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~'*~~a·~!14:.:.~n.~~D~~~s~a~~~tin~-~--------------------~~~·4P~.~~m~MW~oy~~~~h~~~i~ap~~~~~·JOh~~~~~----------------------w~ed!n~a~da~y~.~A~ug~wrt~~27Z·~1~9~8f~·:

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

Meet the team set Thursday

Meet the team will be held at Meigs Stadium in Pomeroy,
Thul'lday at 7 p.m. Freshmen, reserves, varsity and cheerleaders
wUl be introduced.

PUCO accepts local firms GCR
The Public UWltles Commission of Ohio has accepted a revised
gas cost recovery (GCRi flllng by Syracuse Home Utilities
Company.
.
The revision Is the result of computatlonalerroisdet.cted by the
commission and wiU reduce the average monthly gas rates of tbe
company's customers by 12 cents.
In other action the commission approved a reduction in natural
gas costs for the National Gas and ou Corporation. This decrease
wUl save the company's customers approximately $3.10 per month.
National Gas and OU serves 16,799 customers in easl central Ohio.
Syracuse serves 350 customers In Meigs County.

Deferulants forfeit bonds
In the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night
ftve defendants forfeited bonds and six others were fined.
Forfeiting bonds were Brian J. Dingey, New Haven,$BJ, DWI and
$50, weaving course; David A. Hobbs, Dex~r. $450, DWI; Jeanine
MIUer, Bidwell, $40, speed; Scott Wroblewlskl Gallipolis $j()
squealing tires, $100, contempt of oourt: Richard F).uey, Mldd~rt:
$50, disorderly lllallner.
Fined were Ronald E. Coats, Pomeroy, $425 and costs, three days
confinement, DWl; Carl E. Stewart, Cheshire, $425 and costs, 30
days confinement, OW!, $100 and costs, drtvlng under suspension;
Anna Bareswilt, Middleport, $100 and costs, five days confinement,
make restitution, destruction of property; Sheni Butcher,
Middleport, $100 and costs, five days confinement, destruction of
property; Keith Musser, Middleport, 150 and rosts, disorderly
manner, $100 and costs, five days confinement, assault; Patty
Boyles, Middleport, $50 and costs, disorderly manll'r.

Pomeroy Mayor's Court cases
Twelve defendants forfeited bond and six others were fined In the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler Tuesday night.
Forfeiting bonds were WUUam J. Cremeans, Middleport, left of
center, $43, financial responslbUity, $!1J; Walter A. Ellis, Pomeroy,
squealing !Ires, $63; Diana Alshlre, Syracuse, disorderly manll'r,
$63; Marjorte Keebaugh, Reedsville, speed , $46; Jean Delph,
Pomeroy, operating a vehicle under suspension, $63; Beulah M.
Shuler, Langsville, speed, $50; Reta Pullen. New Haven, speed, $!6;
Dana E. Haines, Minersvllle, speed, $50
Peggy M. Carper, Pomeroy, Improper backing, $43; Clarence
Burlingame, Bidwell, speed, $51; Russell Cullums, Pomeroyfallure
to yield, $43; Timothy L. Lyons, Letart. W.Va., speed, $43.
Fined were Tom Peterangelo, Fairborn, open flask, $88andoosts;
Michael McQuinn, Kettering, apen flask, $88 and oosts; Johnle
Evans, Racine, no drivers license. $63 and rosts, expired plates, $63
and costs; David Lee Vance, Pomeroy, menanc!hg threats, $63and
costs; Ronnie Powell, Middleport, OW!, $375 and oosts; Russ
Ebeling, Marietta, speed, $46 and costs.

Area deaths
Cyril D. Arnold
CyrU D. Amold, 79, Rt. 1, Stewart,

teacher, having taught 28 years at
Kanawha County, W.Va., scbools.
She attended Flatwoods United
Methodist Church.
She was born Sepf. 19, 1900, In
Kentucky the daughter of the late
Turner and Anna Evans Branham.
She was preceded in death by her

died Tuesday momtng at his home
following an extended Uiness.
Mr. Arnold was born Sept. 18,
1900, in CoolvUle, Son of the late
Frank and SteUs Frost Arnold.
He was a graduate of Coolvllle
High Scbool and attended Franklin 15, 19&amp;'!. She was also preceded In
University in Columoos. He was a death by two brothers, two sisters
farmer and had retired trorn MUk and one grandson.
She Is survived by one son, Ernest
Marketing Associates. He was the
Max
Cale, Jr., Pomeroy; one
last surviving member of Frost
Universalist Church and a 44-year stf!Hiaughter, Mrs. Lloyd (Aud·
member and past master of reyl McLaughlin, Homestead,
Savannah Lo~e 466 F&amp;AM, Fla.; and several nieces and
nepheWs.
Guysvllle.
Ser:vlces will be held Thursday at
He Is survived by his wife, Bertha
3
p.m.
at Ewing Funeral Home with
L. Arnold.
the
Rev.
Melvin Franklin official·
Services wUl be held Thursday at
1 p.m. at the White Funeral Home lng. Burtal wUI be in Chester
In Coolvllle with the Rev. H.L. 'Cemetery. Friends may call at the
McDaniel !tflclating. Burial wUl be 1\uleral home today from 7-9 and
In CoolvU~ Cemetery. Masonic until time of services on Thursday.
services wlll be held at the fUneral
rome this evening at 7. Frtends Ruth Ann Douglas
may call today from 2-4 and 7·9 p.m.
The Rev. Florence Smith wlll
Dovie B. Cale
officiate at funeral services for Mrs.
Ruth Ann Douglas Thursday at 1
Dovle B. Cale, m, 37lY74 Sinner p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home.
Road, Pomeroy, died Monday
Survivors of Mrs. Douglas In·
afternoon at Veterans Memortal elude seven grandchildren, 18 great
Hospital.
grandchildren and one great, great
Mrs. Cale was a retired school · grandson.

Hymn sing set for Monday
A Labor Day hymn sing will he
held Monday evening at the
Syracuse ball park.
The event will begin at4 p.m. a nd
feature singing by Sunrise; Dan
Hayman and The Faith Trio;
Sheklna, Kathy and Jan; and Mark
Matson, who wlll also double as

announcer.
It is a lso rumored that ·tlle
Infamous Haddie May Is again eO
the loose and may he making :~
su11&gt;rise appea ranee sometln)e
during the course of the evening;
It's suggested that anyone plannl~
to attend the sing Iring a Ia~

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IIGUI.AR 526.00
•TU

Speelal Price

51995
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Good thru Sept. 1

(O~NI

AIR CONDITIONING

(fiiON I 01 ADDII
•Performance Toot System ·
SliGHTlY HIG"EII
•Add Rotrigoront II Necesurv
•Inspect Syatem for Leaks
•Check Drive Bait Condition &amp; Tension
•Test (wi1h thermometer) Degree of Coldno11

GREAT DRIVING COMFORT BEGINS HERE

REGUlAR S44.SO

•ujpulal Prlee

52595
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Good thru Sept. 1

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LUBE, OIL AND FILTER

Lubricate auspanaion, drain oil and replace filter using Mr .
Ooodwrench Oil and AC Delco Fiher.
In this spKialwe insist on usine quality Mr. Goodwret1cll Oil &amp;A/C Filtersnot 111 off brand or chelp filler and oil. This is an oonest to (llodnoss special
on qu11ity GM Plrts &amp; GM Service. no substi1ute tor quolity. Limit 5 qts. Oil.

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Daily Number
761

SuperLotto
25-16-1-27-38-24

rhair.

husband,ErnestM.Ca~.onNov. ~~--------------~lili~~~----------------~

Squads respond to 7 calls
Meigs County Emergency Medl·
cal Services reports seven calls
Tuesday.
Tuppers Plains at 2: 11 a.m. to
Scout Camp Road for Nellie Perry
to Veterans Memortal Hospital;
Pomeroy at 11:48 a.m. to East
Second Street for Randy Smith to
Veterans Memortal Hospital; Ru·
tland atll:58 a.m. to Brick Street
for Fred Cales who was dead on
arrival; Middleport at8: 32 p.m. to
North Third for Shirley McClellan
to Veterans Memorial Hospital;

Veterans

Memorial

Admissions - Nellie Perry,
Chester; George Pierce, Pomeroy.
Discharges - Rebecca Tlllls,
Wendi Kloes.

Pomeroy at 9: 24 p.m. to Nye
Avenue for Bessie Landaker to
Veterans Memorial Hospital:
Pomeroy at10:02 p.m. transported
Shenie Butcher to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 11:33
p.m. to VIllage Grren Apartments
for Brandy Fortune who was
treated rot not transported.

REMEMBER
WITH TuFLOWERS
"t&gt;nd a JH&gt;aulifulh
'"'"l,lifnt'tl funt"ral ·

CHAROE
CHECKING

ACCOUNTS
FOR

SENIOR

CITIZENS!*
I
I'
NO GIMMICKS! NO MINIMUM BALANCE!
'Must be 62 yea~ of age or older
~----,

PEOPLES
MEMBER F.D.I.C.

' /! ..

at y
Vot.36, No.81

New Haven. W. Va.

2212 Jackson Avenue
Point Pleasant. W. Va.

882-2135

675-1121

temperatures In the low 'lOs. The .
probabiUcy of preclplia*lon Is
near zero through Fri:lay. Winds ·
wiU he Ught and variable
tonight.

enttne
3 Sections. 28 Pages . 26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc _ Newspaper

1986

SCS opposes usage of reclamation·material
By NANCY YOA•CHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
The Meigs County Commissioners reported Wednesda:v they have
been Informed the local SoU and
Water Conservation SE&gt;rvlce, and
Its members, have passed a
resolution and forwarded It to the
approprtale people In Columros,
stating their opposition to the use of
Bypro in Meigs County reclamation
projects.
It has recently come to publlc
attention that Bypro, a paper
sludge used expertmenta.Uy since
198&gt; In 16 strtp mine reclamation
projects In eight countle:s In the
state, Including Meigs, contains

small amounts of dioxin , which can
cause a wide range of disorders In
animals and Is a potential carcinogen In humans.
However, tbe amount of dioxin
and Its toxicity in the Bypro from
Mead's Chillicothe plant, are stlll
matters of confusion. The Bypro
used In Meigs County came from
the Chllllcothe plant.
Olrhmissloner R!ch·aro Jo!l's
said It Is his understanding Bypro
has been used In all Meigs Olunty
reclamation projects by the Ohio
Department of Na):ural Resources,
and in some reseeding along the
road of the II'W county landfUl.
A formal hearing before Ohio

Environmental ProJection Agency
officials on til' Byprodloxln O!sue Is
expected In Ia~ Septemher &lt;r
Octoher.
A bid of $11,843.22 from the Shelly
Co., of ThornvWe, was accepted
Wednesday by the commissioners,
to PIVe a portion of New Uma Road
to the Rutland rorporatk&gt;n Umlts.
The Rutland prolect Is'being funded
by a $17,1XXl Community Development Block Grant through the Ohio
Department of Development, and
Includes a 1300 by 20 foot section of
the street.
Bids for new equipment for
Rutland Fire Department, to he
paid for by $11,~ of CDBG funds,

were also read dunngWednesday's
meeting. Submitting bids were the
Sutphen Olrp., of Amlin, $14,005.81:
Finley Fire Equipment, McCon·
nelsvUle, $140,49.85; Warren Fire
Equipment, Wal'l'l!l, $12,517.60:
Franklin Fire Equipment, Ma·
rletta, $9,354.40; Dlls Mountaineer
As!l&gt;Ciation, Ravenswood, W.Va.,
$12,6!18. The bids were tabled for
examination by the fire department
members. A recommendation
from the department Is expected by
Sept. 3.
Gordon GUmore, county soli
survey team memher, reported
that 103,00) acres of Meigs Olunty
have been surveyed thus far. "This

(&gt;Jts us right on schedule." GUmorr
said, "to complete Meigs County's
soU survey by December 1989.'.
Gilmore reported th~ ·survey tmm
is mapping "west of U.S. 33" at the
present lime.
Meigs County' Sheriff Howard
Frank was given autlnrtzallon by
the board to !&gt;Jrchase a used
vehicle for use as a sheriff's cruiser.
at a cost up to $2,001
The sheriff reported that lat e
Tuesday evening, a cruiser being
drtven by a deputy on Ohio 338 at
Great Bend caught fire and was
destroyed. Cause of the fire, which
began In the area of a rear wheel, Is
unknown.

Rinehart fires up
Hunter supporters

Banlclng On Mason County's Future
5th Street

Clear toolght, wkh a low In the
mid 408. SuiUly Friday, with high

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, August 28,

Copyrighted 1986

BANK

HrrunJlf-'RWnt, ju~tl nil
or vi"it

POMEROY
FLOWER
SHOP
u "' ......,..., ......t. l.......-

•

Second Street
Mason, W. Va.
773-5514

Reported drowning false alarm
GALLIPOLJS - Point Pleasant Volunteer Fire Department
divers were called out on stand by to assist the Gallla County
Sherttrs Department In the search of a reported drowning In the
Ohio River Tuesday that turned out to be a false alarm, according to
a spokesman for the sheriff's department.
The spokesman said an unoccupied raft, ortglnally believed to be
the result of two boys drowning, was reported floating down river
along Addison around 7:30p.m. After searching the river banks tJr
J0.45 minutes, the spokesman said, a man llshlng verlflect rome had
drowned from the raft.
Fire department boats found the raft, after searching for almost
2'h hours, around 11 p.m., according to Fire Chief Jim Wood. The
divers were called rot not used.
The sherl!fs spokesman said officials believe the Incident was mly
a prank.

Ohio Lottery

1986 football
tabloid inside
today's edition

POPUlAR FIGURE -

As

one II the Olllo RepubllcaJ•
Party's Jt&amp;mg lllan, with hln
!ilralglalorward, down home,

rank and llle alfllude, Dana.
"Buck" Rlnehari, m~ II

Cohunbu.o and a fonner 1'1'81dent
uf Meigs County, ronol81mil,v
11
WOWS 'em" from the podkim.lt
was 110 different al Wedne!lday
nlghl's fund,ral8lng dblller althe
Royal Oak Re.on Club on behalf
of Gtll'IY Hunter, RepubDcan
candidate for !Nih District !ilale
representative.

By NANCY YOACHAM
Senlb!l Staff Wrller
"Meigs County has a chance to
lead the way. You should be five to
one behind Garry Hunter when the

Senators
open tax
hearings

votes (for the slate representative's
race) areoounted (lnNovemher)."
This was part of an approxl·
mately haU hour message from
Dana "Buck" 'Rinehart, mayor of
Columbus, to more than rot;) Meigs
County Republicans who gathered
Wednesday night at the Royal Oak
Resort Qub for a $20-a·plate
fund· raising dinner for Garry Hun·
ter of Athens, Republlcan candl·
date lor 94th District slate
representative.
Rinehart, knoWn for his "you can
do It -go get 'em" speeches and his
"back to the prop~" sty~ of
polltlcklng,ls a popular figure in the
state Republican party, as well as
In Meigs County. This was the
second tlme the Ollumbus leader
bas spoken In Meigs County, the
first tlme being on behal! &lt;1 .
Jennifer Sheets, the Republican
candidate for state representative
in the 1984 election.
Said Rinehart of Hunter, "This
guy Isn't lazy. He told me earller
tonlght that he's goingdoortodoor,
farm to farm and rosiness to
rosiness (In his campaign). !like
the sound cl. that. That's the kind of
commitment he's bringing to this
race."
Rinehart cited Hunter's achievements as a practicing aHorney and
his accomplishments as Athens
Qty law director, an elected
position he presently ooids. He
highlighted a recent case Hunter
"just wrapped up" in which
"Athens was paying too much ilr
ltabUty Insurance." According to
Rinehart, Hunter " went to bat on
what he was told would be a losing

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Ohio's tax commts,sloner says the
pending federal tax reform bUt wDI
not produce any extra money for
the slate of Ohio before next July.
Nevertheless, state Senate Re·
publicans continued their push
Wednesday to passacon-espondlng
slate tax cut before the end of the
year, throwing the spotlight on tax
reduction durtng the election
campaign.

YOUNG REPUBLI(;ANS - CalillnW. Ma.f«
Dana ''Book" RIDellart, sealed, Glll'l')' HUDler, at tile
podium, candklate for Milt Dlolricl o1ate repr!luma·
Uve, and Mark Colllrul, behind IUnehari, 111111 cl Slate
effort. He was told he rouldn't win.
Well," Rinehart remarked tongueIn-cheek, "that's music to a chal·
Ienger's ear. You think I a:on'l win?
Just watch me! And Hunter
brought over W,OOJ back to
AUens."

Rinehart said Hunter has ·· finan·
cia! lntergrtty, fiscal responslbUty
and the abUlty to deal hard,"
adding, "that's the kind rl person
we need in the statEhouse."
He advised Meigs Republicans to
"he unswerving" In their support It
Hunter. "If you make an Invest-

Sea. Oaldey Collins, are but a sampUng uf the young
Jlepubllcans In Ohio. The tllree are pictured at
Wedo •ay nllht's fund-raising dinner at the Royal
Oak Reoort Club, on behalf uf Rumer.

ment, see It through. It wouldn't be
fair If you and I make an
Investment In Garry Hunter's
candidacy and then walk away
from that investment In the last
eight weeks (of the campaign)."
Applause rangout when Rinehart
commented that he trough! Meigs
was the ooly county In the state with
"100 percent Republicans" In the
county courtmuse. "You have
excellent oounry officials here
because you see to lt. You can have
the same type of npresentatk&gt;n in
the 94th district - If you see to lt.''

Rinehart advised Meigs Republl·
cans to "elect people you &lt;:an be
proud of...people with energy,
enthusiasm, dedlcatiln to hard
work and concern for the
community."
He noted June unemployment
figures of 7.3 percent nationwide.
8.6 percent In Athens County, 12
percent In Gallla County and 12.9
percent In Meigs County.
•·Almost 13 percent unemployment In Meigs County," he said.
••That's why young propleleave the
(Continued on Page 8)

Reagan sends message of deterrence to Gadhafi
By NORMAN D. SANDLER
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - As
President Reagan whiles away a
three-week swruner vacation, the
quiet that. accompanies the dog
days of August has been broken by
a drumbeat of While House warnIngs to Libyan ~ader Moammar
Gadhafl.
.
Gadhafl. who Reagan branded as
a "mad dog'' and "flaky," Is the
target of pressure and publlc
threats designed to deter or punish
fUture Libyan Involvement 1n
terrorism.
Despite confusion between the
western White House and Washing·
ton about the goals and origins of
that effort, spokesman Larry
Speakes Insists there Is no split
within the administration over
pollcy toward Libya.
The Unl~ States, he said, "wUI
do what we can to prevent"

to Its oontention that Ubya Is
geared for a possible resumption ct
Its Involvement In terrorism and
denied the warnings to Gadhafl,
delivered as the earner uss
Forrestal remained in the Medlter·
ranean well outside of Libyan
waters, were intended to bait him.
' "Our goal Is tl prevent Gadhafl
!rom doing anything," Speakes
said, "not to pwoke him Into doing

Libyan-backed acts of terrortsm
and wUI "be prepared to take the
necessary steps, either before or
after these are committed, in order
that they don't happen again."
Questions about administration
intentions emerged Wednesday
with a Washington Post report
claiming details of the latest
campaign against Gadhafl were
leaked as part of a war It nerves to
provoke him Into an Irrational
reactkm that could embolden his
opponents.

anything.''

A senior administration dtlclal
US. Intelligence agencies
have "hard evidence that tbe
Libyan government bas been in·
volved in planning and at~ptlng
to execute terrortst acta" stnce
American warplanes bombed Trl·
poll AprU 14.
The &lt;rlglnal report on these plots
In The Wall Street Journal was
rifered by the administration as
justification lor new rroves against
insls~

The New Yorl&lt; Times then
reported that administration rift·
clals In Washlng1on were ron·
cerned that speculatiln about
Libyan lntenllons and possible U.S.
reprisals - raised Monday In The
WaU Street Journal - was out of
hand.
The White House, bowever, stuck

Libya and was described by the
!tflclat as "unautrorlzed rot highly
autrorttatlve.' ·
"This 1!1 a realistic assessment of
the current situstlon regardng
Gadhafl and the !l'O"pects for him
committing future terrorist acts,"
Speakes said.
Another official said !&gt;Jbllc dis·
closure of the k!telllgence reports
and deliberations under way within
the administration "probably was
uoetul" In reinforcing the message
to Gadhaft.
1n signing a bill Wednesday that
autlnrlzes some $2.4 biUion to
protect American diplomats
abroad from terrorism, Reagan
reafllnned his determination "to
confront this crlmlnal behavior in
every way: diplomatically, economically, legally and, when neces·
sary, miUtarUy,''
The threst of additional mlUtary

reprtsals against Libya is only one
facet ot what admlnLs trallon off!.
clals descrthed as a three-part
program to put pressure on
Gadhafl.
The CIA Is seeking to rromote
and exploit political dissent within
Libya, while U.N. Ambassador
Verron Walters, a veteran diplo·
matlc troublesooater, Is heading to
Europe In the next few days In an
attempt to bulld support for untfled
Western action to tighten the
ecoromlc screws on Libya.
The White House and State
Department were vague about
whether the forus of the Walters
mission might be wider than the
Issue of ecoromlc sanctions. Offi.
clals said only that his discussions
would "Include an exchange ct
Information about Libya" and
a wide range of

Ohio Democrats welcome Kucinich back to fold
Austin had called Kuclnlch
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP!) Gerald J. Austin, the campaign "crazy" for running and made
director for Gov. Richard F. snide referellces to the former
Celeste, summed It up:·''In polltlcs, Clevelail4 mayor's !&gt;Jbllclzed et·
there are 110 ~tfl'lends and torts at !Pirltui1 growth.
ButW...tn-lay KuctaJch "enthu·
ro permanent eQemles."
With that, the Ohio Democratic s~~· li!llll9rlled Celeste for
hlerarciiY wdcomed back Into the rt ~lectltln IIIII Wi1 he wUl work for
.fold Dennis J . KuclaJch. the former ~ Da)iOCiatic.cindldates this tall.
'tndepmdent candidate for gover·
'1 wattI hll active involvement In
nor W008e pret!ellce oo Ill! ballo1 . the c:ampaJgn;" ' said Austlo. "I
unW Wedneaday had threatened to ct:iit't kiiow tlta:t we've ever worked
band the race to Republican togelhet ~· rot we're aotng to
nominee James A. Rhodes.
worlt: IIJB!!ther for the next two
Kucintch had' all rot called the months."
Celeste administration crooked,
Kuclnlch claimed to have cut nO
saytq ''then! Is a 'For Sale' sign oo deal with state or naltlnal DemDcrats In withdrawing ll'om the
the Statebouse."

contest.
"There was ro quid JX'O quo
discussed · at any tlme ., the
meeting," KuclnlcW said of Thes·
day's two-hour meeting with J:lem&gt;.
Cl'litlc National Olalnnan Psul
Kirk and Ohio Democratic Olalr·
man James M. Ruvolo which led to

It Secretary of

Sta~

ShelTOd

Brown, Kuclnl.ch was peppf!'UI
with qliestlons about the apJllll'ellt
Inconsistency of · emlraclng an
administration he had caultlcally
denounced as coiTUpt and wasteful
"I' enthuslastlcail¥ endoJ'Ie him
(Celeste)," said Kuclnlcll ·when
JI'O(Ided by reporters. "He's more '
his wltblrawal. ·
"I citlll'f: 11\Y ~ oourse," said the In tune with the times. He's awakj!,
39-year old politlcai maverick wro he's alive.
"I never questioned the pnonal
served a stormy'.two-)'l!ar tmn as
lnaytl'· r1 •CleO/eland In the late tntegn!y r1 Dick Celeote," 1!lld
I9'IOs. "My Ufe Is deterrnlned by my Kutiltlcll, adciiDi he plana tl work
within the Democ:ratr party to
own cb;lloe. ~r
comet
the soortoomlnp he &amp;
·Meetili with rfllOI'Iei'S lblrtly
crlbed
eerller
tn the campaign,
before fiUIIg hlllelta' r1l'l!lllll&amp;ltln ·
troni the campaign wtth the cillce particularly on ethics.
"' .

'

......
••

:,

'

.... . .... . .... . ... ..
;

,.;

Frank reported there was Insurance oothe cruiser but none oo the
contents of the vehicle. He said
about $4,000 of equipment was lost
in the fire.
The sheriff also reported that
approxtmately $1,:!XI worth of
medical bllls for prisoners are due,
and he has only $8ll In his account
to pay the bUts. No decision was
made on where the addllk&gt;nal funds
should come from, however, Frank
noted ··u Lo; the law that the rounty
must provide medical services to
prisoners."
And finally, bids from Coch
Asphalt OJ., North Bend, and
!Continued on Page 8)

~.~./

Joanne Limbach, the commlsslo!l'r, was the leadoff witness In
the Senate Ways and Means
Committee, which started hearings
on the Republlcan-wrttten bUt
cutting the state personal Income
tax rates by 11 percent to blunt an
anticipated windfall.
Limbach and her as!l&gt;Ciates from
the Ohio Department of Taxation
explained that because of seven
proposed changes In exemptions.
deductions and exclusions !rom the
federal Income tax. taxpayers will
owe about S3al mWlon to $:fiO
million more In state personal
lnoome taxes.
Corporate taxpayers wUl have tc
pay hetween $ll miUlon and $00
million more In state taxes when
the changes go Into effect, said
Limbach. The Senate Republican
till also would trim the corporate
tax rate to counteract the federal
action.
··we probably would not see any
addltilnal money untB flscall988."
said Umbach. Fiscal l9tll In Ohio
starts July 1, 1987.
Corgress Is expected to finalize
the tax reform bUt in mid·
September, and Senate Republl·
cans want to have their plan In
place by Jan. 1 When the new
federal law wiU take effect.
"This Is an excellent first step Ill
the process," said Limbach, ac·
knowiedglng that Gov. Richard F .
Celeste favors rorrecttve legislation to prevent. an unvoted tax
windfall.
However, Limbach cautioned the
senators to walt for the federal
product before fashioning a bill at
the ~te level.
"There Is a great deal of
uncertainty," she said, joking that
she plans to ask next year for an
approprtatlon.for "a crystal ball, a
ouija . board and a deck of tarot
cards" to help predict the fUture.
Sen. Rlchan:l H. Finan, R·
Cincinnati, placed the tax cut bill In
a subcommittee chaired by himself
and said the next hearing wUl he
Sept. 5. Other members &lt;1 t~
suboommtttee are Sens. David L:
Hobson, R-Sprtng!leld; Paul E.:
Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus; Richard c:,
Pfeiffer Jr., D·Columi&gt;Js; and
Robert Nettle, 0-Barberton.
Finan said the key question IS
whetber the Senate wants merely to
roll back the ratei; or to linker with
other · sections of the tax code;
Celeste bas proposed expanding thetax credit for elderly real estate:
owners and adding a credit for day
·
care.
Mark Reai ct the ChUdren's
Defense Fund testified that the day
care tax credit for famUies earning
$00,00) a )'l!ar or less would reduce
the expense &lt;1 caring i:lr chlldren,
the retarded and disabled, and
Alzhebner's disease victims.
The House already bas pmed
that proposal, which Is awaiting .
Senate tloor action.
·
.· .

..

•

�Thua~day, August 28, 1986 ·

\

Com,mentary

Page-;--2-Tho Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thurlday,
Au.gust 28, . t986
.

.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

They're gettb;lg
married!
---,---J_ame
___s_J_.K__:ilpa:;__tric_k_
.

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~'h
ts::miill
~v

f"T'1.....1.._-r,........,c:::::~,""

ROBERT L. WINGETf
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Edllor
AMEMBER of The United Press International. Inland Dally Press
Associa lion and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welco~re. They should be less than :IKl words
loog. All h~tters are subject tofld ltlng and JTUSt be signed wtth name, address and
telephone number. No unslgnOO letters wOI b£&gt; published. Lellers shou ld be In
good taste, addressing Issues, not personaUtles.

Opinions of other editors
Worcester, Mass., Suuday Telegram
· The defection of a former CIA employee to the Soviet Union ... calls Into
question some of the basic tenets under which the CIA operates.
Edward L. Howard was dismissed from the CIA for drug and
alcohol-related problems and for failing a lie detector test before he
~ppeared In 1983. The FBI was Investigating complaints that he might
:· lle selling Information to the Soviet Union, yet he was able to slip away and
: tUm up In Moscow ...
: : Just how reliable Is the selection process that allows an unstable
• character llke Howard to he groomed for a sensitive assignment? ...
: ·"oreover, how can one relatively junior q~eratlve possess enough crucial
·:tnformatlon to, In the words of one lnteUlgenre expert, "wipe rut Moscow
:station?"
• The United States may be exaggl!ratlng the damage to mislead the
::SOviets. Still, It lsdlsturblngtoieamoftheeasewithwhlchan IDlSCrupulous
:·agent sens out his country.
The Hartford (Conll.) Courant
• · The federal government recently quantified some things that have long
: been obvious about the gap between the rich and the mt-!ll-rtch In
· American society, and the Implications are ominous.
Whites are lar wealthier than blacks. Households headed by men are
wealthier than those headed by women, and married couples are richer
. than single people.... White Americans are 10 times wealthier than black
- Americans. Hispanics fare poorly by any measure.
· A house dlvkla:l against Itself cannot stand, warned Abraham Lincoln,
who was speaking primarily about polltlcs. But a house that I; sharply
dlvkla:l economically may falter as well. ~portunltles tlr the
disadvantaged In 11.n1erican society may arguably be greater now than
ever before, yet the report shows that something still Is wrong, and Its
· figures are a cause for worry.
• ·
The New York 11me&amp;
Can Latin American democracies buUd a oommon market rmdeled Cll
: the EurOpean Community? That's what Argentina and Brazil wpukl do
: With a tariff union Intended to Increase and rEOi'lent trade and make
palltlcal partners out of some longtime rivals lor regional dominance ....
: Presidents AlfonsIn and Sarney have declara:l the new common market
open only to democratic states. Ideally, It would soon expand to Uruguay.
... Its success would give businessmen ki Cl!ile and Paraguay a strong
Incentive to press for democratic rule.
. FuD Integration of South America's lndustrtal zone, j:I'Oduclng a
: formidable new lndustrtal power, Is an old dream. If this effort prospers,
• and avoids protectionist pollcles, It would deserve strong encouragement
: and favorable trade treatment from the United States.
The State, Colwnbla, S.C.
The Anti-Defamation League of B'nal B'rtth, the Jewish organization
that zealously blrddogs the Ku Klux Klan and neo-Nazl grrup;, ...
· complained to Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger about the
: Involvement o1 Camp Lejeune Marines In the paramilitary exercises and
: r;lllies of the White Patriot Party In North Carollna. The league says the
· party was formerly known as the Confederate Knights of the Ku Klux Klan.
· Weinberger wrote the ADL that ... the three men hoo been discharged
from the Marine Corps lor their racist activities....
The Anti-Defamation League performs a public service by calling
. attention to the activities ol violence-prone hate group;. We just wish that It
· would direct some of Its Ire at miUtant Jewish group;, such as the Jewish
: Defense League, which are believed to be behind an rutbreak ct violence
· and intimidation against Arab dtlzens In this country. That's racism too.
St. Pele....Wrg (Fla.) 1\mes
It was good news when Toyota Motor Corp. anoounced that It was
building an S8Xl million auto assembly plant In Georgetown, Ky. Now some
people are beginning to wonder.
For example, It was discovered that hidden in the U.S. Senate's "tax
: reform" legislation were tax benefits worth up to $100 million for the
· Toyota plant. Why should U.S. taxpayers subskllze Toyota?
: In addition, Kentucky Is spending $1Zi mlllion lor roads, utillty
Improvements and the 1,:100-acre site, which will be given to Toyota.
When the Unlta:l Brotherhood of Carpenters began ID k&gt;ok for jobs, It
diSCOvered Toyota's ~neral contractor was Ohhayashl, a Japanese
construction company, which wlll bring 600 cllts workers from Japan .The
; union magazine, Carpenter, recalla:l that the Japanese government
; refused to allow American contractors to bid on the Osaka Airport project.
• · Isn't then&gt; a lesson in this for American managers, not tn mention
: American taxpayers•

Berry's World

~nother volunteer for drug testing, Doc/"

~·.Today

in history

Today Is Thursday, Aug. 28, the 240th day oH986 with 125 to tlllow.
'nJe moon Is moving away from Its last quarter.
'nle momlllg stars are Mercury and Jupiter. ·
, . 1be evening stars are Venus, Mllrs and Saturn.
. niose b!lrn on thlsdateareunder theslgn&lt;t Virgo. They includeGennan
· poet. novelist and dramatist Johann-von Goethe In 1749; EUzabeth Ann
~ U.S.·bom saint of the Roman Cathollc Church, In 1774; actor
· puir:lel Boyer In 1899; actor-dancer Donald O'Connorllll9Zi (81e6l), and
! IICtOr Ben Gazzara In 19IJ 1age 56).
·
•. Oa this date In history:
: · 1n 1922, a New Yori&lt; City realty company paid $100 tlr the ftrst radio

· ;_Setllll,

:Oommerctal.

'.

.·

• '· In 00, more than m,ooo clvU rights protesters led.by Martin Luther
' IQng Jr. staga:l an orderly "Freedom March" In Washington, D.C.

.

at her home and through a window
lllto her bedroom. Oh, boy, I said to
the TV screen, now yru 're showing
some gumption. No wa,y. He sat on
the edge of her heel and they
discussed lilw they wruld nab some
time!
For the paat four years, I have International villain. Then he
been shouting every Monday night cllmbed back rut of the wlndo,w and
at the Scarecrow. His real name, of clown the trellis and Into the sports
course, Is Lee Stelson, and he's an car, and I threw some leftover
agent of the OA "Scarecrow" Is spaghetti at the screen. "Dope!" I
only his code name. His partner, a · hollered. "Unspeakable wimp!"
This has kept my adrmals
volunteer at the agency, Is the
pumping
since 1982. Once· I was In
divorced Amanda King. She Is
Los
Angeles
and missed the show.
beautiful, and not just beautllul. She
Is Intelligent, brave, spunky, a My wife telephoned me the next
loving rrother tn her all·Am!rtcan morning. "Did yru see them hold
boys. Slle Is every man's dream han&amp;;?" she asked, She was
breathless. I hadn't Sllen them hold
boat.
"Kiss her! ! " I have been yelling hands, but well, It sremed a likely
attbe screen: The Scarecrowwruld start. Nothing happened the rest of
rather kiss his sports car. "You the season. Amanda' gave him a few
nerd!" I have been crying. longing looks but the Idiot just
"Whassa matter with you, Stelson? holstered his pistol and looked the
other way.
Lost your nerve?"
Now, It says here, "after years of
One Monday night - I forget the
story line- he climbed up a trellis

SCRABBLE, Va. -The Scarecrow and Mrs. King, I see by the
papers, wUl start behaving "like
real human beings" In the coming
TV season. By Geor~. It's about

working undercover, Scarecrow
and Mrs. King are going to try
working under the oovers this
season. Literally." They are "going
to do what comes naturally."
Scarecrow viewers, It says here,
" wlll be pleasErl to see , the
consummation of desire." I
Now that kind of dirtY talk leaves
me uneasy. I expect them to do a
llttle necking. I'm no prude. I mean,
after all, I'm a pretty sophisticated
fellow, but I don't want the
producer Implying that they're ah- going all the way. You know.
Those ct us who lOve Amanda want
to see a ring. We want to hear
wedding beDs. We want a sign on
the rear c1 that sports car that says
"Just Married!" Then they can go
cit on a honeymoon and shoot a
oouple al gangsters, and It wllJ be
perfect, just perfect, and pass the
popoorn, sweetie, he's not a nerd
anymore.
Most men are nerds. You take
Judge Parker In the comic strtps.

"It's ·good to ·get away from the pressures of Washington. Right,
senator?"

Actually,. you rarely see Judge
Parker anymore. You see the
handsome young lawyer Sam
Driver. He's maybe 45. Good
looking guy. A beautiful ra:lhead
named Abbey Lane Is crazy about
him . She's beautiful, brave,
spunky, Intelligent and rich. Lives ·
Cll a great estate. Servants, horses,
all that good stuff. She's forever
feeding him. Will he propose? No:
Will he evro put an arm around ·
her? Not hlm.
I wlll give you another dope. Dr.
Rex Morgan. His nurse Is named .
June. You can tell bY the way she
looks at hum that she would love to
~ Mrs. Morgan. And she's beautiful, brave, spunky, Intelligent. All
he ever says Is "cancel my next
appointments."
It has bli!en ever thus. Remember
Dick 'Ii'acy• He went with Tess
Trueheart for years · and years
before ht? popped the question.
There used to be a magician named
Mandrake. Top hat. Flowing cape.
Handsome clog. For 25 years he
data:l Princess Narda. Gorgrous
brunette - beautiful, brave,
spunky, Intelligent. They traveled
around ta lot together, but they
always stayed In separate palaces.
I stopped reading Mandrake. But I
hear hf!'s stDI around.
So It goes. In the Adventures of
Mark Tralll, this great outdoors·
man and ooventurer has a girl,
name of Cl!erry. She adores him.
He loves the (fog. There used to be a
charac:ter nama:l Smllill' Jack. He
oew·alrplanes. He had a il!rt too, but
I forgo~t whatever became of them.
Not much.
There are exceptions. The Phan·
ton and Diana flnaDy got hitched
and went to Uve In their treehouse,
but goodness knows ·It took them
long enough. Joe Palooka got
mal'Jied. The Bumsteads are a
happy family. Jlggs and Maggie
tlugbt a lot, but they stayed
manied tlr 150 years. In Doones·
bury two of the characters are
legally co-nurturing a child. I'm for
that.
But the big news Is that Lee and
Amanda wUl reaDy be going
steHdy. They're on their way to the
altar. Stay tuned. This season it wlll
he Friday night at So'clock. and I'll
be mthe kitchen whooping It up for
the happy pair. He's no bargain, but
shf''s beautllul, brave, spunky,
In telligent ....

Promise of peace.________._J_ac_k_And_er_so_n
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti Peace has been promised along the
Western Hemisphere's most turbu·
lent border. This Is the boundary
that separates Haiti and the
Dominican Republic - a dividing
line that has spawned Invasions,
Incursions and massacres, a violent
frontier that Introduced the word
"genocide" Into the language.
Both countries have just Installed
new heads ci state- Lt. Gen. Henri
Namphy In Haiti and President
Joaquin Balaguer In the Dominican
Republic. They could go down In
history and set an example to the
world, I suggested, If they would
bury the past and bring peace to
their border. Both leaders agreed to
cooperate with each other.
It will take some tall statesman·
ship to stop the bloodshed that has
soaked this boundary for centuries.

For It divides two disparate nations
that occupy the same piece of
grography - the doorstep to
America that Columbus dlsoovera:l
In 1492.
Not long after Columbus planta:l
the Spanish flag and nama:l the
island Hispaniola, the violence
began. First the Spanish and
Indians claohed, then the Spanish
and French, then black slaves and
their French masters. Freebooling
pirates co ntributed to the
bloodshed.
A revolt of the slaves established
the world's first black republic In
J8()1. Adopting the language ci the
French who enslava:l them, the
bi&lt;~Cks settled Haiti. Forty years
Ia ter, the descendants of the
Spanish conquistadors, their blood·
lines thick with Indian and black
mixtures, formed the Dominican

Republic.
Catastrophe and war and death
continued to haunt the border. The
worst recorded event occurred In
1937,18. Dominican Republic dicta·
tor Ralael Trujillo ordered the
kllllng of all Haitians who had
crossed Into his country ro work.
To separate Haitian from Domin·
lean blacks, they were asked to
pronounce the Spanish word "pe·
reJU" (parsley). U they pronounced
It with an accent, they were
assumed to be Haitians and were
shot on the spot. No count was kept
c1 the nurnber who were slaught·
ered, but the estimates ran as high
as ll,0001 From this horror came
the word "genocide."
There have been at least ll
skirmishes between Halt! and the
Dominican Republic. No other
I:Drder has been watched more

lottentiy by . the Organization of
American States, which has Inter·
vened repeatedly to stop the
fighting. Yet shootings still occur.
Namphy, the Haitian strongman,
said he would do his best to reduce
tensions between Haiti and Its
nelghhor. The people who live along
the border, he said, have already
learned to get along. They criss·
cross the border freely, and on both
sides, Dominican and Haitian
children often sit together In the
same schoolrooms, he sald. The
governments, he suggested, should
learn from the children.
When I asked Namphy whether
he would work lor better relations
with the Dominican Republic, he
caught his breath. But he hesitated
no more than a second, then he
smiled. "We are neighbors," he
said. "We want to be at peace with
rut nelghi:Dr."

Art Buchu:ald
Fat island----------------------------------------------------

A very Interest lng thing hap·
pena:l on Martha's VIneyard this
summer. Scientists dlsoovered that
although the natives lived exclu·
slvely on broiled lobsters, grilla:l
steaks, French bread, scaDoped
potatoes, fresh pasta, home-made
pies, and double-dip Ice-cream
cones, they still galna:l weight.
Even when they went off the diets
and ate frted chicken, hamburgers,
corn-on-the-cob, doughnuts and an
assortment of cheesecakes, they
kept putting on extra pounds. So
alarmed was Washington that they
sent Inspectors from the National
Bureau of Weights and Measures to
lind rut what was causing the
problem.
As soon as they got off the boat,
the Inspectors fanned rut One
headed for an Ice-cream parlor on
Malll Street where several hundra:l
vacationers were sitting on wooden
benches In almost comatose post.
tions licking their cones. The
Inspector lntervlewa:l a middle·
aged man named Freddie who was
eating a lllack·ralipberry-fiavored
ice cream. "I'm doing an lnvestlga.
tion lntn why the people Cll
Martha's VIneyard are gaining
weight."
The man replied, "Every one Is
worried about lt. I don't believe
there are less than three people Cll
the Island who aren't on a diet."
"What kind of diet are yru peope
on?"
.OJ
"You name It, and we're on lt.
We're on the Scarsdale Diet, the
Beverly Hills Diet, the Blooming·
dale's Diet, and the Dr. Aikins Diet.
A friend of mine even Invented the
'Martha's Vineyard Diet.' What

you do i:lr that Is take aU the diet
hooks you bought In the last few
years, lle clown Cll a bed and put tbe
books on your stomach. Their
combined weight Is supposed to
take off half a pound a night.''
The government man said, "If
you hoo to hazard a guess, why do
you think people on the Island are
gaining weight?"
"We cheat a lot," the man
replia:l, "but It's justified cheating.
We'D go tosomebody's house and If
it's a buffet we'll eat everything on
the sideboard. II It's sit-down, we
observe an old Island custnm of
always taking seconds so we don't
offend the hostess."
"What Is your favorite meal?"
"A clambake. The thing that
makes vacations so great Is that no
Clle can tell you what yru can or
cannot eat at a clambake. Everybody Is free to take all that they want.
And that Includes buttered oom-on·
the-cob, which I'm crazy about."
The Inspector said. "This Is a
flltritlonal puzzle. From what
you've told me, It doesn't matter
how much yru eat, you still gain
weight."
"We've been studied before: We
present a serious biological
phenomenon!'
Another Inspector came back and
said to his parlner, "!spoke tn some
people up Island who claim that
although they are stuffing ' them·
selves, their waists · keep
expanding."
"Did you lind rut what they were
eating?"
"Clams with drawn buller, Ca·
memhel1 cheese, strawberry Sbol1·
cake, brownies and salt-free taffy."

"No clues there," •eplied the
Inspector.
The other man referra:l to . hi.s
cllptxlard. "This may just be a
coincidence, but all the people I
Interviewed tnld the same story.
They had come to the Island
weighing 10 pounds less than they

weigh now, and mey haan·t aone
anything different from what they
did at home, except to stuff
themselves with ra:l meat, dairy
products, cakes and pies.''
Tile first Inspector was puzzled.
"Well It can't be their dlet. We
better check the water."

Berry's World

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pornetoy-Middlapor:t. Ohio

Marauders open new season at Polnt Pleasant Friday
By KEml WISECUP
Sen&amp;lael News staff .
Opening the 1986 season on a fif-ld
they'Ve never won on In seven
games, Meigs will try to break the

spell of the "Pt. Pleasant Hex"
Friday.
Thirteen times the two schools
have met on the gridiron and the
Big Blacks have won 11, Including
the last nine straight.
.
Meigs tied PPHS 8-8 In 1971 and
defeated the Blacks 15-12 In 1972 at
Pomeroy. Everything else has
been Pt. Pleasant, which ·Includes
one overtime win. The two last met
In 1982 at Pt. Pleasant with the West
VIrginians winning 29-7,
Coach Charley Chancey's Ma·
rauders, who return 21 lettermen
and 16 of 22 starting positions from

last year's 9·1 squad, have been
crippled by Injuries In their first two
scrimmages (losses to Athens W-6
and Morgan JJ.6), but appear to be
at nearly full strength Friday. Only
senior defensive end standout
Raymond Rider remains question·
able with a sprained ankle.
Mlsslng the pre-season but ex·
pected to start Frilay are Huey •
Eason, J. R. Kitchen, Steve
Musser, and Bill Brothers.
Pt. Pleasant wllJ have a new look
from last year's 8-2 team thatlostto
George Washington 2l·ll In the
class AAA state playctfs. 'We lost a
tremendous amount of talent trom
last year. We graduated 10 seniors
and a lt&gt;t of speed. We'll rrostly go
with untested seniors up lrom last
year's junior varsity. Our defense

All eight SVAC
teams open new
campaign Friday

was decimated by graduation and ·· will have its typical team , always
rur kicking game Is oompletely aggressive and well-coached, ..
gone,' said Big Black coach Steve claimed Chani:Ey, now entering his
Saffi:&gt;rd, now entering his 12th llth ~ar at Meigs and Zith overall.
season at PPHS.
Chanrey added, "Both teams
But Coach Chanrey ha~ heard were JX'etty much ' bangl!d up In
that song before, as the Big Blacks their final pre-season game, so it 's
field a seemlllgly ljg and strong hard toevaluatethem. !thought we
team year alter year. PPHS plays Improved since the Athens scrim·
\)De c1 tbe tougbest ·class AAA mage. Offelllltvely, we have to cut
schedules Ill West Virginia and down mistakes, but we're oomlng
even 'with a seemingly c11 year along.Ilefenstvely,wemustreduce
lying ahead, theBigBiacksereatea rur execution errors. Getting our
people hack should help."
formidable challen!J&gt; anytime.
Bet~n the tackles, Meigs wlll .
"Our primary ooncern wlll be to
stop their power ground game. haVe a sllght weight advantage,
They have two big and strong 207·199. The Big Blacks' backs
rumlng hacks.. The teams' should average 184 oompara:l to 182 for the
match~up pretty even. Pt. Pleasant · Marauders. On defense, the Meigs

By GARY

CLARK

and John Ro~~Ch (5-5 145) or
sophomore Clu'ls Noble (6-0 lBO) at
guard; seniors Rodney Dayo (6-ll
195) and Dale Myers (6-0 185) or
juniors Kevin Roush (5-9 180) and
Jay Roush (6-5 260) at the tackle .

spots,
The receiving corp Is expt.cted to
oome from seniors Bill Marshall
(6-3 JliO) and Todd Pethtel (5-8150),
junior Brad Burngamer (6-3185) or
sophomore Chris Jewell (6·3 190) .
Halfback hopefuls Include senlors J.T. IJoyd (5-9 165) and Matt
VanMeter (5-8 HiO), junior Robbie
Grimm 16-0 170) or sophomore
Chris Jewell (6·3 190). The fullback
will be ooe of two seniors In Eddie
Starcher (5-10 ll5) or Terry
Hawkins (5-10 165).
The quarterbacking duties are
expected to be handled by sopho·
rrore Sean Gibbs (5-9 150), senior
Bill Marshall (6-.1 160) or junior
Ro!Die Gl'llnrri 16-0 170).
Defensively VanMeter Is looking
at Dale Smith at nose guard, Troy
1\lcker, Jay Roush or Kevin Roush
at the tackles with Eddie Starcher,
Rodney Dayo and Dale Myers
filling the end positions.
The four linebacker slots are
expecta:l to come from Terry ·
Hawkins, Matt VanMeter, Chris
Jewell, Tod4 Pethtel or J.T. Lloyd .
while the two defensive secondary
starters will be either Robbie
Grimm, Pete Ollver (5-10, 170 sr),
BID Marshall or Brad Bumgarner.
Kickoff time for the September 5
Jellson opener at Kyger Creek Is
scheduled for 7:30p.m.
··

St&gt;nd address ~h:;lnJI('S
to Th(' Dally Sl'ntlnl'l, 11~ &lt;;ourt St.,
Pom£'1'0\', Ohio 4~7fm .

10Heme1

ros.

Plll)'er 1\ ' r. Wt.l
JR . KllchPn i12-19l \. .
SIE'\'(' MuSSE'r (12-lS:h or
~11 Hanniil~ m -lY.'11 or

LE
.LT

!.(;

.. ..... C

.. RG

Dennv Welsh 112-nJ 1 .·

Srott'Powell 112-1171 .
Blll BrothPr~ tll -101)1 .
Mikt&gt; Bartrum 111-:lKII ..
Hurv Eason 112-169 1
Phl(King (12- 1701 .. .
.Paul Dailpy tl 2· l89J .

. t(f

... RE
. .. QB
. . Til
WR

.... fll

(Of~fon;(')

ENOO- .]('SS('Howard tl2 - li1~1 &lt;.llld Tf'IT~­

F'1rldo; t10-L't31: TACKLES -

YOUR

SUIIHCRimON RATES

Ont• Mnnlh . ..... ......... .. .. .. .......... ~. ~5

.

.... ................ .. ..... .'$6~. 00

Oall ~ ........... ..... .... .. ... ..... 2..,- C'-".nts

I

•

FOR

..

NtNGLECOPY
PRICE

HEADQUA~RTERS
'

1\11'! .

PLI)'t'f' l l r \\'1. 1

Hush and

. TF:

Bil " Mon·"" ,J, :!h ·
Donin\ Hal l , 1 ~ 17'll
Murk· Dursr 1 \ ~ !f\~ 1
JdfWam~ lt'\ rl:! lt'O •
Ja~un

. Mat1 Petersoo il0-24.1 •
Don Bun('(' i 12-2lill ..
JasOn Bush t12-218• ..

DuncJu

LT

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... f
RC

~~~ t,.)( r,

-RT

D&lt;:m d C m1ph'll.ol2lt-oi '
Ho~rr 1-toush · I ~ 11~1 1

'SF

QB
.. FB
. RB
.. RB

C'un lloss il2·2 HJo
R\·an Rl1:1rdm:m 11~ \~I ,
Chatit'\' K1n n.m! 111 1':':1,
( lh·h'll'-1"1

.

El'\ I:*i - ll••lliJil ; nU lJ.,, ~ • '!':\ ( -~l .£S ­

Duncan &lt;llld [)o~:-..

l J 1\'EJ\ACKER S -

\\' amslf'\ ', H.li l ,tnd tlu.u·um.on: OOR!'Ii'ER RACKS ~ .li ollrl R&lt; '. nl ·t •11· 1\i."o o .tnd .liminy
011\'f'l' 1\IJ.1'&lt;~11 : fli·TP B/~ fh: Sc.ull
\'iek f' r:-. ·1111:11 lol \ ). 1 ', 1 11 ] .0\'1' ] 0~ 111 ·1:15'•:
SAF ET'! ' - l'v1ikr• IJ.11 tt lfl 1U lti0 1

Bill Zuspan ........ ..

HB
PB

1 4~

E

14~

120
QB 110
G t50

Bobby Ash ..... ... .. .
Jimmy Ashlt&gt;y. .... .
Shannon BarrPIL
Chris Fink ..

P.J. Gibbs . .. .. ..

E 105

MikE' Harbour .... .

G

Tum Kn app .. ..
Scott Miller ... ..
!ra Zuspan ..
......... .. ..

I ll
9

'gg

1 7~

T 195
c 140
FB 120

9
g
9
9
9

\\'tUlAI\lA SCHEDULE
Cf('('k
..... A
Srp 12-Eastrr n
.. ..... . H
Srp 19-lronton St Jor _ .......... ..... .. .... H
~P

~ K nwr

~p .

ll- Ra venswood ... .. .. ... ..... .......... A

Oc1

~ VImon.

OcL
lkt
Oct
Oc1.

10-F'edt'ral

IIIIIGrtdll&lt;lol&lt;r
Player
1"88.
Rodney Doyo ........ .... ......
T
Terry Hawkins ............... .- ·F B
J,T . Lloyd ... :.................. . HB

"'''· Yr.
195 12
165 12
165 12

Bill Marshall ......... .... ..

F;

!60

Dale Myers·.... .................

T 185

t2'

John -Roa~h... .......... ........

G 145

12
12
12
12

Dale Smtih......................
Eddie Starcher ....... .. .......
Troy Tucker................. ...

G 185
FB 205
C 235

12
12

Matt VanMetE"r ........

HB 160

t2

Brad Bumgarner ..... "
Robbie Gnmm ..........
AI Rose.......................
Jay Roll•h ............ ...... .

E
HE
HE
T

165
170
140
260

11
11
11

T

1110

l'&lt;!le Olive!'........... ........ HB 170
Todd Pelhtet .. ................. E 150

Kevin Roush .. .. .. .. .. ... ...
Scott RusSf.lll .. ... .. .. .. .. .. .. ..

G 170

Tlm Sayre.. . ... . .... ...... ...

11
11

G 140

s.ari Gtbb! .. ..... ............. QB 150

10

HB 190
HD 140
G 150
FB 170
· C 180
E t40
T 185
ET 1.

10

Rick Keam1 .. ..................
Bobby Kin cal~ .. .... ..........
Troy Meadows .. ...............
Chris Nob le .. :... ..... ..........
Billy Purkey ...................
Dave Sigman .... .. ............

Tom Willoughby .... ..........
Dar,ln

yoUna ...................

se

12

,J

tlef. .
WAS

NOW

10
10
10
10
10

10
10
10

1983 BUICK
LESABRE
Stock #67331. 4 dr sedan. V·8 eng fact.
air con&lt;l. ~nyl roof. auto.trans.. p-steering
&amp; p-brakes. p·windows. tin sl·wheel.
. am -fm. radoa~. whrte walls.

WAS

1982 OLDSMOBILE
CUTLASS

NOW

Stod&lt; ~30311. 2 dr hardtop coupe. 6 cyl
eo~.

fact . air cond.. auto. trans..
p-steering &amp; p.brak~ am-fm. radials. sun

roof.
NOW

WAS

1982 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX
Stock 1168452, 2 dr hardtop. 6 cyl. eng.,
fact air cond .. auio. trans.. p·steering &amp;
p-brakes. p-wmdows. P·seat. p-door klcks,
till sl·wheel. cr-control. am·fm. radia~.
sun roof.

WAS

NOW

,395 '5395 $6395 '5395
·1981 MERCURY
COUGAR XR7

1981 RENAULT

LeCAR

WE GiADLY RESERVE

Stock #304I I. 4 dr. front whilrive. 4 cyl
bucket seals, rear v.indow defogger.
NOW

Stock 1168712. 2 doors. v.g eng !act aor
cond. ~nyl roof. auto trans.. p·steenng &amp;
p.brakes. .tih sl·wheel. cr-control. am-1m.
steroo tape.

WAS

NOW

'2395 $5395 '4395

TAPES' FOR YOU ·

1980 OLDSMOBILE
CUTLASS CALAIS

1980 VOLKSWAGEN
RABBIT

Stock 1167861.2 door hardtop COUfl!. V-8
&gt;31 JACKSON PIME •RT.3!WEST '

factaor cond, ~nyl roof. auto. trans ..
p.steering &amp; p.brakes. tin st-wheel,
cr-co·ntrol., am·lm. stereo lltpe. ·bucket

0&lt;14-41124
BARGA!! MATINEES SATUROAY I

NOW

SUNDAY • ALL SEATS 12. SO
' ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY 12 .
- - - L AST OAI !

"THE FlY

Stock 116041 2. 2·0001 . 4wheel d11ve. 4
cyl. eng am ·f'll ~ereo laDe bu cket seats

WAS

NOW

'3295 $2995 $1995

11

9: 10 P.H. RATED IR)

1982 FORD .F·150
4X4 LARIAT
1165121. 4 wiHlrive, V·8 en~ne.
p-~eering &amp; p.brak~
stereo tape, ~ ton pickup. long .
0011, rear ~ep bumper, gauges.

.

NOW

1971 FORD F-100
PICKUP
Stock #64()91. v.s en~. auto trans .
p.steering &amp; p-b,krs '' ton ~ckuo. lonR
wKJe ~d. rear sleo bumper

WAS

'895

'54.9 5

~LADIESf
.
.FALL
. FASHION
•LEE, LEVI &amp; C"IC

~·k .

Nn eubJIC"rlptiOR!I hy m11ll vt'rmll trd In
11rC'tl l' whflt'C• ttOmf' carr\N IK'rvlct' II
liVHihtbJ('I ,

Mall Ruh•crlpUohA
IIWikl4' M11i1Cil County

•

13 WM&gt;kO ........ ............... ...... ..... I17.29
26 Wt'f'kl 1.. .... ..... .. ... .,.......... ..... $34.06
52 WM&gt;ko ........ .......... .. .............. JM.56

"Sorry, Mt1rgan,
boardroom."

no

fish

ties

In

Gallipolis,

O.tot o Molp Count)'

the

13 WN'k! .............................. 118.20
211 Wo'f'i&lt;! ........ ....................... $35.10

~2 Wl'l')llt ......... ................. ..... $67 .60.

' ·.
'.

. '' .

. .. ..,. . ..

..

/.

.

. -.

. ......... ·.·: A
.. .. ...... H

'5895 $7795 $6795.

1,2

11
II

Chris Jewell .. ... .... ..........

4 cyl eng, fact air .cond .. auto. trans..
P:stll!ring &amp; p-brakes, am·fm. radia~.
wMe walls, bucllet seats, t!!ar window

...

17 - BuHalo-Putnam ... ..
2-J-S!)('n('(lr ..
.. .. ............ ... H
JI-R!I chlf&gt; County ...
.. .... H
Nov. 7-WUllamtown .. ... .. .. .. .............. A

1985 DODGE OMNI
Stod&lt; #30 122. 4dr sedan. fr·wheel drive.

.. .... A
H oc kin~

•CARHA.tr INSULATED BOOTS

Subllrrltwr l' not dHirln~ to pa y the car·
rtrr mn v n •mll In nd\'lmcr dlret"l to
Thr Doli.,· Sf'n ltnf•l on t1 :\, tior 1.2 month
bo AI~ . l'1:rdll wtlllx'jii:h•rn ('lll'flrr each

.

CllC'I H1 Jrl un 112 1i'6•

IIIEJGS

Iran~.

R)' Carrlet or Motor Route ·
Onf' WC'f'k ...... ................. .... .... ... .SJ ,25

SAFET\' - Rn11h1'r :-.
M '. PU:..\S.\.''1'
t Offelbl·l

WahamaWhlleFalmn~

play ball

PO~ MASTER :

Orw Yt•ar

Probable-SttU'ting Llntupti

Y. !'L"h
[J !\J:liA( h:l h :-- ()_,,,1 ·•
.JJl U
Bun('l:, CORNEHHACK_.,
L.:-.on and Klfl~
H .~ . F'RAlKS ~ B.:.trln.lll Ul d ..n1dU'f'l .

Wahama has .·I3 .lettermen; open season
on Sept. 5; ·Falcons are inexperienced

Thirteen returning lettermen
would tend to make one think an
exp:'rienced groop of gridiron
hopefuls are back for another
All eight Southern Valley Athletic
Southern's youth and talent season of· schoolboy football but
Conference schools open the 1986 should again put them In contention such Is mt the . case for newly
grid season this weekend against for a very successful campaign.
appolnta:l Wahama High School
non-league foes with action kicking
Eastern and Southern begin the head coach Donnie VanMeter and
· off 7:30p.m.
campaign with three oon-league his staff.
The Eastern Eagles host Water. games, then open league play In
Van Meter re;umes the head
fmd and Southeastern visits week four.
roaching duties at the bend aree
Sou them.
A strong veteran Southwestern school after the unfortunate paSsing
In other non-loop tOts Friday, club hopes to. Improve Its state away of former WHS football
Portsmouth East Is at South~~o~?SI· playoff contender roll of one year mentor Bill Jewell earllerthls year.
em: Symmes Valley at Chesa· ago wherl It battles Portsmouth Jewell roached at Wahama for ·
peake; Oak Hill hosts Alexander East.
eight successful seasons compiling
and Kyger Creek a!' Federal
The Highlanders, 8-2 1ast swson, a 49-31 record and a .61,3 winning
Hocking. Saturday. Hannan 'Ii'ace have· a lot of size on an lnexpe· percentage.
Is at Ironton St. Joe and North rienced offensive Une. Coach Jack
Van Meter wUl be entering Ids
Gallla at Portsmouth Notre Dame. James said he feels the success of second stint as head coach of the
Both Eastern and Southern suf· his team this season lies on the White Falcons after gukilng the
fered losses In the SVAC .preview. shoulders of the line.
bend area team to a 12-7·1 record
With an additional week d. practice
In · the conferenre preview, durtng the 1970'71 seasons.
under their belts lloth schools have Southwestern · blanked Southern
· A Wahama Hlg~ School graduate
made the necessary adjustments 14-0 with a strong ground attack. of 1961 VanMeter playeq football at
and refined their skills.
Only needing to attempt three the Mason County school where he
Eastern, loser of a 20-8 bout with passes. Senior taliback Andy Hals· was captalll ci the squad his junior
Oak Hill, faces Waterford, a team lop led the Highlander rushers with and senior years. Following gra·
the Eagles handily defeated one 85 yards on 12 carries.
Cluatlon VanMeter was awarded a
year ago.
Saturday, Hannan 'Ii'ace travels football i;cholarshlp at Marshall
Eastern's quickness and aglllty tn Ironton St. Joe. The Wildcats University where he played from
wllJ be the key In producing a win Cll ouimuscled Kyger Creek (1-0 In the ·1961 to 1965.
Friday. Junior quarterback Bryan piWiew.
After receiving itls oollege dl·
The defense for Dave Owens' plo!l'a.YanMeterhas been Involved
Durst runs the EHS offense, 'last
week passing lor 98 yards and a squad was stingy against KCHS as In CI)B!))IIng .high school and junior
touhdown In 4·of·9 attempts.
the Bolrats netted only 7 yards high footbaD tor lll)re than :tO years
Eastern rushed for 66 yards oo 23 rushing on 13 carries. Offensively, ln~ludlng •a term as the head ooach
carries led by senior Doug Beaver. sophomore Jay Jarrell led the at' Southern High School 1n Meigs .
Brian Beeler wUI start at halfback, Wildcat attack with 20 yar&amp;l · County' VanMeter also dirEcts the
while Steve Homer and Kyle Davis rushing and 80 passing.
WaliarnB: gtrls softball team In the
will be keys at the ends.
Hannan Trace, normally a sprtng.
ground oriented dfense, may have
Graduation took a heavy toll on
Defending SVAC champion to pass more this season to be the White Falcons with seven
Southern, lacing a major rebuilding effective, according to Owen's.
sen~rs departing last years 7-3
year, hopes In get ci!f In a laster · North GalUa, led by smlor
team
which Included Ali..Stale
start then last season when they halfback Richard Hurt, travels to
running back Todd Gress, the bend
went winless In five mn·league Portsmouth Notre Dame. The area: schools first l,IXXI yard rusher
contests. Although winless In those Pirates wlll be attempting to regain In 18 years.
. five starts, SHSwas In almost every. the stature that earned them a
Gress nin t&gt;r 1016 yar&amp;; h 1985
contest leading at least two until three-Way tie ·for the alnference and was the states leading soorer
the waning moments.
.
title two years ago, after falling to with 134 polllts behind cine of the
Southeastern, a 14·13 victor last 5·5 CNerall and 2-31n league play last best Interior line$ .In WHS history.
season, went on to the playalfs alter fall.
·
Jeff Barntiz, Rodney Long, Russ
enjoying a fine se!l9ln. The !t!en·
The Pirates' offense showed Edw!II'ds, Matt Thompson, Mike
slve ortented Panthers have sev· signs of the past success as Hurt Wolfe and Fred ZUspan also
era! key playroakers ·hack, as well rushed for 192 yards and two completa:l their high school careers
as much speed and talent. ·
touchdowns, one 00 and the other Ill . last year for Wahama.
Sou them will be putting Its chips yards, In Cllly seven carries to lead
A list of some 13 returning
In t~ hands of tackle Tim Smith, a North Gallla over Symmes Valley letlennen Including five starters
star pertonner last season, and In the league preview.
are back from last year and
all-state honorable mention Pete
Coach Dave .Angles has more comprise a roster of 39 possible
Roush. Roush, as a sophomore players, 37, on this seasoo's roster candidates currently baltllng for
rushed nearly 1,100 yards and aJ\d experience on the line to open starting posltfDns ·In .the White
gained 40 last week to lead SHS:
the holes for the nasby Hurt.
Falcon season opener September
5th at Kyger Creek.
Returning lettermen back for
to
another cafl1lalgn Include senior
tackle Rodney Dayo; senior lineHUNTINGTON, W.Va. !UP!)- said Wednesday.
backer Terry ·Hawkins; senior
A player expected by Marshall
halfback J.T. Lloyd; senior end Bill
Yate; said Snyder wmt to two Marshall; senior tackle .Dale My·
University foothall coaches tn play
lour-year shools before transfer· . ers; . senior ·litw:d ~olm ·Roaic)l;
a key role on special teams has been
ring tn the junior ooUege. ,The senior guard Dale Smith; senior .
declared Ineligible for this season, a
NCAA Investigated Snyder's statllll .tuDoock Eddie 1 Starcher; , senior
· school official says.
In the spring and detennlned him · center Troy Tucker;. SE!IIor llneMark Snyder, a junior from
Ironton, Ohio, did not have enough eUgtble then looked fUrther and backer Matt VanMe'ter; junior:
credits to play this year after found he could not play this season, halfback Robbie Grimm; junior
transferrtng from a junior college Yate; said. .
tackle·Jay~; tllld sophomore
"Snyder's a pretty good player;'' end Olrts Jewell.
In Oklahoma, Marshall sports
Of the returnees only four
Information director Mac Yates Yates said. He said Marshall coach
George Chaulilp Intended to use offensive and flye defensive star·
Snyder on kickoff returns and to ters are back from 'last ymrs 7·3
The Daily Sentinel
hold on extra point attempts.
squad which for the second oonsec·
Snyder was listed as a hackup utlve year had their playoff hopes
( ~- "" 14 $-!J6j})
strong safety on thedepthchartand disintegrate · In the final three
,\ 01\l.o~ l o n or MuUimedla, lm·.
wUl be replaced there ~ senior rulings of the 1985 campaign. ·
Pulllt shNI f'\'N Y ufl('rnoon . Mond;1y
Furess Whittington of Stamford, Returning offensive stariers In·
lhrnur:h Fr ida y. 111 Cour t SL. PoConn.
elude Rodney Dayo, Dale Smith,
m('rO\ , Oh io, b y lh&lt;&gt; Ohio Vallf'y Pub·
l!.~hln·~ t'11mp un.v 'MultlmN.I la, ln r.,
Troy Tucker and Eddie Starcher
PnmNrw. Ohio 45769 . Ph . 992·21~ . S&lt;'·
while Dayo, Smith, Tucker,
Nmlt d ;i ~" p~lll~£' pald at Pomcr0y,
Golf
winners
named
Starcher and BDI MarShall are
Ohio
back on defense.
Mt•mbrr : United Press lniE&gt;rnatlon~l.
Winners of Ladles Day 1\lesday
Leading candidates for starting
lnl a nd Dat i)' Prt"Ss Association ar(&lt;f lh~
following 18 holes of golf were, low offensive positions .In the · White
Ohi o Nt•\ll spn pPr Assot'latlon. NAtional
Advrr ! l~ t .l JI Rt•prt&gt;S£"nta.tlve, Branham·
gross, Norma Custer, low net, Falcons season opener lii~Iude
j\j('Y.'!iJlllp('f Sa le~ , 73.1 Third Avt-nut&gt;,
Ellzabetl) Lohse, chlp-ln·hole, Eli· smlor Troy Tucker (5-11, 2:1i ~ at
N&lt;&gt;W York. Nrw York 10017.
zabeth Lohse and Nancy Reed.
center; seniors Dale~mlth (5-6185)

Snyder ineligible

front four averages 190 to Pt .
Pleasant 's smaDer 179 .
Klckolf for the ron -league 'eason
opener Is 7:30 p.m.
MEIGS...J'T. PLEASAArr

•'

�'

,.--~····· ··

·

.

~.-

..

~

...

Thu'rsday, August 28, 1986
Thursday. August 28. 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

·Medicare ·. .,
a, toU HORVATH

FleM ~e
· · A ~a~mll!lf
colwnns ago, we
alnlt bow the hospital
,lnsurance&lt;cl Medicare, called Part
.A. had chiiiiJ!!d regarding payr;.,:;J~nen.ts ilr l¥llpltaJ com.
Since October of 1983, the payhave been basEd Cll specific
related categories called
- the hoSpital receives a
i;; cl!rtam armunt !or specific treat·
' ,...,"" 111\!Dis according to the Medicare
patient's dlagijOSis. The payment
, . system was lntenred to rontrol
·, ~ Ntng costs and slandardlze pay.
.. · ments across the country .
·::'
We have beard some concerns

or

1

1At,·IVC

that people could be released from
the hospital too soon or when the
"DRG's have hln out" Is this a
matter of faot? Are (lEOple indeed
being released " quicker and
sicker" as a matter of policy? The
overall answer is "110-" Hospitals
are committed to providing you ail
tbe necessary ca re for your condl·
tton and only your physician can
retermlne when you should be
released.
There are safeguards, also, that
protect your rlghts,lf you !eel yoo
are being discharged before you
should. The hospital w111 give you
rotlce two days before the date
Informing you that you will be

es.· how they rci,lat~ to ospita/ization

-leased. and that Medicare pay;;;ents will oo longer cover Y!llr
stay. If you disagr!'e, tbe first thiiUI
to do Is. spe~ to your doctor. Your
doctor knows your oonditi;)n and
treatment needs. Also ask
ttons a! the IJJspital's patient
representative.
Be sure-that you do get a written
ootlce. That notice wW detall

"'es·

appeal rights. Yes, you do have the
right to appeal. the release and
ron-coverage cleclston but you must
do it lrnmedialely. The hOspital's
rotlce . will RiVe the address and
telephone number or the Peer
Review Orgarlization that wlll

revle':l' you~:.
The ]'l!er
(PRO) Is

at

conttacted by the goverrunent to
evaluate hospital performance and
to rule on such cases. A decision on
your appeal will be made within
three working days. Losing the
appeal means you wW be responsl·
ble for the costs of yrur hospital
stay beginning with the date
specified.on the rotlce.
The Important thing to re-

lll{&gt;mber is to a~k qut."Stion!- .tnll

discuss you reaSf with younlotl&lt;•r.
U you'd ltkr mor~ in!&lt;WllUlo&gt;n
about DRG's jusl g 1w us" c·JII .11
002-6622 and we'll s«~&lt;l "'u o
pamphlet called "Prospt&lt;! 11·v Po.1
ments for Hospitals UJ1(t " :\lh'tli
care." It '~ Ira' and w ill ~~'': 1 0\· "
gocd understandin g ot II• f 'o &lt;1 ,\
reimbursement program

''•

, Calendar/ happenings

j' = =====::::::::::::=~===

~

·

THUIISDAY

;, PAGEVILLE -Scipio Township
' · ; Trustees will meet 7 p.m. Thursday
·, at Pagevllie.
'
; MIDDlEPORT - There wlll be
~- a revival at Middleport Independ; ent Holiness Chu~h through Aug.
~- 31 with Rev. Wayne States. Servt·:, ces at 7: ll p.m. nightly. Special
~ singing to be featured. Everyone
'; welrome.

REBATE

dinners will be $4. ChUdren's
dinners will be $2.

ON ALL OLDSMOBILE$
IN STOCK•••

Flea marlrel
RACINE -Flea market, Sept. 6,
sponsored by the Racine Merchant's Association, w1l1 set up
between 9a.m.and5p.m. Yard sale
andcraftitemswillbe!eaturedand
anyone wishing to set up a table
should contact 949-2104 or 949-21m
for rrore information.

INCLUPING TRUCKS

..

'

FRIDAY
~G BO'ITOM- There will be
. .. aaquare dance at the Long Botmm:
"'.. Qmmunlty Building, Frtday, be·
.ginning at 8 p.m.
. ,

SATURDAY

~

BAHSAN - The Ladles Auxlllt lary ~ the Bashan Fire Depait. lt ment will sponsor an ice cream
s6cial on Saturday, August llat the
· ~·11re station beginning at 5: ll p.m.
The menu Includes ice cream, cake,
. ·pte, sandwiches, pop and coffee.
"t Entertainment will also be

·· i

Revival

HYSELL RUN - Hysell Run
Holiness Church, off Ohio 124 on
County Rd. 15, will be In 1'1!VIval
Wednesday, Sept. 3, through Sept.
7. Services will begin nightly at 7: ~
p.m. with Rev. George WUUam
trom Point JWck as speaker.
Special slngl!rs will be featured
nightly and Pastor Mike Thompson
welcomes the public,

$
REBATE

Jl COBB

lnununlzation

POMEORY - There wUI not be
an Immunization clinic on September 9, as previously scheduled
Norma Torres, nursing supervisor
of the Meigs County Heatlh Department anrounced .

CHEVROLET-OLDSMOBILE-CADILLAC
308 L MAIN RREET
POMEROY, OHIO

GERRY MONIG~
UPI Sporis Writer
F1naJJy a team has riseri bov
in theArnertcanr.! :
East, and the BostonRedSox's~
looks nlol\! precarious
ever.
The Toronto Blue Jays registered
their fourth straight victory with a
double-header sweep a! the Indians
at Cleveland Wednesday night, the
Qlnth victory In their last 12 games.
The sweep pulled them within five
games o! tbe Red Sox, who lost at
· Texas. _The Rangers, meanwhile,
moved within 3\!, games of the
· Western Division lead! Cal"
·
•
ng
uor. :n~. Angels, who were Idle.
• ... U we keep working together,
· we'll make a run at this division,"
Blue ~ays Manager JlrnY Wllllarns
said. We have all the tools, and we
must have 00 excuses."
Tony Fernandez laced a one-out
double that' scored Garth Iorg with
the winning run In the eighth Inning
to give the Blue Jays a &amp;-3 victory In
the nightcap. In the opener, Ernie
Whitt led ~ tbe 12th Inning with his
:' 12th ~me 111n ot the year to ll!t
To~ro to a 3-2 vtctorj:
U
.
tan

.

. . : ~.
.
,
WT RVI'HERFORD, N.J.
· · (UP!) - ,6Jabama opened the
college football season Wednesday

,.

S, UM&amp;ed PftM

!lairw Cty snap a five-game
Chicago starter

. . *-k.

f'llloll !!lnrllsllfr, 8-lll, gave up five
•,tlliDootflve anddldnotwalk
• lllitter In his fourth complete
pint.

lllu1nen 4, Orioles I
AtSeattle, MikeTrujlllo. l-Oslnce

r:r:=====::::::;::;::::::;:::::::::::==::=::::~

iWe'reHere
To Help
• Prescriptions filled.
• Over-the-counter druiS
• Hea.lth and be~uty aidS
• Cosmetics and pertumes ·
• Sickroom; surgical needs

PharmaciSts Who ·

10 WEEK FAU SESSION BEGINS
SEPTEMBER 8
CARLETON SCHOOL, Syracuse

Care About You

VILLAGE
PHARMACY

JOY KING-Imtructor
I0 W£EK SESSION (20 Classes) 142
MON. &amp; WED. 4:30-5:30 al'li 6:30-7:30: TUES. &amp; IHUIS. 5:45-6,45

tragedy to stalk Alabama. Running
back George Scruggs died In an car
accident in ApriL

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~p!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~-----------------iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

FROM THE BOYS WHO CUT THE BEST
MEATS IN THE ENTIRE AREA! ! !

ln&amp;ernat..,_.

""'

C'lt&gt;veland

10

MUw;~ uki.&gt;r

63 61

:10

Calllumla

70 :56 !d6 bi 60 ~ 3.,

Toronto
N('W York

DE'tro!t
Bal tlmow

Te~~&gt;as

Kansas cuy

THIS

WLI"d. GB
-

74 1.1 .".oS.'l
69 58 .'J.l'l
bi ~ Sf.!
til 00 .~
64 m 516
IW 63 .~

lblton

58

!I(H

m

~

6\-)

6'h

s-n

W·E. EK·END
0 LY!

.4.~7 1 2~

!16 i'O .444 14
56 71 .441 14'1j
o.tcll.jl:o
54 n 4J2 tsn
Minnesota
!'J4 Tl .429 16
W~'" Rftl••
Toronlo .1. Clf'liela nd 2. Is!. 12 lnnin~t~
Toronto 6. 0E'Iiela l\d 3, 2nd

OaJI:lanc!
~ettJco

T('Xas 4, Boston l
l ll k'AAQ J, Kan&amp;as O ty 1
Miln.'IOla 7, MUwaukl'e 5
!Wattle 4, Baltirnorfo 1
'l'lw.nld~Y 'H Gamelj

MI IIN'50ta lmYI!Yen 0.101 a t Mllwa u·
kl'E' 1Boliio 0.21, 1: fi p.m.
Balllrmn' 1nanagan 7-8 and McGI'£1lOI"
B- 111 111 Oak land I YW ~ ]0-8 llld
Kruegt&gt;r tO.)l. 7:M p.m.
Toronto tf'l&amp;lcy l.l-71 111 Cleveland
&lt;Sc hrom U-!it.?li p.m.
1\&gt;,.;as tGuzman 9- n' at O.!C'a~
tCarltool -:lL Mp.m .

,,

New Yor k 1RaunUS5f'fl IJ-4t at
tMorgan 9-lJl. ID:!i p.m.

Thursday, Friday, Saturday &amp; Sunday
LOCUST &amp; PEARL STREETS, MIDDLEPORT, OHIO - PH. 992·3471

~a n ll'

OOroll t K I ~ !J.JI at cautornla tSunon

11·9\, 10:35 pm .
Frld.y'!! Glillllell
MlnN'!Dta at Toronto, nl([ht
(lpyl'l and at Bailon. D¢1 t
Tt'Xu at Chlraj!O. nb;:ht
MUwa ukl&gt;f at Kansas CUy-. niJ(ht

Batttmo"' at Oakland, mght

"' cream.

Nl'W York at ~a n le, nlji(ht

-•'.

Dttrolt i t Ca Dfornla. night .

CHESHIRE - The descendants
Zo! James Claudlous Hoffman and
·.; Cicero Finney will hOld an annual
· '" reunion on Sunday at the Gavin
;· • ~ Plant, recreation area In Cheshire.
,! A covered dish dinner will be
,., served at noon. Signs will be jXlsted
· In Cheslire. All family members

N.tTPNAL IEA.GIJE

Eul

If)

m

PhlladrlphW.
St. Lr.uls
Manlreal

1l ~ $ ffi 62 .512 7
lfi 62 .512 7
61 tJi .8 11
59 67 .&amp; l:lY,
~ fi9

.~ I

XI ~

OF-THIS
AR-EA'S
FINEST
MEAT!

13 \1,

San Francllw 3. Montreal Z
PhUadclphia 2. Los An.~~ete-.• 1
Cll'll.'lnnat1 9, Pl1 llibur!lh 5

St. Louts 2.. Ailantal
Houston 7, Chrago I
Nl'W York G. San Dk'!lO 5. U lnninlt!l
~'&amp;G UM!!

I'Wl Gllmes Sctv;od.lled

i':···

Fridaf'll Game~~

San Dlr-aO Ai Montreal nlghl

Los ~lt5 at Nl!'\ll Yor k , nlltht
San rranc!Jc.'(l 81 Philadl'tphli. ri atn
C!nclnna ti at St. Louis. ntght
Chic~ at Atlanta, night

:J':

Plttslairah at H01.1ston. night

·-

Davis
...
Continued from page

,,.. ...,
HARRISONVILLE

To Our Own Meigs

7

PhU Gamer went 4-for-5 against
Chlcago.Ryan, a 19-year veteran,
· increased his record to 9-8 In
becoming only, the :lith pitcher In
major-league hJsW Ill r~rd :51
victories.
·
·Glanta s, Expos 2
At San Franclsro, rookie Rob
Thompson drove In the \Ying run
and thelt licored the 'Wlniilllg nih
a wild pltch,tn the !llgl1th jnnlng tD
defeat · MontrelitR()9kle l{eiiY
Downs, 1-4, went elgllt lnnl!tP to
notch his l!lrst maJor·league vic·
tory. ¥JdyMcGat!lgan,8-5;was the

Kings &amp;100's
Regular and Menthol

loser.

4-H

CLUBS

•BEEF
•LAMB

.--..,--r-61 1 ' .

. ............. n.Ao'

At Los AnJ!Ies, Von Hayes
singled in Jed Stone from second
brilll! with the tie- breaking run In

Ml(&lt; suggested pricmg basedon luH·plite bronds.

W!~~dd:h::d~:~~

,,

7i

~IU'• Rell..l

MONDAY
. • ,. SYRACUSE - Hymn sing Mon~ at the ball park in Syracuse
:;.,, ·. -~ ·bi!IIIJIIng at 4 p.m. sponsored by
Syi-Kuse Volunteer Fire Depart ·: ' ml!ftt. Maddie May will be making
· ' · .an appearance. Persons to bring
lawn ch8lrs.

the MolltjpmerY COunty Fair In
Gaithersi:Aii'J, Md.
Can1e, Cathy and Donna spent
,;· • · ' • five weeks with their grandparents
" and their uncle Ronnie.
:
Also visiting with the Wood
; : tamlly for a week were grandson,
• • • Jelfery and Michael Br1ckles ct
?~. (jenna!lloWD, ~ - Other visitors
'·~ ;·· · . were Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wood
~'I· ·· •and Mr. and Mrs. Steve Brtckies.
.. ~·~· .

.e

Hwston

U. Anog les
A~la..,.- •
. San OieJ;:o

, day. t;&gt;rmchlng by Jim Lusher.
. Dinner at noon. Everyone
· welcome.

and Mrs. Steve Brlckles, Jeffery
and . Michael; Gennantown, Md .
' WhltiP In Maryland they attended

22~

Ptnshl$

ctnclnna t!

Wood.

so·· E

20
22

:st

San F ranclsto

POPLAR RIDGE - Homecom-

u

~73 . 03 1

Cl'lltago

.. I lng at Poplar Ridge Church Sun-

,.
W L Ptt. GB
.fit!
62 .512
KJ tit .8
61 6l .f!!

NEw York

_J ~come .

'

being acquired from Bo&amp;ton, and
Mark HulsrnaJIIl romblned 011 a
seven-hitter qalrl&amp;t BaltimOre.
Ken Phelps' two-11111 l'llmer hlib·
ligh ted a four-run first tnnblg that
paced the Mar!Ders. Hulsmaiin
worked the final lour Innings for his
fi lth save. Starter Mike Bodflcker,
14-ll, struck rut 10.
•

lllnbrg, to help tile White Sox beat

AMF.Jl.lfAN lEAGUE

•

),~-~·*'~
...

home runs by Larry Parrish and
Toby Harrah paced tilt Rln~~~trs
behind the combined ~ Jllldl·
lng a! Ed Correa, 8-11, and Mti
Wllllams, who recorded 1tla llllrd
save In a week. Bnice Hllnl, 11- 7,
lasted six Innings.
Twlu 7, Bn·,oaal
At Milwaukl!e, Klrt7y Pack.ett
broke out of a 1-!or-21 Unp try
going 4-for-5 with three lUll,
leading Minnesota. Neal Heaton,
5-12, picked up his second victory 1n
eight decisions as a Twin. George
Frazier got his third save.
While Sox 3, Royllill 1
At Chicago, rookie Ron Karlllvice hithisflrstmajor-league hO.fte
run, a three-run shot In the seco1111

Majors

; REEDSVILEE - Chicken bar..; beque Saturday sponsored by Ollve
)J Towrishlp Volunteer Fire Depart·
., ment, ReedsvWe. Dinner will be $1
:, and will Include beverage and
; ;dessert. Blue Knob Express band
'(_ will entertain !rom 7 p.m. to 10 p.m.
!:Sandwiches will be served throughJ ou t the day and games will be
~ played. A horseshoe pitch will be
i" held at noon with cash prizes 1D be
~ awarded. Registration Is at 11 a.m.
..,
· SUNDAY
• RACINE - Racine Fire Dept. Is
: sjXlnsorlng a chicken barbeque this
: Sunday with serving starting at 11
• a.m. Dinners $3.50 each. Half
: chickens $2.75. The ladles auxiliary
":,, will be serving homemade ice

· Jean and Norman Wood have
re!UJ'III!d lllme following a visit
wtth !her son and daughter-In-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wood, Pease
A.F.B. New Hampshire.
RA!tllrnlng home with Mr. and
Mrs. Wood were their grandchlldren,Can1e. Catby and Donna

P&amp;fl 5

Scoreboard

'

'

~ will be held Aug. ll at the Athens
' County fairgrounds. Basket dinner
1 at ooon. Bring table service,
~ beverages and lawn chairs.

- Scipio
Volunteer Fire Dept. Is
a Captain D's fish
at
In Harrisonon Sunday, Sept. 7. Serving will
at Jl a.m. and continue
~-~·ik~th 4 p.m . Price for adult

f$t!lilf

• Vita.minB and die~ &amp;1118.

'

night
State.with a 1&amp;-10 victory over Ohio
Today the players go to a funeraL
"We dedicated this game to
Wlllle Ryles and tomorrow (Thursday) we'll go attend his funeral,"
Alabama running back Gene Jelks
said . "We're glad we were able to
win this game for him ."
Ryles, a defensive lineman, died
, this week alter suffering a blood
• clot pn his bram during a practice
• last week. It was rot the only

'

:1

·Innings in relief or starter Jimmy
Key In the opener. Eichhorn set a
club record with the 11 vlctilrles,
brooking the mark of 10 established
by Jerry Garvin In 1977.
In the nightcap, John Cerutti, 8-3,
allowed nine hits, struck out four
and walked !Ml CNer 71·31nnings to
get the vi~tory . Cleveland had the
tying run on second with one rut In
the eighth, bUt Henke got pinch
hitter Mel Hall to ground Into a
double play.
In other games, Minnesota
downed Milwaukee 7-5, Chicago
bounced Kansas a cy 3-1, and
Seattle dumped Baltimore 41.
RanJitlrs 4, Red Sox I
At Arllngion, Texas, sixth· Inning

Ti~e ;playe~ attend funerru today · .

-""
.;!. ATHENS - The Guthrie reunion

-~

· "Th ..._
e .,.,st thing about · our
ballclub is that everybody eontrtbutes," Wl111ams said. "The players
are In synchronization, stride for
strtde as we go down the stretch.
Reliever Tom Henke added
double share e·-••n
In both
games
' -·~oa saves
"I ~ clocked t 94 mile
hour) .. said Herm: who(tnc.!=
his se~ total to 19'and his Toronto
career total 1D 32 breaking J
McLaughlin's !o~er club reco~
"I mix up a split-fingered fastball
with
my regular heat and It keeps
batters off stride. ,
"We have a better bullpen that
Boston's and we're proving 11 .,
The Blue Jays made a bellev'er a:
Cleveland Manager Pat Corrales
·
"We're what Toronto was two
years ago," Corrales said. "We've
got a core of good players, bUt
they've got the bench they need ,
They've got the bUDpen, plus power
and speed. I think they're a better
ballclub than the Red Sox."
!W'&gt;kie rlglit:hanret Eichhorn,
lH, allowed itlJy one hit over 4 2-3

medlocrlty

· -( ,provided.

.

The Deily

4 ;

l'ltie Jays sweep Tribe, move with~n 5 1/l14ames of Boston

ALL CHEVROlET$

\·

. · . :;- .Rl!l'LAND -Rutland Township
. pstees will meet In regular
··; lfllealoil Thursday, 6:30p.m., at the
· e..Rutlalllt fire station.

10

Pome,roy Middleport, Ohio

,'

who had lefl the game altj!r etii'Iit·•
lnntnp, Improved to make
·
record 7-3. Stl!\le Bedrosian ptched
!he, 10~,
save. . ·

'
Kings 10 mg'"t ar:' 0.8 mg nicotine IOO's 12 mg "tar:' 0.9mg nicotine ev. percigarene by FTC method.

..

'

'

= -lid
'

.

•'

1

l\lli-~:\~ta: 'lW:l

~

&amp;-9,
tbe
21-3
~ b earn~ vk'iory, · "'

.

'

'

.

cOat0f4 DOWN AND TAStE;"THE ·DIFFERiNcE

l

•

At'St\ ~ RtCkMahllii'walked .

'

'·

:19th
. t,Bnv•• '·

TenY··~ . wltb. !be 'baaES
loadel1 in tli! Mth !Didl!i tD tlroe
lll!lle ;VIriCII ~An wlt,b·l the

SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Cigarette
Smoke Contains Carbon Monoxide .

'

•

.

.

•

' {'

·~

'~ ...~

•PORK

ihe
pii)!JI inrtli\i IQ 1t;::r::~
to . victory. ROOkie :a

'

..

.'

I

"I •

,

I

1

.,

~

'

'

.

I

T;ll;f WEEKE,.,D.. . .

..

~

.

.

HURRY.

'

,:,
I

•

.. . ;...._...... olio..!. -

' ·'·.

�Ohio

The· Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

.·. Shula's fourth-quarter TD
toss·sinks -Buckeyes, 16-10

lhul"'day. A~_ 28. 19.86
... .
. Page-6 -:
.

'

-

cByre~~
Get;~-~t~s,0~~
..
5!o~h~~~!~How old did you say
tun

Katie's korner

In

By l(ATIE CROW

larnlly Terry's Wire, Sheny fell and
fractured her knee. And before ever
seeing a d:lctor she hlbbled around,
even went to a festival. Game
young lady. But all In all they all
ha:l an enjoyable visit.

Sentinel Cotr~t

John Risk, 14 year old grandson
d. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Rapp,
SR 681, Shade, recently lourd a
turtle that Is believed to be up In
years.
According to the grandmother
carved on the turtle's shell are the
Initials S. M. and a date. The date,
which Is very dlf!lcult to decipher, Is
either l8ll or 1900.
Regardless, Ire turtle has tra·
veled many mnes as the shell Is
battered and worn and sUck as can
be.
Risk resides with his grandpar·
ents on the large iarm where the
turtle was located. The farm home
In which they reside Is over 100
years old.
The Rapps purchased the farm
!rom Albert Taylor.
Wouldn't It re Interesting to know
who S.M. Is or was. Only the turtle
knows.

.,

The Intent of these sales Is to llllve
older merchandise, 90 sale ltmiS
School 1s now or wBI soon re In wBI re fad and tashlon merchan·
session and many tamllles wnt re dlse, dlsconUnued styles, and clo·
shopping lor back to school clothes. · thing Dnes that didn't sell at the
Walk Into almost any clothing height d the season duetotherotd
slllp and cllanoes ate yru'll !lnd the gannent, color, fabric, or
IrregUlarity of fit.
SOmethingonsaleforbacktoscllool

eou:.!~~

"SIIgbtly·Damaged" generally lndl· ·No Return. No Refunds,
. ·:
cate a majortlaw and tlrow the
Final, tor example. It a store offefu
responsibility lor detBmlnlng gar· a relum or refurd &lt;¥lon, re sure
ment condition m the buyer.
keepaDsalesrecelplsandgarment .
U sale clothing has any of these pice tags.
Ia rices
labels, check Items very carefully
Know origin~ ~r ~ 1 ~ [price ·
before buying. Remember- there of sale ltems_to ~~ e d II the .
may be rmre than one flaw, so has truly been
u alan t ..... ·
examine the entire garment or gannent Is a good v ue a u"'
ensemble to locate any or all dfered price. Coolpare similar
defects. Some defects _ a ripped Items on qu!lltty, price and style.
hemormlaslngbelt, lorexample- Check labellnlormatlon lor II~
d
lrements
can be easily solved; others, such content an care requ
·. ·
as~·•-· tearsorfabrlc!laws,may
Shop with a purpose -what
._ .........
lmpossl
. ble ~ llx.
gannent oraccessory(loyo.u rea lly
""Before - purchasing
w
tfl Buyln ~
sale Items, need to complete an, ou t.
!lnd ~·t the ~~re policy on returns sometling JollU wont wear or don t
~
•w
and refunds. Many stores display need Is nevi!!' a bsrgaln.

season. Sales have tecome a
In a letter to the editor !rom
Some clothing sales focus m
Meigs County 81111 other surrourd· constant promotion measure lor
clothing
retailers,
so
·
ronsumers
slightly
'defective merdlandlse, so
lng aroo bikers In which they need "sales sense." This week "In key words
are clues 1D the &lt;J!allty
exP"essed thanks to local bust·
.
"Irregulars"
IndicatEll clo·
sal
offered
In
ks at us g es
nesses and Individuals three names The Spotllght"loo
"" sllopplng·
thing !.terns with Imperfections In
sense w,~n
were omitted.
· ·In many promo'"'nal
sales
. t oc size- these
'"'
' rolor, weave or knl
They were Powells, Big Bend
stock lor a defects nlay !lOt affect tl!e service
Foodland and Pleasers Restaurant. storll!l dler regular
-'uc
or use of the merchandise. Sm~elimited time a t a -derate
.. ~
'"' ·
perhaps Zi to ll percent. Slllp times the Irregularities are nor
Ruth Powers, librarian at Pome· tton,
these sales early to get the rest visibly noticeable.
roy and Middleport, received a selection of sizes, styles and colors.
"Seconds" are garments with
letter from Harold L. Render of
In clearance or md-d season some fault, mend, tear, runoccolor
Peoria, IU., willis trying to locate
sales, stores offer regular mere han· loss and usually the defects are
Harold Fessel. •
dlse at a considerable reducti:m, noticeable. The location of the Oaw
Render writes that (Render) was oftro 35to 50 percent. But styles and may determine garment accepla·
In the U.S. Arno.y In Europe In 1944
and Fessel was In the 8lth Dlvison,
Co. B, 318 Regiment. Fessel's
address In 1944 was Rt. 1,
..
Middleport.
ALL
THE
TRIMMINGS
Recent visitor of Mr. and Mrs.
Render stated that Fessel would
The family of Mary Craig and the Fred Thompson, Erlcka and Mon·
Chester Knight, Pomeroy, was be approximately 65 years d. age by late Sylvester Craig met on Aug. 9 lea Thompson, Columbus, Ohio;
This time, II" for more than a plain
Knight's sister, Mrs. Helen WIU of now.
Harvey, Gayle, and Allen Brown,
for its first lamUy reunion at Krodel
pump. Get one with aU the
U anyone has any Information Park, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Lexington, Mass.
Gilbert Sr. and Charlotte Craig,
trl mmlngw: ..,a I leather uppers, nice
Mrs. WIU also visited her sister you can contact Powers at either ri
A dinner was served with GUbert Patty. Gretchln, Gilbert Craig Ill,
'n' easy mid heelo, delleilte detailing
and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Pete the libraries or write to Render at Craig Sr. asking the blessing.
Bolily Mabry, Gallipolis;
2ll E. Arcadia Ave., Peorta, lll.
Elberfled, Chester.
Sherry,
Nicole,
Scolilan,
EUenna
- all In an aboolute olew of tmaohing
Duarst Thompson Sr. presided
Saturday they visited the 61003Thompson,
Sheila
and
Frederick
over the business meeting. Officers
hues. Go ahead I Chooee Wbtter
Knight's son, Terry and wile and 2403.
elected lor the coming year are Jones II. Jason WUliams, Jamison
While, Navy or Blaek leather uppero.
son, Steve of Caledonia.
President Duarst Thompson Sr.; Rucker, Nettle Baxton, Columbus;
Jne..,dibly afrordable. 13595 ·
While visiting with Terry and And so It goes.
VIce President Charlotte Craig; Edgar Jr. and Tara Baxton,
Secretary Sherry Thompson ; Sommer and Jasnlne, Forrest City,
Treasurer Fred Thompson and Iowa; Marvin and Connie Craig;
Shasta Gulther, Donald Craig.
Chaplain Gilbert Craig Sr .
The oldest member present was Mary and Lawrence Garnes,
Mrs. Mary Craig, and the youngest Pomeroy; Jeny and Sherdlna
O.Vsley and Dwane Smith, Colum·
member was Jamtson Ricker.
bus;
Claude and Laurene ThompMember traveling the longest
son,
Columbus; Betty and J.T.
with heat exhaustion as one suffer· distance was Elfrem Thompson
By EDWARD SCHRECK. D.O.
Spmoer, Gallipolis;
lng from cramps. However, the
from San Diego, Calif.
Assistant Professor
Botoy and Dorothy Goroon,
heat
exhaustion
victim
should
also
This
ftrst
reunion
was
planned
by
of Family Medicine
Gallipolis;
Minnie Doss, Gallipolis;
be
seen
by
a
doctor
as
soon
as
Charlotte
Craig,
Gayle
Brown
and
Ohio Unl\lers'ty College
Misty
Pleasant,
South Point;
Laurena Thompson.
possible.
of Osteopaihlc Medicine
Rhonda
·
and
Jamte
Hogan, Rio
Those attrodlng were Mary
Heat stroke Is the most serious
Question: I've been hearing a lot
Grande.
about people sullerlng problems heat-related Injury andean quickly Craig, Pt Pleasant; Heather Craig,
from the extreme heat some parts p:-ogress to unconsclo'usness and Hazel Craig, Parkersbufl?:, W.Va;
of tre country are having. What death. Thebody'ssweaUngmecha·
bappens when a person gets nlsm stops, skin becomes lilt and
dry and body temperature climbs
•
011erheated?
Answer: Skin acts as the body's to 105-106 degreeS.
It Is Imperative to lower the
mdlator. SweaUng and increased
elevated
temperature by lnunersThe Rose Garden Club of
blood flow decrease llldy tempera·
,,
lng
the
person
In
cold
water
or
by
Tuppers
Planlns recently toured
ture, but when a person loses large
I!
arrou nts of fiuld through sweat he pouring water over him or her. the Glass House Works Botanical
U1ie
or she may experience heal cramps Then take the victim to the nearest . Garden at Stewart Ohio.
Following the tour memrers and
41P.M.-9 P.M.
or heat exhaustion. Sometimes the dlnlc or oospltal for emergency
went
to
Parkersburg
for
trealment.
guests
temperature regulatlng center of
CALL IN ORDERS
Quesllon: How can heal Inju ries dinner. F'ollowlng dinner a brief
i
the body - tte brain - can shut
ll"evented?
meeting
was
held.
he
843-sno
·
down, overwhelmed by the heat
MIDDLEPORT
·Answer: If you become nau·
The next meeting will be held on
which has built up. When this
UNDER
NEW
MANAGEMENT
happens, heat stroke, the most seated, dizzy or develop cramps Septemrer 17 at the home of Mrs.
serious heat-n&gt;lated Injury, occurs. from a hot environment, ·go some· ~F~red~Goe~~be:!:I.~------L========--_.1-------------------:-:----:----=­
Question: How should these where Ill rest and cool off. Dress
appropriately for work or exercise
problems be treated?
Answer: Heat-Induced cramps and wear clothing which allows the
are tiP mildest heat-related Injury. sweat Ill evaporate, such as linens,
Muscle cramps In the legs and ronon and silk.
During hot weather, limit strenuabdomen result when too much
rus
activity to the cooler times of
sodium is bst through sweat.
tre
day - early morning, late
A person experiencing cramps
afternoon
and evening.!! yoo work
srould he moved to a cool place.
In
a
warm
place, such as a bakery,
Loosen his or her clothing, and give
the victim a quart of cool salt water. take 10 minutes each hour to drink
In no case should the quantlty of some water and rest.
table salt In the water exceed one
teaspoon.
Another problem which can
occur alter teat cramps is heat
exhaustion . Body temperature can
reach 101-102 degrees if there has
been an even greater fluid loss than
that associated with heat cramps.
Symptoms Include headache, ex·
cessive swedtlng, weakness, dlzzl·
ness, muscle cramps and clammy
skin.
1986 FORD
Give the same first aid to a person

,..:::.::==:..:.=:.::.=.:::...;..:..:._:__-'-----------

Craig reunion held

WINNING TOUCIIDOWN

Alben Bell of
Alabama barely holda onto a pa8ll by QB Mike Shula
to 1100re wbal proved to be the wmlnf toucbdo\\11 or

Wednesday night's Klclroll Clllll81c ~ East Ruthel'
ford, N. J. The Tide edged Ohio Stale, 16-10. (UPI)

Both teams had first
game jitters in Classic

•

Family medicine

By LOU RABlrO

PORTLAND
DAIRY BAR

Now Selling...Piua

WE FILL PRESCRIPTIONS AND DO THE
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OHIO WELFARE
COMPENSATION
GENERAL RELI~f
UNITED MINE WORKEitS
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PAID
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MEDIMET
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To Those 60 and Over
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SundiY 10:301012:30 tnd 15 to I ~. m. 92 . 2f&amp;&amp;

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only *8,495

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Pavrnents based on telllna pr1ce01 n.oo wUhSl. ~Ca•h Down or'l"ra«W.
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UP TO

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CASH BACK

lly FRED McMANE
UPJ Aaslltant Sports Editor
Even though his last name Is
commonplace In baseball these
days, Eric Davis' talents are being
compared to one c4 the most

Wlllle Mays.
famous
names ever In baseball -

Of the nine players named Davis
on majc·r~eague rosters, none have

~ -­

~
. "i\

~J ',

Browning with the tying run.
Parker also hit his :aith lllmer In the
third.
Elsewhere In the National
League, Houstcll trimmed Chicago
7-1, San Francisco dpped Montreal

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OWNER/ADMINimATOR
MIS. SHIRt! NUGGUD

rurgh 9-5, st. Louts doiM!ed Atlanta
sn usr MAll
2·1 and New Yolk edged San Diego
PO.IOY,
01110 45769
6-5 mlllnntngs.
6U/
..
2·26U
Asb'08 7, Cuba 1
0 1986 PONoeROSA. ""'
AI Houston, Nolan Ryan allowed ~jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;jj
mly one hllln sx Innings to collect 1

'

. ttbead d 0111111."
'
aactnnatl tied the II!Ore In the
ftfth at 56. Pitcller Tom Brdwn!ni
atnafal, Dlk llecond on a lln&amp;le by
l&lt;a1 Daniell and ~VIII tDthlrdCII1 a

For Registration Stop in
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or Call 992-7321

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Meig• County'• Oldell Flo rill

r·

IIIV;eu··lll tfouble by~ )

RE-OPlNINO SOONII
GINGERBREAD HOUSE
PRESCHOOL

trimmed Pitts· ~h~ls~250th~~ma~~lo~r
ConUnued-~leaRU~:e
on ~vlc~to~ry~an~d~
5
1.3:·2~,~~!~~to~p~ped~=4l~s~An~-·

the aD·arourKI skills ot Eric. As
more and more baseball people are
beginning to !lnd out, the Cincinnati
Reds ootflelder has awesome skills
reminiscent ol a young Mays.
The 24-year-old outfielder ot the
Cincinnati Reds, who hit two home
runs Monday night, belted a
game-winning grand slam Wednes·
day night to spark a 9-li victory over
the Pitts burgh Pirates.
"He's (Davis) a tremendous
player will Is copllng Into his own·
this year," said Cincinnati Man·
ager Pete Rose. "He's done a lot of
positive tlllngs. Yoo saw the perfect
side d. Eric Davis IQnlght. He stole ·
a couple bases, and be hit the ooll as
far as any one In the 111egue can." i
Davis has 6l stolen bases and 22
lllrne runs this season and Is .only
the thlnd player In baseball history
to hit as many as :1» homers and
steal 60 bases In a seaaon. Joe
Morgan of the·Reds accOinpltshed ·
the feat In l973 and 1976 and Rickey
Henderson of the New Yolk
YaniaeEs did If last year. ,
DaVIa' atand o~~iam cune df Don
Robinson, 2-J,' In the ninth Inning
alter Robinson had strUck wt Dave
Parker with the bases loaded.
The Reds had loaded the bases 1.11
a single by Ron Oester and walk8 to
plhch , illttet' Max,.'Veuable ~- ., .•
BtdlY Bell,
•'
.
I
,
· ' "' IIJdn't halie ~ ' aood stuff.

~a.

..
Citir*

·

only

ONLY

Wednesday nlgill flit ~Kenova's Don Ro!Dooa
to give the Clnclnnall Reds ·a &amp;-1 comeback victory
over the Ptraie&amp;. (UPI)

Davis hits ninth inning grand
slam to topple Pittsburgh, 9-5

.,t

Phorrnor 1
Ronald Hll'lhlg, II ·

ESCORT

GRAND SIAM WINS 11LT - Eric Davlll hit a
.urn horne nan In the top of the .alb Inning

~;'.aald Ro~: "I la!ewln .
11111111.., I ,dldli't ~~&amp;ve mytldnjr.

SWISHER LOHS E

' Kton•lh Mt:Cullou'jlh. II .P"

NEW. V.W.
GOLF

'.

grand

N.J.

(UP!) - The
Classica
Wednesday
nightKickoff
resembled
college football game played In
August.
"It wasn't pretty," Alabama
Coach Ray Perkins said following
his team's 16-10 victory over Ohio
State In the college football season·
opener played at Giants Stadium.
"I told our players It wasn't a
pretty victory. But woo said It had
to be pretty? ..
The teams combined lor seven
turnovers, with Ire Crimson Tide
cornrnlttlng lour. Each team threw
two Interceptions.
"I tlllught our defense played
well and hard," Buckeyes Coach
Earle Bruce said. "! thought our
offense put our defense In trouble at
times and that's not the way to play
against Alabama lootbsll."
With the victory seeminglY In
hand, Alabama Dnebscker Darryl
Thomas was !lagged lor two pass

htrifa_gt houst
SHOE PLACE

992-2156

EAST RUI'HERFORD,

o-of-7 for 46 yards. including a
J.yard scoring strike to AI Bell. !D
pull tlx&gt; Tide In fronllJ.IO with 9: 33
to play.
· _
"Poor. very poor," Shula said ol·
his performance. "I was dlsap:
pointed with the way I played. We.
have a lot of work to do. We were
fortunate to he In the game. We
madealotdmlstakes.lleltgoodto·
beabletodosomethlnglnthefourth
quarter."
.
S!IU!a was J.for-4 as Alabama
held tiP ball for 6:05 late mthe
fourth quarter before senior van.·
Tiffin kicked his thlnd Deld goal d.
the game, a :18-yarder With 1:02 Ill'.
play.
Ohio State's brightest spot was
the play of stanrout ltnebacke~
Chris Spielman, who woo the'
game's Most Valuable Player
award with 16 tackles, Including 11:
solos, and an Interception. How·
ever, Perkins says that the Buck: ·
eyes will have a season lull tt lrlght
spots.
..
" I still say Ohio State will be
among the top five or six teams In
the country at the end of the year:
That's the biggest team I have ev~
faced as a coach," said Perkins;
who also has coached In the NFL.

Interference penalties deep In
Alabama terrttory with no time left.

UPJ SpoJts Writer

Heat: health problem

Garden club
has meeung

drives IQ Alabama territory two
other times.
On their last {XISsesslon of the
game and trailing 16-10. the Buck·
eyes were able to push deep Into the
Tide's end of the field wllh tbe help
of two had plays tJy linebacker
Derrick Thomas. With ro time
remaining, Thomas lnterfeml with
Crls Carter well slllrt of the end
zone and surrounded by Alabama
defenders, meaning even If Carter
caught the ball he would have been
tackled and time would have
expred.
Instead. back·to-back penalties
gave quarterback Jim Karsatos a
final opportunity from the Tide 18
and his pass to Carter was Cll target
In the end rone, but knocked down
at the last second by Chris Goode
and Britton Cooper.
"! was on the sideline saying just·"
get It 011er with, get It &lt;11er with, get
It over with," Alabama Coach Ray
Perkins said. "That Is all I was
thinklng ."
Neither Karsatos nor Shula
pertormed up to expectations. The
seniOr quarterbacks, both consi·
dered Reisman Trophy candidates
In the preseason, each threw a pair
of Interceptions. Karsalos held the
statistical upper hand, completing
:IIJ. of -31 passes for 193 yards.
Shu Ia was 11-ol-19 for 83 yards,
but he made his throws count In the
fourth quarter. Over the final 20
minutes, the 6- foot-21ef1 ·hander hit

By JOEL SHERMAN
UPJ Sports Writer
EAST RUI'HERFORD. N.J.
(UPI) -No.6 Alabama and No. 9
Ohio . State gave a three· hour
demonstration Wednesday night on
the problems of playing football In
August
At least the Crimson Tide can
return to work on the lulllamentals
with a victory.
Mike Shula jump-started his
game aller three quarters of poor .
play to help Alabama overcome
lour turnovers and defeat Ohio
State 16-lll In the fourth Kickoff
Classic, the opening game of the
ll8th coliegl! football season.
The teams combined lor seven
turnovers, nine penalties for start·
lng too soon and general lack of
crisp play. The Tide and Buckeyes
performed little like teams deserv·
lng conference and national title
notices.
"It's your own mistakes In
football that will kill you,'' Ohio
State Coach Earle Bruce said.
"And It did tonight lor Ohio State."
The Buckeyes reached mld!leld
or better eight times, hut had only a
26-yard touchdown run by Jamie
Holland and a ;r. yard field goal by
Pat O'Morrow to show lor lt.
O'Morrow, a freshman, was slllrt
on Held-goal tries r142 and44 yards,
and another field· goal try had to be
aborted because of a poor snap.
Turnovers stopped Ohio State

�Sentinel

Thursday,

----~I Brie&amp;:--~
I

Hocking Tech to receive 'funds

..

The State Controlling Board has approved the release 11 $34,~ to

Hocking Technical Ulllege for the renovation of the Culinary Arts
Laboratory,-aeeol'dlni-to State Rep. Jol;ynn Boster, D-Oalllpnlls.
According to Bester, thethreeHcspltalltyManagementPrograms
- Cullnary Arts, Travel and Tourlsm, and Hotel/Restaurant
Management - have all d:&gt;ubled in enrollment. The proposed
facility would house all three programs.
Bester said the additional classroom and ot11ce space Is needed to
keep up with Increased enrollment. This facility, Bester added, w111
consist rl. three classrooms, one of which will be able to be oonverted
Into a cooking lab If enrollment continues 10 Increase.

Holzer Clinic closed !t'fonday
'

Holzer Clinic Inc. wlllbeclosedMondayln observancedtheLabor
Day holiday and will reopen at 8 a.m. Tuesday.
The closing affects the main clinic, the Sycamore Branch, the
Jackson Ulunty branch and the Meigs branch.
For those requiring medical care, the Urgent care Center at the
main clinic on U.S. 35 will be q&gt;en from Hp.m. on Saturday, Sunday
and Mond;ly.
·

Middleport curfew in effect
Parents of juveniles that reside In Middleport are reminded by
Mayor Fred Hoffman and Pollee Chief Sld Little that a ruriew Is in
effect within the village.
All youngsters under the age of 18 must be off the streets by 11 p.m.
on weekdays and by midnight on Saturday night.
Due to the numerous complaints In regard to juvenile
dlstrubances, the curfew will be enforced, warns Mayor Hoffmam
and Chief Little.
Parents of juveniles found ln violation of the curfew will be dted
into court they said.

Eight emergency runs reported
Eight emergency runs were made by local units Wednesday, the
Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reported.
At 12:03 a.m. Middleport to South Third for Connie Stelnmltz,
taken to Holzer Medical Center; at12:24a.m. PomeroytoMaplestJr ·
Darlene Hicks, taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital; at 1:16 a.m.
Pomeroy to Village Green for Brandy Fortune, taken to O'Bieness
Hospital.
At 2:00 a.m. Rutland to carpenter Hill Raod for Bernice Jones,
taken to Veterans Mermrtat; at 8:56a.m. Racine to County Road :18
for Margaret Johnson, taken to Veterans Mermrtal and later
transferred to Holzer Medical Center; at 11:40 a.m. Syracuse to
carleton School for Paul Wallace, taken to G.D.C.; at 3:43 p.m.
Racine to station two for Dennis Teaford, taken to Ve!e'ans
Memorial; at 5:12p.m. Racine to Third Street for Brenda Graham,
taken to Veterans Memortal.

Legion Auxiliary picnic tonight
The Racine Amertcan Legion Auxlllary, Unit 002, will hoeld a
picnic this evening at 6 at Racine Park. Persons to bring cr.vn table
service and dues will be collected.

•

Chester firemen slate barbeque
A chicken barbecue will be held Monday, Sept. 1, at the Chester
Fire House beginning at 11:30 a.m. The menu Includes chicken and
rib dinners, pie, cake and Ice cream. A parade will be held In the
afternoon. The events are sponsored by the Chester Volunteer Fire
Department.
·

Racine OES chapter to meet
The regularly stated meeting of Racine Chapter No. 134, Order at
Eastern Star, will be held Monday, Sept. I, at 7:30p.m. honoring a
70.year member. Refreshments will be served .

: · Turner reunion set for Sunday-The decendants of Delbert M. and Ulra E. Hull Turner will hold
their annual reunion at the new shelter house at Lake Snowden, near
Albany, Sunday, Aug. 31. Basket dinner at noon.

.· eigs Local

Dovie B. Cate

brothers .

and t~ slsters .andl.!ioe !lln,James

'

A survivor d. Dovle B. Cale, woo
died Monday, Is a daughter, Mr.
Uoyd (Audrey) McLaughlin of
Homesread, Fla., not a stepdaugh·
ter, as was reported. Services for
Mrs. ca1e were held today.

Cecil Frazier
· Cecil Frazier, 75, 1100 Powell St.,
Middleport, died Wednesday at
Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. ~azler was bomJuly 3,1911,
at Letart, W.Va., the son of the late
Mr. and Mrs. Mose Frazier.
He was a stamping plant employe an.d attended the Rock
Sprtngs United MetiDdlst Cburch.
In addition to his Plirents he was

Appearing Wednesday before
Meigs County Ulmmon Pleas
Judge Charles Knjght, attorney
Donald Ulx, Gallipolis, and Meigs
County Prosecuting Attorney Fred
Crow ill, proposed a plea bargain
agreement In the state's case
against Jimmie Jude, 29, charged
w1thrapeinanlncldentfromJan.5
of this year.
The proposed agreement was not

~~~ ~e:o=e ::sej~::

He reminded republicans that
"when you go to the polls and elect
somebody, you're electing your
future. You're electing somebody
thats going to speak, walk and talk
for you. You want job; In your
county? You want better roads? .
Then you've got 1D have a fighter
representing you. That's what you
have in Garry Hunter."
Hunter, an Athens Ulunty native,
Is ~posing the popular Jolynn
Bester, D-Galllpolls, for the state
representative's seat.
Hunter spoke just brteHy to
explain that he's running for the
office because he has "adesiretobe
a public servant and to better the
Image It Southeastern Ohio."
He noted the need In the 94th
dlstrtct for jobs, economic development and highway construction. He
said the entire area needs kJ m:JVe
forward and fuat MeigS County ln
particular "needs an effective voice
ln the state legislature." Without
naming names, he said the dis·
trtct's current state representative
Is "not getting things done::
In concluding, Hunter said, "I'm
interested ln you and ln !;!'lting
things done. Southeastern Ohio
needs Its fair share and I want to
return fair and adequate representation to Southeastern Ohio and
Meigs County."

the appllcatkm.

·.. -..-vm; proJect In Lebanon
·~. can be clarltled.
'

'

.

I

Islamic terror group warns ·
world against rescue tries
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UP!) -The Marines on the outskirts of Islamic Huntington Beach, calif., Islamic
Islamic Jihad organization today Beirut," the statement said .
Jihad claims to hold The Associated
The statemen! was referring to Press correspondent Terry M!der·
. threatened to kill the American and
French hostages It ls holding ln . the Oct. 23, 1983, sulclcr car-bomb son and Thomas Sutherland, dean
Lebanon . If a military rescue anack on U.S. Marines headquar· of the Amertcan University rl.
. operation Is mounted.
ters on the southern outskirts of Beirut's agriculture school.
· • · In a statement delivered to · Beirut that killed Z.il soldiers. The . Ancr rson, 38, was kidnapped
Western news agency accompan. bombing was claimed by the Free March 16, 19&amp;\, and Sutherland, 54,
· -led by a black-and-white photo- Islamic Revolutionary Movement. was abducted June 9, 1~, both In
" All lhP conspiracies and Moslem west Beirut.
graph of Amertcan hostage I;lav ld
Jacobsen, the pro-Iranian ·group schemes that are being weaved
Islamic Jihad also has claimed
said all efforts to find the wherea- today by the Great Satan (United responsibility for the kidnappng
States) through bcal and lnterna· and kllllng of U.S. Embassy
bouts of the hostages woold fail.
Jacobsen, the adminiStrator of tiona! mediums to discover the political officer William.. Buckley,
the 'American University Hospital whereab:&gt;uts of the hostages held 56, but his body was never foitnd.
ln Beirut, was kidnapped by three by us will fall as they have In the
"We hold the Ignorant Amertcan
gunmen near his office on 1Ma;r 28, past, " the statement said.
gJvernment fully resJXln'llble and
1(\ll5.
"Let It be known by everybody we draw the attention of the
that
we will have n9 mercy .. . and hos(&lt;lges' families that we are not
"We warn whoever Is tempted to
undertake a military or security the punishment Will be hard," the responsible lor the llostages' lives
stupidity to free the hostages that Shiite Moslem fundamentalist after this statemmt," Islamic
Ills fate and that rl. the hostages will group sajd.
Jihad said.
.
In addition to Jacobsen, 54, of
he much worse than the fate. of the
The group also claims to have
abducted ilur Frenchmen, lnclud·
ing Marcel Fontaine, vice ronsul at
the Frmch EmbaSSy, Marrel
carton: chief of protocol ··at the
embassy, Jean-Paul Kaufmann, a
CLEVELAND (UPII - Ohio's . prize, 100 players won $ffi5 each correspondent for the French
Super Lotto jackpot grew to at least . after choosing five of the numbers, weekly magazine L'Evenement du
$7.5 mllllon Wednesday night when Also, 5,(63 players selected four of Jeudi, and Michel Seurat, a reno player correctly picked all slx
searcher at Beirut's Institute of
the numbers to win $51 apiece.
numbers l,n fue weekly drawine.
There were 87,991 tickets sold Middle East Affairs.
The Islamic Jihad produced
llstlng three at the numbers. Those
protographs March 9, 1986, thai tt
The winning numtx&gt;rs were 1, 16, . tickets are wortti $3 each.
21, 25, 27 and ll.
Ticket sales for Wednesday's said showed Seurat had been
Although no player licked the six drawing totaled $4.:~J7.ll6, with a "executed" In revenge fora French
ilJllcy bias roward Iraq over Iran.
· numbers to claim the $5 million top total prize payout of ~.176.
No body was found .

EXAMPLE:

Whirlpool Washer
Cost
+ 5°/o

: Whit
~ol

S3Q700

__1535__,_

I MEN'S

I ~

You Pay Only

$322 35

The Daily Sentinel

.

NOTICE OF
PUBUC HEARING
Tho Meigs Coumy Commisoioners
in1Md 10 opply
to tho
Ohio Oap.,m11'11
of Dovliopmen1 for funding undor tho
Community Developmen-t
Block Grant iCDBGI Small
Chiet Program, • fodorlllly
1\Jndod -ram adrninistby tho 81111. Tho Coumy
anticipatoo to bo eligible lo1
approxima1oly $77,600.00 of
Fiscal Yoor 198&amp;,· CDBG
1\Jnding, providing 1ho Coumy
meets applh::able program
raquiremen11.
OnSapt..-9,
1986,ot7
PM.
tho lint of two
public
hearings wiM bo hold a1 tho
M"'"o Coun~ Courthouoe to
-~
,,
p~idotiocitizanaabouw1~~~c"'o.a"'a'
n~ma n
·••
pri&gt;grom.
.....
r~n·
u
.... 11'1d
tlon of eligible ICiivlirts
. program '*lUiremMta. Tho
2 In Memoriam

$2125
'

leuv
""'"" oa""

Wronglef .Jeot\1

'

2 -- L'
U&amp;t

,_...

-fOKif*lon
lnoll·lnlotm.
I

3 IICIM

IWra;J 8500 Rebate

on 2 Pair Jeans

1

$446 25

1 ""t"' "" ""'C'&lt;I-I-I-

,
&lt;"•, , - - - . ...--" •u

Mlll - ~ llll

I -~
a.. te.,.. ......... ,......__hroo ...ot -.o..oll
......... .-...-..... ......._

..,___
.... ................ ...

__
.........

~

••

~

.

- ··-...........,

,..,...~

.·non~~

menu; demolhion of unufo
struC~UIM; rehlllliii1atlon ol
houling, and neighbol'hood
focilitieo. Tho . ICiiv~irts nv•
be designed 10 primorily bo,
ki
·
·
·
nefit ·w '"'d moderato n co me penons. "akt tn the
·
eli · ·
of
pr:evanteon or
R111lltl0f)
olums and blight or meel an

I

I ,_.,I'OU' ,te~t-1
'

--------Ill

•DDliPOIT

NEW..;... REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
. FREt; ESTIMATES

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FlU DIRT

.rgon1 . - of the CO'fi11Unl1y.

· Cimano
~ · oro enoourogod
in
s 10
attend "'11 , _ g on. aptombor 910 providethoir inpu1
on tho Count:y'l program..
MEIGS COUNI'Y
COMMISSIONERS
M H0bot otter, ...
1~
"~"
18128, 1: '

54 Misc. 11/Jerchandlse

Ph. (614) 843-5425
7-11-IMI 2 mo.

BODY WOH $10 Por Hr.

AUTOMADC

Pin ltriping/lo~• lhiOip £d10
c&amp;L
PAINTING
Chttsttr,
Oh.

TRANSMISSIONS
REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

co.,ltlt Car Paioting S375

PH.
'

985·4101 ·
8-l~-l mb.

RADIATOR
SERVICE

We can repair and Itcore radiators and ·
heater cores. We can
· ·also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.
. 91!2-21 96 .

'

·Silver Bridge Plaza ·.:
Gallipolis
·446.~8'051

•

Ita. Caii 614-4t6· 3169 .

Old Oriftntel rug• wanted . ,Cny
t ize or condition . Cal 'toll tiee

1·800-433 · 7847
Wanted 5 to 10 acres land. Mutt
be in Vinton Ele. School Oilttrlct

Call. 614-388· 9342 .·

coin s. larg e currency. Top jlric&amp;S. Ed. Burken Barber Shep,
2nd . A ve . Middleport, Oh. 6't4 -

992·3476 .

CARPENTER
SERVICE

•

1957, 68 , 59 John.On 36 :hp

boat motor for parts.
2073

- Addona and remodeling
- Roofing and gutter w or k

30~ - 676 -

- Concrete work

Employrmnl

- Piu mbing and electrical
work
(Free Estimates)

Servtce s

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992 ·7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
4·15· 86·1c

Day or Night .
NO SUNDAY CAllS
4-16 -'86 tfn

CALL COLLECT:

coal he1ters. SWAIN'S FUR.,I · .
TURE . 3rd. &amp; Olive St. OalnJIO·

&amp; SERVICE

YOUNG'S

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

20 years
"Free Estimates"

:

Buyin g daily gold, tilvet co--t,
rings , Jewelry, tterling ware. old

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Prim''

VINn I AWIQIUM
Complete Gutter Work
Com~!ete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Worked in home ~rea

.

.WANTED TO BUV used wood &amp;

Pa.v Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Here
BUSINESS PHONE
t~141 992-6S50
RESIDENCE PHONE
I~ 141 99254.,,,
I

BISSELL
BUILDERS

SUPERIOR
SIDING .CO.

2282-

We. Cany Fishing Supplies

2· 17·86-tfn

EUGENE LONG

Buick -Pontia c, 1911 Eptem
Ave.. Gallipolis. Call 814 -448 -

11

Help Wanted

Make C hrist ma s money. iell
A von . M 8ke 4S ·· Percent. ·C:all

614·446-3368 .

ACCENT

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

!CUT OUT FOR FUTURI UUI

742·2027

Center.

Position Available . Sub bus
driver- · muat hold bua driver
license and have phvsical exam.

SERVICE

Salary S5 . 05 per ._,ur. Cont~n:t;
Mr. David RatiiH. Prtnical; GUid ing Hand School, P. O Box 14.

985-3561

Cheshire, Oh 46620 or e;all
614 -367- 0102.

All Maku

•Washers •Dishwashers

HART'S
CONSTRUTION
992-7111

'

"Frte Estimates".

Installation Availablt
4 I

1115/1 mo.

J.R.'s REPAIRS

.

826 Third Ave ., Gallipolla. Oh

46631 .
SW~EPER and sewing machin e
repair , part a, and supplies. Pick
up ahd delivery, Davis Vacuum
Clur,er , one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd . Ca" 614 -

446·0294.

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE

F11 All y,, Ptlolllf N•h

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorized John Dftre,
Now Holknsd, lush Hog
Farm Equipment
Doaltr

PWII Offico Supp§• &amp;
furniture, Wtddiog
aed Graduation
Stat;-~ Magnlllc
Signs, lu or St..,ps,
lusitest farms,
Copy Strwkn, Etc.
.2ll liU St. Middleport

312/rtn

WE ARE YOUR SAlES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYlVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON ·REFRIGERATOR
•SATElUTE SALES &amp; SERVICI:

Ftll

of

Otd Mon

!flop Ttt~tlll..

.I•• 1111•"""•1111.

PH. 742·2070 .
11271161 I MO.

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS
.Co~uterized Heari~ Air Selection
Swim Molds · lntlnpreling Services

- LISA M. KOCH. M.S.
-z
a:

-~
:t: Licensed Clinical Audiologist
(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Automot ive part s assistant ·;r
GM dealership . Must he\le ex,._
lien ee. AW ty i"l person 1t Sm~h
Nelson Motors. 600 E. Mail\ St . .

SINGLES : Meat other~ hom
your "'" and elsewhere. All
Ill•· Don't be lonely. H.H.C .•
Boll 81 , Leiv..y, WV 26676.

Easy Anemb~ Work1 8714 .00
per 100. Guaranteed payment
No aeles . Oetaila-. Sen d stamped
en~telopa : E fan, "71 6 3418 Enter·
prin, Ft. Pierce. Fl. 33402. :

~rreroy ,

Ohio .

AVQN , 3 open territories. call

Hen .,d 14 biddieaiOgivaaWay .
Call &amp;14-985·C288.
·

furnace motors

Wt Me" Af•ll Th111

3000 ~ve rnment jobs list.
$16 ,040· $69 .230 year . NOw
tiring . Call 805-687· 6000- Ei t.
R-9806 .
.

HIGH SCHOOL GRAOUATES ·
Serve parl·time in the Army
Natkln al Guards and anend
2 mo. old puppy 'h Doberman &amp;
· Oollege full time. W8 provide up
v, Lab. Call 61 4 -388· 9644.
to 818 .000 il education .. U ·
Large ale. range it worka. double ptnt•. PLUS . ..-ovide good pay
link, 1 chair. Call 614 -446- and good training. 304 -675·
9639.
3960"' f.II00-642·3619 . ·

' Winter. Have those

chocked, cl.. ned ail 'd
boaringa ailed for
'16.00
IUSS EIEC'IIIC
MOTOI IEPAII
lecot,. lohin4 t.ading (,..
lllo!tt Dopl. Off St. 11. 124
IUTUIID, 01110

Pullin, 614-446-0474 .

3 kittens. Call614-446-0924 .

.r tilt y,, fpllltl

Got oheod

port Qnd Wellston Ohio CalrDon

304· 676· 14 29 .

P•rt• &amp; Servlee
1·3-'86 tfc

992-3345

Pharmacists needed ! Fruth Ph ~ r·
macy has po&amp;itiol'ls for reg .
pharmacist in Gallipolis. Middle-

NEW CREDIT CARDS I NO ONE
REFUSED! Visa -Maltercard
info call lre1undeblel 1-51 B469 -3646 ext C-1980 24 hrs.

4

· FarM Eqai,Mellt

104 ~Dolry ''· , ....roy

.

Decorated cak• fur any occa·
aton . Wedding• 8 specialty. Will
deliver for small fee . 814· 992·
6601 .

6· 17-lfc

THE QUlUTY
PRINT SHOP

Send rBSu me tO Bolt T60 in c8re
. of the Gallipolis D4ily Tribu~e .

3 Announcements

Also Trusmlcslon
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

8·20-'86 tfn

·X·ray Techn ician . A.ART certlfi·
cat io n pref errEKt . At leaat one
year exper&amp;ince des ired . Parttime 5 evening• a week end
every other weekend. Pay is

oorrmensurete with e11periena~ .

. AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

lV-11 14-843-5248
APPL·b 14-949-2145

4-S tic

A11110 unee men Is

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

Electronic Organs
Mobile service

Health Education Coordinat.or·
R N . with obstetri cal experience
to te11ch parenthood claaaet li'ld
to develop other health educat io n cou rses. Part-time. Send
resume to 8011 TSO in eareofthe
GaUipolis Daily Tribune, 825 .
Third Ave .. Gallipolis. «lh
46631 .
•

•Ranges
•Refrigerato rs
•Dryers •Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE

Roger Hysell
Garage

TYs, Antennas
Satellite Sa!.s
lnstaUation
Service

o
z

Need a good jo&amp;1 See Dick• at
Farm M a rk o~ 1 mi. Spring VIRay

.KEN'S
APPLIANCE

FENCE COMPANY
PH. 992-6931
After 5 Call

Approx . 3 pic~up load• acrap
lumbef, muat take •"· 304 -816·

3429.

ASSEMBLERS WANTED : Eatn
10 f60 pet' dav assembling
daplay ctown 1. Material• IUPP·
lied . Send stamped ulf ·
addraued en'llelop•: H•wks
Unding, P.O Bo11 13493, Or-

up

lando n

32869.

·

3 kitten•. block. 304·882· 3408 .
UHd couch and ch.;r, 1301
Matn St .. Point Pleaunt. W. V1.
304·6?6 · ~618 .

4 boxes ot yard sale thinQa1
304-676-624? .
&amp; -'orlble kittens , 6 weeks old,

J . M01ldlom, 304· 8?6 · 1136.

6 Lo$1 and .Found
In Rodney young dog, red &amp;
black m~trking . Female. Call
814-245-5671 . .

OPENINGS AVAILABLE , selli"g
Merrl Mac ' t guaranteed line of
toys , gifts, home decor items.atc. NO dslivering, coiiKtil\g •
cr iwestment . Your hours cJII
304· 675-6168 Of 1· 900-912-

1072.

l.P .N.s needed for ·part ti me
private duty in Point Pleatent
area. call HCS Nursing ServiQI.
South Charleston, 304-7683996 , ~ : 00 AM to 6:00PM

Medical assistant, op.,ing immedildety, experience priJferfed.
S.-.d r•ume to Boll C· 26 . Point

Aauant Reg iater, 20.0 Main St..
Pt. Pit., W.Va.

814· 38?· 7576.

Pharmacist needed for FQJtit
Pharmacy Storea, Gallipolis,
Middleport . Wellston Call 000
Pullin 614 -448 -0474.

LOST or ttrayed small dirk cat .
Unte whit• on neck . lo11 i"l Bob
McCormidli Ad area. CaM 61 4·

Reliable baby sitter need;c,
starting Sept. 30 . Hours 2 :304:00 PM . Retarenoes . Phone

LOST Angus heifer 860 lbt. Call

"6· 2868.

304-676-13 35.

~;::======~~;:=======~ L--------..-----...;8;.·1;,;3..;1f;;;.•_.~--:::::::::;--1---~:-:--:--~

'WINY&amp; SIDING
*AlUMUM SIDING•

.

SALES

949-2263
or 949-2168

10·8-tfc

Business
Services

PAT HILL FORD

; ; r- -

. '011 '"' .., ..

•

COLOR'· f¥.15..

SHARR

~ 1)011111

_,......0,_ .... _!......e:..
.. ~
. . . . . . .-.,.
I ==-==:.::::.'
- . ~ ' ,.. ,_. .. . =
. . . . .. . . . . . . , . . _.

....

improve-

-

u.- .....

II .................. ....

In loving memory of·
my husband,
Chief J. J. Cremeans.
who passed away
Aug. 28, 1985.

and

PLUMBING &amp; HEAnNG
Now lO&lt;ation:
168 North !t&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohio 4.5760

ROOFING

9~2-3410

'--------""'"io--------"""'1

acquitition

TOP CASH patd fOr '83 ."model
and nawer uaed cart. S~th

G... cook nove. 304-676-5761 .

, 1·13·1fc

.......r

- , . . . II'-111111'11,...... '""""'11Meof1j"'wiiM itom -

pl....

COBG program can fund a
broad range of octiv~ies, in·
eluding: .oconomic develop·
mont
wa1er r
.,ppty,prvjec1l:
drainagestreet
and ...,~...,
sewitr improvomonll; P•k

We P.av cash for late model clun
use(f Cars .
Jim Mink Chev.-Oids Inc.
Bill Gerie Johnton

Howard L. WriftMI

4/ 1/Hn

Middleport; Ohio.

I ---MI)IIttf...ltC.JltPO I()I "'"UIIol!'to 'IO•~ ""' 511tl
l• nc-"""r., .,...__.,.~ ..,. ---~ ~ .....,w-,
I --~-~
..... - ..ID"'OI ..... ocltN"'H OOII'
•II9&lt; ....
- - -NI&lt;I JI
'"' C•&gt;e,_,,

IOf.acFiquoU!led
·
...,..,...,
I ..,.......,....,...._..
.,

z

,~~in

'

DENNY CONGO
WiLL HAUL .
JUST CALL!

CHE~R--915 - 3307

Public Notice

Wanted
•
. To Buy .

614-446 · 3472

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

Public Notice

9

Business Services

• P•lf

EXAMPLE:

RANGES ·
REFRIGERAT·ORS
DISHWASHERS·
'ICRO.· OVENS
.
HERI'SHOW r------------------.
- ------.,1

PHONE
992-2156
Or W1111 Da1lly
Cllnit1ed Dept.
S.nlultl
Ill Court Sl . Pornero~ . Ohio 4571'

+ 5°/o

.

clalms Ohio jackpot

...;;;,..

WASHERS
DRY;ERS

A$500 rebotrl

• : (Qidlnued from Page 1)
•...,.." Materlalll, Marietta, for
~· P'IJdiiCI5.for October,
wa 111111t1 lmtll a prollk!m, with
IDwr:t _ . , ll)lterlal Uled In a

sln~eJ~~~:·flgures are adjusted Veterans. Memorial

:··No one

You Pay Only

Qllldrell from IDuseholds with
'Jnconle at cr ,below the levels siDwn
· JIIIY be' ·eligible t&gt;r tree and
, rediMll(l.prlce meals.
Application ilrms are being
dlltrlbut.ild to all homes In a letter to
•Jl11'8118 or guardians. To ap!iy for
cr reduced-price benefits,
·iifUM~tolds sllluld fill oot the
.application and return It to the

,:s&amp;OII

stating that because he bad entered
the plea of guilty 10 the reduced
char{IE!, 11 would be a conflict of
interest for him 1D remain on the
case. Knight released Cox from the
case and will appoint new rounsel
asJ:; ~~!~~~·custody at .~

RCA 2 5" Color TV
Cost
$425°0

pus $3,1'18.

.'). QMnjJietA! appllcatkm Is required.
•·~ ...... sll&gt;uld answer all

tile original char&amp;!' against Jude
s~~~ rejection of the plea
bargain, Cox moved to have the
court dismiss him from the case,

(Continued from Page 1)

meals for children unable to
pay the full price rl. meals served
under the National School Lunch
:lliid School Breakfast programs.
. ' Meigs Local School atflclals have
IJ!(/Pied the following Income ellgl·
· blllty scale for free and reduced·
prire meals.
,. Jncome eligibility scale for free or
J1:1luced·plice benefits as follows:
:·h!USEilold size: parents, children
and other IMlusehold members,
Income ellglbWty scale for tree
· meals, Income eligibility scale for
reduced·plice meals listed respocttvety are: 1. $6.91B, 9,916; 2, $9412,
$13,1!4; 3, . $11,lrl6, $1li,tm; 4,
$).4,3)0,$31,3!0; 5, $16,7+l,SZJ,828; 6,
$]9,]88, $27 ,:JIS; 7.$21,632. $.1), 784; 8.
pt,UI8. tM$1; each addltilnal
bo~ member, plus $2,444,

'
~·~·
AdditiDJ!IIICOplesareavallableat
tile p •it ll•l's ~ce In each school.

carried a maximum of 2i years in
pr~~h the !iea bargain unratified,

The Daily Sentinei- Page-9

Ohio

WASHINGTON (UPI) -Ulnrall 1n ran tratdi: aild · substantial tratiln agreed to support a public
would have a mfl!'ket value of more . dividend .and Interest payments \0 offering plan after Its jr€lerred
than $3 billion If sold · through a the government beginning In 19!11. buyer, Norfolk Southern Corp.,
However, COO analysts said the withdrew Its $1.9 billion rl.ter to buy
public stock sale, butltsfutureas an
independent freight railroad would payments to the · government, Ulnrall.
be less than rosy, congressional ntjulr ed under federill law, · were
Norfolk Sou~rn. a major east·
analysts say.
·
projected to total $2.5 billion 011er 10 ern railroad and Conrail competl·
The Congressional Budget Office years, enough to p.1 t a major tor, was . unable 1D · overcome
released a report Wednesday that squeeze on Ulnrallllnances.
opposltkln from key House Demo·
concluded a sale of stock !Ji Conrail,
. "According to these projections, . crats woo feared the merger would
the government-owned freight rail and u~r the ronservatlve qJerat· sharply reduce rail competltkm in
system, would fetch a much higher lng assumptions used ln this report, many . Northeast and Midwest
· p~ than has been offered by Ulnrall would run ru I of cash ln 1997 markets.·
or 1998, forcing a red uctlon In Its
various Ulnrall suitors to date.
Ulngresslonal leaders rope to
The CBO estimated the govern· dividend payment atthattlme," the pass a UlnraU sale bW before the
ment's 85 percent stock interest In CBO said .
current legislative session's sche"Nonetheless, Conrail appears to duled adJournment date of Ckt. 3.
Conrail would be worth between
$3.2 bllllon and $3.6 bllllon, assum· be able to meet all of Its commit· The sale Is seen as a painless way to.
lng average performance by the ments over the next decade."
reduce the ~eflclt.
The study ·~· said If operating
railroad over the next 10 years.
However, Hoose akles say many
Conrail employees own the remain- conditbns for Conrail were worse sale Issues - especially those
Ing 15 percent of the railroad's than expected, Conrail could start concerning government oversight
losing rmney ln 1993. However, the at future Conrail q~eratllns- have
stock.
The report's worst-case scenario, · report $aid that was "unlikely" to yei to be resolved. They also say
assuming lower than expected occur .because Conrail would take efforts by some lawma)l:ers to
profitability, Put &lt;r.onrall's value action to reduce costs before It · attach other rail regulation chan{IE!s
.
around $1.1 billion while better than slipped into the red.
to the sale bill may oompllcate
average performance could push
The report comes aI a time when matters furtll'r.
House members are trying ·to put
the railroad's value to $5.6 billion.
Another big problem In developThe teport also found Ulnrall was together legiSlation to sell Conrail Ing the sale bill centers on what
financially stmngenough to survive through a !"Aibllc stock offering that saleguards are necessary to ensure
as an ildependent railroad tJr the would be the lat'g!'st In U.S. history. that an Independent Ulnrall does
Last week, the Reagan admlnls· not go bankrupt In the years ahead. ·
next decade, even wlth .a d:&gt;wnturn

area.''

~

'

The orlglnal char!;!' carries a
maximum penalty of life In priSon.
The reduced char!;!' would have

WASH.INGTO
. .,N
. and
, .(I.IPll, - The materials .prt(.'!!s, · cqntracts
government's biilactest measure d. orders for 'plru.)t and eqqtprnenl, a
future economic &lt;~ctlvlty rose a change 1n out~tanding ci-ed)t' p;~tthealthy ll petee)lt'}n Ju!y;tlie first ems and average weekly' ln(tlal
gain InT'lonorfrn-t
threl!, IIIOnths,
tl)e 'Com· claims for state unemployme·nt
ld .......
merce ~.- w • .,... sa ........,.
Insurance also contributed posiThe Coo!poslte'lndex of.J.¢adlng · lively 1D the lnde!(.
Indicators rOBj! trom a reviSed 177.4
A drop ln stock prtces !13J'tlally
to an l!Stlmilted -179.4-in Ju!y on-a !tfset the ·ga iners, knocking 0.14
scale ·that began at 100 In 1967, the percent off the lncrx. BuDding
department's Bureau of Economic permits and manufacturers' new
Analysis said.
orders for col\'lumer goods and
d Onta the lybastsls alofdmotherelncodemplete materials were also neg~tlve
a • ana s s
x rose contrtllutors.
by a revised 1.2 percen1 lii.Aprll, ·
One Indicator, the length of the
then sUpped back 0.1 percent in '. average work week, remained
May and fell again, by a revised 0.4 undhang!'d.
percent, in June.
The economic barometer rose at
A preliminary report last month a 5.6 percent annual rate in the first
had charted a 0.3 percent Increase half It the year and has gained 6.5
In June.
perrent slnre June 1985.
Much of the downward revision
The gross national product,
was associated with a 0.46 percent which the Index seeks 10 forecast
drop In inventories not contained In rose by 3.8 percent at an annual rat~
the (re'&gt;'i:lus report.
ln the ftrst quarter of this year but
A 0.:18 percent fall in net business slowed to a sickly 0.6 percent 1n the
formation also rontrtbuted 1D the spring quarter.
·
June SEtback.
Administration economists, who
Analysts said the larg!' revision six months ago had predicted 4
was not particularly unusual.
percent l'COnorl11c growlh for the
The Index, which seeks to year as a whole have since revised
forecast the natiln's ecooomlc their fon..ocast d~wn to 3.2 percent.
activity three to six mont!~ in Tomeetthatgoal, theeconomywlll
advanre, has advanced 3.3 percent have to grow at a 4.2 percent annual
In the last sill months and 6 percent rate lor the rest of the year.

Rinehart

20°/o OFF THRU AUGUST 30

tiiday announced Its 198&amp;87 school

,yE81' policy for free and reduced·

ley Jacobs Frazier; a son, Thomas
.,.,,...,
f Lewis ' K y..• daug·hters,
~ .......ne 0
Diana Ash, Syracuse, and Barbara'
Ann 'Lane, Toledo; one sister,
Vemle Jolm!lln, Ultumllus; one
brotrer, atartes Fi'iZJer, Mlililleport; four grandchildren, Ca~
Ash and Cara Ash, Syracuse, and
Diana Lynn LaneandJoshuaL,ane,
Toledo.
Services will be held Saturday at
1 p.m: at !Wck Spring:s United
Methodist Church, with the Rev.
Melvin Franklin olflclatlng. Burial
will be In Rock Springs CeinelefY.
Frtends may call at Ewing Funeraj
Home Friday from 7-9 p.m.
·

Aug~ 28, 1

Federal·rep.ort says Conrail
stock may be worth more

denied any knowledge of the event.
for seasonal differences.
Admissions - Bessie Landaker
"At that time," Judge Knight
The lar{IE!st oontrtllutor to the Pomeroy; Roger Smith, Pomeroy;'
J u1y gain was a O.:fi percent surge Dar1ene HJcks, Pomeroy.
stated, "a voluntarypleaofgufityto
the lesser charge was not knowln the money supply (M2) · In
Discharges - Golda Smith,
1ng1y and Intelligently made by the
constant 1982 d:&gt;Dars, followed by a George Pierce, Shirley Taylor,
defendant."
O.J.'lperceritlnc!'E115elnnetbuslness VIrgil Roush, Howard Phillips,
The &lt;rlglnal rape charge against
formation. ,
Ruth McElroy, Goldie Lawson,
Jude stated that he bad sexual · Meigs Ulunty Jail.
·Vend:&gt;r pertlrinance, sensitive Richard Werty, June Stover.
lnterooursew1fuarrmwrbythreat r-------~--------~----~------~~~~--------~--~----------~­
of force. ln return for a reduction of
the charge, Jude was to have signed
a voluntary plea of guilty to a
char{IE! that he had sexual Inter·
course with a minor, but with the
force element deleted.

GilLS, JUNIORS, IlSSY, IATIINITY, BOYS

- The Meigs Local School District

EdS::v~~lude his Wife, Sb!r.'

Judge nixes Jude agreement

MIDDLEPORT DEPJRTMENT STORE

:::meal policy

ThurSday,

"""'- '"" .eeonc)rmc activtty
·. ,increas~ J'.l percent·

No Sentinel on Monday
The ~ Sentinel will not be !"AibUs!Ed Mormy Ill Its emJ)Ioyees
may observe tbe Labor Day oollday.
Regular publlcation and lluslness hours resume ~BY·

28, 1,986

•towN IN

' INSUL~OO.N

81S.5ELL
SIDING CO•

New llci11111 Built

SUGAIIUN
ASHLAND
190 . . . . ., A¥1.

POMIIOY i 011.

PH. 992·99·9 .
1--L

........ · .....__

nvR, vw,..

11%7/lti/1 MO.

'{ar.d SaleS

NEW
HOURS. .·
.
.
BLU.E ·STRIA
.K
.
·

"""""""
.......Ganrp-oni ······ ..

107 Sycamore

PH. 992-7075

&amp; Vicinity

P-roy, Oh.

7:00 A.M. to I:00 A.M. Monday t~ru Saturday

&amp; COUNIIJ .

VDDINAIIAfl
CLift I£

TAXI TOKENS
SENIO.Ft CITIZENS
HARTLEY SHOE STORE
VILLAGE PHARMACY

Y.!lrd Sl'l! tl 43 2 Port smo ulh Rd
at Sp arkl e Su ppty Co .. Sar. ,&amp;
Sun . Ram or shin e. 9· 7

Yard s•lhurt. 28 . Fri. 29 . Set.

30. 9~m· 5pm . Rt . 35 located in

llfte behind Caldwell's Tn.rdt
Shop. · Childrw~a c~thll . toys,
wooden aUdt. If raining inside.

Pomeriiv
Middleport

Fmilv Solo

&amp; Vicinity

Aug. 28 &amp; 29
Twin · beda, bicycle, clothea,
dish.., c.,cettd If rain. 152 4th

GREAT BEND ELEctRIC, Inc. · ""'·
N.E.C.A. CONTR.CTOR

~aut E. ·Shoc~•r. DVM

n. IUASAIT OfPICI
· 305 Jac~r.e. An. :
SIIAil .- AL lOllS

•Residential
•Commercial

...........TitwJ. 3.5 ...
r- 6130·1; F•L 1,2""'

. liofu~ 10·1h30 ..

•lndu~trial

· ulllil al'&amp;·

1 ·' •

.. .................... : .....

3

. TO~

~~w~·''"·

t; .-· •.

... • . ~

1\'"''",...,..-'1( ~,., ' ~' ~"''- '"'·11 YmW//..-'I:.f'..?.O

(

CAB · 0.

·1 ~:

.

-

: SlliOIIY IY ~I'PI;

.

... . . .....

. ..

.

Wed . Thura. and Fri .. AugUst
27, 28. 29 1 'h mile Hysell-Run

Rd . oH Rt. 124. Manv it em • .
August 29 th and 30th , Sept .
2nd jnd 3rd. Jean ·Craig . 463
Sixth St., Middleport. 9 :00 -1
Sornething for 1\'erVOf'le!

August 2?, ~8 . 29. Clothea .
diahea. houuhold ftems . llfld
much more. 38879 RocksprinOa
Rd ., clo se to HeahhCareCenttr.
··ne&amp;Kiitnce of Harrbon Sffri1h .

Grove Rd. Auoun 28, ~9
'Refrigerator; dftb\u•httr: .:
lott of. m6to.

PH. 304-675·2441

UID

CAlL·.

.·RAYMOND E•.PRof'Fm (MAt) ·
"

OHke 949.2431.

•

RA(JNE,

.

·~·1-

Auou·lt 29 mmugh SeptemiMr
·1. b1fe Kau1il farm IHidMC. 1
· At. 1. 1 mile lOUth ~f Ch11tir:
Aniculel

'• .

�........ ... _. _

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

..... ~----

__

,

74

LAFF-A•DAY
'

.

'

_ _,· .. .• .... ·

lpoalol "'111111 cort for tldorly
Iii li/lw- """"· Coli 114·992·

11'i·••·.....

~··
.
WM .. rtfor olidortvln my homt.

M1 ,,It illlitsl'
11'1

, Wt oi.vo v...,;!'Y for o!cforly
ttnfllln)tn. 'Room Olld bOord.
' . . -lng ioom.. Coll. 814·
112·11022.

1976 Hondl

Full 'l lle box aprlnga•

304-67&amp;-4841 .

.....nr••

76

W•n'fl ~""~'~I !d:D¥8 tor .....
Ctlll14·441·1107.

d.,..._ . liP. Clll Lor• Snow
114·211·1814,
OOOD USED APPUANCES
W"'*•· dryert, refr6a•l10n,

''

WMI It! b.yollllnt In ,,., homt,
doy th~ Mondoy thru Fridoy
... .,. 304-171· 1411 . .

INQ CO. NOO""*'dl thlt you
do buain•• with people V()u
know. and NOT to ..,.d mon.,
tlnu_. the mall until you h.ve
hv. .lglted the offering.

: ...,. tun end proflltblt. We
h.,. 011er 700 ucttino toys and
giftt ,._.ring the new en !mated
ttHdnQ clol .. Cricht" whlth will

bltdv'"llldonnnlonii1V.No
Cllh lnv•nwnt. no collecting,
,. •trwerlng .nd no aervict

3 -bedroom, 2 beth.
Good conditkJn.
wm
teke trtde. Call 614·949·2801 .

uooo.

1972 Otrwln . 2 bedroam .
MOBILE HOMES MOVED: in·
eured, r1110nable rat11, Call
304·571-2338
'13 Doubi81Nide. 24•48. ecre
l1nd, woodlidlng. flrepltce, cell·
lng ''"· out buikling, neer
Hannen SchooL 304· 7437258.

make nnl'(, hl'lt fun tt1d1flw
·. · hourt ot epece time. No ••P•·
rian• nec81ury. Cell 1· 800·

7J7-1110.

2811.

1979 Hoity Park with Mpando,
hutpump,eaccond, J0•·676·
1810.

RMtaurant and ll't'lm for ule.down t:)wn erN or
Call

le••·

33

oftor 8'00 PM , 304-875·71112.
Professional
Services

roqulrtd. Ct11114·448·1619.

Business
Buildings

ft.
Commercial or wtrehouu .
Parting on aide. Adj.:ent to

•' .

.•

2·3 bdr. hou ... rtorm windows.
Gfftrt School dittrict.
0&lt;

Woodl Ag.,cy.
'. • 3 bdr. home 1109 Adfien Ave.

.• 38.000. CtU 814-44&amp;-3718.
·~ ·'ly owner. smell 2 bedroom
•

' houH, rural wat1r. btth, electric
... Md ntW CIIJ)M . 5 mil• lOUth of

For Sele: 50x90 fl.

IMng. dining room. kitchen,
. bitt\ with u:UI room . All fully
.~. ClfPttld. Urge porch. fenced
' "1 yll'd with utHIIte T.V. Al1o
t .,.nm~nt whidl includiiJI 1
,. .
bedroom. llwing room, kitchen
l.J . , · 11'11 ~with blth, workshop 1nd
tltlle. Forced air g11 heet. own
wttlf' well, large lot 1nd m~lnte ­
ntnCII trw tidk'tg. 14&amp;.000. Cell

'

. 114·371·1151.

·-----------------3-4 bedroom h0u11 n11r tchool

. lfMI hoaphel. Priced to sell,
\ f23,000. Ct11814-992-&amp;080.

·- - - - : - - - - : - : :

Thrw bedroom home on 16
..... ftfiPIICt, ru•v carpeted.
MW kltch• with lppli•c•
f &amp;ndutled. Large parMI and yard
_.... allltdran's wooden pl•v
ctnt•. Must 1111. M1ke oHtt.
•• 114· Mt·2&amp;03 .

· "~ UndContr8Cl. 2 bedroom home
.1 in lyrecuH with ,,.II fenced· in
'-~ J. yenl, ldO building, aluminum

'!.wirl..

fulty Clf'PIIed, newly
'h block from
m•,_•t . pool , p1rlt. tennis
ooum. t210. month tv. Cell
_..~nga 1ftef 4 :00 p.m. 614-

· ....': rer~~odel•d .

H2·H33 Dfl14·992· 2088
N. PerttOrivl, two bid room, f\.ltl
unnt~~t.
ctntrll lir cond,
torood ... ptt - · dtttchld
...... elumn lldino. good
.a~. cioN to ho1pltll. benk.
..-1 •• troDirY ltor•. 304·
. :o!.f.,.·1HI.

1

houM In Point

wiM ttn ..ce wrth
pi'Ym.,t. 304· 812·

for Sale

•:"EW

AND USED MOBILE
HOMII IIEIIEL'S QUALITY
MOIIU · HOM! IAU!S, 4 MI .
WUT. GAWI'OUI, AT 3&amp;.
• 1'11()111114·441· 7274.

Chedl; u1 out on wr living room
.. 11tt. !349 • up. Wtbb• &amp;
BulhNne. New Otbton epptiln·
CM. MoMohen Furniture Rt. 1
no"h, Klnauga. Cell· 814-441!1·

7444.
10 cu.ft. fr111er upright 150.

Ctll814·268·1110.
Sof1 &amp; ctlalr, good condition
Celll14· 211-1331-.

Ctll 814· 441·4921.

GE 14.3 elmond Nfr'sJ•etor
onty

446-4411 oftor 8PM.

SS2·3351.

r•kt.

peto. Ctl 114·448·1137.

Acre rHtrict~ building totL
Rodney· Htrritbura R~. Elecnlc.
rurll Wltlll. Ctii8U:24-5· 5457.
Alhton building Iota with pubtic
weter. mobile hom11 permitted,

304·67&amp;-2336 or 304 ·57&amp;·
2287

with

new

1150. Whirlpool

ooppenone 22 fl refrigerator,
skle by lid• $210. Call 614·

!·44--1-·81....,.3_9_.- - - - - - - - - -

~ bdr. tum. or untum. 1190 per
month. utllltl• Plkl. no child·
ren. no petl. e month 1..... 1&amp;0

Townoldp. Co11114·837;1081 .

8 yrt . old

cornpre~tor

Unfurn. 1 bdr. 1pt., carpeted,
utllitlta
no children. no

Fire dMMgMI building, 608
M1in St .. Point PINHnt. 304·

two ldults.

·

ret'""ctt • MC.

dtP· roqulrtd. Ctll 81.4· 441·
0444.

Pickens Used Fumitufl, Good
qJallty used rumtturt. Open 9tu

appcHntmtnt.
1 bedroom ept. for rtnt. IMic 304-175-6483 .. 676-1450.
rent Jterts 1211. 1 month that
8

in dud• · til utiHdla. Depotit

53

rtQUir«&lt; of t200. Contll~ VII-

Itt• Mtnor Apt. MlddllfiD'!.
&amp;14-9t2-n87. E""'l Houolng
Opportun~ .

n75 mo. noo ct.poah:, ylrd,
p1tio, Clll afler lpm 114-192·

or call

for

Antiques

OLD ORIENTAL RUGS
WANTED. Any eizeorcondttion.
Call toll free 1· 800·433-7847.

l~=====::===:;:=========~

W1rm Momlng wood bumlf.
Hu fan tnd thtrmoet.t. Good

Ohtf)t. 1200. Ctll 114·949·
2161.
General EI8Ctrlc micro· WI'II,
uc.llent oondltion. Stalnl111
tteel twin linkl C0"1''-te with
fhcturee. Twin w11h bllalru.
comPlete with ftnu ..... G1rden
blth tub, complete with •how•.
Cutoff uw, W be1ring m~n ·
dfel, complete with blade. C111

41

Houaea for Rent

Dupi&amp;Jt for rent 641 Second
Ave.. G111ipolls. 3 bdr. Uvlngroom. dinlngroom. ntw kit·
chen, backyard, refrig. • renge.
131 0 plus utllltlll • 1~rlty
deposit . Call 814·446·0690.
Availeble now 2 bdr. home
completely remodel1d, extra
nice. ret. neighbor. large front
porch &amp; nict Vlf"d for ftll
weether 1336 per month . Call

614·286-61 10.

OnebldraomunfumllhM. T01al
eiMtric· IP't· Wltlf 1nd gertJIQI
aolttctiOtl ffM. I.oqlted In Pome-

roy. &amp;14·912·2094. .
1 btdroom

opl. In

Mlddl_..

Unfurnished. 1110. p..- month

pluo utiiiUoit. Ctll 11 4·992·
&amp;&amp;4&amp; tflyo tn&lt;1 114·949-2218

FOt sale or rent 3 bdr . 1 bath,

kitch., appl. including u•ege.
loceted 18 Portemouth Rd .,
Gelllpotlt. Sec. dep. a. ref.
required. Rent with optton to
IM.Iy pouible. Call 1!114·4460264.
Aplnments end hou111 in
Pomeroy 1r11. D1p0sil required.
Pay own utilitl•. 1·814-982·
2381 days.

EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jock·
ton, Oh. 114·281·&amp;930.

llo. 814-441 ·8221 .
acctPtlng IPPiicatkml for rente!
ePMtmemt in MIIOn Apll U·
mhed. Two bedroom ..-ta at

f"ntll

r•t• may M h~hlt d_.,dlnl
on income. Houalng will bl
l'l'lilable to tach tppHCMrt ,..
(lll'dl•• of their rtce. ook)r,
r•liglan, ia or neturtl Origin.
lnt..-•tld IPPNc4'nttl'*dd ctll

304-nl-501 1 "' conltct O•

ni. . Strllib or Witter JuttiOI 11
the me in office. 1111 lrl01
Ao1d , Reynoldsburg, Ohio

43088 or coll.l14·113· 4&amp;14 .
2 bedroom apt. OeiiiPolit Ftrrv.

3 bedroom houae In Point
Pleaunt t200 .00 month.
1100.00 deposll. 304· 882 ·

One bedroom apt, Convenltnt

3329.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bdr., fum .. ntw ClfPft. AC. In
Chllipolle. Call 614·441-1408.
1••70 BtyVItw 2 bdr., unfur·
nlsh.ct. Yery nlce. locall_. 2 mil•
ffom Oalllpolil, prlvltt lot.
Adulte ontv, no Pltl. t2150 mo.

In Middleport. Ohk), 2 bed room
furnished apt, 1 · 304-882·

2111.

For r.nt 11-"'t Roam. Hd
light hCMitt kttPint _ , ., Ptfk
Ctrmol Hortl. Col 114-441071&amp;.

~'""Rd.

c.n 114·441·0411"'
114·441·0801.

""h

dryer. 1

alollol
-"'· - · •
pold. Ctiii14·441·401J.

2 bdr. _....., film~
l"''tlat, t200 por- ....
utlhlet. Ctllll4·441·1204.
Nlot. ct.~ , 2 bdf. fumlthtd on

lit. 7. 2 bdr. dupl• houtt In
Choohlno. Con 114-241·1111.

3 Mdroommobtlehomeforrent
In ChHhlrt. Ctll 114·317·
7148.

814· "8-3882 . Up front 1rK·
ton with warr1nty over 7IS ue.t
tecto~. 1000 tools.
4 ft. brush hog ftir cond. Call

114-317-7461 .

SURPLUS RENTAL. dtnlm.

Tobtcao ttickt for salt:. Cell

·army c~JnUufl~ge cklthlng, mil·
h:1ry ICCeltGtitl, tiiSb:ll, rental
~sed c\othint In etock. Sam
Sometvllle, · Ettt of Aawnt·
wood. Frl Sat, Sun. 12:00-8:00

614·211·1111 .
FARM EQUIPMENT' New Hoi·

land Fouue Equ.ment Sele." 1
No. 8·thr• beater forage bo)l
wtth ttndtm 1111 12 tan Wigen
He-Men toyl With. Ill acctiiO· t8, 800: One No. Bbo• whh 10
rill. Myen lhallow wall w1tw tDn w11• M, 100; One Model
puft1&gt; . 304·676·1764.
712 Chopp If whh m01thltrt &amp;
2 row htMI 114.900; OntModtl
Bell collection e&amp;O.OO. Bre11, 30 tor~gt bktwer 1,000 APM
porceli.-.. nrwnlc. Over 10 12.1100:: Ont uttd No. 8 bO•. 2
bollo. 304·171·1836.
but:• wtth 10 ton running gtlll'

t2.1iOO: Dntuud Modtl707. 3

Meul office dnkt 3'x5' with pt hi tell·Cllloppor whh bo1h httdo
tdjultlble twlve&amp; dlllra .. d 11.800: Dnt uttd Super 11·17
filing cablnete , t121 . 00· chopptr t1,800: , ... fll)tnr:lng
.t160 .oo. 304·372·2801 or until 3-1·81 or 5.8 percent for
372-9822.
'2 4 months; 1.8 peraenttor 31 or
41 monthe or d•coum. for At h.
HUNTEASII Complate stock kftflt'l 8trYiot Center, St. At.
hunt5ng ,nd dog care supplln. 87 LIOn. WI/ 304·99&amp;·3174.
Nlt811te dRier, 407 Slx.th I trill,
Point Pl... ent. W.Va.

Tobtcco ttlclto, 111.00 por
Eltctric ETS I'O()m unit furniCI. tundrwd, Morg• WoodiiWn
brtnd nM nev.-uelld t2715.00 . Ftrm. RL 31, 304·176-2271 Df
~75·1201.
304· n3-5004.
Two m1n platttc b11a bott', 2 Tricton, JD •20 oriiWW with
Mite, Olfl, life JDetl. Mor11 ond .lotdor e4,ZOO.OO. IH Cub
lt61'eo 8 trick record player. with culllvetor and mower
Ol~rldge fli-m .
304-991-3382 .

t1.10o.oo.

304-17~ · 1804.

'

82

Wanted to Buy

-d .... .

17.11&amp;
&amp;. 4x81t\4 balndM wit« .b oltd
• - r ,g lutdTplutleB,IItt.
&amp;. Wood thormol polo 11ow
olcturt win-o &amp;•I t241.
7. Doubll IIMI lntullted tn·
trenct doOr Nt' a with V. glaea

•3&amp;0 .

1 . Ooublt 1id1 light door uts

wkh 10 gltto lntuloltd U50.

i.

Double oommercltl entrenct
door Ht' 1 'bro.nz elu mlnu m
1188.11 Mt, olngltl U99 .00

...

Haven, Wnt Vi rginia . Phrm ~
304-882· 3729 . Full linear IM:k
ll'td ear part1 available. Most
prices ' " cut to dealers cost
throu~ September 8th. Oeliv
flfY IYiilablll.

992-3703.
1978 Chevet11 with 81 .naine.
New benery, new exhMist.
Good oondhion . Runs good.
1900. or best ofh1r. &amp;14-98&amp;·

--~

- , - - - -- --

Concrete blodl.t •llall:n.ylrd or
dtUvilry. M ..on lind. 01U6polie

123\ol Plno St.,

83

Livelltock

Gellipolll. Ohk&gt; Ctl 114-44&amp;-

2783.

3 club cetve1 Chianin• ·

Pole Buildings by
Builders. WorkthoPI.
•nlmal shelters, gereg•.
estimttll. Phon• &amp;14 ·

Simmentel·Slmmentei
Her.tord, fuN
Sim·
mentel
· Sentl
Oertft.ldit· Hereford. Oertrudle-Het.rord. Call 814-379-280&amp;.

7121 .

9 tpringer Holltein heitett. Cell

:~::.~~~~~~~~

614·318·9333 .
Pets for Sale

Bobv colv• Holotoin &amp; Anguo
crolt. No Sunday c1ll1, 114·
318· 1124.

Cattary Kennel.
CFA Hlm1layan. Peraien and Whit• mari approx 8&amp;0 lbs.
Siem•e kittens. AKC Otow Oood genlla riding mare .

puppl". Ctll 114·441·3144 1160.00. 304·875-37C8.
efler 7PM.

----,,...--,------ 1 4

rell' old mare work horN
1300.00 . 4 yeer old Peiomino
riding horae Gilding 1300.00.
304-571· 2233:

Cock• Spaniel pupplel;
HlmsiiV•n P..-tlen t.mlle
ten; Minleture 8chniUier

Cell 814· 912·2607.

9065 .

1980 Buick Skylark 4 door.
t1•oo. Need lrtnsmluion -4'1 ·

Perfect ftu overnig ht hunting r..
H.hrlg, 8 ft . truck topper with
removable beds. e•cellent co.:~
dillon, beat otter. CeH614 -256

ptlr. Coli 304-171-1293.
1981 Eacort Pony, exc . cond.
18.000 or bMt offer. 304·876·

' 84 Pontiac Fhn. AM -FM c11·
lltt. AC. good cond. 23.000
mlltt. Ahtr 4:30 coli 304·67&amp;·
2981 .

t3.160. Ctl114 ·318 ·8651 .

~-~,--

81

812-2796.

..-

---

-

72

'' . '

MY GOODNESS! 'tOLl
MEI&gt;.N THIS ALlEY
OOP IS A REAL UYI

CWIMANl'l' '

I KNOW

IT'S HAAD lO

BELIEVE , BUT
IT'S TRUE I

AI.I.EY'6 llELPE'D

US OUT ON MANY
1'. ~I&gt;CT!
HE'S .. ..

84

Hay

8t

Grein

Tro~nspn r lo lillll

•:oo

AKC laxer, femlle, 304-87&amp;·

71

Autoa for Sale

2986.

&amp;t Chevette 4 cyl .. 2 door, I
Musical
Instrument•

tpd.. AM-FM Ctllltte. low:
........ Ctll 114· 441-0137

I]D • (j]) Priot ill Jlltln
(j]) MOVIE: "JI.......
il]l MOVI£: "Cioitt11 I I aI

Merlg.,x •119 au. practl-

ctlly ntw . Colll14·281· 1114 .

Wtnt to buy pleno In good cond,

ctll ofttr 4 ,00, 304-175-1281.

PHYy l•s Ouillr wtth 1mp,

304-178·3048.

8 :05 (]) MOVIE: 'The Cooltt'l«&lt;
Cowboys of Calico County'
8 :30 0 ill G1l Femlly Ties A
ct1e lS tournament between

EEK &amp; MEEK
Houee c:allt on RCA. a u.. ,., .
OE . Sptcleling tn Zenith Cl!llll

c;(AIJi.. .)

304·871·2398 o• 614 U li
24&amp;•-

114-211·1328.

Fettv TrH Trimming. .-u mp
remove!. Cell304· 875-1331

1978 Dodge 0 · 100 pickup.
body good, run• good. engine
318 to barrel, autom~tic trena.,
t1 .160. Call 114-44&amp;-4.422 or

&amp;14-44&amp;·9100 .
81 Detaun King ceb. 4x4,
geugee, tack, sunroof, &amp; ll)d .,

-

-

:

--

896-3802

Monte .C1tkt goad cond. C1ll
&amp;14-251· 1228 or 114-251·
I

1977 Toyota Pick·up and 8 ft.

"

&amp;445 or 17&amp;·5152 .

MY ~
WHEN

THLINDEiR..

ASTORM,
HE HIDE6 LJNDEI&lt; n1E BED.

MY~'sGOT
MORE CLASS

HE ~ES OUT IN THE YARD
ANDSKAkES HIS F IST
AT THE H5AVE'N5.

THAN THAT.

B&amp;B Rooflng &amp; Painting. fii'&lt; P
rooilng, 'IPIIr, painting lnaide,pr
out. fr11 Estimate. LoCDI Rots
encn . 304·171- 7911 .
J,

8t

FRiit
Vegetable•

help to Jason in his ollvorct
procaadingt. (50 mlo.llfll:
(}) £von thl H Weap: The WHI Vlftlnlo
Mine Ware The lllltllt of
Blair Mountain, whict. tyl'ft.

1977. J;hevy pick~. no Nl1. e
cyl, IUtO, AM·fM c•e1ett,

448·4477

•1.860.00: 30C·I15· 4181 .

83

&amp; 4 W.O.

BARNEY .
WHAT'S THAT UNEARTHLY

Excavating

NOISE COMIN'OUT OF •
VORE HOUSE, LOWEElV?

Qood-1 heiVatlnt. bMemlf'lt a.
footen. drlvewrtt. aeptlc' lank •.
landscaping. Cttl enytlme 81 4·
.,.1·4&amp;37. Jem" l. Oevi1w l'l ,
Jr. ownlt".

u..,.

19n CJ
ooh top, 31pd ..
8 cyt., new heiden. wend!.

....

e1 .eoo. Coli 114·441·8173
Dodge 4a4 cuttonUed ven

86

21,000 mlltt, Cl 114· 441·
1182 oftlrl.

vision of her being ttran--

12 Cht.Y Conversion van,
ohtop. prlctd to ttll. 1&amp;.996.
C1ll 114-MI-1131 or 114·

SNAKE!!

month. GtMit HOitl . Ctll 114441·1110. 11.,. .. 1ow • e12o
month.

Furni!IMJd roo.,

•11'1"

111 2nol Golllpollt.
bllfl. llnglo molo. Coli
4411.
pd.

kl

48

Spece for

Rent

COUNfRY MOIIU! Home Plrll.
Roubt U, Nootll of ' -·
LMte """· Ctll14-912-74.,.,

-

................... ,. """·

Tttlltr fof - ·· UWt1
-~
140.00 - · 104-.1 71-2101

(

min .)

, Day.

r.ap..

',

~d

·
VI!: 'DtM'
10:30 I]) Worllfa 11011 Ketti

rr.

I CAN'T 1-!EI.P
IT'S NOT M'( FAULT...

City, Oh. 114-2&amp;1 ·1470. Evil.
114•441·3431. Open dtNy l' lo
8. 811. 8:30 1o 1 :30. Old 6 nOJN
Uphottlrecf.

-·~··

for

GKW

-··-·---···-,..:

G KXHE

DI ZU I

K

L

:W Czech
river
.. Confined
4ll Conceit
4-t Musical
instrument

PNHKL

Z E

ZE

..

ATEE

JQIIWHL

RWQf"

K

CIQQ
~.

CH ,KNZWP

...

:I:W

LIH

l~CitA

LIH
TWZYHNEH . -- U . GRNQHF
IMiordq'o CIIPIJOI,_, THE TROUIIUI wrnt
PllOPLE wrrtl A Wf OF PUU. IS 11fEY VIUAU.Y

.'

.
••

ENJOY PUSHING TifEIR WEIGtiT AROUND. - 0 . A.
BAmsrA

coo,. 11'-

turM a.Mtn1

painter In sce nes from Eak-

lnt" life. (60 min.!

1

1hii)IOfTrlfl.llf ,.,_,..._ 1

It'"''

tMI Kt~ln Co-y,.•• ,, tilt

,,

34 Actor
Hinkle
35 Dash
36 Proltl!
38 Prepare
a path

·. ·

KCRT L

''·
ll])·Amerlaan'MIIura (CCI
Sim We-n.,....

(II'!

Yesterday'• Aluwer

8-28

ml.oYe Connliilan

mao

19 Ghastly

CRYPTOQUOTE

(I) 8CTV

Mowr1y'1 Uphofltlrlng Hfvlr~g
trl oounty erae :21 Ytft,.. "Ttl a bett
In· fumlblre uDhohrterlnp. Cln

304-1715 · 4il4

(I) 1111

valley
12 Allow
17 Frost

One letter slends for another . In lhis sample A il1*d
for lhe three L's, X'for the two O's, etc. Single !etten
apostrophes, the length and fonnation ol the words are ali
hints. Each day the Code'letlers are diflerent.

01'111

"CHOeOlATE CHIP COOKIES
FQl,LOW ME WHEREVER ·
I 60 ...

9 cam .

AXYDLBAAXR

Ill (!liNN Ntwt
illl Toni..lrftn't J_,.
11:oo • ilJCIJ •~ aea
llJJ Newa
·
111

I

" 11188 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN

II LONGFELLOW

N-

10:10
.

R • M Cullom Couche1
Fleupholllery, St. At. 7, CYoWn

r••a...

DAILYCRYPTOQUOTEII - Rere'sbowtenrtllt:

IOmin~

(J]

DIP llltS COOKIE
EMPTV A6AIN1

scores a l t e r - - · ... even more
fua to know llft1rllti1Mt deal whether
their Jll!' c
!leOrl!ll were Bood
eMUM• 1e ;A
1 dlance for a
hiCb flq ••lla111e. (Serry mine
wun'l.) I ~~r••et t11at '"' win see
more sucb ewnts, and Epson Ameri·
ca. the sporutOring company. is due a
vote of thanks.

produd

crz

ii
ro.

Fr• !hOne

114-441-7133 or &amp;14-4.e
1133.
...

Opening lead • K

7 Meat cut

low Intern• wlileh H..,.,.
as a J'llprenotlllw en tilt
hoapltol"o llotrtl ef -

UPHOLST£AV S.HOP H.
GaltipO ,

3 NT

Pass

8 Seew.!ed

!1) 18
Tra- Joofln,
M.D. J .T. un-ntly
cauut pro-lelnl fer hil fwl.

1113 lee. Ave.,

Soot~

Pass

or "Eiia"

members of a socoer \Um .

• • • ,.;.;.... oiOitd ·lot
vwallon; Wll
Llbof

Pass

&amp;.st

6 Home --

fJ) (!I SOop
(}) Cornradtt IC&lt;.'; The

•

TRISTATE

North

2+
Pass

I PonJco

from 1 Sovlai rep••blic ftc·
tOr'( town are pro·.iiiHI. (80

P-Ot .. tlltblt.
porklet- · end varlttiel .
'MtoUI, M-. W.. Vo.
nJ-1721 . o ." " ?.'~J"''

West

2Gizzard
S Evaluate
4Expert
G"Boz"

min.)

mlluae. ac. ~OIHHI . Ctll 114·

Yellow

I.

DOWN

g_lad (60 min.l (A) .
9:30 0 ill (j]) Nlgh1 Ceurt H•rry
attempts to bend thl rvlte .
when 85-yearo(Jid FMnco
facet a forced roti-t
(R) In S1areo.
10:00 IJ ill (jJJ HIH 8tlwt .._
Buntt 'preooet I I - fer I
suspect"&amp; politivt ID wMII
a cop is murdered, - par·
alagal Jesus Mtrtlltel It
the fall guy lor a Cf90iotd
judge. (SO min.) (II).
I]) Auto Roclng '&amp;e: U8AC
Mldgeu Fntm India,.
polis, IN . (80 min.)
(]) Ill (I) 20/20 (CCI (10

Fumiahtd Room•

Roon for rtnt. dll/. week:

Vulnerable: NtJrtll-&amp;ottth
Dealer: West

SOUnd

threatened when he has a

PAW JUST
GOT HOME
FROM ONE OF
HIS ALL-NIGHT
·CARD GAMES

General Haulillll

1 1811 Chevy convtf'aton 'ltn.
... tir, euto, ltltiO, TV •. low

fiJ8

.K QJ 19

34 Favort1e
17 E111me1
38 VItality
•• Scl-n ftlm
43 Cu!ltOm
4G Ballroom
dance
46 Plunder
471nert ga1
.S Bring
to bear

scandal. (60 mln .I(RI.
(J] Mys1eryl: Agolhl Cll...
lie Mya1erllt II (CC) A
young man's marri~e it

Cor . Fourth and Pine
Galllpotia. Ohk&lt;

tiU

IG Wonder 22 Taro root
161naect
~H e lois
18 R&lt;&gt;den1
25 Dock union
19 Shoelace 26 Command
21 Job history to Rover
24_AcciMty 27 Dutch city
28 Worship 29 Invest In
3t Authentic 31 Family
30 Hindu
member
fesUvaJ . 33 Spoke ad
31 Composed
infinitum
32Hummlng

her knowlodgo of o society

CARTER 'S P1.UM81NG
AND HEATING
Phon• 814·441 -3888 or 8 14-

1

Jo. ·

der of a generous beg IIHiy
who wao killllll llecouoe .r

.t11r 1 :00 P.M.

441·4141 ,

(CCI

Harrv check• out the Mur-

lltll-9188.

68

Colbyo

chronicled. (60 min .!
® aJ (j]) Crary Like • FOll

""d Krtbo. 304-f/5-1188.

..2

Cll liJ Cll

20 Do
business
14 EI!Jl&lt;lCtant 21 Cheer

c oal minert' ttruggte fiM
union ization in 1921, ·tt
~- .,

1113 ChiY 8·10 Durongo, V·l
engine, Auto trtn1mi11ion. low
mlltoat. Phone 304·176-1918

19111'11

13 Made
o( cereal

bolizad the Appaltchitn

1878 Ford pickup XLT, PC
concl. 1172 Dodge pickup. nwt
tirll, pelnl 11\d battery. Golf
cert. 'C_1II lnylime elk for leo·

Vena

urgaa him to fire DieM afttl
breok his tin w11t1 tiM poot

son's anger has In ifftf)Of'·
1ant bearing on Jeff'l mwrder charge, Milet dieap.
pears and Connie offers

L

Ashby Const. Carpentry, retnodellng. room eddition. paint ing,
rooting. concrete. llding, blo r.k
work. trn •tlmete. 304 - 6 7~

.1.
'" 42
••a

.9 63

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I Quarr•l
6 Scheme
10 Vestige
11 l.aw11JI

Part 2 of 3 , (lllln ·S1oreo.
Cil 700 Club

-

EAST
.KJ87 3
.13

~~kWWd'

c.._.c--.
.....,

&amp;7&amp;·2088 .. 87&amp;-7388.

Rot1ry or cable tool drillinq.
Moat welt• complvted sarne d n.,;.
Pump 11111 and ltt~t ice 30 4

78 QMC "'h ton , good cond. 77

ill tiiJ

new girlfri&lt;Jn4.
woman JaN! ElllrWtt.

- - - --

Tl. fOfd pickup good body , n1n1
good. Coli 814-266·1268.

e

RINOlES ' S SERVICE, expft·
rienced Clrpenter, eleetrlciarl ,
muon. painter, rooting (lntludlng hot llr application} 304T

814-398-9920 .

Alex and his o p - t. (II)
In Stereo.
llJ A_u10 Racinl ·-. CART
PICOne&gt; 500 (g() .,in.)

9:00

Sterka Tree 1nd l~n Se'"'' "·
lertdiCiplng. 304-678 2010 '

low mil11. aektn.g 13.300. Call

WEST

.A4
'PAK1 0864
+Q 10

Leland College and a visiting Soviet team twrna ,,.... 1
serious compelidtJft Jer

RON'S Telev hinn Se ndee

1984 AtniO&lt; XL 4 cyl .. 4 opd.,

73

ico. (60 min.) 1111.

fill 1IJ MOYII: 'The L.ootg.
our

thor IPM.

18 Olde D11t1 88 79,000 mil11,
SteinWIY • Son cantole plano. lotdtd, burgondy.Ctlll14·24&amp;·
Btst offer. Cell 114· 441· 0946 8131 .. 114· 24&amp;·918&amp;.
after 4 p.m .

Year and witness an unu·
sual ceremony from Mea:·

est Yarcl'

1980 Dodge D·SO with topper
11 ,M8. 1979 Dateun 11 ,199.

•A a

ktll has to adopt an air of bravado
... bid two diamonds Lo gel a gooe
~ . South will invariably bid three
111-trwnp. II West's opening lead is a
.., heart, declarer can take the first
11 1ricb lor a score of 92 out of I00.
StMIIIKIId bidding is not without risk.
At ftplicate scoring, you don 't have to
IJt an npert to know that sometimes
,.. Ill 1 ~nt result just by limilinl
o pj'
"' overtricks. Sup!X"e Wesl
11M! 1 ~ bearL If he nghtly as- l l l l t lhclarer"o leap Lo three oolnllt . . booed upoa a diamend fit,
Ill •Y tlift to llle ace of spades. Now
llilt·W• will t1111e seven trlclts, and
minus 380 for North-South is worth
only 4 out of I00
Players who participated in the Ep·
son Pairs found il fun to know thei•

Choo Choo"

truck topp•. Cell 814 -9921117 after 7:00 p.m.

I ynr old TrHing W1lker Coon
Hound 1nd coon llghta. •&amp;OQ,
Cell 1!11•· 247·2484 1tt11
p.m.

Bem"''"

I·II·M

.9 2
+A97432

..

(I) MaoNtll-l.ehrer llewtll-

.

NORTH
.Q 10 2

*'

made in America's lffet.
tyle, watch how ttle Ja.
panese celebrate me New

Ctll814·261· 11 81

oood oond., tow mileage. mutt
see to eppreclate 14,&amp;00. Cell

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWE~

.._ld

(I) Kenny
Ex·
plains Drag Rea"'l
(I) 0 (I) Rllllov'l lle!IMtll
or Notl ICC! Loam of 111•

Exterior &amp; interior s1ucco. PIUter &amp; plnter rep airs ! ,,.\ ' OIItUr.

1871 Luv 11,388. John's Auto
Satu
. .Buiaville
__
_ _Rd.
_Gelllpoii1.
___;_h

PR INT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THE SE SQUARES

Vuherable against not vulnerable.
Nerth jllst does not have enough of a
IMHid te make a twe-drnmond overcall.
Wlle1l he passes. East probably bids
opade, and two hearts by West
now end the auction . If the
.,..Inc lead is then a minor suit, the
4ltnden should come La six tricks. In
E111CJ11 World Pairs Championship,
II'- 68 for North-South was ani y 39
llllftnl on the pre-assigned scoring

(AI In Stereo.

THE LAB!

by Idling in the miSiing words

lly Jellies Jacoby

Cil WackiH1 Ship Ill 1M

TESTING THE TIME -

Complete lhe thuckle quoJed

.

Boldness
has its risks

his regular partner faftl ""

MACHINE! HE MUST
HAVE FINIStiED
HI S WORK IN

.

James Jacoby

(CCI Cliff en/isis his old E..

I 'LL BET DOC IS

.

BRIDGE

0 ill !Ill Tho CooiJT • -

Army

_

Cradle - Pious - F/fl("k - Borctvr - BAD SPELL

glish teacher at hit plr1nt'
in a pinochle game whet~

... .....

TRicks for Sale
"'¢'

.

"Why Am I So Mluerable?" asked a scrawl on the subway
wall. Underneath. ~omecne wrote, "You Are Going Through
~BAD SPELL."

changes Hulmaa Edialft

Unconditional litetime guartntee. local rl!rferen r: n fuml1hlld .
FrH ntimltea. Call collect
1 -614· 237·0488, day o, ntQtl t
Rogers B esemen t
W1terproofing.

1182 Chevy Cav1liar. hont
whitt drive, auto, 4 cyl, new
tir•a. •4.950 . 00 . 30•· 876 ·
4181 .

8:00

Grandpa's advice to hopeful
young boy: "Fafth le buikllng on
what you know Ia hera, 10 you can

YESTERDAY'S SCRAM-LETS ANSWIIS

@Allee
llJJ Jeopardy
7:35 IIl Sanford and Son

ALLEY OOP

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

1810 · Pontile Grand Pti•
t1,500.00 or belt offer. 304·
178-11808 or 676-1789.

THE? f'XPRE-&gt;510N
''CL-OSE; EfUT"

,...,...v v-o

Home
Improvements

1978 Mullang. 4 qrl. eJtc con d.
u.:10o.oo . 304· 17&amp;·153&amp;.

ARc;- '(Ou
F,AMIL..IAF? WITH

,....r~

Services

' 82 Pontiac 8onn1VIIIe, 4 door,
Vinyl top, V-1. Air, Auto , PS , PB,
AM.fM etereo. tilt. r11rwlndow
defogger, velour interior, bodr
uc cond, high mileeae. 304·

e

televi&amp;ion in the upcoming
syndicated series, " Nine to
Five" .

['10 .:::IGA~" ? ...
'\"':::0.:1
/)..!

1978 Concord camper 19 fl
se11 contained. sl.epa I . AC:

1949 Ford pick-up truck. 'A ton.
82,000 mifel . Qood condition.
Coli &amp;14· 7•2·:177&amp;.

King

M~. ~EMIS",

1682.

1700.

1411.

AKC a ...... pupo. thrto loft. 3
month• old. Pries. 17&amp;. C1l
114· 117-3981 .

67

----

1972 Flamingo trailer qoo d
shape 14.000. Call 614 · 388

n50. Colll1 4· 742 ·2410.

8

ald Pelrrin
E (j]) Enttrtalnment T•
night Sally Struthei"'IJ talkl
about her return to series

79 Motora Homes
1973 Buick Riviera. Good condi·
&amp; Campers
tlon. tiOO . Coll614·843· 6288.
1978 Plymouth Sports Fury.
AC. cktth interior, rul nice.

ll) PM Magazine
Cil Men from U.N.C.L!
I]) SportsCentar
({) En1ertalnment Tonigh1

®News
(J] MecNoii-Lehrer !'f11Wshour
E (j]) Divorce Court
lf&lt;l) WKRP In Cinclnna11
@ W11eel of Forhlne
7:05 IIJ Green Acraa
7,30 0 Cil I]) New Newlywed
Gama
I]) Speedwaak
fJ) 1Il Taxi
0 (I)® WhHief Fortune
(I) Fall and Rise of Regin-

Now buying lheU com or lit

1 . ••• lnd 4118x7- 18thl ltUC·

"·"Mid

19 . . Chevy Cevalier. Auto. PS,
PB. radio, new tirM. Call 814-

.

0 Cll Jeopardy

MOUNTAINEER AUTO BO OV

~

~

L...-1.--L----1--....1...--L.......I you de'lelop from step No. 3 below.

0

(I) Nigh11y Buelneullepon

PARTS ORAND OPENING
SALE! '1318 Fifth 51. . New

13

I

I

.

series. " Our Kind o1 Town ".
fJ) (!) Hogan's Hel'tllltl

'114-379-2220 .

175·6148.

clowa. llntela, etc. CIIUde Win· cam. Call fQrlattlt quotu. ~ ivtr
t1r1, Rio o ·r.endt, 0. CaU 6U- City hrm $uppty, &amp;14·441·
2985.
24&amp;·1121 .
.

56

1977 Ply-mouth Volari. 318
engine, AC. Make good wmk
cer. e100. ot beet otler. Call

I

TAHHER
1--,i-1"-'T-1~~--'i-;-15...,-1-1 G)

her role in the "U pcoming

Tranemi11lona. all lyl)fl. o\ler,
front. '"'· • wheel dri'tje. pficn•
atlrt 1100. wiU deliver c,,u

'74 Ford Torino , 1300.00, 304-

•

Buildtng M1teri11t
Biodl, brick, sewer pip II, win·

llodo Co..

Ctll 614·992·2860.

I

.
. .
.
. .
. - - - - - - - - - , reach whal you know 18 -'-."

Shelley Hack t!lks about

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

4271.

PM .

Building Supplies

76

l

l

t--TE__,M,A.,.B_v..,.,,

IIJ Gomer Pyle, USMC

11.

Plante SubdN .. Ion. 2 bdr .. 1-te

Mobile horM for rlf'lt, Upper

JI.M'S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER . SR 38 W. Oolllpollo.
onto. Colll14·441·97n. "''·

Second'a• Cioaeouta· Suplua.
90t11n110nlte tiding or paneling
eaaond'1 ei.H· 1 .91pc .
2. 4xla'-" maaonlte under\lyment tz.99 eti. 4x4 •1 .00 ta.
MOOndl.
3 . 4xi•Y. lev1n plywood 115 .88
MCOnd• 13. 81.
4 .. 4x8xll 10d &amp;· 11tht wood
plftlling woodGrain and print•

6:35
7:00

I

MUTPH

·

@ Welcome Back. Kotler

~

1978 Cutlas Supreme. 10.000
m1111 . Good condhion. Local
owner. pot Neutzling. •noo.

1Il Fe1har Knowe Bos1
0 ll) !ill NBC News

(J] Body Eloctrlc

cond , ta !l

Autos for Sale

114· 742·2479 .

SH thll model todty. Ctll
114-SSI-7311 .

••II•
...

46

lot. t17&amp;pormo. t100ttc. d.,..
Ctlll14·441·4114.

NIIW countrv dr11m ho,.. . Built
tor you . 118,89&amp;. • bdr., 2 bath

10. &amp; '" I !'""ol tttollnooltttd
loct11on. 304·178·2441 .
pnhung . .ro.,t.ll .
11. Stttl P&lt;thuftll ln.,lottd
Unfwmllhtd, 2 bedroom 191 tor - .. end 1.... 111 ~r. fl&lt;t rt.
rlnt. 201 Popl• It, tiO.OO 1111.. .
.
d-h. 304-17&amp;·7141 .
12. IMI&lt;·end olrlln pipe 4•10
PYC IJI'tltftltd .2.91 tt.
Ont bedroom furnlt~td ttn. 13 . •• olonlo ttblt 2 bendltt
ground loor, prfvlte entnnoe. mede from b4~~:1 rtdwood
til utllhltt ltlaludtd, ......... oltlntdt~t....
•
Htndlnon, W. Vt.. 304·178- 14. .'MT plut I prlflnlohtd bruco
11:10.
011&lt;-r-mlongtllbundltt
178 oq.h.
One bed.oom apt Point PI•• 11. Brown 28xeo rook lac•
Mnt tlttfl nlct tnd d•n.
uncl ... 1100ndt 13 .•
304-&amp;71-1311.

Ctll &amp;14·441·2:100.

-}1• •

appro"•·

hou. .. Pt. Pluunt end Oellipo-

1189.00 per month.

·

Ftt•tlc cistern ltltl
pteltic aeptic tanb, plllltle
.culverts. metal cutverta . RON

APARTMENTS, mobllo hoiMI,

304·87&amp;-2648 .. &amp;75-5783.

2 bdr. trtlltr.

Colll14·2118· 1261 .

...-.lnga.

Av1lllble Sept. 1 . 2 bedroom,
unfurnl1hed house. Electric
heat. Vine St Reoine. C1ll
614· 949· 2946 for eppolntment
if ln11r•ted.

42

o.,.,

Calllfl.,.'• Used Tire Shop.
1,000 tir•. aizea12, 13 , 14. 15,
11. 11.&amp;. 8 mil• out At. 218 .

APARTMENT FOR RENT· Now

Furnished houM 2 bdr .. 1195.
131 rear 4th Ave.Gellipolia. Cell
446-4416lf'let 8PM.

8 .E. Ohio .

. Oregonwynd

2 bedroom tumilhld .,.,-tment

tor rent. Aduhl pt't'f•Nd. 614·
911.2·2749.

40 Ul . . trtctora to chOON from
• ODr1111ete line of new • ulld
equipment. Largeet 11lection in

71

l' I I I I

2 ...,---,-1
1---r::'-1
1-r--il

(I) Tho Rifleman
I]) lnelde the PGA Tour
({) 0 Cll ABC News
(I) Doe1or Who
® E (l]) CBS News

111 ,800.00 . 304 -675 -1080.

114-742·2860,

8888.

Ren ta ls

treiler . . good

1300 Ate-. t1&amp;00. · firm , · 61 Farm Equipment
Ctl1114··2·1181 w .. lnlll·
CRO&amp;S. 801118
llack ltlther b1r Mt. 2 lelthlr •
bor ttoolo lnoiUdtd . Aoltlng U.S. 35 w.... Jeclt.an. Ohio.
t1 oo.. Good condition. can 114·281·1411.
Mauay Fergueon. New Hollend.
114-992-1598.
Buth Hog ltlot. StrVIet. Ovtr

66

6:05
6'30

. ltOVe, portl·pott i, depth tind&amp;f .
i"C). OMCI
·C, deep
V, ,edio-tep.e
full
Clnvlt.
ta tldem
wheel

12f•etPil1CiipMDIIh. Trecklr
111 Motor Drive. Gould o ...l

Moving Selt O .E. washer &amp;

dryer, white UOO. Ou1ur 26'
co~r 1V UOO. letrs floor
d-oh. Ctl &amp;14·441·3187.
modtiO&lt;gtn with bCOICIII t200. 8
rt. truck 1otJD• •7&amp; . 2 metal
Unturnlahad . .. 4 roomt • cloth• clot111 126 each . Call
bttll . c ..troAy - · Ont or 814-388·8120.

Pomeroy 2 bdr, Neyklrs Run.

I room house. 1.2 ecrw. Double
c• gerege. Located on~ ose Hill.
largein priced t20.000. CeM
. . 114·178·2&amp; 13.

AHdsvflle, by owner. Two for
v the price of one. 2 bedrooms,

Coii11C-2U-1747,

Furnished tfficiencv 11150 mo.
utilltl• ptld. 7'h NtH Ave. Ctll

l14-992-e668 doyo. 614· 992·
5113. 114-992-2021ovenlngo.

Lot tor sale: 3'h A. hllllop
hameeltt, cletred. Htrrison

Qualifv honw, n.wty rernodMid
choict loc.tion on Coll~;e Ad.
8YftcUH, new complete kitchen
tnd laundry, eir conditioned,
••ra• lot. 614· 992-&amp;324.

d-o~ .

tion. L•rve gerege door1. South
Fifth Aw. Middleport . Phone

4 mM• outside ci1y llmi1at 32
KNI .. cora. NVIIft room, 1ttory
hoi'N. Papuler Addison SchoGI
dllt. Fishing pond, btm. outbui·
Uding. McGuire Rellhv Co.•
1402 4th A"*·· Huntington,

304-&amp;29-6033.

Large c:httt type fren:tr llmond
11111 modtl, won.e good, 1140

2 bdr. 2. bttht; ltltchlf'l furniehtd, 11 Coun St. 1321 per
mo. plus utllftl•. r.t.,...a11 II

comrMrci~

36 Lou &amp; Acreage

Of

114-441-0322 .

304·87 ·&amp;1 04 or 304·175·
7821.

zon.t bulkUng. Brick coniiNe·

Gtllipolit, From Rt 211 take
Krin• Rd to flrl1 house on right
*14.000. Coli &amp;U-44&amp;·2917.

2&amp;701

1,!

1q .

third. Pine St. CoN 614·446·
2312 for eppoinement.-·---- ·

Homes for Sale

Ulld Fum~re: Wuher &amp;
dryer. electric r8nge, wood
tlble • 2 Nnc:tl11. beds.
drll . ., &amp; riCIIn•. 3 miiM out
BuiM~illt Rd . Op1n 9AM to
IPM, Man. thN Set.

Regency Inc. apanment 2 bdr .•
utlllti•li
· rtly p1id, nloa. C11t

_J •.' '

748 Third .Ave. 1600

meal Clbin .... headboerdt 130
end up to til.

Cloy. con 114·256-1520.

34

: t.

Hlectlon of bedroom a~hei.

2 bdr. unturni1hid apt . In Crown
Fum. 4 room. • bath ctHn. No
pets, ldutta only. Ret. • dep.

'.

e73. end 183. QUMnstt• t2215,
Kino t310. 4 drww• di•t MS.
Dr....-1
Gun cablnet1 8.
10, a 12 tun . G11 or electric
reno• 1375. 81by menrea...
*31 • 141. lid framlllll 120,
e30. King frame •110. Good

Fum. e•eae 11)1., 1 bdr .• 12311.
utiUtiM pakl, 29'11 Nell AYI..
Gelllpolla. CaN U8-4411 after
lpm.

Farms for Sale

814-448-2359.
814· 742·3147

g--.•.
t1t.OOO. Ctlll14·44&amp;·2025

Rant

1 •d2 bdr. lpte. iorrent. al.lc
rent lor 1_bdr. t171 . BHiC,..
tor2bdr. t212.AI10.200MC.
dep. req . Cktae to Foodl~~td lftd
Spring Vtllt'Y P1111. Jecklan
Emete A.plr'tment1, 114-441·
3987 . Equ•l Hou1lng
Opportunity.

Beautilul home in Flltwoodt
lfet of Pomtroy. 11 1cr• a.
spring fed pond evail.,le. Call

Frw tl1imt1M. CtU 114· 992·

31

for

.

2 panlee, 1 dll ld.1·-

ENPCRI

I
l
I

(I) Reading Rainbow !CCI
(J] Under Sail
(g) One Dey at a Time

22 ft lnvlde Cuddy cabin . 260

--"dlt t100
Clll 114·211·.. .201ftlf8PM.

te3. firm

fJ) (!) Star Trek

Boats and
Motors for Sale

304·129·9200 .

251·11!112.

•as.

w... .,.,. .. l!lfViCid tnd drilled.

'

''""'Ill fill "' -

A 'pertment

I·J.t

I

(I)Green~a
I]) Mazda ~portsloo~

with thower. Jtero. tri m tabs,
ship to shore radio. tandat'l
treil.-, lltC oon d , •16.000 O,tl
C1ll Andy 304-623·5843 CJr

Cell 814·

9218 or 814·44&amp;·1437 orl14·

Sofll lftd oh*t priced tram
Two 2.bedooom moiJIIt homtt. 1391 to -t881. Ttbl• t60 tnd
2 mil• OL.II A.ddleon-lulavllle up Ia *121. Hid••·beds 1310
Rolli. G•l hut. no PICt. , 200 . to. 1111. Recun.. e221 to
plul utllitiel, ltcurtty dtpotit U71. Lampl 128 W 1121.
,...uired. 114•441•1141 .
·DinllltM 1109 lind up to •485.
Wood tlbte W·8 dteln 1285 to
Two bedroom lumllhtd tnotltr 1798. Detk 1100 up to •376.
on Crab Ca~JRoed, 1110 .b 0 Hutch• 1400 and up . Bunk
P• month. ;w4-l7l·,208.
blcll complete . w· mlltr•lll
•2811nduptof311. 11bybedl
·
•11oae111.·M1ttr•••orboll

44

noo.

FlrtwoodforMie.CIII814· 448-

for Rent

ct. .... AIIyounetdlaedllireto 3 bedroom treiler, 304-175-

Of

441-3348.

llfiiiHtn~

.f or Sale

13000. Coll814-992-7317.
Ntld eldrae moM¥1 Fritndl¥
holM tGy .,_.,. . hM 6mrntdittt
-~~91 for fiiWI-wJ_.. tnd
dernonrtrttort il thil ,,.., lt'a

11008

MW Ike """'

--:-==--=-----C":"""'"rii=i~r.;ic~~~n~ii.i6lii:l~~~1
Otlllpollt.
32 Mobile Homes
LAYNE'S FURNITURE

1NOTICE I
TilE OHIO VALLEY PVBLI&amp;H·

23

Crw1 Mottl. l14·441·7391.

kid I had to CouJIIY
AppMonot, Inc. Oood
•td
tnd TV Mto.
1
hide from dad when I ~:.~~~:~.1 ::S: :;; ~~
Wanted a SffiOke ...:._ nOW l Avo. Golllpolll. O~.
have to hide from. my kids." r.~-:
!:~'!i :..-:;~: i':r:t
1uro. 1211 Etotern Avo ..

''

.,

.......

wa:s a

"When I

l.

· 21
Buainess
·
0 pportunlty
~.t - - - - - - - --

rtnges. Slklgge Applltncet,
Upp1r Rlv.- Ad. beside Stotte

•

the

be-

low to form four simple words

8:00 IJil) Clllll ClliD Ill ~
llJJ News

1880 cruiser 2&amp; ft Gran Bateau
280 hp ONC, stove. rei , hea&lt;l

Ukt 'l!f!'l· Mod. 12· 12 gtulll
30' fllil 't500 . 032 Stlhl Cllllln·

Rearrange leHers of
0 four
scrambled words

EVE NINO

1876 I!IIDhteen fo'Jt Renk11a8ont
for Hie. Op.-. bow with COVfl.
140 HP, 1.0 .• new seeta.alln ew
lowlf' unit. tr1iler In cluded
14800. Phone 814 · 992 -1217

Rower for ..... Price reduced
Sat .• Sun .• a. Mon. 843 Second
Ave.

menta. oboe. bMtoon. flute.

S@\\Q{}}A- ~ £tJts·

I'IIAT DAIIJ
PUIZLII
_______....:...__; Edfttd by CIAY R. POUAN

8(28/88

like ntw 1986 Honda 4 whoolflf
with two nailers . Willl&amp;k e trad e,

,old.·Colt t800WIIItollfor t380.
Ctll114·288·1251 .

'

1,

t100.00. Ctll304-892-2810

firm. Like ...... ...tv .2 months

W.na an .., WDDdwlnd ln11N·

3 60

ptece Wh.h grill and potMNt,e r

C~tln lllorptnlfit. ropali wort&lt;.
Optn 8·1 Mon.·Stt. Clootd
w.... . Sun1

Household Goods

CB

•1&amp;0.00 . ,Setn FrenkHn fire·

Hu..,....._ttOw~··-•11"
111 .10. ··a.. o1 ~o~ . M.oo. ·

Troln.,t, ..,_Cod. Ctll 814·
w2-•n.

Television
Viewing

Motorcycles

bike; e478.oo . 304· 875 -2073

Ohio. Ctll
Augull 1lfltoitll. · ~ll off Eello
IIWI. 20" oft foho trlmmen.

11

Ohio

1881 Yamlh1 411 cc YZ dirt

.

A···~

chl_
ldt!l ...., iu.PIY... Vlnlon,

'

.

28. 1986

1986

Sentinel

uaily

•

....

f

'

ere G...,.

Cttlln, Helen Slo1., aiMf

. ~.
•,

1:311~£TenightShow Tonlt~t"l. vun1il

'.

·~.

11M

Teot~lll'tJiiNII.

In Stereo. '

110 mlll.l

•
.. ~1-

~'t:i:-~
0.. .........".
. . . . . . . . . . .1111
... Lllllllt •
.. .
..
..,
.
.

~·

~

�-

.

•nursday. August l8,19A6

• • ••wwnoi"'"'' '' Ul UU

--Ohio Briefs:-- Steehriaker, union at odds '· ove~ contract
• So'cialist candidate haUs ruling
_,

PITTSBURGH (UP!) Members d. the Unlli!d Steelworkers unlon involved in a ""urw
week-old labor ,dispute with the
USXCorp.havebei!ntoldthatother
steel companies are taking their
Jobs and their future Is In the union's
hands
In ~ tetter signed by J. Bruce
John
ston, USX's chief negotiator,
~'Ce company loki the steelworkers,
bsompetitors are now taking our
jo as aggressively as they can."
"LTV has restarted another blast
furnace and is caWng more people
back. The union gave LTV, Beth!~
hem, Wheeling-Pittsburgh,

TOLEDO (~I) -The Socialist Workers Party's gubernatorial
c;andldate Wednesday called a fedetal court NUng against tre FBI a
vlctocy for the foes of United StateS policies.
Robefta Scherr of Toledo, one r1 the ortg!naJ paintlffs r1 a lawsuit
against the government, called the roUng "a blow against the FBI."
A U.S. Distrtct Court in New York Nled the FBI illegally engaged
in a 40-yew- campaign to disrupt the pill'f3l and smear its members.
The court awarded the SoclaUsts ~.lXXI.
Tl)e SoclaUsts tn Ohio have laDed to collect enough slgnitures 10
place Scherr'~ name on the ballot. Scherr said the party may-takethe
issue to court.

Trial's cost continues to soar
NORWALK (UPI)- The cost of the six-week long trtal ct James
-E. Young, who was convicted July 25 for the slaying of his parents
has reached $113,881, Huron County o!ficials said.
·
'
Young, 19, man was sentenced last week to 33 years in ChllJlcothe
Correctional InsUtute.
The commissioners llad allocated $115,!59 to pay the cost of
housing 17 jurors sequested in a Sandusky motel from June 13 to July
25.
Because one of the pleas entered by Young was not gullty by
reason of Insanity, part of the cost went toward doctors who were
hired to conduct psychological examinatbns.
"It's too expensive to do any kind of legal work anymore," said
Commio;sioner James Westerhold. • Justice is long gone, it's just
legal maneuvers."
.The commissioners said they expect to receive additional bills
related to the trial.

McLouth, Gulf States, and many
others substantial concessions, the
letter said.
"Our biggest competitor (LTV)
mw has your work on his mills
under a Steelworker Labor Contract not as good as our last offer.·
Your vote was mt even solicited."
James McGeehan, chief union
negotiator, responded ~ saying,
"The union's negotlaUng commit·
tee has and wUJ conUnue to
represent the alms and aspirations
of our members. Our members
voted and that vote was overwhelmingly in support of the
union's posltkln.
"Our members !mow that their
union Is concerned about them,
their famtlles and their interests,
and I am certain that the company's letterwUI be treated accordIngly," McGeehan said. "The union
has offered USX a proposal that
gives oothing less, and nothing
rmre, than any other major steel
company."
McGeehan called on the com. pany "to stop playing games and
get back to the bargaining table.
"The union Is available to
negotiate when the company Is
prepared to present a substantive

Teen sentenced in traffic deaths
BOWLING GREEN !UP!) - A 16-year-old Wood County hoy
charged with the traffic deaths of a Fremont family was sentenced
Wednesday to six months In a juvenile detention faciUty.
The youth, who was notldentifled because of his age was found
guilty ln Wood County Juvenile Court of four counts of ~ggravated
vehicle homicide and one count of driving while Intoxicated.
All four members of the Thomas Rimelspach family died June 28
when the youth's car ran a stop sign south on Ohio 281 south of
BowUng Green and collided with their car.
The youth also was sentenced to perform aJO hours ct communJtv
service work after he Is released from the detention faclllty, Wood
County Prosecutor Betty Montgomery said.

Fire causes building evacuation
CINCINNATI !UP!) - About 1,500 employees In tre 27-story
Kroger building were evacuated and sent home for the day
Wednesday after a small electrical ftre broke rut
The fire In the basement electrical transformer room was quickly
put out and there were no injuries. However, because smoke drifted
through the building and because most windo~ In the building don't
open, workers were sent home so firefighters could use fans to vent
the smoke.
The building is the corporate headquarters for the Kroger grocery
store chain.

proposal that wW address not only
the economic .condttl:&gt;ns, lllt also
the human condlt'"'ns,"
he satd'•
.,
USX. forrnerl_y called US. Steel,
claims Its wage and heneftt costs
are among the highest in the
Industry at $15.20 an hour.
The work stoppage began Aug. 1
hen the old ,
w
contract expred. The
union claims its members are
locked out because it otfered to
conttn ue negotiations under terms
of the old agreement pending
further talks.
USX argues It is a strike because
the Union refused to allow its

mernl:l!rs to work under terms of
the company's last off-&gt;•. •
...
The USW i'ej)resl!lts'aoout
+I,IXXl
~orkers,lncludlng Zl,IXXl will were
laid off ~~!fore the work stoppag!!
hem&gt;n at USX ptan•· tn su'".· .... _

P!ii.s~rgh; Falrl~ HJJJs':"f;;'

Lo ain
r • Ohlb; BJrriltngham, Ala.;
Gacy. Ind.; Chicago; Baytown,
Thxas; Orem, 1-Jtah; and.Mountatn
Iron, Minn.
Minnesota, Pennsylvania, Ohio
and Texas laborrtflclalshaveruled
tre dispute is a lockout and t:SW
memhers are eltglble for IDiemployment compensatkln. However,

Utah, Illtnois, and Alabama offl.
ruled the di te Is
clals
have
spu
a
strike
"N~ one Ukes to take less - It;s
only human to want llllre- bt.it.ln
1business he 1
'-~~
1.....
"" stee
w re osses"""
bankru~ keep JllOUnttng, t!1e
package: we presented ~ms the very
best which rondttlbns p!!11111 '-one
few employers can. match," the
USX Jetter "" employees said
"'
·
The last strt)le
against the ·~
steel lndustcy was tn 19!19 and It
lasted 116 days. This year. the six
J0t t lmak ba alned indl'
rna see
ers rg
·
vldua~ with the union.
~ :::

Letters to
the Editor

AS IS ·USED.C
·
A
R
SILE
-.
·"'=

-Page 2

•

at y

...

By LEE LEONARD
' UPI stateboWJe Reporier

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) -Gov.
Richard F. Celeste has made a

"FEATURES"
~~~SUPPORT- Gov.

CLEAN

1985
CADILLAC
FLEETWOOD
"LIKE NEW"

1985
CHEVROLET
CUSTOM VAN
"SHARP''

Saturday lhrougiJ Monday

IUChu'd Celeate sought the
ado leamltlfrs 'Dm5day In Columbus, praising his
admlnlrltrallon's record. (Ul'l)

.CADILLAC
DEVILLE

!lllppOft ol

By WlLUAM ~WOOD
UPI Science Wder

COBB
CHEVROLO·OLDSMOBILE-CADILLAC
J

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(UP!) - The long search for
submerged shuttle wreckage is
ftnally over, completing history's
most extensive ocean search and
salvage operallon and·marking the
end r1 a painfUl chapter In the
Challenger saga.
The decision, announced Thursday, came seven months to the.daY
after ChaJlenger exploded on Jan.
28, kWtng seven astronauts.
---~ 'AIIJ1l: Rlchard TNly. chief
of the shuttle program, said In a
statani!llt the Navy salvage ott1ce
at tre cape Canaveral Alr Force
Station wW II! closed as wW a
Defense ~t support ft.
flee. At the height of tre salvage
effort In February, 22 ships and
6,tro people were Involved.
Earlier Thursday, NASA's three
booster rocket recovery ships, the
final members of the salvage fleet,
pulled back Into port Ill slgn11y the
end r1 the search operation,
believed to have rost about $al
rnlll1on.

HOUiS .
MON., WED.,FII. 1:30-1:00
'
TUES. &amp; T~. 1:~0-5:00
SAT. 1:10·4:00; 51... U00-5:00

BERFELDS

END OF THE .ONTH SALE
WOMEN'S

IPECIAU

Sale I

OORDINATE

TUBE SOCKS

Drastic reductions on our remaining
stock of summer sportswear. Choose
from Devon. Blake. Russ, Wrangler
Quantities and sizes are limited.
Hurry In!

Our popular Hanes tubes in gray or
white with colored tops. Boys sizes
9 to 11; men's 9to 16 .

Reg. 811 to •16 Sportswear ..... '6.00
Reg. '18 to '24 Sportsweor .. .. .. '7. 00
Reg . '26 to '32 Sportswear .... .. '9.00
Rag . '34 to '44 Sportswaer .... '12.00
'60 to '62 Sportswear .... •20.00

'1.75 TUBE SOCKS ... '1.28
'2.25 TUBE SOCKS ... '1.65
'2.50 TUBE SOCKS ... '2.50

or Ocean Pacific.

SALEI

\

•Pow.r-drNen ~attr ber / bnJih roll to
looten dirt . •Ellclutivt 4 -wly 0111 -A·
N•P• NV height 8djuttm•'lt. •Dull
Edge k1Hner8 for cleaning right \.IP to
the beNbo1rd1. •BriiH..-.t t'teedli;ht
ltekt OUI dirt.

Summer

Blouses ........ 1V2 Price
Knit Tops ..... 112 Price
Swimwtar ••• 112 Price
Shorts ......... 1/2 Price
Dresses ........ 1/2 Price

FULL BED SIZE ........ 124.99
(78"x108")

TWIN BED'

SALE PltiCESf

·.:~s~ JEA~S
"LH"

• "Wrangler" an6

tncludot ·bOYs' boaic jfeno, cor· '
cluroy and denim. All slzu. •Man's
billie donlino
and ~lduoryo

By
Wrangler, leTigre, Campua.

•Men',stretc/1 dontmo •Mon"o full

YOUR CHOIU

cut denims and corduroy!.

1/2 PRICE
GilLS' FALL

DRESS SALE

·

(911"x108")

Sizea 29 to 48

UST '119.95
MANY OTHlR MODElS
NOW SAL£ NKEDI

WOMEN'S
WEAR
CLEARANCE

colo.-..

SHORTS
welat.

SJ995
SUMMER

New 1 00% Polyester.·Tone on tone
colo.-.. Fringed all arqund. Solid

MEN'S SUMMO

FEATURE Pl(fffO 'UPRIGHT VAC.... '

SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) Tearful and repentant convicted
spy Jercy Whitworth was sentenced
to 365 years In prison tor selltng the
Soviets "the most coveted and
guarded" of U.S. mWtacy secrets
tlr.-ough the John A. Walker
espionage rtng.
Whltwl&gt;rth; 47, a retired Navy
radlomanwhojotnedtheservtceas
an Oklahoma farm boy, wiU not be
ellglble tor parole forOOyears, U.S.
District Judge John Vukasiri said tn
handing down the sentences
Thursday.
·
"Jercy Whitworth was one of the
most spectacular spies of this
century," said the judge. "Using as
cover his Navy guise, he managed
to perpetrate a magnificent and
magnificently cool hoax on evecyone around him."
Whitworth wiped tears from his
eyes as the judge read tre
sentencestoapackedcourtroom.
Whitworth's wife, Brenda Reis, a
doctOral .candidate tn nutrltlon at
theUnlversltyrtCallfomlacampus
at Davis where !hey lived, wept

BEDSPREADS

E.O.M. SALE!

EUREKA SWEEPERS i

SAVE NOWI

1

.

SALE PRICIS
• - · IlSSY,

JEANS SALE

ltodc up_now tnil_I~VEl
~utllty Lie tnd &lt;
Wrtilgler
JMnt. All the popular
8tyl...

lEG. 120 TO t37

SALE

.S1.39·7 TO
17
Elhllt~i

• -IOY. OMIO
• ,, ... tt2-1111

CHUSI'CAID

',

•

.
'

AJr Force Col. Edward O'Connor,

who directed the salvage effort for
NASA, said all key components of
Challenger, destroyed Jan. 28, had
teen recovered. He said some
minimal recovecy efforts probably
will continue.
O'Connof has proposed a plan In
which the sllut:tle wreckage would
be stored lndeflnit~ In abandoned
Minuteman missile silos at the
nearby cape canaveral AJr Force
Statl:&gt;n. U the plan I!! approved by
NASA headquarters, transfer r1
wreckage would begin early next·
yew:. .
He said almost lOO percent of the
slluttle's two !lllld-tuel lOcket boosters, called SRBs; was bcated and
50 percent was brought to shore,
Including the fuel segment joint that
ruptured to doom Cha!Jen!J!r 73
seconds alta- blasto!f. In addttkln,
salvage teams recovered about 50
percent of tre shuttle's giant
external fUel tank.
As for the shutUe itself, about 55
percent of the vehicle was bcated
and 45 percent was brooght to
sh:&gt;re, including 96 percent of the

quietly.
Whitworth, convicted July 24 on
12 of 13 espionage and tax evasion
charges at the end of a 3~ ·mooth
jucy trtal, told Vukastn during the
sentencing: "I just want to say I'm
vecy, vecy sorry."
Whitworth's attorney said he
woukl appeal the sentence.
Vukasin could have sentenced
him to seven llle terms but, under
the federal systml, he wookl have
been eltglble Cor parole in 10 years.
U.S. Attorney Joe RusonleUo said
he woold have as~ t&gt;r the death
sentence If It were allo~ under
federal law for espionage crimes.
"Considering the magnitude of
the crime, any Ume 1inposed that
woold allow parole In 10 years
would be unromclonable," the
judllf said. "There's m way the
court wUI do that."
He said, "Few crimes are as
hetnous as too crlmeS for which
Jerry Whitworth Is ronvtcted. He
furnished the Soviets with the very
blueprint of our most coveted and
guarded secrets. To date, we mtill

, WASHINGTON (UP!) - AJ.
though 98 percent of YIJl.UW aduHs
have corllpleted the eighth grade,
one In live - 20 percent - are
reacllni !:~!low the eighth grade
level, a federal study shows.
The Young Adult Uteracy As·
sessment. to II! Issued by the
Education Department Sept. ~.
also found that 5~tread below
the fourth graJie level,_a government source said Thtinday.
Gen~. tho8ewboi'E8dbelo~
the foorth
grade level
'\Sed
to be Illiterate
alitlIre
thD consi·
Ji,
read belqw the elgt)th rn:~

govenunent. hundreds rtcommuntttes and srores of org1111lzatlons,
are IJiblg to tcy to Jill a new
nat))nat ileus on Uteracy.
~ and Jllbllc lelevlsl:&gt;n wUI
lallllch a Jllblic service campallan
-Project Literacy u.s.. or PWS.
It will ND througl;l nat !ljl'lngand
Include documentaries, prime-time
dralnal .and a toll·free hotUne for
Wlterate viewers wbo want to know
where they; can learn how to I'Elld. .
'Educatloa aperts bave had
_,,....;.,
.... ,_,
__ out. or agree lng •
........
._
__..,..

&amp;!'! ~ to be ~-literate.

,miJI1on to lmre lhllllliO mlllon.
Till! uew study wu coaducted by
the two prtvate group. thf nluca·
- tiona! TesUng Servkle aod the
National Aslessment r1 nluca·
t))nal Prqpeea, at a rolt d. $1.8
mWJon.
In addttlo11 to !lndtni that 5·
percent of )'llllllladultl tald below
the t&gt;~ grade lev~!, ~h 1111

_. The

'

should be !J'OUd r:i that."
By contrast, said Celeste, the
Reagan admlnts tratlon has
doubled the federal deficit to $2
trllllon In five years, chiefly through
wasteful spending on defense.
He said Ohio receives only $480 a
person In defense rontracts coming
to the Buckeye State. compared
with the average of $000 for all
states.
The goveroor said despite that
disadvantage and "despite the tidal
wave of Imports sweeping over this
country, we have added jobs faster

...,
•'
•

new

report1 ~ II\ a . ·

aurvey lut 8111Di Of 3.Pl ~pie,
811!11 211D 25. wiU be the latest In a
wave II cbs-confllcttng 8~ on
_WJteracy, which )orne ~ucatlon
·expertl have J:eeuncalltng Amert·
ca's hJdden.problem.''
,
; Next lmnfh. two televlskln net·
-works, In&lt;~' ronjiJIICtj)n with the
'·\

~~~e~':!tei

crew module. Remaining on the
murky seahed is tre orbiter's left
Wing, largely Intact, and other
debris that was oot vital to the
tnvestlgatkln.
O'Connor said lJ percent of a $100
mWlon shuttle tracking satelllte
was recovered along with 00
percent r1 Its oooster rocket. In
addition, salvage ere~ recovered
lli perrent r1 the ~-Halley
science obiervatocy.
"We have now ronflrmed that
this is Indeed the lar!J!st ever

ALBANY , N.Y. !UP!)- Educa-

BACK TO PORT- 'lbe motor vessel !n4!pen4lnce returned to Port
. Canl!lveral, Fla.,.,~,IH!Vea mo•,ao lbt&gt;·diQ' after lbe 81Jultle
"'•? lift' ex,.. Jan. 28, 8lld NASA: llild IIIIRDry's IJilst exlenBive

search- - and ,- JWOvecy~ -eperatlon

conducted," he said. "We have
covered 9J,IXXl &amp;quare mlles r1
!IUface seardl, so we're dealing in
huge numbers.
"Around 6,1XXl people have been
Involved In this recovecy. In most
wata- recovecy activities you're
looking at one spot, so to speak,
where something lmpacte:!. Here,
we're talking about things that
were spread over a large amount r1
cx:ean."
The goal r:t the salvage operation
was to recover 25 percent of each
major slutUe component

~uleardland~ope~nwuflnlll,yfNer.Theln4!pendeaoe

and two olher NASA v p aln!ady In pJri were lhe final members It
the llbultle salvllll! ~ which t~~oe 111mbered 212 ships. (UPI)

For the past few months, only the
Uterty Star, tre Freedom Star and
the Independence have been involved In the search ~tl:&gt;n. The
NASA ships were lllfit to recover
booster rocket casings after they
fall away from a climbing shuttle.
"There'll probably re minimal
recovecy activities going on for a

fully comprehend the damage."
But prosecutors said at a news
conference after tre sentencing
that &lt;Jle-tlme Soviet defector Vttaly
Yurchenko had told American
oftlcfals the Walker-Whitworth spy
ring .was "the most important
operation in the KGB's history."
Yurchenko, who defected to the
WesttnJuly1985rutreturnedtothe
Soviet Union in Novemrer, told
U.S. Investigators the Information
enabled the Soviet intelllgence
agency il decipher "over 1 million
(Navy) messages," according to
the chief Whitworth prosecutor,
Assistant US. Attorney Wllllam
Fanner.
Whitworth was convicted of
seiitng the vital codes to the Soviets
~~!tween 1974 and 1J!83 tlr $332,&lt;XXI.
Walker, ronfessed leader of tre
esplooage ring that also Included
his son, Michael, and brother,

on the tax evasl:&gt;n counts. Some r1
tretermswUJNnconcurrentlyand
tre rest ronsecutively. making a
cumulative total of li5 vears.
Whitworth was also fined $UO,&lt;XXI.
"He .sold ou_t his countcy 100-fo~
over a dec~e r1 treachery.
Farmer said. Whitworth seriously
compro~ rur national defense
by greed.

f

Vukastn alsQ stressed tre manemotive .. and said Whltwor~
repres811ed the evU ci banality.
"He oolleves In ootllng. His llfe Is
devoted to determining the wind
direction and how he can ~e a
troflt from the roming storm, the
ju~ge said.
Whitworth represents the type
of modem man whose highest
ex!J'esslon lies In his amorality."
Whitworth used the Illegal money
to buy a new sports car, motorcycles. camera equipment, rompu·
ters, fine wtnes, opera tickets,
expensive dinners and lingerie t&gt;r
his wife.
John Walker, who testified
against his Navy lllddy In a plea
b&amp;rgatn tor a ligllter-.sentence, Is
expected to receive a Ull! term on

lacy

i~ur,actedasthego-between.
-~ '1\'ukasin sentenced Whitworth to
SE.Yen myear terms on tre
espionage counts and tour three·
year tenns and one five-year term

long time because the SRB retrteval ships are available assets. They
also need to do continuing training
so a good way to train them is to
continue to go w t there and pick up
small components," O'Connor said.
"That could go on through next
year possibly."

Ocf31n Baltimore.
Defense lawyer James Larson
said he would appeal Whitworth's
sentence and the legality of the FBI
search of Whlfworth's home and
said 11 would he a "tragroy" If
Walker Is released from )rison
before Whitworth.
The defense did not dispute
during the trtal that Whitworth
passed the secrets, rut claimed he
believed they were going to u.s.
allies.

..

"In our view Jercy Whitworth's
tragic Daw was his Jnablltty to say
no" to Walker, Larson said after the
sentencing.
Whitworth did not testify during
the trial.
He was the third Ama-ican spy
sentenced this year tn tre United
States. The others wereformer FBI
Agent Richard w. Miller In Los
An!J!leS and Airman Broce D. Ott
atBealeAJrForwBaseinnorthem
cautornia.
John Wlilker was exposed to the
FBI in late 1984 ~his ex-wife and
arrested In Baltimore on May aJ,
l985. Whitworth was taken Into
custody on June 3.1985.

EPA seeks fine
against area firm

oollege delrl!!e at a tour-year or
two-year lchoolfalled to an8\llel' the
followlniJ qlll!lllon come~:
If 1111! J1lll'ChaBI!8 a 11111dwlch tlr
$1.\15andal!o'Mdsoupfllrfllcents,
d ......_ .....
.., ho wrra1ch
1111
..,caa..
•• er""

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UPI) - A federal agency has flled a
comptatnt and recommended a $12,!00 fine agatnsl a Mason County
cornpaDY for keeping poor records regarding a taxic material.
The Envtrorunental Protecit&gt;n Agency's ~nal dflce tn
Plllladelphlasaldthls weekthatFooteMineraJCo.t8!teiltomaintaln
records of quarterly visual inspections r1 seven transformers
iniJulated with a tarde materlai.Polychlol'ln$ted Blphe~Js ·(PC B) at
Station ptant at New S.,VIII. That plant cklSe:! last•-,

thatmetnbyou~Wadultswitha

ao·--•

ch=;.;.:

::,a::'

the

E'.dllc1f~ ~t's Adult U·
~: Wt,..tlve, ~ Ill com·
ment Qn the ~ report otll!r than
to f11Y bi'
the tJndfnp to

..pam

retJeett!p,o«••ltlldy~ the
De""" \itd 1-* dt!plrtmelltl
tha~ ~ 111111 5 ~~~~- d.
· f111Ji!t1 reldlaa ~~!low the
to
level.
·

p

~. ·I

.•

·-

The compa~zy also failed to prepare tile reqUired PCB mmmenti,
the federal agency char!lesPCBs were produced in the United States between 19:11 a!J4 1977
and were used mos~ as tnsulaUng aulcis In electrtcal equipment
Including transformers and cap~ltont ID prevent fires,
TheEPAhasbeenroncernedabolltthehealthEfiectsoiFCBsfllra
number of years.
Foote Mineral has -aJ days to file a written answer to PCB

L.---·...,..__ ____________.
complalatl
l

~_
-.

·;•

tion coutp get a financial boost from
a multi·stl!,te, super lottery, but the
director of, the state lottecy said
legislation tnust he passed before
New York can participate tn the
proposed game.
.
"! l:l!lieve the gamewUl takeoff,"
John Qutnn, director of the state
division of tre lottecy, said Thursday, "Whether New York wW be tn
it or not will depend on whether I
can get the leglslalion ~- ''
Quinn, vlce presldeqt of the
Multi·State Lotto Boai-d, sSJd he has
been In contact with Gov. Mario
CUomo about the Idea and is
working on a bUJ to re considered
by the state Legislature durtng Its
winter session.
"The projected tnpact on education aid in New York would re the
crucial factor," said Tom Conroy, a
spokesman ilrCwmo. "The!Jivernor would ·serklusly consider a
!J'Oposal that would augment that
aid.''

additional 15 percent I'E8dlng ~~!tween the fourthandseventhgrade
teYe!a, the ltudy also showed that
more than 99 percent can write
their name.
In lalttni some basic skills at
varklus levels the study sbowed

~re:,lve?
Ka!'l&lt;·Haigler, dlrectcr ct

than the national average. What
this says Is that we are stronger
than people think," he said.
Celeste Iidiculed Rhodes' past
practices of fighting Indiana and
Michigan fi:&gt;r industries.
"The competition Isn't tetwe!ln
Ohio and Kentucky or West Vrrglnia or Pennsylvania," he said. "If's
between Singapore, Brazil and the
United States of America. We have
to be rompetillve with the rompettlion that isn't going to go away. We
aren't go big to put people back to
work with old attitudes."

State
studies
lottery
proposal

, report stud•tes 'hidd
blem
-. '
ew.
.
en
.
pro
N

•ma

.s

when he said deregulation of the
trucking tndustcy was a mistake
and should be reconsidered.
He also received applause when
he claimed he faced up IP the need
lor a stateincome tax increase in
1983 to balance the rudget and
provide lor needed job training and
job" creation programs, and for
schools.
"We did something that was right
for oor people and right for our
children," hesald,addtngthat since
then "we reduced taxes every year
and stlll balanred the budget. We

EX-Navy man gets 365-year sentence for spying

E

MEN'S &amp; BOYS'

SPORTSWEAR

strong pitch for the endorsement r:t
Teamster Union memoors, claim·
tng his administration has created
good union jobs and rescued Ohio
from the brink of economic
disaster.
In an animated ~minute speech
Thursday to the Ohio Conference ct
Teamsters, Celeste attempted to
lure tre INcking union away from
Its traditional endorsement of his
opponent, Republican guherna~r­
lal mmtnee James A. Rhodes.
Without mentioning tre former
governor by name, Celeste attacked · his . fiscal and industrial
development policies, saying they

were Irresponsible and passe.
In contrast, said Celeste, his own
administration's policies have
created a sound fiscal situation and
a good climate for business to meet
foreign compeUtlon.
"In Phase One, we've laid the
fllunda tlon and I think we have an
opportunity IP become a pacesetter
for this countcy tn the 1990s," said
the IJIVernor, claiming his adminis·
tration created 156,1XXl jobs last
year -fourth In tre nation.
The Teamsters endorsed Celeste
In 1982 over Republican candidate
Clarence J. "Bud" Brown, but has
encbrsed Rhodes evecy Ume he has
run, dating back to 1962. This year's
encbrsement Is said to te up for
grabs.
Celeste won his budest applause

Return of salvage vessels
ends hunt for shuttle debris

-~..._·..,..~--

308 E. MAIN ST. ·
POMEROY, OHIO
PHONE (614) 992·6614

26 Cenu

A Multimedia Inc. Newapeper

Celeste seeks support of teamsters

South Central Ohio

Fair through the period with
highs ranging from the mid' 70s to
the mid 80s each day. Overnight
lows will range from the 50s to the
lower IIJs.

4 Sections. 32 Pages

Vol.36. Na.82

.

'

Clear tonight, with a low near
iiO. Mostly sunny Samrday, ~
highs In the mid •
'l1le
probabWty of preclplllltlon 18
near zero through Saturday.

en tine

Copyrighted 1988

SEVERAL ·EXTRA-CLEAN ONE OWNER · .
USED CARS WITH LOW, LOW MILES•••
IT WILL PAY YOU TO SEE THESE

Clearing today, with highs in the
mid 60s. Clear tonight, with a low tn
the mid 40s. Sunny Friday, with
high temperatures in the low 70s.
The probabUityofpreclpitatlon is
near zero through Friday _
Winds wlll be from the oorth at 10
io 15 mph today and light and
variable tonight.
Ohkl Extended Forecast

COLUMBUS (UPI) -The Ohio Power SlUng Board has assured a
group of Wayne County farmers that public meetings wUJ tJe held to
discuss a proposed pipeline project.
The meetings wiD provide farmers and other landowners an
opportunity to discuss a plan by the American Natural Resourw Co.
to construct the Erie Pipeline, which is slate:! to run from west to east
across Ohio.
The pipeline would be used by ANR to transport natural gas from
txlth Canada and southwestern U.S. states Into 1'\?nnsyivanla and
New England. Current plans do mtcallforthe ppeltnetoserveOhio.

Daily Number
038
PICK-4
9088

II'Jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiillll•lllllli•••llii

Ohio weather

Panel plans pipeline hearings

Ohio Lottery

Quinn said 11 states have expressed interest in the game, which
officials lllpe to tegtn In Octoher
1987.
Altlllugh the group's five board
memters have mt determined
exactly what the game's format
would be, Quinn said It wruld be run
much the same way II!\ current
state lotteries. He said the weekly
drawing would be held In Chic~.
"It wW be several mantra ~~!fore
we can talk about what type 0!
game It wW II!," Quinn said .
The game Is expected eventuallY
. to have jackpots exceeding any of
those r1 the state lotteries, tncludtrlg
New York's record $41 mtlllon
pay&lt;tf. The top !l'ize ...wid in·
crease with tre number of peoJ!Ie
purchasing klttery tickets and tile
numher of drawings hetwe&lt;in
winners.
Quinn said Multi-State Lotto
officials have agreed to pula cap oo
tre jackpot. rut have not deter·
mined bow large the top awaljcl
would be. He said that they are ll)t
considering a $1 biUion drawing, 's
has heen reported.
The chance &lt;twinning wrulda
be sUmmer than with ot r
lotteries.
· Net proceeds from all sales
game tickets bought In a particu r
state would go to that state, exce t
f!ll !miley eannarlaed klr t
jac)lpo~ Qutnn said.
The game could Increase the total
amount spent on lotteries - ~
wlich about 45 percent goes tp
e:!ucation tn New York- althougj!
tt might Initially slow sales of otlli'r
lottery games, particularly Lotto
48, Quinn said.
1
"My mission Is to raise money for
education In New York stale,"
Qubtn said. He said the avera!!
eflect would be positive, because
wllatever Income was lost trorp
exlstlng games would II! llJ)re than
made~ by a super btto.
He said Canada runs a similar
glllll\! spc;&gt;nsored by severaliiWinces and has Increased Its lottery
income.
The otll!r states Interested In !hie
new game are Olio; Comecticul
nunots, Iowa, Mlstourl; NeY,:
lfaiJlllhlre, Oregon, Rhod! laland,
·Wulingtcn, Washington, D.C. allll
West VIrginia.
"

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