 1alks
about his departure from

304·982·31 80.

....

Y·S. PI, P8, 4ti,DOOmR•, good
condHion. Ctlll14· 248·107~.

wflh 1eruNm ule 12 ton WI'Qtn
U.VOO: Dn• No. 8 bo• with 10
ton wegen H.IOO: One Modal

0
0

1978 Stercreft 28"1:1 tt c1mper.
bunk haute style, sleeps 7.

1977 CJ 6 Jeep soft top, 3 spd.,
6 cy1 .. new hllden. wench.
lt,800. Coli 814·441-8173

Eerth

the
beto form four' simple words

IHl WKRP

&amp; Heating

1ora with warranty ovar 75 uted
••cto,., 1000 tools.

tor. AN good oond, 304-273·
4211

0

8t4·949· 2878.

82

to

Edilld br CLAY I . POLLAN

Rearranv- letters ., of
0 four
scrambled words

&amp;l llJ) Divorce Court

Pop up camper Excellent condition . open• to 19 ft . Sleep• 8 .
Stove, ice box, sink. Phone

Cutlu1 Supreme. need•

Down

~

T~~;~:~' S©\\Q{l}A..:~-el!S•' ::~.:

-----~-

our ·

3839 .

81

882-3176.

Call814-448· 2746.

814- ~46 · 56t6 .

Of &amp;HOOV

V066 .

1981 Ford Escort. light blue. 2
doorJ, 4 eyl, 4 IPeed, air cond,
60,000 miles, 82.000.00 . 304·

Portlond ol 8t 4· 843·5263.

Canning tomatoes already
picked Call for your order

PERfECI fOR 'llll F\R;T DAV

1972 Flemingo trailer good
shape U,OOO Cell 814-388 ·

ll•m. 1-304-982· 2847 ..

Steinwey S. Son console pi.,.o.
Be1t offer. Cell 614 ·446 · 0946
after 4 p.m.

Red rllbtmn Taylors Berry
Petch . C1l 614-446-8692 or

1980 Trans van 19 ft. air, cruise,
new interior. tire~ , bfakas, root
air, •"-· cond. Mu1t tell $9,200.
hst offer or trade. Bookl for
112 ,000. Call 614·-MI-2745.

1979 Wildemeas Camper. h ·
cellent condition. Carefree awn·
ing, electric or g11 refrigerator,
1ieeps1ix. Call 614-992-7276.

Cil

@ NBC News
(J) The Rifleman
Cil John Fox Outdoors
®Q®ABC News
([) Doctor Who
® 0) @ CBS News
iilJ Body Electric.
@ Welcome Back, Kotter
6:35 I]) Gomer Pyla, USMC
7:00 II Cil PM Magazine
(J) Man from U.N.C.l.E
Cil SportsCan1er
® Entertainment Tonight
Rob Reiner talks ·about h1s
lates1 directorial effort in
the film, "Stand by Me" .
fll (!) Hogan's Heroes
Ill ()) Jeoperdy
([) Nightly Business Report
[I News
®MacNeil-lehrer Newsh·

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

1978 Z28 . 360 fouJ apeed .
AM-FM eighltrac:k . Goodcondi·
lion. Also 1974 Harley Sportstor
MotoJcycle . Call 814· 367·

II Cil® Ill ([) ® Ol @
@News
(J) Groen Ac•es
Cil Mazda Sportslook
f1l (!) S1ar Trek
([) Reading Rainbow ICC)
iilJ
Healthy
People/
Healthy Business
@ One Day at a Tima
Stereo.

WIHk, 304·875· 624t.

AKC Bour. female, 304 · 675·

61

EvENING

Boats and
Motors for Sale

Truck camper . Very cleen .
Sleeps 6 . Mu1t sell 71 Chevy
lmpal1. t715 Cell 814-986 -

Call 814·268·6509 .

814-887 ·3866 .

fM III

~.

8/25/86

1 ~74 VW Super Beetle with sun
roof Good condition. •&amp;95. Cell
614 · 7•2 · 2126 mornings or
evenings.

021,.

Arlbitn Wefdt Crou Mare. 3
vrs. lhow experience. "00.
61 4· 742· 2177 evenings.

AKC Ba11en Plll'•· Three left. 3
months old. Price. •75. Call

59

I&lt;:Xr&lt;GIJfiVE Wrx5t\Ra::~~~~

..n

;:;;:;---.-..,--7"-;;;-;-71
Autos for Sale

Farm Equipment

676-t208.

&amp;

IQO'(

6t4 ·379·2220.

56 Building Suppli's

58

I
Television
II.Cll'T
..,____, fir lHt'
Viewing

Transminions, aU types, over.
front. rear, 4 wheel drive, pric"
start $100. w1ll deiNer. Call

Imitation racoon co It, new
8300. wom, only few 1imea teN

56

A ~y 1D TI1f:

&amp; Accessories

304-676 ·5203.

t150. Size· 9· t0.
, 780 after 6 p.m.

~IM

304 ·675 ·3939 oflor 5

76

PM
050,

C0t-151DER ltiMfliEaJrNe

WI« VID \tiJ 6Nf&lt;

Al.l. THcl~

uaed clothingEa~tIn stock.
Sam r
Somerville,
of Aaven1·
wood. Frl Sat. Sun. 12'00·8:00
year~

1H~IJ

304·529·9200.

MOVING AWAY SALE of men's
used rental uniform• (make
otter). Sam Somervill•. 67
Burdette Addn, 304·676-3334.

Boy's 24" bicycle, 3

I~ ~ Dlc;,l'T

1980 cruiser 26 ft Gren Bataau,
260 hp ONC. stove, 11!1f. head ·
with shower. stero, trim tabs.
ship to shore radio. tandem
trailer, exc cond. t16,000.00.
Call Andy 304-623-5843 or

304· B82·27t4.

1169.96 to 1179.96.

Unfllm- IIPI.. 4 -~~~~ • County~M•oo. Inc. Good
Htlt. c......., loootld. Ono., ondTV••·
_ldu................. DPIII
M to IPM. tiiN
clop._...,., Col 81"'441- lot. ""'441·11111, ei7 3rd.

0444.

54

Childert Saw Supply, Vinton .
Ohio. Call 614 · 388·8664. Au·
gust Specials. 20'% off Echo
nwt. 20% off Echo trimmers.
HutqVIMI IIWI, ChliniiWI 16''
811.50. B1r oil gal. •4 .00.
Chain sharpening. repair work.
Open 8·5 Mon .·Sst . Closed
Wed. 6 Sun .

D-rtunlty.

lpm.

OlD ORIENTAl RUGS
WANTED . Any size or condition.
Call toll free 1-800-.Ul-7847

APARTMENTS, mobile homn,
hou ... Pt. Pl. .lnttndGallipo-

Hou1lnt

Fum. tlriGO opt., 1 bdr .. •231.
U1Hltlol pold. 28'11 Noll Ave..
Golllpollo. Ctll 448·4418 o1tor

Antiques

aon. Oh. 614-288-5930.

Spring Volll'/ Plut. Jtcktoft
Elltto Aportmonto. 814·448·
3187.

75

6 14· 742-2479.

114·841·22 3.

..... ~ .... 814-448-9848.

44

Gun• fur11la, dealerco1tplus10
pet. FFL holder. 30,·896-303e
evenings .

Concrete blocks all sizes yerd or
delivery . Mason 11nd. Gallipoiil
Block Co.. 1231h Pine St,
Gallipolis. Ohio Call 814 · 448 ·

49
I mill farm for Ale3 bdr. hOusa,

1300. 304-875-2680.

Duncan Phyffe table with 4
chaifl, Walnut dining table with
8 chain. Modern lo'IIM81!1t and
rocker. 3 curved glus curio.
Antique Wllh atand. Old rocker.
Plckent U1ed Furniture. Good
quality uled fuml1ure. Open 9 to
6 or call tor IPPointment.

, 976 model Kaw111ki,
choop,

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt. Ohio.

80 N LOSER

Motorcycles

$750. 304 · 676 ~ 23B7 .

P m.

SURPLUS . RENTAL, denim,
army camouftage eklthing, mil·
itarv accellorlea. ell1iz.es. rental

, Monday, August 26, 1986

1983 Yahama 175 3 wheeler

Full "t 19BI World Book
Encyclopldlu, ttill in box•• ·

1 bedroom apt. for rent. Basic
rent S11rt1 1216. 1 month th1t
include~ all utllhl•. Depo~lt
requ6red of 1200. Contact Vii·
lege Manor Apt. Middleport.
114-992-7787. Equal Housing
Opportunity.
Pomeroy 2 bdr, N-vtor~ Run.
1175 mo. noo depoait, ylrd,

74

2349

6t4· V92· 2888 .

Coli 81 4·V92·8896.

K.IT'N'CARLYLE®byLarryWrlght

Uted 1,000 gal drinking Wltlf
ltorage tank end 1.000 gal
plastic septic tank. 304-676·

pOlo. C1H 814·446·1837.

Tralltf for rent In ByracuH. Call

814·tl2· 2728 . M'u n hove

Check us out on our living room
1uitn. 1349 &amp; up. Webber &amp;
Bulhllne. New Gib10n applien·
en. Mollohan Furniture Rt . 7
north. Kanauga. Call 614 · 446·

Misc . Merchandise

Building Material•
Block, br1ck. sewer pipes, window•. lintel1. etc. Claude Win·
tert. Rio Grande. 0 . Call 6U-

month. Oallla Hotel. Call 81•·
448- 91580. Rtnt 11 tow 11 1120
month.

Cell 81 4·117·3487.

448· t 149.
---------Large chetl typt freezer almond

7444.

2 bedroom mobile homa In
Evergreen. Call 814-.a.tl· 7032.

2 bedroom. In Tupp•• Plllnl.
1115 per month plus utHttl•.

For tale good used floor and
portable color TV't. Call 614-

Furniehtd efficiency 1150 mo.
utillti• paHI. 71h Neil Ave. Call
448·4418 olttr 8PM.

For rent Slaeping Rooms and
light hou11lleeplng room1. Park
Central Hotel. Call 814-448-

3 bedroom doublt wide. 3 mil•
out of Pomaroy on At. 143.
Gar11e and t~rge yard. Penllltv
fumllhocl. 11 4·992· 7401 .

8t4·446·0322.

Coll6t4-266 · t747.

Nloaona bedroom mobllahome.
central air, ptlio, off
ttrltt perking, good loc..tlon In
city. Mun have ratar•CII and
depostt. Celll14·'"8·41&amp;9.

a• heat.

Used Furniture Washer &amp;
dryer, ellectric range, wood
tlble Ia 2 bench II, bad1,
drnltr, &amp; recliner. 3 mil" out
Bulevllltt Rd. Open 9AM to
5PM, Mon. thru Sat

late model. workl good, •140 .

Apartment
for Rent

&amp;room'-•~· 1.2 ..... Doublt
~·· Located on Rota Hill.

jwfctd 120,000. CoH
114·878·2113.

111 t12&amp;.

Oinett11 1109 end up 10 1496 .
Wood 1able w:e chtir1 $28&amp; to
n9&amp;. DMk 8100 up to *376.
Hutctla $400 tnd up. Bunk
b_., complete w-m1ttre11H
t296 1nd up to 1396. Baby bed•
8110• 1176. Mattrestnor box
tprlnp lull Or IWin e83, firm
113, 1ind 183 . Oueen~ett 1226.
King·t3&amp;0. 4 dr1wet ch88l *611 .
Dr.l iiiN's 889. Gun eabjnMa 8.
10, &amp; 12 gun. Gas or electric
range $3715. Baby mattra11ea
t31S a 14!5. Bed fram• 120,
. 130 a King frame •&amp;o. Good
H:lection of bedroom IU ltea.
metal cabinet1, headboard• 830
1nd up to $86.

64

..i
The Daily stmtinei.....:.Page-""7
.

-

Monday, August 25. 1986

'·•..

SPHERE PLEASANT - ANIJI.ET Tilt: A Ill&lt; &gt;I T &lt;1F TilE:
TIRES. - IJOKOTIIY PARKER
·•

liD Allee
•

In) Magnum, .P.I. Hig·

gins reluctantly teams up
with a herd-noaod St. Louis .
privete

eye

to help uxtri· ,

cote himeelf Iron\, • black·
mail scheme. (70 mi~ . ) (R) .
@ Trap111r John, M.D.

'

.1 2:00 (J) Jack Benn.y
@ Major Lea ue
ball's Greatest
min.)

~·

';
....
•
llsO ,,_ '
~/' ,

~- 1111'~

ill Netion~'l Geograp~tO :Ex, ·r-.! , ;,.
plorar

·~

IIJ Entertainment To!l!lht',

p, j&gt;o,

�.....

Lotto jackpot
•
to mcrease
CLEVELAND (UP!) - More
than 12,00&gt; OhiO Lotto players
picked either four or five a! the six
Frances Elizabeth Hewitt, 65, numbers drawn Saturday night, but
.JI745 Barringer Road, Portland, no player had the six numbers
died early today at her residence. · needed to take home tile $1 mllllon
Arrangements wm be announced jackpot.
by Rawlings-Coats-Blower Funeral
That Increases next week's booty
Home.
to an esUrnated $2.6 mlllon, OhiO
Lottery CommissiOn olflclals said.
James W. Mayes
Numbers drawn were 12,13,14, 'rl,
.JI and 38.
James W. Mayes, 79, Huntington,
Lottery dflclals say 244 lottery
W.Va., fonnerly of Point Pleasant,
players chose Ove of tile six
W.Va., died Saturday evening at St.
numbers and woo $1,019 while
Mary's Hospital.
11,716 hold tlckes with i&gt;ur of the
A retired employee of the city of numbers and are eligible for $54.
Point Pleasant, he was born Feb. !,
Sales for the Saturday's game
1907, In Galllpoi1s Ferry, and was
totaled $3,314,631.
the son ;1 the late Frank and Clara
Chapman Mayes.
Surviving are his wUe, Stella
Henry Mayes; one daughter and
son-In-law, Danny and Carol Ha·
Nonna Torres, nursing supervizlett of Huntington; three sisters,
sor
of tile Meigs Coont Health
VIrginia Neal and VIvian Bayes,
Department announced the follow·
both of Point Pleasan~ Mary
lng schedule for Immunization day.
Mal'gllret Mayes of CroWII City;
They will be held Aug. 26 and
four brothers, Scotty Mayes of.
Sept.
2. On Sept 23 will be free sbot
PolntPleasan~ Lawrence Mayes of
clinic
from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. on
GaWpoUs, Jolm Mayes of. New
a
first
come, tlrSt serve basis.
Haven, and Eugene Mayes of San
There will be ao Immunization
Antonio, Texas.
cllnlc on Sept. 9, as previously
Services wm be held at 2 p.m.
Tuesday at the Crow-Hussell Fun· scheduled, to accommodate Bu·
eralHome,PolntPleasant,wlthtbe reau of Crippled Chlldrens Clinic at
the Health Department.
Rev. Louis A. Russell otoclatlng.
Burtal will tiUow In Lone Oak
Cemetorv Friends may call t the
.
·
·
funeral-~me after 2 p.m. ~y.

Mrs.VIrgle M. Allen, n. Bradshaw Awnue, East Llverpoo~ died
Saturday :morning In East Liverpool aty Htllpital follnu.l"~ a liiiet
illness.
• -~Mrs. Allen was born December7,
1914 at Portland, theda~tero:tthe
late Sernuel (Frank) and .NeWe
Evans Corneu. She
a1so
pll'Ceded In death by herbustiand
&lt;llarles W. Allen In' November oi
19QI.

She was a member d the
StlversviUe Methodist Church,
Portland.

Survtv&lt;rs lllclude two 110ns, Mar·
viii E. Allen, Portland, and Orarles
Melvin Allen, WellsviUe; Samuel F.
llmmons, East Liverpool, whom
she raised; three daugllters, Mrs.
CecU (Laube) DeLong, Portland,
Mrs. Jack (Mabel) MU1er and Mrs.
James (Barbara) Joy, bothltEast
Liverpool; two lrotbers, Wlley
Comell, Portland, WOmer (Dink)
ComeU, COolvWe; three sisters,
Mrs. Kate Wells, Hlllsdale, Mich.,
Mrs. Otarles (Edna) DeLong, New
Malalmras, and Mrs. R. (Nonna)
Kennedy, Lancaster; 21 grand·
children and nine great

Immunization set

grancrhlldren.
Funeral services

wm be held at
the MacLean Full!ral HomeTues·
day at 1 p.m. with the Rev. O.K.
Thomasctrlclatlng.BurlalwWbeln
YeUow CrEek Church Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home 1Dday from 4 to 9 and until

Trial scheduled
Jlnunle Jude, 29, was back In
Meigs Coonty Monday morning to
appear before Common Pleas
Judge Charles Knight on a ch~
of rape.
Jude, who Is charged In Incident
from early sununer, had earlier
appeared In Meigs Coonty Com·
mon Pleas Coort.
At that Ume he was found
lnrompetmt to stand 111al on the
charw and Jude was transferred to
the Athens Menial Health Croter
for extensive testing and rehabUIIa·
tion proa!dui'ES under the supervl·
slon of David Malawlsta, director of
psycbology. A review of the testing,
slating that Jude Is now competent
to stand b'lal, was returned to
Meigs County several days ago and
ltflclally entered Into the court
nrord during Monday's court
lrQOI!dures.

m'rape case

Atter consulting with his client,
attorney Donald Cox, GaUipolls,
asked that I be put on record that
he Is stlll having d!tflculty making
Jude understand the serious n$re
d. the char!J' and the possible
penalties. Cox said he Is rreelvlng
"lnapproprla!A! reslllnses" from
the defendant.
Knight noted that the review of
Jude's psychological condition
states he lias a "basic understand·
lng of legal and courtroom
p('(J(edures."

Knight accepted a !l'evlous plea
from Jude of not gullty and not
guilty by reason d Insanity and set
a b1al date of Sept. 2. A previous
booo d. SlOO,OOlwas relnslatedand
Jude was remanded to the custody
of Meigs County Sherll! Howard
Frank.

Meigs County Emergency Medi-

Vetel'llll8 Memorial
Saturday Admtsslons _ Golda
Smith, Reedsville; Goldie Lawson,
Racine; Rebecca TIIUs, Rutland;
Maxine Hobbs, Dexter; Wendl

JOHNSON'S
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and pre-empt Libyan·
backed acts of terrorism.
The warning, SPQnded by the
White HOOse and State Dep8rtment
as Reagan vacationed at his
mountaintop ranch, left open the
door to further political, economic
and m!Htary action In the future.
Administration officials said a
three-part program of overt and
covert action to pressure and
destab!Uze Gadhafl was developed
punish

Prosecutor appeals
retrial for Johnston

NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR IYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS • PRICES EFFECTIVE AUG. 25 THRU 31 , 1986 • WIIISERVE THE RIGHI iO LIMIT QUANTITIES. ~

PICK UP A SUPPLY OF PREPAID ENVELOPES
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SANTA BARBARA, Caut. (UP!)
- President Reagan, who haDed
the U.S. raid oo Libya In N&gt;rU as a
blow to terrortsm, soon wm escal·
ate his campaign to lslotate and
llltlmklate Col. MoanunarGadhatl,
allmlnlatraUon oftlclals aay.
The administration, conceding
the Umlted Impact of the April
~mhlng. served notke Mof111ay
that the United States Is prepared to
move 00 a YaiTty of fronts to

E'S ALWAYS ·sAVINGS AT RITE AID/;;

I

I

a

the Soulberft Dt&amp;trict, did report that liinderprtoo
boy mlrrlakenly IIIJl off hill 8dlool bwr Ill Syi'8CIIIe
ElemeDtary hdood o1 riding tbe Ills • the
idndl!l'prtell lmldlnK In RadDe. KnoMig that
sam '!' 1 - " qdettpt; lbe ~ enlered
the Syraalae balldlag and aaloed, 'Doe!rn, MIN Jean
live here IIIQ'JDOre?" A driver was dlilpatciled to
Syracuae and the lllde boywaalaken lo Racine where
he was certainty happy to see ''MI88 Jean" Alldre,
~·· icqtlale ldnderprten teacher.

Reagan to isolate Gadhafi further

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POSI'MASTER: Send addres.s c hangfS
to 'l1lf' Dally Setllln~. lll Cou11 St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45'1tll.

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lemoi!IIIOriiiPIIIepertedpiacelolalk.
'Bi• Ill fnJm abe Seulllenl, Feetesu •d Melp
'II' 1· l•delllll' afllcel .., the 11nr1 day back In
tl · er, were IIIII "aD wad weD, al weal
~,ntinaiiiiiiOUIII of problfml." Bd wall,
Bolrllrt Beede, IIQiet'VIIIng
principal lor

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resentatlvt, Branham

Ntwspaper Sa es. 733 Third Awnut.
Nt'W' York, Ntw York 10017.

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CA'RJJIING VP - 1be bel&amp; part of the tnt day
. .1111* ll&amp;lldloolll CllldllnK-..., Gil wbal your t.rll!ads clld
·!f!lffi MUIW VM&gt;iii~N' 'lbMe lrieDcll, left Ill rtpi,
~WI
r,Cbrllllarmoa,

1.5 INCHES WIDt .

••'*

,.~

YAOUNDE, Cameroon (UP!) Helle! teams searched today for
survivors of the deadly gas cloud
that bWowed from a volcanic lake
In western Cameroon and killed at
least 1,200 vlllagers - many of
them as they slept.
President Paul Blya said the
death loU for the disaster could rise
but that most at the gas- released
by a natural explosion Friday night
and belched over a slx-mlle area
arouoo Lake Nlos - had apparently dlss!pat!!l.
"The people were sleeping when
they heard a noise (of the explosion)," Blya told reporters Monday
night. ''The gas poisoned them and
killed them. There are at least 1,axl
deaths, lXI Injured and the surrounding populatiOn has been
evacuated." -~
State-run radio said the people
killed were villagers and fanners.
U.S. officials said a Peace Corps
team had been In the area rut lett
before the disaster.
Blya said the type of gas released
arouoo the lake, 250 miles northw·
est of the west Atrlcan nation's
capital of Yaoonde, was not
determined.
Authorities sealed ott the area
around the lake, barring entry to
anyooe but rescue workers, and
decland It a disaster lDle. Pollee
and soldiers were searching for
survlvocs, Blya said.
"We have to Isolate the region
and stop people from going back to
the vlllages In that area," BJya said.
''The second problem Is we have to
care t&gt;r the people who have
abandoned tile region, care trr tile
sick and Improve the momle of tile
population.
"We need International aid to
race the disaster, and we mngratu·

r

,.._,UIII

.

EPA has set a deadUne of July
1988 lor completion of the sewage
system update, which Is estimated
to cost about $150,001 altogether.
Holtman said he bopes to have
more Information for council oo the
sewage system update by the next
meeting. He noted that Middleport
has never had problems with

135

--·

Ohio.

lime.

~

..... RIIIT&amp;III

pEOPLES

sewage tests. He also noted that
Montgomery has been helpful In
assisting the village In finding the
most economical ways of
Improvement.
Regarding the raUroad right-of·
way through Middleport, which
councll hopes to purchase br
development of a bicycle and
walking path, Hoffman reported he
has been In touch recently with the
Otesste System dflce In Baltimore,
Md., and was 1Dld that Otessle Is
Interested In selling the property
belorethe end of the year. Hoffman

189

IBUPROFEN
. · TAB~ETS

The Daily Sentinel

o;)IT.wl ...l.L

The llne at the Race Street area was
"Intentionally omitted from the
or1glnal system," Ho!!man said.
because of operational !I'Oblems
which were thought to exist at that

REGULAR, MIN T OR TARTAR CONTROL

1Contln11ed from Page I)
resolllng material" because It
contains pulp, clay and other
essential rutrlents for the establish·
ment of bog-term groMh of
vegetation. The Mead sludge also
acts 1D neutrallze mine runoff, the
company saki.
"In recommending apJrOVal of
the sludge management plan, the
Ohio EPA In cooperation with the
OhiO Department d. Health has
determ!ned that the application of
sludge from tile Otllllcothe mlllln
accordance with the safeguards
contained In the sludge management plan wUl ji'Otect human
health and the environment with a
substantial margin of salety," the
agency said.
"As part of the recommended
approval, Ohio EPA has set
strln~nl Umltallons on the amount
andmannerofsludgeappllcatlonto
assure dioxin concentrations In the
soU (afterapplicationofthesludge)
wUl oot exceed W parts . per
llillion," the agency added.

1 Section, 10 Pages

211 Cents

A Mulrlmedla Inc. NowopopO&lt;

said he expects to receive a new
quote from Otessle oo the property
Involved.
Also reported on by the mayor
was a "new grant program"
through the Ohio Department ol
Development lor "downtown rev!·
tallzatlon." Hoffman was In a
meeting recently In Columbus to
learn about the grant procedure In
detall. He met last week with Blll
Blower, president of Middleport
Chamber of Commerce, to discuss
the grant possibilities, which could
Include many HUO related projects

such as streetscape, park development and buDding repair. ODOD
would !uoo such Improvements
which meet the required grant
criteria, Hoffman commented, but
ooly If :ll percent of the businesseS
In the central business district
participate In some way. The
mayor noted that partlclpatlondoes
mt have to be costly tor businesses,
but could Include minor Improvements such as painting the exterior
of a building.
Grant applications are due Into
(Continued on Page 10)

Relief teams seek sunrivors
of Cameroon gas disaster

...,....,loG.

--

meeting.
Hottman reported he has received a letter from Joann Moni!J)·
mery of EPA In regard to the Items
which need clarlf1catton. Hoffman
will be discussing the matter with
the projectenglneerbeforemeetlng
with Montgomery.
EPA's main rEIJulremen!s lortbe
update, the mayoraald,arethatall
waste water ·at tile lagoon be
cholorlnated before going back Into
the river, and that a aectlon or the
system at Race and North First
streets be hooked Into the system.

Club to meet
OH KAN Coin Club wU1 meet this
evenlilg (Monday) atEdBurkene's
barber shop In Middleport. Asocial
bour and trading session wm begin
at7 p.m. A coin auction wllialso be
held and refreshments wt11 be
served. All local coin collectors or
Interested Individuals are Invited.

enttne

14 OZ. SIZE

aank·Bv·Maill

Published every anernoon , Monda y
through Fr iday, Ul Court Sl., Po·
mrroy. Ohio. by th~: Ohio Valley Pub·
lllhtna: Company!Mu11\ml!dla, Inc.,
Pom~roy, Ohio i57ti9. Ph . 91J2.2156. Se·
cond class po~lage pa~ at Pomeroy.

429

HOT£&amp;00K~

FREE

(UIPS 14J.OIO)
,\ Dlvlldon of MIIIUmedla, Inc.

By NANCY YOACIIAM
S&amp;-.iel !Mall Wrler
Plans lo update Middleport's
:.sewage system to bring It Into
· : ~ with Environmental
; Proll!ctJon Agency mandates are
• "basically all right," according to
: Mayor Fred Hoffman, with the
' exception of "a few Items which
: need to be clar!lled."
: Tile plans were completed and
· submitted to EPA tor revieW about
: three. Jl¥)nths ago, the mayor and
:· MlMleport Vlllage Cooncll re. ported at Monday night's regular

MEAD ·

Doo~. r.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

Racine. Pomeroy; Ruth
Saturday Discharges - Walter
Haggy n, Elizabeth Roush, Reva
Greene, Margaret Robln110n.
Sunday Admissions - June
Stover, Racine; Ilovle Cale, Pomeroy; Carolyn Whaley, Long Bot·
tom; Richard Werry, Racine; Cecll
Frazier, Middleport.
9Jnday Discharges - James
White.

at y

•

Middleport to cla1ify sewage compliance plan

1tL
HAIR DRYERS ·

799

•

. Showtll'8 and . tlmnderiiGrml
likely lonlght, with a cUiiCe fl.
heavy ralnJall and a low Ia tile
...,per 00s. Showera likely Wedne&amp;day. wllh hJgbs In the mid
70s. Tile probability of pi'eelpla· .
Uon Is 711 percent lonJallt 119d II
percent Wednesday.

, ~~~~=---------------------------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--------------------~~~~~~~---

i f CO~TINEN
PISTOL DRYER,
TRAVEL DRYER OR
MINI PRO DRYER
1250 WAITS

Daily Number: 220
PICK-4: 4292

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday., August 26, 1986

; Copyrighted 1981

~~ A-.

Eastern Star, wUl meet 7 p.m.
TueSday at the masonic hall for a
practice session. A multiple lnltla ·
tlon ceremony wm take place at the
regular meeting on Wednesday at
7:30 p.m. Potluck dinner to follow
Wednesday's meeting.

State EPA

11:03 p.m. to Crew Road trr John
Porter.
0 ~nday at 1:31 a .m., Rutland to
Depot Strret for Jack Harrison 1D
Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at
12:36 p.m. to School Lot Road tor
Mattie Fisher to O'BienESs Memor·
lal Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 1:48
p.m.toOwlHollowRDadforEstelle
Deem to St. Joseph's Hospital;
Rutland Fire Department and EMS
at 7:31 p.m. to a structure l1re on
Salem Street; Middleport at 7: 35
p.m. to Stonewood Apartments. for
Cecll Frazier to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Middleport Fire Depart·
ment at 7:44 p.m was called to
Salem Street, Rutland, to assist In
the above fire; Rutland at7: 50 p.m.
transported Joan Collins, Runnle
CoUins and Danny Davis from the
fire scene to Veterans .Memorlal
Hospital; Rutland at 8:35 p.m.
transport!!~ Jeff Sno-..den and Bill
WUUamson from the Ire scene to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

cal Services reports 14 calls over
the weekend, six on Saturday and
eight on Sunday.
Saturday at 8:30 a.m., ~meroy
to Mulberry Avenue for M1nltee
Blevms to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Racine at 12:56 p.m. to
Bashan tor O!arles Blsaell to
Hoi:ller Medical Center; Racine at
6:59 p.m. to the Soulhem Junior
H1gb baD leld for Pat Aelker who
was treated but not transported;
Pomeroy F1re Department and
EMS at 7:05 p.m. to a l1re on Ohio
681 where lightning struck a bam;
Racine at 8:05p.m. IJ letart Falls
lor Ruth Douglas to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at

'

; Vol.38. No.79

SCHOOL

Ohio Lottery

e

•
'

BACK~TO·

. Practice slated
.. Mason~pterl57.0rderofthe

EMS units answer 14 calls

~.

·Major Hoople
~ back on field
-Page 4

Frances Hewiu

was-

'

25,

Monday,

Uh10

~

a

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....

LOGAN, Ohio (UPI) - Hocking Coonty Prosecutor O!rlstopher
E. Veldt plans to ask the OhiO Supreme Court to decide whether Dale
N. Johnston sb:luld receive a new b'lallor the 1982 dismemberment
slaylngs of two Logan teenagers.
Veldt tiled a notice with the Hocking County Clerk of Courts oftlce
MondaY annoonclng his Intention ID appeal the OhiO 4th Dlsllict
· Coort &lt;1. Appeals' decision Aug. 6 ordering a new trialllr Johlstoo.
: Johnston, 53, 'Logan, was convicted In Hocking County Common
· Pleas Court Jan. 28, l!i!K, of two counts d. aggravated murder In the
slaylngslthls stepdaughter AnnetteCooper,l8, and berftanoe, Todd
L. Schultz. 19.
Jotms.ton was sentenced to death by a three·judge panel that ,
convicted him.
By llllng the notice of appea~ the prosecutor's oft lee has Jl days In
which to file briefs with the Supreme Court, Veldt said.
Jolmston Is on death row In the Southern Ohio Correctional FacUlty
In LucasvUie.
Veldt saki he noted "several positive aspects" In the appeUate
deCision, even though that couri said the Ilia! judges erred In
admitting testimOny from a key eyewitness who had been
hyJIIOtfZed by pollee.
Veldt referred to a section d. the appeUatedeclslon that said: "We
conclude that, after excluding the hyjllotlcally Induced evidence. the
state presented a comblnaUon r:J faets as evidence which If found to
be true by tbe trier of fact, would enable reai!Onable minds to
conclude that (Johnston) committed theSe murders beyood a

reasonable doubt."

In reslllnae to lntelUgence lnfonna·
lion that suggests renewed Libyan
Involvement In terrorist plots
abroad.
White House spokesman Larry
Spelkes refused to discuss those
lnte111gence reports or any punitive
measures under consideration, but
aald the Untied States Is "keeping a
close eye oo what Gadhaflls doing
and what be may be doing."
"Our pollcy on Libyan-backed
terrorism Is unequivocal and un·
chan~,'' he said. "WewUlemploy
all appropriate measures to cause
(Continued oo Page 10)

late France, Israel, the United asphyxia ''slrnllar to tluse proStates and West Germany for voked by strangulation," a French
report said.
having come to oor aid," he said.
The gas release apparel)tly was
~a appealed lor medicine, food
mt
prompted by a volcanr erupand tents and said sclent!ftc aid to
tion.
The area Is bcated In an old
determine the type of gas released
wlcanlc
chain that Is stW semifrom the lake also woold he
active.
welcomed.
But geologists said !llme kind of
A crisis center was established In
Bemenda, regional capital of the wlcanlc activity - other than an
northwest province, some f) mlles eruptlon - must have breed the
deep lake to "turn over," allowing
south of the disaster si!A!.
centurtes
of decayed matter and
Doctors at Yaounde hospital said
poisonous
gases to bubble up from
the vlctlms apparently were over·
the
bottom
to the surface.
come by a gas Hke hydrogen
In 1984, a cloud of carbon dioxide
sulf1de, but French specialists said
bubbled
oot of Monoun Lake - In
they believed the victims SUC·
the
same
volcanic chain - and
cumbed to concentrations of carltllled
37
people.
bonic gas.
~a said Cameroon would welVolcano exJErts In the United
come
an alarm system that could
States said the gas may have been a
wam·
rl.tk:.,._ot-lhe-U....t &lt;it •
combination ~ byd._, · sultlde,
carbon dioxide and possibly carbon natural gas ex!ioslon and allow
them to evacuate the area.
monoxide.
A correspondent llr Radio cameHydro~n sulfide smells like
roon
said Blya had Instructed a
rotten eggs and kllls Ike cyanide.
special
commission "to put meaCarbon monoxide Is odorless and
sures
m
place to avdd the risks of
lethal. Carbon dioxide Is not, In
an
epidemic
and Isolate the popula·
Itself, poisonous buill displaces air
tlon from the dan~rs ltlntectlon
and kllls by asphyxlatbn.
Emergency teams reported the and contamination" In the dlsas·
survivors displayed symptoms of ter's aftermath.

Tort refonn measure
set for House action
"1tlink we have a talaoa!d bill,"
declared Shivers alter an antlcl·
paled war r:Ner &lt;lli!l'epared amend·
ments was canceled because of the
absence of several key committee
members.
A House Insurance subcommlt·
tee was to meet today to put the
Onlshlng tooches mille other halt of
the package to reduce Insurance
jX'eiTIIumS - reform of the laws
governing the Insurance ndustry.
That bW Is to be reported oot at the
full Insurance Committee Frklay
for a &amp;use vote next week.
The key question Is whether Riffe
wUl chooSe to send the Senate two
bllls or comline them to Ioree
senators to accept or reject an
entire package. The Republican·
dominated Senate has adopted
some tort reform ll'oposals, but has
decUned to act on Insurance
reform.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - A
clvll justice system refonn bill
disliked by b1al lawyers, business,
labor and consumer groups and the
Insurance Industry Is ready for a
vote In the Ohio House of Represen·
tatlves next week.
A special House Cmunlttee on
Ctvll Justice and Tort Retorm
approved Monday tile bill aimed at
cutting down on damage awards
and attorney fees 111 clvll lawsuits,
hoping to aotten commerclalllabU·
!ty Insurance premiums.
The plan, which encourages
oot.r:J.murt settlements and discourages frivolous lawsuits, came
out ot committee oo a 7·2 vote.
Its substance dltfered llttle from
a subcommittee version drafted
eerller this month ~ cha!nnan
Rep. Jolm D. Shivers Jr., O.Salem,
In consultation with House Speaker
Vernal G. Rltfe Jr., 0 -New Boston.

HOUSE FIRE ..:_ Flremen from both Rutland and Mlddlepon Fire
0epa11men1s were oo the job early Monday afternoon Ill the Merlin
Mitchell resldl!llce oo Salem Street b Rutland. Rutland """'tved the
call about 1 p.m. and shortly alter called Mlddleportloassllll. fUmhure
waa removed !rom the lar&amp;e lw!Hilory frame home aslireml!lllrled to
roc8ae 111e ortpJ of the smoke Blld Ore, whlclr were mlilned to the
u)lfllalr&amp; portion of the slnlcture. The Ore, whlclr was thouAht to bo
exllnguilhed, n&gt;klndledfaler In the day and Rutlandllreml!ll were back
onllle scene abolil 3:20p.m. Reports ndlcale lhal tbe upotalnr of the
home waa heavlly damaged. The do'Mililalra waa damaged by smoke.
(Sentinel photo by Nancy Yoacham).

Point Pleasant man to face new murder trial in October
: GALLJPOUS - The new trial years to life In prison following a
for a Point Pleasant man convicted lengtby trial In i:ommoo pleas court
ci the March 1.983 sbootlng death d. In Decembel: 1183,
a .Gallla County girl has been set to
Roderick dented the request by
bello Oct. 7 In Gall1a Coonty lee'aattomiy; James M. Casey of
CcJnmon Pleu Court.
· Point Pleuant, 1o ret1uce booo
Pretrial datea will be set as the from $%15,M&gt;, 'Casey · had ·flied a
dloc~Mrre process ~Is underway, Written motion seeking tbe bond
Jlldp Richard C. Roderick Jr. reduction ud ~V,1!l'lr8lly outUned
nlted Monday following a bond po~~lble waya for the court to check
bearllll for Charles Lee ll, ~.
(II Lee If bond were reduced and .
tee, Indicted for the murder of lee was·freed pending a retrial.
~ Twyman, 17, Rt. 1,
Roderick laid the boot would
~. was sentenced to IS
remain at $%15,000 and said that If ·
I .

:..,

. , ..j,,;.- ..,.._--._.........,._..........- .... --........ , ..... . ...

action by thi! court Lee had been
brought back to Gallla County and
was held In the county jall prior to
Monday's hearing. lee wtll ~
brought back to Galllpnlls to be
present for1rla~ Roderick said.
lee's case was reactivated last
January when the Fourth Dtstr!ct
Court d. l!ppeals .. dered a new
trial after I found that lee's Sixth
Amelldmellt rl8ht IDCOIIIIIel dulfne
QllfSdonlnlliad beeD Vt&gt;latetl.
1'he apJielate judjes ll8ld teJe.
phone coiMnal»lll between Lee

lee did post bond, a hearing would
be held prior to his release 110 the
court can set specific conditions
with resPE!ctto !he booo.
Casey then I'EIJue&amp;ted that the
court set an early trial date. casey
Indicated to the court be felt be
would lie ready to try the case
wllhlllstx weeks, rut allo needed
the llrile to pnipare the cale.
After, ll!ttlna the trt8l ' date,
Roderick (ldered that lee be
traniported ·· to the lJ!na ~­
Uonal Inat'ltute to await fl1rther
I

and his then.g!rltr-.nd, Shirley
Furst, had been tape recorded by
Furst with assistance froni the
GaUia County Shfrlfl's Depart·
ment. Furst was later a major
prosecution witness In the (l'lglnal
111al.
"While the appelant was aware
that Furst had given tnronnatton to
authorities. and he may have
llllspected recordings ~~Ue being
made, It did not appear he actually
knew this was happening," Appeals

Coort Judge Earl E. Stephenson
wrote. "Undei: the circumstances,
we are not persuaded that
knowing Intentional relinquiShment
of appelant's right to counsel was
shown."
The court'sorderwasappealed to
the OhiO Supreme Court by Prosecutor Joseph L. catn, but tile appeal
was turned down In May. Afier.
ward, lee's attOrney ltirlne thtl
b'lal, Hamlln ~. wltlldrew ..
d~ counsel.
1
•

a

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