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                  <text>The

Ohio-Point

Times-Sentinel

7. 1986

W.Va.

Shultz criticizes sanctions at Harvard celebration

GeorgeShulz

By JIM RA'ITRAY
African economy on the United
States.
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (UPI) "Sanctions are oot solutions," he
President Reagan's top foreign
policy aides used Harvard Untver· said. "In a delusion of Increasing
stty's 350th anniversary celebration our Influence on e~~ents, we could
to defend limited sanctions against find ourselves quickly on the verge
South Africa and urge U.S.·Soviet rl. virtual powerlessness as a resutt
cooperation to halt the arms race. · of our absence from the South
Secretary of State George Shultz, African scene."
Outside the lrlck-walled rourt·
the keynote speaker at Friday's
convocation, urged a halt to yard, more than lOll demonstrators
"self-righteous moralism" on the protested Shultz' vtsh and renewed
subject of South Africa as chants of calls for Harvard to divest $416
anti-apartheid protesters per· million In stocks In rompanles
doing business with South Africa.
meated Harvard Yard.
Secretary of Defense Caspar
Shultz said further punitive ac·
lion against the white minority· Weinberger, who !p&gt;ke at a forum
ruled Pretoria government would on nuclear war as part d. the
allow opponents of apartheid to celebration, called nuclear arms
blame the collapse of the South oollduptn the United States and the

Soviet Union a suicide pa::t.
"It's a mutual suicide p~ct - a
threat of destruction," Wetnherger
sald r:l. the superpowers' escalating
nuclear arsenals. "The essence r:l.
defense Is not what wUJ deter w;, but
what wt11 deter the Soviets."
Weinberger, a l9ll Harvard
graduate, said the solution to the
escalating International nuclear
arms issue lies In Increased
rooperatlon · between the two
countries.
But, be said, bringing the two
nations together Is oo eagy task
because of distinct political and
"moral differences."
Another Harvard man, Supreme
Court Justice Wltllam Brennan,
spoke of his repugnanre for the

:P rince displays polo ability during visit
• CHICAGO (UP!) - Prince Cha·. , victory over the United States In the came on a penalty soot and the
second was an !IJ. foot tally.
rles, despite an embarrassing !ali
Prince of Wales Cup polo match.
from his oorse, retained his royal
Charles played polo In place of
c!emeanor and winning ways, scor- the British team captain, Major
But In the flrst chukker, Charles'
tng two goals In a polo game that
Ronald Ferguson, father of Sarah rollided with England's No. 1
hlghllghted a busy visit to the
Ferguson, the new Duchess of player, Andrew Seavlll, knocking
Windy City.
York. Ferguson agreed to sit oot so both player$ to the ground. Neither
. After the fall, In the royal Charles could play.
was hurt.
tradition. England's future king got
Charles scored consecutive goals
Adam Butler, the manager at the
right back on the horse to score the
in the fourth chukker, giving Oak Brook Polo Club, guarded
two goals Friday In Britain's 12-10 England a 74 lead. His first goal Charles through the match. "He

Official asks federal panel to
delay nuclear _plant action
WASHINGTON (UP!) - One
lesson from the Chernobyl nuclear
reactor accident Is to make sure
.evacuation plans are up to the job,
an Ohio official said In asking
regulators to delay action on the
Perry nuclear plant.
"We think it's prudent to come
before you and say we need another
look at the (evacuation) plan,"
state Highway Safety Director
William Denlhan told the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission during a
three-hour hearing Friday.
Denlhan asked the NRC to oold
up a full-power license for the $4 .5
billion plant so the state can revi~w
the plan. The owners of the Jian t li ·
miles northeast of Cleveland said
the review could be conducted
wltoout Interrupting the schedule
for putting Perry in production.
Full-power operation Is not likely
before themdoltheyear, they said .
The 6th Circuit U.S. Court of
Appeals Thursday ordered the

NRC oot to vote on a full-power
license until the court rules on a
challenge to the plant. NRC chairman Lando Zech said the NRC will
eomply.
Perry now has a low-power
license, meaning it can test lhe
reactor up to 5 percent of its rated
power. NRC staff workers gave
good marks to operator Cleveland
Electric Illuminating Co. and said
Perry wou ld be ready for a full
license if the fina l two weeks of
low-power tests are completed
SU!'I'I'Ssfully.
'"llle two-week period coming up
is very impot1ant," said an NRC
supervisor.
Denlhan said the state oopes to
complete its review in five or six
weeks. including getting information about how Soviet autooritles
handled !~ accident this year at
the Chernobyl power station. NRC
staff workers said detailed information may not be available for SJme

time although some generalized
information Is being passed along
now.
Ohio Gov. Richard Celeste last
month withdrew state support for
the evacuation plan for residents
near the ~rry plant. The gover·
nors ri Massachusetts and New
York have taken similar steps,
which put in jeoparey the qJeratlng
plans for nuclear power plants.

Celeste and Denihan said the
state also Is concerned about
earthquake safety. However, a
spokesman for Western Reserve
Alllanre, a foe of ~rry. said the
state is working only on evacuation
plans and doing oothlng on other
complaints alDut ~rry .
"They're not doing anything ...
basically, It 's an election-year
stunt," he said, altrough he wei·
corned the state decision to enter
the dispute.
The evacuation plan, which
received high marks lh two test
runs. covrrs 10 mtles around Perry
but at Chernobyl the evacuation
ex tended as far as 40 miles
downwind, Denlhan said. He de·
cllned to specify what Celeste would
do now If there Is an emergency or
tinue." said Jenco. speaking S&gt;ftly how much d the current plan might
and still appearing frail from his tx&gt; Implemented, if any.
ordeal.
"You would expect a moreadooc
The adm in istration has said it Is response?" asked Commissioner
pumsing every avenue to win the .James Asseltine.
release of Americans who remain
"I would prefer In use the term It
ho stages In Lebanon . Howi.'Ver, would be a plan, an act to try to
President Reagan has repeatedly resolve the problems we have with
declared ~ will nf'Ver negotiate the plan," Denihan said, and later
\11th rerrurL,ts.
said It might mean things like going
The Jolliet, lll, priest said he was beyond the 10-mlle zone.
kept with the other American
Commissioner Fred Bernthal
hostages during rmst of his captiv- said evacuation plans always allow
ity and last saw them the night of for a flexible response.
his own release. He said he believes
One NRC stall worker (lllntedout
all "are tx&gt;ing treated well."
Chernobyl used aa dlffermt type of
Three Americans still held in reactor than Perry. NRC chairman
Lebanon are David .Jacobson, an Lando Zech quickly added oonethe·
administrator at Beirut's Ameri- less, "We're still looking at lessons
ca n University. seized Jan. 8, 1985; learned as a result of the accident,
Terry Anderson, the Deirut bureau radiation, contaminati:&gt;n ... "
chief lor The Associated Press.
alxlucted Ma rch 16, 1985; and
Cleveland Electric vice president
Thomas Su IIJPrland. dean of the Murray Edelman said It would cost
American University's agriculture the utility $2 mllllon for each day
school, kidnapped Ju!lP 9, l!ll\5.
Perry is not allowed to operate.
A fourth American, Wllllam
A fluctuation In steam pressure
l:luckley, a political offlrer at the caused an automatic shutdown of
U.S. Embassv in Beirut , was the reactor earlier this week,
kidnapped Mat·ch 16, 1984 and officials said, and there later was a
lslamlr Jihad claimed last &lt;Xtober malfunction In a printed drcult
that he was "executed ." But no board In a cabinet In the control
body has Pver b?en recovered.
room ..

Ex-hostage empathizes
with hijacking victims
NEW YORK (UP!) - For the
Rev. Lawrence Jenco, freed six
weeks ago by his captors in
Lebanon, the bloody hijacking of
Pan Am Flight 73 was a painful
reminder of the anguish he felt as a
captive of Moslem extremists.
"I started to shake simply
because It was as if I was touching
into my own perS&gt;n again with all
that," said Jenco, who met ~&lt;ith
reporters at the headquarters oft he
Archdiocese of New York on
Friday.
Jenco, 51, said he heard about the
Pan Am hijacking In Pakistan on
the morning news and immediately
Identified with "what they (OOS·
tages) must be going through and
what I went through and the not
knowing and the fear and the
·anxiety."
Jenro, woo was freed .July 26.
said government negotiators mu ;1
I~arn to keep opm the lines of
communication with terrorists.
"The term 'non-negotiate' is
already a closing statement. When
you have a non-negotiable state·
ment, then conversati:&gt;n stops.
Somewhere along the Une I think
that the conversation soould con-

wasaverygoodplayertoday,"sald
Butler. "He never lost his -cool. He
was polite."
Butler said Charles tt»d him he
mjoyed the smell of roasting hot
dogs when Jiay moved to the south
side rl. the !leld.
Lightning, the pony Charles was
riding when he scored his two goals,
was named the most valuable pony
at the match.
Friday morning, Charles attended the rtbbon-cuttlng t&gt;r Marshall Field's departmmt store's
"Eagle and the Crown" British
promotion Downtown. There he
purchased a $3811 English sweater
for Prlnress Diana.
Charles sald the fastjons featured at Fleld's rould be the
beginning of an English fashion
Invasion.
"It looks to me as tiDugh this Is
the beginning of a British Invasion
which Is going to last all season ...
and wt11 soon he the subject of a
series of deep penetrating strikes
by dukes and duchesses armed with
homemade and highly desirable
wares," the prince said.
During his stop, he lDught a
ladles' wallet purse an·d a stylish,
handknit wool sweater In fuchsia,
purple and lime. A Field's spokes·
man said the sweater rost $.1l0.
"This Is just the kind of tiling Dl
would like to have," the prlnre said.
AlDut 5,00 spectators waited on
the west side of State Street across
from the store to catch a glimpse of
the prince. Sgt. Robert Thomas
said.

,.
BUSINESS DATA
PROCESSIN,.

PCHS
- Page4

at y
Vo!.36, No.87
Copyrighted 1986

Canaveral Air Force Station at
11:08 a .m. and the smaller Aries
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla . target rocket was launched from
(UPI) -The beleaguered space While Sands Missile Range,
agency Is back In business with N.M., at 12:39 p.m.
"I think It was very signifl,
the successful launch of a Delta
rocket that ccarrted two "Star cant," said Iauoch director
Wars'' satellites Into orbit for an Charles Gay of the Delta
orbital dogfight that success· success. "The agency needed it,
fully ended with their mutual we needed II for morale purdestruction.
poses, the country needed It
"We feel like we're back In the . because we've had a string of
groove," Wllllam Russell, Delta !allures and I think ft was
project manager. "The Dlght of significant to everyOOdy ."
the Delta was as close to pertect
Tense NASA engineers report·
as you can get."
edly placed a Saint ChrisA Pentagon spokesman topher's medal on board for
Thursday described the Stra· good luck in the wakp of the
tegtc Defense Initiative expert· Chal!enger klss, the April 18
ments as a "classic textbook destruction of an Air Force Titan
success" that shows "we can 34D rocket and the !Rita failure
pick up an object, identify what In May.
It Is and then we can home in on
Friday's mission W'dS classian object."
fied and although 9:lurces accurately described the payload,
As icing on the cake, one oft he few details were known untU
satellites detected the launch ri Pentagon officials discussed the
an Aries· rocket from New experiment five hours after the
Mexiro 91 minutes after the blastoff.
Delta took off as part of a
A Pentagon spokesman said
multi-pronged experiment, the Delta "ejected two satellites
clearly the most ambitious yet In in low-Earth orbit that were
the mulllbllllon-dollar Star Wars crammed with sensors." He
missile defense research effort. said one of the satellites was a
The Delta liftoff was NASA's target with a reflector and both
flrst space success since the Jan. were able to dodge each other in
28 Challenger disaster. NASA's an orbital game of tag.
last lauoch attempt ended In
"They eventually collided,"
failure when an identlcal S42 he said. "It was a kinetlc energy
million Delia was blown up May Impact, no explosives."
3 following an engine failure.
"We got pretty good data on
But It was clear salling the debris and we can safely say
Friday. The 116-foot rocket lDth were destroyed," said
blasted off from the Cape another Air Force rificlal .

~

Rt. 1, St. Rt. 691

*

Nelsonville, OH. 45764
753-3511, ext. 25

ByJONA~S.LANDAY

KARACHI, Pakistan (UPI) President Mohammed Zta ul-Haq
has ruled out extraditing the four
hijackers of Pan Am Flight 73 to the
United States, saying they would be
hied in Pakistan for the deaths d 18
people.
In his first public comments on
the hijacking, Zla told a news
ronference Sunday that the hijackers were young Palestinians
who were operating without the
support of any government.
The men face the death penalty If
convicted of the 16-hour hijacking
that ended Friday night with a
bloodbath that left 18 people dead
and more than 150 wounded.
"These hijackers have commit ·
ted a crime on the soil of Pakistan,"
Zla said. ''We wllltry them here. 1
hope that the courts will take full
rote of this and they receive the full
punishment that such a crime
desei'Ves."
The United States has issued
arrest warrants for the hijackers
because Pan Am is a U.S. carrier.
Sources In Pakistan's Internal
security agency said at least one
person was jailed on charges of

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WE CARE -ABOUT YOU AND YOUR FUTURE.
Call, write or stop in for further information
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VEIIIClE DEMONS'ntATION - 'Die Dllttrtct of
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"It all comes down to the Golden State," he said. "If
we win this California Senate race, we will keep
control of the United States Senate ... I did not come to
Washington to be a six-year president. I did oot seek
re-election just to protect the gains of oor first term ."
Reagan gave Zschau the requisite praise as a
business entreprenpur dedicated to the president's
economic policy, but he concentrated his fire on
Cranston, who holds a 51 percent toll percent lead in
recent polls.
Zschau is an enigma to California voters, a decided
llreral on civil rights and women 's rights, and an
opponent of administ ration grain sales to the Soviet
Union and the MX missile.

Reagan called Cranston , asslstan t Senate Democratic leader. "a world class champion at expanding
government and centralizing power In Washingtona man with a 100 percent rating with the left wing
ADA (Americans for Democratic ActionJ ."
Acknowledging that Zschau, who represrnts a new
breed of technology-oriented Republican voter In
Silicon Valley south of San Francisro, is not well
known, Reagan called on his oon conservative
patrons to "get out the word"- in country club locker
rooms and ooardrooms - to make certa in that voters
recognize the difference" tx&gt;tween Zschau and
Cranston.

Soviets
charge
reporter

reused to confirm reports that two
Americans were killed.
Hospital sources said the leader
of the hijackers- Identified only as
Hussain - was brought to the
operating table with a belt of
explosives stni around his waist and
doctors nfused to perform surgery
untll air force officials renoved It .
The hospital sources said one
bullet hit Hussain In the chest and
another In the stomach, missing the
belt and avoiding a massive
explosion In the Jiane.
Zla, mll!tary leader of Pakistan,
said the four men were relng
In terrogated, although one was
crttlcaUy Injured.
"They are unfortunately from
Palestinian ll'lgln," Zla said, referring to Pakistan :s longtime support
for the Palestinian cause.
"Where they came from, It Is yet
to be e;tabllsli&gt;d," Zla said upon his
return to Pakistan from the Non·
Aligned Movement ronference In
Harare, ZJmbabwe. "The Interrogation Is going on."
"So far, what has been ll"Vealed:
They are youngsters, but very
motivated and highly volatile." he
said. "Their ages are between 19.

WASHINGTON (UPII - The
case of an American reporter

fonnally charged with espionage
by the Soviet Union should oot
Impede plans for a summit or
hinder efforts for his release, top
U.S. officials say.
Nicholas Daniloff. 52, a U.S.
News &amp; World Report correspondent held in a KGB prison since Aug.
30 on wha t U.S. officials call
"tollmped-up charges," was forma lly accused of ;-pying Sunday, a
magazine spokesman in Moscow
said.
However. U.S. News chairman
Mortimer Zuckerman, said he
believed some "face-saving" can
be found to head of! aSovteltrlaltor

TEARS OF RELIEF - A woman !lteds a joyful tear for
safe
retum ol her hll8band, left, on Sunday to Frankfurt, West Gennany. The
.man was a passenger on lhe Pan American 747 airliner hijacked In
Paldslan Friday. The Incident ended with a hall olruDets and at leasll6
people dead. (UPI)

23, and 25. They must have been
motivated by some cause."
The hijackers, during negotla ·
ttons with officials, demanded a

crew to fly the plane to Cyprus.
where three Palestinian guerrillas
are jalled for the slaylngs of three
Israelis on a yacht In Larnaca.

Paper alleges investigation
of state auditor's opponent
CLEVELAND (UP! I - Asstate
auditors were Investigating the use
of state aircraft. by Ohio Supreme
Court Chief Justice Frank Celebrezze, they were also looking for
dirt on state Rep. Ben Rose,
R·Ltma. the opponent of their boss.
Audltor Thomas FerguSJn, accordIng to the Cleveland Plain Dealer.
The newspaper reported Sunday
It obtained work papers - docu ·
mentation for examination- that
soow auditors traveled the state
checking on Celebrezze's appear·
ances to see If the :W flights taken by
the chief justice since 1984 were for
court business or political purpose.
While scanning newspapers
throughout Ohio's public libraries,
they were also on the lookout for

stories on possible campaign ft .
nanclng abuses by Rose.
Included In the work papers was
an &lt;XI. 5, 1984, newspaper clipping
about Rose relmoorslng himself
out of campaign funds for expenses
Incurred In his law tyactlce, the
newspaper said.
The work papers also re~~eal that
the chief justlce took six more
fl!ghts In 1985 on state planes than
the 34 filghts previously disclosed.
Fred Knippenoorg, administrative assistant to Ferguson, said he
had no Idea why state auditors
would be looking for artiCles on
Rose when they were supposed to
he Investigating Ceiebrezze.
"It sounds like an Independent
operation," Knlppenoorg said. "It

would have to be the exa miner. I
can't tell you why lhe guy did it ."
Knlppenoorg refused to Identify
the auditors who conducted the
court audit and said department
policy prohibited them from talking
In reporters about audits.
However, the audit ll"port ident i·
ftes the examiners as Thomas
Remlinger and James Mathes.
both of wiK&gt;m told the Plain Dea ler
that they had nothing to ro with
researching Rose's campaign
finances.
Rose said he was not surprised to
learn that he had been included in
the audit, which he has ca Ued a
"political whitewash."

Assassination try wounds Chilean leader

Financial aid and/ or tuition subsidy is available
from avariety of sources: Pell Grant, VA, Guaranteed
Student Loan, Single Parent/Homemaker Grant and
J.T.P.A. (Community Action Agencies).

w
0

renting the van the four hijackers
used to reach t~ Boeng 747 on the
airport tarmac and srool their way
aboard early Friday.
The hijackers held 383 people on
the plane, making various de·
mands, until the power died and the
lights went rut. The hijackers
panicked and hurled grmades and
sprayed gunfire through the cabin,
officials and survivors said .
Confusion over details of the
drama persisted Sunday, with
conflicting reports on when Pakistani commandos reached the plane
to end the hijacking.
About 300 survivors of the
hijacking le!t Karachi Sunday
aboard special flights In Bombay.
India, and some to their original
destinations In New York and
London via Frankfurt, West Germany. Diplomats made _arrange·
ments for the bodies of the victims
to·be transported to their homes.
One American, a newly naturalIzed Indian man, was kUled early in
the hijacking, 16 people of various
nationalities died In the gunfire that
ended the ordeal and an Indian man
died late Sarurday night from his
injuries. The U.S. Embassy has

COLUMBUS, Ohio !UPI I -The Republican candidate for U.S.
Senate said elected officials in Washington soould voluntarily take a
drug test, and he said he will submit to one himself this week.
Rep. Tom Kindness said he will fnUow President Reagan's lead
and submit to a drug test.
Kindness, who said he was happy to follow the president's
suggestion, said other representatives soould take tests In "set an
example for the rest of the nation."
Kindness said he wll! take the test as a soow of support for an
anti-drug blll scheduled for a vote in the House next week. The btllis
aimed at giving the government more firepower In the fight against
drugs .
Kindness, at a news conferenre Friday at a Columbus area high
school, outlined the bill, which toughens pmallies fnr drug violat&lt;rs,
provides grants for drug education In schools and Increases the
number of drug enforcement personnel.
"The war oo drugs blll putssometeeth!ntnthe antl-drugrhetoric,"
Kindness said. "The measure promises the resources needed to
effectively fight the drug epidemic ."
The congressman said one of the irost Important aspects of the
anti-drug b!U is the provision for local and state grants to Implement
drug education and treatment programs in American &gt;rhoois.

Most classes are held from 3:00 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.
(except Nursing Assistant and Diversified Medical
Occupations - 9:00 a.m. - 3:30 p.m.) All classes
meet Monday through Thursday

Ill

flying back to Washington today after 23 days tn
California, with a brief stop In Denver to raise money
for Senate candidate Rep. Ken Kramer.
In Los Angeles, Reagan 9:&gt;Unded the theme ri. his
fall campaign to keep control of the Senate, now In
Republican hands by a 53-47 count, and sought to
avoid the "lame-duck:' label that can make a
two-term president ineffective In his last two years.
Thanking the $1,00a-platecontrlbutors for their :!J
years of supporting him, Reagan said, "It Is fitting
tha t as I head into the last major campaign of my
political career, the last campaign In which I will have
a personal stake, thai I am herewith you. It Is a make
or break election.

Candidate to submit
to drug test in D. C.

WHEN: FALL QUARTER BEGINS OCTOBER 6, 1986

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enttne

Pakistani president rules out
extradition for 4 hijackers

WHO: YOU!
WHAT: PROGRAMS TO DEVELOP YOUR SKIUS THROUGH
HANDS-ON 'IRAfiiNG IN CN OF 14 PROGRAMS
WHERE: THE ADULT EDUCATION CENTER 1\
Tri-County Vocational School
It!~~
-~

iS
....

pref'lpllatlon Is
through Tuesday.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Mond~y. September B. 1986

By IRA R. ALLEN
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - President Reagan Is
putting his personal prestige on the line In what he
calls his last campaign, an effort to keep Republican
control of the Senate in a "make or break" midterm
election that could determine his political legacy.
With 22 of the 34 Senate seats at stake held by
Republicans, Reagan urged Californians Sunday
night to oust three-term Democratic Sen . Alan
Cranston, "one of America's most strident liberal
leftists" In favorofunderdogGOPcandtdate, Rep. Ed
Zschau.
After raising $1.5 million for Zschau at a
star-studded dinner in Los Anwles, Reagan was

Skill Is Strength
z

Clear toolght, with a low in lilt'
mid tos. Sunny Tuesday, with
highs near 75. The prohablllty of

Reagan opens campaign for GOP candidates

UPI Science Writer

'

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Lotto
38-33-6-20-8-12

•

By WILLIAM HARWOOD

~=====AUTO

Daily Number
153

to

SDI satellites
·destruct in space

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Ohio Lottery

Eagles lose

Brennan said. "That day wlll be a
great day for our country and also
for our Constitution."
Brmnan said he does not understand why Chief Justice Warren
Burger considers the death penalty
constitutional yet calls oomlng at
the stake "repugnant to all clvtllzed
standards."
"The flesh does oom when the
electric chair Is used, just as It
mlghl bum at the stake," Brennan
said. " (ltl might fairly tx&gt; described
as frying in a chair."

death penalty while addressing law
students.
Brennan, who earned his law
degree at Harvard, predicted the
nation's highest court will S&gt;meday
outlaw capital punishment, which
was relnstattrl In 1972.
"I believe that a majority of the
Supreme Court wlllooe day accept
that when the state punishes with
deatlr, It dentes the humanfty and
dignity r:1. the vtctlm and transgresses the prohilition against
cruel and unusual punishment,"

I

grandson from his weekend retreat
By AN'I110NY BOADLE
In the Andes when his motorcade
SANTIAGO, Chile (UPI l
when was amooshed 3l miles SJuth
President Augusto Plnochet sui·
of
Santiago. Autoorltles said his car
fered a hand wound in an assassinawas hit by more than a dozen bullets
tion attempt by suspected leftist
that lal!ed to pierce the bullet-proof
rebels who fired rockets, grenades
windows.
and machlnP guns at his motor·
"There was very Intense gun,
cade. A nationwide state of siege
!Ire,"
the army general sald of the
was In effect today.
attack, In which autoortties said
Gm. Plnochet, 70, appeared on
two cars blocked his Mercedes
television Sunday night with a
Benz.
"My first rmctloh was to get
bandaged hand Injured by a piece of
out
of
the car, but I was traveling
grenade shrapnel In the attack by a
with 11\Y grandson aged 10 and I
suspected leftist commando !JIUad
covered him with 11\Y oow."
that killed five security guards and
wounded nine.
His rntlitary government lm·
Acrordlng to authorities, a romposed a nationwide state of siege mando squad ot at least 12
Immediately after the assasslna- suspected Ie!ttsts opened fire on the
motorcade with au~mattc weadon attempt.
"We are fighting a war between - pons, rocket launchers and hand
Marxism and democracy," Pl- gl'l!llades as tt crossed a bridge Ill
oochet said, crlltclzlng his political · the way kl Santiago at 6:40 p.m.
opponents woo are seeking a return · Three of the motorcade's cars
. to democracy. "It's chaos or were overtumed by explosions,
democracy. They will have to Including one that plunged Into the
· decide what they want."
dry riverbed below-kllllngltstwo .
Ptnochet was returning wh h a occupants, roth Slr'ret ~•tee

a.

,.

boeyguards.
A Mercedes similar to the one
used by Ptnochet burst tntonames,
but the IJ'esldent was traveling In a
second one, 100 yards behind.
"The IJ'esldentlal motorcade was
amooshed by ... at least 12 people
with weapons d. dlffermt types and
calibers," government spokesman
Franctsro Cuadra said.

Ptnochetlast resorted to a state of
aut a
mounting wave d. unre;t and
violent prote;ts by opponents seekIng the restoration of democracy.
CUadra said an army sergeant
and I 1ro pollee r:I.Dcers, one d. them
a motorcyclist escorting the motrocade, were kltled In the attack.
The two other securtty guards
kltled In the ambush were oot
Identified. because their bodies were
badly charred, he said.
He sald three army officers and
six police officers were seriously
wounded In the amoosh, and two
were In a critical condition.
siege on Nov. 6, 1984, to

Cuadra said the weapons used In
the ambush were found later In
three abandoned cars and were
part rl. a massive arsenal- some r:1.
which was dtsrovered In abanoned
mines ~ oorthem Cl!Ue Iasi rronth.
The arms were lapeled by
Cuban·tralned Communist rebels
from trawlers In a Soviet fishing
!leet off the Pacific coast, author!·
ties said.
1
The state d. siege grants the
mUitary gbvernemnt special powers to arrest suspects wtt!Dut due ,
process, censor the press. restrict '
the rtllht of assembly and association, tap phones and open mall.

,

Press reports said a Communist
urban guerrilla group called the
Manuel ROOrtguez Patriotic Front
clalmeed responslblllty fur the
attack In a telepoone call to a
foreign news agency. But a spokes·
man for the front called UP! and
said he was the only official
spokesman for the group and had
made oo lllch anoounreltiEIIt.

SVRVIVPli A'l'I'ACK - Chilean President AuRtJ!ito Plmchct, shown In an onlated llle
photo. 8tdfered a grenade shrapnel wound after lefi·Wtng gueiTIJ.
las ambu!lted his motorcade
Sunday as he was retumlng to
SantJaao, Chile, lrom hla country retreat, olllclals llllid. F1ve ol
I*' bocb'JIIards were reporied
dead. (UPI)

,,,

Danllofl, who he described as ·a
hostage.
Michael Armacost, unde rsecretaoy of state for political affairs,
said that sending Danilo!f to trial
wou ld "complicate" the "resolution
of this case."
When asked Sunday on NBC's
"Meet the Press" if a trial would
rule out a superpower summit now
in the planning stages, Armacost
replied. "We haven't said that."
The revelation of the formal
charge came less than 24 hours
after Whil e House officials confi rmed that President Reagan
appealed to Soviet leader Mikhail
Gorbachev for Daniloffs release.
In a letter to Gorbachev. Reagan
gave his personal assurance the
reporter is not a spy, aides said.
tn Los Angeles Sunday, where
Reagan was campaigning for
Republican candidates, White
House spokesman Larry Speakes
repca !rd the administration's profession of Ulniloff's innocence.
But Speakes added, "There will
be no trade" - a reference to a
proposal for an arranwmen t link·
lng Danlloff's fr"'dom tothecaseof
a SovlP! U.N. employee, Gennadi
Zakhamv. arrested O!lP week before Daniloff and now jailed In New
York without oond on spy charges.
Speakes also said no change has
been mad e in plans for the SE-pt. 19
meet ings txotween Secretary of
State George Shuttz and Soviet
Foreign Minl s trr Eduard
Shevardnad7P.
"We wlll conttnue to review our
options - what WE' can do to
influence events and impress on the
SoviPis it Is tn!X&gt;ed a matter or
utmost serious ness to the United
States," he said. The Kremlin has
been tnld that Reagan "Is personally involved in the matter anrl th a t
he regards It as !l'rious," he said.
U.S. officials have sa id, ho~'!'ver.
something other than a trade - for
lnstanre, Danlloff's release and a
DE'W U.S. considt·mtion of a I'RJUC'St
for Zakharov !o.Jxo ll'leased into the
custody of the So1·ipt amoossador
- has ll«'n suggt&gt;sted to the
Kremlin.
Armacost reiterated the U.S.
view that Daniloff's detention is
directly linked to Zakhamv's
arrest.

"They grabbed him for lllltlves
that aretransparmt ... gettlngthelr
man out," he said.
First word rJ formal action
against Danlloff came In an
Interview Sunday on CBS's "Face
the Nation," when Soviet Foreign
Mints try spokesman Gennadl Gerastmov said, "Tl\l!re Is going to be
a trial."
'·
·
"Pretty soon ... we ·are going to
have thesechargesagalnsthlmand
he can hlrea la..yer to helphlman(j
that's It," he said.
·
'

.

.,

�Monday, September 8, 1986

.
.... '

i ~C()mmentary
Dying hard __________W_i_llia_m_F_.B_u_ck_le_y_J_r.
The·
. ·Daily Sentinel
Page-2- Th~ Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-M)ddleport, Ohio
Monday, September 8, 1986

~

~-- ~

_. -. ..

_- ·. Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

DEVOOED..TO TIIJ: INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

- ~...:::.

rgm~ ,...,__.L-"""'T"'•~c.~
~v

ROBERT L. WINGh'TT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
. Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFIJCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

News Editor
A MEMBER of The United Press International. Inland Dally Press
Association and tlK&gt; American Newspaper Publishers Association .
LETTERS OF OPINION are- welcome. They shoold bt&gt; less !han

3(()

words

long. All ll'tlers are subject toed !ling and fl1.L st be signed with name. address and
. . telephone number. No unslgnOO letters w!ll be published L('lters should be In
good taste. addrt&gt;Ss!ng lssut'S, not personalltit&gt;S.

Ohio Politics

Chief justice race
~ coming into focus
By LEE.LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
• ; £0LUMBUS, Ohio (UP! 1- The campaign t&gt;rthe Ohio Supreme Coort
• · .w;ts brought Into sharp focus last week at the Ohio Judicial Conference
· -when Chief Justice Frank D. Celebrezze delivered his "State of the
Judiciary" address.
Celebrezze. a Democrat, told his fellow judges that an "environmental
Iceberg" of lawsuits is lurking under the surtace. and that hazardous waste
· diSposal and underground water pollution will top the list of Issues facing
courts In tile 1900s.
.Celebrezze said the courts will have to decide complicated legal
questions "pitting tile need to protect th~ heallb and well·belng of the
-people of Ohio versus the rtghts of oor free enterprtse system to liandlr
ttlese dangerous problems in an ecooomlcal fashion ... "
· Then, citing a case decided last May, the chief justice said the court is
going to come down on the side of protecting the poople.
~ "Personally." said CelebwLZe, "it has bePn my belief that the courts of
this country were fanned to protect its citizens. In the coming years, It will
be our responsibility to continue to ensure that Ohiowlil oot be a dumping
ground for the toxic and hazardous wastes of other states."
Judge Thomas .J. Moyer of Franklin County Court of Appeals, the
. J:!epubllcan nominee for chief justice, was not on the program but he held a
. press conference outside the meetlnR room and took exception to
. Celebrezze's position .
Moyer agreed that transportation, storage and disposal of toxic waste
~ ate serious issues that will have to be carefully considered and decided by
1be courts.
• :But Moyer hotly disagreed that ill&gt; the Supreme Court's responsibility to
· ~regu late hazardous waste disposal through judicial opinion~ It is the
r.esponslbllity of the Ohio General Assembly. he said.
Moyer believes that the citizens will be protected by their ela·ted
representatives in the Legislature, and it Is the job of the Supreme Court to
. even·handedly interpret and apply the law, whether to individuals or
~~

WSI!lesBe$.

: .When Celebrezze takes sides. particularly ahead &lt;:1 time, the law Is not
_going to be applied even-handedly. said Moyer.
: ~ "Fairness and impartiality are the foundation of our judicial system,"
said Moyer. "When that's gone, lawyers have oo reason to tell their clicnt.
• 'tkl&gt; your case to a court and tltlst you1 property, your life. yoor libPrty loa
court,' because the court is not going to treat you fairly .
• · ."What he (Celebrezze\ should he &lt;;aylng is, ·we are going to consider
· -those cases very carefully ... we're going to make sure the law is applied
'.cOnsistently the way we think the General Assembly intended for the law to
be applied."'
In simpler terms. according Io Moyer. just&gt;oe ought to be blind. but
· Gelebr!'l71' has bePn peeking under thr blindfold and bending the law to
please the constiluency that elects him to office.
· Nor are slate legislators Immune from appealing lot hose who keep them
·In power.
.~ :The Ohio House of Representativrs votro 87-8 last wt'&lt;'k fo r an
;tnsurance~ tort reform bill which practically no one believes will aehleve
t)le desired goal of making commercial liability insurance available at
n?asonablP rates .

: Why? &amp;cause lawmakers are in the middle cJ: 11'-cleclion campaigns
and want to bP able to brush their hands toget her and tell voters. "we've
solved Ihal problem." or course. they haven 't.
But House Speaker Vernal G. R~fc Jr .. D·Nrw lloston. was privately
warning last Wl'&lt;'k that anybod)' who voted against thP bill would he In
'trouble if they had a close election on their hands. demonstrating that the
legislation was more for effect than substanCf'~
· • Riffe put the icing on the cake bv pushing tlu·ough a resolution declaring
·.It is the "Intent" of the House to adopt a tax cut after 1he federal tax re!orm
· ~fiillls enacted. Another flag to lake around to his membPrs' district s and
. wave this fall. even though nothing has bPen accomplished.

Letter to the Editor
A good feeling
• ·To all the beautiful p&lt;'Ople who
'helped me get over the feeling of
being 94 years and a last leaf on the
tree thank you, and for coming to

see me.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel Page 3

1'

· First I thank my two closest
rietghbors. Don Rea and Elladene
Watson, who do so much for me.
And IJve those girls of the
Minersville Methodist Church woo
gave me a party! And kept me from
feeling 94 and the last leaf on the
tree and Rev . StPVe Nelson who

took time Olll of his busy life to come
10 the cilurch girls j.llrty oo I did oot
feel Hkl' the last leaf oo the tree.
Love those girls, Vic Brown and
Mrs. Brown and Mrs. Ron Rey ·
nolds also came. So ille seemed
good again and not being old and
feeble, slnCI' I have outlived my
conterr:porary folks. And for a lrief
moment I did not feel like the last
leaf on tlw tree , and life seemed
good again.
Bless you all, and God love you.
Hazel McCallum

Today in history
· Today Is Monday, Sept 8, the 251st day oC 1986 with ll4 10 foUow.
The moon Is moving toward Its first quarter.
The morning star Is Jupiter.
The PVenlng stars are Mercury, Venus. Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of VIrgo. They Include
~ England's King Richard I, "Richard the Lion Hearted," In ll57; composer
Antonln Dvorak In 1841; stage and lllm director Max Reinhardt In 1873;
country music pioneer Jlmmle ll.cqers In 1897; ·Fk&gt;rtda Sen. Claude
• pepper In trol (age 8!)); comedian Sid Caesar ln'I9Z! (age64) ; actor Peter
• liellers In 1925, and country music singer Patsy Cline In 1932.
·. : · · On this date In history:
; : In 1522, Spanllih navigator Juan de Elcaoo returned toSpaln,completlnl
: ; the !Irs! clrcumnavl&amp;'atton &lt;:1 the globe with an l!&gt;l!l'!dlti&gt;n that began under
• · Ferdinand Magellan.
.: · : In 1565, the llrst pennanent European settlement In the future United
; : States ot America was founded at what is now St. Augustine, Fla.
. : : In trol, more than 6,001 people were kiUed when a hurricane and tidal
: • · wave struck Galveston, Texas.
• · ~· In 1944, the tlrst Gennan V·2 rocket fired !rooJ across the English
Olannel hit Britain.
'

A fortnight ago In this space I
ruled that t!J:e matter of William
Rebnqulst and his alleged lnter!er·
ence with the rtghts of votes
approaching tre polling place In
Bethune, Artz., In 1962 amounted
eitrer to a 1 mistaken identity, or b)
perjury by an associate justice of
the Supreme Coort. I raised the
further point that it would be odd to
perjure yourself in order to conceal
the charge that yoo had askEd a
voter to prove that he could readthis because, In the Dark Age of
1962, poople were actually supposBI
to prove they could read before
!J:elng allowed to vote.
There Is was left. But since t!J:en
certain facts have come out The
star witness against Rehnquist was
one James Brosnahan. It was he
who most resonantly insisted that
Rebnqulsl was ·out there harassing
voters. But oow it devdops that
Brosnahan in fact didn't himself see
t!J:e spectacle he described with
such animus: He had heard others
say that Rehnquist had done this.
Meanwhile, every engine of re-

search, journalistic and criminal,
had gone to work on t!J:e case. And
there Is nothing there. No contem·
poraneous news accounts, no pollee
reports, no FBI report mentioning
Rebnqulst. Brosnahan was reduced
to saying that it must have been
some other episode involving Rehnqulst, at some other site. Perhaps In
some other country.
Mr. Brosnahan Is a Uberal
Democrat (his self-designation)
woo has q:~posed Rebnquist for
years, and wUl presumably oppose
him as chief ju stice, which Is his
right. a right he will no doubt lJ:e
disappointed the Rehnquist court
will not deny him.
The diehard Democrals, having
failed to discredit Rehnqulst.
toought to maneuver for time by
asking for a delay In the vote. Sen.
Robert Dole ot Kansas replied with
a simple no. And no one can easily
accuse Mr. Dole of being preclpi ~
tate: There has been plenty of time
In which to accumulate an anti·
Rehnqulst portfolio. light down to
incriminating birthmarks. The

Kennedy·Biden·Metzenbaum De·
mocrats have thought of filibust er~
lng, but that Is not a popular
practice in the Senate a few weeks
before a national election. They
have decided to emphasize Ihe bad
cilaracter of William Rehnquist.
Here they have the difficulty of
needing to deal with eplsndes 11, Jl .
25 years old, concerning which
there Is ambiguity as to the facts .
and ambiguity as to their meaning.
If you were a clerk writing a memo
for Justice Robert H. Jackson on
the points In contention in Brown"'·
Board of Education. what would
you understand your responsibill~
ties to bP?
The drum in the background
continues to beat oot the main point,
that Reagan ls trying to "idt'Oioglze" the court, Ideologize bPing the
word one uses whPn someonP
attempts to shape a court that
respects the primary right of the
legislature to legislate. The anticonservative lobbies !People for
t!J:e American Way, the Supreme
Court Watch, etc.) are in high gear.

But thev have their problems,
primarily the not ion that It is not the
American way for a

presidt~nt

to

appoint to the court members

whose virws arr harmonious with
his own. Or the maHer of rdW
qualifications, Maggie Gallagher of
National Rcvk:w has put together a
chart that handles the question
neatly:
Myth No. 1: Reagan appoint~
ments arr of \ower-than-a verage
gualltv overall.
- Judges rated wrll quamied or
bl&gt;ttcr (ABA rating!: Carter. 55
pern•nl; Rt•agan , .12 percent;
Nixon, '1 percent; Ford. 48 percent.
Myth No. 2: Reagan has ap·
JDintt'!l somP completely unqualifiro judges.
- District Court judges with
minority not qualified rating (ABA
rating! : Reagan. 3; Carter, :1:2.
-District Court judges ratro not
qualified i ABA rating) : Reagan,
zero: Carter. 3.
Myth No. :1: Reagan has ap·
JDintro an unprrcedPnted numbPr
of judges.
- Pri'Sidenti aIappoin 1ments as a
(J('rcentagr of all federal judges:
Johnson (five years !, &gt;4 percent;
Nixon ioo years!. 15 (J('rcent;
Cartrr (four yciJrsl. :!9 pPrCPnt;
Rragan (5.!J yrars\ ..16 prr('('nl.
So whf'rr do

W('

go from herr?

his Supremr Court Watch
report on Judge Antonln Scalia.
attorney :VIiehacl Goldfarb admits
that Scalia is inll'lligPnl. amiable
and. warmly admired. even by
lhoS&lt;' who dlsagr"" with his positions, but ttlc'n qurstions his crPdenllals. as hr would Rrhnquisl's
anyway. "Scalia Is a William F.
Buck lry C'OnSf'rvativf' rat her than a
New Right conscr\'alivr~ His world
vit•w Is b&lt;1sed on a well ~lnformed
misiniPrprrtetlion of history rather
than kn ow~ nothingism ~"
So ... opponl'nls of Mr. Reagan's
appointments ar&lt;' contending that
tt.:•y sufff'r from a misintrrprrta·
tion of history. 'J'hp kind of people
rlv':v prC'rrr arr thosr who invPn l
hi slmy and interpret the law. But.
ao; thr 'Nisf' man said, historv is thr
poiPmir of the victor.
~~

Jim Ke.lly, Kelvin Bryant shine in NFL debuts Sunday · . · .:
By JOEL SHERMAN

UPI Sports Writer
In their NFL debuts Sunday, Jim
Kelly and Kelvin Bryant showro
that talented players will succeed
regardless of lbe competition.
In Buddy Ryan's debut as a head
coach, the Philadelphia Eagles
showed that without much talent ,
even the finest strategies will falter.
Kelly and Bryant, two of the most
publicized players to jump!rom the
U.S. Football League, opened their
NFL careers with shining perlor·
mances, although Kelly's came In
defeat.
Meanwhile, the "%" defense theta~koftheNFLlastseasonwhen

Ryans formulated alllgnment
the Chicago Bears dominated
league - failed miserably
Ryan's debut as head coach of
Eagles.
As defensive coordinator of

for
the
In
the
the

Bears last year, Ryan was able to
employ such players as Mike
Singletary, Dan Hampton and
Richard Dent on a defense that
catapulted Chicago to a SuJ;'"r Bowl
title.
·

Without that kind of personnel
Sunday, Ryan's Imaginative de·
signs were little more than partial
obstacles · to the Washington
Redsklns.
At Washington, Jay Schroeder
passed for two toochdowns and ran
for another and Bryant scored
twlcetopacetheRedsklnstoa41·14
trouncing of Ire Eagles.
The Redsklns ripped through the
Eagles' version of the "46" defense
for 433 yards In offense.
"It is tough on the kids to learn a
new system right away," Ryan
said. "They will catch on; I
guarantee lt.
"It was a tough opener for me.
prohably rrorelhananybodyelse,"
Ryan added. "I didn't have the best
day mentally with some of my
calls."

"It's a jot dlt!erent ," Bryant said,
Elsewhere, Atlanta routed New 30-0 and New England crushed the
comparing the NFL to the LSFL Orleans 31-10, Detroit stopped Indianapolis Colts, 33-3.
"It's a Jot more physical than It wa~ Mlnnesdta 13-3, the Los Angeles
Bears n, BroWII! 31
In the otrer league.! wanted to he 1n Rams beat St. Louis 16-10. Chicago
At Chicago, Waiter Payton
this league all my nte."
defeated Cleveland 41·31, Houston rushed for llJ yards and scored
Kelly lookEd like he had heen whipped Green Bay 31·3, San twice 10 help the Bears overcome
playing In this league all his ure.
Francisco crushed Tampa Bay an unexpected shaky defensive
At Orchard Park, N.Y.. Kelly 31·7. Seattle ripped Mlaml 5Q.:1Jl. performance. Dennis Gentry re~
completed 20 of 33 passes for 292 Kansas City defeated Cincinnati turned a kickoff 91 yards and
yards and three touchdowns. His :!1·14, Denver nipped the Raider., Wilbur Marshall returll.'d an Inter~
strong right arm was enoogh to .:JB.."i), Seattle blankEd Pittsburgh ... ception 58 yards for scores as
provide the Buffalo Bills with future
hope but not for a victory against
the New York Jets.
Ken O'Brien threw touchdown
passes of 71 and 46 yards to help the
Jets overcome Kelly's showing
with a :1Jl.ZJ triumph.
Keliy, who jumped from the
USFL to sign a ftve-year contract
worth $8 million with Buffalo last
month. gave the Bills the quality

Bryant's debut went much better.
The multi -talented performer
rushed for 36 yards on six carries
and caught four J.llSses for16 yards.
He had a :£-yard touchdown
reception and a 16-yard loochdown
run.

quarterbacking they hoped for
when they made him a millionaire.
"I wanted towinthlsgamesobad
because Buffalo has had 2~ 14
seasons the last rouple of years,"
Kelly said. "We have to keep one
thing in our minds, that's that we
can win."

Chicago produced Its 11th st ralght
victory at Soldier Field.
Chiefs u, Bengals 14
At Kansas City, Mo.. safety
J:l?ron Cherry and tight end Walt
Aroold recovered fumbles In the
end zone for touchdowns to help the
Chiefs 10 their fourth str.lghl
season-opening victory while the
Bengals lost their fou11h consecu·
tlve opener.

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

.
_

COLOR FILM
~,~~4 DEVELOPING*
~·

• AS PER POSTED SCHEDULE

Bosox up division lead to 6lh games
By SCOlT NEWMAN
UPI Sportswriter
Boston Red Sox pitcher Bruce
Hurst corrected a bad habit quickly
after It began and Sunday pitched a
complete shutout. If the Red Sox
continue such behavior, they may
- finally - overcome their bad
habit of folding In September IJng
after It began.
Hurst, who had struggled In
recent outings, pitched a nine- hitter
and struck out seven .to lead
Boston's 9-&lt;l victory · over the
Minnesota Twins.
Prior to the game, Hurst watched
films with Clemens and found
something wrong with his delivery.
"! was doing something wrong
with my hands," Hurst. 10.7, said.
"! corrected It and now my
fastball's got some extra pop."
The Red Sox have had some
Traditionally

vlllefied for dying In the stretch, different things up there.
Boston has won eight straight and
"I'm having fun. I'm not worried
lead the second· place Toronto Blue who's behind us. We'rewlnnlngand
Jays by 61· 2games. Toronto lost to that's aU that matters. We're
tbl&gt; Chicago White Sox 4·3.
making things happen."
"We're winning the games we
Boston stlll has six games
have to win," said Hurst. whose remaining against Toronto, but
ERA of 3.22 is third In the AL. Just veteran outflei&lt;Er Dwight Evans
going for the pennant is &lt;!lOUgh says this team won't fade.
Incentive."
.
'"This is a different club with
Boston's lead has been J.lltkled by dlfferE!It character,'' he said.
winning against the AL West The "When we play Toronto, we'D see
Red Sox are· 51~33 against those wbo's the better learn."
teams ...,. their best mark since
Losing pitcher Neal Heaton, 6-13,
divisional play began In 1~9 .
was tagged for all nine runs over 4
Jim' Rice's grand slam - his 2·3 Innings to drop his litetlme
second during llxe weekend series rt'&lt;'ord against the Red Sox 10 1·9.
against the Twins - Iro a 15-hlt
In other games, Ollcago edged
Boston attack.
Toronto 4-3, CIPVeland blasted
"Jinuny's doing the things hedld Mllwaukee 7-2. Baltimore shut out
the year Yaz (Carl Yastrzemski) Seattle. S.O, Oakland defeated
retired (1981)," Hurst said. "He's Oetrolt, 8-4, California routed New
been a
to watch. Jimmy York 7·2, and Kansas City defeated
real well and he'll do ""''"•, 5-2.

. ALKA·
SELTZER
ANTACID
TABLETS

RE~U~~OR

6.4

war.

The use of "speed" lappred off in

postwar Japan. only to begin rts ~
ing in the 1970s. It has been Increasing ever since. Though .ofll·
cia I estimates claim trere are only
320.000 "stimulant abusers" In Ja ·
pan today, unofficial sources place
the figure much higher.
"Japan is a user nation" . one
Justice Department report states.
"The major sources of tmetham ~
phelaminest are the Republic of
(South I Korea and Taiwan . with a
lesser amount smugg led In from
Hong Kong.
"Profits from rnethamph&lt;'tam~
in e trafficking are the main source
of income for organized crime
groups in .Japan ~ Drugs, as tre sin ~
glc most Important component of
organiz£1d crim f' 's income in Ja ·
pan, are what pose liM&gt; greatest
threat to the United States."
Law enforce ment agencie-s have
ix'f'n awa rr sin('{' thr early 1970s
that JapanesP criminal gangs
wLw expanding in H~waii, tre
West Coast and th&lt;' Pacific Trust
TI'!Titorles. which are particu~
larly allracllve because of the

larf" number of Japanest'
dents and tourists .

rcs i ~

"The Japanese toUJists wh:J visit

the area (s l expect to be provided
with gambling facilities, prostl·
tutes, massage parlors and JDr ~
nographic shows," another Ju sl iC&lt;'
Department r&lt;'port explains. " In
order to meet t!J:ese expectations.
Japanese organiwd crime groups
have invested in hotels. bars, restaurants ~ night clubs, ti"K'atrrs.
tourist agC'nclrs and similar busllltlSS£"S

The report abo prroictro that
Yakuza member s would be lm ~
porting mcthamphet amines into
the Untied States. laking advan ~
tage of II-.• prier different ia l. Asl ~
an ~ produ&lt;'&lt;'d "SJJ&lt;'t'd" msts abou t
$10,1Ul less per kilogr am than thr
stuff made in thi s eountrv .
South Kor ea is a majOr C'X JXJr.
ter of methamphetamin rs. Cl an ck&gt;stln e laboratorif's manufac·
ture it from ephedrine smugglro
In by sea fr.om Thailand. Singa pore. Hong Kong, France and
Germany.

ra lly. about !ll percent Is meant for
export by ship to the Ullcit Japa ll{'Sr market. " a Justice Depart~
mf'nt rrpm·t notC's.
SLEEPTNC PIPE BOMBS:
Shortly before dawn on J uly 8, a
pipeline IPa k .sp iliPd more than
4fl.OOO gallons of gasoline ont o
Long Lake Road in the St. Paul
suburb or Mounds View, Minn . A
p~1ssing car's rxhaust ignited a
lhrr&lt;•·blork hla ze. and a series of
explos ions blt•w off man hole cov~
PI'&lt; '" lhr burn in g fuel dralnro
into sPwrr systf'ms. A woman
and hrr 7-yca r·old daughter died
wh en lhrv ran from lheirhomrln
a cloud of f'Xplodin g gas fumes.
Thr Mound s Vil'w tragedy oc ~
currrd two months after Con ~
g rrss had sco lded !he Dl'aprl ~
mrnt of Transportation fo r nr-:
" aggr&lt;'ss ivrly" C'n forl'i ng its pl·
prlim• sa fPI:'o'' rrg ulalions .
'J'wrnt~ ·Onf' persons have dird
so far this year from pipeline ~
rrlatro rx ploslns and !Ires.

7

Intellectually. economically. mil ~
itarily and socially by neglt'&lt;'tlng
th e bl ig hl of ignorance and
llliler i&gt;2y.
Next 'year \\111 mark the 200th
anniversary of the framing of th&lt;'
U.S. Constitution. That document
was the work of 55 men assembled
In Philadelphia during the summer
of 1787. Noting lis 1UOihanniversary
in 1B87, William Gladstone, lhr
celebratBI British parllamentar ~
ian. said: "!have always ~arded
· ~t"&gt;
that Constitution as the most
remarkable work known to me 1n
modern times."
11 has lndf&gt;ed proved to be a
"remarkable work," and Its founders were remarkable men; remar ~
kable in considerable part because
they were highly literate, deeply
learned men. They were not only
well educated themselves; they
bellevBI that the system of self~
government they had devised was
dependent upon an educated
citizenry.
&lt;
Thomas Jefferson. principal au ~
thor &lt;:1 the Declaration rt JndepEndence. wrote to his friend George
Wythe In 1786, the year before the
Philadelphia constitutional conven·
lion: ~ "I think by tar the most
Important blll In our woole code Is
that for the diffusion &lt;:1 knowledge
among the people. No other sure
tJundati&gt;n can be devised tor the
preservation o! freedom and

Eight years later. It Is clear that
the same condition still exists.
in my 1978 statement I spoke of
the folly of spending "$130 billion a
year to defend oor nation mllitarliy
In the world when the citizens we
seek to protect are 01-f'qutpped to
functiJn educationally in the world
tiiPy Uve and work in every day."
!IInce 1978 we have nearly trtplro
federal spending for defense with
tile mHitary now eating up about
$.1iO billion of the federal budget
The theory behind the Increases n
rnUitary spending Is that II Is
necessary In view r:i. tre Soviet
Union's Increasing military power.
Has slmllarrol!t'ern about Dillerw::y created a ~eated nati&gt;nal
commitment to resolvlngt~s blight
on American society and our
standing In the world?
To put It bluntly, m . We're oot
even In cornpetltiJn In the global
concern over Illiteracy and the
effort to address the ]rOblem.
Jonathan Kazol, the autoor of
"DIIterate America," believes that
a third C'l Americans above the age
ot 18 are handicapped by varying
degrees ot Wlteracy. Ko:zol thinks
till! America Is weakening Itself

prin cl plf's to Thr issuf'S l)f our limP?
Would we not be contributing
much more to the defense. SPCurtty
and well·belng of America if we
were to mark the blcenlmnial of
wr Constitution by a nrw na ti onal
commitment to "the diffu sion of

knowledge among lhP people"?
f.Aol us ponder .Jefferson's warn Ing: "If a nation expects to be
ignorant and frE'f', in a slate of
c\vUiza tion . lt rxpYts what nC'Vff
was and nrvrr will be&gt;."

Berry's World

happiness."

WhQt then would Jetferson.
Franklin and Washington have to
say about today's America, In
which an estimated 00 million
adults are tmable to read tre
Constitution, to say nothing C'l
oomprEilendlng It or relating Its
\-'

BOTTLE~49
OFlOO~

consumed domesll·

In literacy is strength_____c_e_or:_p;e_M_cG_o_ve_rn
Eight years ago, on International
Literacy Day, Sept. 8, 197ll, I caliro
for congressional action to establish
a National Commission on Lit er·
acy .. "It is intolerabk'. but true,
that ... America's standing In world
literacy ratings is falling sharply,"
I said.
I emphasized that "30 million
adult Americans are functionally
Incompetent... ll million Amerl·
cans aver thP age of 16 cannot read
well enough to understand a want
ad ."

29

"Do you want that with or without the popular

.,

99

OM, CF, OR PE
4 OZ. BOTTLE

S'IERU

LENS WIIIICAHT

'

0.5 OZ. IIOTTLE

TBOPJI)'
AT MEIGS - Memilen of
Jaycees, I'1!DIU!s In the possession of the
,the Metp loolball team 1ft the 'ChaUensr Trophy'
foolbaU Winner each season. The
lfhlch W1!J stay al MI!Igs lOgb Scllool for 811(1ther year
lis' III!rd season wllh Belpre holding II In
me to 11)0 Marauders' 1~ win over Belpre Friday. 111M (won 25-14) _IUld Meigs retrieving II Jam .....,n
The traveling trophy' which Is SJIOII.'lOI'ed bs the Meigs ·(Meigs won :M-7).

.

Martina, Lendl capture
NEW YORK (UP! I -After two
weeks of upsets and surprises at the
U.S. Open, theworldoftennls lsstUI
as It was two weeks ago - Martina
NavraiUova the undisputed No. 1
among the women ·and !van Lend!
without peer on the men 's tnur.
John McEnroe and Jimmy Con·
oors feU at the OpEn. Steff! Graf and
Helena Sukova rost&gt; but Navratil·
ova and Lendl reafftrmed their
already ~tlght grip on the top spots

'
U. S.

Sunday with stralght·sets final
victories.
Navratllova won her third Open
title and 22nd Grand Slam cham·
plonshlp lvlth an easy fi.J, 6-2 victory
over Sukova, whose late mother
was Navratllova's coach when she
was playing In CZl'Choslovakla.
lEnd! won nine straight games to
break open a close match and
defeat 161h·seeded Mlloslav Meclr
of Czecooslovakla 6-4. 6·2, 6-0 In the

Astros hike lead to
8 games in NL West

YOUR CHOICE

READYTO-USE .
4.5 oz.
BOTILE

Open crowns

MAXI·
PADS

49
GENERIC
DRUGS COULD
SAVE YOU

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS II~HI)
A IHvillon ot Multimedia, lne.

Published ·every afternoon, Mooday
through Friday. 111 Court St., Po·
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llshtng Company~ultlmedla, InC'.,
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IJ:&gt;glnnlng of the end tlr the Reds
By JOE DLUZZI
and the rest of the NL West.
UPI !lpons Wrtter
New York, New York 10017.
"Most o! the season we've been
The Hooston Astros. who have
with
the
(third·
place)
concerned
experienced elimination !rom the
POS'J'MASI'm: Send address changes
to The Dolly Setttlncl, Ill Court S1.,
pennant race often enough, are Giants," Astros ralever Dave
Poml!'roy, Ohio 45793.
starting to sense thatthe end lsllffir Smlthsald. "Butnowlt'stlmctoget
down to buslness,agalnst tre rest of
for their divisional rivals.
8Uli8CBIPTION RATE!!
It Carrier or Motor Reule
The Astros have held sole the West. We've1 got Clndnnatt
On• Weeti .................. ........ ......... Il .25
possession or first 'place in the NL coming In here and to tell you the
One Montb'..•.•.... :....................... ~-•5
One Year : ...................... .... ...... $65.00
West since July 21, and Sunday they truth, nobody,.· Is thinking split.
extended their lead to a seas6n·hlgh · We're looking to "wrap this thing
• 81NGLII COPY
up."
'
"\
..
•
PilfeR
eight gaineS after rallyirig to beat
· DaUy .......... ........ .. .... .. ......... lS Cent s
A l\W!ell.wpuld lower the Astros'
t~ St. Louis Cardinals, 6-3.
for eliminating the , SublcrlbOrsnoldeolrlnglop.oytbecar·
Plncil hitters Davey Lopes and magk n\m)!Jer
~
·
rler rMy 'remit Iii advance direct IO
Jim PankOvlts combined to drive in Reds to 15. The Reds 1Wllld then
Tho Datl)l Sontlnot on o'3, 6 or 12 m01tlh
bastt. cri!lu '!'111 '!!' pv011 corner I!Och
thrt!i! runs tor Houston, which have 10 play near·perfect llall untO
.'
'
scored tWice ·111.the fifth lor a 3-3 tie their fhree.giirpe series against the ! ~· . .•.
1
·No .Ubatrtpuopa.by mau permjtted tn
apd.t~n ~eored twice 1n the sixth to Astros next week In ClnclnnatL
· Sunday'svlctoryputtheAstroaat . ..ar..a !file!'• 11om• carrier oervlce 1.1
go ahelld 5- 3.
•' I
20 .liiiiJ!e$ over .500 br the first~ . : ·~vau~.bt•· · ·•
.
I
' .
.
Clncllnilat~ which lost Sunday ll·3
this ~.
. . i,. ; . ' ••
~ Malllolbilildllll,rilt=lll
·.
.
to the Cub$, Is In' aeeond
In lhe
•.. In -otliery~es. San Fhlllc!&amp;Cb , ·· ·~ w..b'::~.~.~.~......:..'.... .'.:E.211
m.:.Wes). The· Reds wOI liave a bliii~Montrlllll1.0,
Philadelphia · J1l w.,.q ..:............................... ~ .11$
slged los Angeles 2·1. Plttsburgll
&amp;2 Weeki.................................. ..!16
chanre kl cut Into the Astros' lead
wren they PJlEn a two-game series
defeated;Atlanta J.l and New York j 13 w..~~~.~~.~ ... $18.~
tonight In Houston. The Astros,
swept a oouble-header !rom San I 26 Woet&lt;a .................................. $3:1.10
Diego, 7-1 and 6-5.
. 52 Weeki ..................................~MUO
oowever, vtew this series as t!J:e

...'

STAYFREE

men's final. It was Lendl's second
straight Open title and capped rtf a
tournament In which he lost just me
set

ASK YOUR RITE AID
PHARMACIST FOR
COMPLETE DETAILS
'

.

SAVINGS EVERYDA RITE
.
IN .EVERY AISLE AT•• •iqP

1

.•·

.

'RITE

)iaee

'bomb' option?"

oz.

N
TABLETS

"Although so me of II-.' mrlham·
pht•taminf' is

.

TUBE

Moving up in crime ___J_a_ck_A_n_de_r_.~o_n_&amp;_·_J_o.~_·ep:...._h_:Sp~(-~a_r
WASHINGTON - An omi·
nous. if prroiclable . develop~
ment ha&amp; accurred in the depre·
dations of Japan ese criminal
ga ngs In the Unllro Stales: thev
a re expanding their OPl'rationS
from ex tortion and protection
rac ket s aimed mainly at the Ja
pan ese community, and arr now
cautious ly moving into lu crative
drug trade .
According to confidential Jus~
lice Departm t•nt reports seen by
our associate Donald Goldberg,
the Yakuza gangs have been
dC'aling in methampht•laminrs.
or "speed," the drug of choice in
Japan. recently havP bl&gt;en mov ~
lng out of their home territ ory to
lhl' fPrl iiP U~S~ market .
Addiction to methamphelamines has berli a problem in Japan
s ince World War I I , when kamil ~
k:tzr pilots ust'&lt;.l1hP st imulant to
fortify thf'mselvc ~ ror the ir sui cide missions against the U.S .
Navy in the fin al ballles of lhl'

179

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•' '

�Page 4 The Daily Slntinel

Monday. September 8. 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Eastem drops 48-0 .non.;.Joop encounter
Majon

•

•

-

...I'JIICA!&lt; I.EMlUE
By\IIIIH PftM bet1 ' nJ

""hm

NY

01t1o c.1eao F-al ""'""

..

hling Green 21. Ohio Un!V lli
Kent state 18, Toted&gt; 16
Mlam145. Ball Sla.IP 7
Cincinnati U. V~nla Tech ll
Akron .'ft, S.a1Pm (WV A! 0
Alhllllld Z. NoniM·ood tMicht 7
Qnlnll st G., Saginaw Valley II
81 J08&lt;'1)M lind I 'll, Mu.&lt;~ktnf!U m :li
Dlr.ylon rr. Butk&gt;r tlodl 16
WIL'Ih 6- Jpff 23, OtOO Wesil'yan 'l
llndlay ll . \'at~a.ram tlnd l 6
DliQUE'Silt' !Pat 78, John Ca nu ll fl
Wi.lmlngton 41 , Watf'floo tCan 1 6
ntrln :!, Almll !MICh l 11
NtchoDs 31, Yoongs!CM'n Sla!f 17

7'lflliB~

"""'"

n 67

MlwkN"

611 71 .i18 17

.~t•

12
IB 6&amp; .Ill 14
67 (It .193 15

C1vlnd
Bllmr
Calif

18~~74-

Tf":Cas

71 86 .n8

7\f,

- ..._.._ .

l&gt;\1

m 7l .rn w

oakland

KC

.llll

Q "

SPanif'
Chi

6J 'IT .IC 18
~'M .MlJB

.

!II 'II .126 .,

Saturday's games

Bos•n 3, Mlnaot&amp; 2

T~ t,

Cblcaao o
OakliDd !'1, DPimlt 4. to lnntnga

Seatnr 6, BIJtimore 2
T~as 6. Kansas City 4

s.....,·,.

''

CJeo.·rland 17, Mltwaukef&gt; ~

UNo Col!p Fooih.ll Sche4lle
a1 vn~&amp;.ec~ PnM ~Mf&gt;I'MIIMIIII
Ohio Stale at Washlng1on
Bowling G!l'f'n at Mlnlll'SOta 1n 1
Eastern Mlch at You~IOWn Sl 4nl
Akron at Kent Slute
Miami at CinclnMtl
Marshall at OhiO Unlvrrsl!y
Wtci\Jti; Sf a1 Toledo tnt
W~ms PI at Dl:l~·to n In )

Callfomla 9, New York 2

s....,.• ae..

lUton 9. Mln!BOla 0
O.ltlnut&gt; 8, St&gt;attW 0

MUwau.lft 7, ~eland 2
Olk'lli!D 4. Toronto .3

Oakland 8, Detro£! i
Callrom!a 7, NPW

York~

Asttlll.d ar Findlay inl
Jolll CatroU 11 Bak!Y.·ln·Walarf'
Bl&gt;thany (W Vat a t Capital
Ht'~~lll: at AndPrson tlnd 1

Kansas City ~- Texas 2
MO!DQ'11 GarntR
Boston t Seawr 7-lll at Raltlmore Wlana-

w:an 7-91 ,7: 35 p.m.

Alma (.Michl a t O!ll"!"bt'-tl tn l
WlheniEr~~: at Hot» IMk'h '1

New York at Toronto, nlgtw
Boston at Baltlmore, ntatat
C'Allbnla at Clevf'land, nfl:ht
Milwaukef&gt; alllPtn:Ht, rUghi

Cue Rnerw at Hlram
DPPauw Hhdl at Denison
Kalamazoo IMktU at Kmyon

Oakland at Chlcaro. nlf!'M
Mlnni.'!Ota at Kansas City. 11&amp;'11

Thiel tPal at OlrrUn
Waba.~ll Hndl al OhD Wf.'U&gt;}•an
lll'flanct' a1 Albkln 1Mk'h1
n-nl.11ht gamf'

f&lt;'anle ''' Trx.as. nllrtll

NAmS..U. lEAGUE

NY

" ' L Pl1. GB
lJ1 44 .1&gt;76 -

Phlla

n

n

"'·
Loo
MontrT&gt;al

68 .110 M
66 68 .fl:l Zi

Chi

56 8) .02 ,})

ffi .!'il'l

High school scores

till

....

Ptsbl'gh

Hou ston

:n

........

OMo RIP SdiiiOI Foolltal

1M !'1M 514 'iU flj) .515 8
~ Ill .fti JOY,

&lt;kMU
· SaiiF'ran

n

61

6l 72 .471 14
6.1 7q .41i0 ~~

~..,.

.474

Cath 27. New Phlladelphill fl
Cin Wal Hills 'II, H&lt;tm Badin 0
Col Wattenon 13. Wt'SI&lt;'n.ille S 12
Cortland Lak£'\'kw .11. Lakeo.1cw !Pal fl
DPipllll St J ohn :l2, Tri C~ntv N 12
Erk' tPa ~ Pr.p N, You Ut"§ul!IV' 7
Garfld Hts Trlnt1~· 41, Steub CC lS
Ga l Mil Hawlen (J, Oiaarfn Falls 8

.• ._It!!

Nt'W 'I ock 4, s .. Oie&amp;Q :1

Houston 7, St. LoWs 6
Cincinnati 5. Chicago 1
Atlanta t PlUsb.lf'lilh 2
l..cB ·Ana.'k&gt;s .1, PIUiadPiphl;~ 2
MontrNil, San Frandsro 1
a..My'" ReKultft
Sin Frartcls&lt;lo 1. Montnrdl 0
NPw York 7, San Uirgo 1. Jst
~· York F., Fitw~ Dk'~ !i. 1nd
Ptllladfolphla 2. los ArlJlf·~·s 1
Plltsti.Jflth 3, Atlanta I
Chk'&lt;120 U, c netnna1l :1
Hou~ton fi, St . Lllui.~ l

Grand Vallty 42, MldiM Card 7

Ironton S4 J ot' 3i. SymrJEs Val fl
ledRanont 9. VPn&amp;nlifJ ~ Pal Chr 7
Licking Vallry li. N Union M

Uma ~ .11, Findlay 7
Unsly (\\Vat !&gt;.Bellaire St Johns 0
Usb:Jn &lt;D. Columbiana 1.1
Mlnrord 22, Oak HBI 0
NDrs ll , Ck' E 14
Norwalk Paul 11. Pb-' ll'Duth 7
ParlcprsW I'R 1'MIAI Cath fl . [ Ml'ijr.i

0
Pt&gt;t~lll Spring :D, E Pak&gt;sllnr 7
Wan111 WMn Rsr .l'i. Ml'ntor 6

MINIMy'IIGllfll{'fo

PttUacM'iphla t Bi11 ~l
tLvnch 4-lt . .t ffi p.m

fH1

w~

can CPnt

uy,

Atlanta
LA

Sanll!&lt;o

Rs'' 1
BrldRt'P()M 27. Beallsviik' 7
Buckeyp N W. &amp;&gt;rJCillb: SprinM 14
Awn 12. H!Ml!iOI"I

Ill .fl7 :.11,7

ill Ch~faRQ

You E L,, Can Tlrn11l&gt;n 0

Montrea l tSI'bra 3-.11 a t Nf'\\· York l()jld3

16.olt. 7: 35p.m
Sf. l.ool!; ri\IdOI" 13·71 111 Pltl:ibui'J!:h
tPaUA'!iOn D-2 t, 7:.Ti p.m
QnC'Innad tWI'l~ h ~0&gt;1 .:.~ !Hous ton •Ryiln
9-fll, 8; ~ pm.
Atlanta tMahll!r 12-'-il J l 1_Q!; '"'~~"i
tWl'lrh G-Ut, II : ~ p.m.
San I&gt;W'iQ t¥t1tltson 1-61 a1San F' ranctsro
tMumiWJdo.6t,lO:l"l p.m.
,_., ~

Saturday's

Phllrur!Jil,la at.Chk·aJ:U

BJ

.....

Amoorit·IIIII { . .!'n!IM_'P

... L T rt1. PF FA

F:n~l

NY Jr1 s

I H II I.!.UI .1.1 .1
I ll II 1.1n1 &lt;!JI N

Buff&lt;~io

0 1 II .rm 21

lncltn pls

~

II I II 1111 1 11
0 1 II lUI b! !ill
fl'flll"'ll
I II II I.IUI "11 .1

M~uni

Houston

U fll'lnnl

111 II .100 H

PTI ~

Ill ll

.....

Clr'\•100
0.'1\H'I"
Kn ~~; ( 't\
Sl&gt;: llf~ ·

LA Rilllrs
~~lltMI

II .'WI

:n

H

I 0 !] 1101 ."II .l i

Ill
Ill
Ill
II I

S.m Dlf'~

_lUI

fll II .001

~~

111101 14 H
!1 1101 ~ ~ .!!'
Il l fiWl ."JI II
II .i UJ ·~; .\W

t onhTnn t; ~l

Wshnw

111 0 1.1111 ~ 1 N

[hila ~

11 11 II

N'l:' ( ;lnl$
Pltildlph
• Sf _Lou l~

JUI Ill IM)
f~ll Ill Il l

11 11 II
ll 1 (I .IJOI 14 11
Ill

ll

!Ill Ill lli

f•'fltml
Otlca,ro

111 O J.IlYI

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11

f.l'frolt

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1.1

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Mlnnl'sl

fl l (} .®
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0 1 0 .00l7 :1J

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-

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Allan !a

• • ~Ram~
&amp;In Frn.

·.- · Nw Otlnli

Hl'.ll.~lon

.11. I ;N'-t'n Ra1, \

LA Rams hi. St. Lou I~ 111
Tamvu 1\;,•\· 7

NY .1£&gt;1~ ~. Buff a lo!~
San Dlf'-RO !10. Miami ~
Kansas Cltv lot. &lt;1nrlnna!l H
Of'nvt'f" :111. LA Ha ldrn :If.
SPank'- :ll. Plnm.tnz h o
New F.ngland :n lndlanet p.;ll«1
Mund11,.'V , S.opl.

,.

[).Jiu• )j , !';nrth""·~ l rrn 1\
Furman ll. s . rmullna St_;

.Jark.o;on Sl . Ji Al&lt;lbar"rul St . ')I
.Jark"'4'ln,il k&gt; ~ l al(l '!7, N('llb&gt;rry 11
1.rnolr mwnr .1 1. Om'kt.o;on H
M&lt;'l\«'S(' '•7. l'ralrk· \'IPw 1~

Eastern

W. 1'1')1.1S Sl . .'t !

Vlr,tnnia .10, S. l'a.roll na :!1
W;lkt• F'oll'SI Zl. Appal.-lllan Stair Ll
W_\'II"J;lnl;• n . i\'ul"lhl 'fn fiii'Klls H
WU IIam ,\nrl Mal\ ol'l. Col.'laiC' 21

Mldwt111
.\kron .'!i , S;I!Pm 0
A ~ hl ;md 3 . NtH·ttN.·ood IMk-h ! j
~- Un~ r;rCl'n :ZI. Olltl U nl wr ~ lh

11.

r:rt"&lt;&lt; u....-:n. Fn•nklln ~

W1¥'a~ 1 n

10, N01 ttl •aslf'Tll

flll nol.~

.1

'

MHS volleyball team loses match
·STEWART - The Meigs volleyliiill team dropped to 3-2 moerall ~ nd
:1--21n the TVC with a 15-9, 15-10 klss
't4'rv&lt;: toe Federal-Hocking here
last week.
• Jennl Swartz and Jenni Couch led
Marauderettes In scoring with
pve j;lolnts each whlle Couch added
sJi assists and seven kills and
Swartz l!;ld stx kUis.
• Otl~r . MHS pelformances lnctUded 12 assists by Shelly Stobart,

!he

15 kills by Shannon Hlndy, and eight
kllls apiece by Julie and Jenny
Miller. Jenny Miller also had !bur
assists.
In the reserve game, Meigs
continued to hunt for Its' first win,
0.5 overall and ~ In the TVC, by
losing 15-0, 15-2 to the Lady Lancer
reserves.
Meigs returns lxlme Tuesday
against Alexander.

,,

·-· - ----··- ---

~~HN _ A.

WADE, M.D •.In~.

. VETERANS .MORIAL HOSPITAL

EAR, .NOSE .&amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
"WE HAVE,HEAR/NQ AIDI"
CAll (614) 992·2104
(304) 675-1244 '
a

Last Week's Results:
Kyger Creek 15, Wahama !W.Va i 13 ,
Hannan Trace 34. Hannan ~W . V a .l 0

Ironton St. Joe 26 , Sy mmes Valley 12
Minford 22, Oak Hill 0
Sept. 12 Garnes:
Waterford at Kyger Creek

N. Camlina ~:•. T tr&lt; ' i l ~ do. ·t 1 ~
Ok!J ~atf' 21. ~ W l.oulslilna '.1\1
RW'hmoTil .'IR :-.;"~ · lfltmJ:t:hll't' 1.!
Tl"'11I'SSCf' ."fi. N~· Mf'XIro 2J

RACINE - Racine Merchants
AsJoclatlon meet 7 p.m. Monday,
Club Restaurant to plan for fall
festival Oct. 4. All organizations of
community should have representatives present.
RACINE - Southern Junior
High School Athletic Boosters rreet
at 7 p.m. Monday, junior hlgh
school.

Cburch.
: Evelyn HoDon prepared the
_schedule for the show, guest judge
was . Eva Rol:l!on, and Tom Ball
pb:&gt;tograplied the ·ari'angements
lor the rovers of the yearbpoks. All
17 members of the club were
present and exhibited arraniJI'·
ments Interpretive of an assigned

'

We're always by your side..
Every hour of the day,
electricity helps make life
so much better.
Electricity is the security
of a night light, the con~
venience of a miCJVNave,
the ease of a powentrill.
It's the twang of country music, the beat of
rock and roll, a late
night movie and the
early morning news.
Our job is to make
sure electricity is
there each time
you flip the switch,
push a button, or
turn the dial.
1\venty-four hours a day, every day the, yeat.
And, you caiJ always call us for valuable free information on choosing efficient electric heating and cooling systems,
electrical safety, and our equal payment plan.
·
Electricity . . . making sure you
can get the most out of life.

Green at Hannan Trace
Ross Southeas ter n at North Ga lli a
Southwestern at Al(•xander
Huntington Ross a t Southern
Eastern at Wahama (W.VaJ
Oak Hill at Ironton St. Joe
Huntington Vinson at Symmes Valley ,
Adi'CrtiJmW:nl

Worried About
How:You'll
Look With A
He·aring Aid?
Chicago, 111.-A free offer of
special interest to toose who
hear but do not understand
words has beeri announced by
Bellone . A non-operating
model of the smallest hearing
aid Beltone has ever developed
will be given absolutely free to
anyone requesting lt.
· It's yours for the asking, so
send for it now. It is not a real
hearing aid, but it.will show
you how tiny hearing help can
be. The actual aid weighs less
than an eighth of an ounce, and
it fits completely in"to the ear
canal.
These models are free, so
we suggest YO\! writ~ for yours
now. Again, there is no cost,
and certainly no obligation.
Although a hearing aid may
not help everyone·, more and
more people -with
losses are beihg helped.
your./ree sa~ple write to&lt;htv.
to: Department 69478,
tone Electronics Corporation,
4201 Wesr Victoria Str·eet. ·I
Chicago, IL60646.

rest $96.99. Asll&amp;tln« W!l1! Shellle
Fox, Mary Clark, Dlanr Jarvi!!,
Grace Welsh, .811d Mrs. Parsons.
Coot for the Ololvllie party was
$314. Fruit, caa4', ctgarettl!s, and
earne prtzes wwe· takeu . Helptag
were Pauline Gn!lltlvuse, Roaroe
Roush, Jenny bttp, ~ Uttle.
Grace Welsh, Carol flose, Cbrllty
Dye, GaD Ferry, Jeu GilmOre,
Trlcla Tobias, Velsla Romh, Erma
Hendricks, Mrs. Parsons,. Zella
Tayklr. and Eileen Snyder.
·Field service crlentatlon was
held at the hall with :Y 1rcrn Unitl28
and one from Croollsvtlle completIng the program ta11(1ht by Elzena
Wagner of Ma~~sfleld . Local
members completmg the p-ogram
were ~nnls Utile, Roscoe Roush,
Grace Welsh, Janice Gltbs, Gerry
Hanel. Freda Eddwards, Paulrje
Greatlxluse, Carol Rose, Phyllis
Blake, John . Metzger, Katheryn
Metzger, ~Jla Tayklr, Elleen
Snyder, and Mary Clark; and Katy
Curl, Eighth District pmldent. Tea
was served by Mrs. Parsons
assisted by Diana J aiVls and Jean
Gtlmore.

A CHI MNEY FIRE
CAN OlS 1ROY YOUR HOME
O!l!hn~ry Q!art
LICE"'SED-INSURED-CERTIFIED

FIREPLA=~~!r:~ra;~:OVil

f\.

! ...... . \
\
I

"TOT At. FIREPLACE ANll
CHIMNEY WORK ..

'..,.;\.(
l'

1NOUS1111AL
STAIUESS MEL LINERS
INSURANCE WDRIC
I . T: '.'.'\r 1 '

,f"J,.

!

9-4·1 mo.

446· 2062
!l• .r,

NEW HOURS
BLUE STREAK '
CAB CO.
PH. 992.7075

Debbie Ball slDwed a low
container with one white gladioli,
small dahlias, mpatlens, and ~n­
ery wlth water s!Dwlng In the
"!latue ol Uberty" class. Dcrothy
Smith for "Plymo\lth Rock" did an
arrangement with a roc!&lt; on tbe
base using sunflower, rnUkweed
pod, and nutgrass In a basket, and
Mary Nease t&gt;r "Boston Tea
Party", used an arrangement d
j!uoonyrrous, pink zinnia, pink
petunias, and joe ple weed In a blue

a

BEDFORD -Bedford Township
Trustees meet 7 p.m. Monday at the
town hall.

tea

Jilt.

For "Old Wllllumsburg", Faye
Wiggins displayed a mass arraniJI'·
ment using small zlnlllas il a white
container; whUe Ada Holter cave
an lliterpretatlon d. "Natural Heritage" with gladloU, cattalls, and a
rose in a tall antlq!IO! pitcher.
"Land 11 the Free" ~ Sandy
Hawley featured three roses witll
fern and corkscrew wDkiw In a taft
arrangement. Peggy ~re for
"Freedom of Religion" used yellow
daisies with forsyt~a follagi' , whlle
Doris Gruetlel' sluwal red, white
and blue in salvia, mums, and
arborvitae i:lr "Old Glory."
Other aiT811pnents were by
"Dawn's

Co~uterized Hearing Air Selection
Swim Molds • lr :arpreting Setvices

~

LISA M. KOCH. M.S.

parsley and mint In a basket .

Betty Mllhaon, "Woodland
a dry design of eucalyptus
and roses; Marcia Arnold, "Candil.'glo)V'', using yellow roses, holly,
and fantlal wUlow on a base with a
single yellow ca ndle; Evelyn Hoi·
Jon, "'The Harvest", a dried arrangment of yarrow, glycerlned magnolia leaves and twisted willow In a
tall Vllse.
Katluyn Miller, "Young AmerIca", a miniature design ol passion
flowers In a white swan container;
Hilda Yeauger, "Land of Plenty" , a
cornlcopla wllh flowers and vegetables on a tmy; Evelyn Hollon, "Th
Vlslt a Planet", a tall black
oonatlllet featuring one !l.lnflower.
twilled wutow and bridal wreath:
Kathryn Miller.
"!leeutlhll Sunset", using red,
roses and puJ1lle salvia with ooleus;
Janet Theiss, "Roadside lfauty",
a display of gladloll, dahllas and
hollyhocks: Evelyn Hollon, "Enjoy
the Times", ~rn desl~nt of two
roses with twisted vine In a green
footed container.
T ...ll",

Earty

Ugh t", !Nii'loftn, gokl&gt;n ro4 ,
needleburr, and greenery in a
basket; LJorotiW Smith, "Fruited
Plain", featurlJII fruit ln a ba*et
with snuwballs, fantail willow and
greenery; ·earrte. Grueser, "New
England l3ollwd Dinner" using an
arrangement.{)! fruits and vf'gela·
bles with straw flowt!l's; Dorotl!y
Smith, "Herbs from the Gar&lt;Fn".
slxlwtng an arrangment of sage.

-

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis. IJ!io 45631
8-ll tin

Do~t,
Clllsillld ilt!l
Ill Cowt St .. '-troy. Oltio 4516!

On Sept- 4, 19tle, ill
till Mtigl County ....,_
eourt. c- No. 21UIIili. Mort

~~=

The family of Clint
McNamee would
like to thank
1\11 JYOIII for thei r
sympathy&gt;and
kindness shown at
the time of the
illness·and dlath
of our
I rutile r.and-Uncle.
· 2 In Memoriem

L..l1 K. Nnr±rad. C'-'
i9l I, 1I , 22, 3tc

64 MIIC. Merch•n411e

Busines·s
Services
.

I .

•ROO" NO &amp;

·. QUTTER!NG
N-·llepolr
•BIOI~ SOFflETT
.•REMODELING OF

NEW- HPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Electronic Organs
Mobile service

949-2263
or 949-2168

lV-614-843·5248
APPL·614-949-2145

-

8-20 -'86 tfn

2·17-86-tfn

.

"'-

,.

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP

SER~ICE
We can repair and r.,

992· 2196

f, AN ~- Pt/11111 NNil
PWS: OHin !upp~11 &amp;
Furniture, Wedding
.and Graduation
!toliollll"y, Magnrtk
SitJns, lultllor St. .pl,
lusin•• Forrm,
(apy lorricn, II&lt;.
255 Mil St., Mithlloport
104 Mulberry lr., Pomeror

Middleport. Ohio

992-3345

core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out rlllillors. We 1lso
repair Gu Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
1-13-tlc

3/2/ Hn

•VINYL SIDING

BISSELL
BUILDERS

•ALUMINUM SIDING
..._OWN IN

CUSTOM BUI~T
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

SIDING CO.

"At Reosonoblt Pritts"

New Ho11111 luilt
"Free E11tim1t111"

PH. 949·2801
or 949·2860

PH. 949-210 I
or 949·2160
No sun4a, Calls

•

.

,

..

~

' ·"

~

....

... ...

•,

AlUMINUM

CAll COLLECT:

Ph. (614) 843-5425
7-115·81 2 mo.

• ALL "TYPES

~TREE TRIM'r.ittNG
•CONCRETE WORK

KEN'S
APPliANCE
SERVICE

21 r - bpertenoe

IAIT'S
(OIIS1111',1011
"t92~7 .1 '
'•

511•.

4

.

Giveaway

Two temlle
miud breed puppies. All lhGtt
and wormed . Don't le1 th•e
cutiet become pound puppN1.
Call 446· 731'3.

LAST CHANCE

Very nica cat. tortoise lhel(

c,u

Appro11. 10 mos. old.
446 ·0946 .

6 six week old kittena. lltf8r
trained . Call 304· 882· 2006 . !
HaH grown male bltck • whi"',
w -whil:e collar . Call 814-446 -

2494

2 tong haired gny &amp; white male
kittens . 6 weeks old. ow..way
to good loving home. ctu

614-446-2393 .

•

3 kittens. 2 male, 1 female. o8
wk1. old. Call

614-367-0138 :

-------···Border Collie type puppiea 10

gN-eaway. Call614· 992-e36P .

6-17-tfc

6677.

Iris roots . 304-676-3020.

PlUM81NG &amp;HEA nN G
New location:
161 North Second
fll \d~leuorJ. Ohio Ul60, ,

1 YINI' old ailvtr and blaok
German Shepherd. Real gentle.

304-882-3316 .

We Carry Fishing Supplies

Pay Your Cable l!t
Phone Bills Here
IU!IHESI PHONE
t614) 992-6550
lfiiDENCf PHONE
{6141

2 evailable k;ttens to a good
home. 304 ·676· 6162 .
·
Yard Sale, Midwey Drive, New
Haven. Sept 8 ,9 , 10; 9 :00 titl
2 :30. Rain e~ncelt .
6 kin&amp;na . 6 weeka, linertrained•,
phone 304·882· 2006 .

WE ARE YOUR SALIS
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

6

Lost and Found

•ZENITH

•SYLY~NI~

•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
• SAIElUTE SALES &amp;SERVICE

w.s..N•o
, TteA..hllleluTt ..
IIDIIy

. RIDENOUR

TV &amp; APPLIANCE

CHESTER-915·3307
4/ 1/ dn

Lost north ol V inton -Small white
fflmale dog. Reward . CaM 814·

388 · 8178
FOUND black, brown &amp; white
male Beagle pup. Vincinty of B~t
Run Rd . Call 614·388-8759 . ,
Losl: lit h~
·
at from akl
Ponland L · -t&amp;O rlft. . rd fer
informatiO ,:J!M(IW'!g to bo...
recoverv . 808t No . OH 21'J
RC. Call 814·843· 6362.
•
Found: l.iver-colored •pon•
bird dog. Male. Large. C.U
614 ·986-3881 .
'

IODY WOU $10 Pw Hr.
Pin Strlfttng/Coltr (tt.l• hlra

C&amp;L PAINTING

Buying d~ly gold, tllver coin-j
rlngl. J.Wekv. lt.,Nng wart. a,
coins, larQ• currency. Top pri,
en . Ed. Burkan Barber Shopt
2nd . Ave. MlddltpOrt. Oh. 814•
992-3478.
~

'

.,

All M•u•

•Diahwtahen

·······aanrpolis·········
•Oryort

~liS
~

&amp; SOVICE

S. IT. 50 EAST
GUYSYIUf, OHIO

n. PWSANT OfFICI

'Aullllri11tl Jahn Dnort,
New ltelltttl, lunh Hog
, _ Eqtipmtnt
haler

~-A".

SIWI. ._.lliiiiS

.........n.n. 1-5 ,.

flrll

"Free

E••IPMIIt

Ptrle &amp; Strwlee

LAMIA_, I
•lilY ., '"''·

end 10. ?ern to 7pm. Wed . the

10th il hetf price on til remltinlnu
mttchandlae . An goode told •
it, un•tll lttted Olherw .. e. no

refunds. ell Nllt Hnat Fr•
co«• tin 91m tor al you •.tv

birds. Plwlne 441·4145 . Salt

cotufstl of antlqu•. oollecti·

bin houlllhold toodl. .,d
mfl~. The followlnQ will be
offottd: nice 7 ploco dining
raom JUite, oak·prltl rodt•.
••"'· nand 'ttb.,, wtlnut

tabte, butterrnold. plctur•. olk
ft.. w1ll cupbo•d. 8 dey chime

clbdl, 8 day Etltllke Wllnut
ctock, pair uf bran etdud glaa
.. , . lltttrl, lg end am . thowtram•. old megulnetds.
rfngt end other Jtw,try, 350

cat•.

ptptrbtOkl; Canltnd. Ill·

5·2441

SATEWTE IS STil Til WAY TO GO
Owr 100
cha~~t~ls.

••,..lid

n. 'SYSTEM' FOR

!10,11111

. 9-'~t)

omeroy
· -.
Middleport

&amp; Vicinity
Yard Sale, 1136 Second Ave.
Mon .. Tu11. tndWid., Sept . 8, 9

BOGGS

···· ·-- p········-- ··········--····•

&amp; Vicinity

PARTS end &lt;II'IAVI

Patll E. Sllockly, DVM

T- 6•30·1; FrL 1·2 J1111
l,elv~ lOri 1110 ..

~ry PTO meeting Sept. 9)h.
6 :45 pm. Everyone urgad ~ IO
attend.

915·3561

... 992-7121

CUIIIC
JOS

ATTENTION: H1nn1n Elemifl·

1 female German Shepherd
puPPY. 1 female kitten . 304876-3794
.

ICUT OUT 101 FUTUl£ USE!

AI" Trut.-htle•
PH. 992-5612

(With Lariy'•

,~·

&amp;

PH. 915-4101
8-15·1 mo.

LARRY'S ,SATEWTE SALES

"'•'t' ,., ,, ....

VINYL

c..,tote Car Painting 137S

MOlt Syfte!M

,

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

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

We AI!IO ~p-- 'nd Service

•'

EUGENE LONG

McDaniel Custom Butch•inl, 8
days week, 304-882-3224. •

.SALES &amp; SERVICE

RADIATOR

' SJO I

,.

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

hchange genealogy with detcendents ot Jefferson . Price
!born 1822. father-George?,
Mothflf-Sarah Boice1) .. d .:hill
siblings. Dan Whitley, 350 lat
Riendaa . Fullerton , Ca(if .
92635

House. partlv tom down , muit
remove all in 3 days. 304-67!;,-

NOW A COII'LITE 10

Pan of American.Elearic Power

992-3410

Choke, 12 ~ro~~e shotgun a. '·

20 years
"Free Estimates"

• YnDINAIIA"

Alii

Ohio .Power

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

Racine G1m Club. E'l/tfYSunctav.
beginning 111 1:00 p.m. Flc~rv

TVs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation
Service

YOWiit &amp;.COIIIIIT

Pll.

'

lob Barton, Owner
8127/ 86/ 1 mo.

Racine Gun Shoot IIPOi'ltor..j. by

ROOFING

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
Vltvlnil
....,..- 3, ...•---------!~---------1 REPAIR
"""-·c-•
Ohio 411719.
......Ill E...mto ol tho
o1 Wyllll Fronldln Ch.ltl·

Noah's Ark Animal P.rk .
Schools. church", 00"1JMMV
picniCI , birthdey parties .,.d
family reuniont. Cllf 814 -384-

4 kinana . 3 black and 1 bltck ..;d
white. 6 wka. old. Litter train ell .
Call 614 -992· 2764.

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. 124, ,_,., Ohio

AOUCIARY

-

AUTOMAnC
TIANSMISSIONS
REBUilT &amp; REPAIRED

Chester, Oh.

APPOINTMENT OF

repair . parts, and aupplles. Pick
up end del inry. Davia Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile 1 up
Georgn Creek Rd. CaU 6.14446·0294.
•

Roofing of all Types
Worked in home area

Public: Notice
NOTICE OF

SWEEPER and sewing mac,ine

J.R.'s REPAIRS

l/11/tltt

Will dour rd. 1. . ol " 3. Pon-y. Ohio 4117111.

1/!7/1611 mo.

.

3 Announcements ·

Howard L Writesel

IISSELL

PHONE
992-2156
II! llrih
ltntiMI

PH. 742-2070

Complata Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling

INSULAOON

The Daily Sentinel

IUllAIID, 01110
lo•l71lo..,o ...

10-8-Hc

z

\\'EDNESDAY

RACINE - Southern Local
OAPSE Chapter meet 7 p.m .
Wl!dnesday at the hlgh ~hool.

lo(atecf lthiml lll!ling (rotk
Wator Dtpt. Ofl lt. lt. 124

::c Licensed Clinical Audiologist

room.

RUTLAND - Rutl.,d firemen

wm,

z

a:

EAST MEIGS- Eastern Local
Band Boosters meet 7:30 p.m.
Thesday In tte hlgh school band

MIDDLEPORT - 1Aterl18tional
Orci:&gt;r d J:Jb's Daughters meets
7: JJ p.m. Mooday, Middleport
Masonic Temple.

Juanita

SWISHER -LOHSE
CtlsK MARKET
FRUTH PHARMACY

FREE HEARING TESJS WEDNESDAYS

CJ

RUSS EII(IRIC
MOTOI IEPAII

PH. 992·9949

8/20/'86

ruESDAY

'16 .00

190 MULIEBY AVE.
POMEIOY, OH.

107 Sycamore
Pomeroy, Oh.
7:00 A.M. to 1:00 A.M. Moodoy thru Saturday

SALEM CEI)ITER - Officers
will be named at meeting of the
Salem Center Ball Assoclatkln 6: JJ
p.m ..Tuesday at the fire house.

bearings oiled for

ASHLAND

rneet at 7 p.m. Monday at · the
ftrehouse.

POMEROY - Meigs Disabled
American Vetera11s, Chapter 53,
annual picnic 6 p.m. Monday,
southbound roadside p11rk oo Route
Il, south of Darwm·; 'l'ake covered
dish.

AllllUU neeI!I I' nl s

Winter. Have those
furnace motors
chocked , cleaned and

SUGAR RUN

l&lt;l!!oHJITAI(,I1 1J 1dL!fl

I

' " ,, ,, y,, s,.l,t

GOI ahead of Old Man

2108 011-800·282·2107. :

'l'IYBlrK.Lf"

'f1t'

SENIOR CITIZENS
HARnEY SHOE STORE
VILLAGE PHARMACY

Wildwood Garden Club gathers

ChillS.

Mlaml I Fta . 1 XI, Florkla \!'&gt;

Stalf' 6
Mon'tll'ad Stair 19. Ma r!i h&lt;~ll Ill
1\i.C. :-ilalf' .'VI, f. . l'am\lna Ill

ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs High
Scbobl Band Boosters meet 7 p.m.
Monday, In the high school band
room.

A Dower show using the theme.
"America, Then and Now", highlighted the recent meeting of the
Wildwood Garden Club held at the
FtRSI ltun United Methodist

1
I
1
1
2

Miss is~lppl ~. Mrmpl'l l ~

r~Hu lman 1.11 . MacMunay 17
~thrrn llllnol~ 11. Att-~tln Pray T7 ·
Soutb....·~t Missouri li.IIIIMI.~ St I&gt;
~ ~ .li.IS(1JM ~ lnrl 1'!1, Musklnjll.lm :.li
TIIfln •0 I .11. Alma ~M i l .' rl

~

I
I
I
1
0

North Gallia 9, Green 0
Southern 31, Fort Frye 25. 2 OT
P arker sburg !W.Va .) Ca th.48 .

Murray Sl. tl . SE Mls~rl 17
NPhr.l .~ ka .l l. Ftl11da St. 17

NY Giant s 81 Dalla s, !4 p.m

•

Sout hwestern 8. Southeastern 0

Illinois Flmrolclinr Zt . S!. F ra rrls:!
lnrtlana ~ - '!1, Sl. Cllvd S . II
KPnt St. Jl, ToiNio Ifi
MLam! t0hlo1 .fl. Ball St. 7

~I. 1'1'111adrlph~• I~

EVERYDAY
7 D.A YS A WEE:K

GUrnore oo behaH d the unit
pl'l'S€1lted a Ute membership to
Becky Tyree. Plans were .announced for a brEakfast lDmrtng
the poppy chairmen and grOUJll
that sold IIJP!Jies and IJ'EI)al'ed
food .
The death rt Tony FoMer was
ooted. On the sick list were (llrlsty
Richmond, Kim Kennedy, amck
Lemley, Fred Gibbs, SUm Cornellus, Albert Roush, and Nettle
Hayes. Cards were sent.
Buckeye Girls State represet!tatlves giving rep&lt;rts were ~san
Jones, Julie Hysell , Cindy Riffle,
Erin Amrrson and Melissa Callaway. Several d the girls were
accompanied by their rrothers and
each told about their experiences at
~ workslDp In democracy spon. so red by the AuxUlary. Three
delegates were unable to attend the
meeting and wlll report at a later
meeting.
The fall conference was annoWJced for Oct. 2 at Pomeroy.
Door !l'lze lrought by Mrs. Parsons
was won by Erma Hendricks. It
was noted that 112 members have
paid dues and others were urgl'd to
~t get them In . A ham dinner was
served prtor to the meeting.

Vete!'IIIIS llllemJrlal HospiW's Extended Care Center, food
and game pl1zes al~ with gilts

Community calendar/ area happenings
MONDAY

with rlllfY disc or roll of
color print fltm brought
in for p&lt;oc~tlllng.

lliat at

TAXI TOKENS ON SALE AT

D

.

A.habama U, VandA'bUI Ill
rwbur n 4'.1, Tl'niW'S.'l(lf'-lltdtlilno:JUt(a 14
fl oclnn;•!l 2-1. \'lrl(lnla Tf'&lt;'h 211

Tro~· ~ la h • .'~ .

, Care Center, Mary Patterson, John
· Dill and Eva Stout were taken to
: Pleasers for lunch. They were
accompanied by Mary Hoover,
Betty Mercer and Vlrgll and Gerry
· Parsons of the unit. Etta WUl ooted

EAST MEIGS - Despite much the setting department Savoy was
resistance from the much smaller 21-25 and Wlgal!i-10.
Eaglettes, the Meigs Marau·
Coach Pam Douthitt of Eastern
derettes claimed a non-conference commented, '"This was one of rur
volleyball contest in three sets, best games,all-around. I am very
1&amp;14,7-15, and 15-9.
proud of our girls. We lost t&gt;night,
For the winners Jennie Couch but we hustled and played hard,
scored ten points and had five aces losing to a good team In Meigs."
and five assists; Julle Miller had
Eastern won tn&gt; reserve match
seven points,!~ kills, and two 15-ll and 15-10 over Meigs.
blocks; and CindYlmne bad seven
Trlsha Spmcer led EHS with 11,
points and five digs. Jennie Swartz Lisa Driggs had 8, Mel Mankin 6,
scored five polnts,four aces, and Amy Berkhimer 3, and Amy
. had three kills; Shelly Stobart had Co!Uiolly 2.
four assists, and Shannon Hlndy
For Meigs Heather Hovalter had
had four kills.
3, MAry Butcher 6, Kelly Douglass
Lesa Rucker led Eastern with 13 3, Lesley Carr 4, and Christie
'
·
11Jints and two aces, while Tonya Sauters .&gt;.
Thursday against Oak Hill EastSavoy had ll11Jints,Arlene RJtchie
8, Bev WlgalandKrlstlHawk2,Lee ern claimed 15-6 and 154 victories.
Bev Wigal had a great game to
Ann Robinson 1, and Melissa Nutter
lead with 10 11Jlnts and one
1.
Savoy added ftve aces and ace,HAwk had seven, Ruckel' ~ .
Savoy 3,Mellssa Nutter 3, RobinsRitchie three.
Ritchie was three for four spiking won 2, and Ritchie 1.
Hawk was 4-4, Wigal 2-2, and
while Wigal was 4-5 with two aces,
Hawk was 5.S, and Rucker :\-7. In Savoy 1-l ln the spiking departn\ent.Ot a total 10-14 for 71 pel'CI!nt,
Savoy led E HS setting with 6 of 8
and Wigal wa~ 4-6.
A. Caldwell led tteOaks with 3. In
a two set reserve oontest EHS and
Oak Hill ~. EllS wjnnlng )&amp;14
and the Bttle ·Oaks claiming a 15-1
win.
Spmcer led EHS with 7, Melanie
Mankin had 4, Berkhlmer 4, and
Team
W L
Usa Drjggs 2.
.
.•
Kyger Creek ...
2 0
J . Jones led Oak Hill with 13
Eastern ..........
1 1
!llints.
Hannan Trace .
1 1
North Galli a . ..
Oak Hill ..... .....
Southern. ...... ..
Southwestern..
S. Valley.. .......

Scholarshlpswereawardedlllda
contrlbutloll made to the Jerry
LewiS 'l'eletllon ftlr Mllscular Dlstropey at the receat meeting o1 the
American ~ .Auxiliary of
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
Middleport.
Amy Molden, who graduated
from Melp and will attend Rio
Grande College, received the Cora
Betlnett Memorial Scholar.mlp as
wftl as the $.1ll scholarship from
the" LeKton Post. Scholarships ol
$.1ll each were also awarded to
John Christopher Konezal and
Laura Jean Wichman of the Ohlo
Veterlills Chlldren' s Home In
Xenia.
The unit voted to send $2i to the
telethon during the meeting conducted by Jean GUrnore. Rejlorts
on parties for nursing homes wete
given. Freda Edwards noted that
the party at the Plum Street
Nursing Home cost $18.00. Assisting
her were Mary Clark and Elleen
From the Riverview Nursing

U

IAII!r li. Nortl'lw(jllf'm G
1\lqueon•• ~ .• John Ca!TOII 11
t:. Mlrhlgan 21 . \\'. Mlchl~~;an 1~
t:. llllnot;, tl . NE M L'L'i0ul1 .l l
F'indla,v :Ji, \ ' alpa ralso 6
Illinois Zl , l..ou lsvlllor 0

100 lO :11

[)(&gt;!roll Jl MIM ·~jol lfl

n

IIUnul~

II J II

n. (1f•l."l&gt;laml :1 1

San rrant l!'.m

W_Vl'l{lnla 4i, N.

Cmtral ~ 10.1 41 . S~i naw Val 1M I1 :ll
I ~\ ton li, Rutk'-r ti

Ollt·ll.i'l

Wash lng!on

-

2

I II 111 .1111 .11 1fl
I ll II J 100 IIi 10
]II fl l.IUI :'it
j

S.l'lll ..,, Hi-pt., j
.Atlanta :n . N1'\lo' OJ·k'an' 111
ot•

PI'I!AIIlllltrn~~~~~on.u
SahrdQ'' 5 Re!ub
F..o•

Brookly n H . Sk'na 1:1
Cn.ast Cuard H. w_rofln(&gt;(·tic-ut 6
DPiawan- 4t HhOdf' Island 111
lll'lawaJ'(I S.. 11. P.ostoo U nln'I"Sit~· 9
HIIMult l.l Slt~ trr:-· Hrric 7
Rullotf'11i 11, l~l!l l on Col !i
W;~sh l~ on llr .l(offt&gt;rfoll:m !l. (lhk• W{·S~iln

NFL standin@S
Nw

u-

Auxiliary announces scholarships Business Services

!!ttyder.

standings

scores

n~h l

Monln&gt;alnl NN.· Y.:rk.

Only one PC starter tlppoo the
scales above :a:xJ IIJUnds, lxlweYer,
their dlsclptlned quickness and
excellent timing rattled tn&gt; EHS
ci:&gt;tense.
An astonished cro\W quietly
watched Starcher hlt the endz(Jle
again at the 6:22 mark on a 22·yard
pass from Starcher to Mike Roederschlmer. The play was set up by a
fumbled punt attempt, tte scqre
li.{).
At the 2:41 mark In the ftrst half
and anothef · half yet ·to go,
Roederschlmer caught another
Starcher pass for 23 yards. The
EllS Interior line came through
with a blocked ldck to ci:&gt;ny the

·
was 11-67 and Lewis 2-34.
extra !lllnt.
Steve Homer and Johnson each
Substituting freely In the second h uled In passes for the Eagles
haH haHback Roederschlmer hit :hlle Roederschllner caug!Jt thr~
the mdzone for the third time, thls fo
yar&lt;h and two 'I'D's
00
time from the defensive unit. The
~urst and Homer eaeh had nine
compact sparl&lt;plug blocked an tackles for Eastern and .Johnson
EllS p.mt and rocovered lt In the
8 Joe Nader had 5 tD lead tte
endzone for another soore, 48-0.
~d ·
PC then called off alllts lxlrses,
Ennerst·
Frld v
·but .a !rustra ted EllS crew had
. a · at
, has ern P1ays
already suffered a hard-nosed \\a ama.
whipping.
mAM srATI!TICS
PC
Defensively DW"St, Charles Cle· Departmeot
~
13
land, and Rob Carpenter each had ~~:~~~~~;~ys·YardSI..
43
J\R
fumble rocova-ies for the Eagles. Passing Yards............... .
11
70
McCullough and Roederschimer To1al Net Yards ..... ....... ······ 54 279
did the same for PC.
Pass"" iCmp-Atl·1n11 ·· ········ 2·12 4-6
d
Fumbles (No.-Loso .. ..... ..
1·1
3-3
Lewis had two Intercept klns an
Penallies 1No.I .... ..
16
4
.I I
McCullougb one for the winners.
Pena1lles 1Yards I ..
11~
1
Individually Brtan Beeler and :;;:~:: :~~~ 1
18 _3
30
Jeff Johnson led the EHS rushi ng
COJ1lS with 11-for-ll and Hor-28
By Quarters:
respectively. McCullough led all Parkersburg
Ca t h. .
. .... 22 19 7 0-48
rushers with 9-lll, .while Starcher EastPrn ...
.. ....... 0 0 0 0-- 0
. . - - - - , . - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

SVAC

college

GM'If'oA

Ctndnnatl atllou5ton

·
·
plays (6:11). and again on a
Starcher run at the 0:52 mar.k. Both
times the I&gt;AT kicks were good.
TraDing 22.{) !J)lnglntotteserond
frame, Eastern's mlstortWJes contlnued. Following a Jeff Lewis
Interception, halfback Cbad McCullougb rambled 42 yar&lt;h aJ ooe play
for a 29.{) score.

Meigs defeats Eastern in
non-league volleyball match

1\dfllan iMichl ar Ohlo Norttw&gt;rn

Gamt'M

""'"

1nl

BlufftQn at MarEtta
Mlunt Union at WOO!iiPr

M\~ 8 IBiy~en 15-101 at KaMas Cit\'
1Ll'onard 1)-111. 8: .J5 p.m.
'l'vftld~'11

...

8COI'ell

~.ru wrr-~

WLN.OB
82 54 .IB'l ,. 61 -"' 6\\

T(ll"(lnfo

_

Ohio grid

'
By S(X)Tf.WOI.JI'E
s.tmel SWf Wrller
PARKERSBURG- Taking ad vantage of sevl!'al Eastern.turQovers and their own quickness, the
Parkers~rg CatlDUc Crusaders
SUJ1lrlsed everyone with a !18-0
shelling d the Eastern Eagles here
Saturday evening
Quarterback · Jay Star.cher
passed, kicked, and ran the Eagles
ci:&gt;fenslve unit to death, as he
excelled In all aspects of the game
to lead his Crusaders to victory.
Starcher passed lbr two 'I'D's and
ran ilr two others while Jdcklng all
the PC extra point attempts..
PC started rolling at the 10:12
mark when Starcher culmlnatal a
four-play, 61-yard drive on a !bur
yard run. The play was set up by a
~ yard run by ' the lleet-footoo
signal caller, ,/s well as his
successful PAT run.
·
Before the smoke could settle on
the first soore, PC struck hw rmre
times on a 24 yard run ~ Jeff
Lewis, cov.;&gt;rlrjg 40 yards on lour

Mqndly, September B. 1986

houtttt. Herlequ"!1 _. ethlrt.

ben- oh•.

-~ .....d . "" ........ lk-

..... ~.... 2 TV'' oll¥~oto
too · Ill,
qld
tool bol, z - · dlopll'l
-

3

bolt, ctolhlnl.
ln&gt;n
~

,

..

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

Sept .
.t:OO .
what
men1

Bth. 9th, 10th. 10 :00·
Chriltmll decoration1.
nota. • · and p. thlk.,..,
and womena clothinQ.
houu plants. misc. 34 7Q6
Whitea Hill Rd., Ruttlf'ld. Ohb.
I femilv yard 1111. 111. hou• on
Betley Run Rd. Atthecrourotda
on 124. ltby ctoth•. lin 0.:2:
yr1 . furniture, Bundy Cl•lnft
LH jell'll, men end womeOa
c:klthlng and m•c. lttma. · ·
Yard Salt Tu11. • Ww:l ., 8

to .(

549 B..ch St, Middleport. Boys
tknhM&amp;IUitlliJI2, 3, 4, 5, ,, 1
12 II 14. Girts II• e. Huhh Te ~~t,
Ctrttr. lillythetcid,gluswlfe•
collac:tlblll.

---------·I
·· ···· PfPieiiliinr----:

8t Vicinity " :
·· -··-·--··- · ·· · · -· ·· · · ···· ·· --·-~

•
•

•

Mon . 8, Tuoe. t . Tooto, dlttteo. .

clolhot, olloin, .mloc. 2217 ..d .

~

2211 Oott St. ,

4 tomlty yonl oote. little ~~ !
cloth II I mo. · tO . 3. · White ,.

*•

10, lfnwm RIW ~
lun~;::!"'.OI. , nuoto • .,d,,
~
. Rt. 2 tnt hoUH •
H_.. ~-tl C!tordt, •
.. ~ f-..,, 304-871 • •

uniform.

r::
,.... .

•

..

.·

�Monday, September 8. 1986
8, 1986

M~y.
;I

LAFF-A-DAY

'IIIIo""' .... Noo lett OIOdtl-

c,....

wel fll!•·

l

.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

~·~Mink
Qiftlnc.
•IR Gena JohfiJOf'l

2 bdr., completely furnished,
large lot, 8200 per month plus

11.·44t·3t7a

utlln; ... can 814·4•8·9204.

TOP CASH ptld lor ."13 modtl

Tr~iler

anti ftei~Wtr uaed Clrt. Smith

c:oel heatefl. S WAIN 'S FURNI ·
nJR E. ltd. S. OIWe St. Gelllpolls. Ca ll 614 -448-3169
llize

Coii814-.. 8·23DO .
vreen . Ca11446-7032 .

Any

1 · 800-•33-7U7.

3 bdr. mobile home for rent.
close to Cheshire. Cell 367·

·

7148.

Wanted 6 to 10 acret i..W. Mun
be in Vinton Ele. ~choo ll)lttrict

44

Coli &amp;14·3BB·93•2 .

,,

t'i

1375. Lampe t28 ta •121.
D inettes 1101and up to M95.
Wood table w -8 chlirs
to
1796 Dotk t100 up to t371.
Hutches
and up . lunk
~· complete w·mtnr•. .

!
4

••oo

t296 and up 10 1386:1tby bach
t1 10 &amp; $1715, Mtnr•••orbox

173, 1nd 183. Ouetnslta•225
Ktng 1360. 4 drtwtf d1•t 185:
Dresnrt t89 . Gun ctblnets 8.
10. 6 12 gun . Gu or electric
range $376 . Btby mlttretltl

I

74

!
'/

1984 Honda XROO. good con d.
1380.00 . 304-676·&amp;109 .
1986 Honda 250R Fourtr.-x Nke
new . U300. Firm. Tecum11h
10hp riding IIIWn tflctor engine

"Don't take things so seri11

ously. Life is just a game."

Help Wanted

Make Christ mas money , sen

Regency Inc. epar1ment 2 bdr ..
utilities pertty peid, nice . Call
304 · 676· 51 04 or 304-675-

t'F~~i;;;~;;i=~~lr.;;:::;;~;~;====i
iualftell
32 Mobile Homes

Awn.
Mak·e 46
614·•8·3358
. percent. CaM 21

O,,rtunlty

for Sale

1113 t.ron -12..&amp;5. 2 bedroom
1Yt b1ths. woodburn•. washe;
• llry«. . ..500 good 'shape.

tor local resteuran1 busintls.

Colll14·317-0477.

Some eM:p erienee neoesaary .
Pleate send riMJume ·1o T-70 In
care of the Gallipolit Daft¥
Tria.une. 826 Thifd Ava ., OatH-

polis, Ohio 46631

Ladr.:

n8&amp;ded fof good .-rWtt
temopery office like work . no
experience necessary. Alto neNI
lad~ with car for light deiW.,.
work. Gas a ltaw•nca. Apply in

12~t80 2 bdr.,
~nine. porch. refrlgere-

dMt• .-, .... _ . . . .. High
pot•lial ........, "' .. r trowtlt
lndu.,ry. 1)03)711-UOO
2403.

t.,

••non onlv - absolutely '"'
phone call• - to Mrs. Carter room

14. Ewno lodge Mocel Tultidl¥
S&amp;pt . 9, 9-9 :30am .

tor 1M ltO'&lt;'I. 1tr condit~ing
...inl fi .OOO . CaH 81o\-446:

7020.

ly

1211.80 mobile home
wtn. 1 acre. 1 'It mil• out
ltltMINf HaiOw Rd off At. 180.
Mlllt Mil ;-lotely •1 1,500
'"'rH~onlbleoffer ratuaed. Call
OWftllf

oltor PM. 81•·«1-974 • .
23

Prot.•ional
Servic11

Reliable ladiet to ca refOf eldlfly
ladv a1 night in hflr home. Call

34

Business
Buildings

446·2455 .
Babyai1tet" needed tor 2 children
in my home . Clal 6 14-258·

17S8 .

w.t. . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . .
Fr ............... Cel 114-HJ·

100• •

114· 'Hl-JU7.

Lots &amp;

311

45631 .
Help wlltlted . See manager of

Fltt' m Merkot. At 35 West. 1 ml
WM1 of Spring Vell ey.

Homaa fOr

31

PricW t• Hill Nice 2:
bdrm. mobile ~tome. tttal • •·
with CA• .- 2.11 . . .. ww.
flat front.... Doutt~. ........,..
g•llt. pllio, '"'" .... Cloco

w• ,..1

to KC -

· · •11.100. Coli
114-lt7-717'0 .
fur·

Th ird Ave ..
45631

Gallipolis . Oh

-------...
2r.... -

Wr. w.a.

n

. . .. ...100. 1

• -.e.ooo.

cre- Clly. Coli 114·441 ·
1" 11

•1•.-.....
uo .,..,_,. ....,.
806-687-6000 Ext.
~\lefOrT\O!]t )Obi

lilt,

Easy Assembtv World t71 4 .00

per 100 . Guerant•ed payment.
No
Dfft•ilt ·· Sendate'"'td

••1• .

eRVeiope:

Elen· 71 I 341 I Enter·

prile. h

P'lerot. Fl. 33402.

Meture. reliable person needed
tor HoJtt houte-k&amp;eping 1nd lwllrf
sitting in New Haven we• in""'
Call 30 4-882 -37 04.

ho.,.._

ASSE MBLERS WANTED : E.-n
l4J 10 &amp;60 pe r day asse mbling
display &lt;:lowns. MBt8fials IUPP-Iied . Send sta mped
addreued envelope : H1wka
lending. P.O Box 13•93. Orkinde Fl 32859

••If·

Mature reliable pel'lon needed

··1·9257.
Athton buikU"g kJU with public
wet.-. mobile hom• permitted.

J0.-171·2338 or 30.-676 ·
2217
111') •oree mort

a ktt _fcw . . . lllfft. .
A-. 3Wr .. f u l \ ' - - t t

Heu M

heet. AC , Ill a. .. •100 ~town .

11111 Cal
Al'll. Doc.
llh.
...... J04.114-JII1
... lor D.l . laM.
3bdr 1 ~ 1teth.l.,..lhfnvroom
with fnptece.
in deMtt.
kitd'l.n caltM..., hNt pump,
w.ttter &amp;. .-y.r. •....-..• elec
WA 1101 I'Mftth. L..,. , .....
pMI 12aU, fNtt ....... gr..,n,

w•

11'9' -

Kl'l fJ'OUhd .

. . . -. Almen 1

w. """'-' .....

oontrKt whit ...., .-vtnent or
can ....,... to.. Cll ~lnga ,

E.ltperianoed hair dretlflt'. 304875 -2930 or 676 · 3388

AVON.

open

territories. ctU

8 room ...... 1. Z ICI'•- DouW.
c..- ...... a. loc.-d Or! ftoM Hifl.

11··171·2113 .
I 'll- acr• on C .R . 21. )M1t ltllt of
A.c:ln•. ) bedroom~. tuN .....
mfll'lt. fireplace, weod·bur""·
cloMtl patio, centrel H . tlrN-ate
Mtti" l · Call .tter 15 :00 p.m.

ll•·IIOt-2181

Exp,-t.,noed mltdta ules r8ftre5entltives needed
plu•

oo mtni1110n

a•••

30 4 -757· 7811 ,
Monday thru Friday 10 :00 -4 :00.

AIR TRAFFIC CONT AOLLEAS
8JI:tUnOIII•IIITU081ion nOw op.., ,
For l.tttuu l'lfo write P.O . Boll

275. Sterling, Va. 22170

Situation s
W ant e d

N eed 10mtt0ne to ct re for yoUf

In Mlddl~rt. 3 llotclt'wll'l, ftrw
place and'ttt00411umer. AIIUIN·
bit Lo1n .... to rwllt..- Sept. 1 5.
Price 0011 up I ~
Astu11"111 aoan. 3 ....-.om home,
femlly POem. wtm wM41urner.
fenced yft. 304-112·2317

loved ont? Round the clock c.ra
f't'lr amhuhJtory m ltfl or woma" In

~2

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

. , • . 742 -2126

187614o70Qmy-.2 ..... 2
luM · ....... tull, ,..c:to 6
•ninl. 2 MNI. ••· CIIIIWI .•
itltl oloc. c.III14·HI-IIIO.

Mobllo lloMO lof -

18 Wante d to Do

~.on s

M 111 woodwin d inftN·
manti. oboe, bassoon. ftut•.
cJ...-Irlet. ••• C•11 Lor• &amp;rtow

614 · 2116·1614

Chril'lian lady would I*• to tit

whh Mlerly Of do houtec~Mn ·
lng . JD .. 875-7UO .

WMI itJ Ill by tlning in rrPf home i
watk. 30··1112·2117.

•av•

41

HouM 3 bdr. stov1 &amp; refrig .
,_..,..., Vin~e 11 1275 mo.
,__..,..,en. Call441-441 e after
4 bdr. ZY1 b1th, livingroom,
-'inlnpoom , kitchen . 1300 pftf
mo. 11 00 deposit. 8 mo . lena .
Calll1 4 -446 -3667 .
I room hou11 tot" rent in count')' .
tl.,.ty Nmilhed . Call 614 -256181]
flHnlshed one bedroom cottage
In town . AU newty redaoorated
Nios for ona lady 01 married
r:ouple. No pets, ~f. &amp; deposit
requWed . Cell 614 -448-2643.

Furn ished apt . aduhs onty. Call

4 rooma &amp;
bath . Centrally located . One or
two adults. references &amp; sec.
dep. required . Call 614-446·

Unfurnished 1pt..

Garfield Ave. 6176 . per month
Call &amp;46- 7644

plus deposit.
aher 1pm.

2 bdr. apartment Gaa hear,
furnish ed. C1ll 6,4 .446-1024
tttllf 6 :00PM .

ni1hed. RAmodeled . large petio
On Spring Ave .. Pomeroy . Cal!
atter 6 :00p.m. 614· 992·6B86
Ap ar1 ments for rent in Pomeroy
One and two bedrooms . Call

814 -992-8215

6908
1 bedroom sp1rtment in Middl e-port. All utilities pai d. S200 . per
month . $1 00 . deposit. Call
614-992 · 6611 d&amp;ys &amp;nd 614·
992 -676 3 even ings.
APARTMENTS. mo bile homes,
houses. Pt. Pleasant and Gallipolis. 614 -446 ·822 1

heat . 6 wooded • era -barn
12150 per month. $100 deposit .
No inside pet s. 10 East St .
ll'orMroy . 114-423 -6289 .

446 -9580 Ren1as low asS12 0

month .

101!11

M1in

3 br. full H11ment. femtly room.
11'891. MeUrity deposit • refer·
ence. 304---175-3030 or 175-

2411

Merchandise
51 Household Goods

SWAIN
AU CTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Oliv1 St., Ga llipolis. New &amp; used
wood ·co•lttoves. 6 pr: wood LA
suite 1399, bunk bed1 1199
antron reclinart 199, new
u~ bedroom suites, renget.
wr~nger wathert . &amp; t h9es. New
livingroom tuitn 1 199-1691.
tamp s. altO buying 0011S. wood

S:

1177 ...... 14a7D. J .....

GOOD USED APPLIAN CES

roo.,., . - .-t ..... 11oo - . ,. - CoM·
•1•-na•. -.

lwrltfttt Adctn . 2 -bldroom. full
NMm•t. Celt for.._ n"IOfe infor·
Mltien. J0•-&amp;76 -•480 Trust

Wuhers, d:y•rs. rehigtr1ton.
rang•• · _Skaggs Applian ces .
Upper RNtr I'd. bnlde Stone
Crnt Mottl. 814·4411!1 -739B .

11ovn. C•lll14·441· 3169 .

o.,t.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 !tilT.

ueH•

wtth W-0 quiet

cto.,

oou ....
to town.
rtf.,..oe requlrtld. Cell 114·

4"·40U.
Nlw c'-" • .2 IHfr. turn6thed,

.
_
....__
....
-

-.

• · .. ftt. 1. noo
· Ctll 114· 241·1111.

-~-

-

I -

· -

-

.
· Coli .114·

.. l r -. OliO plua

•to ...... "" ....... fltlh1·

lot. .. -

· 114·H7·7217.
fwe I»W:tom .·moble hOm..

tvrolohod. phone 304·1 71 ·
1111- 1:00PM,

County Appli..,ca. Inc . Good
u1ed t1PPii1nces
TV aeu.
Open BAM to II!IPM. Mon thru

•"d

Purebred Gre1t Dane pup1. 4
bleck mal• wfth white biiHS on
ch•t t100 tad: . D.Po1h will
hold. Cal 811&amp;-448-1354 .
AKC REo. Dob..-man puPPiet. 8
week• old . Atd1 &amp; bltcks.
Shots. worm«~, paper• t71 .

Ctii814-U8-n95

Sylvlltlla console teltvlalon, 2&amp;
fnelh acr..n. 918 Second Ave.

Cltlllpollo. Coli ., . ... f . 3373 .

WQhtr and dryer MI. U&amp;O.

no. Smal

frltltr. t150. Ctll 81.· 982·

3101.

1971 VW IHtle t39S . Cell

10 ft . 1lu n-inu m boat. Electric
motor. Good condition. C1ll

1974 Firllblrd, 400 ang . with

Tran1mi11ions. 111 types , over.
front, r11r, 4 wheel drjye, priCII
stan 1100, will datNer. CaU

1918 Mustang. 8 cyl. , euto ..
runs good. Body n..cls 10me
work. Call 4'6· 00'5 lfter 5pm

1700 tObi CCO tticks for 1500.
Call614-261 -1258 .

6 ye1r old Tr~eing Wilker Coon

1984 Chrytltf Flhh Aw.,ue.
condition. 1982 Otta~n King
Cab pickup with topper, AC. PS,
15 speed, reclining teats. low
mUe1 , uc. cond. Call 446·

' 79 Monte Carlo, 70,000 milet.
ac, cruile, ps, pb, tih 11nring,
left front fender slight d1m1ged.

.1.800. 304-B95-383B.

otter . M1ke offer 814 -379·
2 144

7 '"'" brld Old Ert9ilth Sh"''l
Dog puppies. •100.001 304--eJI-42•8 thor 5:00 .

1984 4 door Celebrity Chew.
front whe• drive, PS. PB. power
G-Wers tnt. PW. Call 814-992·
3896 1fter 8PM .

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

Long woodbumM, glau door.
with 14 ft chimney ptpe end

2 full b6oodtd Btaglll. melt
no. ooch . 304· 571-200&amp;, g.

12 Citation one own.- low mil•
e•cellent condition . Call 11 , .

16 ft. Vacon tr1illf 1teep1 6 .
coft1)1ete tumance • kitchen. f .
window. tlr , •1 .000. Calll14·

Wilcat eros•

bow.

12 weekdays.

57

«&amp;·8337 thor SPM.
81 Horizon T-C3 •1.500. 76

Musical
I n1trument1

carpel. 165. Call 379-2809 .

5 - piece Tema drum Mt &amp;
cymbals. 6 elactronic drums
with mi•lnt boerd Rototomtl.

a

Sale Sept . B. 9 &amp; 10th. 614·

388-B824 . Oyer ret. D•v St.
Vin ton, Ohio . Wheel ch1lr.
thowar, ato'lle. windows. storm
doors, anUque1, • dithes.

Ct11114-245·11!91 .

trombone .with

Bundy

0111

1100. Cell 81• ·«1·4141 .

Beautiful oak roll top desk,
e11cellent condition , not antique.

for beglnnlf1. C1ll 814-448·
7882.

New Broyhill foot board 8200
Will u ti ei ther 16 or 28 cuft.
ch~~t~~t dsep freeze 1150 . Call

Conn

trombone, like

.48-7421 .

new . CaH

Ut-.1 Trombone. Good condl·
tion . 165. Cell 814 · 992-7312.
Ruget lite weight 270 cal.
8400 . Savage l..,er 1ction
Upright Klmbtll Pi1n0. Needs
30' cal. w-scope. Call614·"6· . tuned . Good condition. 614-

7019

H2· 313S.

Casio kevboard 1400. Bladl:
Jack drum set 1,00. Seefl
weight bench 1150 . Cell 614·
446 -0109 1fter 6:30PM .

BundyTNf11111, u1td 2 yaartfor
letsons only. 1200 .00 . 304·

58

F!Uit

&amp; Vegetables

2802.

2 instav baclcho• K-12 . 2
2-inche water pu~1 &amp; hose.
Cal 304-882 -2237 .

Red rltberriet . Tayk)rl Berry

P1tch . C1l 814· 446 -8892 or

51.·2•6·660M .

14.00 P" bulhel. 814-247·

Milled herdwood slabs, t12 . per
bundle. Containing approll . 1 v,
tons . FOB Ohkl Pallet Co.,
Pome roy. Ohio . Call 614· 992·
6461

Stone Canninl

pr icet and nrletin. lob ' s
Mtrket. Maeon. W. Va . 304773-5721 . Op.. 7 d.ays. ·

61

&lt;fill SI Jiiplii'S
~

.. .Wtff NOT NiCNP.

Serengeti plains is charted
in this portrait narrated by
Richard
Widmark. 160

843-2957.

min .)

al ()}) Scarecrow and Mrs.
King Amanda and Lee help
out Am a nda's ex·husband.
who finds himself em-

1883 Prowler 21 ft ctmper,
sleapt 6. 20 ft IIWning, ••c con d.

prlcod to 1011. 304·876·•S74 .

broiled i n i nternationa l in·

Higue. (60 min.) (R).
(j]) Greatest American
Hero
8:30 0 (1) (f)) Amazing Stories
A actor playing a mummy
in an on-location horror

EEK &amp; MEEK
B1

Home
Improvements

movie causes a town-wide
p a nic when he frantically
leaves the set in costume to
be with his wife . who is

949· 2J668.

79 Iuick Aegtl . BliCk· red 1ut.
Cleeo . PS. PB, 1ir. Good c:ondi·

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

1912 Cht'IV Ca'llalier, front
whMI drivt. eu1o. 4 cyl. new
tint. •1.860 00 . 304- 8715-

4111 .

oond, •1.200.00 . 304·176·
&lt;1072 .

s.,,.

79 Buick La
74 Buick
Rivett. 30··875·5112.
1978 For.d Finta, ••c. running
cond . •400. 1971 Chrtty ttltian
w~on tor PJtrtt t&amp;O.OO . Good
:no tor a trent. 304- 895~ 3059 .

Stereo.

(!) Magic Years in Sports
Ell Cil Major league Base-

Rogers B11ement
W1terprooflng.

ball: Cincinnati at Houston
(3 hrs .l

EJrte:-ior &amp; intwior stucco . Plat·
pluter replirt. low rat11.

tiN'

'82 Pontitc Bonneville. o\ door.
VInyl lop. Y·f, Air, Aulo. PS.PI.
AM · F M It II'to, tNt, re• window
defogger. velour Interior. body
uc cond, hfgh mile1111e. 304882-279&amp;.

about 10 g;vo birth . (A) In

Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Loc11 referenc• furnished.
Free ettlmatn. Ctll collect
1 -814-237· 0488. dey or night.

Farm Equipment

M111ey Feroueon, New Holland,

Buah Hog Sal• • Sarvica. OVII'
40 u..d triCtor• to choose hom
I OOrYPittt line ot new &amp; utld
equlpnwnt . Larg•t telection in

RON'S Talevlalon Service.
HOUM Cllll on RCA , Quazar.
GE . Speciellng In Zenh:h. Cal

304· 67e·239B or 11•·•U·
2.S4.
Fetty Tr" Trimming, slump
removal. Ctll304-871-1331 .

RINGLES 'S SERVICE ,

••P•·

rienc:ed carp.-.ter, electrldan.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
MY MOM 80LJGHT ME
A LOT OF NOrEOOOK5
AND PENS AND 6TUFF...

r------50, PHYSJCI\LLY, rM

\

mason. p1inter, roofing Unclud·
lnv hot t• •PPUcltion} 304876·2088 or 876 ·7388.

ALL READY ID 60
BACK TO 50-IOOL.

WHSTHeR IM READY
MENTALLY 15 A HORSE
OF ANOTHER COLOR .

S.E. Ohio.

JIM "S FARM EQUIPMENT
CfNT~ . 8R 35 W. Golllpollt
Ohio . Ctiii14-MS·!I777 • ..,.:
614· 446· 3&amp;12. Up front trac·
tors with Wlrtanty ov.- 40 UHd

SALE ! 50 percent OFF ! Fluhing

arrow 1ign 12691 lighted. non·
arrow 82691 Nonllghted •2211
Free lener11 Few left. SM
loc•.lly . 11800)423 · 0163 .
1nyt1me.

•1.200. Coli 81•·• •·9303.

For sale RI COH oftlce copier

-

t'ICtofl,

1000 tooll.

Ford IN trtctor dllk. lhd to.ter

HoNtnd 717 Fortgo Htr·
wttt• wlltl 1 lOW com hMd.
International 1210 Orindtr

machin e FT-4010 whh oolletor

3

mllller. both good cond. 304 .

273·4211.

Fuller Brvth Products . For free
de1Ne rvc• II304-875-1010 .Rt-

62 Wanted to Buy

1--------....:__

30.. 675-1113 .

Eugene O' Neill , IS eK·
plored . 12 hrs .. 30 min.l
[I) (j]) Kate 8o Allie Allie is
in for a hectic Thanksg iv·
ing when she invites a
large group of people for

\

\

Rot1ry or nbl• tool drilling.
Mott Willa completed umeday.
Pump salts end service. 304·

dinner , including Charles

ond Claire . (A).
@) Coming of the Second
Summit (60 min.)
9:30 al iHl Newhart (CC)
George's inhttuation with a
v isiting actress appears to
be mutual_, although everyo ne else at the inn is con-

B86·3802
82

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

BARNEY

88&amp;·31138.

Now buying lh ..l

JUGHAID ··

Cor. Fourth and Pine

Gt!UpoUs, Ohio
Phona 114· 4ot8 · 3B88 or 814·

•48·«77
83

RUN OUT IN
TH ' VARD
ArJ'GIT MV

1871 Old1 Cutlau Suprame
1100. 304·f75· 148L

I ~;;;:::::;;::::;=;:::::;;:::;=
72

l.IUCkS for Sale

1--:----------

12 Chny 8 · 10 4 ~pd.~ v.e .

Livestock

:ill brtoktr boo with I · ----~-'"--­
breaklrt, must. tell. 304·••· JtrM¥ n .. lk mw, NCI Md white

200 trftP

ptll 11-.1 oow. AN
wlf Olive In Sprint· WhH•ICOW,

~:':ia~rd

\'""·

Clllt

10:00

HOE

Excavating

footers . dr ivew-vt. teptit: tank s'
446·4637, J1mn L. Devtson
Jr. owner.
·

85

General Hauling

Pr

I&lt;.N~ADA

Watt era on ' t Wt ter Haulin g
reuon1bl e rates, lmmediat~
2.000 gallon delivery. clttarni.
poola, well. etc . call 304-576-

1111

HOOWOOP

8l4·4•e·

7&amp; Fr.nhlln 21
, tile or trlde.

tl.

2919.

OIC"nONARY

OUi"

PIC110NARISS
FO~ SAL-e

.

8i

Upholatary

1IIIA Fohl Rtngtr TNck. Coli
441·1117.

PEANUTS
TRISTATE
UPHPLITEAV IHOP
1163 Sflc. 'AYI., .OtMipoll t .

IH·441· 7833 or 114·•41
1S33
.

H~AR?

·~I. MV NAME I KNOW ..
IS

TAPIOCA MAV I SIT

" • M Cu1tam Coucttn lnd

WI~ VOU?

I

N E XG0 Y
dtughter."
~-'T~~-i~f-15,.:..:..1,.:...:;.1...:."'1--1 Q Complela

I

L -.1-..&amp;.-.1--L--L-.J.

•

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

•

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE tEllERS
TO GET ANSWER

YESTERDAY'S S(IAM·IITS ANSWERS
Sponge - Axiom - Bulge - Armour - EXAMPLE
T Hnagera were discussing lhelr car troubles. "Wha1 model
Ia your cal?" one asked. "H Isn't a model " waslhe reply "h's
a very poor EXAMPLE."
'
'

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

o,.. dtKv • ..;

@Soap
11:30 1J (1) III Tonight Show
Guest host Bony White
welcomes Charles Nalaon
Reilly and Paul Rodriguez.
(80 min .) In Stereo.
(]) Beat of Groucho
@ Sf!ortsC.nter
fJI (I) Taxi
ill BluiiJraU Ramble
())Alice
(ll) Thla Old Houia (CC)
Gl iiJl M11Jnum. P.l. An
over-Imaginative novallat
becomal Involved .In Magnum's Investigation of en

(R).
.
II) Trapper John, M.D.

9·8·16

• A Q9 2
t K6J
K Q 10 8 4

+

By James Jacoby

EAST
Have you ever played with an ex- WEST
+K8654
+J97
2
pert partner who insisted upon using a
.10 3
b1ddmg convention with which you .J64
+9 75 2
• Q J 10 8
were a little unfamiliar? That was the +6 .
J75
plight facing Ann Riggs of Boca Ra·
SOUTH
ton, Florida, some months ago. The
+A 10 3
c~nvention involved wa s the splinter
'K 8 7 5
bid. North's three-spade bid sa id, "I
t A4
have a singleton spade, four-card
+A
9J2
heart support and a very good hand ."
But Ann Riggs was not immediatel v
Vulnerable: Neither
certain of · that meaning. PerhapS
Dealer: So uth
North held six diamonds and five
N orth East
South
Wesl
spades and a good hand. To be on the
t+
safe side , she bid 1hree no-trump.
1
t
Pass
Pass
t•
The situation changed when North
3 NT
3
Pass
Pass
confirmed what Ann bad suspected all
4 NT
Pass
4•
Pass
along by bidding four hearts . Now she 1 Pass
5 NT
5•
Pass
launched into Blackwood . Her subse·
Pass
Pass
7•
Pass
quent five no-trump bid guaranteed
Pass
all the aces and invited a grand slam.
Opening lead: t Q
Expert North was happy to go all the
Although the slam would fail if

+

+

•;;;;;;t~. opponent held J-IO·x·x in

11

it was a high percentage con·
tract.
lo Ms. Riggs for making a
strong recovery when she r ealized the
full import of her partner 's strong bid ·

ding. And maybe someday anonymous
North will tell me why he responded
one diamond to South's one-club open·
ing bid.

~Ntr.VJt4rf
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

7 Conju n('t ion

I !'ulrahility 8 J)erangt•d
6 Stret•t
9 ro mmor 1

ur&lt;·hin
t I East• u ~
12 St·n ...,. •Jpss
13 Happ&lt;• nin~
14 Did a sum
15 Sun . talk
16 ( )JWrah•(l
18 Asian
holiday
19 Craftsman

suffi x

10 Actor
Bf'ally

17 Skill
20 Delail
21 Lamp of
lhP day
22 Gohhled up
23 Ecccntril'

Yeeterday'o An8wer

( sl.)

24 Statute
25 Oallrl

24 MapiP

skin

26 Gelder·

39 Floor of
31 llooray
exchangt•
33 Primeval
40 O klahoma
34 Freneh
city
painte r
35 Oire(·tinn 41 Apirt 't&gt;
42 AUrn lion
on s hip

genus

26 u·~islah ·
29 Ba.'ik

land city

27 Pour

prindplt·

Clare,

30 ( :ar's·raw
31 "clgo•

28 Likely

t' -1-t

36 "Foldin~

29 Ship

32 Bl•st•t·l'li
3 4 Mayan
Indian

44

~ whal

. of lUll

,..;;;.,;;;.;,;;....,r::-....-.l::

37 ( ie~h"ha!

II

38 Mil ilary
acldrt'ss

39 not·umt'lll
43 ( 'urtain
fahrit ·

45

1 1 ara~ol\

46 fo'n•ndt
riwr

47

J.iH~('f

48 Spil l' fU I
DOWN
I Ji' rt•nd 1
,o.;Ca JIOI'I

2 Hiwr hank
3 Vi~ilanl
4 "II I Wt·n·
a Hidt

~"

5 Dt•riV4'
film

""

AXYOLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

One let1er stands for another. In this sa mplt' 1\ " used
for the three L's, X for the two O's. etc. Sing lt· letters.
aposlrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day !hi! code let1ers are different.
CllYPTOQUOTES

9·8

nu

Lll FG HL C VA

A

R V A

EHJD

ZYilTAS

E NI

R H ll

c

VATA~'

J

NFOIJHF
Y-..laJ'I

RA

K II BE
IJNVSYA

F A J L A &lt;; ll A S
YllTAS . -

ZIICilA~"t:NV

CrrPW41-: A

BANKER. .. LENDS HIS

UMBREU.A WHEN mE SUN IS SHINING AND WANTS
IT BACK 'l1tE MINUTE rr BEGINS TO RAIN. - MARK

TWAIN··

12:00 (]) Dob.. 011111
(!) NFL YNrbook

. gueate are former NFL_atar

..,

NORTH

+Q

DAILV CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how lo work i1 :

())MOVIE: 'The 01her 8ldl
of Mldnlghf
12:16 Cll WKRP In Clnclnne11
1Z:30 • III (jJ) LA~ Nklht wl1h
Dnld LI1Nrmen Tonlghra

Mowri7G~~~~g Hri,;.

A speedy
recovery

fBI

fJI &lt;Il Rawhide

CHy, Oh, 114·211 ·1470 lvt
114·441·3431 .
I ; Itt, 9 : 3~ 10 1:30. Old &amp; ntw
Uphoo~ .

lhe chuckle qvolad

by filling in the mi ssing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

6 l..iz Tayhtr

([)D(()Newa

lt. Rt . 7, Crown

_

deadly when a vial of plu tonium is stolen from e
physicist's car . ~60 min .)
(A).

ln1urence fraud. (70 min .)

.PI!DPIN6!
lleupholatery,

Cagney 8o Lacev
(CC) An average theft turns

Prepare•

pools htllld. Cttl 11!114 -2,;6· 1141

Dill•rd's Water Deli'llery. Cis 1.
trns. pool, &amp; well . Anytim rt but
Sundav. 614-448 -7404-

77 Ford

SNAKE!!

Jam•• _Boys Water Servi ce. Alto
or 814 -446 ·1175
7911

&amp;I ()})

News
10:30 I]) Taking Stock _ ·"""'
10:45 (]) Major LNgue ~Dill:
Atlanta a1 Los Angeles
Joined In Progreu (2 hrs.,
15 min .)
11 :00 0 (1) ® 111 1]}1 (!JI News
I]) Burns 8o Allen
® Am•rlce"a Cup: Cha~
lange Down Under: USA

l1ndscsping. C•ll enytlme 61 4:

Form luppty, 114·441·

83

him. (AI .

¥0Ur.IG · UNS.!!

WEED IN'

lont!lfd. AM·FM. flOOd 1•
llllltlfo. M~• MM. J . . boupt
truOk . Ctl '114· ..1·3313.

Com or • .,

I' ~;;==::::;::;::==::;:==

vmced she is only usin g

AGGERVATIN '

cond. •1 .300. 304 -881 ·383S.

· C•ll.~,, ....,.,.otH. River

·

WHAT DO VOU
WANT IT IN
HERE FER?

.,, ,.,.mouth Horil'on, good

Ctll

Early Americ•n living room
tulte, rust gold, gr11n ftoral 6n
beige background . 1150. 304·

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

Good -1 E•cevating. basements

72 Ch.V. pickup for parts. good
front f~nder. good hood. 304·

life of one of America ' s
mos t pow erful dramatists.

Starlet Tr11 end Ltwn Service.
l1nd1ceplng . 304-578-2010.

dey , elll.l.1287.

1872 -Cutla.. Supreme. high
miiNge. ..c oond, 1800.00
firm. . . . . 38 Burdette Addn,

(1)@ MOVIE: 'Fiashd·
once' lA) .
I]) 700 Club
@ Bast of the 1988 U.S.
Olympic Festival (2 hrs.)
00 D (l) NFL Football:
New York Giants at Dallas
(3 hrs.J
(l) (ll) American Mu1ers:
Eugene O' Neill (CC) The

Coii814·Z&amp;I· 1112.

Cldillacs, M•ctd•. Porsr:he,
etc. diract from Govtmrnent.
Seized In drug reldt . Avall1ble
your .,... Save tthouundt.
21t-413·3000 . Including Sun-

0

9:00

a.

1878 Caprice Clanic V ·B.

CROSS 6 SONS
U.S. 315 Watt. Jtdton, Ohio.
814·298·1411 '

fr eezer with ftat freezeCDI!'fllf't·
ment. S150. Hotpoint, H1rve11
Gold etectfir: range 160. See 1 t
39637 SR aJ.

3079.
10 loo1 1!111 M•tt Coo lor wllil
Iorvt C0""41rMoor. "blftg, ..,.
good Cl!ftd, Dlotloi....,IO!IItl.
30.·773·8121 .

ALLEY OOP

• :oo.

Mon tgomery Ward , Harvest
Gold . side by side refrigeretor

County are 1 .

COMMUTE'.

I'D LOVE 10 SEE
YOUR MACHINE
IN ACTION I

crulte. •lr. 304· 811-2881 lhlf

matiC them'&lt;)ltat. $350. Queen
and King siud w1ter bedt,
$200 . eacl-1 . 614 -843 -524• .

protantot;vo wontld Qolllo

1980 Olds Cutla11. Auto., PS.
PB. 1ir. cn:ile control. velor
lnttftor. Good condition, very
dun. beautiful car. Call 61 • ·

Vallow

,\ lrv•:sl:r,

,._,E

&amp;1·· ~9- 2584 .

SBZ·3U8.

f

MOI~NING

promo-

beest&amp; on the East Afric an

1911!19 Chevllle. Good shape.
New rebu ltt .,gme. •2000. C•ll

77 Pontiac LaMans. runt gra1t.
t450 . Call after I p.m. 3D•·

Pe~ehes now availlble. C1ll tor

Sale! 60 per cent oft! Fla1hing

1980 AMC Spirit. Sun roof. 4
11300. c.u

cv1. • • •·

2142 .

Free

OF BED AND

accepts a

tion at the au ction house.
she finds little time to
spend with her family. (A)
In Stereo .
I]) Father Murphy
@ Zenith's NFL Monday
Night Ma1chup
CD MOVIE: 'Yankee Doodle
Dandy"
\.{) MacGyvor (60 min 1
Ell (1) To Be Announced
D (l) Hardcastle 8o
McCormick (60 m in.)
(]) MacNeil-Lehrer Newsh·
our
~ America: You're Too
Young to Die
(ll) Survival Specials: Groat
Migration: Year of tho Wlldebeeeta (CC) The light for
migration of the wilde-

I&gt;EGREBS. ToDAY:s" LOWS AAE
f:XPT:CTEP TO ge: ~TT'IN~

892 ·8819 .

1979 Volksw~gan Rabbit. good

Late cannlng tom1toec. John
Hill. St . Rt. 338 . Letart Falls.

1558

,&gt;Hout.p BE A~OUNP 70

rely whltls. t600 . or tredt for
Volkllwlllon or pickup. 614·

tlon. 11•· 773-15870 .

882-2S17

Nice clean li'llingroom suite 4
piece 6160 . Call 814 ·379 ·

1887 Chevy 4S»or, 8cyl.. auto ..

&amp;14·992-348&amp; .

CompJett drvm 1et. ExceMII'II

Call 81 4·«8· &lt;10«.

ttand, reductto n cap.Hity •
P~er travt . 304--0?IHSIIO .

t225. 71 8ulc::k LtSsbre

•200 . Coli e14-2.S ·B241 .

Sulky for G11vety tractor. 166.
Cell 266·6240.

Va lerie

Oodgo Oort 8360 . 74 VW
w~gon

I ~~ I I

which reunites the cast of
the classic series.
Ell &lt;IJ Making of M • A'S • H
D ([) MacGyvar (60 min .)
ill Nightly Business Report
®News
(ll) MacNeil-Lehrer Nowshour
al (J]l@ Wheel of Fortuna
@) WKRP in Cincinneti
7:30 0 CIJI]J Now Newlywed

8 ft lightweight aN m. tNck
topper with bubble&amp; roll outttde
wirldowt. t65 . 304-882-3236.

7S59.

Bt~rnett

ToOAY:s- HIGHS'

~ .~

Our daughter was only hours
old when I heard my husband
.
•
.
•
thinking out loud, "H won't be juat
. - - - - - - - - - - . any fellow who Is going to- my

(ll) Body Electric
(I) PM Magazine
I]) Allu Smith and Jones
® SportsCenter
CD Sanford and Son
® Entertainment Tonight
ET visits the sa1 of " The

m ()})

FRANK AND ERNEST

thfou., September 8th . Delivery •vailtble.

Hound and coon lights. tioo.
C•ll 114-247-2484 eft..- 4:00
p.m .

Ammo . 30 army 30- 40 Craig
also 300 til'llertip 180 grakl best

r

--11.

• '"'TB;;...L=r.,.O.:...,;.;-M.:,..1

Gema

814· 379· 2220 .

H 1'1111, W•t Virginit . Phone
304-882-3729 . Full llneoftruok
and c•r Part• 1vail1ble. Molt
pricet are cut to dealers cott

317·0483 .

I

0

@ NFL Films
CD All in tho Femilv
Ell (1) Too Close for Comfort
Cil Butterflies
® Wheel of Fortune
@ Jeopardy
@)Alice
8:00 0 (1) @ Volerie When

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

•eoo. Cell

lntlfior. Mu1t sell.

OR ~lUPID AALE"

14ft V bottom Lone Sttr alumn
boll1 and trtller. 1988 Evinrude
18 ~motor . •&amp;00.00 ell. Phone

MOUNTAINEER AUTO SODV
PARTS ORANO OPENINCI
SALEI 131S Fifth $1 .. N"'f

400turbotrans. Rtdwithwhite

HE\'~ WIIAT'!&gt;
A"~~tDUIJOAACV"l

6:00PM.

76

1983 Plymouth Reliant wagon4
ipd. air, AM-FM 12,499 . 1982
Plymouth Champ 4 1pd .
11 ,996. John's Auto S•l•.
BultvHie Rd. Glllipollt, Oh.

ARLO AND JANI~

Ii

PINER

New leave It to Beaver",

'84 Lowe Sprite. 16 ft bMs bolt
lo«&lt;td too many •ccnsorin to
li11 . »4-176· 2631. 8 :00 &amp;

79 Ptymoulh Voleire 69 .000
1etu1l mil11. good cond. Call

to.tld , tow miles, eKcelltnt

2237.

692-27&amp;1 .

304-671·2·73 afttr 1,00 ,

White Chinne weld• gee.. for
11le. t&amp; .oo each. CllllOtC -882·

blac:k muh. 1 year old . Call

17 ft. Duo . Deep V fibre gle11,
12:0 HP, 1.0 ., trailer. 111 tki
equipment. low hours. Mint
condhion. t3760. Cell 814·

1243.

61··..8·7882 .

10 hp ltwn mower, pttane
304-&amp;?s-231t.
I

ture . 1216 hlttrn Ave ..
Gtlllpolla.

Autos for Sale

Full size bo11 IPrings S. mattrets
firm. Like new. only 2 months
old . Cost 1800 witltell fo r t360.
Ca/1614·258 -&amp;261 .

Valley Furniture• .MW • uaed .
Large section of qu11lty tumi·

71

1979 Dodge O;plomat. PS. PB.
AC. 73,000 miln. 82000. Call
441·2914 thor Spm.

876-U89.

A..... 01Uipolil, OH .

Tran s~ur t a t1on

and WMkendl.

Regilterld male Pug . Fawn whh

son. Oh. 614-286· 6930 .

Stt. 11•·«1· 1e99. 827 3rd .

Mlcnwave cut,

Kennel.

Siam•• krtten1 . AKC Chow
puppi11. C1ll 114-448-3844
1ft8f 7PM.

Wood for 1ale . Call 614 -7422545

171-1140 .. 112·2406.

n:rzm

for Sale

CfA HimaiiVtn, Ptnlen and

EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jack-

W~d stove. glall doors, auto-

New Hhan, 3 bt- hormr in tow n,
........ UOO. month. 2 bf
holM, nfoe'ot. ba~tmtnt . •180.
MOnth. HeMttteed Rutty . 304·

Ma.u· iloMis MOVED: lo·
twrM.
Lll ,..., Cal
30.. 17S-QJI

Pets

Che~p. C1il

6U-446· 1616 or 114 ·446 ·

Dragonwynd Cat11t";'

Callah1tr1 ' s Uaed Tir e Shop. Ov•
1,000 tires. tirea 12. 13.14 . 15,
16. 16 .6 . 8 mil" out Rt. 218 .

COUNTRY MOBilE Home Park,
Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
Large lots. Call 614-992 .'7479 .

Livestock

8,.·.. 8·8034 .

OLD ORIENTAL RUGS

814 -44&amp;·•053.

School D1s 150 per mon th Call

New MMn'Z ·II* .• mt.... Mma.
cemp'-tt eat • · ...d oend.

U ,I&amp;O Coii814· SI7·0117 .

.

56

l1rge Tann ing Bed tor sa1e.
Inquire It P.O . Box 2:17 . Svr•
CUll. Ohio .

lllitlti•

hou••· 2205 N.
304-058·1728 oftor 6.

Antiques

lltrow sign 82691 Ltghted. nonarrow $259 ! Nonhghted 82291
Free le tten l Few left See
locally . 1 ( 8001423 · 0163
an y1 ime.
'

l ar ge private lot Gree n local

C9tt.,a. 2 tvomt, bath. fur -

J04 -en.n2o

27S3 .

Chest freezer 10 cuft . t160,
w1s her $16 . Call 614 -266·

Rood. 30•·e76-S769 .

1pot

Concrete blocke all•iz" Ylfd 011
delivery. Meacm sMd. GlllipoU•
Blodl: Co.. 123'h Pine 81 .,
llaltipolls. Ohio C1ll 814 · 448·

814 ·«6· 4495.

1 bedro om apartment upstain.
New ly c•rpeted throughou t
Par1ty furnished . Ct~ll 614-992 -

Boats and
Motors for Sale

814-992·8219 .

ten. Rio Grende, 0 . C1ll 114·
24&amp;-51 21 .

448·7625 .

Split rima for Ford l,4 ton lruck.
New 12 x 12 rote cokntd

814-992-7787. Equal Hous ing
Oppo rtuni1y .

Block. brick. ll'l'ller pip•. win ·
dow1, llntell, ltC. Cla:dl Win·

ttove. 40 in . wide,
CfOuch . B ft. long,
roller, 130 . Allin
condition .
Call

1 bedroom apt . for rent . Basic
rent 1tarts 1216 . a month that

Rooms for r flnt. day weflk
month . G•11ia Hotel Call 614 -

tr•ller

Electric cook
&amp;150. Gold
649 . Power
very good

IC C8SSOfift. llmhed UN. 1150.
Call614-446 · 1985 .

includes all utilities. Deposit
required of 8200. Contact Vil lag e M 1nor Apt . Middl eport.

63

Turkayt for sele
114-JIS-9335.

Building M'1antlo

oftor

Modern 1 bdr. apt Call 614048 ·0390 .

Nice 3 bedroo m houae. ft~mi l v
roo m, g..-age, batement. FA

1nd

814 · 2•6 · 1582~

Plastic cistern atete approved,
plastic tepth: tankt. plutlc
culverts. met1l cutv.rtl . RON

0756 .

hou ses

Call

Oupl811 for rent 648 Second

CaU 114-992 -3324.

2

0100.

5PM .

814·«8-9623 .
Ave.. Oelhpolit. 3 bdr. livin·
groom. dinlngroom. new kit·
chen, bechyard, refrig. &amp;: range.
t295 plus utilities &amp; .aecuri1y
deposit. C•ll 614-446 -0690.

56 Building Supplies

2 wood single bedl, tin be
bun ked, m1ttres1 S. mattres1
platforms. ladder B. btdspreldt

Call 614-268-&amp;251 .

For rent Steeping Rooms t~n d
tight house keeping rooms . Park
Central H(ltel. Call 614 -446·

mt«~

f r11.1nm1

4·8-2216 .

R••l n•c• home. furnished
Adultt only. No pets. Overlooking Ohi&lt;&gt; River irl Min ersv ill e .

Houtt kit rent. Potters Creek

norfh. Kaoau 9o. Coli su ... 5.

WANTED . Any tlze or condition.
Call toll free 1· 800-433·7847.

Furniahed apanmant. second
floor . 3 rooma with priv1te beth.
References r~uired . Ce ll 614·

~~~~~~~~;~;;~;;;;~~~~~~~~

SIKEAR

~,+I...;...1:.:,:I~~---~

ill Doctor Who
ilD al ()}) CBS News

14 ft . fishing bolt with motor
end treiler. Can 814·992 ·2794.

7444 .

3 room furnished upstairs utilities paid. 94 Locu st. &amp;200
month 160 dep. Call 446 -1 340
or 448-3870.

luutitut 3 bedroom houte in
Syracusa. O~otit and referen
cet required. C•ll 614 -992 ·
1291, 9 00-5:00 . Mond1y thru
ieturday.

3030 or &amp;75·3•31

tuites.
1349
up . w•ber
&amp;
Bushline.
New6 Gibson
appli•n·
ces. Mollohan Furniture At . 7

53

2 bedroom apt. Gatlipolis Ferry.
304-175-2648 or 675-5783 .

3 a.droom. full b"ement, f•m ·
ity rvom. t•rage. Seeuriw dep otit and reference. 304 -676-

Chech u1 out on our living room

I

Stereo.

7:00

814 ·448-0322.

Unfurn . 1 bdr. apt .. carpeted.
utilities p1id, no c hildren , no
pets. Call614-446 -1637.

992·2749 .

H ou1e1 for Rent

l br

Fld . "Pltland 614 -742·2778 or

2U3 .

448·44 16 after 8PM.

plid. 165.00
w.ltl. 304 -875-3100 or 6761609 .
'

3-40 2 lf1llfime

Now t1k10g e lderly rotld ems into
awr t-o me Pleuant thllng conditions . We ar8 certified by lht
S tat e of Ohio PhOne 6 14-848-

Furnished efficiency $160 mo.
utilities paid. 7 Y, Neil Aue. Call

2 btldroom. furnished or unfur·

nihld.

my home . 15 ysan ~tlpe rlence .
fupp«n Platrts are• 614 -617Babyshting In my homt- . days
Part t~ or full11me . New lim a

246 · 9696.

46 Space for Rent

8eau1ySalon 304-676 -466104'

12

Rentals

.2 bedroom unfur"~hed hou se in
Middleport 1200 rent . Call
114-192· 3·1&amp;57 evenings.

Hair dtttaOf. eJ~ cellent opponuni1y and co mmiuion . Busy

.76-&amp;499

2 bdr. unfurn . whh appl. at 861
Third Ave., Gallipolil S260
month plus utilities. Call 614·

bedtOOm fumlsh.,d ep•rtment
tor rent . Adults preferred . 614·

81'M.

S.rgiiM priced 120.000. C..

304· 675 · 14 29

600 ft .

5~ .

., . ......703.

York New York 30 4·675-73 11 .

Of ._,

roall frMt111. ctty water. all
ut~Mtt.~ , fll.trodl . I mil• N. lit.
Pt. ft t. 2. 110.000 or b111 off.,-.
304· 175-1820 after 5 :00.

For Sale by Own..-. J bllt . home
in to-.n . C1ll •75-1021 tf11f

tor light househeeping • babvtitting In m., home. New Htwen
area. 304-882 -3704 .

Hatr stylist needed , appty ,..._.

2 bdr. 2 batho. k;tchen fur·
n;ohed. 1 1 Court St. 8325 per
mo . pluo uUHtlos. roforanco &amp;

2 bdr .. utilities, unfurnished . 3

Mollite home lot on Aaccoon
Creek "d- C1ble TV av1il able.
1&amp;0. dip . required. HO. per
nwttth .
can 446 -7911 or

hiring Ca ll

R· 9805

Acreage

Sale

Aek)t~tinl

"ia:htd, .........

!lq)efitlft oed co mmercial refrig·
. eration MrVice mlln . Send r•
turnll to 8o11 T· 90 in care oftM
Gelllpo~ Deity Trittune. a1

7928 .

0444.

10· 4.

• lOOO_

7U Thlr4 Avo. 1600 sq . h .
CetnftiMrci•l or warehouee .
fllf1llnl on aide . Adjeeent to
thW • Pine St. Cell 114 -4462!12 tor appotnement

bperlen ced Medie Sales R81" nllld.t . Ban plut commission .
C.. 30&amp;·767 -7881 , Mon .- Fri. ,
Sactet arial wo rk bookkeeping.
oo 111Hiter uperience. Stnd resume to T-OO In care of the
Gallipolis Deity Tribune. B26
Third Ave .. Ga ll ipo li s , Oh

.

1MI Holty Peril

lntem.....,el M . . . luilltlnt M•
nufectwlf 111111k:t ltuildet -

----------deposit. Call 6t4-446-4926.

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMI!S KESSEL'S OUALITY
MOilLE HOME SALES. 4 MI .
WfST. CIALLIPOLIS. RT 3&amp;.
PHONE 11 4·«&amp;· 7274.
. Immediate monagemant pasted

Furn . 4 roomt S. bath clean. No
pats. edultt only. Ret. &amp; dep.
required . Call614-448-1619 .

low to form four ~mple

Cil 0 Cil ABC News
Ell &lt;Il Hogan's Haroas

0160 304·882-31179.
75

0 four
Rtorronge lttt.ro of
scromblod words

(f)) News
I]) Green Acres
® Mazda Sportalook
CD New Leave It to Beaver
Ell &lt;Il Jelfaroona
ill Reading Rainbow ICC)
(ll) To Be Announced
8:30 0 (I) (f)) NBC News
I]) The Rifleman
@ John Fox Outdoora
CD Down lo Earth In

Motorcycles

S@\\~~-~£tfs·
::=:
lor CLAT I . POUAN _;__,_ _ __

0 CIJ ([) D Cil llD III IHl

8:00

I

dryer, electric renge. wood
table &amp; 2 """'•· bids,
drnser, II. reclinar. 3 miles out
Bulaville Rd : Op.-. tAM to
&amp;PM. M011. thru S1t.

PIZZLII

- - - - - . . : Edllod

EVENING

1881 Honde CB 60. 2.600
miiH. 304-676 -6524.

135 &amp; . . 5. loci fromoo •20.
130 &amp; Kino frlme •so. Good

TUTNKY

9/8/86

81 Ford oovartion vli'l. 23,000
miiM. lo.:l.. . 18.000. Clll
.,• . 388·!170• .

selection of bedroom a:it11
metal Clbinett, htadbolrdt uO
end up to 186 .

Apartment
for Rent

2 bdr. unfurnished apt . in Crown
City. Call614· 266-6620.

r VI Cf:~

&amp; 4 W.O .

.. 8·•141 .

1395 1o 1995. Tlbl• •so tnd
up to •12!L Hldt·t·beda U90
to t696 . Rec:lin.,. t225 to

Uted Furniture: Wnh• 6

FrnpiUVIIIPr·l

Television
Viewing

•

1985 Chevy oonwraion v1n.
dual air. auto. stereo. TV. low
miletg•. ••c . cond. Call 814--

Sofas and chairs prlcM from

spring• full or twin . .3. firm

2 bdr. mobile homa at Ever-

condition. Cal ..u • •

Of

r

Van1

BORN LOSER

•2es

141170 Bayviwl 2 bdr., unfur·
nlthed, verynict, locatad 2 mlllll
from Galllpoli1. private lot.
Adult• only, no pet1. 1260 mo.

WANTED TO BUY u.... -oO

w.m•J.

'

for rent . Ctll 814-387-

7680 or 814·367·0317.

-....-Puntiac. 1111 Ealtern
11,..,. Gall;pojlt. Ctll 114-4U·
2212
.

Okt Oriental rugs

~K!!IT:_:'N!'~~!!:!~!!:~~W~rlfl~ht~=:::::-~-,

Goods

lAYNE 'S FURNITURE

~~

,:

51 Household

73

The Daily Sentinei- Page-7

Ohio

An Donovan , author Tame
comedienne

Janowitz end

Rita Rudner. (60 min.) In
Stereo.
(]) Fatl1er Knowa BHt
@ Traoll end Field: Bud
Light USTS Tr.lathlon From
Bal1lmore, MO . (80 min.)

fJ) CD Rawhide

CJ ([) ABC Newa NlghUine
fBI MOYIE: "Nodla'
t 2:40 Gl iH) MOVIE: 'The Rein
People'
12:46 (I) ABC N•wa Nlghtllne
t:OO I]) Bechelor Father

.,

�;Page-a The Daily Sentinel

Monday. September 8, .1 986·

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

r---Local Briefs:-......, Disease threatens Ohio's· soybean crop
Racine board meets tonight

The Racine Village Board of Public Affairs will meet at 7:30 this
evening atthe Racine Firehouse Annex.

County gets ADC payments
State Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson's ciflce announced the
September distribution of ~2.774,940 In Ald to Ill'pendent Chlldrm to
631,872 recipients In Ohio's 88 counties.- Meigs County received
$:zi9,:198 for 2,710 recipients.
•

Free entertainment set Saturday
The Bend River Boys will be providing free eJtertalnment at the
Shrtners' Park In Racine at 7 p.m. Saturday. The auxUiary ofd the
Racine Fire Department will hove homemade ice cream and other
refreshments available during the evening.

Racine Masonic Lodge to meet
, Racine Masonic Lodge 461 will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
temple.

Organizations slate meetings
Regular meet ings of Pomeroy Chapter OO,_RAM, and Bosworth
Council 46, R&amp;SM, will be held at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.

WOOSTER, Ohio (UP!) - The
state's soybean crop has been
struck by a vlruk&gt;nt disease that
could cause severe damage under
the right conditions, but an Ohio
State University researcher says
stopping Its spread Is relatively
simple.
The telltale signs of Sclerotlnla
stem rot, or white mold disease, are
soybeans that appear dead just
before they ripen, says A. Frederick Schmltthenner, plant patl&lt;&gt;loglst at the Ohio Agricultural
Res ea rch and Development
Center.
In the bag or bin. infested beans
look like they're mixed with rat
droppings.
Thanks to very low rainfall in
rocent weeks, the disease is not
chalking up big economic losses in
the state this year. But with the
right conditions In another year or
so, the disease could spread quickly
and the potential losses could be
substantial, he says.
He says fields showing small
amounts of the disease I his year are
the ones that would have stuwn
S('.'ere while mold disease with
. ·higher moisture conditions.

t

Area deaths

Lawrenre Rupe

Fire remains under investigation
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department answered a call at 2 a.m.
Sunday to the Sandra Clonch residen ce on Ohio 184, where extrosive
damages were incurred by !Ire.
The fire had been extinguished by the Rutland Flre Department,
assisted by the Pomeroy Department, when Sheriff Howard E.
frank arrived on the scene. Sheriff Frank said alter checking the
house, he called the State Fire Mars hal' s office to assist In the
investigation. No one was a tumc at the time of the fire, which is stU!
under invest lga lion.
There Is some Insurance on the house and contents, Sheriff Frank
reports.
.
Sheriff Frank also Investiga ted a breaking and entermg at the
Steve Giglio residence on the Carpenter-Dyesville Road at 10 p.m.
Sunday. A .22 caliber pistol and an unknown amount of money was
taken fro m the residence. Sheliff Frank Is continuing his
investigation of the Incident .

Sorority meeting slated Tuesday
Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Soro rity will mee t
Tuesday night at the Senior Citizens Center. Pledges are to be there
at 6:30 with the meeting to start at 7: :J) p.m.

Lawrence Allen Rupe. 00, Langsville, died at his home Saturday
afternoOn of an apparent heart
attack. He was recovering from a
ttiple bypass operation which he
underwent four weeks ago.
Mr. Rupewas bomJan .B, l9~ . to
the late Selby Ernest and Mabel
Pansy Rife Rupe. He was reared at
the foot of Lindsey Hill in Kyger.
A retired employee of Foote
Mineral. New Haven. W. Va., Mr.
Rupe was currently employed by
Rutland Township as a road grader
operator. He also was pastorlng the
Rutland Aposlalic Church on Depot
St. in Rutland.
After returning from the Pacific
theater where he served with the U.
S. Marines, Mr. Rupe married the
former Betty Lol•Jacks. They have
resided in Langsville since 1952.
He is sutvived by his wife, Betty.
and their four children and spouses,
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Rupe, Langsvi lle; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph !Char-

and the harvested beans now, andlf
they find evidence of Sclerotlnla,
don't save seed to he planted next
year.
The dry black Irregularly-shaped
fungal oodles that resemble rat
droppings are harvested along with
the beans. These bodies, produced
In the main stem of the plant· an.d
called sclerotia, are the culprits
that can Infect fields at alarming
rates.
"But if producers plant certified
seed, the problem will be helped
immensely ," Schmitthenner says.

"This disease is most severe In
high-yield situations, with high
fertility and ample moisture,"
Schmltthenner says. Badly Infested
fields can suffer 75 percent yield
losses.
The disease has been nolloed for
many years In Ohio In cabbage,
grapes, sunflowers and many kinds
of weeds, and was spotted on
tomatoes rortheflrst time this year.
Sclerotlnla has only been prevalent In soybeans In the last four or
five years. Michigan soybean producers, too, are noting the problem.
Unfortunately, the most jiopular
Ohio soybean varieties, the Willi·
ams types, are hit hardest. Those
Include Williams, Williams 79 and
Williams 82. No lmown available
varieties are resistant to Sclerotlnla, but varieties do vary.
The newly-released OSUdeveloped Century 84, which has .
good resistance tn other soybean
diseases, appears to be a little
better than the Williams. as do
Pella and Keller. OARDC researchers are checking 42 varieties
for the disease this year.
Schmltthenner's prime suggestion lor growers Is tn monitor fields

No winner named

Ten calls were answered by units of the Meigs County Emer!"ncy
Medical Service over the weekend.
Saturdav at 1:03 a.m. the Racine unll went to Apple Grove Road
for RebeCca Cochenour who as taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; at 12: 25 p.m. the Racine unit transported Marie Theiss
from Ohio 124to Holzer Medical Center; at 3:34 p.m. the Rutlandurut
went to Langsvil le for Lawrence Rupe who was taken tn Veterans
Memorial Hospital; and at 6:47p.m. the Middleport squad went lo
390 South Second from Martha Taylor who was tran sported to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
On Sunday at 12: 13a.m. the Middleport unltwenlto County Road 5
from Wilbur Haning to Veterans Memorial; at 7:46a.m the Pomeroy
Squad went to Pleasant Ridge li:&gt;r Donald McKenzie, also take to
Veterans; all: 29 p.m. the Rutland squad wenttoOhio 143 i:&gt;r an auto
accident at which treatment was refused by Mary Bowling and
Jerry Stone; all: 40 p.m. the Middleport unit was called tot he park
for Garv Clark who was taken to Holzer Medical Center; and at 2:53
p.m. the Pomeroy unit went to 143forCecll Bolin who was treated but
not transported.

CLEVELAND (UPI) - Ohio
Lottery officials Sunday said no
tickets were sold hearing all six
numbers in Saturday night 's Lotto
drawing.
The winning numbers were six.
eight. 12. 20. 33 and 38.
The estimated jackpot for this
coming Saturday' s drawing Is $2.7
mUllan.
How many players had four and
five of the six numbers will be
determined today.

Marriage license issued
A maniage license has been Issued to Johnny Eugene D:&gt;nohue,
Jl. Pomeroy. and Josephine Catherine Logan, 35, Middleport.

Rehnquist opponents
ready new allegations
IVA..&lt;;H INGTON IUPlt - Democrats opposed to William Rehnquist
being confirmed chief justice have
some new ammunit ion that will
likely be presented this week when
the Senate begins deba te over his
nomlnation.
Civ il right s leaders charged ·
Sa turday that Rchnquist drafted a

Patrol tickets drivt'r
The state highway patrol cited
Jerry A. Stone. 28, Orient, for
driving while under the influence d
alcohol and failure to control and
fasten his seatbelt Sunday after the
vehicle he was driving veered off
Ohio 143 and s tru ck a n
emhankment.
Stone was northbound on 143 at
1: 20. lost control in a curve. veered
off the right side of the road, then
the left and struck an embankment.
according the patrol. His vehicle
was damaged mnderately. troopers
said.

.

const itutional amendment in 1970
that would have permitted racially
segregated schools.
William Ta;·lor, an official with
the Leadership Conference on Civil
Rights, said Rehnquist's 1970 propos.al "would have sharply curtailed
the powers of federal courts to
remedy unlawful segrega tion oft he
public schools."

FOR JUST

COIBINATION DINNER
DINING ROOI ONLY

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cole
hot roll, butter and coffee. Sorry, .
no
except beverap with adell·

$3•25
,

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

PH. 992-5432

POMEROY, OIL

Fritd Chick111

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enttne
1 Section , 8 Pages
A Multimedia Inc.

Middleport
accepts deed
to building
By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer
Middleport Village became
$100,fXXJ richer Monday night as the
result of the foresight of a former
councilman and mayor. the late
John W. Zerkle. and several
business and professional people of
the town .
During Monday night 's council
session, the village was preSf'nted
the Meigs County Welfare Depart ·
ment building - rented to the
county - located at the corner of
North Third Avenue and Race
Street.
The building is deeded to the
village fret• and clear and has an
appraised value of S98,4:xl. Into the
bargain the town. received a check
for $1,5.'i3.42 which was the balance
In the trea sury of the Citizens
Development Co. Inc .. the group
responsible for the building and the
presentation, of it to the tOM&gt;
Monday night .
L.W. McComas. a member of the
development company board,
made the official presentat ion last
night to Mayor Fred Hoffman and
member s of village council and
hi ghly commended the late Mr.
Zerkle for his vision in coming up
with the original idea to construct
the welfare building. McComas
also praised the late Mr. Zerkle for
his other contributions to the town.
Relating the history of the
welfare building, McComas said
that the structure is the result of a
project which began on Aug. 19,
1966, when articles of incorporation
for the charitable corporal ion were
filed bY John W. Zer kl e, the late
Walt er B. Harris and Dale M.
Dutton.
Following the incorporatio n. a
meeting was held with six local
residents who Included Zerkle,
Harris, Dutton. Paul Smart, Dr.
Rankin R. Pickens and Homer

PEOPLES

BANK

"The Better Bank"
MEMBER F.O.I.C.

5.th Street
New HaYI!II, W. Va.

882-2135

OVER

Ohio weather seene
South Central Ohio
Clear tonight, \lith a low In the
mid 40s. Sunny Tuesday, with highs
near 75.
The probability of precipitation Is
near zero through Tuesday.
Ohio Extended Forecast
Wedne.day through Friday
A chance of showers each day.
with highs mainly In the 71&gt;;.
Overnight lows will be In the :ils.

Cook. Each r:t the six In ned $5.fXXl
to the corporation at four percent
interest. The group then made
arrangements to secure the remainder of the needed funds and
entered Into a contract with
Certified Homes, Inc., Columbus, to
have the present welfare building
ronstructed for $03.875. The Ohio
Fuel GasCa. made a loan of $9.00J,
which was the financing for the
heating and air conditioning of the
st ructureand this was repaid by the
&lt;·ompany at a rate d. three percent
a year. With the grand total of
$67,00J. lands were purchased , the
ruilding constructed and was then
llo'ased to the Meigs County Welfare
Department for a term of 10 years
with a beginning renta l of $525 a
month.
Sinoe the building was con;,1 ructed, it has been paid for and
maintained by the rmts from the
wel fare department. 01 the original
subscribers, only Dr. Pickens and
Dutton survive. Dr. Pickens. Dut ton. McComas. who was later
named tot he companyboard,Gene
Grate, who has ser ved as
sec retary-treasurer of the development rompany for the some 20
years. and Bernard V. Fultz, who
organll.ed the corporation and
contributed his legal services over
the years, survive. The group has
kept thebuildlngmalntalnedandin
good rq&gt;alr.
On hand tor last night's ceremony
to give the valuable building to the
village were McComas, Dr.
Pickens, Dutton, Grate, Phyllis
Hackett, daughter of the late Paul
Smart. and Hallie and Nellie
Zerkle. sis ters d. the late John
Zerkle.
Hoffman and the VIllage Council
accepted the deed with gratitude to
all those persons who made the gin
possible and particularly praised
thE&gt; unselfishness of tiDsewho were

By JUDY MOll(; AN
OVP News Editor
POINT PLEASANT - A tenta tive agreement between the city of
Point Pleasant and Consolidated
Communication' Group lnc., whereby WOUB-TV. Athens. would br
returned to basic service fo r loca l
cable television s ubscribers, appeared to be In jt'Opardy Monday
night while councilmen haggled
over whether CCG should pay costs
Incurred by the city in association
with a suit it filed in Mason Coun ty
Circuit Court against the callie
finTI.
After three separate motions and
extensive discussion, however,
council voted 8-3 to accept the
settlement and dismiss Its suit

NEW UNITS IN STOCK

•

INTEREST RATES

QR

CEREMONY - ThL• delegation representing the
original memhers of the Citizens Development Co.
Inc which con..tructed the welfare hr I ding In
Mlcid.eport met with Middleport Village oHici;U.
Monday night to olllclaUy P""""'l the valuable
structure, free and clear, to Middleport VIDage. The
group Includes: front, I tor, Phyllis Hackett, daughter
of the late Paul Smart; HaWe and NeUie Zerkle,

GIFT- Middleport Village was pre;ented a deed
free and clear for this building at the comer ~ North
Third Avmue and ~e Street during Monday night's
village councU session. In accordance with a plan
devl"'-'11 by the late .John W. Zerkle, a oounclimllll lor
many years and also Ute mayor of Middleport, the
willing to give of their resources to
make the reail7.atlon of the project a
reality.

REBATES
AS

agai nst Conso lidated. Voting of a cable ra te hike in September
against the motion, made bY 1985 was cont lngent upon a certain
Councilman George Six and se line-up of channels, Including
conded by Councilman Rick Hand- WOUB. being offered to cable
ley . were councilmen Leonard customers.
"Buster" Riffle, Steve Lovell and
During negotiations between the
Ch a rles Garland.
city and CCG, how.., er, company
The action approving the settle- representatives argued that the city
me nt means WOUB-TV, the jllbllc was Infringing upon Its first amendtelevlsl:m station broadcast from ment rights by trying to dictate
Ohio University, wUI be back on the what channels be made available,
air tonight, according to Mayor city attorney Carroll Casto told
.Jimmy Joe Wedge.
counell Monday night .
At the heart of the dty's suit
In the agreement hammered out
against CCG, filed last month, was between CCG represmtat ives and
the question of whether the cable Wedge and Casto, the cable comfirm violated its contract with the pany, while agreeing to reinstat e
citv when it pulled WOUB-TV from WOUB to basic service, denies It Is
basic service line-up earlier this at fault In the dispute, Casto said.
year. Tho dly claimed Its approval The city, In return ro r the restora -

its

RhGdes blasts state's jobless level
DAYTON, Ohio tUPli - Republican gubernatorial nominee Ja mes
A. Rhodes says Ohio's unemployment rate is second-highest among
the nation's largest states, and wUI
gel worse if Democratic Gov .
Richard F. Celeste Is re- elected.
"Ohio wUI fade Into economic
oblivion unless there Is a drastic
change In state economic development poUcles." Rhodes said Monday evening at a dinner of the
American Foundrymen's Soclet:v.
"With CPieste as governor, .It
won't be long before we're ftrst in

$

MUCH
AS

u nemploymen 1." said tbe former
governor.
''Ohio's unemployment rate has
been above the natbnal average for
44 straight months under Dick
Celeste, and he can't tell you when
things will get better because he has
no plan," he said.
Rhodes said businesses db not
want to expand because Ohio Is
known as a hlgh-rost ~ate. He sa id
he plans to make Ohio "a low-cost
state so we can make business and
Industry welcome here again."

25 Cents

Village
council
sells lot

sisters of the late John W. Zerkle; back, Ito r, Gene
Gmte, company secretary-treasurer for 211 years;
Dale Dutton wtd Dr. Rankin R. Plckms, members of
the original company organllatlon; Lee W. McComas, a member of the oompany board who made the
official presentation, and Mlddlepori Mayor Fred
HoHman who accepted the gift for the town.

Rhodes said he wUI eliminate
personal property taxes on Inventory, mac hinery and equipment .
A spokesman for the Celeste
campaign said Rhodes was " Ill ping
Ohioans will confuse facts with
fiction."
Todd Ambs said studies released
by the National Academy of
Sciences and the U.S. Bureau of
Labor Statistics showed that Ohio Is
adding jobs laster than any state In
the Midwest and fourth-fastest In
the natbn.

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer
Middleport Villa ge Council .
meeting in regular session Monday
night . so ld to the highest bidder a lot
- preSI'nted as a gift to the town
several years ago - located at the
comer of Third Avenue and
#I
Garfield Street.
Council voted unanimously to
accept thr bid of ~.002 submitted
by Kathy Baker of Middleport for
the lot, which was given to the town
by the la te Ma ry Elizabeth Hartinger Thomas. A house on the
pro(ierty, the Hartinger homeplace, was torn down before the lot
was given to the town. The iot had
been advertised for sa le a couple of
times over the years, but bids were
not accepted on one occasion and
there was a short age of bids on
anothPr occasion.
There were severa l sealed bids on

huUdlngwas to be given lo Mlddlcpori Village when k
was paid for. The structure ls rented to the Meigs
Coonty Welfare Department and Income from the
properly will now go 1o Middleport VUlagt•. Tht•
appraised valut• of IlK• aUradlve buDding Is 9lll,t50.

The presence of Ire welfare
bu llding In Middleport has created
an Improved climate for the

businesses and continues to be a
welcome addition to the village. Not
tContinued on page 81

Point Pleasant approves cable lawsuit settJe·m ent

AS
LOW
AS

'l'ht• pn&gt;hahili!J' ul prwiJ&gt;ilalom
l• :!IJ JM'rl"t•nt loni~hl ;Uid ;UJ

•

Vot .36. No .68

PICK UP A SUPPLY OF PREPAID ENVELOPES
AT ANY OF OUR THREE CONVENIENT LOCATIONS

Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions - Joseph
Anderson. Ru \land; Pauline Cunningham, Mason; Garnet Carr,
Pomeroy; Martha Taylor; Middleport; Wilma Osborne. Pomeroy.
Saturday dischargPs - Phyllis
Hudnall and Joseph Anderson. )
Sunday admls,t;lons - WUbu
Hanning, Middleport; Donald
McKenzie, Pomeroy; Wetzell Bailey Jr., Dexter.
Sunday discharges Van
Evans.

•

We Pay The
Postage Both. Ways!

2212 Jackson Avenue
Point Pleasant, W. Va.
675-1121

I•ICK--1

&amp; -cumin~ doUI.l)' lah· tunight,
ith a In" rM •ar 60 . Mo~ly d(Kid~·
\\•·d.Jlt"!'oltol\o', with a d~&lt;ul01' ol
shuwt·r.. ar.ld higiL.., in IlK.' low MUs.
\%

JH'fC't'UI \\t• dm~a~· ·

'

Second Street
Mason. W. Va.

Bail) !\umiM•r·
992

5991

Bank-By-Mail!

m-5514

Weekend calls occupy EMS units

Beat of
the Bend
-Page 4

"Ohio Seed Improvement Assocla:
tlon has examined tlllusands r:t
certified seed samples" and abSir .
lutely none of those samples had
sclerotia. The cleanb\g process
eliminated II .
"It's reaUy easy for growers to.
think they can save money by:
planting their own seed. But It's:
false savings Usclerotia areln those
beans."
·
Approxin)ately 50 pei-cent of the .
state's soybean growers do not use .
certified seed.

FREE

lotte) Stewart, Hysell Run Road;
Mr. and Mrs. James il..olsi Snod ·
grass, Rutland, and Mr. and Mrs .
Darrell (Brenda) Dotson. Also
surviving are seven grandchildren;
a brother, Stanley of Kyger, and a
sister, Nina Mae Gibson, Indlanpolis, Ind.
Besides his parents. he was
preceded In death by a brother,
Marlon, and a sister , Violet.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Tuesday at the Rawlings-CoatsBlower Funeral Home in Middleport \lith burial to be in Miles
Cemetery. Friends may ca ll at the
funeral home from 7 to 9 this
evening.

Ohio Loltt•r'

lion of WOUB. agreed to dismiss its
suit.
Lovell made a motion to accept
the teJtatlve agreement. but withdrew It when Riffle expre;sed a
desire to attempt to r~over from

the ca ble company attorney f&lt;'t's
and court costs incurred In filing the
S1J It. "I'm for going on." Riffle sa id .
"Sue 'em.

"You got what Wf' wanted." he
!Continued on Page 81

Village block party
slated for Saturday
Middleport's fourth annual block party. sponsored by the
Middleport Chamber of Commerce. will get underway at noon
Saturday.
Variety Is the keyword of the annual party, which opens wllh
entertainment by CharUe Lilly on the stage. The annual hamburg
eating contest will also begin at noon.
Crossover will provide entertainment starting at 1 and animals
from the Columbus Zoo wUI be avallabk&gt; starting a t 1. At 2 p.m. the
Mud River Band wUI entertain and the annual paper airplane flying
contest will start at 2:30.
Denver Rice will entertain on the stage at 3 with Shady River
Shufflers, a clogging group, tohefeaturedat 4. Featured on the stage
at 5 will he the Country Gospel Choir and the annual pizza eating
contest will begin at that hour. The Lone Wolf Band will start
entertaining at 6 p.m.
"Bubbles, Bubbles, Bubbles" wlll be the theme cia display at the
Center of Science and Industry from Columbus and there wUI be
displays of country crafts. country lamps, tole painting and
woodcrafts as weU as ceramics. Games will include putt putt golf ci
the Meigs Jaycees and the dtlly dunker operated by the MI&lt;llleport
PTO, a football toss, blngoattheCentraiTrustdrlve-through,aswell
as load stands handling hOt dogs, popcorn, soft drinks, baked goods,
lemonade, milk shakes, funnel cakes, tacos, sandwiches, homemade
Ice cream and firemen wlll stage a chicken barbecue.

the proj)('rty opened last night, but
th'' Baker bid was the only
exceeding a $7.000 figure, a minimum which officials felt they
should havr for the lot.
At the suggi'Stion of Council
President Dewey Horton. it was
agreed that the ~ .002 to be received
from the sale of the lot will not go
Into tllf' general fund but will be
earma rked fo r a special project
with a plaque to be plaeed at the
project site so recognition will be
given to the Hart inger family.
Council did agree. on a motion by
Councilman Bob Gilmore,, to spend
a p8rt of the n\olll!y "for a sct ol
bleache1 ~ at thr ballfield on
Hart inger Park. Gilmore said that
crowds to games doting the
summer months are large and
there Is no seating for people.
Steve Powell. representing the
Meigs Park District . met with
council a nd a resolution was Jl!Ssed
by the group fi:&gt;r the \1llage to be a
part of the park district with
projects being subjec t to approval
by council . Powell pointed out that
being a part of the district will not
affect any projects now planned oc
any tulure projec ts of the town.
Mayor Fred Hoffman Oilid tha t a
one-hiuf mill levy which the dlstrict
has placed be fore voters In the
Novrmber election would go better
with voters if mch rommunJ ty was
assured the return of the amount
brought In bY the levy. Powell
stated that tre entire area would
sec many times the millage spen t In
each oommunity through a tourism
program being developed by the
district.
Horton commented tha t he sees
grea t potential In Middleport as a
tourist spo t. pointing out that plans
are progressing for a bike path, the
new Diles park and marin a Im provements. Powell was commended fo r a good !&gt;an. bvt council
did specifY that the resolution must
include word chan gPs that make
projects subject to the approval r:l.
Middleport Council.
Council approved tllf' report of
Holiman showin g receipts of
$4,9J7.:t! collected In fines and fees
for the month of August. Hoffman
announc&lt;'d thr fi rst hearin g on the
communit y devPlopment block jX"ogram to be held by tl&gt;c• Meigs
County Comm lc:sioners at 7 p.m.
this evening at the courthouse.
Councilmen .Jack Satterfield and
Gllmore agreed to represrnt lhl'
village. No projects are required to
be outlined at his time. However,
the Middleport re-presentatives do
plan to point out that Middleport did
not receive approval of Its request
last year In the program. Council
also agreed to r!'!naln a seconda ry
!Continued on Page 81

State Controlling Board OKs $8 million in high tech funds .

Jim o

CHEVROLET-OLDSMOBILE-CADILLAC
308 E. MAIN SIREn
POMEROY, OHIO

PHONE.992•6614
'

r
I

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Heponer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - Another $8 ml~lon
worth of grants has been approved for the Ohio
Department of Development to fund expanded and
new Edison Technology Centers Involving Institutions
1n Tok&gt;do, Cleveland, Columbus, CIJiclnnatl, Dayton
and Lorain.
01 the grants approved Monday by the state
Controlling Board, S4 mUllan will go lor a new center
In Toledo linking lour colleges and universities with 25
area businesses In working on Integrated, autnmated
manufacturing systems.
The corporations will share Information with each

other and with the participating coUeges, attempting
to Integrate computer software programs In
manufacturing, marketing and sales.
Cooperating are the University of Toledo, Bowling
Green State University, Medical College ci Ohio and
Owens Technical College.
Other grants were:
- $2 mUJiontor sensors technoklgy research at Case
Western Reserve University In conjunctk:m with the
University ol ctndnnatl.
-$1 mUllan for the development ol manufacturing
sciences tralnlilg and microelectronics resiBrch at
Lorain County Community College In conjunction
with the University of Cincinnati.

-m:i,OOl In additional funding for the existing
Edison Welding Institute at Ohio State University.
-$2.'\,(XI) ror development ot a plan IJ r a materials
research center In Dayton Involving the University of
Dayton, Wright State University, Sinclair Communty
Colk&gt;ge and Central State University.
Edison centers bring together businesses and the
academic communities In buUdlng on Ohio's
technological strengths throupt research and
application In Industry.
The CootroU!ng Board approved $232,!137 ror
Implementing a new ethics and campaliiJI llnandng
law that takes effect later this rmnth.
The Ohio Ethics Commission will receive $113,1l5 to

·'

hire an additional attnrney, inves tigator and clerk.
and to provide for additional space and equlpmmt.
The secretary ol state's o!tlce will receive $119,422in
emergPncy funds to administer the ca mpaign finance
changes.
The board also approved:
-$101,632 In emergPncy funds to match federal
assistance for cleanup of the May 31, 1985 tornado
da~e in Trumbull and Mahonlng counties.
'
-$150,fXXl In Community Development Block Grant
tunds for repair of roads damaged by nashfioodlng"ln
Ashtabula Coonty, and Wl,OOl from the same source
for replacement of a ml,tXXJ.gaUon water tank In
Campbell.
J

,,

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