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                  <text>Page-'-- D-8 - The Sunday nmes-Sentinel

Upward
trading
leaves
analysts
skeptical
By EU.EN FREUJCH
UPI Bilsiness Writer
f\'EW YORK tUPI ) ~The stock
markPt put in a mixed pPriormance
last week in moderate trading.
Mor·r issues ga ined than ga ve up
ground. bu t the blue chip sec1or
slipped.
ThE' Dow Jones industrial averagr gave up 4.78 points, finishing at
1832.26.
Gainers outnumbered losers
l ,C!l2-939 among a · total of 2.206
issues traded on the New York
Stock Exchange.
The Dow Op!'ned the wee k with a
26-point slide. Counteracting tha i
dmp was a 26- point rise Thursday,
occulTing as invcs1ors responded to
a stmng .dollar. rising bond prices
and better-than-ex pected corpora tr
earnings report s.
Short-co,.erin g became a factor
Thursday, traders said. as investors bought stocks loreplaceshares
they had borrowed Ia sell shor1.
People ~II short. hoping a stock's
price will decline 50 thai !he
borrowed shares ca n be rrpurchased a1 a lower cost. If soor1·
sellers think prices will rise. thr_,.
buy stocks to cover their posit ions.
But the ma rket' s inabili tY Pridav
to ex tend Thursday's adva nce le~
some analysts skeplical.
"The markel' s back to the sa me
old pattern." said Allred Goldman.
market strategist for A.G. Ed·
wards in St. Louis. "Aone-davthrill
gets everyone healed up. and the
next day they get hit with a bucket
of -cold watrr."
Goldm an sa id lhc market's rallies have had no cumulal lve
st rength.
"The markel is stuck in the
mud." Goldman said. He sa id there
is no n•ason lo pay higher prices for
stocks as long as llwre is nothing 10
indicate tha t the economy is
showing strength.
Goldma n characterized govern men! economic reports released
last week as "a mLxed bag. · Data
included news that real lhird-

Pomeroy- Middleport--' Gallipolis. Ohio.,-Point Pleasant. W. va :

Dow JurH•c, Avt•t dCJP
JO l!lduc.tr tdl~.

Dow Jones Average

High .... :;.... 1851.66
L.ow........... 1821.71
Close ........ 1832.26
Down........ · ' 2.67

30 Industrials

October 24, 1986

· October 26, 1986

Goodyear maximizing
shareholder values·

AKRON, Ohio &lt;UP]) · ~ . The
Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. says
It has begun steps to max-imize
1870
shareholder values, amid rumOrs
High: 1851 .66
· thai the company Is the target of a
Low:
1821.71
NYSE
corporate takeover effort .
1850 Close: 1832.26
Volume Profile
Goodyear spokesman John PerDown: · 2.67
duyn said the company has hi red
the fjrms of Goldman , Sachs and
Up Down Unch.
Co. and Drexel Bumham Lambert
to assist in conducting a shUdy that
could lead to development of a
1790
program fo r increasing share.
Issues Traded: 1997 holder values over the near terin.
1770
Perduyn said It's anticipated. thar·
••••••• :.Index----····
!he program could Include a
1750
restructuring of the assets and
137.27 Down 0.49
possibly the capital structure of the ,
company.
Composite Volume
GoOdyear stock has been yery
194,590,750
active In the past few weeks, and
thf' company has been rumored to
be
the target of a takeover bid. but
S.&amp;P.
Cornposttes
1
Perduyn stopped short of referring
to the company' s action as a tactic
October
238.26 Down 1.02
to fight of! a takeover effort,
Lei our experience gu1de you in the
per haps ~ GAF Corp ., a New
select1on at a 1amily mo[lum ent.
Jersey-based chemical company.
Made of Se lect Barre
, DOW JONES AVERi\GE - The Dow Jone' down 2.in, according to final ll'ading on tire. &gt;Lock ·
Howe~er. hr said . " If the shareaverag&lt;' for 30 Industrials closL&gt;d 1832.26 on Friday, market. ( UPJ )
·
·
Grant te that is gua r- BARRE
hOlders' value is increased and
a Barre Guild CUll
qua rter gross nat ional product
General Motors provided a more of the stock !tom neutral 1o a buy they 're hapw with that P€1'lor- anu,ea,
M
an
u
men! is a perma·
D
_mance, 1 suppose they would be less
grew a sluggish 2.4 per&gt;ent. The hopPful note. climbing J•,.;. to 69 l-g . rrcommendalion.
nen t trib ute to your M on umcnls
government also said du rable GM reported a drop in third Slacks of ,Japanese multinarlon- interested in what someone else
1
na me.
goods orders rose 4.9 pPrcent in quarter net income thai did no! als advanced afler a Tokyo rally .
September while pPrsonal income surprise Wal l Streel. ·•
Ma tsushila Electric climli&gt;d 7Y,; tO
in creased 0.3 percent.
. Ford jumped 2\ti to f.ll. Ford said U7 Y,i and Kyocra added 4'X to 57%.
111-- c.._, -.,.vn., OK
On !he lrading floor. Allied Stores Its lhird-quarter net in come rose to · The D&gt;w utility lnctex rose 121to
I~ IfNI ,. FlU ~lth st.wing """'•ilk
was !he most active NYSE-listed $2.61 a share from $1.13 in the 2l2.27. The Dow transportation
I printttl il tvtl ctiM with sins P~ prigs kttd.
issue. slipping 'h to 66 11,. Ca mpeau year-ago quarter. a bigger jump average cllmli&gt;d 1.12 to 825.00.
i
halt • •thoritttl t.t-n ..._llltflt C.. I
said it dropped it s $67-a-sha rc than Wall Streel had an ti cipaled.
Standa rd &amp; Poor's 500-stock
r••wfttoti.. colt Dt "'f hmel.
I
lakeover bid for !he company but
USX was unchan ged a! 26. The in dex easro 0.08 10 238.26; the New
,..d "" dtlolh _ ..... ,
pu rchased a majmity - 25.8 oompar,v confirmed it has held York Stock Exchange oomposite
witllotlt
oWi91tion.
million - of Allif'd's out standing discu ssions with inves10r Ca rl index slipped O.:!J to 137.2'!.
·
._soLID WOOD
shares. Ca mpeau sa id it now plans lcahn. who has bid $:n a share for
Big Board volume totaled
•FURNITURE
IO offer $Gl a share in cash and it s stock.
621,432,530 shares, oompared with
Olk
s~ uril if's fo r the remaining stock.
Lear Siegler jumped U \ti to 76\12. 597.146,84() a week earlier and
pine
Goodyear Ti re &amp; Rubber fo l- The company sa id late Wrdn esday !Ji3,412,620 during !he ~ me week a
lc;ry"' t •• ,. .................................. ......................l
alder
lowed. rising 2% to 44\~ on volume tha t it is studying a possible .lear· ago.
of 16.2 million shares. After the restructuring of the corporation.
Composite volume totaled
I. ~~on.
market closed Friday, Goodyear
American Bakeries rockeled 10·}1 781.230.010 sha res. oompared with
WICKER
said if had hirro Goldman, Sachs to 44 :X. A nf'w ooncern formed by 712,612,8l0 a week earlier. · •
sets&amp;accents
and Drexel Bw·nham Lambert to American Bakeries' cha irman and
Prices were mixed in moderate
develop resl rucl uring plan s aimed chi ef El&lt;eeul ivr madp an acquistion lradlng on the American Stock
.&amp;.CUSTOININISHING
a1 increasing the value of it s stock. offer of $43 a share.
Exchang(' .
a AVAILABLE
POMEIOY, 01110-ME!Gi COUNTY
li·answorld Corp. was third.
CBS dim bed 5',&gt;to 132. It pl ans to
The American Stock Exchange
DISPlAY YAIII NEAR
•isin g 7 10 :!9"; . Thr bdging and sell it s book publ is hing busiriess to index slipped 11.84 to 262.32. But
POMEROY -MASON IIOGE
food services com!Jany said it had Harroun. Brace .Jovanovich for gainers out numbered losers 369-366
LEO I. VAUGHAN, MGR.
been informed that entities asso- ,roJ miUion. ·
among !he 913 issues traded .
;;;,~~iclcmuuvL
PHONE 992-2518
Purolator Cou ric•r jumped 4'.', to Volume was 44.379,()ID shares.
cialed with in vestor RDnald PerelVIIIIIA. WV 304-211-1133
man have acquired aboul 1:, 24. The company sa id it knew of no oompared with 31.78'2.9;-JJ last week
VINTON, 01110-~AUIA. COUNTY
Heun: Mon. Turti~ F.U~
percenl ot its oulstanding common reason fort hr rise in il s Slock !l'ie&lt;'. and :F.Ol9.79fi du ring thr same
Wed . Tttwt. Sit 1H
DISPLAY YAIII
S\ln . no•
Zayre Stores }lmped 3'!• lo 24% . week a year ago.
slock.
JAMES 0. lUSH, MGR.
lBM stabilized . slipping only y, 10 The reta iler said il plans to buy
Wickes lro the Amex ac-lives.
PHONE 311-1603
121-', . Over the three prior weeks. back up IO ttu·ee million oommon easing r,, to 4\'J . Hasbro followed.
the compu ter giant lost more than shares.
sliding 4 )~ to :D '\1. Wang'Laborato13 poin!s.
Eastman Kodak climbed ~ to ries class B was third. slipping 11! to
58 Y,. E.F. Hutt on raised its opinion 11'1•.

~=====!

~1860 I@I]

-+---

Beautiful and Economical

-----------·--

LAYAWAY

I'

J;.

onu1m111t Co. Inc.

monlhs of 1985.
AMC Chairman Joseph Cappy
sard the tosses reflected the costlv
buyer incentive -programs and
lower sales. but tha t !he ca rmaker
did have improved operal ing
margins.
" From a markeling standpoint.
the incenlives helped boost reta il
sales and substantially reduced
dealer stocks of l!lffi models,"
Ca ppy sa id. "Prom a financi al
standpoinl. we should benefil from
these reduced stocks in fu ture
quarters."
.J
" ll fil s info !he General Motors
pattern.'' said Arv id Jouppi. a
DPtroil aulomot ive analyst who
fo llows AM C. "(AMCI paid a dea r
price on incentives. bu t they did
move the cars.
Jouppi said !he ca rmaker ha s

sa id It ex pects lo break even in the
fourth quarler tJJr !Ita! "it's up to
the dealers 10 sell mo re cars. "
AMC' s record fo r a third quart e r
loss was se1 in 19!() when it wrote up
$84.9 mill ion worlh of red ink . Its
largest quart erly loss e1·er was in
the second quarter of the sa me
year. when it los! S8Rl mil lion.
oompany spo kesman Edd Snyder
said.
·
AM Cis lraditionally known as !he
nation's No.4 carmaker. bu t in facl
Is now outprcduced by !he U.S. car
assembly op~ra t io ns of .Japancsp
carmakers Honda and Nissan.
AMC's ca r sales so far this yea r
have been running alrnos l Jl
pPrcent be low year.ago levels
despite numerou .s buyer incentive
programs. Including a zero po·cenl
interest rate offer on t wo-vear loan s
' through the end of this month.
Prom Jan . I through Oct. 20. the
carmaker sold 61.606 Renauli AJ .
vear earlier. The increase was due liancc and Enoo re Subcompacts
primarUy to grea ter volume pro- cars, compared wit h 103.542 unit s in
vided by Ri chardson-VIcks. which the year-ago per iod.
was not a factor in !he comparable
quarter last year. !he oompany
said.
·
Earn! ngs for t he first quart er 1986
were S273 million, a 9 pPrcenl
mcrease over 1985's $2j() million.
Ea rnings per sha,ro increased
similarly. from $1.49 to $1.61. ·

_Procter &amp; Gamble sales up 21 percent
CINC INNATI iUPl I - The
P rocter &amp; Gamble·Co. posled a 21
pPrCI'nt sales increase ·for the first
quarter over figures for th~ sa me
period last yea r. !he company
report,;, primarily because of. the
acq uisition of the Richardson-Vicks
business.
Sal!" for the firs! quarter ended
~~ . 30 were $1.4 billion, up from
$3.6 bi.llion for the same pPrlod a

.

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BUY A HEARING

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It has been plagued by !he lac k of

any new models. However AMC Is
illping that some new. larger car
models will help its retail sales.
Ca ppy sa id AMC's Jeep rela il
sales "OOnlin ued! obreak records in
!he third qu arter." although wholesa te deliveries were do wn abou t 16
percent .
Earlier !his 1\'C'!'k~ the nation 's
Big Thrt'&lt;' carmakers - Genf'ral
Molars Corp .. Ford Molar Co., and
Chr . slcr CotlJ. - reported their
thil·d quarter profils.
A 49 percent drop in profll s by
indu sl ry Iracier GM mluced their
oomblned 1hlrd-quarter net in oome
Ia $1.19 billion. a scant 4 percent
abo\·c ~ar -ago levels of $1.15
bil lion.
GM's net il come of $];4 million,
saved onl)' by profit able r£Sults of
ils non-automotive operations and
some lax credit s, almost erased
any indu stry gains despite a 121
percenl rise in net profits by Ford
MOlar Co. to $003.3 miU ion.

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Pleasant Valley Ho5ot1a1 PQinl PltH1Sill"'l WV

116
LottQ

-Page 3

•

at y
Vol .36, No .122.

By LEE LEONARD
United Press lnlel't¥ltlonal
. On a dull, gray day last week,
Gov. Richard F. Celeste stood on
the banks oft he Great Miami River
In northwestern Warren County to
announce the bid date for reamstruclion of a bridge carrying
traffic from Franklin to C;rrllsle.
It wa~ blatant pre-election showboating, but right In the front row at
the ceremonies were Rep. Bob
McEwen, R-Ohio, a likely candidate for the Senate in 19~nd state
Rep. Corwin M. Nixon of nea rby
Lebanon, the J!epubllcan leader In
the Ohio House.
,
Their presence contlnned what
Democrat Celeste has been saying
about RepublicanJamesA. Rhodes
for· al least eight years - that he
promises the moon but never
delivers.
Nixon said he has been trying to
get the crumbling bridge rebuilt for
12 years.
"Four years ago, I was promised
a bridge and it didn't happen," he
&gt;aid, politely declining to mention
thai Rhodes was governor from
1975-83. "I gotta give the man
(Celeste) credit, he buil t my bridge
lor me."
"He (Nixon) made fou r trips
:!own there [to the governor's
office) when his friends were in,"
attested McEwen. "Zip."
It is events like these that
graphically Illustrate one reason
that Cele5te.Js riding a tide toward
re-election.
He is seemingly everywhere,
cutting rlbbons .and shoveling earth
fo r projects promised but shelved.
At the Hamilton-Butler Count y

line on State Route 747, the
governor shouted above the noise of
a steady procession of double rigs,
moving vans and gravel trucks
clogging the two-way road.
He was announdng a $4.5 million
prOJect to make· it a !Our-lane
highway, starting early next year.
State Rep. John Boehner, R-West
Chester, said the prolect had been
planned for six years and was ready
to ·go when Celeste was elocted. It
was delayed, but got a last-minute
green light. And Boehner was there
fOr the announcement.
Celeste had lx&gt;gun his ty]:Acal
campaign day In Dayton, offering
"reflections" on IDw to get his
message out, oow the troadcasl
media is powerful ·In Influencing
public cpinion, and why he chose a
positive campaign.
Next, he was questioned by the
broadcasters about ecommlc development, about diversion of
Ohio's water resources and about
the details of the gubernatorial
debate, which was to fall thrrugh
later that day.
One broadcaster raised the question about a whispPr campaign,
abetted by Rhodes, that the Celeste
adminislration supports oomosexual rights . .
Celeste carefully threaded -his
way through an answer, saying he
dol'S not want the state discrimlnat·
In!( against anyone but "I'm not
leading the parade" for oomosexua l right&amp;.
Later, on a plane from Columbu s
to a Cleveland appearance, the
governor said he didn 't see any
letdown in his campaign troops,
despite what looks like a oommand-

ing lead over Rhodes.
"The cl\allenge is to make sure
everybody's energy level stays
high," he said. "There's no sign of
people walking away from the
election, at least from the Democratic side."
In downtown Cleveland at sunset,
Celeste brushed past pickets on his
way into the Brotherhood of
Looomotive Engineers Auditor ium, where he received a rowdy
greeting from about 300 loyal
Democrats.
OutSide, there was a huge white
banner: "Celeste Close Perry,"
referring to the nuclea r po~r plant
east of the city. Other picketers
protested a prison planned tor an
East Side neighboroood: "Cut
Crime With Jobs, Not Jails."
Inside, a tourl-pieee li?male rock
band caUed "Lipstick" was whipping the crowd into a frenzy
·
Celeste's I'U)1lling mate, au! ·
Leonard, paraphrased Neil Diamond 's song, "Headed fOr the
Future."
"We will lean oo you &lt;1o'er the next
12 days," sa id Leonard, "and then
you can lean rn us for the futu re of
Ohio."
Celeste further Ilred up his
supporters. urging them to "share
with your friends and nEighbors the
positive story of what we have
ac hieved in the JBSt 3~ years."
Out In the crowd, Dennis Kuclnich, the former Cleveland mayor

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money to hire hundreds of newdru g
enforcement agents and to acquire
new ground, radar fo r the nation 's
southern border, new radar and
chase planes, jet helicopters and
other hardwa re.
it also allocates at least $475
million for new drug treatment ,
prevention and education programs, $124.5 million to run(! a nd
staff more federallJ'Isons and $2:ll
million for state and local law
enforcement agencies.
In addition, !he new drug lawpassed in response to what poUs
showro was growing national
concern about drug abuse- pays
for mo re U.S. attorneys and
marshals. fil'akes money laundering a federal crime ca rrying stiff
pPnaltles of up to :!J years in' prison
and .establishes . new i:Jrelgn aid
limits t&lt;i drug-prOducing countries
that do not cooperate wit h U.S.
eradication effort s.
Legislators who JBSsed the bill In
what some skeptics called a fit of
election-yea r anti-drug frenzy say

"Beware, the cou nteroflenslve
has begu n." sa id Rep. James
Quillen, R-Tenn., when the liluse
passed a oompromlseverslonof the
bill.
A compromise mea sure was
necessary because both the House
and Senate loaded the original bill
with so many extraneous or
constl lutionally ques tionable
amendment s tha t final passage
was threatened.
The House approved an amend ment that sought the death penalty
fo r dr~g kingpin s convicted of some
drug-related murders rut Senate
death penalty opponent s vowed to
filibu ster unless it was removed. It
wa s taken out.

•.
-·-

Sl299S

•

11\\ Southwestern BeU

~ Freedom Phone·

MEMBERS - These residents, who are among Ill!
llrst four memhershlp purchasers of the Boyal Oak
Resort Club, were on hand Saturday evening when
groundhreaking ceremonies were held i&gt;r Che
resort's new sports complex, which will feature an
indoor swimming pool, SIUlnas, jacuzzi, exercise
room and equipment and an adult lounge. The resort
has 90 acres of ground and Is aflillated with Coast lo

Coast Resorts. From the left are Mr. and Mrs.
Nonnan Baum and famUy, EUzaheth and J~k
Hawley and Dr. Craig Mathews. The first
memhership was purchased hy Frank Herald, who
arrived later lo hreak a little ground oo the project.
Pomeroy llltomey Bernard Fukz was master of
ceremonies and t"e(.'Ognlzed company representatives
and other dignatarles attending the affair.

•

Syria denies bomb c~arge·;
U.S. embassy heads home
DAMASCUS, Syria (UP]) British diplomats packro today as
the U.S. and Ca nadian ambassa dors headed home in moves against
Damascus for what London. said
was Syrian involvemenl in an
anempt to blow up an Israeli
airliner.
Syrian officials Sunday reiterated their innocence and got verbal
support frDm Iran. Kuwait , meanwhile, sa id it regrettect the Brit is h
stand .
But Israel hailed the British
break In diplomalic relations with
Syria as part of an Int ernational
struggle against .state-sponsored
terrorism that is "a vital necessity
for hum ani ty everywhere."

Italy also said Sunday it hacked
the British. British Foreign Secretary SIJ: Geoffrey Howe was to seek
unlled EW'opean actio n against
Syria today at a meeting of
European Community foreign minIsters In Luxembourg.
In Damascus, the lB Br1tish
diplomats at the embassy and four
more at British Cou ncil cultural
offices were p;rcking, preparing to
get out of Syria by Friday In line
wit h a one-week deadline Imposed
by Syria.
U.S. Ambassador William Eagleton left the Syrian cap ital
Sunday, f~ylng back to Was hington
via Frankfurt on the same airliner
as his Canooian oounterpart
Jacques Noiseux - the only

Lee's retrial resumes today

FF 1100

f.." Awlhot Led Dealer ol

number of years ago. Memberships Into the resort are·
now helng sold IUld a model cabin ha.• h&lt;en
coffitrucled, open for Inspection for residents
Interested in joining. Entertainment, an ox roast
dinner IUld dancing concluded Saturday evening's
activities.

\

the new measure wa rns drug
smugglers that the federal government Is fin ally getting serious in
what has been a losing battle to stop
the import and use of marijuan a.
coca ine, the cocaine derlvat'ltte
ca lled crack, heroin and otli&gt;r
illegal drugs.

liS WEst SECOND ST.
- 992·2284

F MilLY - Horace and Do roll~ Karr and soos,
Tom and Ray, and Steve Skipp, general manager at
the new Royal Oak Resort Club affllitated with Coast
to Coast Resorts took a tum at breaking ground for the
new sports complex at the club Saturday evening.
'The Karrs opened Royal Oak Park near Pomeroy a

Celeste by dropping out of the race,
commented: "They're going to
have a lig margin in rorthern Ohio.
There's m division. Everyboey's
unified now."

~

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1 Section. 10 Page&amp; 25 Cents
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who: vtr.t uolly handed tile electton~o"

•

SEE US AT HOLZER CLINIC
GAI.LIPOLIS. o·HIO
ENT .DEPARTMENT
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'

ent1ne

Celeste moving along
toward day ·of election

By 'UD NEWMAN
WASHINtTON tUPII - Drug
dealing Is a high-risk business tha t
nets a high financial reward. Now,
a new law Is goin~ to make the price
for getting caught equally as high.
President Reagan is scheduled to
sign Into law today the new $1.7
billion anti-drug bill - the biggest
single commitment of federal
dollars ever made in the ongoing
and. so far, largely unsuccessful
battle against Illegal drugs.
The landmark legislation. to be
signed in a While House East Rooni
ceremony, Increases enforcement
and Int erdiction efforts with new
manpower and machinery aimed
at making" smul(gling drugs into
this oountry more difficult .
it also raises the prison terms a nd
fines fo r those convicted of v lola ting
virtuaily any federal drug law, and •
dealers convicted-of using children
to help sell drugs will be subject to
double the normal crim inal
penalties .
The measure provIdes ex tra

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profelltonal help ava•lable at .Diles Hearing Aid Center.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, Oc,ober 27, 1986

Copyrighted 1988

Reagan to sigfi landmark hill.
pledging funds to drug war

us 111 well.

.

near zero tonight and Tuesday.

go'"

'·

Varlable cloudiness tonight,
with a low between 40 and 45.
MosUy sunny Ttlesday, with
lighs between- 60 and 65. The
probabDity of precipitation . Is

19-31-6-28-30-36

.
.''

COM~LETE hear1ng aid IBNtee such as Jolow-up counaeling , periodic
cl~anmg and checklng.of the instrument. baHeries for all makes, minor reP••!• · and re.lated se_rvtces. We also provide loaner aida when yours must
for m'.JOr repair . Many of tt'ese services are included in the original
purchase prtee atthough we ant happy to help those not originally fitted by

EMERGENCY
CARE CENTER

IAMIIIIIIIII~M

Daily Number

•·.

OR LAVAVIAl/ FOR
CHRISTMAS
SAVE NOW ON TOP QUALITY, SELECTED
SINGER* SEWING MACHINES AND CABINETS

J'

Ohio Lott~ry

Diana McVay, MA, CCC-A
I.~D?
Audiologist
If the answer ia Y~· Diles He~ring Aid Center It the enswer. We provide

BUY NO
AND SA~E

24 HOUR

lOf".i'llecl il

''''

--------Logan

AMC blames losses on incentiv~ plans
By ,JAN A. ZVERINA
UPI i\uCo WrUer
DETROIT iUPI I - American
Motors Corp. sa id Fridav cosllv
Incent ive programs and to,;,er sales
caused it to lose S40.! million. or 40
· cents a share. for the third quarter.
compared wilh a net loss of Sl9.1
million. or 20 cents a share. in !he
year-ago pPriod .
AMC lost $ll1.3 million or Sl.!O
pPr share for the first nine mont!"
of this year. narrowing its $ll8.b
million or $1.15 pPr share toss
du ring the 'co mparable period of
1985.
Sales for the third qua rler
amoun ted to $&amp;15.2 million. down
21.9 percent from the $1.03 billiOn a
year before. Nine month sales
totaled $2.5 billion. down from !he
$2.9 bi llion duling the fi rst · nin~

Series' 7th
game slated
for tonight

might have to offer."
Perduyn said reports of a possible takeover are only rumors
IPeause no one has formally
deClared an in tention to acquire the
company.
·
Don Walsh, senior vice lJ'esldent
or Merril l (..ynch Pieree Fenner a nd
Smith In · Akron, said he 's not
surprised by the takeover rurm rs. _

SHIP AHOY - Sevliral members of the Sacred
Heart Churdt Youlh Oroup wave from a boiU liS It
from Ute shore In Parkel'!lburg, W.Va., ro take
them oo a twr to Blennerhasilett Island From tbe left
are Jodi Smith; Lila Poulin, KeDy Stewart and Nikki

pu•

Meier. The p~ week the group and guOICs held
an overnight camt*g trip at Forked Ron state Park.
On Oct. 28, hiJh 1IChool memben of the JII'OIIP are
plllllllktg a Halloween party for younger members
and tbelr guest&amp;
·

Twyman's boc(y wds disoovered
GALLIPOLL!!- The prosecution
In the retrial of Charles Lee II for in a well off Allee Road, nea r
the murder of an area teenager Ewington. on April 6, 19&amp;1, after
resumed Its case aga inst Lee this having been missing for more than
morning In Gallia Cou nty Common two weeks. Lee,~. Point Plea&amp;ant,
was arrested the sa me day and was
Pleas Cou rt.
Proceedings will pick up from indicted for murder In Twyman's
Friday, when major prosecution death.
Lee was found guilty by an
witness Shirley Furst took the stand
eight-woman,
lour-man jury in
and was questioned by Prosecutor .
Joseph L. Cain and defense attormli&gt;r 19&amp;1 and he was sent· .
enced to 15 years to Ute In prison.
ney James M. Casey.
Casey, who replaced Hamlin The Fourth District Court of
Klng as Lee's attorney when King Appeals, however, ruled earlier this
withdrew from the case earlier this year thirt Lee's right to oounsei
year, emphasized In his opPning during questioning had IPen vio·
statement last Tuesday thai the latro and ordered a retr1al. Aseries
prosecu tlon has been unable to of tapro telepiline ooi1Yersatlons
establish a motive for Lee to have between Lee and Furst, which
i shot and kUied Barbara L. Twy- played a major part In the
' man, 17, ·Rt. I, Ewington.
·(Continued on Page 61
\~

diplomatic moves in support of
London so far.
.
Aski'd if he wou ld ever rerurn.
Eagleton told reporters at Damascus airport that he would ask his
superiors the sa me question.
Washington said Eagleton was
IPing wlth:lrawn and Otawa said
Noiseux was being ',' recallro for
consultatio ns" ~ diplomat ic parlance br a protes t that ra nks third
In severity. behind withd rawal and
severing relations.
A Londo11 cou rt Friday convicted
a Jordanian-born Palestin ian of
du]:Ang his pregnant fi anCP~ info
trying to cart')· a suitcase -conlain·
ing a bomb onlo an Israe li El AI
jetliner at London's Heallu·ow
air]:lort in April.

�.
October 27. 1986

The

Ohio

~.

I

.I

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Commentary

Page-2-The Dally ~nel!

.

Ill Court Street

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DEVOTED TO THE INTE.RESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA

~~

......

!Slm~ ~ ..,..,~o::~.=~v

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
PAT WIIITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
· General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
AMEMBER of The United Press In ternational. Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
,
LE1TE RS OF OPINI ON are wel com(l. They shoukJ be l£'ss tha n 300 words
long. Alllett~rs are subjectt o edit ing and mu st be slgne:i with name, address a nd
telephone number. No wtslgned lettcrs will be published . Leiters should be !n

good taste, addressing Issues, not' personalltles.

' .

Ohio Politics

~eleste,

Rhodes fail
to get message across
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPii - ll's evident from being on tt.:• campaign
trail with both candidates that Gov. Richa rd F. Celeste and Republican
challenger James A. Rhodes are frustrated over their inability ro get their
respective messages across ro voters.
Celeste told the Ohio Association of Broadcasters in Dayton last week
that it 's difficult to personalize Ohio's dramatic economic i'I'COvery slnoe
he took office.
The governor says he has the raw figures. but he can't "put a human
face" on tile recovery. "What do you do when good news seems to IX' oo
news at all?" he asked the broadcasters.
With Rhodes, it's a different problem. The four-term former governor Is
convinced that Celeste is 11lnning the most crooked administration in the
history of Ohio government. bur he's IX'en unable ro get that issue to stick.
"How many grand juries does it take•" Rhodes asked reporters on his
campaign bus last week. "Seven? '1\velve? Fifteen ?"
. Apparently. bad news also seems to be oo news at all.
Rhodes faces an additional problem. Celeste already has outspent him
by more than 2·1 and by Oct. lo ha'd five times as much money as Rhodes to
spend on last·minure television advertising. Which annoys Rhodes most of
all.
"You can buy honesty and integri ty," the former goveroor told
Republican supporters in Galion last week. adding that Celeste is tryin g to
buy the election by masking his transgressions wi th glitzy television .
advertising.
Celeste puts a different spin on this. accusing the Republicans of
"cynicism" which gives a blac k eye to all the progress the Celeste
administration has made in the areas of a balanced state budget, higher
employment. strong school funding and an end to skyrocketing utility !}ills
and health care costs.
"In 1986 we face a choice between two views in politics." Celeste told a
noisy Democratic rally' In downtown Cleveland at' sunset last Th~rsday,
"one which is cynical' and the otoor which is confident; one whiCh reflects a
fear of democracy and those of us who share a faith in democracy; one
aimed at turning off the voters of this State and the other dedicated to
turning out the voters of this state."
It would be the Republicans' view that the Ce!estials are cynical- that
they think because they are in power that they can mace employees for
·political donations. barter with state contracts for campaign rontributions.
'and play games with taxpayers ' money.
Bur on one point Celeste seems to be right. The Republicans are banldng
on a low voter turnout to win. They believe that b yal Republicans will go
vote on a day when Democratic folloWers might not.
Robert E. Hughes, the Republican chairman iQ CUyahoga County,
pointed out to r€porters that registration, particularly in Ito:&gt; black areas of
·Cleveland. has Increased by only about 2 percent since 1982. He said this
means Rhodes still has a chance.
State Sen. Gary C. Suhado!nik, a Republican candidate for Congress.
told a Parma fund - raiser for Rhodes and himsel'f: ''This L~ a low tumour
year. People have not gotten excited. This a year we ca nwin lf rur poople
get our and vote."
Celeste told fellow Democrats in Cleveland there's a time to say no- ro
drugs and alcohoL But he said there's a time ro say yes- to the 1ight to
vore.
"This is not the year for those who would say no." he muntered
Suhadolnik. "Can we tum our a record vote on elec tion day? hP asked.
"Yes. we can! " they shouted in unison.

NEW YORK - So the Soviet
Union now kicks out five Americans
it is here·we-go.aga!n time.
Diplomats are given to tit -for -r at for
retaliation, and while this Is
understandable, surely 'the country
that created Barnum &amp; Bailey and
Disney could, come up with' some·
thing more Imaginative.
Last September, I have occasion
to recall 'that it had lately been
highlighted In more than one
documentary that the new Soviet
Embassy in Washington presides
over the city the same way that the
Elfie! Tower presides over Paris. If
the KGB had approached thedtyof
Paris and asked please might it
lease the Eiffel Tower to facilitate
the interception of radio and
telephone traffic emanating from
Paris and the city acceded to the
· request. the differenoe in the
ambi ~nt advantages enjoyed by the·
Soviet Union over those It cuiTently

E.&gt;njoys in Washington would not be and even now. 20 years later, the .
ooriceabte.
structure Is not compiete. Why?
It was n Canadian documentary Well, years ago. Captain Eddie
that first call~ to our attention Rlckenbacker came back from a
what was happening- In the ~new ~teur-o! ooam• ·
Soviet building. Super-modern was really marvelous over there,
·equipment. w~ :' discovered. no problem wHh labor unions. A ·
"sprouts from the Soviet Embassy Soviet spokesman would no doubt
like 1111 bristles of a porcu[lne. and sigh and say that theSovleiUnlon!s
no conversation conducted In other now rimning into labor union
than super-scramtlese L&lt;; secure problems.
from intf&lt;'ceptlon." A casual rele·
L&amp;te last year. Secretary Wein·
phone call from the secretary of _berger came out with a concrete
defense to our secretary of state. if proposal to do SJmething about the
there is ruch a thing, can he pick€11 congestion of Soviet spies In
up ~ the Soviet Emba~ and America. Europe has pretty much
studied hours later In the Kremlin the same problem, especially Ger·
and by Georgi Arbatav at the many. A cursory bok at the
Institute for the Study of the U.S.A. headlines last winter raised the
and Canada . On tnp of which. w~ cpJestion wtrther there are more
are ronsrantly heing reminded that rommul)lsts in East or In West
the Soviet Umon has diddled and Germany, and headlines over one
dawqled wer our own requestfor a weekend last spring 'trom the
new emtxi ssy in Moscow. assigning federal murtroom In Baltimore
us a site some feet below sea I&lt;'V el, raised s!mllar questions about San

,

I

iHE BoMS BGUAP

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Today in history

LI

Today Is Monday, Oct. '!1. the :JJOth day of 1986 with 65 to illlow.
The moon Is moving toward Its new phase.
There Is no morning star.
The evening stars are Mercury. Venus. Mars. Jupiter and Satul'n.
Those born on this date are under the sign d Srorplo. They Include Dutch
schOlar Deslderius Erasmus in 1466; Engl!shex(iorer Capt. James Cook in
1728; Italian violin virtuoso Niccolo Pagan!nl In 1782; Isaac S!~ger,
dt'Veloper of the first practical home sewing machine, in 1811; Theoct&gt;re
Roosevelt, 26th president of the United States, jn JBJS; etkjuette arbiter
EmDy Post In 1872; Welsh poet Dylan Thomas n 1914; actress Nanette
Fabray In 1~ (age 66) ; pop artist Roy Llchtj!llste!n in 192.1 (age 63):
actress Carrie Snodgress In !9&lt;l'i (age41), and rock singer Simon LeBon of
Duran Duran In 1958 (age 28).
On this date in history:
In 1795. a treaty with Spain settled Fbrida 's northern boundary and gave
navliatlon rights oti. the Mississippi River Ill the United iilates.
.

-

W L T P&lt;t.
7 I 0 .1175
5 3 0 .115
3 5 0 .375
I 6 O .25f

NY. JI•
NwEn
Mlam
Buffa I
lndnp

•

Diego, which was made to look Ilkq
a farm system i:Jr the KGB. .
The Thgllsh had their ex•~han~
on the .spy.,."0: ,;,, l ~~,;a~_ag?

, sltll'tlleDMrolon
· Edrmlll

NATIONAL FOOTBALL L•"GUE
Qy United Press laternatlonal
American Conference
EWit

·.

Here we go again ______w_i_llia_m~F_.., _Bu_~_kley-=-.·~11·

The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy, Ohio

. NFL .results

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio l
Monday, OC:Wber
27•.1986 :
,,
.
"~.

PF PA
M 1M
Itt 115
1!11233
ID !71

0 M 0 .11111

811116

Cncn

:'TI.

Central
5 3 0 .1!5 185m
Ctvtnd
5 3 0 .llt5 1751110
~~~~~--+
: ~~~0!--•2.\LI ISJBI _
Wesi .115 11117K
'· D•nvr
7 10 .m lllll:tf
Sea.UI
$ 3 0 .I2G 178 121
Kns!i c
5 3 0 .eu 110 112
LA 11t1
· 5 3 o ,115 1114 117
Son Dti
I .7 0 .115 1116 214
Natloaal Conlerence
E .. I
W L ' T P&lt;l. PF PA
Wshn
6 I 0 .11.17 148 118
,_ Dalla.10
6 2 0 .7:1e 11111114
NV'Gn
s 2 o .m m 10
l'llldt
3 I 0 .:Ill Ill 1116
Sf. Los
I 7 0 .115 103194

70

-

.....,•• ~
Mrs.
ran into th~ other face of
exGoperbac
edlteav ,:orehenof.h~rit~h ,..'!.~~
11
~
u1
1'"
mats. It carne just at tltil~er::~
moment - ·after Mr. C
hoo spent 12 days, more o~-~es~
non·stop, spooning with
journalists and diplomats In
t!on Ingratiation, proceding the',
lilmmlt conference with Mr.:
Reagan.
•
The effect in Great Brttalnl
{however stnrt-l!ved) was qu!tej
won&lt;rrful. It recaUed. as I noted.l
the moment In the 'lls when tbei
chlldrm's tad!o Idol, J))n Carney .•
who every night would read fur an;
hour or ro children's stories, endect:
an hour by commenting to an alde,l
"There, I guess that'll hold t)J! llltl!'!
bastards for another night." The:
trouble was that the little bastards!
all heard the remark. because the,
radio signal man had neglected tOt
switch Carney off tbe alr. He paid!
· for that ~ suspension lrom ttte;
airwaves for a period. On~ can bel
mnf!dent that his sentence wilh

Central

"
,1

·

Chll1'

7 I 0 .tn5 181 17

Mnnst
Detrot

3 ;

TmpB
~m BJ

I 7 0 .125 1!'7 218
I 7 . 0 .115 IOU!%

LAR

6 2 0 .710 1141!7

Allan!

5 2 I .!111M 167 132

3 3 0 .11'15 tlf 114

o .:n5

113 143

"'c1d

Sn

Fm.
Nw Or

5 2 I .111!8 21111!4
3 5 0 .375· til 130
,
Su nd;ay, Oct. 26
NY Jets 28, New Orleans 23
Plttshu~ :.. ~elnnatl 9

Cll'velud ~. Minnl'21ota •
Chi cago tl, Delroll 7
K~tn!till8 City ti, Talf1)a Bay 20
LA Raiders 28, Houfim 1"1
New &amp;.~and 23, Buffalo 3
Phltodetphta 23, Sao Dl'l• 7

!\uta Frand~K!O 31, Green Bay 17
Miami 17, lndtanllf)olls IS
LARa~ U, Atlanta 7
Dan.. :n. st. Louis 8
Denver 00, Seattlt&gt; 13

~~:eln io~~~~ha;at ~::~~~~~j

Monday, Oct 27
\\'a"'..-n~m

at N~ Giants, 9 p.m.
SUIMh&amp;), Nov. 2 '.
Allanla at New Eli~Uid I p.m.
Buffalo at Tampa Bay, I p.m.

Operation Ingratiation. and find his:
palace filled up again overnight :
with courtiers.
•
01 course, we should follow up on:
· Secretary Wetnberf!?r's - sugges-~
lion. and get rid of all ttnse excessi
KGB accomplices. approximately•
700 d them. &amp;r \\1? should go!
beyood that. and advls~ the Soviet:
agents ihat we have just finished ;
rezooing
that area of Washington• in I•
.
which their emoossy squats; were,
most fearfully sorry about it. but It:
Is going to recome a bird sanctu· j
ary, because there Is a 'species of ~
birds that profits from the higher •
altitude.
'

Cincinnati at Detroit, I p.m .
Cleve land at lndianapollM, I p.m .
Dallas at NY GIUib, 1 p.m.
l'llltodelphla l1l Sl . Lou to, I p.m.
San Frwu:i!'ICO at New OrleAn!', 1

p.m .
Green Bay at PIUshurgh, 1 p.m.
Hou~oo 1d Miami, 1 p.m.
Denver Ill LA Raiders. ;j p.m.
Kan!iWi City at San Dlf."Ko, ~ p.m .
Minnesota at Washlnl(ton, ~p.m .
N\' ,Jt•ts at Sea ttl(', .a p.m.

Monday, Nov. 3
Li\ Ram'! at Chit'KI{O, 9 p.m.

NHL results
NATIONAL ROCKEY LEAGUE
Waleoo tonferent.'('
Patrltli

Dh· l~ion

M' LT PI~ . GF GA

Pti!ohr

Oil fines unpaid ____J_ac_k_A_nd_e_rso_n_&amp;_D_a_le_~_an_A_t__;t~
WASHINGTON- Oil companies
that gouged the public during the
period of price controls befor-e 1981
may not have to pay millions of
dollars in fines. thanks to federal
bureaucrats mshlng to meet a
White House deadline for a new
regulation.
The bumbling bureaucrats' hasty
action allowed some oil companies
to destroy records that the government would have needed to prose·
cute them for. price-control viola·
tlons. according to an unreleased
General Accounting Office repo1i e
obtained by ourt associate Lucette
Lagnado. The r€port was questioned by Rep. John D[ngell. chairman of a House subcommittee on
oversights and investigations.
The regulation that was so
prec!p!tatdy rescinded last year
requ!rt'd oil companies to hold onto
the records of their transactions
throughout the period of prioe
cont mi. 1973 to 1981. After decon·
trol. the Energy Department prosecuted many of the mntrol-era price
gougers. but as of last April. the
GAO report nares: "About :riO cases
inv9lving about $l blllion in alleged
violations remained to be resolved." The o!t rompanies' records
wen • vital to the prosecution .
In the years since decontrol. the

oilmen have complained repeat edly about the burden of record·
keeping - which of course kept
them In peril of prosecution- and
the Energy Department has been
sympathetic. The government aud Itors found that the number of films
with r~'Ords necessary for enforce·
menr purposes has decreased
su bstantlally.

rocords had to he notified - ·and
many of the notifications were
never delivered. for one reason or
another.
As the auditors pointed oot, firms
that were notified "tould have
disposed of - or could st Ul dispose
of - records nreded ill' ...
enforcement actions. without vio·
!ating the I~u!ati:lns ."
Furthermore.ln Its hastetolssue
Ba ck in November 1984. the the rule change ~ Jan. 31. the
department proposed a change In Energy Deparlment failed to make
regulations that wruld require only · clear which rocords should be
a handful of oil companies to I't'lain retained ~ oil companies that
their records from the d'mntrol weren't exempt. When in doubt, the
years. Th~ rest would be exempt.
companies might well have des·
The Whit(' House Office of troyed the records the department
Management and Bwgt&gt;t estab· · would have nePded to prosecute.
llshed a deadline of Jan. 31. 1985,
Th!' January rule chanl!l' allowed
and the f!nalr€!(ulati:&gt;n was issurd . the exempt o~ r.ompanles to
on that date. The GAO auditors . destroy Jhelr rocords after June 30, .
concluded that the department had 19&amp;1. Belat€d!Y. the EnE!'!\Y Depart·
been extremely hasty In Its action ment realized this date w.~s "un- and thereby let many rx&gt;tellial realistic" If there were \o be
dC'fendants off the took. A GAO prosecutions in the future, and sent
official suggl'sted that the depart· letters In May and June to 841
menr was under con•tant pressure companies telllng them to retain
from a variety of sources to change their records.
the rule.
"Due to undeliverable letters and
ThP department's haste was letters delivered after June 30,
apparently compounded by lneff!· 19&amp;1," the GAO reports. "129 of Ito:&gt;
ciency that also worked to the oil 841 i!rms could have dis rx&gt;sed of companies' . benefit. Companies or in some cases could still d!spos&lt;'
that. would have to hold onto their d- their records. even though the

Nw ,Jrsy
NYRnl
NY loin

•

t

JAMES BOYS. l'!!Os STYLE: ·
Nor all bank robbers these days
walk In off the s reet with drawn ·
guns; many·areoo the other side of'
the munter. In fact, federal banldng'
regulators estimate that two-thlrdsi
of all bank failures are trace able to ,
insider abuses or grex&gt;s mismanagement. The concern has oow •
spread to credit unions. Federal"
investigators will be checking the·:
15.100 i'&gt;derally-!nsure&lt;l i!nanclal ~­
co-ops following Increasing inci'l
dents of fraud and favoritism -like;
the WlSrcured loans to famllles and •
friends. As In the savings-and-ioari •
crisis of recent years. credit unions
insured by the states areal grearer''
risk than the federally-insured.
;,

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Berry's World

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' ol

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25
2!
2M
ill
31

31
2M
%l
211

'

Mlnnt'St
Detroit

:J4 1 i2:128

St. Loul!&lt;i

2:1

Chlw.,;o

2526211:11

3~1 '

731:tli

~61i2:1

6 1 o

WlnfiPJ

tz

ByMIKEBA~
~

ill
7 Ill \l9

3 I I
c·••·~
3508!'7114
,...._,
1M .U,Ia
3 6 0 6 :M 38
VUt.'Yr
! 5 I 5 1"1 27
SaturdaY' II Rauls
N\' lllanders 4, lAo Ariretes 3
WaohlnJ(CII !, New Jer ..y I ·
Ptllabu_, 1, Philadelphia 2
....
Hartford 3, tlollato I

"'ebec 4, Tor._to a

N\' Rift liON :1, Moot,..al 3
Detroit a, Sl. Louis I
Sllnday'• Results
Toronlo :1, N\' RUI~.., 3
- 'Phttiii&gt;IPillH;-MUIIIHIII.-1- ... II. ra•-rr '
'""
' Chlcaloii.Winolp'll
EdmDntm 3. Vancouver 2

.'

--

Monday;s Game

Los An&amp;&lt; I'" at

Montreal,

7:35

p.m .

Tuesday'• Games
Plll•ha..., a1 Rar1tord, nl~hl
Los An&amp;ele8 at Quebec, nlghl
Plall .. elphla at NY Islanders,

night

Chlca1o at TOrcmto, nl1hl

UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) -The rain
that forced Game 7 of the World
Series to be postponed Sunday gave
the Jh;ton Red Sox another day Ill
soothe their ' psyches after the
team's crushing 10ih-lnning CO!·
lapse In Game 6.
But perhaps more significant, It
also washed
Dennis "0 '
Can" Boyd's
assignment
by giving
the needed rest to start in tonight's
. makeUp game.
, .
aa.ton Manager John McNamara ;Wnounced late Sunday night
that because of the ralnout. he
would shuffle his pitching rotation
and substitute the left -handed Hurst
for Boyd, the volatile right· bander
originally scheduled ro start Game
7.

Calpry at Minnesota, nlllat

Washlngtoo at Vanoouver, nl«ht

'Hurst, who won Games 1 and 5.
will be working on three days rest
Saturday's game8
tonight when he opposes right·
Ohio College
hander Ron Darling. The game is
Football Schedule
scheduled
to start at 8:10p.m. EST.
S6llurday, Nov. I
Tonight's
forecast for the New
Ohio State at Iowa
Nor 1111nol8 at 'Bowling Green
York · area calls !or sea ttered
Central Midi at Miami
showers during the day. followed by
Kent Stale at Ohlu Unl~t·rPiity
fair weather tonight with tempera·
Weatena Mlch at Toledo lnl
llldlaaa stat Clncln•aU (" pm )
tures In the &amp;ls.
AkrCI'I at Tmne.ee Tech
According to a source close to the
Middle Tmn 11t Ywngstown 8t
club,
Boyd, the loser In Game 3. was
Daytoo at W Vlr~nla We!leyan
Wayne st (Mit:h ) at Central Sl
extremely., upset when he received
Franklin (lnd) at Allhl,..a
the news fi'om McNamara. He had
otterbein at Baldwki-Wallace
to be consoled by teammate AI
Heldelberclll Capllal
ship World Series game In New York. The Bosox blew
TILT POSTPONED- Boston's Don Baylor (left)
Martella al Oberlin
Nipper In the lobby of the club's
game six, 6-5, in extru innings Saturday night to force
and Dwight Evans reOect in the wgout whHe
Mount Unktn al Mu!lldn!PJm
midtown
hotel,
the
source
said.
the seventh and Jlnal game. (UPI).
awaiting postponement of Sunday night's champion·
Wltteaberc Ill Ohio Northern
"It hurts so bad, but what can I
Allt!klamy (Pa) at Kenym
DenltHII at CaMe R~ne
do?" Boyd told USA Today. "Bruce
Hurst had rot permitted a 11ln in 15 one' strike of the tit'e.
Commissioner Peter Ueberroth
Hiram at Ohio Wesley"n
is
on
a
roll.
and
Mac
thinks
the
Mets
Darling,
who
bst
to
HurSt
on
an
called
Sunda y night 's game at
straight
innings.
Boyd,
meanwhile,
Rom a~ter at WOG8ter
have a better left-handed lineup.
1\Bderson (lnd) at Bkl Hlon
unearned
11Jn
in
the
opener,
came
surrendered nine hits and six runs
.about 5 p.m. EST The decision to
tirhana at lh:-flanre
It 's just that It was my turn, and in a 7-1 loss to the Mets last back on three days rest in Game 4 play tonight means Game 7 will
Drake at Findlay
after all I've been through ... I'm .Tuesday.
and won 6-2. despite walking six. He take play opposite the NF'L game
Hlrl\,m at Ohio We81eyan
sorry, but my sensitivity is going to
.Jolin Carron at GI'OII'e City (Pa)
has
surrendered just one earned between Washington and the New
Hurst could become the first
· WllmloJim at Unloo {Ky)
show through."
pitcher since Detroit's Mickey run in 14 Series iinings.
York Giants.
Westmk!Mter (Pa) Ill Tlrtln
It was the second major setback
The
right·hander
was
set
to
go
Lollch
in
1968
to
win
three
games
in
(n-nlpt
l
this season for the 27- year-old one Series.
again on three days rest Sunday
·
'
Boyd.
After being !eft of! the 1 The Mets did not relish the first night. but now he'll have four.
Prep scores
American League All· Star team, World Series postponement since · Asked Sunday what the rainour
Ohio Hl~~:h S.·hool
he threw a tantrum and was Ocr. 27, 1981. They said they owned meant to him. Darling said:
Foolhll.ll Ri&gt;S•Ih
Akr Bul·hh•l 'lK, Mr lh·nmurt•D
by the club. Later. he
suspended
the momentum following Saturday "Another night without sleep. Phys·
BI•M'd nuuwl 'U , fit• Holy S~nw 1;
was hospitalized for psychiatric
(lit)
ically, I was ready tonight. But it
night 's 6-5 victory.
Bl•llulrt• ':I, ( 'll.mhrld~r i
evaluations.
"We wou ld have liked to have can only help me to get the extra
Bt·ll~•ln• St ,J,~W ::eH, C'udll. G
~31 JACI(~ ,we.•i;U
811111'12jl, !\"11tlonal Trull II
"This hurts more (than oot being played tonight," MetscatcherGary day' s rest. "
Brudford ~2. D~y TrH 'ouRI~ N 6
named an All-Star)," Boyd said. "I Carter said. "(The rainoun may let
BARGAIN MATINEES SATURDAY l
Ruclu•yt• Trull7, But:kr.\'t' \\"6
SUNDAY · All SEATS 11.50
Budw:n• N Ill, S~t~~dy Vallry II
was psyched to pitch the game that
them pick up the pieces."
BuMon 84•rk!lhlrt• :n. Rkhmond Hts
ADitSSJON
EVERY TUESOA~ 11 .50
means
everything.
Mac
said
I'd
be
II
The Mets, trailing 5-3111th two out
fa• McKinll'y II. 1\ustlltlown fllc·h
the first out of the bullpen, but I and none on In the bottom oft he lOth
reaDy
don't know If tile intensity Saturday night, rallied for three
fin Oak Hllllll-1. fin \\'oodwa~rd 7
fit• Gilmour 'm , PIHtd~ttr~· Sh!Uiy .o4df•
, will be there."
runs to !bi'CE' tonight's decisive
' ( 'I•• l l•lv S t ·hooli. Kkkl f I'll. ! Prt'p 7
Boyd may be unhappy. but it 's game. The tying run scored on a
, Thl.y rolo••l Whllr &amp;. Day Bt'lmtnt :1
easy to sre McNamara's logic.
wlld pitch by Bob Sranley, ·and the
Duy olf'flt•nwn Ill, H~tmltloo 811dln
Hurst. working on three days rest winning run came home when
&amp;l...t ('lt&gt;Sh~tllo 13, Shl&amp;iu'rHt•l.a;hl!i 10
"'F11irlland
for only tbe socond time this yearMookle Wilson's routine grounder
II, bru,.fti"IIOI't"rlln!oi II
the other was Oct. 12, in Game 5 of slipped througlt the legs of first
Galt" MIIIK H~twkm II, Hud)iun \\"p;n
the AL playoffs - has dominated
""'"
~ 3-1, r\toihlahula H1utlor 41
baseman Bill Buckner bran error.
Gt•nrva
New York In his two Series starts.
lklllluul ~rtn~~:K,Sylvatnln Nouthvh1!.· i
Thrre times. Boston was within
.Mit•n~ ... :M,I.t&gt;d.:t•mont D
"The
ralnout
definitely
gives
Krl 1\ltrr •· oloMMon ( 't'nl (Kyt41
Lultt..,Wd ~ Edww.rtl 141, Till S1vll (I
Boston an advantage," Mets ManLor•ln 1-1, Martoa I •
ager
Davey Jolmson said. "They
Loruln ( 'll(h 7, ( 'k' l.utlwru!l \\":t
l.oOIII~YIIIt• r\41uln11t1 I, \'.un1 fhwuoy
can make a chan[!? In their pitching
and 1hi'ow a guy who has given us a
Minford I , ffii'ISR!Uih F.a.~ II
.
Nll\"llrft ' t'alriH!ol t l, TuJo~ ky \'Ill t!
great deal of trouble. I was
~orwllllt Puul fl. Oanhul')' Lakt-,ldt•
disappointed they called lt."
Ort'KOI! .Strltdt tl, Tol Llbtwy I
Hurst blanked the Mets 1-0 on
four hits aver eight innings in Game
1 at New York,' then came back on
four days rest to shackle New YorR
In a complete-game 4·2 victory In
,
The underdogs were ro competl· Game 5 at Fenway Park.
Before Tim Teufel's homer in the
lion for sldpper lain Nturray at the
helm of KookabuJTa Ill or Peter eighth inning Thursday night.
Gilmour steering KookabuJTa II.
Taskforce 'ffl Chairman Kevin
Parry Is In the e~vlable position of
having two fast, even and versatile
yachts to push his ambit ions to Toledo resu Its
defend the trophy won by Bond In
1983.
TOLEDO. Ohio (UP!) - Mister
Increasingly worried o!Iiclals In Valiant posted the 100th sub-twoBond's camp analyzed the perfor· minute mile at Raceway Park this
I f the Ohio Division of Oil and Gas and the
manCPS of the boats. concluding the season in winning the featured lOth
Australlas will have to b? sailed race pace at . the track Sunday
present Administration continue with their
better to make them morecompet!· night.
live against their Kookaburra roes.
· With Mark Grismore in the sulky,
present unrealistic and punitive rules, regula"We've got to get tbe points on the the winner covered the mile In 1:58
board by sa!ling the boats b?tter," 3·5 and returned $4.8l, $2.60 and
tions and enforcement policies, this will be
syndicate spokesman Vern Reid $2.40. Tex McKinzie finished sethe result!
sa!d. "You can't expect towlri races cond, one length behind the winner.
against boats so dose In speed if you and Kermit Key came in third.
®..n't CPY_er."
The track's Twin Trlfecta Weill
you AFFORD to lose your free gas?
The 12 yachts vying for the right unclaimed Sunday night. lncreas·
tochallen~ the ttJ!)defenderforthe .lng the jackpot 10 $43,812 for
• Can you AFFORD to lose your royalty
CUp also kept an eye &lt;II the speedy. Thursday night's racing.
Kookaburras, wlththefirst round of · . Sunday .night's . crol"(l of 2,237
income?
defender trials ending Tuesday and wagered ·$241391.tbe second challenging series start·
'
lng Sunday.
·• Can you AFFORD to have your well
•

«•""'

~!='!'ru~::v~~

•

.

-

•

•

20,000
Oil and Gas Wells
May Be Plugged!

Australia IV easy winner Sunday

bas seemiOJlY .been more candid in • the Waterga~ scandal lllld-tbe subtJe.
The,CoastltutiC!D, wboae blcentennl·
lll8ertlng that lf there ' wu such a quent cover-up. Do we really waut to ·II we will oblerve ne:rt year, clearly,
campalp be would aee nolh!!!a 'l!l'OIII go down !hat _!'OIId agail! wlt!t au ad· J!lices tbe wp-maklnc ~ lll tbe :
with it. Botb men seem IDdlfferent to m!nlstratlon that aeem1 Deiil 011 over· baDda of Conareu. u tbe president be- '
the m8111ler in which a dubloua, lbort· tbrowlnl the govel'll~Mnt of Nlcara· lleves our national security requires a !
term lorelgn·pollcy objective was IJUI even If that means defylnl war aaalnst Nicaragua, let him take :
UBed to justify miBleadlng not oaly an· Congress and federal law?
biB case to Conaress.
•
'
other government but the American
press and public.
. '
' '\
In tenderln1 his reaiJRatlon from
' I
the State Department over this l.iaue,
·•:
highly retpected journalist Bernard
I
Kalb said that tile credlbillty of our
government depends upoa respect for
' ''
truth. He is rlghl Col. Gactbafl may be
'
a menace; but be preMDia no tbreat to
'
the United States 10 great u to jtlatlfy
•
''\
risking the lntqrl%.~~our tlemocra·
cy In the name of "
ormlllt'' blm.
(
In defending truch deceptive oflltlal
'
l •'
behavior, Secretary Shultz cited WinI
ston Churchill's World War U obler·
vatlon that 10meUmes "the truth
must be defended by a bOdyJlflrd of
••
lies."
\
'
\
But Cburchlll made this-statement
\
at a dme when the fate of Western
'
I
civUlzaUon was critically tlrreltenfd
I
I '
by Hitler and his monstrous mlll!ary
I
and political maei!Ine:
'
''
Compared to H!Uer, Gadhlfl IB a
'. ''
minor Irritant oa_the worlclliqe. The
••
Lib au leader loop to be treated u a
r $baUenger to·the Ualted States
I
the West. The Reagan acJmlnll.
I,
\
tratlon seema bent upoa arutlna blm
'
his wish - even !lit threatens tbe ln·
tegrlty of our (IOvemment.
AJ for Nicaragua, we need to remember tllat in 111-ailviJed course ln
•
Vletnain eventually poisoned the
l
wells of our society. It wu the Nl:ron
'
.'
"So much for the computerized coloring of
administration's desperate efforts to.
contain tbe domestic political fallout
cl,sslc black-and-white movies/"
J
from the war in VIetnam that created
"

!'7 23

Norrbt DIVL-41on
W LT PtH.GF GA
Toronto
323 9 26111

Credibility gap back..____ _ __...;.G_eor...::;_ge_M_cG_ov___,er~;

,.

:n

31 16

!31K~31

3 3 I 7
Adams Dlvl!don
Quth4'&lt;'
5 2 2 II
B""t'"'
5 ~ 0 tO
Mo"ntrcl
:i 3 ~ K
llurllrd
3 2 I 7
Bullalo
I 6 I I
Cllmphell Confert•nct•

records ma_v bee needed ... fa :
enfoi'CE'ment actions."
,
In Its desperation. the depart-:
ment spent $7.000 on private •
investigators to locate Ill compantes that the Postal Service hadn 't ,
been able ro ftnd.
,
In letters to Ener!\Y Secretary •
Jam Herrington and Budget Direc· ::
ror James Miller. Dingell said the :·
agencies "took misguided, and, I '
believe. improper actions that'
could ultimately hurt ~reffortsto
enfoi'CE'. collect and distribute
every last dollar of 0\(ercharges."

.J&amp;

4 4 I 9 :n 39
4 4 0 K 2fi 31

W~hn~l

~

ed the law against CIA arms deliver·
ies by Initiating and ~ling such
deliveries tbroup tbe Wblte House.
With regard to Libya, !I aeems
clear that the admlnlltration decided
to destablll%e Gadbafl by planting
false stories In !he AmerlcaR. press
· about an Internal coup developing
against him and about a possible U.S.
attack, This campaign was referred
to as "diBinformatlon": It IB better de·
scribed as decepllon or offlclallylnl.
Pret!dl!llt Reagan denlet tbere hu
been any "dlllolonnatlon" campaip.
But Secretary of State GeorJe Slrull~

K I 0 16
7 I 0 I~

Phtdtph

'"

r detect a familiar scent around tile
White House these days, perhaps lor
the llrat time sinee the Watergate
scandal forced --ihe resg!nation oi
Richard Niion In 1974.
The so-called "dislnlormation"
campaltln involving Libya followed
by the strenuous White House denials
or Involvement in the ill-lated plane
carryiiiJ arms and American agents
to Nicaragua have thrown a dark
cloud over tbe administration's
credlblllty.
Mr. Reagan campaigned in 1984 on
the slogan ·"America is back." But
what's really back is the credibility
gaf.. '
'm grateful that a long-overdue
conareulonal Investigation is going
forward on the matter of U.S. involvement In tbe Nicaraguan war.
Sea. John Kerry of Massachusetts
believes such an Investigation wlll
ihow violations of the Arms ll::rport
Control Act and the Neutrality Act as
well as violations of the more r~nt
law barring the CIA from deUverlns
arms In Nicaragua.
· What seems to have happened l.i
that the Wlllte House. bas circumvent·

Rain postpones .G ame 7 until tonight

Scoreboard ...

I

FREMANTLE, Australia (UP!)
- Alan Bond's new Australia IV
scored an easy victory over the
older Australia III In 2:17 )'.londay,
b\lt otficlals of the boats' symlcate
mulled how to speed up both yachts
~ the Kookl!burrai. kept winning In
the America's Cup defense trials.
Australia UI skipper Gordon
Lucas was besieged with equip·
llJj!llt problems for a woefully slow
start and trailed at' every mark.
l~avlng the world 12-meter cham·
pion at 4-5 while stablemate
Australlla IV kept hold of secom
place at 7-2 in the 18-to 22-knot winds
sweeping the choppy seas.
Jn the other races. Kookaburra
III. 8-1, retained sole possession of
the No. 1spotwlthanmormous6:05
victory wer South Australia. 2·7,
and Kookaburra II. &amp;3. whipped
Eastern Australia's Steak 'n Kid·
~ by 2: 33. leaving the winless
boat at ~9.
\

~
.,

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.r

�-=,,.,'

!lUKE SHARP
5-5, 135-Pound
Junior Back

5-9, 135-Pound
Freilunlllll Back

CHARLEY WOODS
5-8, 140-Pound
Freilunan Back

KEVINSPAUN
&gt;-10, 185-Pouild
Junior Tackle

Steelers bounce
back, rip Bengals
By CHUCK MOOD\'
PriTSBURGH (UP!)- Earnest
Jackson says the Pittsburgh !steel·
ers 3().9 upset of the Cincinnati
Bengals has the team thinking
about reaching new heights- like
first place In the AFC Central
Division.
Jackson rushed for 132 yards on
21 carries· and backfield mate
Walter Abercrombie gained 109
yards on 22 carries Sunday to lead
the Steelers to the victory.
·
The Bengals !ell to 5-3 and into a
tie for first In the AFC Central with
Cleveland at the midway point of
the season. Pittsburgh Improved to
2·6.
"It definitely feels good," said
Jackson, who carne to Plttsoorgh
from Philadelphia earlier this
season. "Everything we called
worked real well.
"! felt more relaxed today with
the o!!ense. Walter running well
really helped me rut. I was able to
run inside a lot and when the Inside
wasn't there we were able to pop
outside because of the offensive
line.
"We're not out or the season.
We've got to get ready for Green
Bay {next Sunday) .
Abercrombie alsO praised hi s
offensive line.
"The credit goes to the ~fensive
line," Abercrombie said. "They

yards on 45 carries for a 5.3 yard
average.
·Bengal wide receiver Crls Col·
l!nsworth said Cincinnati's lnexpe·
rlence, Pittsburgh's defense and
the boisterous crowd at Three
RlversStad,lumwerethekeystothe
victory. ·
"We have 15 young guys who've
never played here before and It' s
not easy," Collinswort h said.
"Pittsburgh has great individual
talent on their front ~ven."
. Mark Malone. who missed the
last two Steeler games with · a
thumb Injury, completed 12 of 20
passes for 1M yards. He hit Rich
Erenberg with a J().yard touchdown
foss and Weegie Thompson with a
9-yarder for am.
"I had · a solid performance,"
Malone said. " I didn't oont to do
anything outrageous. I w.as put In
an easy, comfortable position the
ooy the team played.
"For the most part my thumb
held up well, although 1 did feel a
little JDreness towards the end."
Gary Anderson also kicked three
field goals for the Steelers.
The closest Cincinnati came to
scortng a touchdown occurred irt
the second quarter when the
Steelers led 10-0, but Stanford
Jennings was stopped twice on
running plays from the Steeler
l·yard line.

were
there. making things hapjEn out
"The game pian was to run a lot .
We r811 inside a lot successfully.
The offensive line created a lot of
holes up the middle."
The Steelers entera:l the game
16t h In the NFL in rushing,
averaging 3.5 ~ards per carry. b\lt
• against the Bengals they gained :!J8 ..

Pisto'ns top Knicks

By CARRIE Ml.SKAT
M~APOLIS (UP!) -l!'sthe
little ·guys on the Cleveland roster
that seem to be the biggest rcoblem
for opponents.
·
Take :&gt;-!oot·'i Gerald McNeil, the
AFC's leading kickoff returner and
third· best punt ' returner with two
touchdowns on this season.
The Browns' new pesky gnats are
:&gt;-!oot·9'Frank M!nnlfleld and 6-foot2 Felix Wrlght,'&amp;ho..keptlly!ngJnto ~
the fa~ of Minnesota kickers
Sunday.
·
•Wright recovered a lilockedwnt
lot a touchdown and set up the
gaml'-wlnn!ng score - a 22-yard
field goal by Matt Baht with 1:46
remaining - with a fumble recovery to 11ft the Browns to a 23-20
victory Sunday over the VIkings.
Minnifield blocked a punt and
deflected Chuck Nelson's 4:&gt;- yard
field goal attempt with seven
seconds remaining In the VIkings'
effort to tie the game.
"Forty-five Isn't out of Chuck's
range. He just didn't come through
today," ·said VIking quarterback
Tommy Kramer. "But a lot of
. people didn't come through today."
The VIkings' regular pupter Greg
Coleman, who Is second best In the
NFC, told Minnesota Coach Jerry .
Bums he was stU! bothera:l by a
groin pull Injured Wednesday at
practice.
"I tried to punt (before the game)
and nothing happened," Coleman
said.
Backup quarterback Wade Wil·
spn ha.nPJed ·punli1)g clutles for. the
.first time since 1977, his freshman
year at East Texas State. and was
relieved In the third quarter by
Nelson, who had not punted stnce
high schooL
It wasn't just new legs, rut an
opening on the VIkings' line that
Wright and Minnifield discussed at
halftime.
"We made a little adjustment at
halftime," Wright said. "It i&gt;oked
like they were a little soft on the left
side, letting hoth outside rushers
come through."
Nelson's 18-yard punt 111th 5:09
left In the game put the Browns at
the VIkings' '!1. setting up eurtts
Dickey's 17· yard toochdown run to
tie the game 20-20.

ha·~ h~ve;;,t ~:r~:~~.!o~u:;~

quarter and Wright recovered,
racing ll yardS for a truchdown to
pull within 17· 10. Wilson averaged
38 yards on two punts.
"You do.n't get an opportunity to
come In clean like that veryQften,"
Minnifield said. "I just took~!. It 's
like a 1()().yard gprlnt."
The Browns. now :&gt;-3 and tied with
Cincinnati ilr tbe lead In the AFC
Central Division. scored 13 fourth·
quarter p:&gt;!nts m Bahr's 19-yard
field ~al , Dickey's TO run and
Bahr's game-winning kick.
Travis 'lUcker tackla:l Mlnneso·
ta 's Ru·fus Bess on the return after
Dickey's scoring run and Wright
rE£overed Eess's fumble at the
VIkings' 21 to set up Bahr's 22-yard
field goal. He also had made a 52yarder In the first quarter, a
personal best. to tie the game 3-3.
"This was a ~g team win. It
showed we have great character."
said Browns quarterback Bernie
Kosar. who hit 9-o!-18 attempts for
101 yards.
Dickey, subbing for ·lnju ra:l
Earnest Byner, finished with 106
yards In 19 carries.

Friday's games
SVAC
Oak Hill at Southwestern
North Ga!Ua at Kyger Creek
Hannan Trace at Symmes Valley

SEOAL
GaJUpolls at Jackson
Athens at Logan
Warren Local at Marietta

KRAMER SACKED . - Minnesota QB Tonuny
Kramer (9) is trapped hehlnd tt.! line of scrbnmage
hy Cleveland's Reggie Camp (96) in Sunday's NFL
game In Minneapolis. The Browns l".illled to win,
· "I was down last week. 1 was on
tbe sidelines watching," Dickey
saldo!theBrowns'Josslastweekto
Green Bay which was the Packers'
first w1n this season. "I had a lot
more chances today. I feel tired, ·
banged up, but great."

"

23-20, and move Into a lie lor first place In the Central
Division of the American Conferenre with a 5-3
record. ( UPI)

·REAL: ESTATE

SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS COLLE.GE
•
ff •
IS 0 erlng Real Estate courses
Real Estate Principles &amp; Practices
Real Estate Law
Don't Miss The Registration Deadline!
Call Us Today: 446-4367

VIkings, now 5-3.

r--------'----l~A=IC:S:A:CC:R:ED:IT:A:TI::ON===========R=EG:·:N:O·:I:OS:S:B~

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Monday, October 27, 1986

The

Pumpkin decorating contest ·conducted
,

Winners In a pumpkin decorating
contest were recognized and presented awards at the Tuesday night . ·
Candlelight and flowers were dye.
meeting of the SaUsbury PTO held
!eatuml In the lnstallati&gt;n cerem·
Mrs. Buckley presented a pro-·
at the school.
ony ilr the new ot!lc:ers of the gram on candlelight and flowers
Taking first, second and third,
Chester Garden Club at a recent using several arran~ents featur·
respectively, In their classes were
meeting held at the liome of Mrs. . ~g can!lles. apJl:oprlate t&gt;r table .
Michael Leifheit, My~a Haynes,
Paula Mora.
centerpiece, oof!ets, church altars
and Shera Patterosn, first grade;
Installed by Jennifer Machlr, and holidays.
Max Wilson, Jenny Clifford and
oolgolng preside?'· were Maurita
Mace! Barton had char~F of a
Christopher Roush, se:ond grade;
'" '•Miller, president! Janet Koblentz, . spring oolb ei&lt;change and Mrs ..
~~~~ Slm)lS()n, El!lly_Smith and .
·· ·first vice-presldent;-lftty-Elean~crea a quiZ on lilforma·
Patterson, third grade;
second v~ rcestdne!; Paula M&gt;ra, tlon presented at the ·meet!ng·.·Melissa CUfford, Matt Morris, and
secr~ry, Dorotby Karr, treas·
Reports were given on the regional
Emtly Johnson, fourth grade:
u rer, and TwUa Buckley, assistant m.eet!ng and the regional board
Jason Wltrerell with no second or
meeting. It was nota:! that Mrs.
treasurer.
tldrd, fifth grade, and Crurtney
. For roll caD members brought In Barton had replanted flowers at .
Midkiff, Heather Pauley, and Car·
a hand·held bouquet which Included · Eastern High School which had
Adam Thomas
rie Bartels, sixth grade.
an herb or spice. Theme to study · been destroyed.
~ring the rosiness meeting
this year will be the lessor known
New year hooks were dstributed
conducta:l byThelmaJeffers, plans
herbs. Janet Koblenlz talked on and discussed by Janet Koblentz.
were discussed ilr the (all festival
absinthe. known as W&lt;rnl wood, ~ring the past nnrith Ruth Erwin
The fifth birt~ay of Adam which will take place on Nov. 15.
which Is used in flavcrlng vermuth, gave demontratlons o~ herbs at the Thomas was observed recently Becky, Broderick 5 the ways and
and agrimony, also known as ~tnt Pleasant and Gallla County with two parties held at the home of mearis chairman and noted that
cockleblrd, anherbusedasayellow Garden Clubs.
·
his parents, John and Cheryl more workers are needed and
· CONI'EST WINNERS - First pace ~ners In the pumpkin
Thomas, and his sister, Brandl, anyonewUllngshouldcontactherat
decorating contest at the SaUsbury Elementary School were, from left,
992-5533. There will also be an
Middleport.
Melissa Clifford, fourth grade; Teresa SlmjlsOn, third grade; and Jason
"Transformers" was the theme auction at the ronclusi&gt;n of the
WethereU, fifth grade; and 'lnck, Michael Lelfhelt, first, and Max
for both parties. Cake and Ice festival.
W!Mn, second. The sixth grade winner not present ilr the )Icture was
first was a surprise party given by cream were served.
Jan Sheets of the kitchen OOJTlllllt·
Courtney Midkiff.
her aunt, Mary Engle, at the home
Attending the first party were tee gave a repqrt and .asked for a
of her parents, Gary and Marilyn Mr. and Mrs. James Thomas
food donati&gt;n 1¥1d help In serving
Cooper and brother, Gary Lee. grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Jtn: the Gideon dinner and also !Or the Whaley wlll check Into securing
Sharon Birch, school nurse,
Others attending were her cousins Thomas, Amber and Autumn, Mr. · fail festival.
new flags for the classrooms. talked about her duties and had a
Fred and Shawn Engle and Mike and Mrs. Dan Beam and Dusty,
.Mrs. Jeffers reporta:l on mem· Wendy Halar, principal, reported question and answer period for the
Johnson.
Lisa and Ashlee Saunders.
bershlp and urged parents to sign on several Items Including new parents. Pat Young, Teresa SimpCake and Ice cream were served
office son, and Erica Rotie presented a
AttheseoondpartywereMr.and up before the November meeting. . mats for the gym and a
machine, with a committee to play, and the third and fOurth
with the cake being baked by Mrs. Ms. Ed Kennedy, grandparents, Membership fee Is $1
·Engle. Later her parents and Mr. and Mrs, William Kennedy,
Arrangements were made to report back at the November graders sang several halloween
brother took her to Captain D's for a Mr.· and Mrs, Chatles Strauss, purchase a set of National Geogra· meeting. Rosalie Story's third songs un&lt;Er the direction of Connie
dinner and then she joined some great-grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. phic hooks for 'the library. Eddie grade won the room count.
West.
friends at Show Biz PIZza at David Kennedy, Jennifer and Greg,
Parkersburg for a party.
Debbie and Mike Kennedy. Sending
Attending were her parents and gifts were Kitty Mees and Mr. and
brother, her aunt, Mrs. Engle. and Mrs. Chuck Kennedy and David
cousins, Fred and Shawn Engle, Scott.
Stewart to Michael Roberts, 0.49A.
Jolin Henry Warner, Sr. aka, tracts, Orange.
and. Terry Boyle. Kenny Rizer.
Salisbury.
Dolphus
Burke,
Wanda
Burke
to
Dec'd,
to
Esther
Mae
Franklin.
Penny Gilillsple, Barbie Roush, and
Mendal W. Jordan, Elizabeth
Le-Ax Water Distribution Corp ..
John
H.
Warner,
Jr.,
Mary
Emma
Heather Proffitt.
Jordan,
and William R. Edwards,
right
of'
way,
Columbia.
King, DorothY A. Hlll, Richard N.
Sending gilts wete her grandpar·
Sharon
K. Edwards, Boundary
Warner., Cen. of Trans, Rutland.
Alan Wayne Sheppard, Ju lla E.
ent Woodrow and Julia ~ngle,
Line
Agree,
Columbia .
Edgar A Amott, Dec'd, Mar· Sheppard, DorothY M. Sheppard to
Middleport. Stella Jarrell, Basham,
Mendal
W.
Jordan. Elizabeth
ciuistma Cooper
garet E. Amott, Af!ld, ·Sutton· Mark A. Pierce, Rosemary Pierce,
Mr. and Mrs, Bill Roush, Portland,
Jordan and VIctor Perry, Dessle
/Midd. Vlll.
parcels, Sutton.
Christina Cooper observed her Junior and Debbie Engle, and Pete,
Margaret
E.
Arnott
to
Allen
Glen
Phillip E. Hawk, Stephanie L. Perry, Boundary Line Agrre,
' 11th birthday at three parties. The Mlddlepo.rt.
.
Arnott, 5A Sutton.
Hawk, to • Charles R. Simms, Columbia.
Mendal
W.
Jordan,
Elizabeth
Margaret E. Amott, to Allen Glen Emogene J. Simms, 3.57 A,
toM
:
Walter
Jordan.
Katby
Jordan
· Arnott; ···satali · Katbryn Ar)lott, Columbia.
N.
Jordan,
I.B4A,
Columbia.
George Richard Amott, lot 263,
Clyde E. Kuhn, Shirley M. Kuhn,
Alvle M. Phalln, [lec'd., to
Mldd. VOL
Plans for the preferential tea to Dicklle, Racine,
to Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
.VIrginia I. Phalln, Af!id ., ·Porn. VOl.
Clyde Jr. Morlan, and Lowell G. Electric Co., right of way, Olive.
be held Tuesday at 6:30 at the home
Discussed dtrlng the meeting
Alta Dlle to Roberta Dill, Jot 5,
Cremeans,
Marjorie
L.
Cremeans,
of Teresa Kenna:ly , Mldleport, was serving the Gavin Plant
Pamela Theiss vs Thomas
Porn.
VIII.
tracts, Orange.
were made when the Ohio Eta Phi Christmas party and a bid wUI be
Theiss, Judge Entry, Lebanon.
Roberta
Dill, Charles Richard
Magnet Bank FSB, fka Fed. Sav.
Chapter of !'eta Sigma Phi Sorority submitted. Also panned was the
Harold . Dewhurst, June De·
Dill
to
Harley
Eblin, parcels,
.&amp; Loan Assoc., and Lowell G. whurst to Daniel Enright, Andrm
met recently at the home of Pam Dec. 13 party with all !Our chapters
Salisbury.
Cremeans, Marjorie L. Cremeans, Enright, 2A, Rutland.
to re beld at the Senior Citizens
Center. and community projects to
Five Points Grill. Inc., James R.
be carried rut In the spring In
The Family
Melissa Sinlth. Reedsville. cele· Racine, Syracuse and Mld:lleport.
A
party
with
a
western
theme
Max Wilson
brated her ~lith birthday with a
REV. GEORGE
party at Showbiz Pizza, Parkers- was held Sunday night at the home
~tore
the
public
by
the
medta
and
A meeting on calcium suppleLUSTER, JR.
burg. The children enjoyed the of Judy Williams.
ments and lnformati&gt;n about a; teo· other advertising sources.
rides and games. Attending were
A look will be taken at calcium In
p:&gt;rosls will be held Wa:lnesday at
Max Wilson was honored on his
e.rt
Angela and Andrew Reed, Brian Winner named in
tbe
diet, osteoporosis, techniques
eighth birthday with a party at the the Meigs County Extension Office. for adding calcium to family meals,
: and Usa Ho!!man. Terry. Debbie
· Klr~ Reed, Eastern High School. home of his grandmother, Emma Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy.
and Barbara . Smlty, Jodi Smith,
The material, according to Cindy hints and recipe to add calcium to
Mark and Connie Smith, Elizabeth was a winner In tbe prellmtnary Wilson. A wrestling theme was Oliveri, county extension agent, the daily diet. Reglstratk:m fee Is $1
Smith, Dale and Thelma Smith, her round of Ohio University's «Jth carried out and refreshments were who wUI be oonductlng the classes, and residents are asked to call the
parents. Mr. and Mrs, John Smith, annual American History Contest. served. Favors and treats were Is being dfera:l to clarify some extension o!!ice, 992-li696, by Oct. '!I
More than 14,:00 students In 400 given to the children.
and her brother, Brandon.
Information which has been put to register.
Ohio
high schools took the rcellml·
Attending were he grandmolh·
Sending gifts were Melvin and
Olive Smith. Josephine Ritchie, nary examtna11on at their respec- ers, Emma Wilson and Nancy
tive high schools earlier this month. Reltmlre, his lather, Max Wilson,
Lucille Smith, and Dolly Reed.
his mother, Lois Mossman, VInce
Mossman, Jimmie Kaye Wilson,
A report on the recent !aU carnival. Thl' 1987 event was set lOr
We would like to thank evcarnival was given at the Portland Oct. 3. New teachers and parents
Butch Wilson,..., Tember Wilson.
were Introduced and the room
eryone that offered their
Jerry. Todd. Steven, April and ?TO Meeting held at the g:,hooi.
count
went
to
tt"l'
sixth
grade.
sympathy for our great
Gary Reltmire, Joey Lipscomb,
Cory Hatfield and Rachel Rose
.•· .
POMEROY - The following
County Park District Project.
Ron
Rigsby
oos
a
guest
at
the
Jimmy, Carrie and Brett Counts.
were crowned king and queen and
loss. It was very deeply
activities are scheduled for the
Friday- Qullt!ng, cards. games.
meeting. He wlll JErlorm!ng at the
Maxine
Lee.
Michael
Blessing.
several
rctzes
were
awarded
at
the
appreciated
whether it
week of Oct. 27·31. at the Meigs
Areminder the Center Is Sponsor·
shcool on Dec. 6 at a fund raising
Sending
gifts
were
Earl
aJ1d
Patty
was flowers. food, donaCounty Senior Center, Mulberry
lng an Arts and Crafts Show,
dinner. The unit extended thanks to
Mossman.
tions.
prayers, or just a
. Heights. Pomeroy:
featuring 18 area cra!tspersons on
Kenny Rizer, Dln Cremeans. and
kind word. Again, everyFrlday, Nov. 7, from I to 8, and
·
' Monday - Square dance , 1·3,
Dennis Long for erecting the new
i!lllowol Power
Saturday, Nov. s. from 10 to 5.
,. exercise c)ass 3: 30.
has our sincere
one
playground slide .
As I !laZe out o'er the meadows,
Thesday - Cindy Oliveri, Meigs
,The Senior Nutrition Program
J
thanks.
Bathed In tlrlr rot.. of green.
.
County Extension Agent, will spea k menu for the week is:
Doned here and 1tl!re wtth floY.·crs,
Adding beauty to the scene.
•:0; . at ll ahout 'Calcium and Osteop:&gt;r·
Monday - ·Soup beans with ham, c
J S('(' trees that proodly stand,
I Of
IS
; ·;. , sis'; chorus to Pomeroy Health • cole slaw, cornbread, pudding.
Wlth branches raised on high .
Waving In each ~ntle brt'l"l..e,
· :: : ': Care Center at 1:15.
Tuesday - Chicken, succotash,
The Meigs High School Band will M
rh(ly .!lf."E'm to tw.ch ttl&gt; sky.
'· · ' · · Wednesday - Soc'lal Security
mashed potatoes, cake.
be out collecting for tag day on
It makes me think how C'IOd above,
represrntatlve 10-12, bingo 1-2.
. Wednesday - Liver and onions, Sat urda y, Nov. 1,
Takes carf!' ot aU we see.
boll1lng 1:30, Rainting class with
mru&gt;\Fd potatoe§. green bews.
Following are some of the GuarCllnR all with Iovin~ cart' .
Lois Pauley as 'lnst111ctor 1: 00,
cookie.
• expenses for purchases the Meigs As H£' does to yoo and mE'.
With lhls beauty f'vervwh!&gt;re
exercise class 3:30.
Thursday -Ghostly Con Carne, Band Boosters have Incurred for So
I'll trust In Him earh w}r.
'
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Thursday - Halloween party ~
Eye of Newt Salad, Vampire's the rond since May, 1984: band To help me tlrough this mrthly lite.
·
: , : . : grand march of costumed persons
Delight, a nd Great Pumpkin uniforms and auxiliary equipment, As r Joum~ M my way.
'' i&lt;: at _11:15, pr!Z&lt;'S awarded for , . Cookie,
·
Sl2.ll9.01; 'Instruments. and-stereo , Kefll'me staridln g straight and tall.
Looking evt!r to th£&gt; Sk,y.
:: : prrttiest. funn iest: ugliest , and
'..oi&gt;Oil.Cf
Friday - Silked fish, peas, $3,534.&amp;!; Insurance oti lnstru· Just
l~e the treE' on yondc&gt;r t1U .
: -: · · most original: at 1. Steve Powell,
Waldorf salad. orange sections.
menl s. ......
81
....
dri
1
"""'· : ws
ver ees, With branches raJsro on hl,gh.·
Ill'"'
, : : : : Park Board Commissioner. will • Choice of beverage available $1244
Proof of power to all the world.
u.,.uo
11•11'
, .81 ; band camp, $11·'"
. w; That
He
cart'S
k!r
E"Veryone.
-: ..; :: present a slide show on the Meigs
with meaLs.
"' 1air booth, rent L"il J:POO enough for~ to hope,
mus1c. .$2.027 .w:
and repair. $2,:m.75; awards, 1b so~ay reach thE&gt; SON.
Olen Harrison
$1i18.13; parties and banquets,
P(lll'"eroy
$563.44, and flowers, $MR2i.
The Band Boosters meet on the Walrus vis its
'.
.~.....-. ;.........
first Monday of each rmnth In the Spanish beach
.c:·.:.
·.: ·.·-·
lal Hospital Auxiliary mN&lt;ts 1:.10 band room at 7 p.rri. Membership is
MONDA\'
'
Tuesday.
$1 for .a full year. Reside nts· arc
COANA, Spain (UPI ) -Fisher·
."·....".
•
RlJfLAND
'The
Rutland
•
being
Invited
to
join
the
Supportive
men
on their way to work watched a
...
" .....
". Garden Club wil meet Monday at
trganlzati&gt;n.
fon&gt;lgn
sun worshiper on Arneches
HARRISONVILLE -Harrison·
....... . 7:30 p.m. at the ,home or Mrs.
beach
snooze
for about three hours
:); . Robert Ca naday. New officer&amp; will vllle Senior Citizens Oub will meet
before disappearing Into the sea.
.-;;.;·.; be Insta lled by Mrs. Harvey at 7 p.m . Tuesday at the 1bwn
House. Snack refreshments will be
The visitor was a 9-foot long.
;:-~ :-:: Erlrwlnc.
·
· ,
served .
3,300-pound walrus who apparently
'' ' '•' '
ha~ traveled thOusands or miles
:-; ..;
RACINE - Southern High
JAKARTA, Indonesia (UPI) '
from
his home In frigid northern
WEDNE'lDA\'
;: ~::~ School Athletic , Boosters meet
Indo.nesll! 's l!rJ;t condom manu!ac·
waters,
the state-run news agency
EAST MEIGS - The regular turing plant , bullt at a cost 'or $22
;:-:: ·: · Monday, 5:,10 p.m., to clean tht&gt;
-:;.: &lt; booster building. Business meeting meeting oft he Eastern Local Board mllllon, was put through a Ilia! run EFE said.
PICK UP A SUPPLY OF PREPAID ENVELOPES
ThP walrus was spotted Thurs·
~.. ··.• ot " pm
of Education has been changed to In prepara tion for Its start-up next
r.. " ,. •
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Wt&lt;dnesday, Oct. 29. at the high year, the national news agency
day by a group of !ishCimen from
AT ANY OF OUR THREE CONVENIENT LOCATIONS
,•.....
the Atlantic coastal town of Coana.
Antara report.ed.
MIDDLEPORT- OH KAN Coin school.
Club meets Monday, Burken's
'
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MIDDLEPORT - Revival at
Barber Shop, Middleport. Social
hou'r and trading at 7 p.m. Coin 7:30 p.m., Mld:lleport Inrepenrent .
Holiness Church Wednesd ay
auction and refreshments follow.
through !iJnday with the Leroy
POMEROY - Flu vaccines wlll Manns Family . Point Pleasant, In
he given Monday, 9 to 11 a.m. and 1 charge of special singing.
to 3 p.m .• at the Meigs Cou nty
TIIURSDAY
H~alth Department.
CHESTER -\Friends and neigh·
MEMBER F.D.I.C.
: : ·:
TUESDAY
bars of Bob ansi'Sue Smith. whose ·
11
·~ ' · '' · MIDDLEPORT- OAPSE Chap-·
home was burned Mlnday, Oct. 20,
_..
HA~E NEARIN~
•'. • ter 17 wUI meet'l'uesday, 7:30p.m.,
are having asho~rT hursday, Oct.
5th Strtel
Second Street
2212 Jackson Avenue
:: ;' at Meigs Junior High.
30, 1:30 p.m .. , at the Chester
Mason, w_va.
New HMII, W.Va.
Point Pleasant, va.
,·
firehouse. Everyme Invited.
'~
882·2135
n3·5514
675·1121
Memor·
' ..,
:.. ~ ' POMEROY- Veterqns

,l

Sorority chapter schedules tea

Smith birthday

Meeting on calcium scheduled

com

Portland PTO reports on

Week's senior citizens activities

&lt;·

·&gt;

Meigs High band
sc hed u es tag day
h· S
t
arurda y

Electrifying deals on every new '87!

/

Poet's corner

FREE

aank·BY·Maill
I \\\

Elegant Chrysler Fifth Avenue
Prlc8ll over $5.1100 tm than Cadillac
Sedan DeVIIIel..

$15,666

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I

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wirh .wHY disc orrolt of
color prlnr fllm btoughr
in for proc:•lling.

Indonesia readies
condom factory

..

EVERYDAY
7 ~AYS A WEEK

Practical Plymouth r:ellant .$

America's best &amp;·passenger value!

7I 897&lt;'

.
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!Sticker pnce con'j)arison or co n'j)arably-eq~pped mode~.
'Dealer price eJCCiudes ti~e. lal&lt;es and destination charges.

Wfive got just the car for you!

COOPER

PHARMACY .

ttlCUS~-.'f

. . . --------------------------------------------h
L·.. Community calendar

''Sti:ker price comparison of base mode~. Standard equipment lewis vary.

Meigs at Federal-Hocking
Alexander at MJUer
·
Trimble at NelsonvUie-York
VInton County at Wellston

c

Se~

us today!
•,

Ch~ysler, Plymouth, Dodg~, Inc.

399;So. Thtrd

.

, 992-642 1

Middleporr ·

M~D. Inc.
VETERANS MEMORIAl HOSPITAL

JOHN A. WADE,

PEOPLES

BANK -

"rhe letter lanlc"

.

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CALL (614) 992·2104
7 1244

w.

' •

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\

-,-

We Paj The
Postage Both Ways!

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
\\WE
A/0$

I ' '

SATURDAY'S GAME
Southem at Eastern
..
f

•• 1.

Wilson birthday

TVC

0011ERS
Belpre at W!lltamstown
Portsmouth at Portsmouth West
Washington CH at Rock HIU
Coal Grove at Fairland
Point Pleasant - Open
Ritchie Crunty at Wahama

--~

Meigs property transfers recorded

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new

·

The· Detroit Pistons defeated the
New York Knlcks 96-92 Sunday ln.
an NBA exhibition game before a
crowd of 16,999 in Hamllton,
Ontario- the largest ever to watch
a basketball ~arne In Canada.

- -·... .....

,_, , __

Area girl-honored at 3 partie_s

threw!or~l yardsand aiD !or the

pu~n~tl:b~~~~ ~ls~~s::~

---·-

Thomas· birthday

Darrin Nelson rushed for 118
yards and scora:J on a 5-yard
touchdown run while Kramer

said. "Jthinklhaveastrong legand
I can punt but having 10 guys come
at yoo L&lt;; completely different"

· -~--

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installs new officers·

.

By United Press lntemalional

J

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defeats Minnesota, 23-20 · Chester Garden Club

Cleveland

.,

.

Monday, October 27, 1986

Ohio

Meet .the
Sou-thern Tornadoes

JEFF SHARP

---·-·· - ...

'

Sentinel

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tiii~ !UO

�, Page- 6- The· Daily Sentinel

Monday, October 27, 1986

Board hires
two teachers
, J r.. New Haven. W.Va.; two
brut!Ers. Robe rt McKenzie, Columbus. and Jolm McKenzie. Pomel'Ov: and a sister. Theria McKenzie
. Hendlix. Middleport. Five grand,
children also survive.
'
Besides his parEnts. he .was
prECeded in death bya brotfi'r, Jlnl
McKenzie.
Graveside services will be fi'ld at
10 a.m. Wednesday at Beech G!'Ove
Cemetery, Friends may call at the
Ewing Funeral Home from 7-9 p.m.
Tuesday.

. Vaughn E. Roush ·

--

D!mald E. McKenzie

Donald E. McKenzil'
Donald E. McKenzie. 66, Plea·
: sant Rtdge. Pomeroy. retired edu: cator, died Saturday night at
" Veterans Memorial HospitaL
: , Mr. McKenzie was born .J uly 24.
1\W. in Pomeroy. a son of the lat e
' Michael and Bertha Th acker
· McKenzie. He was a graduate of
' Ohio University and received his
, inaster's degree from Marshall
: University. He was a retired
educator a nd a retired employee of
the State of Ohio Industrial
Commissio n.
Mr. McKenzie was a member of
, Drew Webster Post 39. American
Legion. He owned haflll'ss race
, horses over the )-1:'ars and was a
., member of the United States
• Trotting Association. He was a
member of the Baptist Church.
. Surviving are his wife, Dorotha
L. .Calvert McKenzie; a son and
-' daughter-in -law, Bruce L. a nd
Linda Stowe McKenzie, Columbu s; ·
: a son, KeUy M. McKenzie, Pome- ·
. roy: two daughters, Mary A Lyons,
Gallipolis; Penny S. Elliott, Jack¥'"· and a third daughter and
son-in-law. Lisa and Raymond Sisk

Vaughn E. Roush. 77, Rt. 1.
Bidwell, died this morning in Holzer
Medical Center.
Born Sept. ~6. 1009. in Meigs
County, son of the late Luther and
Maggie George Roush, he was a
retired painter and farmer and was
a member of the Brotherhood of
Painters and Decorators of
America.
He was preceded in death by his
firs t wife, Edna Kemp Roush, In
1979: and by a brother and two
sisters.

Public Notice

Public Notice

SNAFU™

Notice Is her.eby given that
m Nov. 7, 1986 , at 10:00
A.M. a privatualo witt bo held

will ' bo open at 6:30 o'clock

Wf\RiileR ...~R...

CO\reR. .. ~! ...~..

at the offices of The Central

Trust Co.. NA of f\llddteport,
Ohio. to sell for calh the

• '

'

.

I

folowing collat.-al to wrt:: .
t976 Ranken 19 ' with 140

A.M. and remain opm U'ltil
7:30 o'clodc P.M. ·

By order of the
Board of EleCtions,
of Meigs County, Ohio
Evelyn Ctart&lt;, Chainnan
'Jane M. Frymyer. Director
Dated Sopt. 2, 1986
(10) 6, 13, 20, 27, 4tc

Mercuov Motor and
Boat Traitor. .
The Control Trust Co., NA.
Middleport, Ohio, reoOIV• the
right to bid a1 this sale.
110) 26 . 27. 28, 3tc
HP 1/ 0

Patrol tickets Rutland man
A RuUand man was cited for fa ilu re to control by the Gall ia-Meigs
post of the state highway patrol Sunday in a onc~ar accident.
Troopers sa id Merlin M. Mitchell. 46. was northbound on Rutland
Township Road 46. eight -tenths of a mile nort hof Ohio 124, at 10 a. m.
when he reportedly lost cont rol of his car on a sharp curve. The car
went off the right side of II&gt;'• mad and overturned , acco rding to the
report.
The car was moderately damaged and Mit chell was not injured.
the patrol said.

AAVW branch meets Tuesday
The Middleport -Pomeroy bra nch of the AAUW will meet at 7:30
p.tn. Tuesday at the homeof HelenS mith. Condor Street. Pomeroy.

·: HEAP program begins today
The Ga!Ua-Meigs Com munit y Act ion Agency began the
Emergency Home Energy Assistance Pl'Ogram today according to
Sidney Edwards. executive dirf'C tor.
Emergency HEAP provides financial assistance to bw income
househoulds that are threatened with disconnection of tJ-;:ir heating
source. have already had scn •ice disconnected , or have less than a
1(klay supply of bulk fueL
Emergency funds can be paid on behalf of an eligible household
once per winter heating s~ason. The total payment cannot exceed
Sax! per household and mu st be sufficient to restore or continue
service for 30 days.
All households serviC!.'d by a r"'!Ulated utility must he mrolled In
the percentage of income payment plan. This is a payment
arrangement offered by PUCO rcgu Ia ted utility companies.
AppUcants must present prof! of income for all household
members for the previous three mo nths. along wit h social security
numbrrs.
.Applica tions will be taken Monday ttu·ough Friday al both the
Gallia and Meigs County outreach offices. The cent ral office in
Cheslilre will accept applications on Monday, Tuesday and
Thursdays only. All offices wUI accept applications fro m Ba.m. until
12 noon and fi'Om 1 until 4 p.m.
Applicants may apply In person for HEAP at the Ga llia-Melgs
CAA's central office In Cheshire: the Ga llia County outre~ h office,
220 Jackson Pike, GaUlpolls. or the Meigs County outreach office In
the courthouse In Pomeroy,
For additiona l infonna tlon. contact the Gallla-Meigs CAA at
367-7341 or 446-0011 for Gallia County and 992·6629 or 992-5605 for
Meigs Cou ntv.

· Trick or treat set in Reedsville
Trick or treat night in Rce\lw ille \\'ill be held from 6 to 7 p.m.
Wednesday.

Long Bottom group to meet
The Long Bottom Communit y Associatk&gt;n will hold a specl_ai
meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday · at the home of Martin and
Margaret Nesselroad.

Royal Arch Masons to meet
A special rrieeting of Pomemy Chapter 9J. Roya l Arch Masons,
wi ll be held at 7 p.m. WedneS!b,Y at the lemple. Worls will be In the
mark master and the past master degrees.

Open house slated Wednesday
A-Tri-Chem Christmas open house will be held from 11 a.m. to 4
p.m. Wednesday at the Richard Coleman residence, 37lY70 Bas han
Road, Long Bottom. Door prizes will be awarded. Those needing
information may ca ll 985-3376.

Leaf pickup set for Middleport
Leaf pickup will begin In Middleport Wednesday starting in Ward 1
and continuing from day to day until aU of the wards have had a
plckllJ) sen;lre. Residents-are asked to rake t l'i?ir leaves to tl';: aut.

· lnnaculations

.HALF COSTof SPAY/
NEUTER at time of Adopt~n
Balance Paid monthly to
. Humane Society ·
CA~L 992-6505
'1'12·5427 or 992·3026

Tickets available
for stemwheeler

Tickets are still available for the
P.A. Denny stemwheeler cruises
on Saturday and may be purchased
at tJ-;: Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce office , Bank One,
Farmers Bank and from Paul
Gerard.
The dinner tickets are available
at theTopoftreStalrs, while dance
tickets may be purchased at Clarks
Jewelry, and excursion tickets at
Simon's Pick-a-Pair,
Dinner and dance tickets rru st be
purchased in advance. The dinner
will be served from 5: 30 to 7:30p.m.
at $l5 a oouple. while the dance will
he held the same evening, 8: 30 to
11:30 p.m. at S!l a couple.
The afternoon excursion will be
held that same afternoon 1:30 to
3: 30 p.m. at 6 per pe-son.

Halloween party
A halloween party will he held
Fr iday night from 6:30 to 8 p.m. at
tbe Asbury United Methodist
Church for members and . their
families.

Trick or treat
Trick or treat will be held In the
Portland area, Friday from 6:30 to
7:30p.m. Those wishing to treat the
children are asked to turn on their
porch lights.

Emergency runs
Nine calls were answered by
local units over tl';: weekend, tJ-;:
Meigs County Emergl!ncy Medical
Services repon s.

Roger Hysell
Garage
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

something about It, They wrote Rep. Joi)'m Boster
and Congressman Clarence MWer and last week
received the Ohio and America Dags.

Alto TttlllllbliOI

PH. 992-5682
or 992·7121
6-!7-tfc

MEIGS
EXCAVATING
COMPANY

to merge. affiliate or form federa· in the coal 6elds and a rapid
!Ions with our natural allies in the increase in non -union companies ....:
labor movement If such opportuni- especially huge non-union strip
ties present themselves ... and will mlnes in the West. ·
The UMW puts Its membership
significantly strengthen our collecat
250,!XXI active and retired
tive bargaining posltbn."
The merger debate Is expected to members. alti"Ougli that number Is
be lively, particularly since tfi' challenged by some analysts. More
UMW has 'traditionally been ruspi- miners are being laid off and the
cious of outsiders- including other percentage of unionized coal pro·
duction has fallen fi'Om !n percent
unions.
The delegates represent a union during the reign of union President
concerned about dropping mem- Jolii L Lewis to about 46 percent
.
bership because of mechan ization today. .

known as . Sgt. O'Rourke in "F
Troop," a TV series that parodied
cavalrymen and combat. died after
a long battle with lung cancer. He
was 67.
Tucker died Saturday at the
Motion Picture and Television
Hospital. a few minutes after his
wife had left following a visit . He
had been admitted earlier in the
week, hospital spokeswoman Linda
TI~ert said Sunday.

(Continued trom Page 1)

prosecution 's case In tfi' original
trial, are not' being beard in tfi'
retrial.
Veterans Memorial
A jury was sea ted ·in the retrial
last Monday. During testimony
Hollywood producer Walter
offered last week, a Bureau of Seltzer said Tucker had been
Saturday Admissions - None.
Criminal Investigation firearms suffering from lung cancer a nd had
Saturday Discharges - Cindy
I'X[X'rt testified that the .22-caliber been hospitalized several times In Stalans, Mary Casto, Clarence
rid b
Fu t ha he the past year,
Napper.
H
.anq:un owncu Y rs t t 1
Tucker was hospitalized twice In
s unday Admissions ; - George
prosecution maintains was used to August, the second time Aug. 21 Green, Albany; Sh aron Henderson,
Twy
bee th
kill
man may. have
n e when he collapsed as he was about ChiUicothe: Ivory Bush, Racine.
gun that lised 1n the murder, and to be honored with a star on tbe
·
D h
Le
Capt. Carl Langford, cplef inves t!·
Sunday
lsc arges na
gator ror the Gallia County Sheriff's r-H_o_uyw_oo_d_w_a_lk_o_t_F_a_m_e_.-..,---G-ibso
_n_._ _ _ _.,-_ __· _
Department, Indicated that without
tJio gun, he had no phy sical
ev idence tollnkLeewith Twyman's ·
reath.
Furst. whowasLee'sgirlfriendln
late 1982 and early 1983, testified
that she had given a statement to
tiE sJ-;:riff's O?partment that resulted In Lee's arrest In which Lee.
via a telephone conversation l"ilh
Furst on April 5, 1983. admitted to
killing Twyman and placing rer
tndy In the well.
Furst admitted, under Casey's
cross-examlnatton, that sfi' wrote
two statements in June 1983
O?nying that.lt was Lee M!owas m
tiE pi"Oill' in tre April 5 conversa.
.
tion. Sbe retracted the statements
IF YOU'VE BEEN READING SECONDHAN.D
later-that summer after Lee tried to
choke he r, she said.
COPIES OF THE DAILY SENTINEL YOU'RE

•All Types of' ·
Excavating
•Landscaping
•Basements
•Sewage Systems
•Water &amp; Gas Lines
•Water Well Drilling
·•TrucKing

Call:

ating cemat&amp;iiw.
Said tax being: a •enewal of ·
en axilling tax of 1.0 mila ta

run for fNa yea;. at a rate not

oxcoeding 1.0 mtna too each
one dolao- of valuation, wloido
amounto ta $0.10 (Iron Cantil
for oac:h one hundred dolloroof
valuation, for 1M yen.
The Pols foo laid Election

will bo open at 6:30 o'clock
A.M. and owmo1n opan until ,
7:30 o'ctodc P.M.
Byorda-ofthe
Board of EtoCtlono.
of Molgo Coumy, Ohio
Ewotyn Clllk, Cto.lnnan

Jane M. Frymyer, Dinoctor
Dated Sept. 2. 1986
110) 6, 13. 20, 77, 4tc

•WE BILL ALL INSURANCE
•PURCHASE AND RENTALS

COMPLETE LINE Of MEDICAL CARE EQUIPMENT

'" Street
1011 Vilnd

675-6100

Point Pleasant

992·2196

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATEWTE SALES &amp;SERVICE

We Hll.t AFill Tl•
Shp T11hlel11
ea P1ty
'
RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

CHESTER-915-3307

M.AIL OR BRING IN ,THE COUPON BELOW WITH
YOUR PAYMENT OF 526.00 FOR 6 MONTHS
AND RECEIVE A CLEAN, CRISP UNUSED COPY
OF THE DAILY SENTINEL DELIVERED TO YOUR
HOME EVERYDAY •.

oral Election to be held in tho
Townlhip of Lebanon, Meigs
Coumy, O~io,
tho oogular

't

Tueodoy.
the 4ththen&gt;in,
day
placet of voting
November. 1986, the
.,t tovytng a - · tn

I

PHONE _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ __

I

I
I

'.I,,

I

'

I

- -I

cemeteries,

Soid lax being: .. additional

tax of .08 mill to run for five
years at a rate not exc-.ding

.08 miH lor each one oollar of

valuation, which amounts

$0.08 Ieight cants) for

Box 729X
c/ o Dally Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomo•o , Oh. 45769

Unimproved
Land For Sale
110 acres on
Rainbow Ridge in
Chester Township.

Home National
tion, fo• 1M! yea,.,
Tho PoNt. for said Eloction
Bank
will be open at 6:30 o'clock
RACINE, OHIO
A.M. and remain open \lllil
PH. 949-2210
7:30 o'clock P.M.
By ordar of the
BoardCounty,
ot Elections,
of Meiga
Ohio l:~!l:!!~!]!!!i!!;![
Evelyn Ctoli&lt;, Chainnan
Jane M. Frymyer, Director
I r-----:-:=~
Dated Sept. 2. 1988
110)6, 13, 20. 27, 4tc
one ht.iildrad dollars of wlua-

On Tax Levy
In E...,.. Of The
Ten MiU Umltadon
NOTICE to hoflby given lf1at
In pu,_of a Ramtudon of
the Vllllge Council of the
Village of Mlddt~ Meigs
Coumy, Ohio, . , - on the
14th daY of Jlllt, 1988, wilt bo .,lrminlld to a vote of
the people of aid M~aport
Vltlogo at a General Election ta 54 Misc. Merchandise
bo held In the Village of
Middleport, Ohio, at the nrgu·
I• ptocoo of voting therein. on
Tueoc~!~v. the 4th doy of
· 1988. the quell·
tion
of levying
a w. in exceu
of the 111n mil limitation, lor
the bonotlt of Mlddtapon
--:::--:-c::--::-:-::--- l Vlttoga fol' the purpo10 of
. N t•
Curr.,t Exptw!Je.
PUbl IC
0 ICe
Said Ill being: 0 nrnewal of
- -- - - - - - , I on axiotilg !IX of 3.0 milo ta
- Notice of Election run-far 1M yoon-81 a note oot

~

....

CITY _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ __

.

sume to:
DanTu, Inc .

•Refriger•tors

•Dryers •Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE
4-5-Ift

992-3345

3/2/tln

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSYILI!, OHIO
Aufhari11cl John D1111,
Now Hollantl, lusb Hog
Farm Equipment.
Dtoltr

Farm EqulpMtllf

Parts &amp; Servlee .
1-3-'86 tic

NO SUNDAY CALLS

FENCE CO.ANY ·
PH. 992-6931
After 5 Cal

742-2027

1.141 992-7154

4-16-'116 !In

DENNY CONGO'
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL! ·

J.R.'s REPAIRS
TVs, Antennas
Sattllite Salu
· Installation
Service ·

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

Electronic Organs
Mobile seNice

614-843-5248
REASONABLE - IEliAIIE
8-20-'li tin

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS
REBUILT &amp;REPAIRED

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND
POMEIOY, 011.
lob larton, Owner
10-27-86-1 mo.

'*VINYL SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULA nON

BISSELL

SIDING CO.

New Homes Built
"Free Eatimat•"
PH. 949~2801

or 949-2860
No

Sunday Calls

3111 /lin

Annuuncelllents
3 Announcementt

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER

SERVICE

- Roofing and gutter work
- Concr... work
- Plumbing and eleetrlc:ll

wootc

IFoea Eotimatao)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 ar 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
4-15-'86-lc

•

,•

SWEEPER and s..,..lng m.tehillle
rep1ir, p1rt1, and supplies. Plek
up and delivery , Devil VacuUJn
Cleaner. one half mile liP
Georges Creek Rd . Call eu.

441 -0294.

I

Reduce tate 6 f11t with Go8-'•
cepaules &amp; E-v1p 'watll' PAl•'
FNth Pharmacy.
· ,;
Racine Gun Shoot spontorld ~loy
Aacini Gun Club. Evtr;' Sund..,,
beginnlng at 1:00 p.m. hctoty
Choke, 12 guq1 shotguna. of

Tripping IUPPiin·• Nlte II• .
Wheat ltea. Alao buying Gin ·
aeng. George Buckley. 014·
664-4781 . Hrt . 2 -9 p.m. MonS at. Closed Sund1y.
Anentlon Par~t~t a of My Ch!QI,
Cabbage Pttc:h, Cridlet, AIJII
Baby and Teddy Ruxplnl Now
taking ordltt for fur COlts,
achool chMt·INder and footbil
player c;lJtfits, Plrtv dre1111 l~d
other ipeclahy outfits. fltlone

114-992-7532 or 114·112·
1379. Mikes 1 gr•t Chriatrnp
present.
,

No ftunting or trnpa"in' ,
Mynu Ferm loc.ted Ch~~tnpt
Ridge Rold .
•

4

- Addont 1nd remodeling

ACCENT

Pay Your Cable&amp;.
Phone Bill• Hare
"""' - ' IIUSIIESS PHONE
1~14) 992-6551
R,niiENCII'IIOl\1

Day or Night

PH. 992-9949

Copy IIIYi&lt;H, Etc.
255 Mill St., Mlddlapo•l
104 Mullllrrr Aw., Parneror

Wo Coooy Flohing .... pilei

or 949-2860

PIUS: . Oftict Su"Uos &amp;

ligM, lullll.- Stamps,
luslnoss Forms,

. SALES &amp;SERVICE '

949~2801

PH.

. 190 MUL.BY AVE.

Furniture, WtcWing
ancl .Gr.....! ion
Stalionory, Magnoti&lt;

Now localiln:
161 North Second
Mldclltport, Ohio 45760

''At Reasonable Prices"

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP

Fll All l'tll ,,.,~,, NIUI

PLUMIING &amp; MI&amp;'UNG

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMI.S &amp; GARAGES

Giveaway

Cute abandoned klnM , net)d
good home. Cell 814 · 37•-

2436.

•

Full slz• mtnress to give ew...
Coiii14-992· Titl4 .
1
.

Very friendly 1o children . M'·
diu rn sire I'TIIIIt dog. 304·17d'1141 ,
j
Dog . hn merfllinga of bleek•1!f'
coon hound, epproll . I monttf!l
old, shots &amp; worrMCI . 304-nl-

9586 .

,

2 Long h1irld kllt.,l, ltttf,
trlin«&lt; . 304- ~5 · &amp;043 .
• ,
~

6

Lost and Found

exceeding 3.0 milo foo eocll

\

I

FOUND ....ett hound. c.n
identify, 114-448-1354.
:

FOU~D. '-" end white calli . .
Junior · High' ·..-... ~4 · 17.,:_ '

.

1

7

Yard Sale '

1

9

Wanted To Buy :

t32o.

-

ItO) e. t3,

ao. 21. 41c

. - -:
Public Notice
I

WANT ADS , .
ARE JUMPING

' "VOUR HO~ETOWN NEWSPAPER"

WITH BARGAINS
\'

t

"" laid Eloctlon

Jane M. " - · Dlnctor
Dalld Sept. 2, 1988

THE DAILY SENTINEL

We pay cnh for lete model ci;J
used Cltl.
PI
1
Ji m Mink Chev .-Oidalne.
Bill Gene John ton
\

wit bo open 11 6:30 o'clock
/I.M,- and owmotn open unt1
7:30 o'clock P.M.
Byordtrofthe
Boord of Elactiono.
of Molgo COunty, Ololo
EVIIIyn Cillll. Cloainnon ·

\

ADDRESS - - - - - - - -- --

0 CURRENT SUBSCRIBER
0 -NEW SU~SCRiilR

lin~ to undergo utenaiVe
tra1ning , and would like
ta convert a lniall inveat·
ment into a heah:hy Income - tend your re -

...,_I

ship fur the purpo1B of main·
taining and operating

Notice of Election

at prep•ing Individual in·
ooma tu raturn1. are Wil·

of
General
on~:~~~~~~~~

of the ton· mi!t ti'101tation. for
the boloolit of Lebanon Town·

Public ll!otice

area . If you are proficient

•Washers •Oiahwaahera
•Range•

BISSELL BUILDERS

t;':::::·

r-----------------------·:
SAVE 20%
NAME - - - - - -- - - - -

the Pomeroy-Middlepolt

, ·Entlr(lfncv 94'1·l!l to

•-·tor

MAIL .TO: THE DAILY SENTINEL
111 COURT ST.
POMEROY, OHIO 45769

I
1
I
1

Notioe of Election

RACINE, OHIO
Offiu 949-2438

tn e,... Oltha
ono of .-lion, whi&lt;h
Ten Mit Umllatiulo
amounto 10 to.30 (thirty
Notice of Eloction
NOTICE to henbr giwn t11at canto) f01 oecll one hundnld
In purouance ole R110tutlon of of valuation, for five
·on Tax Levy
·me VII'"- Cwncil . 'me yeono.
·
··
.Ten
ln·ExoosiOIThe
_.
-1
fo
-~d e•-'0
1
1
Mitt Umilation
Vlltoge of Rldno,
'" ~
_,,....,
...._
Coumy, Ohio, poolld on
wll
at 6:30 o'ctoc:k
NOTICE lohenoloy ...
-.t111t
AM bo .open.
d -~
~
•-- of 7th d..,,_, open .... w ·
in pu,...nco of a Reootu -·
·• of July, 1981, - ·
7 .30. 0an
'cto~ PM
tho Boord of Pork Commit· witt bo .,bmltted ta •
of :
~ · ·
the poopta of lllld Racine 1
By order of the
...... 'of the Coumy of , Village Ill Genonot Election ta
Board of Electlono.
Meigo, Ohio, pa..t on the bo,..,lnthellllagaofRICine.
ofMiigo County, Ohio
2111 day of Auguot. 1986, OhiO, 111 the
...__of
Evelyn Ct.tc. Chainnan
there wit bo IUbmitted )0 a
...,.. ,_...
Jon M F
Dlrecto
0
vote of the -1&lt;1 of llld IIOIIng thenoln,
'
· oymyer,
Meigo County at 0 Gennl 4th day of Nmoarnbor.
Dtltld Aug, 2, 1988
Election to be hold in the the'f'*l!onofltvyingatax, in 110) 6, 13, ;ro, 27, 410
......,. ~·io
~- of the .,. mltt llmfla.
County of .. ~. vn ' 81 ·~ lion, for the bonellt of Racine
"''lular ploCIO of voting tha·
..rn. on T..o.ct.y. the 4th doy lllltago foo the purpo10 of
Public Notice
of November, 1986, the queol'll1tiWIII
of
1
tion of I~ 1 w , in uc• ., exllllng Ill of 2_0 nilfi ta
of tho ., mitt limitation, for run for 1M -,. Ill I , . . not
tho bonollt of Meigo Coumy
•Poot&lt; DlltrictforthepurpoiOof ..coodiflg 2.0 milo foi each
one dolt• of valuation. whic:h
Cu""'' Exponoo.
amounto to •o.20 1'-"V
Said Ill being: on additional . con !OJ for each one hundnod
1ax of 0.5 mill ta run for 1M dolln of wrluotion, foo five

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

•24 HOUR SERVICE
•FREE DELIVERY

. PAT HILL FORD

985·3561
~II Maku

lebanon Township at a Gen·

Qn Tax Levy

Revival slated

"WE SPECIAliZE IN CARING"

Public Notice

Ten Mill UfTiitatiot1

BUT IF YOU ACT NOW YOU CAN HAVE THE
DAILY SENTINEL HOME DELIVERED FPR JUST
S1.00 A WEEK

Soutlt Central Ohio
Variable cloudiness tonight , with
a low between 40 and 45. Most(y
sunny Tuesday, with highs between
60 and 65.
The probability of precipitation Is
near zero tonight and Tuesday.
Winds will he tight and west to
southwest tonight.
"Ohio Exlmded Forreast · .
Wednesctai.v lltrough Friday ·
A chance of si"Owers each day,
mainly In tl';: northern part of the
state. Highs will be In the mld OOs to
lower 'iQs Wronesday , falling into a
range of tl';: mid 50s to mid 60s
Thursday and Friday. Overnight
tows will he In the 40s Wednesday
and Thursday mornings and In the
, mid lls to tower 40s Friday.

• I

Wa can repair and r&amp;to
core' radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod ·
out ridiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY

the Boord of Tow1111hlp Trust - of tho Townohip of
Lobenon, Meigs County. Ohio.
POIIIBd 00 tho 7th doy of July.
t986, thoro wit be MJbmilted
to o vote ·of the people of said

Notic;o of EleCtion
On Tax Levy
In E...,.. Of The

SmLING FOR SECONDHAND NEWS.

Ohio weather

HOME MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

SER~ICE

Public Notice

in PJI'&amp;IInce of a Resotution of

NOTICE lohtinby givwlthlt
In pu....,co of • Rooolutlon of
the Boord of T"-lhlp Tru•
- of the Townlhlp of OIM!,
Meigo County, Ohio, poolld
on tho 3rd doy of July, 1986.
thoro Wil bo ..bminlld lo I
vote of the people of oaid OIMI
Townlhip ot a General Elec:·
lion ta bo hold in the Towrolhip
of Olive, Meigs Coumy, Ohio,
Ill tho nogut. pt...,. of voting
thonin, on Tuaodoy, tho 4th
doy of N.......-. 1988, the
quosdon of lovojing a tax, In
excoso of tho . , mitt limite·
lion, for the lxolafit of otMt
Townohip Village fO&lt; the purpolO of main1oining end GP•·

1,

RADIATOR

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

On Tax Levy
tn Excess Of Tho
Ten Mill Umltation
NOTICE Is h-y given that

.

'

•Residential
•Commercial
•I ndustrial ,

.12 Gauge

Business
Opportunity

Fr.-.chiaa available il

.

CONTRACTO~

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
~:30 P.ll

4/ 1/ tfn

·STOP
GETTING
YOUR-NEVIS
SECOND HAND

Saturday 1-uns Included: Middleport at 1:28 a. m. treated Sheri
Ferguson, North Second AVenue:
Tuppers Plains at 7:23 a.m. took
Paul Chevalier, Long Bottom, to S(
Joseph Hospital, Parkersburg,
W.Va.; Pomeroy at 11:14 a.m..
treated Wayne Cleland. Ohio 7:
Rutland at 7:11 p.m. took John
Young from an auto accident In
Rutland to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Rutland at 9:31p.m. took
Althea Morgan from Goose Creek
Croad to Veterans Memortal;
Middleport at 10: 09 p.m. took Tony
Gilkey from Hartinger Parkway to
Veterans Memorial; Pomeroy at
Revival servies will be held at the ·
10:21 p.m. took Donald McKenzie, Middleport Independent Holiness
Pleasant Ridge, to Veterans Mem- Chu rc h Wedn esday through
ortal; Rutland at 10:47 took c:rorge Sunday.
Green from Ohio 002 to Veterans
The Leroy Manns famUy of Point
Memortal. On Sunday, Pomeroy Pleasant wUI be in chal'ge-and will
took William Morris from the also be handlllg the mu sic. Services
sheriff's office to Veterans . will begin at 7: 30 p.m. The Rev.
Memorial,.
Odell Manley Invites the public.

n

Tucker was probably best known
as the star of tfi' mid-1960s ABC
television series "F Troop, " a farce
featuring the gallant but incompetent troopers of Forf Courage.
Tucker , as · Sgt. Morg·an
O'Rourke, spent more time ~lUng
trinkets to tourist s than defending
Fort Courage after negotiating a
personal treaty with the fictional
Hekawai Indians.

N.E.C.A.

Bashali Building

(CUT OUT FOI FUTURE USE)

Lee'S retrial

PLEASANT VALLEY

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

GREAT BEND ELEctRIC, Inc.

Public Notice

Public Notice ·

FlAGS FOR CHESTER ELEMENTARY Stephanie Otto, right, and ·Sarah Banis were
concerned that the Chester Elementary School didn't
have slate and nationul flags and decided to em

GUN SHOOT

10/ 5/1 ~·-

UMW.,s special convention opens today

0

. Two petitions for dissolutions ha ve been filed In the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.
Filing for dissolutions were Michaela Carol Hoback and William
Steven Hoback of Racine, and Conn ie Faye Burton, Middleport, and
Stephen Allen Burton, Pomeroy.

MEIGS CO. HUMAN£ ·
HAS BEAUflFUL
IDMN$ and CATS FOI
ADOPnQN
S500 Adoption F11
Includes Wormed and First

Rl. 114, Pomoroy O~io

''

•

Ill Collrl St. PDIIIIOW. OhiG 45769

SOC~TY

' NbTtCE OF PRIVATE SALE

'.

The

·Business ·Services

PHQNE
992-2156
Or Write D1llly Slntilt•l Ctlullied Depl .
.

Martha Bartrug and Jenny Manuel were employed as teachers at
Saturday night's meeting of the
Southern Local Board . of
Education.
Added to the list of 0ubstltute
teach~rs for the district were
Charles S. Norris, Michael Edwards and Christy Nelson. Charles
Curiman was employed as substl·
tute custodian and Lois Mugrage as
a cook, effective Nov. 3 to replace
Doi'Othy Sa,vre. who resigned effec·
tive Nov. 1.
The txi&lt;ird gav~ permission to
Pam Boso and Grace Griffin to join
the Ohio Association of School .
Business Administrators and authorized the lnstallatk&gt;n of baseboard
heat i1 the special education room
at the Southern Junior High schooL
Atterttllng the meeting were
SuperintenO?nt Bobby Ord, Clerk
Denny Hill and all board members,
Don Smlth, Joseph Thome. Denny
Evans, Charles Powell and Scott
Wolle,

Ohio

Forrest Tuc-ker dead at 67

----LOcal Briefs:----.

•

The Daily Sentinel

Surviving are his second wife.
Naomi Skidmore Roush , whom he
ATLANTA (UP! ) - A two-day union's $70 mUllan strike fund . to
married on April 23, 1986: two convention of the United Mine enhance his leverage during tre
daughters. Mrs. Leola Cohse- of Workers begins today, marking the contract talks,
Laurelv ille, and Mts. Juanita first special convention In almost
In addit19n to set ling' the union's
McGovern of Ypsilanti, Mich.; four 100 years with the union facing goals, for the talks, Trumka Is
stepsons. Waylll' Kemp of Rt. 2, critical challenges in America's pushing hard for au thorlty to merge
Vinton. Paul Skidmore of High coal fields.
with another union or perhaps
Point , N.C.. Harold ~idmore of · Union President Richard
reaffiliate with the AFL·CIO. 'f!le
Patriot, and Dav id Skidmore of Trumka Is asking the 1,500 dele- union left the giant W,Jor federation
Gallipolis; five grandchildrEn, four gates for the power to negotiate a in 1947.
"'
grea t-grande hildrEn, 15 step grand- merger before going into the
Trumka opened the !X)ssiblllty of
children and three step-great- · life-and-death coal talks next year. merger in August. saying he would
grandchildren; a brother, Burl
The meeting is the union's first ask delegates to give the leadersllip
Roush of Gall ipolis: and t"" sisters. special convention In 97 years and authority "to explore new ways of
Mrs. Worthy (Lola! Bright of comes as the UMW Is.threatened~ increasing our union's strmgth and
..
Danville. and Mrs. Carrie (Flor- dwindling membership and power.
ence) Hanes of Zephyr Hills. Fla.
The union's leaders are emphas·
Services will be 11 a.m. Wednes· izlng "job security and job oppor- '
day in McCoy-Moore Fureral tunity" over wage Increases In the
Home. Vinton. with tiE Rev. Noble upcoming coal negotiations .
WOODLAND HILLS, Calif.
Russell officiating. Burial wUI be in Trumka also wants to beef up the
(UP!)
- Forrest Tucker, who
Vinton Memorial Park. Friends
starred
in dozen s of Westerns and
mav ca ll at the fureral home from
war
movies
but was perhaps best
2-4 ~nd 7-9 p.m. Tuesday.

Dissolutions filed in court

Pomeroy-

Nollco of Etec:tJon
, OnTaxL.ovy

lnE,...Oitha
Ton Mil Unrltlltiulr
NOTICE to 11er!rbr giwn that
injlu-ofiR........ DI
the llllogo Council of tho
Vlttoge of l'clmonJy, Moigl

1.

614-441-3172
TOP CASH paid for '83 mo

and n.wef uttd c:a,., ltnt
Bulclc -Pontiec, 1911

hst.,.

Ave .. Gallipolis. CaM 114 -441;1
2282 .
I

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDN ESDAlS
Co!11M"eriad H•ri" Air SelectiOI!
Swim Molds · lnlllpreti111 Slrvices

WANTEO·TO IUY uood -dill
cool ioooiOII. BW,.IN'I fURNil
TUR.E. 3rd. &amp;·Olivo lt. GoMII&gt;oj
tis, Colt 114 -441·3119 .

1

' Uuld mobile homes. Cell 114:
441-0175 .
•

Buying d1ily gold, tllvtl' coM.t
rtngs, iewelf¥, lltrtlng we,., aN
eotnt, large currlr'tcy,
poll
cas. Ed. Burkett Barber hopt

T,

2nd , Ave. Mlttdlopon, Oh. 114i

992· 3471 .

�- .....,.....__,.

; -~----

--·-·-. --~

•

't

.
I

:II:' IIi I Ill

t

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO

LAFF-A-OAY

I

r1. ll e"

01

Help Wanted

..

...

--

Make .Chriltm11 moniiY.
A110n . Make &lt;15 perc.t. Col

114-441 -3358 .

44 .

Apartment
for Rent

' 64

'

I

•

KIT 'Nr CARLn1 ~r LarrrWrlgllt

MIIC. Merchandile

43216,

'

3000 Government Job• List.
S16 ,()10- $69 ,230 yr. Now Hit·
fig. Call 805 -687-6000 Ext.

222\'·

6664"' 614-992-6729 .

~'(~'b)
rc.:.~~st

Snolfo' blade wit~ hydraulic. con·
troll for Je • • good c:ond1t6on,
t$60. Ct11614-441-32321fter

"It says ... 'Destroy this
machine _when the pyrarnids
are completed."'

47 Wanted

Alien .

OpiYI

territories .

Ins.

availabte. 304-875-1429.

" REPS NEEDED for business
&amp;eoounts. Full-Time, 160,000·

S50,000: Pan-Time. •12.000 -

S18 ,000-No SeHing, repeetbua·
ineu. Set your own hours.
Training provided . Call: 1 - 612~
938 -6870 . M·F. S•m to 5pm
(Central St8Rderd Tfme) .

MONEY

FOR

COLlEGE

-

Qualified men !lld women oftha
Army National Guard can ntceive more then $18.000 lor
their education . Join now and
begin earning a monthly paycheck . Your acti¥1 duty train ing
can be delayed until the school
yeltf -'*•nd you wUI•am 8639
or more per month while in
training . CALL 1 -800 -1423619 for FREE information
package.
VETERANS :

Put your expe-

, rlance to work. An E-4 urn1 up
to t128.00 for one weak -and

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW AND USED MOBILE

HOMES KESSEL"S OUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT 35.
PHONE 814 -448-7274 .

1c-c-:c:-c-:---:::--.,.--::-,-.,.-

1978 14lt70 Gettyaburg. 2 bdr ..
2 full bathl. porch &amp; awning, 2
AC'1. all alee .. exc. cond. Best
offer. Call 114·251-1620 or

81 4 ·266·1602,

Big saving &amp; 'big Mleetion of
uaed &amp; bank repossnsed mobila
home. Call Kanauga Mobile
Homes. 614-448·9662 .
20 acr.. and 1973 Eagle Trailer
with 2 bedrooms plus 1 ldd·on
bedroom. G11 hMt Tupp1Hs
Plains-Chnter water s'(ltem.
Willaellall)aratety . Succ:naRd ..
Tuppers Plains. 61•· 687-6437.

12lt65 Vindale. 12~8 ••Pando. 2
per month - an E-5 , up to' deckl with twning, wood 8159 .00 ; SSO ,OOO lite insu- burner, dishwa1her. underpin·
ranOB • Gl 8111 - Retiremenund ning . Call 814-211 -1608
rmch more to qualified men Md
vromen .,_ the Army Nation1l Rou sh ln. Chtllhire. Traitor &amp;
Guard. Call 304 -675 -3950 ·or approlt. V! acre tot with porch &amp;
1·100-142-3619 ,
1torage buikUng. Calll1.4-367-

7492 ,

Situations
Wanted

···,- - -- - '''W ilt

:.in

m bl!lby- sitttng in my home

Middlepon. Call 614 -992 -

, ·1!1126 .

•

'.-----------18 Wanted to Do

Need help withy our fell cleaning

chores? We clun homes. oHic..: church ... smell bulin••nReasonable rates. Call81 4 -388-

9027 .
Septic Tank PuiTPing. Commercial &amp; residentiel. 2 trucks for
prorf1)t lltfVice. tao per 1 .500.
gol,

loMI , RON EVANS ENTER·

PRISES , Jackson. Oh . Call
c:onect 614 -286-6930.

AnENTION CAMPERS, Wm

move your campers from cemp
lite to wint•r ttorage lrtl. Call

e 1• · 742 -3166 .

F1nonml

Greet Buy- 1h80 2 bdr. mobile
home 24•28 metal pole build·
ing. epprolt. 11 ' cl..rance, utra
hook up for mabile home. garden
space. allthil on large corner tot,
1ize 8&amp;~~:172 . No hi!la to mow. In
Patfiot. have to Me to eppreciata. Cal &amp;1•· 379· 2282 .
2 bdr., fum . W11her &amp; dryer . ~ 1
acre ground. Call 6U.. 3888469 aher 5:30.
'81 Wind1or Z br large lfving
room · &amp; kitchen. 2 porch• &amp;
undMpenning. oreet eond. Mutt
..,.. 304-882-371&amp;.

5968 .

12~t60 mobile home and to1 on
Hertford Line, Apple Grove an4
1"h acre lat. 304-676·2153.

I NOTICE I
•
TiiE OHIO VAllEY PUBliSH ·

Professional
Services

S larks Trae and Lawn Service.
Hedges , s hr u b • . bushes
trimmed. landscaping, stump
and leaf removal. 304-676 -

2842 "'576-2010 ,

Real Es tate
3 .1

5422 or 876-7978 ,

1975 Freedom Oelu11e, 121166,
S room• anit beth, BdO ltont
porch, one outbuilding snd
cistem. S9,000.00 with htff
acre lend. Palnttn1 Road. Ash·
ton. bus route. 304-611· 2231 .

3 bdr, 1 bl;th, new Clrpet• wall
paper, outfide newly painted.
part. furnished. good location &amp;
neighborhood . 566 Jay Dr. Call

614 -441 ·1663.

114·178-2513.

a

61 4 ·446-0322 .

Regency Inc. apartment 2 bdr ..
utilities Plnly paid. nice. Call

Nicety fumlahed mobile home
CA &amp; h•t. ueel. locatian.

114-948-2801 or 614-949 ·
2610.

Waaharl, dryer1 , nrlrigerator1.
ranges . Skaggs Appliances.
UppM Riwer Rd. beside Stone
Crest Molel. 814-446-7398 .
New &amp; ulld refrig.. r1ngu.
washers &amp; dryers. 6 pc. wood
L.roorri auite t400. Mollohan
Fum .. Rt. 7 North. Gallipolis.

Oh, &amp;14-448-74&gt;W .

u1td color TV for ule and
odullo'onl, . Col1 &amp;14 -448 -0336, Good
repair. Cell 61 4 ·446-11 4 • .
6131h 3rd. Awe. 1 bdr. private
.Rev's Used Furniture. Addi1lon.
bath. 1140 per mo. Depo1lt Oh . 614 -38-7-0637 . Swtk bed1
required . Call 114-446-4222 186, chest 135. bookcase 125.
between 9 &amp; 6 .
o• 1111'1d table &amp;15, mtp!e
Fumithed apt. U35. Utilitl• hutch t50. china eabinet S76 ,
1cr"" 815. kitchen
paid . 1 IR, 920 4th. Gallipolis. fireplace
cabinet t4f5 , high chair e10,
445 -4416 after 7pm.
refrigMator S7&amp;. 3 coal &amp; wood
Fumithed apt. 1 bdr. t23&amp; heaters and I gal heaten.
Antique•· oak chiffarobe teo.
utilititl petd . 701 4th Gallipolis. ollk
achoalhouu clock e36,
Call 441 -«111hlr 8 pm.
walnut bed t2:1 . iran bad S36 ,
walnut buftet t76. o.k rocll•
Fumlthed efficlencv t150 utill- t20
, walnut ch'eat 1100, 0111
titl paid. shere bath, 701 4th, dnk
t40 . Open 10 111 6,
Gallipolis . Call448-44l6after6 Mon .-Fri.

pm,

IW..,

41

Houses for Rent

2 bdr. houte wllh g•age cer·
P-'td, curtaint, dflhwasher I
refrig. Near new city poot. 106
Kin eon Dr. Rent 1300 mo . dep.
• lease required. Celll14-4414347.
Nice hou11 lor ule or nmt in
Crown City on Rt. 7 . CaU

rern 11er11 t21&amp; . 1 manth that
includes all ut illtin. Dapash
required of UOO. Contact Vili81jle Manor Ap1. Middleport.
614-192-n87. Equal Housing
Opportunity.
•
Ap.anrnents for rent in Pomeroy.
One and two bedrooms. Cell

814-992-5215 .

.1 bedroom aP,.nment. Newly
clf'JH'ted . HUO approved. 402'11
24th St. , Pt. Plea11nt. Call

614 -892-6U8c

Hou11 fOf rent 109 Cherry St .. '
VInton . OH. Call 814·••8 · 2 beclroom, furnished apartment
8607.
for rent. Adults only. Call

814·192·2749 .

In R.cinil, · iiice 2 .bedroom
dupt.x. Partly furn ished. S200 .
per month plut deposit. Call

GOOD USED APPliANCES

1 bedropm apl. lor ..:nl. eooic· '6:-:4""
'M'o;:i8:-:c:-.-;M;.-:e-r-:c;::h.=a-:n-:;d;:-is-e'

814-266·6009 .

e room house. 1 .2 acrn. Double
car garage. Located on RoM Hill .
B11g1in priced 120 ,000. Call

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

Furnished 3 room• and bath, 3 piece liwingroom suite . Cell
claan . aduhs only, no pall. Call 814 -381-8489 after 5:30PM .
614-44&amp;· 1619,
Rocker recliners like niiM'. used
&amp; tullsil!e bedding. Corbin
Nicely furnlahed 2 bdr. IPt &amp; Snvder
Furniture, 966 2nd.
34
Business
Adults onty. Inquire at corntr Aw, Gallipolis. 61 4 -44&amp;-1171.
Fir1t
&amp;
Olive
St.
It
Sheppardl
Buildings
Sales &amp; Service.
Stel'f; upright frHZet, 30 in .
elec.
range. 2 elr candltionert
1 bdr. apt. over loaldng city peril.
Commercial or ltorage building IC ·D eno per month . Call P.J 's 27.000 STU &amp; 14.000 BTU . Clll
for rent 140, 160 Third Ave., 114 -446 -1819 or evening• 114-448·4868 .
Gallipoli1. .Ohia . Call 304~7!ii .. 814-448· 2325.
Pickens Used Furniture. Good
4473 nk for Gary.
'
1 bdr. newly dec:orated . niW ~ality used furniture . Op .. 9110
carpet.IUitlbleforone lldy, 841 8 or call for JtPpointment.
2nd . Aw. Call 814-4•6-2466 . 304-176-1483 or 176· 1450.

Homes for Sale

3 bdr .. air, pool , garage. Nice.
Commercial property, corner
lots &amp; highway frontage. lilt
with us. We have buyert. A-One
Real Estate-Broker. Call 304674 -6104 or 304-674-15381 .

Gtll~lia .

Sot• and chlirs priced from
1396 to 1995. hbl" t50 tnd
10l!i0 2 bed roam mabile home. up to $126 . Hlde·a·beds 1390
near Recine. Call 614-992- to t596. Recliners 1226 to
0375 . lompo $28 tv 0126 .
5868. Available Nov. 2 .
Dinettes 1109 and up lo 1496 .
2 bedroom trailer in Tuppers Wood table w-6 chaira 1286 to
Plains. t176 month plu1 deposit S795. Desk t100 up to *375.
and utilities . Call 61•·887- Hutch" 1400 and up . Bunk
beds complete w-ma«r•••
3487.
t~96 and up to 1~96 . Baby beds
$110 a t175 . MattreiSes or bolt
12~t85 2 e.«~room trJil&amp;r In
country, Peach Forll Rd. Total IPrings full or twin $83, firm
alee. 1176 month, 1100 dep- 173, and 189. Queen seta S226 ,
King t360. 4 drawer ch•t t66 .
osit. 814-992-7093,
Dres1ers t89 . Gun cabintns a.
Two bedroom trailer with lerga 10, &amp; 12 gun. Gal or electric
add on room. p1nty furntshed. rMge 1375. Baby mattr•lft
Gallipo,is Ferry vlcnity, t150.00 835 &amp; S46 . Bed frames UO,
eJO &amp; King frame t50 . Good
per l'fiOnth, 304 -675-1206 .
~election of bedroom M~itel,
2 bedroom all electric. t1 25 .00 metal cabinet•. he.tboards UO
month plu• utiliti", Gallipolis and up to te&amp; .
Ferrv, 30•·67&amp;·•088.
Used Furniture: Washer a
dryer, electric range, gat range,
wood table 2 bend-las. beds,
44 Apartment
·dresser, &amp; recliner. 3 miles wt
Bullville Ad. Open 9AM to
for Rent
&amp;PM . Mon . thru Sat.

Duplex far rent 646 Seco.nd
Ave.. Gellipolia. 3 bdr. llvlngroom. diningroom. new kh·
chen, tiacllyerd, relrig. &amp; r1nge.
t28!!5 plu1 u111hlts a. Mcurity
deposit . Clll814-448-0890.

1 Ox80 housetralllf, FleetWoad .~
11200. 304·882-3239 or n3-

Valley Furnilure, new . &amp; used .
large section of qutlity fumi turit .· 1216 E•stern A11 e. ,

) ~room trailer. adults or 1
baby. No petsl . t135 p11r mo.
Call614·268-1167.

B &amp; R MobUa Home Maven.
insured, re•onlble ratel. call
304-175-1612 or 876 -2486.

12 ' x85 trailer. utility bld1if ..
stortge bldg ., % •~reland. Rt. 2,
• -miln Nonh from Point Plea·
aant . Anne Schmitt. 304·176-

23

Coli 614-44&amp; -4607 or &amp;14 446 -2802 .

304·676·6104 .

Business
Opportunity

lNG CO . recommends that you
do butin•s with people you
know. and NOT to send money
through the mail unti,l you have
inve11tigtted the otfenng.

- 2bdr. unfum., 111 tlec., 2 mil•
Rt. 668 private lot 8200 month.

1 ... ,.,

!1!11 """mJ!ll, ""'·

ne•r town. Ref . &amp; deposit
required . Call 814-.f.46-014).

1 bedroo'm furnished apt in
MlddJeport. Also far rem trailer
lot with all utllltitl. Call 114-

Callahan's Used Tire Shop . Over
1,000tiret, sll!es12. 13. 14 , 15 ,
16, 16.6 . 8 miles out Rt. 218.

Call 61 4-26&amp;-6251 .

Paestic ctatem state •pprolled,
plattic septic tank1, pintle
culverts, metel · cutv.rts. RON

EVANS ENTEAPAIS"ES . Jock-

llllllody

71

T
· --~------~--- ,

Personal computer, Commo·
dora 128, 1671 disc drive. 7
programs. 8500. C1t1 AI 814-

3 HP, two 1tage, iervlce ttation
type air campreuor. Asking

1760, 080 . Coli 614 -992 -

7354 evening•.
Half price! Fl11hing errow liant
$2891 Lighted, non-arrow 1279!
Unlighted $249! Free tettersl
See locally. Call todtyl Factory:
1-800-42)-0163, anytime.

1971 FOfd Elhe. Very good
condilion . t1100 . Cell 814 ,

186-4418.

79

Sale t11 ttlde. 1971 Fiberglass
Nova, buRt 327 4 speed. For 1
low mileage 1980'1 car. Cell

26 inch Quasar T.V. for u le.
·G'ood condition. t100 . Call

614-982-8810.

114-982-11941 '

Squire fireplace insert, lop of the
line. eleetric btower. uMd one
wintet' only. •&amp;&amp;0.00 . 304-876-

1980 Olda Omega V6. eulo ..
flOOd ciMn cer. e1300. Roger
Kerr. 81• -98&amp;-4396.

Rough Lumber. Oak •d papler

1967 Dodge. 2 door coupe. ·VB
euto. 39,000 actual miles . Cell
614-949 ·2893 before 10:30
p.m .

2927.

0126,00 to 0160.00 per 1.000.
auorttd length Masoned walnut. Can deliver. 30•· 876 4412, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Can see
Walkers Wrecker. Henderson,
WV, Rt. 35 .
Surplus · Army: Denim, Rental,
Cathlrt Clothing, Kids Cemou fltge (Free HelmM wi1h Complete Suit Purchase with capy
this AD at Regular Price). Fri .
Sat. Sun . 12 :00-8:00 p.m .
Other Days after 4 p.m. East of
Ravenawood . H.O. " S'flm"
Somerville. IT·Sgt. U.S .A.O.
Ret.}

HALF PRICE! Fla..Nig a"ow
signa 82891 Lighted. non -arrow
82791 Unlight«&lt; 12491 Free
letters! Se• locally. Call today!
Fac:tory 1 1 (800)423 -0163,
anytime .
13 good wooden wtndows &amp;
1 -Picture window, plu1 storm
\i\lindows &amp;: screen for eech .

304-676-1596.

Quilt tops, 125.00 each, 304-

Autos ~nttd . 1175. Call 614-

742 -2323,

Ntw and uMd ptrtt tor Whites,
Olivert. M ·M, Deutz tractors
Sldert EquiprY)Int Co .• 304-

2783.

Pole Buildings by Quality
Builders. Worllshops, tarpons.
1nima1 thehera, g1rages. FrN
- estimate~ . Phane 814 · 384·

Pets for Sate

AKC Reg. O.rmtin Shepherd
pups,.Charnpion bloodlines. Sir'
&amp; dame . Reedy for immedilte

Now buying shell com or ear
com. Call fof lat"tquotet . RiYer
City Farm Supply, 614 ·446:1118&amp; .

Wanted to buy: CCC Generic
Certlflcatn. Phone 3a. -6751807 evenings.

Liveltock

Registered polled H.,eford. 21h
veer• otd . Cell 114-143-6210.
Registered ~J.!Iner horte, gliding, I year• old. good size. well
bfoke, trailers wall, h•• bten
shown. Payment plln with IP·
proved cr8dh. Trail rides well.

Polc:ed to oell, 0800 . 304 -675·
8799 ,
Reg . Chsralait Bull, approximately: 1700 tb1 .. 4 vear~ old.

304-81&amp;-2970 or 304·875·

1824 after 4 p.m.

Tr,Jns~orl&lt;illllll
71

For lila or trade, '7' Corvette
Sting Aay, 360 1uto, air, T· top,
ntW dr• and new paint. 304-

578-2953 .

1984 Ford LTO lX 30·2 V-8 .

676·2151.

Puppies, half Beagle ' half Blue
Ticll . 120.00 e.ch. 304·175·

4216 ,

son. Oh. 114·2116·6930 .

3363,

Firtwood for aele mixed &amp; aplit
S16 pickup k&gt;ad. Vouchan
accept.ct. CaK 614 -2&amp;1·1768
aher 5PM.

57

1982 lubliN

4WCi wagon, VG

cond. 03,750. CoW 814·4464141 ,
1979 VWD1ther auto ex. cond.

Coli ll4·381 -B415,

1974 Pontiac LeMen• S1,200.

drive. eo• 814 -317·7225 ,

1983 Plymouth Reliant auto.
AM-FM tape. {lew tim. wire
rim1, 12.799 . John 's Auto
Sales, BuiiWilll Ad .• 'G1IIipolis,

Oh.

1979 Mercury Mlrquit 4 door.
~. PS , PB. ,..io, clean. good
n~nnlno cond., price. t1,99&amp;.

Coll514·317·7217.
1911 ChtyolorLo10r. turt&gt;o, AT.
4150 oflor 5,00 PM.

1981 Phoenl• 4 cy\, air. h/th
miltt but lookl 1nd Nl'll IIIIa

Musical
lnstn~ments

For 11le: Pllew f:ender Stratocaster Guh•r. lett offer. Call
&amp;1•·992 ·3314 .tt... e p.m.

()

10

1982 Ford Eacort ttation
wtdte-bfue Interior. ac.
new liret, .newty ~ih engine.

Fetty Tree Trimming. stump
removal. Call 30•·676-1331 .

w~gon ,

02.000., 304·182 ·3200 ,

78 Dodge Megnum. ps, ps, ec.
at. reer def,. 360 engln., am·tm,
eb rlldio. 8-track, 1'8Ciiningtells.
hi1ith miiN1ifl, body exc. eond.

o1500. 304·111·H84.

1970 Cl!lmaro . Verv good condl·

don, 304·87&amp; -3097,

· Rotary or ceble tool drilling.
Most wet! a completed ume day.
Ford Broneo good condition. Pump utea and service. 304115-3802
Coli 114 -2118-111188 , • '

John 's Auto s.t... lulavllla' Rd ..

Go-lit, 0~ ,

19711ntemationll5 tpd., 2 ton.
2 IPd . a~tle. t2.700 .. Call 614-

2118·1116 .

82

·

1911 Ford Ranger exe. eond.

Coli 814·2116·14,11 ,
1971 Chevy plcll:up, PS, newo
batt...,_, _ ~- _c:arburetQ!.---.C.o!l

19H .S-10, 4x4 eAt. cab wi1h
topper. v.e. 51Pted.loaded. ••c

cond. 110,600.00. 304-676·
'
8739 , .

Pricod ID oell , 304-882-3437.

73

Vans

&amp; 4 W.O.

81 Jeep CJ· lli 37,000 a'ctual
mWu, V-8, ttet"ea. C1U tfter

8:00 814·246·8497 03.900.

1883 &amp;10 Blu:•r. V6, air, Mno.

1982 Dodge Diplomat AC. wire
ri"'lt, ~Yf mlluge. •2 .699.
John 1e Auto sa~... Sula~ileRd .•

Exc. Cond. 03.100. 304 -676 -

.
Good·1 Exc1vetlng, b1sementa,
footers. drivew_ava. se ptic tanka,
llndscaplng . Call anyl,lme 614 446-4637, Jamn L. Davison.
Jr. OWI\flr.

Ameri can and HispaniC ar·

lists we see lhe

SHOWER, MV EVE!!

RIGHT I\IOW. ELVINE-/. •• I
FIXIN" TO TAKE MV SH,:)Wf:R

THAT

FEMALE

DON"T KNOW WHAT
A SHOWER LOOKS

LIKE

9, 30

®

• . (jJ} O.algnrng
women Julia is shocked
when she meets h'ir son,s

new gi~friend .
9:50 C1J MOVIE: 'Lonely Are the
Breve'
.
10:00. (D Odd Couple
[[) Story of En~liah:
Muuver Tongue U.S, 1mm•·
grotion from the Brrttsh Em·

pire during 1ho 191h cen1ury
he1ped spread 1ho Englt&amp;h

language to other pan~ of
the w.orld, which still e1us~s

pools filled . Cell 61 4·266-1141
or 614·446-1176 or 614-446-

Coal. llmtttone, gravel. etc .
Oeli..,eutd 1 ton and up. ·Jim
Lanier, 304· 676· 1247 or 676-

in 1he speech of London s
cockneys. (60 min,)
® • Gil Cagney &amp; l.a~ey
(CCI Cagney and Lacey nsk

SNAKE!!

PO I L-OOK
L.IKt: A ReAL..
cow~?

Upholstery

PEANUTS
· R &amp; M Custom Couches and
Reupholltery. lt. At . 7, Crown

ClOy, Ph. 814·251·1470. Eve,

•

·Mowrev'• Upholstering serving
tri countrarn21 years. Thebett
·1n furniture UDholmrlng. Ca11
.304 - 171 -4 1154 for free·1

.I

-

~
br THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
3 Glut
I Rebecra 4 Twitch
or
II Shoe part
Nathanael 6 Deluge
5 US. Cabhoal
inet post 7 Lure
t 0 Expect
8 French
12 Macaw
river
13 Go to it
9 Run amok
111 Cockney II Peace par t
Ana""r
rollcall 14 Meara
answer
of comedy 24 M.D.'s group 33 Surpass .
16 Compass 18 V.M.l.
21134 Potpourro
point
student
Buddhism 311 Encourage
17 Arter ess 19 Kind of 26 Pop or Op? 37 Oulhurs\
18 Poem
oxygen 281'ypes
38 9unther s"
division 20 Omega 30 f11ghIns1de 20 Heir's
21 Observe
Pitched
39 Torn apan
concern 22 Egyptian
sound ,
41 E~
23 Mascagnl
deity
32 Spur p1ece 42 Sprote
opera
27 Poor
28TV Marine
29 Attica
township
30 Inhabit
31 Threefold
33 Feather
scarf
36 "- O"Ciock
.lump"

37 Vets' group
40 flard work.

2 Pltcffer ·
DAILYCRVPI'OQVO'I'F8-Here'a bow to work II:

AXYDLBAAXR
. IILONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's X for the two O's , etc. Single letters.
apostrophes the ienglh and lonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code lellerJ are different
CR.YPTOQUOTES
10.27
P A . fl

RW

child molasoation . (60 min.l
l1ll@ News

QEY

10:30 1]) Bill Colby Show
(!) llodyllulldlng: Mixed
Palrt (60 min.)
INNNewa
l1ll This Old Houae (CCI
11 :00 D Cll ® D Gil (]I) Newa
1]) Herdcaalle lind McCormick
• (!) M'A'S'H
(I) Managing Our Mire·
cl11: Hulth Care In Amer·
lea

Panel

discussion

·oddreaal"1f the question of
medical

melptacttce

and

how doclors and patien1a
should deal wijh it. (80 min.)
()]! Story rrf Englilil:
Muuwr TMgue U.S. lmmi·
gration from me Brijlah Empire during lha 19t~ century
helped spread 1he English
language lo o1her partl 'of
lha world. which 1111 exlata
in 1he opeech of London·a
cockneya. (80 min.)
(]I) The Hoi IIVft'ICIOIIOrt
(I) !lll Tonight Show

11 :30 •

b-+-++-+-

informally
48 Screen
44 Pooped
411 Conwlete
48 Act of
derring-do
DOWN
,1 Carry on

a harassment charge when
1hey Investigate 1 case of

•rn

7387.

114-4418-3438. Open d•iiY 8 to
I. Sat. 9:30 to 1 :30. Old &amp; new
Uphosterld.

unde~ying

freedom associated wi1h the
Southwesl. (60 mln.l .

General Hauling

•"rno~•.

IS

the

learns 1ha1 he has fallen for
another woman.
f1l) West of the Imagination: Enduring Drooma
Through 1he eyes of Taos,

Jam11 8oy1 Water Serviee . Al1o

87

, through

triumph of the continuing

I CAN'T CHAT WITH

2919 ,

Boatl and
.Motor~ for Sale

e)(amined

spread of classical leaming
inlo 11aly . 160 min .)
1iJJ • Gil Newhart (CCI

·'
· Excavating

Watt erson ' • Water Hauling ,
reasonable rates, lmmediete
2.000 gallon delivery, cisterns,
pools. we ll, etc. call 304 ·576· ;

76

binh of the Renatasance

I

Dillard's W1ter D6H11ery. elst·
ems, pool &amp; well. Anytime but
Sundev. 614-446-?404.

'

ro

5ETUPAWFULLY ~LV.

THE SCHOOL 61.15, OON'T 'filE~

&gt;W&amp;-4477

1185.
Motorcycles

VE6SIR, WE eLIRE HAVE

matum to Michael when she

7911 .

74

WE. 5URE HAV!O 10 GE:T IJP
AWFULLY !;ARI..Y lt? CA~::H

Cor. Founh and Pine
/
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 614·446-3888 or 614-

86

I

Stephanie delivers an ulti -

1979 CJ5 Jetp. 4 oplld. I cyi .•

892·6304.

..-----...------.,

CARTER"S PlUMBING
AND HEATING

83

.

9:00 D (I) (jJ) MOVIE: 'Stren·
gor In My Bed' (CCI In
Swoo.
1]) 700·Ciub
(!)Auto Roclng '88: I.MSA
GT se'riea From Walkins
Glen. NV. (90 min ,) IR).
C1J D (I) NFL Football:
Washington Redaldna 11
New Vork Gianta (CCI (3
hrs .l
[[) Day · tht Unive,...
Chtnued: A Personal View
by Jam'ea Burke. ICC) The

Plumbing
8o Heating

19n Ford 2150 cullom ptus400
nlauttt motor to be lnatelled.

Coli 614 ·182·2780.

Go111pollo. Oh,

Ashby Construction. carpen·
tery. remodeling, room 1ddition,
cement bloek work. raafing,
interior and eltterior painting,
1kting. Roofing. Free ntimatea.
304-876-6-446 or 875·6162 .

MORTY MEEKLE ~ND WINTHROP

EAST

The openiDg two--dlamoad bid, the • Q 9 6 4
• J iO 8 3
Flannery conventi~n, is a strange ani· • 6
.Q983
mal t.o moet of our readers. II normal- 1 t J 10 6 5
• Q9 3
.A6
ly dellcribes a baud of 12-15.high-card ' +Q 10 9%
poiDIII with four spades and live
SOUTH
bearlll. Alter bearing tbl8 bid from his
partner, South thought he could safe I
• K 10 4
bid a game. Four bearta was a good
t AK 8 4
contract, played from either ba~d.
.J8753
catch the ace of clubs onside or fmd
Vulnerable: Neither
the defeaden' trumps 'dividing S.2,
Dealer: North
tnd almoal surely I0 tricks will come
home to rooat.
we~~
Nortb East
Sou do
That was the view declarer took of
2 t•
Pass
the 'deal. He won the openiDg diamond Paso
Pass PBJS
lead and immediately -led a club to:
•Flannery convention
dummy's king. East took the ace and,
Opening lead: t J
returned a club. That losfto West and 1
a tbirtl club allowed East to overrulf
dummy's small heart with his eight. L------------'
Later South played A·K of hearts. Now ruff dummy's last s~de and cash
When the queen failed to drop, declar· the king of hearts. Then play the last
er was set a trick.
diamond. When West plays the 10, ruff
Of course there are variOUB ways to low in dummy. East can overrufl but
make 10 tricks, but no play is. auto- m111t IJ'en lead either into the A·J of
matic. Try Ibis approach and see what hearts or away from the ace of clubs.
happens. Alter winning the ace of dia- Either way, declarer takes 10 tricks
IIIOIIds, play A·K of spades (pitching a and makes·his co~tract .
club) and ruff a spade. Then play the
,,... Nlmi'APIR BNTIIIII'III8I: .....
diamond kin I and ruff a diamond , ·

.5

singer.

Starttl Ttee al)d Lawn Senrice,
Hedges. shrubs , buahes
trimmed , lendscaplng and
atump remo\lal . Lt~f removel.

.K4
WEST

crashes Sarri' s important

876-2018 or 176-7147.

NORTH

.AK7 2
.AJ752
t72

By Jame1 Jaeoby

photo session with 1 rock

AINGCES ' S SERVICE , . e~tpe ­
rienctd ca rpenter, electrician.
meson, painter, roofing !Including hot tar appli_calion) 30·-

Trucke for Sale

new! 02,310, Coli 814-182·

nu.

IT'S
&lt;;x.JICKE.R

2454.

oo•-576·2010 or 576-2842 .

72

caution
pays off

!CCI The o1ory of a
fourteen·vear-old who II expolled from school and is in
1roublo with lhe law and
how his life cliangos over
one unforgettable summer·
j60 min ,) iR).
•
@ MOVIE: 'Bare Eaaence
Pan 1.
8:30 (!) Zenith NFL Monday
Night Match·Up
1iJJ • (D) My Slater S.m
(CCI A s1ar·soruck Patti

EEK &amp; MEEK

chuckle quoled

BRIDGE

his first wife is haunting him.
f1l) Wonderwolka: lalanda

Unconditional llf-'ime guarantee. Loe•l references furnithed .
Free ntim1te1 . Call collect
1-814-237-0488, dey or night.
Rogers Ba•emen t
Waterproofing .

you - - money.

.Fetith - Opine - Egret - Oneway- .RIGHT NOW

Kale and ·Allie spend a b1·
zarre Hallowetjll nigh1 10geiher when they encoun1er
'i widower who claims 1hot

RON 'S Televisi on Servlee .
HouM c••• on RCA. Quaur,
GE. Specialing in Zenilh. Call
304·576-2398 or 614-448-

•

380 Grant St .. Mkkllepor1. 6
rooms , blth, oarage. work shop,
good lOcation. Call 814-992 -

.,

_..... .,............ .

I

p 0 T S UM

"What do you aay when you want eomethlng?" my sllter·
In-law liked her unruly llfx·year-old. Hla reply ••. "I want some
Ice cream RIGHT"NOW."

perform black magic on 1heir
hated English 1eacher. 160
min.) In Stereo.
1]) Father Murphy
(!) Magic Vooro in Sports
[[) D Cll MICGyver (60
min.)
.
• C!J MOVIE: 'Revenge of

Home
Improvements

1973 Chr;attr Newport, 4 door.
runs good, needs "'" little
work . t410 . Call 304 -675nu after 11 a.m. or can be
seen •t 2825 Jtfferson Ave.

9332 .

Autos for Sale • 1978 ChnyLuv 4 spd. radi,o.

AC. all apdons. Call 814 -U8-

Beagle pups 120. 304-895-

...... ,,

_

Old you ever notice depart·
ment: Whenever you hear the
word 81VO, h II UIU.tly the beginning of an !ld deelgned to make

•

(J)
MacNeil· Lehrwr
Newahour
@ • (jjl Kale &amp; AlllejCCI

All typn. carpenter work. Pe'int ·
ing. remodeling , ,aafing . Free
ntimatll . Ca11614-446-41505.

1980 Chevy CitMion no Nat, -614 ·4-U-1835 or &amp;14 -441 ·
good work cer. frunt wheel 2203 .

Puppi"· German Short h8iretl
pointel'f;, E•c. bird dog1. 30•·

·.

~

I. .I I. , I·.
~

YISTEIDAY'S SCUM-LEIS AIIISWEIS

the Pink Plllllhor'

Loaded with optioftl, Automatic
with overdrive . 1 -814-388·

2 8eagiM 8 mont~t old,. 136
each . Ca11114 ·441-2451 .

Pit IIAI pupp~ for Nit. t25 .
each. Call 614 -7•2 · 24150 .

:

02.600.00 . 304-676-2072 ,

-----. .

--

..

Mount1ineer truck camper, fits
pick up, 11 ft. tully contained.

PRI EV ..

.fill ing. in the misSing word1
L---1.-....L.-..1·---'-...L---"'- you develoJ) from step No. 3 below.

A pretty teenager convinces
a love-struck classmate to

, BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

1973 GMC pickup U50 . Coli
114-317-01141 .

112&amp; nch, Coll614-448 -7372 .

I

•,

•11.ooo.oo. 304·n3-59B6 .

62 Wanted to Buy

oo lo. Colll1 4 ·448-4211 ,

ACK blonde poodlepuoa. Champion Mnad. Wormed &amp; UliiH .

WS GO AGAIN.

·n Ford motor home. 24 tt, seW
con't.ined. generttor. .!ir , and '
carpet, bath with shower ,

81

sharp, 11.199 with this ad.

Dragonwynd Cattery Kenn~ .
CFA Himalayan. Per!Jtn and
Sl•m•e kittens. AKC Chow
puppies. Call &amp;U -441· 3844
after 7PM . ·

H~e

Se r v1ces

l-:-----------

6762 ,

66

1760. &amp;14-986 ·3839 ,

e,oo,

panM. g1tv pipe, he~ 2 in pipe.
On sale thN Nov . 1. Yauger
Fsrm ·Suppty, Rt.35 , Southakfe,
W. Va.

66 Building Supplies

Concrete blocks allslle1 yerd or·
dali\lery. Mason •and. Gallipolis
Block Co., 123'1t Pine St ..
Gtllipolia. Ohio Call 614-4A6-

1918 Chevy Nova. 4 door, V-8 ,
good cond, 304-875·3997 1f1er

8 ft . wide iruc k camper. Water
tank. tumace, ainll. stove with
o..,en, Pono-pony. sleept e.

INDIAN
RESERVATION
.

DON'i LOOI' NOW, gui

,,

TRUCKLOAD GATE SAlE. Five

63

245 -6121 '

.

AND ERNEST

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

876·7421 '

675-639&amp; .

Building Material•
Block, bric k, sewer pip•. win·
dow1. lintels. Jtc:. Claude Win :
ters. Rio Grtnde, 0 . Call 814 -

Fron1 Disc Brake Service for
tnott Clft, 156:'99 install new
di1e peds tumed •nd true rotort.
rapac:ll bearings, inspect calipers, ftpl1ce fluid1 . Phone 304- .
675-2663 after 6 p.m.

FR~NK

~lectric

port

We repair automatic trantmialions. Call614-446-0966 .

992-2914 ,

.

hs....-T-I-'i-l-'-f.l6--'rl-rl-i G Complele
lhe
by

(JIDNewa
l1ll
MacNeil- Lehrer
. Newahour
• Gil (BJ WhHI of Fonune
@ Barney Miller
7:06 CD Sanford and Son
7:30 D (I) [[) New Newlywed
Go me
(!) NFL Filma
. .(!)Too Clote for Com·
fort
D Cll Judge
(J) Fine Romance
@ Wheel of Fortune
IJ Gil (BJ Jeo!*dv
@BIIneon
7:35 CD NBA Hall of Feme
Game: Dalila Mavoricka
va. Boalon Ce~icio Cover·
aQO from Springfield, MA. (2
hrs ., 15 min.t Live.
8:00 1J (I) (BJ Amutng Storie•

Auto Repair

,,
1

r~l -~' I

@GoodTimeo
6:36 CIJ Down to'Earih In Slei"ao. ·
7:00 D (I) PM ~lne
1]) H~ and McCor·
mlck
(J) Sport.Center
(I) Entertainment T!&gt;'llght
A visit wilh S1eye Martin on
location In Bri1ioh Columtoio
lor the making ol hio new
film, ""T)1e Three Amigoa· '.
'1!111 (!) M*A'S'H
Ill [[) People' a Court .
[[) Nightly Buaineaa Re -

(INffi~b mD CIRCUUTE)

)

b.·

. I I I .I .

CIJ D!octDr Who

Pomeroy, no down payment
needed . 3 bedroom, equiPPed
kllc:h.n . bJth. bt..mtr~t . ~c.
csrport . Call 814-992· 2102 .

2102,

t-I•L"--1-r_F-r.T~H.,..-;1

(!) Jefferoono
CIJ 3-2-1. Con1Kt (CCI
l1ll Here'o 1~ '(our Huhh
.@) F..:to of Ufe
6:06 (I) New l.uvllll to Buver
8:30 D (I) (BJ NBC Newo
(!) Action Outdoors whh
Julluo IIOroo
C1J D Cll ABC N~wo
1!111 (!) Hogin'o H81081

00 IJ Gil CBS 'Newa

Two cemetery lots st Meigs
Memory Garderl1 for sale. t700 .
Call 614-992·6240.

th•

low to form ·tour simple wordt . .

1!111

3063,

676-3788, '

I----------

Aeorr~l'lgt letters of
0 fovr
scrambled words

1]) Big Valley .
(!) Muda &amp;portol.aok

8 tl. alid• in uuclt camper. el::
oondhlon, 0800. Call &amp;14-446.

Garage ·to More car far winter.
preft1 vicinity of hospital. 304- .

Oliva St., Gallipolis. N~ &amp; Uled
wood -coal1toves, 8 Pc wood LR
suite t399, bunk bed1 t199.
42 Mobile Homes
entron recliners 199, MW &amp;
for Rent
uHd bedroom suite~ . ·ranges.
· wringer washers, • sho111. New
livingroom suites 8199-f699.
,2 bdr .. all utilities paid except lamps, al1o buying coal &amp; wood
ale&lt;:.. fUrn . or unfum., sec. stoves. Call 614-446-3169 . .
deposit required. Convenient
location . Call 614-446 1 8568 or County Apptiance, Inc. Good
Wiad appliances and TV seh.
814 -446-4778.
0p8fl SAM to 6PM. Mon thru
2 bdr. fulf¥ furnished adults only, Sot. 614-44&amp;·1699, 627 3rd,
Ave. Gatllpo!il, OH .
utll. paid. can 614-448-4110:

1982 Cl1yton. 12xl0, all elect·
ric. tltC . c:ond .. belt re·asoneble
offer. 304· 671·2485.1

1975 Cameron 12di0 Mobile
Home 2 br, all alee. t3,000.
Kelvinator Ja• Actlan washer
S700. Sesrs 14.000 BTU 1ir
condition..- 1275 .00. 304-1753137 Of 896-3886 .

21

3 bedroom house fn HendllfiOn,

W, Vo. 304-875-7448 ,

lA !!II

ldilod by CLAY 1, 'OUAN

8:00 r.~ (I).[)) ilJ • (Jt (BJ

to Rent

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 52

.

WOII

EVENING

Immediate opening lor girl ·f-------.,..~--.,.----------~ - -- - - - - - - - trained in shorthand and typtng
Must ~he to mnt p.jblic. BookMerchan di se
41 Houses for Rent
keeping he_,ful. Write giving 31
H ome1 for Sale
'
COitl) tete quelific1tlon to appli·
ca nt . Box 426 . Pome roy .
46789 .
3 bedroomhouleforrentor .. te. For rent or sale, 3 bedroom home
61 Household Goods
25 aeres land. gat heat. Gallipo· In cauntry. Close to Dexter and
Warned: Someone to tear down lis, OhKt. call 304 · 882 - 36~6 - ·
coal mines . If interested, cell
k:luae for materials. Call 614 514-742-2729 .

992-6635 ,

· '::~:::~' S@~~lA-J&amp;~trs·

10/27/86

oOdrill's Auto Parts. 21ft mi .
' NonhOiVInton on St. Rt. 110 II
the p4ece to buy yoUr .u..t auto
part1 . Vou.' ll receive .fut.
friendly llf'Yict 9 the belt u~
pant 'tvallable.' Call 814-381·
1815 ,
I

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park,
Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
Laroe lots. Call614-992·7479 .

• Friendly Home Party at home .

book a party. Mavnolia Nth:,
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~--.-. -

Monday, October 27, 1986

304 -671·2651'.

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Ponieroy~Middleport, Ohio

Pl!ge-1 0- The Daily Sentinel

CLEVElAND tUPI) - There was one grand prize winner in
Saturday night's Lotto drawirig, with that person winning $1,295.268,
lottery officials said Sunday_
_
The grand prize winner, who has me year to redeem his ticket, will
receive 20 annual Installments of approximately $6!1, 763, or about
$51,810 after federal taxes are subtracted.
Lottery officials said 259 people had five of the numbers correct
and Will receive $1,013 apiece, while $53 Will go to each Of 13 216who
had four of the numbers.
'
The winning numbers were 6- 19-~-:0.31-36 (six, nineteen,
twenty-eight, thirty, thirty-one, thirty-six).
- Next week's grand prize will be at least $1 m!Ulon. The grand prize
in Wednesday's Super Lotto drawing will be at least S15 nnlUion.

Teamsters reject concessions
CINCINNATI (UP!) - HudePohl beer truck drivers set up an
obstacle to the sale of the brewery to SchoenUng Brewing Co. by
rejecting contract concessions. a Teamsters leader said.
- Robert Bethel. president of Teamsters LDcal 1199. ~aid the vote
was 52-46 against concessions which woold have towered the average
weekly wage of a driver from $500 to $400.
The offer also lacked job security and drivers could have lost their
jobs after a merger, he said.
·
Bethel said Schoentlng president Ken Uchtendahl Indicated the
drivers' rejection ended Schoenling's attempt to buy Hudepohl.
"I think they're just going to pull back their bid," Bethel said. He
saw no prospect for continued negotiations on concessions.

Religious college closes doors
COLUMBUS (UP!) - One of eight religious s~hools being
investigated for operating as a college without state authorization
has ceased to operate. a spokeswoman fort he Ohio Board of Regents
said.
State officials began investigating four of the schools after the
Columbus Dispatch ran a series of stories In September on diploma
mills and unauthorized schools. The others were reported to the
Board of Regents after the stories appeared.
Under Ohio law. a school is operating Ulegally if it caUs itself a
college or gran ts degrees without authorization.
Patricia Skinner, director of certificates of autrorization for the
board said the pastor of Eastern Union Bible College In Columbus
wrote a letter to the board saying the school has changed Its name
and quit offering bachelor's degrees.
The school will continue to offer Bible study classes for no cr'edft.
Two other schools. Heritage Baptist Academy in Canal
Winchester. and Harvest Temple Bible College In Oytle. said they
never offered co!lege credits. Skinner said the J3oarP of Regents and
the Ohio attorney general are Investigating the schools.

Athens County judge quits bench
WASHINGTON (UP! I -An Ohio judge has been forced to resign
from his seat in Athens Coonty Common Pleas court in order to
receive a prestigious fellowship to the U.S. Supreme Court.
J udge Thomas Hodson. 38. was selected recently-to serve as a
fellow to Chief Justice William Rehnqulst
However. Ohio Supreme Court Chief Justice Frank Celebi'('Zze
says Hodson can not temporarily leave the bench because Ohio law
allows no long term leaves of absence except for health reasons.
Hodson aske&lt;} the Ohio General Assembly in September to change
the law. but the lawmakers never got around to passing it, so Hodson
resigned after an old political enemy from Athens, Joe Sabino,
petitioned the Ohio Supreme Court to remove him.
In resigning, he gave up the remaining four years of his term and
he took a $5,000 pay cut

Clevelanders may puy for repair
CLEVELAND tuPll - City fi'Sidents may be forced to pay for
sidewalk and curb repair because of the pinch in federal block grant
money, say~ Mayor George Voinovlch.
.
_
"We've got to spend the money on the projects that will leverage
additional private and governmental money or provide more jobs,"
Volnovich said Saturday. "We've got to bemorecreatlvein the use of
block grant money. "
The city had close to $40 nnllllon in block grant allocations In
1900-81. but has been allocated $.!4.4 nnlillon for 1986- 87 and wUl
receive SZl.9 million In 1987-88. Voinovich said.
"1 believe in the New Federalism ci the administration, but 1oon't
believe New FederaUsm means no federalism," Volnovich said.
"The federal government has a responsiblllty to help cities."

By United Press lnlemallonal
·The campaign of fonner Gov,
James Rhodes to unseat Gov.
ftich_an;l Celeste Sunday received
the backing of the Cincinnati
Enquirer, but Celeste was endorsed
by The Akron Beacon' Journal and
The Toledo Blade.
Both The Blade and The Beacon
Journal said they were making
their choices reluctantly_ "Negatives are the basic theme
of this year's race for govei'IIQr:
The casual approach_to ethics in the
adrrilnlstratlon of Richard Celeste; the lack of vision in thecampa)gn r1

.'
'
James Rhodes," The Bearon Said.
"Both are troubling: but for the
future of the state of Ohio, we think
the better choice for governor Is the
Incumbent, Richard Celeste, 48, the

'

Contract acceptance finishes
ll8-day steelworkers' strike

UAWiocal
considers pact

r;::========================:===========l;:

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Moistly clear tonJPt, with
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Wednesday, with highs near 61. ·
The probabYfty of precfpflallon
is near zero throu~ Wednesday.

•

enttne
Vol.36, No. 123
Copyrighted 1986

-

.

1 Section , 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, October 28, 1986

25 Cent•

A Multimedia Inc. Newspap&amp;l

Council approves ownership transfer action
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel staff Writer
A move to transfer ownership of
the Sears-Fruth _ complex, bull!
partially with funding secured by
the v]jlage through the Ohio
Department of Development. was
given the approval of Middleport
Vlllage Council at last night's
meeting.
Mayor Fred Hoffman advised
that But Haptonstail, operator of
Sears, is interested in purchasing
· the buUdlng from Greg Gibbs and
has asked to takeover the loan from

the village fund at the same rate.
· Council passed a resolution by
unanlmous vote to make the
necessary changes In the loan
name, which would permit Haptonstall to proceed with the purchase.
l;loffman noted that the village does
oot have to secure the approval of
the state to make the transfer.
The mayor reported that the
yillage will receive no revenue
sharing montes next year but that
an additional $2,700 wUl be coming
in before the end of the year. He
said that .the village had approp-

rlated only $11,944 in the current
budget, had received $16;24lincludfng the balance from 1916, and
needed ,to appropriate the balance
in revenue sharing funds. Council
gave the . first reading to an
ordinance which would allocate the
money to various funds.
Hoffman reported that the$16,552
in community development block
grant fund s allocated by the Meigs
County Commissioners to purchase
and raze the burned-out buDding on
North Second will be available In
early 1987 _ The property will be .

resold by the village for development once _the former _ Empire
Furnitu re buUding has been torn
down. Discussed at length at the
meeting was the ferry service to
operate between Meigs and Mason
Counties while the Pomeroy-MaSon
bridge Is closed for repairs. Mayor
Hoffman, and Council members
Dewey Horton and Jack Satterfield
attended a meeting Qf village
of-ficials and business ·representatives rn til:&gt; matter last week. It was
the general consensus of the

prospective ·operator. Dorsel
McCoy. Point Pleasant, and others
that the · best location would he
between Middleport and Clifton.
W.Va. Hoffman said the Middleport
levee is ln good condition but t~at
the Clifton levee would require
considerable work.
Hoffman and Council commended But ~lower and Bill Nease,
of the Middleport and Pomeroy
Chambers of Commerce, for their
Involvement in the project and
spoke of how vital It is to the
businesses of roth towns that the

.UMW ,authorizes
By DAN CARMICHAEL
.UPI Labor l!eyortcr
ATLANTA IUPI) -TheflerceJy
Independent United Mine Workers
union may merge with another
labor organization in a move that
reflects hard times In the coal fields
and the poUt leal clout of Its young
pl'l'Sfdent.
In less than ll minutes Monday,
delegates to the .union's first special
conventlon In its 97-history approved a package of proposals
advanced by President Richard
Trumka.
The delega tes authorized
Trumka to negotiate a merger or
affiliation with another union. In the
past, !'Ven talk of merger would
have been heresy.
But Trumka, 37. warning In an
emotional speech of tough contract
negotiations and a bleak future for
the union unless it adapts. persuaded the 1,500 delegates to
overwhelmingly approve his
"game plan.
Delegates also authorized removal of the "cap" on the UMW's $70
million strike fund, which would be
Increased by a 2.5 percent assessment of the membership. Currently, the strike fund contains $47
million.
The near-total lack of opposition
to the proposals was proof of the
political sfrength Trumka has
consolidated since his election as
president in 19112.
Trumka warned of the union 's
-weakened position at the barg~~in - ing table because of increasing
mull lnational ownership of coal
companies and operation of nonunion mines. Multinati&gt;nal companies derive only a portion of their
revrnu&lt;'S from coal. insulating
tix'm ti"om the imp'act of strikes.
"Brothers and sisters. the future
of the union and our members is
precarious." Trumka said .
"We must have the ability .. _ to

-

-

-

merw &lt;r affiliate with other labor
organizations:" Trumka said. "We
need to have as many different
plays as possible in wr playbook."
Speaking later with reporters.
Trumka said he had not discussed a
merger with any other u_nlon. but
described a possible merger as a
"tool" to enhance the UMW's
strengt h.
"As we enter this next round of
negotlations. It is not sufficient to
negotiate a oon- concessionary
contract." he said.
The UMW faces tough going in
coal lndustcy negotiations. The
national contract expires In Janual)' 1988. but talks are expected to
begin later this year.
\llere was considerable speculation by delegate; tllat Trumka
might engineer a merger with the
Ott. Chemical and Atomic Workers
Internatk&gt;nal union, wiDse president. Joseph Misbrener, spoke to
the UMW convention.
Trumka also announced an
agreement with OCAW to share
information about their commo11
corporate opponents at the barg;tfn·
ing table.
The UMW's ranks have been
D:pieted since the coal boom ci the
1970s, declining from some 160,000
members to approximately 100,000
today.
The OCA W also has suffered
from .the bust in America'soilfields,
leading to speculatk&gt;n that the two
unions are "natural" allies.
Trumka . who began working In
the coal nnlnes at the age r:l19 and
later _earned a law degree, said the
J"i?gotlations would be "hard" and
"difficult.''
Delegates also approvJ"(( a proposal to ·cancel next year's convention and hold it In 19\ll. That means
there wUl be no convention In the
midst of the national coal negotiations in 1987 - the same year
Trumka is up tbr re-election.

,\ strike by the approxima te
150 tea chers of the Meigs Local
School District - sch!'dufed to
begin at 12: ill a.m. toda_v -was
averted Monda y evenln!(.
Negotiators for the teachers
and lhe Meigs Local Board of
Educa tion moved into ,~a final
session at 1: 30 p.m Monday and
before 8 p.m. came out of the
session with a tentative agrrement for a new contract.

Meigs Local Board of Education
has thrre days to hold a special
meeting tri formally ratify the
agreement.
After several extensions by_
the teachers, the contract between them and the roard of
education had lx&gt;eQ ex tended to
12:01 a.m. on Oct. 16 and
provisions were made for rmre
extensions on a day to day basis.
However, the teachers association did mtify the board. In .
Teachers of the district met at writing, that its members wo:lld
8 p.m. in the nearby Meigs go m strtke at 12:01 a.m. Ocl2l If
Junior High School. Midlleport, a new contract agreematt was .
and ratlfied the agreement. The mt reached.
·

ferry be in operation wring the
bridge closing.
Horton ooted that McCoy has said
Middleport's levee l&lt;; a better
location' due to the oownstream
angle and particularly slnre it could
be used durtng times of high water
without any problem.
Council talked about traffic flow
and Horton said that Mayor
Hoffman had worked out a pattern
for getting on and off the fer!)'- to
go on to come down Front Street .
park on the left hand side of the
(Continued on Page 10)

Auditor
hopeful
bashes
Celeste

·merger bargalning

board avert strike

/

992-2156.

Ohio Lottery

Me,igs teachers,
•

If you jams uro• thr~&gt;adhare and your
wht't'ls arr worn, don't rr&amp;Kh! M11ney
for thr te~&gt;nage nt'ces• itir. ran he
yours. Call Th .. Daily Seniinel Circula•
tion Dl'pl. for morr information -

Mets nip

'

ulnce, and with unbouhded admiration still 101~ the job Jim Rhodes dld
during his 16 years as governor, we
endorse Governor Celeste f9r reelectton.ln the hope that hewutri&lt;le
to the occasion and demonstrate I~
honest and effective · leadership
Ohio needs," The Blade said.
·

-.

$25 .00

~-

Monday, October 27, 1986 t

development" and other ar€8s, the
newspaper said.
_
The Beacon Journal also noted
Celeste's problems with his ~
appointees.
- _- · - ,
1
''AdnnlttedJy, because of the '
· Democrat."
ethics Issue, there is a ri&lt;lk In a
The Blade, which endorsed Cesecond Celeste term. But in terms .
leste four years .ago; said it was
of -overall state government, Of '
- qlsappolnted by an admlnlstratlon
_ The editorial Siogfed wt many of where Ohio should be headed, there :_
that lias !Mien Rlarked by "atroRhodes's
accompllshments as evl-_ Is a greater risk In Mr. Rhodes's '
cious" appointments and the numerous indictments · of Its dence of his ability -to govern hodge-podge cJ dated Ideas, vacant :
members, but encouraged by his dfecttvely in the past. Btt his promises and absence ri vision." ,
The paper said, however, that the ;
abtllty to lead the state Into the neKt campaign is bereft of imaginative
programs and "blueprints for endorsement may have gone the :
decade.
_
"With understandable reluc- progress !n, badlY needed ecomrotc other way were Rhodes's running ;
'mate, HamUton County Commissioner Robert Taft, heading the ;
tjc~et.
•
"In sharp contfliSt, Ml1. Rhodes, '
77, is rooted In the past. Aside from :
tre contrtbutions of Mr, Taft, the '
Rhodes campaign has been hopelessly out of touch, .even with large ;
.
.
segments of the ,Ohio Republican
with a 5 percent wage restoration In proposal is development of a Party," The Beacon Journal said:
HANNIBAL, Ohio (UPil Overwhelming acceptance of a the llnal year of the package, was labor-man11gement cooperation
The Enquirer safd_lt was enthust'team that would address the poor astlcaly endorsing the Rhodes-Taft
Ia bor contract between members of 1,077 to 2118.
Local 5724 of the United Steel-- • Ormet agreed to provide the relatk&gt;nship between top company tlcket. which last week was en- 1
workers union a~d the Orrnet workers with preferred company officials and the union.
dorsed by the Columbus Dispatch,
The proposed contract also proAluminum Co. closes one of the stock and create a profll,sharing
"James A. Rhodes has already .
most rontroverslal chapters In the program In exchange for the vides that the lo&lt;'al union president been govermr of Clllo for longer
concessions.
and grlevance committee chair- - than anyone else In history. He stiU ·
history of the Ohio River plant_
About half of the 1,500employees man will -be able to devote all of ' has much to give Ohio In terms o' .
Employees Sunday approved the
contract, -ending a 118-day strik~ are scheduled to return to work their time to union activities and strong, purposeful leadership. The '
that was marked by several violent Nov. 3. More will be called back labor-management relations, while Enquirer believes he deserves the
confrontations between the com- weekly untU the plant is back to still drawing their regular Onnet cpportunity. The prospect that
capacity In Ailrtl.
salaries: ·
pany and the Sll'ikil]g workers.
Cincinnati's Robert A. Taft II would ,
"I'm glad this strtke is finally
Duling the strtke, an investor be a key figure as lieutenant •
The vote on the 43-month agreement calling for an average hourly over because we now have an group put together by Boyle closed governor makes the prospect aU the :
wage and benefit reduction of $4.00. opportunity to buUd a new future, a a deal to purchase Onnet from its more appealing," The Enquirer :
future that can provide jobs for a lot foFmer parent companies, Consoli- swd.
:
of good people," said Onnet dated Aluminum and Revere
"During the Rhodes years, •
President Emmett Boyte In a Copper and Brass.
Ohioans used lo joke about his
statement released Sunday.
The roinpany has been unprofita - h.arplng on 'jobs.' The jobs Issue, to :
"We must prove that Ormet can ble for some time, and Boyle him. was not just the most
become a competitive independent maintained throughout the strike . Important issue, but the mJy Issue.
aluminum
producer that will sur- thitt Orrnet needed concessions to If Ohioans can find rewarding,
LORDSTOWN, Ohio (UP[) vive
and
will
provide jobs and become . rost competitive in the productive, satisfying . jobs, he
Auto workers at General Motors
security
for
a
long
tel'm future. " he world aluminum market.
t:elleved, they will be sound and
Corp.'s -Lordstown car and van
said.
The plant has been running at less responsible eitizens."
assembly plants began meeting
Celeste, The Enquirer said, gives
"I felt that it would probably be than half of oorrnal operating
today to discuss a tentative local
the
strike,
with
capacity
during
ratified
hut
not
this
strongly,"
said
service" to the cause of
only-"lip
contract agreement.
a
bout
:00
salaried-employees
mwnj&lt;ibs.
"His
administration has given
Kenny
Cozart,
president
of
USW
Members of UAW Local1112 will
tainlng
production.
LDcal
Si'24.
Ohio a climate In which old business
vote Nov. 17 on the proposed
Onnet has received commit- finds It difficult to grow, In which
Cozart said a number of emfour-year pact, which was reached
Oct. 14 after 10 weeks on ployees who wereorlglnaUy against ments for loans to help It return to · new business finds it difficult to
it accepted it when the oompany · full-scale operations.
I~ocate.''
negotiatlon s.
If the strtke were to conti11ue and
The Enquirer also enoorsed Sen:
The proposal will result in a 2 lowered the number of jobs lost
eventually
force
the
company
to
from
75
to
15.
He
said
the
15
people
John
Glenn over Republican chal.
percent pay htke and job security
cease
production.
the
existence
of
who
will
mt
be
rehired
wUl
ooUect
a
Ienger
Thomas Kindness, a Confor 8.000 union workers.
two
nearby
West
Virginia
operaretirement
package.
gressman
from the Clnctnnatl area-.
Local1112 President Bill Bowers
tions
would
have
been
thrown
into
"We are never satisfied with a
It spilt the ticket in the four .
said additional raises would be
statewide races, endorsing Demo.granted to "variable operators," a contract where you've got to take a doubt .
American Electric Power's cratlc Incumbents Anthony Cetenew classification of workers who step backwards," Cozart said. He
Kammer
power plant in Marshall brezze and Mal)' Ellen Withrow for
would be trained in at least seven added that the union bargainers
were satisfied with an auditor's County sells virtually aU the attorney general and state treasdifferent job areas.
The cro8s-tratned workers will report on the company's finances electricity It generates to Ormet, urer, respectively, and Republican
give the company more flexibUity. sayiong the wage scale flt what the -while Consolidation Coal Co.'s c-hallengers Ben Rose and Vincent
-Ireland Mine supplies the roal used Campanella in the races for operation could bear.
Bowers said.
Another key element In the in the pov.er plan L
s:ecretary of state and auditor.
·
The contract also cuts the

number
overall
lions fromof 107
to 58 job
and,classlflcatrims the
number of supervisory personnel
on the plant floor.
Bowers and other local union
officers traveled to Detroit last
week to present the package to
officials at GM and the UA W
internati:lnal union. The International approved the package, and
Bowers said he expects GM to do
the same.
The unlon official said the new
contract secures the jJtr; of union
members. unless the company is
forced to eliminate a work shift or
reduce production ilne speed because of slow car sales.

--

..

,...------.-Ohio Briefs:-- 2 newspapers -suppo~ ·,Cel~ste candidacy
One ticket nets Lotto prize

~

~---

.

By LEE LEONARD
UPI statehouse Reporter

RICHER - The Carleton School In Syracuse was

$8,000 rtcher as the ~•• of oontributions made to the

school Monday afternoon to provide funds for
development of the school w-ounds. The school
received Sii,OOO from the Middleport-Pomeroy I!A:tary
Club Orfppled Children's Ftmd a,nd $3,000 from the
Meigs AliSOClatlon for Retarded CKlzens. The money
wUJ provide for a ball fltold, a picnic shelter house, a
wheek:halr path IUld an outdoor baskethaB wurt to he

carried out in three phases over a t hree-ycar period.
The money lor the ·Rotary contrihution came from
Interest Iron\ the estate of the fate Elsa B. Kimes.
Pictured at the presentation are: front, I tn r, Nora
Harri&lt;l Rice, president of MAJU:; Lee Wedemeyer,
Cark'ton School superintendent; James Diehl,
president oft he Rotary Club; hack, Itor, Tom &amp;wen,
BUI F'riUlcis, Lee W.l\fcComas, Kart Kehler ID, and
BUI Blower, Rotary Cluh members.

New war of words erupts
•
over arms stance at summit
By RICHARD C. GI«&amp;
And White House aides indicated
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The today the admlnlst ration is sending
White House and the Pentagon:s top to U.S. arms negotiators In Geneva
arrns control expert are accusinl( this' week a wide-ranging packag-e
the Soviets of trying to split NATO of proposals lncorporatinl: Reaallies by sayin~: President Reagan gan's summit offer to eliminate all
agreed at the Iceland summit to _ balllstic missiles within 10 years.
eliminate all nuclear weapons.
Aides said Reagan attended a
Assistant Defense SecretaiY RI- meeting Monda y.- of a National
chard PerltJ, one of the rx&gt;gotiators Securtty Council planning group
at the surrlmit in Reykjavik. said that drew up the Geneva directive
Monday that Reagan "did not go outlining in prl11clple a unified u.s.
al_ong" with an offer by Soviet - p()slti:ln on the summit proposals'
leader Miki)ali Gorbachev to abol- Reagan and Gorbachev discussed
Ish all strategic nuclear arms and In Iceland .
that !hero was "no -discuss'ion on
NATO depends on nuclear wea how one would define strategic pons based In Europe to deter the
arms."
SoviNs from launching an attack
"The president did not say that. with _oonventional weapons. The
but the Sovletsareseeklngtocreate Soviet bloc outnumbers NATO In
the lmpresslon, that he did," Perle . conventional weapons. Any U.S.
said In an interview. "! think the agreement to witlxlraw nuclear
Soviets want to create the Impres- weapons- whtch include nuclearsion that something was agreed at armed bombers and artillery shells
Reykjavik that wasn't agreed at as well as ballistic missiles - ti"om
Reykjavik.
Europe would be certain to spark a
" I think the Russians are trying major disagreement and a split
to make an Issue that would-create within NATO.
problems with the allies," he said.
Perle said Reagan would not go
Perle. a hardliner considered the along with ellrninati&gt;n of all nuclear
administration's top arms control weapons because "he understands
expert, said Reagan proposed the perfectly well" that the Soviet bloc
elimination of only -all ballistic is _stronger In conventional fforces
missiles within 10 years "whatever than NATO.
the range."
What lu!ve baUooned into issues

following- the summit Oct.ll -12 are
questions about whether the presioont fully understood the complexities of what was being negotiated
and whether the Soviets. oorrectty
reported the oontents of the negotiations, which they based on notes
taken at the session.
During the weekend, Deputy
Soviet Foreign Minister Aleksan dr
Bessmyrtnykh quoted Reagan as
saying: "U we agree that by the end
of the 10-year -period all nuclear
arms are to be eliminatel:l, we can
refer this to wr delegations in
Geneva to prl'pare an agreement
you could sign during ywr visit to
the United States."
Perle said the Soviet notes were
not an "agreed text" on the talks by
roth sides. He said the U.S. side
took its own not es and made oo tape
recording.
White House spokesman Larry
Speakes. who also accused the
Soviets Monday of tl)'ing to divide
Western allies, said ills not "usual"
diplomatic practice to disclose
discussions at private summit
meetings and the admin istration
wUl not release ootes on the talks.
The Soviets have ihreatated to
release the nnlnutes of the session.
which woold be a· breach ct
diplom alie protocoL

COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPI) -Ben
Rose, the Republican oomlnee for
state auditor, said Monday Gov.
Richard F. Celeste is living high off
the hog at the Governor's Mansion.
and he used a live lobster to
punctuate his accusation.
Rose told reporters hls Democratic opponent. state Auditor
Thomas E. Ferguson, has been soft
on the governor in his audits of the
Mansion expenses.
"Tom Ferguson has a hlstol)' of
looking the other way or doing
nothing when it comes to protecting
tax dollars that are abused by his
political friends," said Rose, brandishing the squirming crustacean.
Ferguson responded that his
agency audits the expenditures of
the Goveroor's Mansion every, two
years and wUl make a r(port 11
anything illegal is found.
Rose said Celeste has purchased
lobster tails, stuffed flounder, crab
legs and veal cutlet, as well as
expensive china and designer
bedsil&gt;ets. He conceded the expenses are not illegal. and many
are for the benefit of guests. but
added:
"A goveroor with flair and style
ooes not have to waste the
taxpayers' money ."
Rose suggestal that Celeste
serve Lake Erie penn or Ohio
catfish. beef or chicken . "We don't
need an impertal goveroorship in
Ohio." he said.
"The state auditor approves
every expendi ture state , government makes, and 1bm Ferguson
has not llfted a linger to (JJ €Stion the
goveroor's Ufestyle at the Mansio n." said Rcse.
Rose said--If he becomes ~uditor,
he will quietlY discuss any question-"
able ex(Enses . with tix' oHending
sta te r:lflceholder. If they 00 not
stop, he said , hewill!llblicize them,
regardess of the officeholder's
party af!Uiation.
Ferguson said his office makes a
post -audit ct til:&gt; Cl'&lt; pendt urcs r1 thf'
Goveroor's Mansion eve-v two
years.
"If there are anv vblations of the
law, we report tix'm. and that's
exactly w'hat wc'U do in this case."
-he said.
Ferguson suid the governor is
appropriated a certain amount of
money to maintain the residence.
and has the authority to spend that
ll)Oney. "If the Legislature had put
any restrictions on that money, we
would follow those," said the '
auditor.

Lee retrial ·judge denies acquittal motion; defense begins
GALLIPOLIS - Alter Gallia
County Common Pleas Court Judge
Richard C. Roderiek Jr. denied
three motions -for mistrial and
another for a direct acquittal of
Charles L. Lee II. Lee's defense
attorney called the his first witness
to open the presentation of his case.
Alter Gary Bane, juvenile officer
with Gallla Coonty Probate Coort,
was called to testjfy, the. prosecution rested and James M. Casey,
Lee's new attorney, made his

motions to RDderlck.
The Point Pleasant a ttomey
motioned .for a mlstrtal on three
co11nts. TwO onne counts were
based on testimony by Carl E.
Langford, county chief lnvestfga·
tor. last Thursday.
Casey's first point claimed. upon
Lee's orlglnal arrest tor the shootIng death of Barbara Twyman on
April 6, 1910, Lee was mfsfnfonned
of hls lights and ail questions about ·
the alleged murder weapon should

have _ t?een suppressed until he
received proper legal counsel.
Th.e then-17-ITa_r-old,_ who wa!
convicted of the murder, also was
under duress during the interrogaUon, Casey said.
A statement made by Langford
about a polygraph test was the
defense's second point for nnlstrtal.
Langford accidently made a referralto the test, whtch-cahnot be held
as adnnlssable evidence. The statement was stricken from court

records immediately.
Langford also remarkea arout
_ Lee'~lld being revoked. !l&lt;lnd Is
usually revoked because authoi'ities fear the suspect wlU leave the
area. Casey said Langford's referraJ to this may Influence the jurors
into believing his client is guilty.
Alter the three nnlstrial motions,
Casey moved that Lee be directly
acqutttt&lt;tl, cliifffitifg tHllt tile tr(fsecution, lacking physical evidence to
ilnk Lee 1o the_murder. failed to

prove the youth's participation In
the murder beyond reasonable
doubt
1n response, Prosecutor Joseph
L. Cain said that Lee properly
executed his lights waiver prior to
the interrogation and .both of
Langford's afore-mentioned statements were unintended and properly stricken from the records.
Considering both counsel's statements, Roderick refused Casey's
mlstrtal _request and denied his

a

direct acquittal motion. Roderick
said he dented tho acqulttal,motlon
because a reasonable mind, based
on evidence brought forward by the
prosecution. may find otherwise.
Following the denials, Casey was
instructed to call his first witness. Before the state rested Its case.
Bane was asked to testifY. Bant&gt;
was present during Lee's Initial
Interrogation and Informed the
youth of his rights.
Bane said he heard Lee tell his
(Continued on Page 10)

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