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                  <text>Pomeroy-Midd'1e~\~!io

Page 1o-The Dllity Seutilltl

~onday, August 18, 1986
1

--Local Briefs:-__, Cincinnati whts reputation as .JM)m battle center
Grqnd champions named at pul~
l _
Following a week c1 competition, grand champions of til! annual
Meigs County Fair kiddie tractor pull were named following final
events on Saturday a1temoon.
First place In the 35 to 55 pound category went to Eric Wagnerwtth
Chad Sloan taking seconcl. First place In the 5611! 75 pound category
went to Aaroo Brown with Paul Smith taking second.
The top four winners received trophies and cash awards.

Chain saw conte~t winners
Sawing their way 1D cash prizes Satufday afterroon at the Meigs
County Fair In the annual chain saw contest were several Meigs
County residents.
First place winners In the stock chain saw competition were: 0.2,
John L. Ridenour, Chester; 2.1.J.5, Ridenour; 3.~.5. Cecil Midkiff,
Hemlock Grove; 4.6-5.5 and 5.6 and up, two firsts, Ed Werry,
Pomeroy.
In the modified chain saw competition, Mldkl!f won first place In
the ().5 competition and Ridenour was first In sawing In the 5.1 and up

category.

Patrol tockets motorist
Eric Taylor, 19, Racine, was cited by the state highway patrol
Sunday for failure to maintain an assured clear distance, resulting In
a two-car accident on County Road llln Suttoo Township.
According to the patrol's report, Taylor was eastbound on :ll at 1
a.m., tralllng a car driven by Randall Simpson, '!1, Rllclne. Simpson
slowed to avoid strtklng a deer crossing the road and was struck In
the rear by Taylor, who was unable to stop In time. Both cars were
damaged moderately.

Divorce action filed in court
Connie Kay Chevalier, Racine, has flied for a divorce in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court from Allen Keith Chevalier,
Reedsville, charging gross neglect of duty and extreme cruelty.
Granted a dissolution of marriage were Jeannie D. Nease and
Stephen H. Nease.

KC pool closes Tuesday
The Kyger Creek pool at Cheshire will close for the season
Tuesday, according to a spokesman for the Gallla County Local
School Dlstrtct.

' ·"l

Iii¥! liA ~leaded Into an
unbj!Uevable era of repression,"
Slrklti said,
...
Klr~ say•lhe restrictions placed
on pQmoa;rapey In Cncln!l&amp;tl gave
hope 1Q .~her antl·po~grapey
~pi " the nation. .
·
"QI!r alm'fl'om the beglnnblg bas
~ · ~n · dlapense inOre light tht
heat,'' fllld tbe fol1ner pastor of
CoUeae J{IU Pfesbytel:lan',Cburch.
"We'Vf. w~~ . to let ~~ ·

CINCINNATI (UPI) -Nota day
goes by without a call to Cl!idMati's National Coalition Against
Pornography from anti ·
pornography activists In other
cities who need Ideas on how to
exterminate from X-rated book·
stores, movie houses and nude
dance bars.
"I feel as It we've been riding a
whale through til! ocean," said the
Rev. Jerry Kirk, president and
founder of the three-year-old coall·
lion. "We can't keep up with aU the
phone cails and requests for
assistance.''
Moral activist from Pittsburgh to
Atlanta, from and Columbia, S.C. to
Little Rock have learned to use the
coalltiop as a powerful source In
their local llghts against
pornography.

citizens know what can be done to
Interpret the First Amendment and
re$lst the harm of violent and
degrading pornograpey," he said.
A substantial flow of cash will be
needed If the National Coalltlon
Against Fl:lmograpey Is to achieve
Its 1\Qal d. ridding the land of
hard-core and chlld pornograpey.
To attain' this, the coalition has
hired Russ Reid, the publlc rela·
.lions agency that promoted Moth·

ers Against Drunk Driving Into a
housdlold name. Initial plans call ·
for a nationwide direct-mall cam·
paJgn to poll attitudes about
pom0grapey and solicit funds from
mWJons of homes.
Countering the project Is 11
$900,(0) CIIJllpalgn proposed by,
Gray and Co., a Waslllngton, D.C.,
public relations firm to the Councll
lor Perkldlcal Dlsll'ibutors Assocla·
tlon, wmse struule Sirkin relates

Jim Kelly signs
with Buffalo Bills

Partly cloudy tonight, with a
low In the mid 80s. Mostly cloudy
Wednesday, with highs In tbe

418

PICK-4
0523

•

Vot.36. No. 74

low 80s. The probablllty of
precipitation is 20 pereent
through Wednesday.

•

at y

enttne
1 Section. 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 19, 1986

Copyrighted 1986

26 Centt

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Group seeks merit selection of Ohio judges

Kirk says he's heard other
anti-porn activist respond saying,
"every time we gl!tsomethlngfrom
Cincinnati It give us a shot In the
arm. We're up and on a high for
weeks. It makes us know we're not
alone."
But It receiving' advice from
coalition leaders such as Kirk and
execut!Ve vice president Richard
McLawhorn Is Uke getting help
from the masters, talking to H.
Louis Sirkin Is a warning.
"It's . scary to me. What's the
dl!ference between this group and
Rev. (Sun Myung) Moon's cult?
They're a dangerous voice scaring
people with mind control," said
Sirkin, who has earned national
recognition for successfully defend·
lng retailers of allegedly pomogra·
phlc materials from criminal
charges.

GIIWI- Eight llltle 11r1s were nained the wtnnen
clurlll« Saturday's ..,..., preUy baby conlelt at the
Metp County Fair. In froot, lett 1o II~, are David
Tiemeyer, uttle Mr. Melp Counly Fair; Amanda
Priddy, &amp;-3 monlhs, with mother, Tamml Priddy;
'Dffany Manley, U months, with lather, Mldlael
Manley; Je881ca.Cwfman, 6-12 montM, with mother
Brenda Curfm• Rachel Cbapman, 1:1-18 montbs:

public service' organizations represented In Citizens
for Merit Selection of Judges.
The the petition supports the creation of a merit
system of. appointing and retaining Ohio Supreme
Court and Court of Appeals judges. It would be added
to ballot as an Initiative.
Jacobs said the amendinent would take partisan
politiCs out of the selection of judges and substitute a
bi-partisan system In which a commission of dtlzens
II,'Oukl oorrilnate a group of judges for the 1\Qveroor to
consider as appointees.
After an Initial term, judges would maintain their
seats It they receive an affirmative vo~ from at least
55 percent of the voters.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPii -Citizens for the Merit
Selection of Judges and the Ohio State Bar
Association are urging Ohioans to support an
amendment to the Ohio Constitution that would
change the prooess of electing Supreme Couri and
Court of Appeals judges tn the state.
·
.
Bar President Leslle W. Jacobs and Diana
Winterhalter, president of the League of Women
Voters In Ohln, held a news conference Monday to
launch a petition drive that will attempt to gather
400,(XX) to 500,(XX) sfgnatureS over the next several
months -to place a the amendment on til! ballot
sometime In 1987.
Jacobs urged the 18,500 members of the bar to help
circulate the petition which Is backed by 23 Ohio

wtlh mother, 'Ialrut\Y Olapman; and Rachel As~MJ,
UUie Mils Melp CauDty Fair. Second row, letllo
right, are Krllllm Napper, 18-:U IIIOIIIbs, wtlhmother,
Sllella Napper, Sara McDaalel, lwll years, wllh
mother, Rhonda McDaniel; Celella DUiard, tine
years. with mother,lmo JeaulllevU; 0w1a Burp;·
four years, with grandmother, Rosemary Hysdl.

The plan would not affect on local judge seats unless
voters tn a particular county vcte to extend the merit
system to their local elections.
Jacobs said tr Is Ironic that 34 other states and the
Dlstrtct of Columbia have adopted some form of
judicial merit selection over the past 45 years whlle
Ohio - the state where the merit plan was first
proposed In 1938 - still doesn't use it.
"The Ohio State Bar Assoclatlon has worked for
adoption of a judicial merit plan for nearly 50 years,
and we are proud to join moll' than :Jl other publlc
service organizations working to place this Issue
before the voters In 1987," Jacobs said at a news
conference.

"Lawyers have an ethical duty to aid In Ire
'!;election of judges who are weU qualified and who wDI
place legal principle above potitical expediency," he
said. "We are convinced that adoption d. this
carefully designed merit system will Improve the
administration of justice and insulate Ohio's top-level
judiciary from partisan potitics and special-Interest
money."
Jacobs urged bar members to contribute time anq
money to tl¥! petition drive and public educatloneffprt
about the amendment. He said he and other bar
leaders plan to speal\ hefi:lre civic groups across the
state durtng the coming months to expaln the
proposal and seek public support for Its passage.

Pomeroy
acts upon
ordinance

Racine endorses
merchants festival
Meeting Monday In recessed
session, Racine VU!age Councll
endorsed the Racine Merchants
Association's annual fall festival for
Oct. 4.
Assisting the merchants In the
sponsorship of this year's festival
wUtbetheRaclneAmerlcanLeglon
and the fire department.
Papers for the village's Commun·
lty Development Block Grant are
ready to be mailed to Buckeye
Hills-Hocking Valley Regional De·
velopment District for Input before
the papers are submitted to the
Meigs County Commissioner's. The
vlllage will put an additional $73.ro,
besides labor, Into the park development project which Is being funded
through the CDBG program.
The Shrine Park Committee
reported a number of groups have
~the Pl\l'k's shelter hotise for

'reu~tlf~elfll!ier.
On Saturday, Sept. 14, the park

committee Is sponsoring another
free evening of entertainment with
rnuslc to be provided by the Bend

River Boys Band and others. The
firemen's auxlliarywUJhavean Ice ·
cream social that evening at the
park with activities to get under·
way at 7 p.m.
Council extended the probationary appointment of Joe Kirby as
deputy marshalllr six months.
In a related matter, a new
resident to the village, Joe Drasko,
has exiJ'essed his desire to councll
of obtaining pollee training. CouncU
suggested Drasko check to see It Ills
veteran's teneflts will pay for the
required schooling. Council lndl·
cated a wUUngness to have Drasko
commissioned and bonded so he
may attend Peace Officer's Train·
lng School.
Council authorlzedenterlng Into a
contract with Bill Parsons for tree
removal within the vlllage. Work Is
to begin Saturday.
Council discussed several Inter·
sections In the vUJage that shoUld
havelefUurnsbanned,however,no
action was taken.
· (Continued on Page 10)

· " ·. " • ·- •
TEMPORAKY KOAO -A temporal)'
11811
been COIIIItructed on Ohio 124 at Racine where a
culvert UDder lhe highway 'Is being n,~laced by the

•· ..
Ohio Deparlment of

A culvert on 1%4
betweenPortlaadandLonglloUomhasalreadybeen
replaced. A third culvert at Syi'IICIIlle wm also be
replaced this summer.

Pomeroy Vlllage Councll approved the second and third
readings of an ordinance to vacate
a portion of Third Street when It
met Monday In regular session.
The street Is no longer main·
talned for traftlc and after It Is
officially abandoned, the property
may then he sold for development.
Council approved the ftrst read·
lng of an ordinance il allow the
village to sell at public auction a lot
behind the Sugar Run Mlll. Council
wlll then use proceeds from the sale
to purchase a piece of property
which adjoins the vlllage's park 1n
that same area.
In other matters, council dis·
cussed the need for about $2,000
worth of parking meter parts to
repair village meters. It was noted
that many of the village's meters
are either broken or mJsslng and
til! vlllage has no extra meterswtth
which to replace them. It was
decided that parts slvuld be
purchased only as needed In order

New buduetary
estimates signal sp·ending
cutbacks~~:~~~s;:$:::ft:
e
.

New

~
WASHINGTON (U!J,i'
- To·
day's estlrnates~the budget
dell.clt, requtrea under the Gramm·
Rudman balanced budget law, wlll
mean major spending cuts unless
Congress.can reduce the red Ink,
says the head of the Senate Budget
Commlttee.
Congressional efforts to cut the
deDclt, however, may get a boost
from the tax reform bill. Prellml·
nary estimates show It wtil ralse$11
billion next fiscal year, although It
is supposed to neither lose nor gain
over five years.
In a letter to colleagues on the

KOS

etition!

South Central Ohio
Partly cloudy today, with highs tn
the low 80s. Partly cloudy tonight
and Tuesday, with a low tonight In
the mid 00s and highs Tuesday In
the low 80s.

generic price!
Kings&amp;IOOs

'';oi

One ticket 'nets prize

..,.

I

Mfr.suggested retail prico

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'
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.
~-·.

12 mg "tar:' 0.9 mg nicolino av. per cigarette by FTC method.

'

OMB and CBO planned to
formally release the joint deficit
estimate for flscall987 late today,
but most of the 111mbers have been
known 'tor weeks. The COO est!·
mates the deficit at about $173
bllllon and the OMB's projection Is
expected to be about $154 bllllon.
Social Security and other l!deral
retirement programs are exempt
from Gramm-Rudman cuts, and
cth:!r programs, llke Medicare, are
partially protected.
Co~ has a month to avert til!
across-the-board cuts. Under
Gramm-Rudman, another report

on the economy Is due in Ocbe
to r,
and If lawmakers are within $10
bUUon of til! largl't, no cuts wUJ be
required.
"This Is not an Impossible task,"
Domentcl wrote. "We can enact
legislation that wlll allow us to set
priorities for spending and avoid
~:.. mechanical and mindless

II Congress falls to enact deficitreducing legislation, however, 11
would be forced to vote on the
UJ1l01lular across-the-board cuts
just before the November elections.
TheSupremeCourtthrewoutthe

partnership.
"It was an opportunity. for
several open and frank. exchanges
of views," Celeste said. "Til! joint
communique wDl continue to buUd
oo a strong bond between our two
peoples."
Celeste said the 1\Qal c1 the
communique Is to conUnue to work
ioW!lrd expanding trade cpportunl·
ties In Ohio and Huhelln a way that
will be mu tuall)l heneflclal.
"Tog!!ther we apect to maintain
a strong commitment to build on
our sisterhood and bring about new
areas d. ecooomlc oooperatton,"
Celeste said. "It Is a close example
d. the IJlodrelatlonshlphetweenthe

(lt'Ol)le of Ohio and the people of
Ollna."
'The communique also says the
Ollnese plan to Iring the Wuhan
Acrobatic 'Iroupe to til! fair next
year. CelestesaldHubel'sexhlbltat
this year's fair, the IJ'OVInce's fifth,
Included sales oftextDes and small
machinery.
· Ohio Is also to participate In a
trade ahlbltlon In Hubel sometime
next year.
Guo Invited Celeste to visit Hubel
again at the earliest and most
convenient tlme.
"We have enjoyed warm hospl·
tallty here and we feel as If we are
living among oor friends," Guo
said .

Tax refortn may be complex for some

Regular &amp; Menthol.·

SURGEON GENER.AL'S WARNING: Quitting Smoking
No~ Greatly Reduces Serious Risks to Your Health.

Senate budget panel, Sen. Pete
Domenlcl, R·N.M., said a joint
report due late today from til!
administration's Office d. Management and Budget and the Congres·
slnnal Budget Office wUJ show an
average deficit of slightly below
$165 bllllon - $20 bllllon aver
Gramm-Rudman's $144 billion
maximum deficit for fiscal 1987.
"As a result (this will require)
across the board cuts d. 5.5 percent
for defense and 7.5 percent for
non-defense to meet the 1987
target," Domenlcl wrote.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)- An
Guo Zhenqlan, 1\Qvernor of the
agreement pledging contlnued rela· province, said a seven-member
lions between Ohio and the Chtnese trade delegation toured factotles,
province of Huhel has been signed schools and farms during alive-day
by Gov. Richard F . Celeste and til! mission Just ending. It was Guo's
leader of the communist first visit to Ohio.
government.
Guo, speaking through an Inter·
Hubel. Ohio's sister province in · preter, said delegates on the trade
the People's Republic of China , and mission were Interested In soot
Ohio agreed Monday to continue a blowers for bollers produced at the
relationship formed seven years Diamond Fl:lwer Co. In Lancaster
ago.
and ftttlngs made at Mid-State
The communique guarantees Bplts &amp; Nu1S Co. Inc. In Columbus.
that merchants from Hubel wlll
He said no contracts were signed,
participate in the 1987 Ohio Stat,e but added that meetings With
Fair and It sets reciprocal trade rej,resen tatives d. 100 Ohio commissions by delegates from til! two pan les were part of the developgovernments for 1987 and 1988.
ment of a long-term trade

Taste breakthrough,

The probability of precipitation Is
20 percent today and near zero
tonight and Tuesday.
Winds wlll he tight and from the
northeast today and Ugh! and
va riable tonight.
Ohio Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
Achan&lt;l! &lt;t showers and thunder·
storms each day, with highs In the
Ills. Overnight lows will rang!' from
the upper !'ils to the lower 00s early
Wednesday and In the 00s Thursday
and Friday mornings.

hazard at the bottomc1LinootnHlll,

Celeste inks pact with Chinese province

Ohio weather

CLEVELAND (UPl l - A jack·
pot of S1,3ll,l'!l awaits til! ooe Ohio
Lottery Lotto player who holds a
ticket with the numbers 1. 17, 18, 22,
23 and 28.
The numbers were drawn Satur·
day tor thelottecy'sweeldygameln
which $3,358,125 woi:1h of Uckets
were sokl.
The number c1 players who chose
four or nve of tile six winning
numbers, along with the amount of,
money they won wUI be announced
Moni:lay. Tile mtlmated Jaclq)Ot for
next Satuida)''llottery 15SlmWJon.

Daily Number

-Page 3

Emergency nms
Meigs County Emergency Medl·
cal Services' workers were busy
over the weekend with 11 calls on
Saturday and six on Sunday.
Saturday at 4 a.m., Middleport to
247 North Third for Mary Wallace to
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 11:49 a.m. to 1667
Lincoln Heights for Michael Grlf·
flth to Holzer Medical Center;
Syracuse at 9: 13 a.m. from the
fairgrounds with Paul Collins to
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 12:23 p.m. to 1665
Lincoln Heights for Margaret Karr
to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Racine at 2:ffi p.m. to Bashan for
Charles Bissell to Holzer Medical
Center; SyraCUSf at 5:48p.m. from
the fairgrounds with Rose Plants to
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 7 p.m. to til! strip mine
on Ohio Glllor Rhonda Phelps Who
was dead on arrival; Middleport at
7: 19 p.m. transported Rod Manley
from the same strip mine to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syra·
cuse at 11: 09 p.m. transported
Terry Roush from an aum accident
oo Forest Run Road to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Fl:lmeroy at
11: 11 p.m. transported Mike Bar·
trum from the same auto accident
to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 11: 24 p.m. to Ohio G!l
for Ru~ll Cullums to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Sunday at 12: 20a.m. to403Sprlng
Ave. for Ellzabeth Hepp to Veterans Memorial Hospital: Racine at
12:28 a.m. to Fifth Streetfor Randy
Tucker who was treated but not
transported; Racine at 9:31a.m. to
Bashan for Charles Bissell to
Holzer Medical Center; Middleport
at 6:19 p.m. to Story's Run for
Nancy Plants who was treated but
not transponed; Tuppers Plains at
6:40 p.m. transported Christina
Goldbu I)' and Denzil Hudson from
an auto accident on Ohio. 248 to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Ra·
cine at 10:50 p.m. to Oak Grove
Road for Curt Johnson who was
dead oo arrival.

Ohio Lottery

I

•

r

I

WASHINGTON (UP!) - For
many Americans, simplicity Is not
one of the virtues they can apect to
find In the new Income lax system
approved by H011se and Senate
negotiators.
Even though one of the original
goals of tax reform was to come up
with a less confusing system, many
taxpayers who Itemize deductions
may, under the new plan, ftnd
themselves facing surprising new
degrees of complexity.
.
At a quick glance, tht! ~appears
to be amazingly simple, dropping
the cuiMlt 15 tax brackets to two
and slashing numerous deductions .
However, sprinkled tlrouihout
are provisions that could oompli·
cate matters, especially In the ftrst
few years of the plan when certain
tax breaks are gradually lncreas·
lng and decreasing and new

calculations will be required.
Even when the bill is fUlly
effective, taxpayers would have to
try to determine whether they
qualify for certain tax breaks or
how much c1 those deductions they
could use.
For example, therewtlitd be new
rules for Individual retltement
accounts·thaHwukl allow lite IUD
deduction for some pmpe, dltfer·
ent partial cleductlobs lor others
· &amp;!ld 111 deduction at aU for stUI
others .
"If Ws tully Implemented without
changes It could he simple," said
Henry Bilch, JI'I!Stdent d. H&amp;R
Block, Inc., wHch hamles tax
matters mostly for middle-Income
peeple. "But In the next tlve years
there are phase-Ins and phase- ·

oom."

Other accounting experts added passage."
And Sen. BDl Bradley, 0-N.J.,
that for very sophl5tlcated tax
planning, the problems muld be del'ended the blll, which stUJ must
be apJrOVed by both houses c1
even more complicated.
But President Reagan supports Cmgres,s.
the bill, although II! might have
Lar!lely because d. the Increased
designed some elements ol It standard deduction and personal
dltlerentzy, Wblte House apokes· exemption, he said about 15 million
man Lany Speakes slid Monday. people Who 'Itemize deductions will
Whether or not Reagllil will tJy Ill m IOnjierdo so and will ftle a "short
revile the measure after expected tmn" return. Also, about 6 ntlllon
pas•age by Congress, •'w!ll!ld de- poor people would be takl!ll ott the
pend m what's In the analysis" tax rolls and not m}ulred to ftle any
being done on the measilre, return.
Speakes said.
Bli those will continue to llemlze
"But I think "(Treasury I Secre- maytlod It lou&amp;b todeta'mlneeven
tary (James) Baker has Wll'lled eo what tax rate they are paying.
clolely with tliat confertllce comFor example, the much-heralded
mllfA:e m bplh aides," said Speakes, two-rate'structure In the bUI wookl
"that li!IJTing any iltal surprlle, I notbejpn Ullt11l988. Nextyearthere
think the JI'I!Sid!mt's behind the bill woukl be fllie' brackets between 11
and certainly wUI work tlr Its pel'cent ~d 38.5 percent.

'
I

'~

automatic spending reduction
procedure that was supposed to
leave the distasteful budget-cutllng
task to the comptroller general. An
unsuccessful attempt was made
last week Ill restore an automatic
deficit-cutting process.
Final congressional action on
many spending bUis has been put
c1f untO Congress returns from Its
summer recess In mid-September.
Among the bllls 10 be considered Is
a detlclt·reductlon measure total·
lng about $7.3 . 1llllon, and some
budget experts have suggested
adding more to that as a way to
meet Gramm-Rudman's targets.
Gramm-Rudman, passed last
year, requires the current $2ll
bllUon deficit to he cut In annua t
steps untD the budget Is balancedthe deficit Is cut to 11'1'0- In 1991.
Under til! law, each year's annual
deficit Is to be estimated by the two
largest government economic
agencies - the OMB and CBO.
Congress' Joint Tax Committee
projected the lax reform bill, on
which House-Senate conferees
reached IJ'ellmlnary agreement
Saturday, will raise $11 bllllon In
fiscal 1987 but lose $17 btlllon In
fiscal 19111.
It loses $15 billion In fiscal 1989,
but raises 119 bllllon In flscall900 and
raises $12 billion In ftscal 1991.

Law lncame lu Breakdawn"
·EIIllmples conSiruCied from rypal

r••,.,..3fj.

ra~ ~anos

Jolnl to~!ngo~Ra~

~~;- $0200
,.,....,. ,n.eeo 1n S2 aeo

"'*"en

[[

~no~~~~~~
vlate
the problem were decided
upon .
Pomeroy resident Bob &amp;ck was
at the meeting to request permls·
slon to oolld a permanent drive
from the street to property on
Mulberry Avenue, which he recently purchased. Buck said he
would have a drain Installed
beneath tl1e drive. Council ap·
proved the request.
Present for the meeting were
Mayor Richard Seyler· CouncU·
members John Ande~n. Larry
Wehrung, Betty Baronlck, Henry
Werry,BruceReedandBUlYoung;
and Clerk-Treasurer Jane Walton.
Council mded the meeting In
recess.

EPA slates
hearings
By United Press lntematlonall
Aseries of public hearings will
he held by the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency on a
controversial proposal by Mead
Corp. to use paper sludge
containing small amounts c1
lethal dioxin In land-reclamation
projects.
The Issue has generated a
flrestorm &lt;t protest In southeast
Ohio, especially since thi! EPA's
public notice anoounclng prell·
mlnary approval c1 ·the plan
faUed to mention the p-esmce d.
dioxin In the sludge.
Darlene Barrett of the Hock·
ing- Valley Land!UJ aeanup
Committee In Hocking County,
said the Mead sludge, called
Bypro and produced at Its
&lt;l!UIIcothe plant, has been used
experimentally In eight sou·
theast Ohio counties since l911l,
without EPA approval.
Mead was told by El'A
d.flclals last year to·stop usiJti
the sludge for reclamatbn c1
strtp.mtned land aftEr federal
authorttles found dioxin l1udae.
from paper mills h Maine and
Wl&amp;consln.
·• '

REFORM EFnCDJ- TN1

Mead's proposal calls !M',
using a sludge-dirt mix COIIIaln- .
tng up to 10 parts per trillion ol
dioxin on un acres c1 ~p;

H-e Senate conference com-

mined lands In Jack.;on, Hook·
lng, Lawrence, Perry, GaWa. .
Meigs and Vernon rountlei. •

ll'l(lhlc lhlrn • breUdowu ot
the locome lax biD that the

mittee appi'OV1!d over the weekend. (UPI)

�_Tu_e_~_a~y~·-A_ug~u~~~19~·~,~~~8~6_____________________________P_o_m_e_ro~y~-M~~t·~~l~epo
~rt~·~O~h~~--------------------------~The~~D~a~ily~~
~·~"~~~-~P•ag
~e--~1~

Th~

Not

Daily Sentinel

Ul CG!Iri !!Reel
'.
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE ~I&amp;ESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON .\REA

tllb

B!m.~
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.

~.....-.-,,.,....,.c::~,.,.
\

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Pu!JIIsher

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOBHOEFUCH

Aulfltlllll Publlflher/Coalroller

General Maaacer

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and tbe American Newspaper
Publishers Association.
.

.

~egotiable - ,- - - - - - ; - - _J_ame_' s_
.--J........
K--:il~:. ''t.......
nc_k:

WAsHINGFON - ·One alt8mon. presS, which has covered tbe stocy microseconds. Scores of ~ptiCal
last week, the president walked Intensively, or perhaps It tels us sCientists have said Oatly that no
. over to the Old Executive Oflk:e 9:lmething at tbe publlo'~t unwtlllng· such device'\.can be invented and
Bulkllng to talk about his beloved ness to read or to Usten to anytling successtully oepioyed.
"ClearlY," said the president,
Strategic Defense Inltlatlye (SOl). having to do with nuclear war.
"intetllgent
and well-meaning indl·
His remarkS were rot widely
The idea, in brief, is to develop a
vlduals
.can
be .Q'apped by a
reported, in par,t because the )l'eSS defensive shield against incoming
mind·sel,
a
way
of :~JUnking that
was not ~ltlCaUy invited, and in nuclear missiles. 'lbe''technotogy is
part becaus'e.he was restating basic mind·hol:!lling. AU tHe presli:k&gt;nt prevents them from seeing beyond
what has already been dollll and
positions. He ought to be heard.
~ asklld is that American scient·
'Ibe poUs indicate that tuny half of ists rome up with a device that will makes them uncomfortable with
the country !mows Uttle oc nothing · ' detect a missile as It leaves a sUo, what is untamiUar. And this
of the 3-year-old program rt SDI, or ignore decoys, intercept the mis- mind·set Is perhaps oor greatest
"Star Wars" as the concept Is sUe, and destroy it before it reaches obstacle in regard to SDI.
"Many of tbe vocal ~nents of
popularly known. The figure tells us Its target. This must be accomp. .
something of the efficacy of the Ushed in minutes
llnaUy In SDI, some of tberq wlthimpressive

LE'ITERS ..OF OPINION are welo:~ me . They !lbwld be less than IXl words
long. All letters are subject toed lUng and rnJst be signEd wtth name, address and
tiPlephone number. No lllsl&amp;nEd letters wOI be pubUshed. Letters should be In

iOod taste, addresslng Issues, not SErsooalllles.

Major difference
'Ibe sceae.was the Senate Judiclacy Committee room at the q:&gt;ening of
conflrmatkm hearings on the rominatlon of Antonio ScaUa to the Supreme
Court.
Sen. Alan Simpson, R·Wyo., was taUdng to ScaUa, but talking about
Justice WUilam Rehnquls~ who had occupied the witness seat the previous
week during hearings on his rominatlon to be chief justice.
Simpson was angry about the repeated criticism of Rebnqulst for
supporting racial segregation when he was a Supreme Court law clerk in
the l95ls and for his activities as a Republican poU watcher in 1964 when
witnesses 'said he harassed black and Hispanic voters.
Noting t!Jat there were some senators m !be committee who had q:&gt;posed
civiLrights.legislatlon several decades ago, Simpson as~ whether they
would be forever subject to criticism regardless of their record since.
He did not say so, but he could have been lalking about Sen. Strom
'Ibu111l000, R.S.C., who set the world record for a ooe-man BUbuster by
talldni for 24 hours and 18 minutes against a civU rights bill in 1957.
When the clvU rights bills he fought became law. Thu11110nd stopped
giving black·baiting speeches, hired black staff members and started
working lor the interests of black as well as white SOuth Carollnians.
Slmp90n's unspoken question was, " If dvll rights advocates can in·gtve
a 'Ibunnond, wll)' can't they get o!f Rehnqulst's case, or at least give him
the benefit of the doubt?"
'Ibere is another permutation of this question that arises from the
Relulqulst case. Sen. Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts, among other
Democrats, demanded access to memorandums written by Rehnquist
when he was a Justice Department official In the Nixm administration,
and hinted darkly of a cover·up when they were denied by President
Reagan.
During a discussion at the Rehnquisl hearings, a friend as~
indignantly, who was Kennedy, whose explanations of Cllappaquiddlck
stW do not satisfy many people, to be talking about cover·ups?
'The answer, of course, is the same to both Simpson and the young friend.
Both Thunnond and Kennedy have repeatedly submitted themselves
and their records to the voters who sent them to Washington and been given
l'eiiE'Wed mandates to serve. They have taken the test of election and

Letter to the Editor
A solution to the problem

roy knows, parkin~;. is a critical
J)illblem at times.
·I have noticed ooe )I'Oblem, that
die people working in P.1meroy
-Jliii'k as close to their doors as they
leaving ro parking lor the
customers. It's a shame that the
e~~stomers supporting a town as
hli~ for business as Pomeroy
ll)luld have to walk the farthest.
Customers don't owe us wything,
llUt we, the l:llslness peJple, have to

can.

Pomeroy

Today in history
By Ualled ...._lata's

n all

:Today is Tuesday, Aug. 19, the 231st day of 1986 wtth 134 10 bUow.
·'Ibe moon is ruu.
:'Ibe mom!nil stars are Mercury and JUJiter.
''Ibe evening stars are Venus, Mars imd Satu"l·
:'lbole bom on this date are under the sign at Uo. They Include English
p1et John DlydeD in J63l. Coonectlcut clockmaller Seth 'Thomas In 1'7!5,
statesman Bernard Baruch in lBlO, aviation pioneer Orville Wright In l8'll,

~fi!!lliMdeslperCOcoChanellnl883,h~rlltO&amp;denNashln:tiiOO.
ploDe« •t-'llloll engineer PhUo FamaW'th In :ID, publllher Mail.'olm
YJI'Ilel in 1119 (age 67), and jockey WWle SNlemlker In 1931 (age !II).

...

NETl'l.ES UPSE:l' - San Diego JIUIIJager Slt'Ve Broskeepsanangry

•

Scoreboard ...
Majors

ness - In an administration whose
policy Is b get the federal govern·
ment o!f the backS of local
communities - infuriated Lantos.
In his confidential letter to Engen,
he wrote:
"I wish to re-emphasize my
deeply held view that it is bad public
policy to atlempt to blacknuill the
San Francisco lnternatlonal Air·
port with the threat of withholding
fUnds because of Its appropriate
attempt to mitigate the horrendous
problem of aircraft noise - a ·
nightmare for tens of thousands of
citizens who Uve nearby.
"The airport continues to be
under the threat that badly needed
funds - to which ·the airport ts
entltled and which areforthesafety
of the millions at travelers who use
the facillty - wtli be withheld
unless the airport surrenders to the
unacceptable demand that aircraft
which do not ll'leCt noise standards
be allOwed to land."
What exacerbated Lantos' out·
rage was the fact that while the air

Californi a at ONrolt. right
Bos10n a t Mln!Y'~ta . Al!ht
Tf'Ka~

NATIONAL I..E,\fa ·t:

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Mond ~l''s

f 'lncimL&lt;Jii h. Ci;Ul Olt'-"' ·,
Ho1mon :1. Pl11.~hlln:h 0
~ 1'\1' Y or k ~- Lo.~ An)[f'ir'!' 4
1\Jn;duy '~

freight company's complaint wu
b?ing reviewed by the F M, the
agency's chief legal counsel, E.
Tazewell Ellett - the man who will
ultimately rule oo the Issue - was
making public statements desci'l!J.
ing the airport's retusaJ to let
BurUngton Northern's 7t11s land as
"Oagrant discrimination." ln a
~h to the DaUas·Fort Worth
Chamb?r of Commerce, EUett said •
that "we intend to stq:&gt; that :
discrimination."
Lantos suggested that he ,and
Engen meet to discuss the situation.
Engen replied that he would be
!ieased to meet wtth the congress.
man - but that he would not
dlsa~ss the subject Lantos wanted
to bring up.
Footnote: A spokesman for Bur·
lington Northern characterized his
company as a "victim'' caught In a
light between tile airport and the
FAA He pointed out that the
company's 7rJis met the FAA's
noise standards and those at other
airports - just .not San Francblro.

Gamf'!oo

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E8ll4!l'Ji.molt ~ the dlaln, has been

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dlatac.lel bel the water 1Mlli as

,\llanta ill Cl\k'rrg£1 Ph!larlf'lphla a t San

Sl L rllll' al ctnrinnaU . night
Mn ntre;rl at San l)lr~ . niJ!hl

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M il&gt;~ illlkl' (' oil Ck'l·l']iU"HI. nil!hl

,

Publls hrd f'VC'ry afiNnoon. Monday
1h rou~h F/·tday. Ill Court Sl·.. Po·
mProv. Oh o, by lhf' Ohio Vall£&gt;y Pub·
l ls h l n·~

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Inl a nd D ~:~ ll v Pr('SS As!'ocla llon and lhC'
Ohio Nr"'sPa]X'r Assoclat ton. Nalional
Advrrt lslnll RrprME'ntaUve. Branh'a m
NrwspapC'r Sales. 733 Thi rd AvPnul'.
Nrw York. N('w York 10017.

POSTMASTER: Srnd address chan,lles

to ThC' Dally SPnHnC'l. 111 Cour1 S1.,

,.

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Pom.•roy. Ohio 4.'l7lll.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Jly Carrier or Motor Route

On• w...k......... ......... ...............11.25

One Mon1 h .... , ...... ......... .... ...... ...$:'1 .45

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PRICE
Da lly .... ........... ,: ................. 2'j

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SubsC"r lb(' rs not df'! l rln~ to pay thrca r·
rlcr may r('ml! In adva nel' direc t to

The Dally Secn tln (') on a3, 6 or 12 month
bas is\ Cr«&lt; U will be g iven car riN l'H ch
wt't'k .
'
No suhlrrlptlons by mall }X'rmll ted In
art'as wherfo M me carrlf'r ¥ rvl ce Is
llvalla blt'.

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Compa ny ~ Mull lmC'dl a.

Po mt'roy . 0hlo 4!i7n9. Ph. 992 -2156. Sf-.
cond C'la !l..~ p Mill~f' pa id i!. l Pomrroy .
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Mi.JJ 8oibocrlpllono

ln1ide Melp Count)' · ·
13 Weeks ·.l..1.........
1........... . Jl7.29 .
2li Weeko..... ...... .... .. ................. $31.(16 ·
!12 Weeks .. ............. ,...... ...... ...... 166.56
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Oullll&lt;lt Mtlp Coullljl

Monday for ~7.ii million

Transactions
&amp;.-;kl'll•t..l
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Kelly signs with Bills;
Earl Campbell retires

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KELLY SIGNS - !luffulo's new q uuo1 erhack, ,Jim KcUy, holds up his
new Bill&lt;\ jersey with his lavorllte num her alter signing with the BBL•

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Berry s World

tlonal · ~!)lnt •Comlhlsalon, : lAn,od"a-U'.S. ageuey, , 11)'1 b
•n'flcs an "l!lllel.,ncy'~ aad
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for fi rst plaN'. II lor

Ul 10'14'11 rlO.J I
14 Louls lam1 Slitl• ' 1!-1·! II
3'1. MH I'\"Iil nd 14·.1 1

Th e Daily Sentinel

•

!D in! ~

16. Wa.~ hln Rfon

Wr•lh'Pid!U''!'; (lam l'l'i

ll\P L'nlll'&lt;l

1UPI &gt; -

r l'&gt;l''() I DOY&gt;' rl~U· :I I, \11:.\'i p m
;..·r·w 'r'ork tDarlln,!! ll .J1 il l Los An Rl·h~
o\",,lo •n, ..-'1;1 I ~· A I . 10:."\"i p.m

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r ll rm' nl n J:: !ll01, 7.:r, p.m.
Monl rNd rSmllh R7r ;rt San Dil'l."l!
rH &lt;J wk lns M-Ml, to:rei
l'h llw;Fiphlu 1H utlson j-IIJ• ar San fran

p.m

tnexocably drawn to the shore. In ·
their ceaseless quest for tranquWty
and $el'enity, however, they have .
b?en oWvlous tD the daqers of tile ·
fragUe envll"'Oiment.
'Ibus, !hie cllfllcultles now being
faced tn !hie Upper Midwest IDd In :
Utah c:ould be atly a portf!it at tar' ~
more severe probleriJs all. across
the globe In the years to colne.

'

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i"&gt;l'f"-S lnr Nnatlnnal floa rd of Ctllrfhl "' Top
!II (~) i ir:•J.!I' loolhall r&lt;l Tln..:s. "11h l b ~l
pl;u "l' \"Otf's ,tnd l a~ l V('llr's 11'('()1'fl in
l ll • ~'fl t ~ ·s .

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revetments have produced only
tlmitoo success.
Here in Glen Haven, the septic
systems required ·to dispose of
lllusmold waste water bave been
rendered useless oo many shoreline
properties. Dunes have been artW·
In early June, it peaked at a caUy propped up with thol!sands at
historic hlgh·water mark ct 4,211.115 · sa'ndbags filled by nlirvous
feet above sea level. 'Ibe swoiien homeowners.
lake roceded sUghtly last tnonth,
For centuries, humans have~
rut not as much as expected. It has
tnundatoo beaches, roads and a
shoreline amusement park and
tbreatebs raU Unes, highways and
some neighborhoods In ·Salt Lak!!
Ctty.
I
AU of those dUtlcultles are
~atively trivial, however, when
mmpiu'ed with the )I'Oblem many
·i' ' cntlsts predict will be poled In
~IJ!Ing years as tv:at·trapping
gasES produced by Combustion
continue buDding up In the Earth's
atmosphere. ·
'Ibat )I'Oduces a "greenhouse
efJect" - a gradual increase in air
temperatures leading · to the slow
melting of polar Icecaps. Finally
the oddltkmal water\wllld aWeD the
world's oceiDI'and inwldate many
coastal corminmlta!s.
'Ibe morelllllllei1lllte probleml ~
the Great Lakell, Which bave a
!ltferent cause, thre4lteb not Cllly
smaU toWIJI b1t alao 10me sectloos
at Chlcaao, Detroit. Cleveland,
Mllwau!Gee, Toldeo, Buftalo, Duluth
· and other c1t1e1 loalted 011 !aka
Erie, Huron MlchlPlt and SUperlor. Late 1..! month, t.be water IMl
Ill -Lite MldJ'an reecbed an
· ·,
Ullpleidlettted blill rl lllil.25 1eet
llbove -leYeL
)
'·

Kan s:l.~( J!~·. ni~~:h l

College poll

-

iti .'Jl.l J;

'1!1
'1:l "fi

l'r-hr gil

"1 ]I

Great Salt Lake has been shrinking
for almost a century because of
evaporaUon induced by the desert
sun. Since the early 1961s, however,
the lake has been rising because of
heavy snowfalls in the area .

at

t::a..t

Danger on shore ______ __R_o_be_rt_~_a_lt_ers
GLEN HAVEN, Mich. INEA) "During a stonn, the waves will
break through the dune line and our
home will be completely sut·
rounded by water," says • one
resident. "On one occaskm, my
family had to.evacuate tbe IDuse."
'lb the south, in the community of
Empire, 50 feet of beach has been
carried away by rising water. ln a
desperate attempt to halt further
erosion, municipal at!lcials have
constructed a seawall of rocks and
rubble.
'lb the north, In tbe town of
Northport, a marina Is half submeri!J!d in water and an adjacent
parldnglotalsoha8beeninundata:l.
In a premtum·)l'iced subdivision,
anxious lllmeowners are paying
$lO,(XX)to$15,(XX)eachtohavethelr
houses rmved back from the
advancing shoreline.
Some people wiD failed to take ·
similar precauUons in Luddlngtan,
100 miles south of ~. Watched
helplessly as their llluses tllppled
Into the water.
·
. In each lnltanoe, the besieged .
communi~ II not on a turbule!Jt
ocean coast b1t on the llljpposedly
placid lhore rl Lake MJch1pn.
After'· 15 to ill years ol aboveaverage preclplti~n in tbe 'wet'
Mldwl!8t. ~ter m~ur: of tbe. ll.ve
Great 4kel has·teacii[C!II'"record·

I'

fl)· I nlt••d I' " "'"' lntf'rri:Ukmal

lack Arulerson &amp; Joseph Spear

Francisco Bay, just across the
Bayslllre Freeway from Lantos'
San Mateo County constituents. His
district, just 9:luth of San Francisco
proper, includes 9:lme of the
poebHt.. suburbs In CaUfomla.
Barbecue grWs and backyard
swimming pools are in use virtually
the .year round, and the roar at the
big jets landing and taking off at the
airport is not a welcome intrusion
m the residents' gracious life style.
So under community pressure,
San Francisco International set
ooi.se-level standards below the
FAA's nationwide minlmuln.
'Ibis ruled out the Boeing 'IITT, and
led Burlington Air Freight, which
relies m that rrodel, to complain to
the FAA thl!t the airport was
discriminating against it. The FAA
mt only agreed, but decided to use
Its power of the purse to make the
airport management knuckle
under. The money tt threatened to
withhold was to be used for
Improved safety at the airport.
'Ibis bureaucratlcpresumptuous·

called Nettk•s out on stoiko'S in tilt' sevPnth Inning at Cincinnat i Mo nday
aftcn1oon. The Reds won, (;.5. ii.J I'l l

Gralg Nettles away lrom home plate umpire Tom llaUion alter Halllon

r'\lla n l~t

Fighting for funds

-~\
r{·J

I am satisfied . after ~~ at
some·length witb tbe preiltdent that
any such barpin~M' Js put of the •
quesUon. When the pflliSideDt pts '
his feet dug in, beUeve (rte, tlli6e •
number l2s are set In concrete. SOl ·
is his baby. This Imaginary pro.
gram could be the one aCcompUsh· '
ment l)y which his .presidency .
would find Its plaee in the ~ at :
Annerlcan histOJy. SOl Is to tills
president what the Great Society ·
was i&gt; Lyndon Johnson, the China '
breakthrough was to Richard
Nixon, the Camp Davtd accord was .
to Jimmy Carter. Reagan Ill
absolutely hooked oo the vlskm of a
world free of fear of a n11clear
holocaust . .

LIENS

~Rebnquist,

do everything we can for wr
business.
My 9:llutlon: Don't patronize
those who make you walk! Wltlllut
any business tltngs are tDund to
chani!J!.
It think it's time for action, or we
could let all of our business go
!IOilleWhere else. Where there's a
will there's a way!
'Thank you,
Ed Atkins

.c-~·

Progress has been made over the
past three years, Reagan said. lie
himself Is serenely confident that
continued research will perfec.t a
device that will protect our people,
not just our missile silos. He,
mentioned .no timetables or deacf.'
Unes. The talk here Is that J'e5e8!'Cil
and development, with appropriate
testing, will take another elgbt to 10
years. Two p-esidentlal terms may
have rome and gone before. the
shield could be deployed.
The president last week was
pre~~ching mainly to the choir. His
audience came from such ferVent
8uworters as the Heritage Founda· .
Uon, Htgh Frontier. the Anner\Can,
Defense'l;,&gt;reparedlless-Assoclatlon,
and the American· Conserv,atlve
Trust. But Reagan also was talldhg
-to the Congress and to ~
Amefican peOple. He was trying to ; .
disabuse ev~ooe ofllle notion !bat . :
SDI might be bargained out rl
existen~
IX'Cier to get an
agreement
m the Soviet Union
on control o . reduction of nucleer

arms.

WASHINGTON- Incredible as
it may seem, Federal Aviation
Administration bureaucrats are
and lor that matter all federal judges, are "elected" for willing to withhold tnoney needed to
life by as lew as 50 senators, and, short at Impeachment, never again must make air travel safer in order to
I(! .
-·
..
bow
act'OWII for their actions.
. _ ,
The drafters of the Constltutliin gave life tenure only 10 federal judges down to the FAA's standards on
because they wanted them to make decisions based on lawwH,hout regard·' permissible aircraft noise levels.
The FFA apparmtly intmds to
to popularity. But, having lived under absolute rmnarchy and periodic
tyranny, they also were suspicious at anysystemthatdid mtrequtrepublic make a test case oo t of San
Francisco lnternaUonal Airport,
at!lclals to answer to the people they governed.
'Ibeir soluUon was the Senate " advise and consent" arrani!J!m!!!Jl. In a which had the effrontery to set mtse
sense, by requiring the Senate to conflnn presklentlal appointments, they standards strtcter than those of the
made Its members jointly repon.sibie with the )l'esident for the conduct rt federal agency. Determined to
bend the airport's managemmt to
appointed &lt;t!lcials.
Under those conditions. it Is essential for senators todig as deeply as theY Its wUI, the FFA has thrmtened to
can and ask aU the questions they can think of before voting to gtve any withhold $8 million In ~deral fUnds
person a seat, let alone the center chair, on the highest court in the land. earmar~ for such safety Improvements at San Francisco
InternaUonal as improved runway
lighting.
Rep. 'Ibm l,antos, J).CaUf., in a
letter toFFA administrator Ixmald
Engen, seen by our associate
Lucette Lagnado, accused the
agency of tcylngto "blackmaU" the
airport into relaxing Its noise
standards. The airport is on San

As everyooe shopping In Pome-

scientific 'Credenilals, claim wr
goal ts Impossible; lt can't be mne,
they say. Well, lthlnklt'sbecomJni
Increasingly apparent to every,dle
t!Jat thoSe cJaiming it can't.be done.
have clouded vision. Sometimes
smolie gets In your eyes."

m r'n· ,

lo ll'lolll l'f"('\1" {'OO('h

F'nothall

.h••'

·\li&lt;~nla - Si~TIIod " "kh• n~ · t •iwr~
.Jun•" •tn d A ubr.· Ma11hl'l-l ~ : rtil HllPbi.l('ki•n
,\I Hw hil l'd'on anll ,lc'ff .IH('k'iOn_I'OilV'r·t);ll'k
t:ll r l ,\ lim . QliJI"t('r bark M l('hOII'I Kusr h .
r urudn~ I~&lt;M: k .1
m-.. 11ulln . kl:kl 'f"' Mil«•

By United Pro'" lntematlonal
'1\vo promising quarterbacks
joined the NFI. Mond a)· and one
Pr indk&gt; and 1-:ddW&gt; l',L\ Ior. Ill)!;(' 1:1('kl1'
grea t nmning back ll'll.
\1 i•·l\;1(11 PnrtL\. 11idl- n,..,..in•1· ]);~n"\ I
Jim Kelly and Chuck Long signed
.'ih!'plnd . IY'N'I\W AOO!V'\ 1\ri'M _ l"l'nt!•t
•\ntl\' t.:~hU I"I ' h , runnJnl! hark Mtr h.. ·l
contracts
with the Buffalo Bills and
Wllll i\111 .~ . pldn~ l on in ju1f'd 1'1').1'1'\l' Or•l!•n
Detroit
Lions.
respeclivelv, on a
~tl·o • Pnd 7..arh ;u-:o.· l larn ... . rorn 1·bal'k 11ohh'
lm·k'iOn. IIJ!IIt f'lld Mlkr- l..andrum . rW&gt;IMhi&gt;'l'
day New Orleans Saints nmnlng
r nd Michael Mr lnnl' il.lld df'h-n~ ll'l' !:Jw k
back Ea rl Ca mpbell ra ltrd his las t
! );In WaJ,'Or'l•r ; ~lll:IlPcl wldl&gt; l"l't't'il'l'!"!" a nd
o\uh1Y M a tth('I'O~ .
as a professional football player.
Bulla lo - WaiiNI 1.1 pl:l_n ' l"';: quarll'r
Kelly signed a fi·year, $8 million
llat:' k o\r1 Srhllr hl('r; offm ~ h·(' llnr.•mm O!m
contract with the Bills. making him
l ~•h~•ar . rllrrn•l Cu ldv-'1'11 and .lohn Wojrll •
t·ll&lt;M·s.td; wiB • 1 ·1whw~ ~;~wn Potts. .1 ••·
the highest paid player In t\FL
llow;trd. a ntl Oann1 Kn~l\ t : JMmtrr Oill"ld
histmy. Kelly, who passed for BJ
~an:lo nr.• : kk'kf'r Jason S!l!UI"Oio'!ikV: llnr•
hackrr Mllu' Larkin . safm· OJ a r M-5 Harbl
touchdowns in two seasons wit h II'&lt;'
'-On. t[aht £&gt;nd Kl'lt h [.('!11f'r il nd 1108.' !at·kk'
USFL's Houston Gamblers, is
II;"·•· ~ndN . Plll«''llourp layer&lt;~onlnjun&gt;d
IT"il't"&gt;'f': 11a i M k's .l im PN'I')'ITiiln a rid SfM'f'
expected 1o take part in his fi rst
rla rk ~m d !lllf'barkm; Jim f..tf&gt;lkll o'lflll
workout wit h the Bills Tuesday a t
.lam•" S.:•&lt;J'&lt;~TI~&lt;:I\1.
their Fredonia staiP coll~e tra in ·
lng camp.
"Alii can say is I'm finally llell'."
Kelly sa id at a news conlerene&lt;&gt; to
announce his signing. "I'm an
athlete. I'm a competitor. Wlla ·
tever the sit ua tion ls, I'll give 100
Kffi.TLAND , Ohio (UPII Darrol Ray's hope of a comeback . percenl."
Bills coach Hank Bullough said
aft er a year's absence from pro
fcotball was s.idetracked Monday he was looking fotward to having
when the veteran safety was Kelly ready lor Jhe upcoming NFL
waived by the Cleveland Browns.
season.
" ! thin k he wants lo win,"
"I came to camp (at Lakeland
Bullough
said. "His former coaches
Community College 1 with a gOOd
attitude and I'm leaving the same said that J lm Kelly Is a grea I
way," safd Ray, a five-year veteran leader. He likes to throw. He enjoys
011tol Oklahoma wOO wascut ayea r the game d football.
ago by the New York Jets.
"Kelly is our futu re."
Long, the Llons' No. 1 pick from
"I got a fair shot, but (Browns
head coach) M~rtySchottenhelmer Iowa and the 12th selection overall,
said be didn't have a spot for me. I agreed to a four·year, $1."15 mUUon
didn''t get Ued to, though, and I'm contract foUowing a morning meet·
grateful for that."
ing between his agent Jack Mills
Also waived Monday were quar· and General Ma~ager Russ Tho·
terback Jet! Christensen, line- mas in the Pontiac SUverdome.
backer . Bobby Bell, nose tackle

Browns put Ray
on waivers Monday

Reginlild
.Carr, rwming
guard· center
Ranczy Dausin,
backs

mons, tlgllt ends Jim Talt and Ron

~:~:er~:Ow::~

· to~ P:.w::

r::r~.

Scliantann (puUed 'gro!J! muscle),
det!osiveend~lthBaldw!n (knee
suraecy), COI'I)etback Danny Tay·
lor (aore slllulder) andtackleaJlm
Meyer (80!-f_bac:k) atldScottBolzan .
(strained "''I IIUICie) were paced
on injured reiC!l'VI!. w•

the 1985
fll'isman Trophy ba lloting to Aubum' s Bo Jackson. led Iowa I o the
Hose Dow! last year. Sine&lt;&gt; starting
&lt;IS a
sophomore in 1!ll'1, he
completed 782 of 1,:m passes for
10.461 yards and 74 touchdov.ns.
Ca mpbell , a fonner Heisman
'ii·ophy wumer an d the NFL's
seventh all·tlme rushi ng leader,
retired fo llowing a nlne·year ca·
l'(('r. He was In his third year wit h
the New Orlea ns Saints and was ~3
ya rds shy of IO,OOl career rushing
yards.
· A punishing runner at 5·fOOt· It
and 22'i pou nds. CampbeU spent
most of hls carfl" r wit h Houston . He
was traded to the Saints after the
six th game of the 19&amp;1 season.
Campbell, 31. had arthroscopic
knee surgery befOil' thai season.
"This L~ Ute best thi ng for me and
the Saints," said CampbeU. flanked
by Saints Coach Jim Mora and
Pr,. ident Jim Finks.
"Pro football has done a great
deal for rl'1l' and I'm hapw I played
as bng as I did. It's time this old
rnwboy got on with things. I've b?en
watching myself and my body
reactions and I just wasn't recover·
lng as fa st as I used to. I!I can't give
It my best, I might as well ro t do II."
CampbeUwon the Heisman as a
senior at the University of Texas.
He rushed for 4,444 yards ln four
seasons with tbe Longhorns despite
missing seven games as a junior.

"PRO UDL y PRESENTS"

lltf/

TERRY STARR (STALNAKER)

and

FRIDAY, AUG. 22;...8:00 P.M.-12:00 Midnight
TICKETS: , i6.00 ADVANCE
1
7 .60 AT THE DOOR
,~\
ISET UPS AVAILABLE)
\'t'
FOR IN FORMATION CALL 992· 7111
TICKET$ AVAILABLE AT SWISHER &amp; LOSHE. FOOD SHOP
CAR W~SH &amp; DOWNING CHIL SMULLEN MUSSER INS.

o\

•
Denny, lHO, was tagged lor a -;
two·run homer by Tony GwyMand ,
a mn·sro 1ing double by Terry ·
Kennedy brto.re lefty John Franco
ca me oo to l'l'lieve with t wo 011t and
ru rmers nn s!l·ond and third In the
ninth.
Franm ga1·1' up a two·run,
pinch-hi t double to Kevin McRey·
oo ids befo rP striking out another
pinch· hii!Pr. l.orry l'empleton, to '
end game wit h the tying run on •
soxond ba,;c.
"[)ronn)' had pitched a great
gamP,"

said Franco, who was

creditr&lt;l wit h his :JJth save. "I didn't
want to

{'f )lll f'

in and blow it for

him ."
Padres rrtJJI ~er Steve Boros.
whose r lub sufferEd through a 4·8
road trip that ended M:lnday, said .•
" It wa s anothe r of those late:•:
comebacks that we' re noted for, but ·
we ca me up a little short this time. I '
guess It ju sl was n't In the cards lb r
us.
.
Nearing Ill&gt; end of a 16-game, ·
H&lt;lay ho mes tand, Cincinnati wlll · '
face tlx' St. Louis Cardinals in the .
fi rst of three gam es tonight. Tom. ~
Bm~~ming, 9-10, wtll oppose .the
Ca rds' Tim Conroy. 3·G.

~J 1

JACIC.SON PIKE · AT 35 WEST
Phone 446· 4524

BARGAIN MATHil£5 SAl - SUN &amp;
WEON[ SOAY · Al~[A'!S $,2.5 0
ADMI SSION £~E P ~ TU ES DAY i2.SO

SPECIAL WEDNESDAY
MATINEES
THIS SUMMER!

rela tionshi p."
Long , nmncr·up in

/'ROYAL OAK CAMPGROUND ~:!•
"

CINCINNATI tUPI 1 - Buddv
Bell Is taking it all in stride.
·
"! don't know what's wmng with
me, " said the Cincinnati Reds third
baseman with a laugh, " but it floris
good."
Bell, currently one of the hottest
hitters in thf' majors . had just
belted his fifth homer in the last five
games and seventh in 1J contests lo
ex tend his hitting slreak to 16
games
His three· run blast in the seventh
inning- No. 14 of the yea r for &amp;II
- powPred the Reds to a 6·o victory
over the San Diego Padres Monday.
"I've been working hard and
getting a lot of good advice from
!Reds' hilling coach! Billy DeM ·
ars. Tony Pert&gt;z and my dad," said
Bell, who will be 35 next week.
His father. Gus Bell . played lhe
outfield for Cincinnati fmm 1953 to
1961 and is a member of the Reds
Hall of Fame.
"Dad told me I wasn 't using m)'
hands a ll that much in swinging al .
the ba lL So I started trying Jo hit thf'
baU up the middle," the younger
Bell said. "I'm a line drive hitterbu l
I got that one up today after the
pitcher made a mistake and hung a
brea king ball to me in the seventh."
"I tried to throw a hard slider
past him," said Padres lefty Gene
Walter ruefully after serving up lhe
long ba ll . " It was a little stupid of
me to make a pitch up in his zone in
tha t situatio n when I gotta be {:Oing
after him."
The fac t that he shared Na tional
League player of the week hono rs
wit h lhe Padres' .John Kruk last
week was of secondary lmportane&lt;&gt;
to &amp; II, although it was the firsI time
I he league had selected him for that
honor sine&lt;&gt; he joined the Reds just
over a year ago.
"It' s nice. " remarked &amp;II, "but I
o:fo n't reallv care about it that much.
I'll take 'a win instead ol that
anytime ."
I
"Buddy's In a good groove righl
now," said Reas manager Pete
Rose. "He's just going up there and
hitting the baUhard."
Although his hitting ha ~ sufferEd
from time to time. Bell said his
reflexes on defense haven't slowed.
"I've never lost my reflexes or
range," he replied. " I feel like I'm
pi aying as well defensively'as I ever
have (ln 14 years with the Texas
Ranger and Cleveland Indians) and
I haven't slowed o:fown In that
area."
John Denny, who blanked San
Diego 2·0 on thra · hits last week,
appeared on his way to another
shutout Monday after giving up just
three hits In blanking San Diego
through eight innings.
"II was humid out tbere and he
might rt run oot ol gas In the ninth,"
said Bell. "He's been pitching so
well and had everything under
cont rc l up 10 that point. "

·'I'm glad 1u be in camp and glad
to have it ov('r with," Lung said at a
m·y,~ confcn'nCl'. "I think it' s going
lo be the start of a good. long

rr:;;;;;;;~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;l

=n.~!tv:':!d ~~!

~

Bell continues
streak as Reds
post 6·5 victory

5 DAYS ONLY

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�. Pagu-4- The

Sentinel

By The Bend

Indians humble
Milwaukee, 104
By ROBERTO DJAS
UPI Sports Writer
CLEVELAND (UP!) - No
wonder the members of the ClevE'Iand butipen unofficially are Tom
Candiottl's most ardent fans.
"Whenever Tom Candlotti starts,
It's ilke a holiday," says Indians
reliever Ernie Camacho.
Thanksgiving, no doubt. Candiottl and complete game victories go
hand·in-hand. The right·handed
knuckleballer remained true to
form Monday night , tossing his
· leaguE'-hlgh llth complete game to
lead Cleveland to a 104 decision
over Milwaukee.
"It seems I'm always scheduled
to pitch wheneverourbuUpen needs
a rest the most," said Candiot !1,
12-9, who allowed 10 hits as he
struck out seven and walked four.
"I guess that's OK. As long as l
have runs to work wlth,J can help
this club win. I had a little nausea at
the start, but my stomach and my
rhythm setUed down."
Tony Bernazard and Mel Hall
each drove in three runs to lead the
Indians' offense, tops in the Ameri·
can League in batting with a .276
average.

"ll wasn't easy, because (Mil·
waukee rookle starter Chris Bosio 1
was st riking us out left and right,"
said Bernazard, noting the righthander had nine strikeouts before
faltering.
"This pitcher was aggressive, so
the only way to beat him was to
attac k his first pitch."
Bernazard did just that, leading
off the Cleveland first with his
career-high 12th homer.
Boslo, 0.2 since being promoted
from Vanoouver of the Pacific
Coast League oo Aug. 2. struck oot
the side in the second and fourth
innings and walked three wer 4 1-3
innings before wildness hastened
his departure.
"I had a good fastball but I
couldr't control my breaklng
stuff." hesald . "And t te indians are
hitters. I got some of ttem with
pitches ootslde. but l also got
clobbered.
"Still, I learned a lot. l have to
treat every batter as a lesson."
After Berna11ird's homer, Cleve-

Otis Nixon, who pinch-ran for
Hallin the seventh, stole second and
third before coming in on Tabler's
hit. It is the sixth straight time he
has pinch· run and scored.
After slugging two homers Sun·
day, Cory Snyder was hitless In five
at ·bats with four strikeouts against
Brewer pitching.
in tonigh t's game, Mt:waul&lt;ee
will start ace Ted Higuera (15· 8,
2.78 ERA) against Cleveland's Jose
Roman 11·1. 4.97 ERA) .

Pick Sooners first in
:pre-season grid poll

·Indians to .field
team in Maryland
(UPI) _ The
'Cleveland Indians announced Mon·
:'day that the team will estabtlsh a
-:$olltliern Maryland team In the
Class A Carolina League next

; . CLEVELAND

"~.

.

UCLA plays at Norman CJl Sept. 6.
to open its season .
t'lesta Bowl champion Michigan
returns tie top-ratal quarterback
in tie country in Jim Harbaugh.
Texas A&amp;M, which rErelved five
first -place votes from the Board,
brings back l8 staners from Its first
Cotton Bowl team In l8 years.
UCLA, with Its lmpessive run·
ning game, recelvedfourfirst-!iace
votes. Penn State, the No. I learn in
the oountry for slx weeks last year,
earned two top votes while Ala·
bama garnered CJle. The Crimson
Tide, which has one rtthe natk&gt;n 's
most fearsome defen&lt;Frs in tinebacker Cornelius Bennett, opens
the college football seasm Aug. 27
against Ohio State In the Kickoff
Classic .
No. 7 Miami grabbed three
first -place votes. The Hurrica nes
are led by quarterback Vinny
Testaverde. tie top Helsman
Trophy contender.
Running back Doug DuBose, also
a Heisman challengn, keys No. 8
Nebraska's attack.
Ninth-ranked Ohio State pos·
sesses CJle of oollege football· s rrost
feared receivers in Cris Carter.
Sugar Bowl champion Tronessee
was hurt by graduation, rut still
owns an elit e defense.
Five Soutteastern Conference
teams made thi-top ll wtiletll! Big
Ten and Southest conferenel!s were
represented by thrEI' each.
The 50 members of the UPI
Board of Coaches selErt 15 teams
each In order. with total points
based m15 points tlr ftrst place, 14
fm' s«'Ond. etc. By agreement with
the American Football Coaches
Association, teams that start the
season oo NCM or conference
probation and forbidden to compete
in a bowl are ineligible for the Top
20 and national cha mpionship
consideration by the UP! Board of
Coaches. Those teams are F1orlda,
Southern Methodist and Texas
Christian .

Beat of the Bend

tJDl

JACOBY SCORES - Cleveland's Brook Jacoby soores 1n sixth Inning

By BOB HOEFLICH
gestures d good will. Her address is
Sentinel Slalf Wrler
l29 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, for
The Meigs Coonty Fair Board those who want to send birthday
I ucked out.
wishes.
Weather for this
year's fair was
Betty and Vernal Blackwood
just about perfect
: have returned home from a roost
- no major probpleasant trip to Wisconsin IRils,
1~ untO Sun·
which included a stop at the House
day' the day after
oo the Rocks, a fabulous place.
the final day of
Betty and Vernal markl&gt;d their 2'ith
the fair.
wedding iutnlversary while on the
I still marvel at members of the trip. They parked the car and
board who hang ln there all year traveled by bus to Wisconsin.
long to plan the annual falr and then
during fair week are ali over the
Doug Hemsley, Syracuse, is a
grouoos handling the detalls ln· patient at the Pinecrest Nursing
valved. Some fortitude. I'd say!
Home and would like to hear from
If you noted that Roger Gilmore friends. The room number ls 215
was CJl crutches and was aroond the and the nursing home is in
fair all of the time, there's an GaU!polls.
ex!ianatkln. Roger and his group,
known as Ardvark, dld the sound on
Hope -you keep in mind that this
the grounds for the flrst time this Friday Is when Terry Starr - who
. year - and let me say that I was is actually Terry Stalnaker, son of
the first year that I could under· Mr. and Mrs. Harley Stalnaker,
stand what the anrouncer was Route 7, near Pomeroy- wW be
saying daring the harness oorse making his appearance at Royal
raceJI'Og'l'am- up to row, It's been Oak Park. This marks his first time
mumbo-jumlxl. At any rate, Roger back for any length of time ln seven
was working on the grounds before years and his llr'st professional
the fair J'l'Wiring ln preparation for appearance locally, although te is a
the upoomlng event when a pole professional entertainer In Florida.
snapped. The pole headed over.the A graduate r1 Pomeroy High
well known rocks over the race School, Terry presents a wide
. track and Roger .jumped in the variety of numbers In hls shows.
other direction. He received a
Now - don't get Terry confused
fractured heel and thus the with Bruce, who Is also a son of the
crutches. !ncldenlally, that other Stainakers and is a professional
famllllar face helping with the entertainer. Bruce uses Bruce
sound was Tim Glaze, formerly of Stone as his stage name and he does
Pomeroy.
gospel music presentatklns. Ad·
And history repeats Itself. Rachel vance tickets for Friday can be
Chapman, daughter and C.T. and purchased for $5 while the cost at
Tammy Chapman, was selected as the door ls $7.50. Hours wUJ be 8 to
a winner ln the ll"etty baby contest midnight and tickets are available
Saturday. It was in 1937 that at Swisher and Lohse, Big Bend
Rachel's grandmother, Donna Foodiand and the Downlng-ChUdsJean Smith, Racine, was a winner Mullen Insurance otflce 1r you can
: in the19Jiprettybabycontestatthe call 992·7111.
· fair.
John Lisle, new Pomeroy Ele·
A nice gesture by Mrs. Alva mentary School principal, will hold
:Clark, Langsville. Mrs. Clark do· an q&gt;en house at the school from 1 to
· nated DJ bales of hay to the pro!ie 3 p.m. Friday atterroon. Students
:of North Carolina who have been and their parents are oordlally
: hurt so badly by the drought. The invited to attend.
· hay was picked up Saturday for
: transportatkln to Carolina.
After all the hoopla, lt comes out
that the income tax reform will
; Mary Buck wW be ol!;erving a mean very little extra cash In the
: birthday anniversary oo Sunday, poCkets of rmst of us. Now~ thlit a
: Aug. 24. Mary, who has been having ytng yang or what? One good thing
· some health problems, has really tlllugll - lt does'nt cost a thing to
: appreciated your many cards and keep smlllng.

of Monday nlgbt's 104 victory over MUwaul&lt;ee. Brewer catcher fi BW
Schroeder. (UPI)

Boston hikes division lead to 5 1/2 games
By MIKE TULLY
UPI Natlollal Baseball Wr!let'
The Boston Red Sox proved they
can win wlthou t Spike Owen.
Shortly before Monday night's
game, the Red Sox learned that a
technicality had temporarily
snagged their trade with Seattle for
shortstop Owen.
Fortunately for them, another of
their deals worked a little better.
Tom Seaver, acquired earlier this
season. pitched 8 2-3 innings to Uft
Boston to a 3-1 victory over tie
Minnesota Twins.
"I was ready to play," saldOwen,
acquired with outfl~der Dave
Henderson for shortstop Rey Quinones and three minor leaguers.
"John (Manager McNamara) told
me I would lead nff and play
shortstop and I took Infield. But
then they told me there was !()llle
technicality so 1 wa!Biiif 11 lh ·tlie
clubhouse.
"It's different and I really don't
know how to feel because It's kind of
stunning. &amp;It I presume they'll
figure this out."
Rich Gedman's t\i.Q.run homer

with one out in the ninth inning
enabled the Red Sox to take a 5~
game lead in the American League
East.
Gedman's 12th homer came CJl a
3-1 pitch off Frank Viola, 13-9, and
followed a one-out single by Tbny
Annas.
Seaver, 7-10, allowed three hits,
walked fbur and struck out seven
befbre giving way to Bob Stanley,
who got the final out for his 15th

Houston blankl&gt;d Pittsburgh l-Oand
New York topped Los Angeles 5-4.
Indians 10, Brewers 4
At Cleveland, Tony Bemazard
and Mel Hall each drove in three
runs to lead the Indians. Tbm
Candiottl, 12·9, allowed 10 hits whlle
notching his leaguE'- high ll th
complete game. He struck out
seven and walked four to help
Cleveland to Its fourth straight
triumph.
Reds 6, Padres 4

save.

"He (Seaver) Isn't easy to catch
because when he is on like he was
tonight, he breaks the ball sharply
and in all directions," Gedman
said. "What makes Tom different is
he knows his llmltatklns and stays
within them. It's amazing how he
knows himself."
AL spokesperson Phyllis Mer·
hlge indicated Owen and Hender·
sari 'may not become available to
the Red Sox untO the weekend.
In tie oozy other game In the
American League, Cleveland
routed Milwaukee 10-4.
In National League games, Cin·
clnnatl edged San Diego 6-4,

plays his worst, then I've g.t a soot
against hlm. But! was really tlght
and made a lot of errors."
WUan&lt;Fr readily admitted he
wasn't at his best, but didr't think
he !iayed as poorly as Layendecker.
figured.
"I haven't played in three weeks
and I'm always a little flat after a
laydf," said Wllan&lt;Fr. "But I think
I played quite well oo crucial
points."
Wllan&lt;Fr has WCJl the ATP
Championship twoolthe j:BSI three
years. Hls bld for a third straight
win last year was spaDed by
Wimbledon champ Borts Becker,
but Becker ~n't back todefendhls
ATP title this year.
"I'm happy Becker is not here,"
said WUander. "He's the hottest
player on the tour rtght now and he
may be the best right now. If he's
not here, that gives me a better
chanre to win."
Svensson, 19, posted one of the
biggest victories of his four· year
career when he upset the heavDy·
favored Jaite.
''I'm progressing one step at a
time," said Svensson. "I played

berrY escaped an O.!or-24 slump
wltb a two-run oomer and an RBI
single, helping New York increase
Its lead in the NL East to 17 games
wer Idle Montreal. Bob Ojeda, 13-4,
was the winner and Roger McDowell notched his 13th save. Orel
Hershlser, 12-9, suffered the loss.

,--,.---------:=

At Cincinnati, John IRnny, 11·10,
pitched shutout ball fbr eight
innings and &amp;ddy Bell homered to
pace the Reds. Tbny Gwynn
homered for San Diego, which
scored four times In the ninth.
Astros 3, Pirates 0
At Pittsburgh, Mike Scott pitched
a four·hltter and Jose Cruz
smashed a two-run homer to lead
Houston. It was the rtght·hander's
fourth shutout and fifth complete
game or the season - both career
highs. Scott, 13·8, walked two and
struck oot 10.
Melli 5, Dodgers 4
At Los Angeles, Darryl Straw·

Svensson is upset winner Monday
By RICK VANSANT
MASON, Ohio (UP!) -Sweden's
Mats Wltander was sluggish, but
countryman J .B. Svensson was
sensational in Monday's opening
round of the $375,000 Association of
Tennis Professionals (ATP)
Championship.
The top-seeded Wllander, ranked
second in theworid rut rusty after a
three-week layoff, labored to defeat
unseeded Glenn Layenctecker d
Portola Valley, Calif., IN, 6-4.
The unseeded Svensson, ranked
53rd in the world, pulled of! Ill!
day's only major upset by ousting
6th-seeded Martin Jalte of Argen·
tina, 6-7 (l-7), 7· 5, 6-4. Jalte is
ranked 17th In the world.
In a mild upset, unseeded
Jonathan Canter of Beverly Hllls,
Calif., beat 16th·seeded Ramesh
Krlshoan of India, 7·5, 6-4.
Flrst rouoo play continues today
and tonight, with tonight's featured
match pitting 2nd-seeded Jimmy
Connors against Ronald Agenor of
Halt!. The 64-man tournament
winds up Suooay with the winner
receiving $o1'!,00l.
Layenctecker, ranked 97th in the
world, figured he missed a golden
opportunity for one of the biggest
up...ts ever in tennis when he let
Wllander get away.
"WUander was beatable today,"
declared Layenctecker. "He was
giving away points. He k&gt;oked a
little flat He looked fairly slow. He
didn't move nearly as weD as he
usualy does. He just wasn't as
smooth as he ll!lually ls.
"This was an q&gt;portunlty for me
to plck up a IJlO(Iwln.lflhad dcne a
little better, 1 might have had a
chance. If I !iay rny best and he

today, rut I can play even
better."
In other ftrst round matches
Monday, lOth-seeded Jakob 1-Dasek
ofSwitzerlanddefeatedGuyForget
of France, Hi (7·1), 6-4; llth·seeded
Matt Anger of Pleasanton, Calif.,
topped Robert Green d Boston, 6-0,
7· 5; 12th·seeded Tim Wilkison of
Asheville, N.C., beat Hans
Schwaler r1 West Germany, G-3,
6-2; and 15th-seeded Horacio IR La
Pena of Argentina defeated R&gt;ter
Lundgren of Sweden, 6·7 (3-71 , G-2,
6·3.
~==========11
II
good

MEIGS COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIETY
FILL A GROCERY BAG
FOR ONLY 51.00 AT
THE MEIGS COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIETY

THRin
S.
H
OP
Second Au.
·Middleport

JUDY WILLIAMS

The first birthday of AUen David
Hudson was celebrated recently
with a cookout at the home of his
parents, Gene and· Dreama Hud·
son, Middleport.
A Pound Puppy theme with
streamers and balloons was cmTled
out In the decorations. Attending
the party were Lynsl Hudson, .Joy
OUer, Lucy Hendricks, Randy, Jo
Ann, Amanda and Allson Hays,
Harold and Blondena Rainer, To:il
Hudson, Velma Taylor, George and
Phyllis Luster. Sending gifts were
·Tom, Bessie and Craig Darst, Jim
and Unda Keesee and family, and
Bob and BernM! Salser.

......~
214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
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ADen David Hudson

rnon .

Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Ashley,
Middleport, are announcing the
birth of a son, Joshua Mark Ashley,
July 11, at the Holzer Medical
Caller. He weighed nine pounds, 12
: ounces, and was 23 incites lo111.
Mr.' and Mrs. Ashley have a
: daughter, Jt&gt;nnifl!r Marie, age flve.
: Paternal grandmother ls Mrs.
·Josie CaUahan, CosOOcton. and ttl!
. maternal granctParl!llts are the
·Rev. and Mrs. James Keesee.
:Middleport. Great-granctParen ts
·are Mrs. Ada Keesee, Pomeroy,
:and Claude Woodard. Portsrmuth.

.Auto-Owners
Insurance
llrt. Home. Cn Buslntss.
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'I
I

Middleport Garden Club meets

Free clothing day set

rt:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;l

RUTLAND TIRE SALES

.Blackwell
birthday

Amber Danlelle Blackwell

Amber Danlelle Blackwell,
daughter of Steve and Shari
Blackwell, celebrated her ninth
birthdaY., with a .slumber party at
her htltrle In Darwin ft!cently.
Gttts Were presented m Amber
and refreslunents were served to
Erica Roble, Stacy Blanl&lt;enshlp,

District •meeting were
~rsO::r8!1~M,:~r
her slsders
l:rother,
reservations now~~4!:::==:
and

Luncheon reservatklns tor the
Garden Clubs d. Ohio, Inc. faD
district meeting are to be made this
week with Mrs. Jenny Junk,
Jackson District treasurer, 31
CUmer Lane, Frankfort, Ohkl,

45628.

The meetingwUJ be held on Sept.
12 at the Hocking Motor Inn ln
Nelsonvllle with the-co tree )Durand

well, maternal grandparents, Jerry
and Barbara Collmer, maternal
llf€8t·grandmother, Mamie Stephenson, David, Tammy, Jeremy,
Scott and Kimberly Jolllson, BW,
Pearl and Billy Colmer, Tim
Colmer, Jim, Paulette, and Rick!
Farley, Dave and Jamie Leach,
Arnold, Nancy, Shawn and Daniel
Wittekind.

IIliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiillilliiil
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-------

Pitnic set

•
•.

:Pet saved by CPR

Annual family picnic d. the
Auxiliary d Veterans Memorial
Hospital wW be held at 5 p.m. on
Tuesday, Aug. 26. at the oome of
Mr. and Mrs. Max Folmer. Dlrec·
!Ions may be obtained by ca111ng
843-5416 or 992·5074. In July the
Auxiliary members enjoyed a day
out with a vtslt.tothe Middleton Doll.
Factory In Coolvllle.

' CONKLIN, N.Y. (UPI) - A
who learned CPR from
:watching television used the tech·
)llque to breathe new Ufe into her
'COUsin's pet crow.
: Pamela Hoover, 39, ot CookJin
'said MondaY she never dreamed
. :she would end up using clirdJopul·
:morlary resuscitatiOn on a pet.
• But when she saw her cousin's
:Crow, Blackle, drowlilng in her
:swtmmJng pool Saturday, she .
'rescued lt and bepn blowing Into
:ltJ beak and pulhlng on Its breast.
:After an hour, the bird revived,
apparently no worse tor the WNI'.
: "I,don't know It I could do It to a
'human or I! I would do It for any
:other anl!Ml; but tJils was Blackle,
:anc1 I IIIII wanted to save him," she
'sald.
: The bird belonged to Joeeph
:Brotlak, who nurset;l the bird back
·to llealth after dncllna it Injured Ia

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THUisDAY, AU.St 21
FIOM 9:00 A.M.·12:00 NOON
THE TESTS WILL BE GIVEN BY A LICENSED HEARING AID SPECIALIST.
Anyone who has troul&gt;le hearing or understanding convereat1011 !I invited to
have a free hearing testto Hill this problem can be helped I Bring tniscoupon.
with you for your FREE HEARING TEST ot $!10 value. Adulta Ollly. PtaaH.

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,

: Hoover l8ld she learned . CPR .
•trom watcblna a televlllon pnl- ·
:P'IlV that demonstrated Ill!

I, ·~~ue.
I

.

Racine: Ma ry J . Fontaln, Terry
Runion, Tim Runion, Ronnie Fontain , Randy Fontain, Michelle,
Greg, David, Shelba Fontaln,
Reedy, W.V a.
Jan e,· Boggs. Art Boggs. Gemini
Starcher, Cabriel Boggs, Spencer,
W.Va.; Edith Ramsey, Tammy
Fontain , Trina Fontaln, Reedy,
W.Va. : Lawrence Scarberry and
Karen. Hende rson. W.Va.; Justin
Log-an. Lindsey Scarberry, Teresa
Bonecun er. De nise Scarberry, Susie Bonecutter. Dawn Glllesple,
Charles Bonecutter, Henderson,
W.Va .: Mr. and Mrs. Don Shively,
Columbu': Tara Chambers, Ml ·
chelle Cottrill. Curt Crouch,
Columbu s.
Mr. and Mr. Roscoe Knight.
ElilCJb&lt;•lh, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs .
Tom Scraberry and daughters ,
Joan na and Elizabet h. New Haven.
W.Va .: Dave and Susie Stull and
children . Aaron and Adam, Par·
kersburg, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Don
Krarnrr. Pickerington; Mr. and
Mrs. Dorsey Parsons, Racine:
Carolyn Gilmore. Bellvllle, W.Va.;
Jean Shaffer. Debbie Phillips,
Sharon Ha rkness and Ida Fury,
Eliz.1bPth W.Va.; and Mr. and Mrs.
Kenny Smith and Dale, Letart,
W.Va.

Games were played, pictures
taken and offlcerselecfed .They arr
Lillian Weese, president: Cheryl
Wood, vice president; Esther
Smith, secretary-treasurer. Ra'ognlzed and presroted gifts wrrr
Roscoe Knight, the oldest; Curt
Crouch, the yoongest: Clark
Grady, who traveled the farthe st.
and also was the me with the most
children ll"esent. Jean Kramer won
the door prize.
Next reunion was set for the first
Sunday in August at tie Shriner
Park ln Racine.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Clark Grady, chUdr€1\, Stephanie,
Jerlmlah, Kalani, Andrea, Kendal.
Scott and Erik, Lafayette , Ind .:
Mrs. Luda Arnott, Belpre; Mr. and
Mrs. Harrison Smith, Racine: Mr.
and Mrs. Scottie Smith. Chester:
Mr. and Mrs. Johnson Scarberry
THE WINNERS - EUa and Harold Wll were 1111! Millers of a
and Steve, New Haven , W.Va .;
washing machine In a drawing held Mondar at Fnllll l'hannacy In
Lllllan Weese and daughters, Me·
Middleport. No purchtllll! was req*ed to sip up fer lhe wasber m
lanle and Tracy, Racine; Cheryl
Fruth's promotional. Pictured wllh lhe couple Ill HertJert Canon,
Wood
and daughters, Aymee,
phannaclst.
Emily , and Abbie, Marlon.
Sam Greene, New Haven,
W.Va.; Rick Fontain, Patty Fontaln and Jason. Elizabeth, W.Va.;
Annual plcnlc of the Middleport discussed and plans were made for Mr. and Mrs. Harold Grady,
Garden Club was held recently at the September ~meting to be held at Spenrer, W.Va.; Mrs. Wanda Po·
tbe home of Mrs. Jeanne Bowen, ttl! horne of'Mrs. Betsy Horky. A well, Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Carro ll
Free clothing day wUI be held at
horne flower srow will he held with
Syracuse.
Smith, Ravenswood, W.Va.; Mr. the Freedom Gospel Mission
For roU cat! members answered each member m take an arrange· and Mr. Wilford Scarberry. Point Chur('h at Bald Knob on County
by naming a favorite picnic spot. A ment. 'Theme wW be "A Place !or Pleasant, W.Va.; Johnny Scar- Road 31. between County Road 31
rnte from Hallie Zerkle thanked Everything". At that time guest berry II and Pam, Point Pleasant, and Stiversvllle Road , from 9 a.m.
members for a plant sent to her night w1ll be observed and officers W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Powell, to noon on Friday.
wil be Installed.
during her recent llnesss.
An lnvltatkln was read fr!l'll the
Dorothy Morris had the JI'Og'l'am
Rutland Garden Club invitllng at the meeting and related ter
members to an open meeting on experiences at the annual conven·
Aug. 2'i at the Rutland United tlon d. the Ohio Association d
Methodist Church. The Meigs Garden Clubs held In Clnclnnatl,
"OETTING YOU THERE SAFELY"
Coonty Fair Dower shows were giving highlights of the program,
toun, decorations and nower
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arranBE!ments.
AND LIGHT TRUCK TIRES
Mrs. G.E. Schaekeldlsplayed the
arrangement for the evening which
*AUGNMEN'K *FRONT END WORK
consisted of field flowers, Queen
*BAmRIES *Till REPAIR
Ann's Lace, black eyed Susans, and
lOCATED : MAIN ST ., RUTLAND, OHIO
phlox. It was !lanlled with gold
OPEN: 8-6 MON. -SAT .; 8· 8 FRI.
tapers In huJTicane lamps. On the
PH . 74.!·3088
refrEshment lable was an arrange·
Master Card and Visa Welcome
ment ctgolden rod and Queen Ann's
lace prepared by Mrs. Bowen.

9
begin atIDrtluclture
:lJ a,rn.
registration
Bert
Merry,totllsll1ct
chairman, and Shirley Sadler,
GCXl, Inc., president, wW have the
morning program
Pat Holter ot the Shade Valley
Council of Floral Arts wW give the
attermon program on lncorporal·
ing baskets and woven material
with flowers

Ashley birth

Free Etectron1cs hearing tests witt be given by Battono Hearing Aid Centlf 11

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

The Grady family reunion was
held Sunday at the Chester Fire·
house with a dinner being served at

Hudson birthd4y

HEARING TESTS IN NIDDI.EPORT, OHIO

N FOR TEST

Grady reunion conducted

Luck was with fair

COUPON

COME

Tuesday, August 19, 1986

Page-5

land added !our runs in the third.
Brook Jacoby walked and WEill to
third on Chris Bandc 's first of two
doubles in tie game. !frnazard
drove home roth runners with a
single to center. After Bernazard
advanced on a groundcut and Joe
Carter reached on an Infield hit,
Hall lasted a triple into the
right·field corner to make It 5-0.
"Tht' early lead helped Candiottl
get Into a groove," saki Mllwaul&lt;ee
manager George Bamberger. "We
never really got a rally, and tll&gt;se
three errors hurt us. Youcan'tglve
any major-league team that klnd of
leeway ."
"Boslo looked good, but the !iate
was moving on him. The key for
hlm is not to get discouraged.
Anylxldy who can whiff guys like he
can has a future ln this league."
Rick Manning, who played for
Cleveland from 1975 to 1983, lined
his fourth homer of the season to
make lt 5-1 In the flfth.
"Candiottl hU!11 a curve," said
Manning. "He didn 't make many
mistakes, though ."
Cleveland roWIIered with a run in
the lxlttom of the inning on Hail's
fielder 's choice grounder that made
it 6-1 .
The Brewers scored a run in the
sixth on Ben Ogilvie's groondout
but BandoaddedanRBidcubleand
another run scored oo catcher Bill
Schroeder's error In the lxlttom of
the Inning.
Robin Yount's RBI single made lt
8·3 in the seventh. Pat Tabler's RBI
single In the bottom of the inning
and Thornton's RBI double in the
eight h accounted for Cleveland's
final runs.
Dale Sveum led off the ninth with
his fifth oomer to make lt 104.

By JOEL SHERMAN
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK 1UPII - Fifteen
straight college footbati national
·champions have failed to repeat.
:The UP! Board of Coaches predicts
:that streak will end.
The Board Monday established
the national champion Oklahoma
Sooners as an overwhelming No. 1
choice in its preseason ratings.
The Sooners collected 36 of 50
flrst·place votes and 731 points.
·Michigan, which closed last season
:ranked second to Oklahoma, began
"this campaign in the same spot. The
Wolverines earned one flrsl·place
vote and 605 points.
Texas A&amp;M. UCLA and Penn
State rounded out the top five.
. Alabama was No. 6 followed by
·Miami (Fia.l. Nebraska. Ohio
·State and Tennessee.
The second 10 was: Florida State
at No. J1 before Baylor, Auburn.
Arka nsas and Georgia. -Brigham
· Young and Washington tied for
: 16t h, and Iowa. Louisiana State and
Maryland followed.
Texas was the last team to
. capture conseuctlve nationai cham·
· plonshlps In 1900 and 19'10. Okla·
: homa moved Into position to match
· that feat after winning its last eight
· straight games last season, including a 25-10 Orange Bowl victory
over Penn State. The Sooners also
wNe last year's preseason top
choice.
"I think it was something that
was anticpated by us," Oklahoma
: Coac h Barry Switzer sa id of being
named No. I. "We've been ranked
:&lt;o. 1 in the preseason several times
in the past. It's a part of Oklahoma
football and really at this stage of
the year. we don't think much about
it. "
Beskles Texas, only Oklahoma
: has won won back-to- back nationa l
· titles since UPI began Its rating
_system in 1950. The Sooners won
· consecutive titles Wider Bud Wilkin·
·&gt;On In 1955 and 1956.
1n winning Its fifth national title
: last season, Oklahoma averaged Jl
: points per game In the eight games
· red-shirt freshman Jamelle Holle·
· way quarterbacked down the
·stretch . The No. 1 defense In the
··cou nt ry ha s lost nose tackle Tony
: t:aslllas. but linebacker Brian
· Bos1rorth leads a talented group
: that will be tested right away.

The Daily Sentinel

1·2201

842

Miln, Pomeroy ,

•Cteii.Jne' ~ CiNdM fn)m Cltlblnk. PI~ may YfiY dlpendlng on blllnct.

•

PRICES loi'PLY .r PARTICIPATING STORES i1N0 DEAUAI

�Tuesday, August 19~
.....
..-..ge 6-The 081"1y Sentinel

Tuesday, August 19, 1986

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Time, chemistry alter soil conditions for wildflowers
.. 111 GORDON GIUIORE .
Sol Sclen&amp;trJI
POMEROY- As I was sitting at
niy desk awaiting some !lash d
ID!IplraUon for this week'$ article, I
~ il notice about 10 tu 20
~ldftnches In the weeds below rey
~w. A striking and IEautlful
sight. The brightly cobred yeUow
IIIJII black goldfinches wm&gt; eating
seeds ctf the blue-llowerro chloory
pllillts. Chicory Is tbe oomlnant
vfge!aUon In the area below my
window, yet scanning tbe surround~g areas there are m chicory
plants tu be seen. Why?
'· First, for those wiD may mt
k;npw ctdcory or know It by anotber
name, chicory Is the blue flowerro
p.hiDt which seems to tine most
roads In the area. It grows to about 3
f$1 high and bloOms long and hard
through much d tbe summer and
early faD. lt makes a IEautlful
border along the roads when It Is In
full bloom. But If you look car{jully
the next time you are driving along

a chicory boardered road, yru wnt
notice th;lt It generally does not
spread very far from the road Into
the adjourning land. Why?
The answer Is, In this case, due to
an alteratkm d the local lllll
chemistry by man. In smrt, tbe
addition ol Urnes tone to tbe
smulders and surfaces of the roads
In tbe area has raisEd the pH oftbe
soU and the chicory plants have
!lourtshed. The area outside my
window Is dominated hy soli
material which was dug rut rl.
drainage ditches along country and
township roads. Over lhe years as
soli was deposlte:l through erosion·
/depositional process, llme and
llmestone was also added from the
roads. The soU chernlstcy was
altered, the pH, lncrease:l and tbe
chloory flourished. The dllcory
when blooming Is a pretty sight, but
when the goldfinches are .added, It
Is truly remarkable.
When the road system was buDt,
tbe designers dtdn:t add limestone

beds and siDulders lll chicory
muld grow and gold!lnd1es would

advantage.
SoU structure is anotber physical
congregate O!ltsiQe my ~w. but property of son. SoU . structure
because limestone was the best refers to the size and shape ci soU
constrilctloll rna.... avli~ tn . aggr~tes. A soU ~ate Is the
the price rani~'!·· but ~e llJ their• natural hlmplng together of sand,
cho,lce, tbe !Ill) dlem!sfly .·w&amp;S sill and claY p&amp;rtlcles IntO definite
altered, lhe plant specJes_!l;rowJni shapes and. sizes, SoU structure
was altered, and !Inally the \Yildllfe dl~tly e!!eCis soU permeabUlty,
population In Small ai'l!tl WilS sul'face area, lllll root oontact,
affected.
.
fertUlzer avallabtuty, soU warm up
The !llll Is a large body and cne
and inany otber factors. Soli
which In many ways can not be structure ts also a physical property
altered very easUy due to Its very that Is easily altered by man.
size. SoU texture Is the percentage Simply hy plowing the soU with a
d sand, sUt and clay In tbe soU. An
standard roolboard plow one tine
acre of soU 9 Inches thlch weighs can destroy the beneficial granular
about 2,00l,«XXX pounds. It's pretty lllll structure In the plow layer.
obvious that soU texture Is not
Anotber area man can have a
!llmethlng you change so much as dirECt and marked Impact on soils
learn tu live with. SoU texture Is In tbe soU chemistry. I have
directly effects soU water I)Oidlng already alluded to the Impact of
cation exchange capacity, struc- limestone and tbe plant and animal
ture bearing strength and many species ruts!de my window, but the
otber properties. Texture Is a chemistry of soils Is much more
physical component of soU which complex. Simply by rl!lslng or
man can't realistically alter to·hls lowering the pH. of sons can have a

a.

tremendous Impact on many as·
peels of.soUs and soUreactions from

pmsphorus avllllabtuty to the
d!lclency of Rhizobium bacteria to
fix N· for soybeans and alfalfa to
COJTOSloh of concrete. For example,
below pH of 6.5 the amount of
aluminum Increase dramatically.
Aluminum combines with the
piDsphorus making It unavaUable
tlr plants, hence greater amounts
of piDspiDrus must be added . At
about $140/ton for fertlltzer versus
$18/tun llme, It's easy to see which
tu add.
We are constantly working with
or on tbe soil. In home construction
WI' bulldoze homesltes which look
nice but after the first wet spring
and major landsllp that takes out
our driveway or da mages the
bunda tton we see In hindsight how
WI' actually created an unstable
landscape. Every action we take on
tbe soli will eventually have a
rmctlon. In some cases the reaction
Is beneficial and
fertUizl'r

Meigs Agent's Corner

Smith reunion

Time for fall seedlings
By JOHN C. RICE
Cwl&amp;y Extmfllon Agent

'

AgricuMure

POMEROY -August ... tbe time
!Or faD seedlngs. The earlier In
August you can make your faD
seeding, tbe better. SoU test If
possible. Prepare a firm seed bed .
Seed oontact with lhe soli Is
essential for go od seed
germination.
:This means a cultipacker or
sbnllar device smuld be usro prior
to ·seeding and Immediately after
se9ding. Don't put legume or grass
seeds too deep. The seed smuld be
Ill more than % to 1116 lndl deep.
means tbe seed smuld be
diopped on top of the ground and
pressed ln.
·H using m Ill, he sure top growth
1$ cut back or grazed close. Use
paraquat or grarmxone and 2,4-D.
Ose 1 or 2 legumes and a grass In
your SEeding.
Many producers want tu harvest
tbe fall growth from meadows. This
practice Is risky because heaving
and winter kUI may he Increased
and root reserves and plant vigor
are lowered . Theseredure tbe plant
stand as well as lower the yield tbe
foUowtng year.
&amp;lggestlons to mlnlmlzl' these
hazards of late harvest are as
follows:
..Make tbe last regular harvest hy
tite calendar: northern Ohio, Sep-

nus

tember 1 to 7; central Ohio,
Septem!Er 3 to 12; soutbem Ohio,
September 3 to 15.
Permit the meadow to grow untU
late &lt;ktober. Legumes store food
reserves in tbelr root system during
late September and October. Harv·
estlng hy grazing or mowing during
this reserve ruUdlng period wUl
reduce next year's hay crop and
may result In almost complete
winter kUling oft be legumes. Food
reserves In legume roots are lower
folloWing a wet season than after a
dry season.
Make the late harvest during tbe
last week of October or lhe first
week of November. Any growth
following this harvest wUIIower the
food reserves In lhe legume roots
.and wUI probably mean some
rrouctlon In next year's hay crop.
However, by making this harvest
late, there wlll Ukely he little
regrowth and little reduction d root
reserves.
Mulch following the late haivest.
Use .)IP to 4 tons per acre d. strawy
manure, up to 2 tons per acre of old
hay or straw, or stmUar mat~ lals
at a rate that wtll give winter
protection and reduce heaving.
Late harvest should only be
attemptro on established stands,
mt new seedlngs.
If choosln~ between fields, harvest loose which are well drained
and have tbe highest level of
fertUity.

I

"

CHAMPS - Cathy Jo Hobsleller, left, was named
reserve grand champion and Nlldd Meier was mmed
grand champion at the anmalt-H mrse smw staged

Community calendar I
area happenings
~DAY

. LONG BO'ITOM - The Long
aOt.tom Flame chapter meeting
wUJ be beld Tuesday, 7:30p.m., at
tbe.'Mt. Ollve Community Church,
Long Bottom. Speaker will he Mary
Dln\000 from Cheshire. Everyone
welcome.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - The Red Cross

Bloodmobile will he at the Pomeroy
senklr citizens center on Wednes·
day from 1:00 to 6: 30 p.m.
l&gt;f!DDLEPORT- Meigs Associ-.
at1on of Retired Citizens annual
~Clllc, Wednesday, 5-7 p.m., Mid·
dlejlort Park.
.

FRIDAY

. LONG BOTIOM - The gospel
group Saved, from Poln t PleasaiJ t,
W.Va., will be singing Friday, Aug.
22, 7:30 p.m., at the Mount Olive
Community Church. Pasto r Law·
renre Bush Invites the public.
'

SUNDAY

RIJTLAND- A hymn sing wUI
be held Sunday, 1:30 p.m., at the
Rutlalld Freewill Baptist Church.
Ali . proceeds wUl go to a needy
family.

'
ReunkLETART, W.Va. - The annual
JohnsOn famUy reunion wtu be held
SCiflday, Aug. 31 on the West
VIrginia side of the Racine Locks
and Dam. A basket dinner wUI be
served at noon.
· pOMEROY - The annual Ours
f~ reunion wUI be beld Sunday,
.\uit. 31 at the Meigs County Senior
Citizens oo Mulberry Heights In
POmeroy. Dinner at 1 p.m.
,' DARWIN - The LaudermUt
r8Yhlly reunion wm be beld Sunday,
Al!i- 31, beginning at 9 a.m., at the
i\)i!d side park on Rt. 33.
.-

GiJpiPI

MASON, W.VA. - Tbe Bend
Area Gospel Sing wiD be beld
Sunday, Aug. 24, trom 1:ll to 6
p.m., at Wahama Hlgh School In
Masoo, W.Va. Feature:! singers
wiD be the Reflectklns Tm. Home\xlund, the Stnrere Gospel ~et.
. Dan Hayman and 1be F~olth Trio,
the west Vlrglnlil Cwrlers and
&amp;Jnrlse..Master of ceremonies wlll
be George Hollehar. Admission
tree. Everyooe welcome. Bring
your lawn chairs. In case of rain,
the •ill wUl be he~ In the high

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (UPI )
- Three stray cats found by tbe
carel;iker of President and Mrs.
Reagjln' s ranch now have a new
home: the western Wh ite House, the
first lady's press s&lt;'Cretary says.
Nancy Reagan adopted tbe ca Is
after they were discovered In a
Santa Barbara parking lot by
Barney Barnett, caretaker of the
Santa Barbara ranch, said spokes·
woman Elaine Crispen.
.
The cats were brought back ror
approval of the president and his
wife, Crispen said.
Mrs. Reagan named the newest
ranch additions Morris, Cleo and
Sara, Crl~pen said.

Dance lessons '

MIDDLEPORT - Shirley
Quickel. Dance Company lnstruc·
tor, Is accepting new students for
the coming year. Dance lessons wUl
be given on Thesdays and Thursdays at Carleton Sch!)OI, Syracuse,
and on Wednesdays at the Gingerbread Preschool, Middleport. For
!nfonnatton, call 992·7756.
Bake sale

Attend camp

These are the novice champloiL'l
selected a1 the Junior Fair 4-H mrse show a1 lhe
counly lair. On the left Is Beclcy Meier, grand
champion novice, daullhler of Mr. and Mrs. Robert

NOVICE. -

-

Meter, Route I, Middleport, and on the ,rtgl!t Is
reserve grand champion novice, Jamie Ord,
daughter of Cindy Ord, Flatwoods Road.

·. Pomeroy Elementary room assignments set
Room assignments have been
m'ade for the upcoming school year
at tbe Pomeroy Elementary School
as follows:
Grade 1, Mrs. Jamie BlaettnarDavid Ander!lln, Rachel Ashley,
Melissa Copplck, Jerlca Clark,
Sara Craig, Clayton Crow, Jack
Day, Heidi Delong, Michael Dent,
Jerod GUmore, Richard Gryszka,
Natalie Granda!, Brandy Gangwer,
Amy Hayes, Jennifer Mankin,
Steven McCullough, Candace
MUier, Chrtstlna Neece, Gary
Reltrnlre, Russell Robinson, Amy
See, Wendy Shrlmpllne, Jason
Slater, Chris Stobart, David Tatter,
son, Tamyra Taylor, Adam nomas, Chrts Triplett, Jennifer
Yeauger.
Grade 1, Mrs. Carol OhlingerLauren Anderllln, Wayne Barn·
hart, Jason ChUdress, Jerrod
Clark, W~ndl Daniels, Apl11 Foreman, Dan lelia Grueser, Erin Hag·
gerty, Michelle Harrill, Tara Haw·
ley , Steven Hoover, Stacey
Hubbard, JuDe HUIIJII!I!. Michael
Krautter, Unzle Nottlnglwn, Roy
Powell, Aaron Price, Trenton
Qualls, Rusty Robinson, Bonnie
Rutter, Betsy Sheets,. Wendy Size.
more, Patrtcta Smith, Frances
Walker, Bradley. Walker, ·Joshua
Wilson, Jessica wt:Wit. Brian

Descendants of Sam and LUlie
Smith gathered at Lake Alma
recently for a famUy reunion.
Attending were Betty Schnelman, Columbus; Marjorie Banks,
Rutland; Gerald and VIckie Rupe
and famUy, Ben, Brian, Nina, and
Bllly, Pat Hordey and famUy.
Tracy, Tammy, Hank, Angel and
grandchildren, Bradley and M!ndl,
Steve and Cindy Rupe, all of
Columbus; David and Beverly
Rupe and famUy, Stac, Bib, and
Duylan, Henderson, W.Va.
Others attending were Bill Ohlin·
ger, Bill Feasll, Charlie Woodruff,
Elbie Mlzl', Ronnie Smith, Ru·
tland; Ronnie Smith, Rutland;
Ellie Mae Southern. Michael Heath
McKenzie, Middleport; Joe and
Mona Anderoni, Middleport, Diana
Walker and Candi, Rutland , Brian
Woodward, Charles Smith, Rose
Deem, Rutland. Yvonne Whittington, Fort Wayne, Ind.; Loretta
Atkins and family , Jerry and Misty ,
Point Pleasant. W.Va .; Sherry
Tackett, Racine; Shawna Tackett
and son, Bill, Racine; Terrt Whitman, John Wayne, Seth Stohart ,
Raymond and Lydia Smith, Pome·
roy, Patrick and Donald Smith,
Columbus.
A memorial was held for Sam
and Lillie Smlth, their daughter,
Wanda. and son, William, by the
descendants.

Presidential approval

school gym.

RUTI.AND - Rutland FreewiU
Baptist Omrch is sponsoring a bake
sale Friday atlhe church, starting
at 10 a.m.
Square dance
POMEROY - Tbe Belles and
Beaus Square Dance Club wUI
sponsor a western style square
dance at Royal Oak Park Saturday,
from 8-11 p.m. Caller will be Qlle
Eddy. All western square danrers
welcome.
MARC picnic
MIDDLEPORT- Meigs Associ·
at ion for Retarte:l Citizens wtu hold
lhelr annual picnic Wednesday, 5-7
p.m.. at tbe Middleport Park.

added and plant growth Is stlmu·
lated . Sometimes It Is neither,
Improperly designed septic ffelds
polluting ground water reserves.
SoU science seeks to understand tbe
properties d the soil, both chemical
and physical so we can accurately
tre:lict what the effects of our
action on the soU wUI be.
We all work with the soU, some
more directly than others, but the
soils properties are impm1ant to us
aU. The soU survey Is a great source
d. lrifDrmatlon on the properties of
the soli. It rovers all major land
uses trom alfalfa production to
leach fields, from golf course
oonstructlon to homesite locations.
Otber excellent sources of soils
Information are the local Soil
Conservation Service - Soil and
Water Conservation District Office
and your county extension agents.
Sometimes the actions wet ake on
tbe soU provide unexpected results,
tbe gold!lilches are stU! In the
chicory and I've written my article.

Young.
Suzanna Henderson, Monty Hun·
Grade 2, Mrs. Suzy Carpener ter Wendt Krautter David Neut·
Dusty Andrew, Chad Baloy, Isaac · zU~g. QJ.vld Park, Aptil Reltmlre,
Barnett, Carl Carmichael, Leslie Joseph Roberts Jason Runyoo
Clark, Wonda Dickerson, Joshua Shelly Sinclair,' Jessica Stobart:
Duckett. Tara Grueser, Ryan Terry Stobart, Ira VanCooney,
Hawley, AprU Herdman, Elizabeth Kristina Warner, Gene Waugh, Lee
Hugbes, Misty Jeffers, Shawn · WUilams.
King, Leigh Mash, Kimberly Pe·
Grade 3, Mrs. Linda Zarnoch trle, Joshua Phalln, Timothy Travis Abbott, Rebecca Ackerman,
Roush, Stacey Price, Rusty Robin· Anne Brown, Jessica Chapman,
llln, Josie Sllison, Adam Smith, Pall'lcla Clark, Cass Cleland,
William South, Mindy Taylor, Wendt CoUins, Corey Darst, Aaron
Charles Tyree, RJcky Watson, Carl DavL!, Terri Fife, Krlstll) Foreman,
WUson.
Alicia Haggy, Michael Hawley, ·
Grade 2, Mrs. Ida Diehl Carla Hughes, Heather Knight,
Matthew Ault, Tina Boolhe, Chas-' Travis Lipscomb, Bert Mash, Scott
tity Coe, Taryn Dolllge, Matthew Mitch, Sllawn·,Mitch, Shaun Nltz;
Dalley, Charles Donahue, Branoori . Erica Phllllp8, Wade Pooler, Adam
Floyd, Whitney .HaptonstaU, Jo- Riffle, Shawn· Whltteklnd, James
sbua Harris, Joseph Hlll, Coy White, Palma Wiles.
Jom!lln, Julie King Alniee Kloes,
Grade 4, Mrs. BoMie Flsber Jessica McElroy, Stacie Reed, Stl"len Arnott, Jessica Capebarl,
Michael Reltmlre, Russell Robin· Keith Carmichael, Ronnie Casro,
sen, Jason Roush, Andy Sanders, Je1rrey Darnell, Alan Durst, Travis
Bryan Sublett, Kri&lt;lta Sargent, Drenner, Kelly Grueser, AlliSon
Marta Sellers, Stacy Stewart, Da· Lee, Scott Hubbard, Reggie Pratt,
nlel Whltteklnd.
Erkl Qualls, KeJty ., Smlth, Aditm
Grade 3, Miss Kathy Haley Sheets, Jacly11 Swartz, Usa Tatter·
Stacy A.mott, Darnell Blanks, .soo, Opal Wliltlatch, Julee Wolfe,
Aman~ Brinker, f'.aul Chapman, Usa Yeaull!lr.
'·
Megan Clark, Michael ·' COijlns,
Gra~ 4, Mrs. Marjorte Gibbs David Cunningham, Jay Day, . Sarah Ander!lln, Heather Blanks,
Tamldo Deeter, Israel Grimm, Tony Browrj, CorneD ChUdress,
L11De1111 GIVVI!I', Amy ~· ! Michael Clark, Jerod Cook, Amy

Sh~t s,

Kelly Satterfield . Mandi
Durst. Tara Erwin. Benj amin Sonja Stanley, PetrickSteele, Vicki
Ewing, Jered HUI, Todd Mitch, warner, Lindy Williams, VIctor
Chrystal Pridemore, Tabitha Young.
Perez, Jeremy Runyoo, KatySandGrade 6, Miss Becky Triplett _
ers, Richard Smith, Jason Taylor, . Megan Bartels, Nathan Baloy.
Julia Young
Jamie Biggs. Nathan Brown, Tracy
Grade 5, Mrs. Marsha Rada· Collins, Kelly Doidge, Denise Hybaugh - Brad Anderson, Trenton sell, Autumn Griffith, Mtsti King,
Derenberger, Tracy Fife, Brad Kevin Lambert, Melissa Maynard,
Haggy, Lee Henderson, Rebecca Chris N!tz, Kelly Phelps, Stephanie
Hoffman, Johanna Imboden, Cas· Price, Steven Reltmlre, Brandon
s!e Nease, Shannon Nltz, Stephaq!e Rotish, Beth Roush, Roger Roush,
See, Shannon Scholderer, Jeff Tony Roush, Angel~ Searles, Ru sty
Tracy, Ellen Watoon, STanley Triplett, Katrina Turner.
,
WatsOn, Marlo White, Matthew
D.H. Prltttat!y, Mrs. Judy Carter
WUilams, Amy Wright.
_ Scott Autherson, Eva Crabree,
Grade 5, Mrs. Debbie Sebert Ernest crouso. Malinda King,
Deanna Boothe, Trenton Cleland, Michael Klein. Keith Landaker,
Daniel~ Crow, J .P. Davis, Bonnie Eulonda flumfleld, J .R. Scarberry, .
Donahue, JeremyGrln'li)l,Rachael Kim Smith, Roger Stewart, James
Hawley, Joshua Heck, Donne May, Haynes.
Sandra Morris, Annette Pierce,
D.H. Primary, Mrs. Chr~ Wake·
Melissa Pooler, Dawn · Roush, field - Carletta B~ckley, Plane
Stepben See, Shannon Spaun, J.P. Hook, .Terry J9hnson, Jason Klein,
Stanley , Christina Taylor, Brian Charley MUier, Brian Ross, Larry
Walker.
Rutter, Sl!lly Watson.
'·
Grade 6, Miss JuDe Byer t.eamlngD!sabUitles, Mrs. Betsy .
,Debbie Alkire, Jenntler Barnhart, H6rky - Roger Hook, Patrick
Christln Buzzard, WUilam· Cape- ·Jacka, Galy King, Bruce McCloud,
hart, Anna Chapman, · Leanna Bry&amp;!l Molden, Joii'{Perez, Loreita '
CUool1!, Am,ber . Davis, Mickey Rliltinlre, Chtis . Swanllln, BUiy ,
Goode, Dennls..Hbscber. Jodl'lm· Wblfe, Bobby Ellis.
.
lxlden; Charles Kl!ig, Penny Klein• ' St~n!J 'are ro' repOrt to their
ChristoPher Knight, Michelle!,«, . .tcned \eachers on 'the q&gt;en daf '
Tammy ~een, ~ Reltm,lte: 'of'IIChool.
'
" ey

~B::::::;:;:u~s;;:i=n:;r.e=s=s==:::S~e=r
v
;:;;i;c;e::;:;s;:;=n
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11
.
YOUNG'S

Farm labor group pleased

l·r-

over Heinz contract talks
the Heinz company," Baldemar
Velasquez, leader of lhe Farm
Labor Organizing Committee, said
Monday.
Heinz USA, a division ci tbe H.J .
Heinz Co. of Pittsburgh, and Its
growers, have agreed to begin
negotiations over union representa·

TOLEDO, Ohio (UP! ) - The
president of a farm labor union
praise:l Heinz USA for agreeing to
hold talks that may result In a
contract for 2,00) migrant workers
In Ohio and Michigan.
"We are very much encouraged
by the attitude and oommltment by

..--Ohio Briefs:-......,
Steelmaker boosts production
WEIRTON, W.Va. (UP!) - Weirton Steel Corp. says it has
boosted its production of a new zinc-aluminum coated steel that
offers Increased protection against rust.
The company said Its commercial orders for lhe product have
increased so much that It wUI be produced every two rronths rather
than every two, president Robert Loughhead said In a news release
Monday.
The steel Is used In lauJ:ldry equipment, coolers and air
conditioners, the oompany said, and also In automotiveromponents.
Weirton uses the llcense:l Gaitan process, which roats galvanized
s t~l with 95 percent zinc and a 5 percent mix of aluminum and
mlschmetal, a mixture d !be elements cerium and lanthanum.
The company became the first North American jX'Oducer to apply
Galfan coating to wide steel sbeets In 1985 after entering Into a
licensing agreement with tbe International Lead Zinc Research
Organization.
The company's No. 4 hot -dipped galvanized line was converte:l for
production of the product.

Corning to buy Cincinnati firm
CORNING, N.Y. (UP! ) - Corning Glass Worl&lt;s announced
agreement Monday to buy U.S. Precision Lens Inc. of Cincinnati, a
maker of plastic lenses and optics.
Terms were not disclosed. Corning officials said It Is hoped the
pu rchase wUI complement the rompany 's own development c1 glass
lenses for Industrial uses. The purchase Is subject to approval by
directors of both companies.
U.S. Precision Is a privately held company base:lln Cincinnati that
makes a variety of optics for large-screen televisions, stmulatocs,
fiber-optic coupUng, universal product code readers for super·
markets and other uses, officials said. The company designs and
makes nonsphertc, or aspheric lenses.
The company, with 600 employees, had sales ci $33.5 million in the
fiscal year ending June 30.
Corning Chairman James Houghton said lhe purchase would
provide the company was a foot mid In !be treclslon-molded plastics
marketplace.
The company already Is developing a glass asphetic lens
program, and the U.S. Precision unit wUI give tbe company the same
capabillty In the plastic market, he said.
Corning said the existing management team will he retalne:l and
the oompany will operate as a Corning subsidiary .

Ohioan escapes from jail
FRANKFORT, Ky. (UPI) - Ricky Tyree, 25, a convicted kUier
from Toledo, Ohio, remained at large today following his weekend
escape from the Franklin County JaU.
Tyree, charged with tbe February manslaughter of an Owenton
man, was helping a deputy jailer empty trash Saturday morning ·
when he escaped.
Authotittes believe tbe convict would attempt to reach Ohio, where
he has relatives. Officials described Tyree as a model prisoner
during his six-month stay at the jaU, wbere he was awaiting transfer
to a state prtson.
Tyr~ was sentenced to a 10-year term after pleading guUty to
manslaughter In the shooting death of &amp;lbhy Edwards.

lion Nov. l.
Actual contract negotiations
would follow once those Issues are
resolved, said Harry Carroll, gen·
eral manager of communications
and lamr relations for Heinz USA.
Velasquez said the transitory
nature of farm workers and lhelr
high rate of turmver makes the
negotiations "different and
unprecedented."
The talks also wiD Involve
farmers In northwest Ohio and
soutbeast Michigan woo belong to
the Fremont Pickle and 'Ibmato
Growers Assoclatkln.
"We have l"lery belief and every
thought that there wlll be a
functioning collECtive bargaining
agreement In place hy 1~,"
Velasquez told reporters at FLOCs
'Ibledo headquarters.
Heinz has 70 contracts for
tomatos and between 40 to 50 for
pickles, Carroll said.
Velasquez said the !)JnJop Com·
mission, estabUsbed to facU!tate
negotiations with Campbell's, wiD
participate In the latest talks ally If
tbe parties reach a deadlock.
An agreement signed hy FLOC,
Heinz and a representative from
the growers' association states they
"recognize their common Interest
In the EConomic bealth of tbe
tomato and cucum!Er lndustl:tes of
northwest Ohio." It also states they
have agreed to refrain from
disrupting work operations.
A boycott of Heinz Is out of the
question, Velasquez said.
"Essentially it says 'mid your
cannons'," he said.
FLOC ended a seven-year boy·
cott against the Campbell Soup Co.
In February after reaching a
contract that provided a wage
Increase, medical coverage and a
paid hollday to 600 migrant
workers.
Velasquez said he hoped to reach
a contract containing a 6 to 8
percent wage Increase and benefits
slmUar to Campbell's. Approxl·
mately 2,000 migrants would be
rovered under a Heinz coni ract, he
said.
Workers oo farms under contract
10 Heinz earn between $3.35 to $4 an
hour, he said.
Heinz had announced Intentions
to negotiate sbortly Campb!lis
. reached Its agreement. Carroll said
tbe threat d. a boyoott and Ul
feelings that result were contriwt·
lng factors.
~- "
"We looked at what Campbell
and FLOCwentthrough. There was
a lot ci ranoor and tjtterness,"
Carron said.
"Ideally, If we' re going to take a
responsible postlon, we have to do It
as a oompany," he said.

RADIATOR
SERdiCE
11

We can ren~lr
and r~d
r~
core radiators an
heater cores. We can
alSO ICid bOil and rOd
We also
Out rad '·tors.
Nl
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FO RD

IODY WOIII S 10 Por Hr.
C.... loto Car Paintint t3 7 5
'·~ c..- r
Strlpiog/~ - • Klro

CARPENTER
SERVICE

'""
· C&amp;LChotte
PAINTING
Oh
PH 9.,'.•,H~·ll
'

- Addon 11 nd romodolino

- Rooflng and guttor work
- Concrete wort.
- Plumllng ond eloctrlcol

JFree Ellimatoo)

992·2196

992 -6215 or 992 -7314

Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy, Ohio

3 Announcements

4-15 ·'86-lt

.

SWEEPER Jnd terwlng m~~ehine

.. and delivery. Owla Vacuum
Cleaner; one htlf mile up

Now Location:

161 North Socond

EUGENE LONG

Georg• Creek Ad. Cll 814·
448-02.94.

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

DecoraiMi ClkM tu any OCCI·
lion. Wtddingl 1 sp.ciJity. WIH
deliver for smsll fH. 814 -992-

Middloporl, Ohio .45760

VINYL I AWMIIIUM

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Complete Gutter WOrk
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types

We Carry Filhlng Suppli"

Pay Your Cable 8t
Phone Billa Here
. 111!11!51 PitON!
16UI 992-6510
IESJD!N(I PHONE
t6141

THE QUAUTY
PlUff SHOP

F11 All

y,, ,,111111 N.Ur

PWS: Offi&lt;l Su"its &amp;
Furniture, Wtdditg
anti Grlllluation

Stotlonay, Magnolk
Signa, Rubltor Stamps,
lusin111 Forms,
Sonk11, Ett.

c.,

21 S Mill St. Middltport
104 Mutltorry h. Panroy

992-3345312/tln

•VINYl SIDING
"ALUMINUM SIDING
•BlOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSBL
SIDING CO.

New Homes Built

U01 .
Cere tor the 1k:Jerty, roam.
bolrd, l1undry . 24 hour csre.
Aeuonlble r1t ... Lots T.l.C .

304-n3-ll82B .

Worked in home arBll

" Free Estimet81"

W111ted ride to Merfl111l Unlver·
aity Mon 1nd Wad. 304-67&amp;·
6499 or 876-4886.

CALL COLLECT:
Ph. (614) 843-5425

Pilno IIIIOns , lucy J•ne
Bulrmn, Htr1ford, W. V1. 304·

20 yoaro

7·11!1 -&amp;e 2

mo.

882-2395.
Ta whom it may concem 1ny dog
found on my farm will be 1hot.
Jim S1ew1n.

(CUT OUT FOR FUIUR£ USE)

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

4

Giveaway

Fr" puppi.. psrt Airdlle Tenier.
part Collie. Ctll &amp;1•· 379-2313.
Two begs of ytrd ule, leftoven
to gNeiWay. Call 814-318·

985-3561

All M1b1

8449 .

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•Refrigaraton
•Dryers •Freezers

Free kittens long hair.. Cllllco.
Coil 814·440·82 53.

PARTS and SERVICE

4·5·tlc

1 young ducka. Cell 814-446·
•• 10 .
To good honw mother c:et • 3
kitt.,,, 1 tom cat, bloth good
mousars. Small houu dog Gorgey
Pekk'l•e• .-o c:hlckena.
Cll1814-258· 1919.

a.

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE

Pwt Beagl•r,:· 6 month• old to
give IIWIV . M frtnk Clellnd or
Todd Tsvtor It A.cine.

HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SA1!WH SALES &amp; SERVICE

"' HIWj

Mixed breed dog to glvtiWay to
good home . Lovtt kids . 4'-'i

v••n old. Csll 814-992-2772 .

Afill Tl•

Shp Tte~•lelt•

01 "'''
RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

CHESTEI-985-3307
4/1/tfn

3/\1/lfn

The Daily Sentinel

fitM af Hartl
Ruslf Waflr?
Wo Han Jho An·

Howonl L Write•l

IWtr ....

NEW- IEPAIR

ROOFING

SPRING SOFJ
Naw A Small

=-:r~~aar'.!:...li..

Puts A Softtlllr In Your
H01111 Today !Loose with
OptiM fa lufl
1

fA~Ys0wmR~E~~d·
Will Jth ltr•t

Public N.otice

Public Notice

LEGAL NOTICE

of the Ellato of Maury D.
Miller, Deceased .

Offen will be received at
the office of Bernard V.
Fultz at 111 % Welt Second
Straet, Pomeroy. Ohio, until

Auguot 22. 1986 at 10:00
A.M. for the purchase of the
Edna F. Walker real ootott.
The reel estate is a 2 11ory

ESTATE NO. 24866 - fi· ~-------...0---------i

of Cryatot E. Si111110n, Ad·
miniatratriJI. of the Eltate
of Eoto Jane Ruooell, Do·
C811ed .

ESTATE NO . 26112 - fi·

frame dwelling situated •t

nel1nd Distributive Account

consisting of 3 bedrOO(Ill,
1'h botho, kitchen, diriln g

McCr·t. Deceeaed.

room. central air condition·
ing and
two enclosed
porches. Immediate PDIIIS·
stan. The right i1 reserved to
reject •ny and all bids.

Neva F. Ruuell,
Executrix of the Estate

of I. 0 . McCoy. Exocutor of
the Ellato of Audrey G.
Unlep

exception•

ere

which time 11id 8CICOUn11

will be conak:lered and con-

tinued from doy to doy untH
flnotty diopooed of.
A.., poroon lrrtortllled
18)13 . 14. 16. 17, 18, 19.
moy lite written ucoptiono
20 . 7tc
to uid IICCOunta or to manera pert1inlng to the •ecuPublic Notice
tlon of tho trull, not foot
then five doyo prior to tho
IN THE MATTER OF
dote oat for hearing.
SETTLEMENT OF
Robert E. Buck, Judge
Common PIMa Court
ACCOUNTS
PROBATE COURT
Probeto Dlvlaion
Melgi County, Ohio
MEIGS COUNTV, OHIO
Accounts and vouchers of i81 19, 1tc
the fottowing norned fiduol·
Probote Court. Moigo Coun·
ty. Ohio. lor opprovel end
setttement:

ESTATE NO . 24207 - Fl·
net end Dlobributivi Ac·
count of Eute P. Proffitt, Ad·
mlnlatr•trix of the Estate of

'·r-------...,
TOWN I COUNIIY

filed be
thereto,
oold eccounlo
will
.for hearing
bltfore rooid September.
Court on the1986,
20th day
of
It II

of Edna F. Wa•er

erlara have been filed in the

Business
Services
L..--------.,---------""'1

64 Mile. Merchendlte

VETEIINAIIAN
CUNIC
Paul E. Sllotkty, DVM

PT. P&amp;IASANT OFFICE
305 ._._ Atrt.
StULl AMilll lOUIS
Mort.-Woti.-Thun. 3·5 pm
r... 6:30·1: Fri. 1·2 pm
Satu,., 10· 11:30 am
UIGIA. .All

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL

Fill DIRT

10·8·tlc

SUIGIIY IY APPT.

PH. 304-675-2441
liND AIEl CALL

...., Offkt

For lloun
304-372-5

Herold L. Proffitt. Decaooed .
ESTATE NO. 24782 - Fl·

BOGGS

SAliS &amp; SOYICE
U. S. liT. SO EAST
GUYSVILII, oHIO
Aulhori1M John DMre,
Now HolloM, luth Hog
F.-m E..... lllf

n•l111d Olttrlbu1NeAccaunt

of hit M. Wlloon, Cleo M..
Sm~h ond Opal M. Gruooor,
ExecutriKM of the Eotoll of
Ja"lo M. Weber. Docoued.
ESTATE N'D. 24815 - Fl·
nat .,d DlllributiveAccount
of Worley A. RHo, Adminio·
trotor of tho Elllto of Hezot
E. Rift, Dec..oed .
ESTATE NO. 24789 - Fi·
nat .,d DJotributivoAccoum
of Horatd lfubbord. EKecu·
tor of tho Eototo of Vlrginio
s . Hubbard, Docooood .
ESTATE NO. 22284
Seventh Portlt!l Account of
Kenneth Woloh, Guordlen ol
tho Poroon lnd Eotltt of
Adrienne FrenCh.
.
ESTATE NO . 20121 sevont•nth Account of
Fronk W. Parter, Jr., TNot•
under ittm V oft!Jo Loot Witt
end To.,_nl of· J*n.o
Loulll D. Smith 0~11•!!'1'·
ESTATE NO. 21001 - F~
nol.,d Dlotribui'lvoAcooum
of 't!"tred Miller. e...utrbr

DENNY CONGO
Will HAUL
JUST CAll!
992-3410

O..lor

E••'••..

.Fir•
,.,., &amp; •• ,.,..t

949-2263
or 949-2168

S:

·")

o~~~•• ~~on.
~!~~~;·~i.~o8/!.~'~:~~

Moin St .. JocU.n. Oh 411841) ,.~
No~
_
mon-1
Ftiii!NDI.
'" y".
"" ._.111
-,.

HOME TOY PARTIEihMI....,.\'
chttop.,~gtform••.,.!!\' 1
dllmonstni10rl In thll .,.., h I'
111y, fun end prafttllblt. Wt~~·•,
hive over 700 t~~.cttk1g toy~J-'!'d
giftl teMuring the n_.an~ ~
talkng cloiC~dlotwhidt WI~"" ·

ldvtrtllld

Gt

nation... T.V.

-t

Cllh ,. . . . _ . . '"' . .'":.~ '

rm dtllv.me ~tnd no •
~
chwge. AM VDY nHd ''' cle*4ncr-.
mlka mon.v. h8vefun •d•W,•

hourt of spn time . No ~~ ,

rlenot n~11ry. CeH 1-800.: '
221-1610.
. '., .,
3000

;ctbl

government

Ult!' ..

116.040· HII.230 voor. Ncltlt'l
hir~g . Coli !106·•1-ltOOO Ext,
R-9805.
.
EASY

WORK!

ASSEMBLY

17,..00 p1r 100. Ouarsnt-'ct
ptvment . No •••· Detaiii·Mnd
lttmped .,vtkJpe: Eltn· 7187\
3418 Ent..,ritt, Ft. P..,_, fll .

33482.

•

LPN or RN 10 co_,. leta mobfle
in•r.nce -.em In Pomeroy
1r11. E•cellent pert-time potl·
lion. SMd r•ume to,,., P .O .
lo11 2217. HuntW.gton, W. Ve.

25723 .
E11perienc.d body men wanted .
Mult hr.t own too• Md'

rolo,.,.... 814· fl82 · 7013 ore
114· 992·11653 8:30 tNIII:OQ, ,
AVON. 3 op., t..,lto.rl-.. eel '

304·f75·1429 .

REPS NEEDED for buofrtll!.

•eo.ooo- ·

.:counta. Full-time.
180.000. Plll -tlmo. 112.QOO.

111,000. no oolllng. rtPMt •
butln•s. Set your own hourt ~ .
Tr1lnlng provided. Clll 1·812·
938--70. M·F. Btm to ....
(centrelltiWidrld time) .

Pliny TNdt Stop .......... .
now KCfiPtlng IPPIIcetion fGr·
cooll-w.ltNSs. Phone 304· 717.. ,
8367 betwWI 10 • . m. • 3 p.m'.'

or 1ppty 1t r.. tiUfM~t .

6 lost and Found
FOU NO Contact ,.,,.. 4th
Ave. bygoltcourll. Girlsgt•...

LOST Cash rtwlrd. Lost in 0 .J .
White Rd.
M1le bitch L..b .
Coil 51 4·440· 0370 .

•rM·

Public Sale
· 8r. Auction

2·17 -86·tfn

Community Centtr .,IKY Sltur·
doy Night 7 :00 PM.

Wanted To Buy

We PlY c•h for 1111 model ciNn
Uled Clfl.

FENCE CO..ANI

Jim Mink Ch..., .-Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson

PH. 992-6931

614-440-3672

After 5 Cal

TOP CASH p•id for '13 model
tnd naw.,. used csrs. Smith
Bulck -Pontiec. 1911 Eastern
Ava., G1llipolls. Ctll 814-448·
2282 .

742·2027

25 Yeera Experience

WANTED TO BUY und wood.

HART'S
CONSTRUTION
992-7111

coel htettrl. SWAIN'S FURNI 1\IRE. 3rd . • Olivo St Goill!lo·

lmll mo .

RED'S
CARRY OUT
Wood• Mill load
z•llos,..lldwol
3 Milia fritnt Vlnttn
. HOURS.;
Mondoly·Thuroday
10 A.M. ·9 P.M.
Friday 8t Soturday
10 A.M.-11 P.M.
CloMCI Sunday

388·9\'-Pmo.

Ill. Coli 814·448· 31 &amp;8 .

"Fr11 Estimates"
lnstallatian Availablt

.nd rtftriiiON to lOll •

Situations
Wanted

12

1·800-433-7847.

B11ying dtily gold, ..lvtf COinS,
rings . jewelry, Milling Wlrt, otd
coins. lqt cun .. cy. Top pri CII. Ed. lurtlltt Berber Shop,
2nd. Ave. Mkldlipart, Oh. 814 ·

Roger Hysell
Garage

992· 3478.

Rf. 12 4, P-roy Ohio

f llliil liYilii'III

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

'

REPAIR

Sl I vII I'·'

AIIO TrtiiMIUIOI

11 Help Wented

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

lltbyaitter k1 my horM lttrtlng in
Sept . S•d reaum11 • referen·
ct1 toRt. 4 lox 148, Gslllpolla.
Oh 411831 .

Nood bobylinor 2PM to IPM.

Pert. 10meone wHh ctllclren at
.... .. Coli 514.· 387-7281 .

CJ Corq1Uterized H•rirc Air Selection
z Swim Molds • lntltpretina Services

-a: LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
i3 Licensed Clinical
z
or

P~~rt-timtsecrtt•rv

and full time
bol&gt;yoltt• tco"*lnod) lo my
honw WI GellpoNs. Rtf•.,CM

and eJCptrienct a rNJII. cen
814-448· 1422 oft• tlf'M.

....... Ganr.:;ons......... .
&amp; Vicinity

GREAT BEND ELEaRIC, Inc•.
N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

s-ol fomllv. off Rt. 7 an
Addilon lul•ltle flld . .ht . rd. to
left. 'Whitt houN wtth rtd blm.

boltnd Adrl"'lto Sohaot lloby

ICOHIOrin. lohool lklthQ,
boat motof'l. olothtt. mile. Aug.

'

HIGH SCHOOL DROPOUT ,
EARN WilLE YOU LEARN '
If you 1r1 econorriCIIty $edv.nt-a.t betwMn 1he 118• of
18to21 yeartold•ndwouldllkt
to recltive yaur GED c:antect the
EmpiDym~nt lhcurity office It
228 lth StrMt, Point Plltlllllnt:,

Augull 18 throu~ Augult 21.,
b.tw-Nn 9 1.m.-l p.m. for
ltigtbiUty CMtiflcation . If lnterlltld you mullt be 1 r•klent of

Mnon County and provkleiHOot
of lddr••· liillty bill or driv.,., •:
licente, bring your birth Gefllfl•.,

utt or 'lOt•'• reg lltr.tion Cllrd, •
10cl-' eecurlty card , checllstuliw •
thlt ~diCIItlthl trnount of grog •,

ftmlly Income for p•tt e mon"" ~.
tnd the type of welflrt 1111st- "'lftOI you ,,. r.::.Wing bnld 6h ' ·
tht ftmify liu . AH mel• born
lfter 1· 1-80must hiYI ....,c.
tlve service number E.E .O .

EmpkJytr.

:;:;;:::::::;;;:::;::::;==::::
•~
Schools
..
16
Instruction
lum ., prspers lnaonw Tu
rttuma and ltunch • MW end ·,
811Citing cer11r. Cl11.1 .. 1\111. ~
SetJtlmbM" 8th throughout the '

Tri-State. For morelnformstiOn',. .~
phone OtnT•• in G•lllpolll,
014-446-S178

18 Wanted to Do

.

Proftlaiontl Sign P~ntlng ~ •
Signs Df qutllty 1nd dilttnGdOft . '
AirbNih. pk:tort•.
~

•reen

PM. 304-f75-11027.

Plsno IMaons In yCM.~r home, cell

Mo"ho Rood, 304-1178-13711.

•

Now ap111 tu buain.,, J • · J\.
Otrtgt one mHa up At. 31 troD. '
Hlndenon. J•m• Sttw•rt. It• • .
w1r1 Hollow.
•

,..-------·
Nuralng •nlltW'It ill ait lhiMiy tn
ho .., hoopltol. Elght·t'on hou•·l
porloclo , Fri lhou Surtdoy. 3n.o.
17&amp;.1887.
n

R•clne.

, ...

Wtdn•Hy end Thur~~ Au-

gull . 20th, 21tl. ,..._.
Rold . W:lll heYuhHia, curtt~n 1 ,

dlohol. toyo. borby ............ ..

3 Fomily Vont Solo ot tho horrw
of Dorio Hordor Ewlrigton. Aug.
20 • 21 . IAM·IPM.

houllllhokf heme, •cl mo....
8mc Ptck-up 7t Pont6ec ltMion
WlfDn . Co... to flluttand folio.,
••ns on New Lime f'd. Pet efH1o
Jim Rick men.
•

8-11, .... -

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

"At llti. . .lt PrieM"

n

.

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

.......Pomerov ..........

i

.

'
G•rao• S•lt: Aug . 18· 20. 1 : 6,
Blcyclo. clothing. baby ~lln't
hou""okl itomo. 401 4rh .n .

Fri. ond Sot Augull 22. U .)il
Llroe ule. Toote, giftt:, otottt..:-

0 .. Drlvo.

RAYMOND E. PROFFm (MAC) j

&gt;

11·22. 8:30·1

011'11111 lllo Wod. l 11turo..
1:30om to 3pm. Olrf'o olod!lrir

•Residential
•Commercial
•I nduatrial

Offict '"·2431

1-' Buain•• .Training .

•

(614) 446·7619 (614) 992-6601
417 Second Awnue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

RACINEr OHIO

W"l cere for eldtrtv in my home.
Trtinld, ••perilnced. Call 814·
992·11183.

'··
~~~
···
,., ..
r '(ard SaleS
....

Audiotocist

'CUSTOM iiiir
· HO.S.A GAIAGES

3595.

ceu printing. CIR •her 3 :30 '

6-17-lfc

l:

Special ,.using care for tld.ty
_, P'ivtte horN". Call 114-H2· .

Old Orl.-.ttl rugl WIIRiad . Any
aiZI or condition. Cal toll fr•

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS

. BISSELL
BUilDIIS

. Day or Nipt
NO SIINDAY CAW .

~~!"l:r ::~ .=."'.Q'{&lt;i

alml

AUCTION , Arbudclt CrHk

H-'l&amp;lfc

, .... 949·2101
or .·949•2160

wll .,

trolrr~·

C-15 Cllrl Point PI...MI A tal•~
ttt. 200 Meln St .. Point Pf••·
IIRt, W.VA . 26050.

8

ACCENT

•SIDING SOFFIETT
•REMOOELING OF
ALL TYPES
•TREE TRIMMING
•CONCRETE WORK

nel1nd Distributive Account

HI-

I . .,... .......~v.

6.

Lo.t: M1le bledc cat wwring
wNte flet coli II'. Close to
Beechgrove Ceme11ry. 814·
992· 2154.

Guttel'l
Down1pputs
Gutter Cleenlng
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

:304-112-2996 7· .

Naw &amp; Repair

Ill Ca11rl St. , Po111tray. Dhio 0769

ot&gt;~~lleont

colvo

•

Eastern 4ve. •crou •om U.S .
Morino. Coil 814·448· 7338 .

•ROOF! NG 8r.
GUTTERING

PHONE
992-2156
Or Wfltl D11lly Stnt1nel Clmil'itel Dt,l

tho

Blby sltt• needed Park Drivt
Are1, l'h end 4~ ye•r old. d1yl ·
1nd ev.. lnp shifts . Send ,... .

2 kin.... 304-876-7651 after

"Free Estimates' •

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
No Sunday Calls

tlonur~dednilnlltrotlaft. we-

..
,kino. mot!YIIod. -::;.;
tic 111d ntoo ..-111 In
.,.,,..

to thetuccetlful a.ndld•· · ,..
lmmodl•. . . . .
- ·

repair, p1n1. tnd tuppliM. Pick

PLUMBING I HEAnNG

.,,. . . o chol.,glng po-lri
tht 1r111 ol crMI .. ....., ciolle-

.. autot..dtngfronolitlpock

V. C. YOUNG Ill

. 1 · 13·tfc

otftrt • ce,.....mlndl4
•
uol., immtdlltoirfrjroi'lllnlll't~

m~r~t cor-. tlonoiiGIII I'IWirdinl uiiiY •ftlatuie~

work

9

t 60 Hamilton Street il the
Village of Middleport, Ohio.

Several from the Syracuse
Charge, United Methodist Church
attended camp at the Franc~
Asbury Camp, Rio Grande.
Going from the charge were
Kimberly Jenkins, Sara Harrts,
and Bridgett Varney, Forest Run
Church; Wendi and Crystal Har·
mon, and Emily and Sam Shain
from tbe Asbu'Y United Metmdtst
Church, Syracuse.

The Daily Sentinel-

Ohio

r: ··· ··· · · ··· ·· · •·•• ••••••••• •••••
A"""ll 19· 24 Wro1 ano In two
ye. .. tit. 7 It Molill Momory

~' "'.

.. ... ··pt·Piiiiiallnr::·:,
&amp; VIcinity ...
'·1
·················:··············,·.·,•
July 6rh, yoict- I till
Gtlllflollo

misc.

-I

FOllY." -· bio¥ote .;,
~

•

•

!t

Cl1n1MM. tum on Co. Rd. 32
Eoglo tllclgo loohon Rd. go t

Yord&amp;AII. Aot11-U. 41&gt;1111..;

814·141·2111 .

~M.:.:'"..:.·:::.
~.:.:•.:.:Io.::."'
_ :ln:::o:::"::
:.
...
::.::::;:

m._.

D-. fumto.ro. oun6.

aut Rodmond R!No 011
Good clun clo~j• .,. t

,,

.a

• •1 """

�1986

Ohio
KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®ltr LMiy Wrttht

Ml~ lt : IWIII ISI:

21

61

Business
Opportunity

Houset\olll Goods
LAYNE'S FURNITURE

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH-

Sof11 end Dhlira priced from

U88 to tells. tlbtoo 1&amp;0 ond
liP to 1121. Hldo-a·bidl 1390
to 1818. Roclln . . 122&amp; to
13'11. Lampo 128 to t128.
DiniMIII 1109 and 1111 to MBI.
Wood 'tioblt W•8 chlirl 0281 to
1791. DHil 1100 up to 1371.
Hutch~~t e400 tnd "'P · Bunk
bedl cd"'lete w-menr.....
12815 '"" Up to 1311. Baby
b•• 1110 • 1175. MettrNtH
.. bo• oprlnp lui 01 twin 183.
firm t7·3 , and 183. Qu~~n tett
1225, King 1350: • dr-lr
cheat 1111. Dr•ttrl ell. Gun
cablnett 8. 10, a 12 ~n . Get

ING CO . reoommendl the• you
do bulin•• with people ~
know , and NOT to und mona;v
throullt the mt i1 until you h iVe
i'lvestigated the offering.

Need eJCtrll money1 Friendly
~me toy panles his immediit•
openi1g1 fo r maniQefl end
demonstrators In thil a' " · If'
ea•v. fun and proftt.b!•· W•
have over 700 I I(Citlng toys ll'td
giftl feMUring the new enlmDid
talking dol "Cricket'' which wJH
be tdver1iud on nattonallV . No
cash invuatment. no collecting.
no delivering and no serviCe
charge Allyounaedi1adniri10
make monev, heve fun end a few
hours of space t 1me. No ex,._
rience nece11ery Call 1· 800227-151 0 .

1n&lt;

ne&amp;! •n Gallipolis, Ohio. Well
estabhehed in convenient dawn tow lo catiOn No food. liquor or
clothing . GroW1h and expantion
limited CW'IIy to your ambition.
Earn a verv attractive income

while being your own boll. 1nd

helping or co mmunity. Send
B.F.S. P.O Box.
1227, Gallipo lia, Oh 45631 .

1nquirM to

23

r

32

Professional
Services

Mobile Homes
for ·sate

MOBILE HOMES MOVED: insured. reuonable ret•. Call
304·678·2338
1982 Clayton, 12xeo. allelctrlc,
exc cond. 304-171-2411',

Real Eslale
Homes for Sale

J bdr honwt, clo se to town, 2
ba th s. partly furnished . GH
heat, low utdittes Call614 -24fi·

9248 .
Very speci al oHer

Owner must

sell th is small but underpriced
home located on Mill Creek St.
Close to the nfftN swimmmg pool
1n Gnllipolia Call 614 -446·
2539
3 bedroo m. 1 '!1 bath home with

raRge. retug woodburnar on
lA . lot near Crown City. Call

614·446-6541
2- 3 bdr hou sa, storm windows.
garag e. Green School diltrict,
S19.000 Call614-446 -202&amp;or
Woods Ag ency.
House wit h 1 acre close to Rto
Grbnde. 3 bdr . 2 ba'lhs. Call

61'4-245· 9248
For sale by owner. 715 Third
Ave . 3 or 4 bdr. 2 baths. New
kitchen cab in ets . Garage ,

garden spot, within walking
dis tance to Ga llipolt1 school• &amp;:
shopp1ng. Caii614-245 -5B46 .

Mutt Hll. 14x70. 2 bedroom.
1Va baths, carplfted, furnished.
poreh, utility. 2 expandos. AI·
most a double wkl• _. 1 sk1gle
wide price. All electric. on rented
half ecre. No ,.nonHie offer

..fused . 304-571· 8704.

33

Farms lor Sale

614·378· 61 56.

3 large bedrooms, 1V, bath, XL
Hving room, XL k1tchen, utility

room. g11age Arbaugh Addition
in Tuppen Plain a. Ca1161 4·667·

Business
Buildings

For S.ta: &amp;OxiO h . eomm•cial
zoned building. Briek construction. Large garage door1 , South
Fifth Ave. Middleport. Phone

814·992 ·8858 doyl, 814-992·
5113, 814· 992·2028 evenings.

120 acres 1 mi. hom counhou•e. Call814-446-2991 after
&amp;PM .
Al fllon build ing lo1 s with public:
water. mobile home~ permitted.
304-576-2336 Of 304-576·

2267 .

Real Estate
Wanted

Rcnlol s

AND

USED

41

Houses for Rent

2 bdr hou sa on Dry Ridge Ad

Patr iot. OH . l 17D mo. including
water. Call en. 814-448-4703.
2 minulft from new Gallipolis
Pooll Mint condi11on, 2 bedroom
house with new plush carpeting,
draperift, windows, intulatkm.
wiring. House Is
13150

spotl"''
pa.,no. Coli 814·2B8·111 0.

MOBIL E

HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES . 4 Ml

WEST. GALL1PO LIS. RT 35.
PH ONE 614·446·7274
1966 Buddy , 2bdr ., 121160.
$2800 Call 614-446·0390
1 2x50 Shultr fully furnished.
&amp; dryer. a1r conditioner
on 86x171 all leYellot, one· thir d
acra garden apace. located in
Porter. St Rt. 160 Pric.
reduced for quick salt 116 ,000
takes all Tefml may be avalllbe
to rnponilbit person with IUJ'"
1an1ial down paymenu at 6 %
lnterftt . Cash prefltftblt. Call
8 14· 388·9893 if no anMr call
Wa~her

air oond., dishwather, exc. loct·
tion. Call 814-448·92015 after

5 15

lerge. tpeCiOUI 2 bdr . Windsor,
2 bath, diningfoom, convenient
tocatfon on Rt 7. Ct ll81 • ·245 ·

6818.

Duple• tor \Jft1 &amp;•8 Second

A111. Gallipolis. 13 bdr. llvin·
groom, dlningroom. n...,.. kit chen, backyard. rtfrig . • range.

1310 plus utifH:iel • security
d-oh. Coli 814·441-0880.

Rio Grtnde eree 3 bedroom
homt, Clean, t300 rental, Hcurhy depo1it and refertnCM. no
p ttsll Cell 114-441-4201 .

Hunt WVA 304-429· 3396 .

Stut ...

1981 Oakbrook 14x70 ex -

1 12 Third Ave. 2 bdr. Stove l
refrig . furnished t210 month.
t16 deposit. Water furn'-hed.

pando, electric:sto \le &amp; rehiQtra·

tor. gas furnace. woodburner. 3
bedroomt, gerdlfl tub, 2 full
beths. new carpet . cu rtains &amp;
underpinning included ,
t14,000. Ctll 81"· 379-2&amp;87 .

12 •60 Vind ale totalelec .. 2 bdr .

new carp et, exeellent cond. Free
detivery • Itt up . Call 81 4·4•6·
017&amp; 16960
1982 14x70 Fleetwood, 3 bdr ..
2 btthl. tots! etectric For more
Information 614 ·388·B&amp;33 af·

3 b4idroom n,obaeftomtforHie.
Coiii14·HZ· MII.

,.

I

pool frolt tree refrigerator •a&amp;,
refrigerator harvnt gokl side by
side •195, rtfrlgeretor white
side by side •1t&amp;, 2 alactrie
r1ng11 3Clln. eoppertone 8126
ea .. 20 in . gas range 876, wood
• eoal buming stove t200. GE
washer IYOCidO green 816D, 12
cult. freeur t1215. Skaggs
Appliances Upper River Rd.

114-. . 8· 7398.
UNCI Refrigerator, full1i1e met,,.., , couch . Corbin • Snyder-.

8)4·. . 8·1171 .
Refrigerator, stove, livingroom
IUitl. 2 piece bdr. a~ite , wood·
b\lrner &amp; v.ccuu m cleanet. Cell

114-248-9857.

Like new counter top buih n
alec. stove Amane 1250. 11 cu.
ft . Gibson rtfrig8fatorgopperton

1100. Cell 114·"8·2470.

1100. Calllt4·M7·7711 .

EVENING

King woodbumer n.w brickl
very nice t250. Cutiron wood
St. coal bumer good cond . •1110.

2 bdr. unfum. with appl. at 881
Third Ave.. Gallipolis. I26Q
month p1us utllltill . Call 814 -

245·9595 .

7928.
3 roofT'IIII bath. new carpet. nice
a. clean. Clou to shopping,
t211 mo. All utilitill pild ae.
elec. Ctll814·448 -7516 .
2 bdr . 2 batha, kitchen. furni·
tute , 11 Court St 1326 permo
plus ut ilities. reference S. deposit. Call 614-441-•926.

Remington 870 full choM bturol
t200 . Artley flute like

Aug . 21 , T~urodoy. 1:00 public
bids will ~ taken on folowlng

Stlel 60 percent offl Fl11hlng
trrow sign t2891 Lighted, non·
arrow t 2591 Nonllghted 82291
Free letter1l Few left. 8•

locally . 1(800)423· 0153 ,

Middleport . t150. per month
plut utlliU•. For further information. c.II814 -887-09BB.

2 bedroom fum !shed epsrtment
for rent. Adult1 prellt'red. 814-

992· 2749 .

2 bedroom. •175 ' pet month.
1100 deposit, you Plr utilities.
No petl. 814· 949·2234.
APARTMENTS, mobile hamel.
houses. Pt. Pletnntand Galllpolil. 814-448-8221 .
APARTMENT FOR RENT · Now
aeceptlnt appllcadans for rental
aptrt"*"tl ln M110n Apta Limited. Two bedroom apt1 It
t189 .00 I* month. RMtal
rates mar be high• depending
on Income. Houalng will be
.vtllllble to e.ch applicant regerdle.. af their raee. color.
religion, ltll or n.tural origin.
lmer•ted tppliCints should cell
304-773·15011 or contlet D•
ni1e Btr .. b or Walter Justice It
the main otfl~ 1671 lrlce
Roed . Reynoldtburg. Ohio

•aIn e, nM tires, brak ... inte·

2617.
1972 Ford LTD. No trantnils•on , 875. Sofa, 110 lovetQt
•10. Chair. t10. Seml- ent~ue
rocking their with ottoman,
•10. Admiral 8 -W tv, .,0.
AM -FM 8 track ltereo player,
110. Ant.que pieno. •3oo.
Philco coppertone r81rigeratorfreezer. t76 . Admifal copper·
tone side by side refrlgarttor
heezer, $21 . Call 114·992-

btrTell9

shot revolver. Prtctieallr new.
Less than 1 box shells been tired.
11()0 Contact Ralph Pratt 227

8115
79 Ford 4x4 wheel drive . lA .,n.
$4000 . OBO . 79 Odyauy
Han de, •Boo. Ditch WHch Road
· Bunch .. d acce..oriM. ••soo.
Call61•·949· 2293 evenings.

lte9.95.
12. Sewer and drain pipe 4•10
PVC preterattd t2 .99 et.
13. I ' plenie table 2 bench•
mtde from 2•4d r.twood
otolnld 129.95.

e

2. Mdroom apt. Oalllpollt Ferry.
304-171-ZIQ or 175-1783.

46

11. t1)an,dd~2~~~~;~"~: wban
~
aooon;

3 bedroom 2 Jtory home in

Furnilhed Room•

Pomorvy. 114-112-3431.. 1
Hou11 for r•t In M'ddtiPOfl. 4
BR ., 2 both, fonotd in yord.l . .a
kitchen, F.A., formtll dining
room. laundry, b•tmlnt . U31

814· HZ·I281.

For Nnl liMping ROoms and
light houM kooplng '"""' Pork
c ... rtl Hottl. Call 114·- ·

0711.

Aoonw for rent, d.y. week.
n'Niftth. Oallla HOIIII. Call 114·

"1· 1180. Rontlllow•t120
month . .

Furnllhtd room •118. Utllttl•
pd. 111 2nd Oolllpolla. Share

bllfl.

~Ingle

Apar1mtn tl and hou111 In
Pomeroy area. Deposit required .

..e......

Pov own !'111hi•. 1·114·BI2·
2381 days.

48

2 btdroomo, IIIII dry b • Uncoln Ave., 3 bedrooms. fuA
dry biHment Lincoln Ava., 3
btdroomo now hou11, fuN drt
._.mant Mt. Vtmon Aw., tl
... oond. wtlln...t-low full
blllo. Rant ""'inG 1271.00,
- . . roqulrld, ·304-171·,
1112 .. 871·4t80.

mole. Coli 814·

SpiCe for Rent

...

304-875-3308.

for

1111.

I Mill Sliill·lll''.
/1, LIV I:S IIi l. k

61

Farm Equipment

CROSS. SONS
U.S. 36 Wilt, Jacklon, Ohio.
814-288·1461 .
Mauey F•guson, New Holland,

s• a

luah Hag ·
Service. Over
40 wed 1ractore to ct.OOH from
• COft111etl line Of new • UNCI
equlpnnt. Larg"t •lectlon k1
S.E. Olllo.

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER . SR :W W. OoUipolla,
Ohio. Coli et4·44e·8777. avo.
114·"8· 3892. Up front trac·
ton with warTinty IMM' 71 uted
tractors. 1000 10011.
6&amp;0 lntametional tractor. Far·
m.tl wide front end commerlcal
loader. 4 plowa, 2 row no-til corn
planter, Co foot alwetur, 1 old
com pidcer, transpon diac,
mowing mechlne. extra dual
whatll, 1971 GMC Dump

r.uclt. 11100. Coli 814-388·
9300 .

Farm wagon, 1 row tobacco
..n.er. bush hog. tpreyw. bottow plows. hey rake, hi¥' balw.

Ctrtop ClrTMw, t30; quetn lb:e
hkt-•bed •200 . Phone 304·

7.600 btu air cond . Compound
bow. 304·676-6674

McDaniel Custom Butchering.
Open for bu&amp;ln••· 5 days e
week. 304·882 · 3226.
Quilt tops, 7 total. all for t141S .
Seperatety, 125 each 304-876·

6395.

55

aom -p~eur.

4 row com tlfant•.

dsc, mowing

814-143-2803.

meahlne. Call

Building Materials
Block. brick, MWet' pip•. win·
dowt, llntell, etc. Claude Win·

245-6121 .

Building metaritls. cement,
bku:k1 tlltizas, yard or delivery.
Gallipolis Block Co .. 123\-\ Pine
St.. Gaillpoll1, Ohkt Call 614·

7121 .

56

Dragonwynd Ctnery Kennel .
CFA Himalayan, Persian end
Siamese kinena . AKC Chow
puppies. Call 814-441·38"
after 7PM .'

•tin•·
5t4·882·83M doyo, 114·992·
7364 nighll.

w-.

1967 Chevy Nove. 4 door. auto ,

9 mo old long haired Chlhuthul
female . Call 81•· 2&amp;6·1911 .
Britttnv Sptniel pupa, 6 welkl

old, 130 00 each. 304· tll·
1727.
3 ye• uld, AKC reglat•ed , Red,
male Chow Chow, •oell•t
papers. 28 champiOns In

Pldl·

II'"·coli efta• 1:00, 304·871·
1789.
4 year old female Bugle, "'"'
good. UI.OO . Dog cartl• for
tNol, 2 oomportmantt. 304112· 3238.

l ...it puppJII, IIIII blooded,
118 .00. 304· 182·3118.
FOR SALE'. - Walma""''
pupPy, AKC Ragllttrld, fomtlt,
ohoto ond •
304·11:17·
3302

-•mod.

Ragll,.ld mole P~ lluH T.orrltr.
2 yro old.• 1194-.871·247S, '

s·-·

.a

AKC •OIIii!OrOd "'"""'·
ft.
malo, Z mol-.
old.
- · and .,._;..,., 171.00.
304-17e-zsN .

Muel.c~l

'

Flute 0100.00. b!M'4I
110.00. Flutt plays

.......
•-L
,.•,

304-882·34~.

PI- and bench 120.00. JD4-

..

'

3839 .
1970 Winnebago. 22 ft. long.

A· 1 ohepe, 18000. 814·949 ·
2234 .

1974 VW Super BelUe. Good
oondition. t&amp;95. Call 814-7422121 momlnga or wenings.

1882 VW Rabbitt L.S.. 4 door,
air, • apaed, AM·FM ,
11 .880.00. 301-876-2829.
1971 Elderldo. all available
option, ti,.,O.OO or belt off•.
304-87&amp;·M41 .

1971 Ford Lei1ure Tim e
Camper. good cond for •ale or
trade for Cl111 A motor home, . •
phone 304 -676- 2184 after
5:00PM.
1978 Starcrah 26% fl eamper,
bunk house style, sleep• 7 ,

1948 Ford Coupe. 2 door. auto
302, 13.800.00 . 304·875·

Se r vic es

revenge-hungry

tB80 AMC Spirit OUOO.OO.
304-878·1174.

81

'84 C.V.II• wagon. 4 eyl, I
ak end r•Uo, front WhHI
driVe. 15,1500 or beet: offar. No
Vede. 304'!'4140 .,d leiVe
eeac~.

"*IIIII• on machine.

1180 • - Skylarft 4 door,
t,.QO, Nlltd trll'lrNuiOn r•

'*'· Coll304-871·1293.

1871 M08.now1opgoodcond.
12.000.00. 1971 Z21 Cam..,,

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime gutran·
tea. local ref•encas fumtahed,
Fr.. eetknetel. ,.. Call · collect
1-814-237-0488, dey or night.
Roger• Ba 1 ement
Wlterproofing.

Phone avo. 814-288-1402.
New Holl•d 4.17 htyblne.lnter·
national 1250 grinder mllar.

49 . 000 mllaa ,

03.000.00. 304·175·1113.

'71 CuiiMI Suprema, nHda
-Itt, 304-178-6241.

72

62

4

Now buying thtll eom or ••
com . Callforlatttt.,o181. River

City Form
2885.

BuPO~.

63

Uveltock

114· . .&amp;·

Trucks

for Sale

spd .. brown with

cream

flb•gloot top,... Caiii14-M70384.
1878 Dodgt'1410n 4•4 club cob
plcltup, low mil-. 310 tn·

gin.. auto, Pl. Pl. air, new tiNs.
brlbl, front end. with todt-out

hubt, u . oond . liking U ,700
belt otftr or tr.cla. looks for
. .. 700, -I(IOn ..
,_......, Yilt. Moving 11 ....
"1·274t.

12 mbtld lions 01 .71 IICII. 10
largo cluclto 13.00 u. I doo •

•
DatiUn tNak ru• good
1200. Coli et4·"1· 4t78.

oholtl4~

72 Ford PU "'"' good, flOOd
body. 11,000• Call 8t4· 261·
tZII.

buck rlbblb. HorN Rag. Btend-

ord ... lid. I F1to. 4

month old. 4 large bNde IOWI.

11 monthooldholfSimmontal•
holf Chorlolo bul. C.ll814· 241·
834t .
R..iltwed H•etord ce"l• for
Ale, 1 bull. 2 CIOWI. 1 CIH, J . C.
A.,.WOOCI, Ol•wood. W. Va.
304·671-21.0.

lr ,t iiSJJrr l LI IJ IIII

71

"11 Ford XLT Aenger, thr111
411rt.,
480 •tine, auto·

•n.

matio. doublofualtankl, Pl. Pa.
304-BI2·32:N.

lin ChiVYioottodalo half ton.
bn&gt;wn, AM·FM radio, PS, PB,
301 V· l . 304-178-. . 93.

73

Vena&amp;

4W.D.

1981 J11p CJ-15. 4 cylind•.
lookl Md runa or•t. Call

Auto1 for Sale

814-21e·1881 .

1962 JHP CJ . 7 Ran.. ado
84 Chwette 4 cyl .. 2 door, I
opd.. AM-FM 011-. low
miloo"" CaN 114·"e· 0137
olttr &amp;PM.
1880 Trano AM rtbwllt ...,.
Mdo, Pl. PI, .W, d~ . . . . .
ca ..... con d. Alltfnv 14,'70o
bOlt oHor 01 1rado. loo• to.
11.210,nald
·..
_ . . , v a n.M-ti
t14441·274t .

11M c~~evy c .. tlltlool
WIIJOn, nM
wttll onty
1,000 mllto, ver\1 good - - .
t4.200. Col 114·1141·"'
814·.. 1·~12 .

•gin•

QE, Specleling in Zenith. Call

spans three generations of
a wealihy AuS1reilian fa mily and centers on 1he lot·
bidden love of a boeu1iful
woman and an ambitiou s
priest (2 hrs .) Part 1 of 5.
(1) MOVIE: 'Toward 1ha
Unknown'
CIJ D (]!)• Growing Paint
(CC) Jason and Maggie 's
careers take drastic turns

304·678· 2398 or 814·448·
2454.

identifies the wrong man In

ter • pl•tar r•alra, low rates .

Coll814·268·1182.

8 :06

Prop . 814·"8·9848

8:30

hltdtr&gt;p and toft top, 8 cyl. I

opd .. '0,000 mllto
YIIUI 11,300).

~otaH

MORT\' MEEKLE
AND WINTHROP
'

878· 2088 or e75· 7358.

'

Sttrkl Tree and Lawn SeMce. - ·
landiCiping 304·878·201 0.

8111 price

'II Dodge van with btd oH
noo.
..
" ' ·w•tlltaoarfD&lt;trldaln
· "'"' ,... ..... fair
oflw. Can, bo
Ut
""*- E - Bl.eanyt~mo.
' '

'

MY D6D LtKee TO
6-l~Y, "WHeJo.J IN
CIOIJB'I; PUNT! II

Rotary or cllble •ool driUing .
Moat wallacornpleled umeday.

Pump lltll end lervice. 304·

HE 5AY6 KNUTE
ROCI&lt;'NE':ALWAYS
SAlOn-tAT.

895·3802
UB Roofing • Ptln1ing. t•P·
roofing, repair. painting in1ldeor
out. Fraa Estimate. Local Refer-

' " - · 304-e?l-7891 .

82

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth end Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 114-441-3888 or 114· _ , .
445·"77

83

Excavating

.'

Good· 1 Ellcavttlng, basenu11t1.
footert , driveweya. septic tanks .

landacapinu. Call anytime 114 4'1; 41537, Jtm• L. Deviaon.

WHAT KIND OF A /YOTHER
V\OL.IL.D NAMe H5R BA.&amp;t'
~CANoor;•

BA.R NEY

..

YESl~IDl Y'S

1

.

Kin's Water SIIJ'VIce. Wells. : •
clnems. poo.la and waterl:)td1 , :

filled . CoM 114·387·0823' o• • ,
m;317-774) .. 304-175· : •

--------------------Wttteraon ' a Water Heullng, :·
••
r...onllblt retn, Immediate • •
2.000 gallon daiiY-.y, cl1tem1, ; :
DOQia, weH, etc. c8M 304-1576· ,

2111.

Crazy
like a fox

NORTH

,1 1:00
Upholstery

I

•1o 8s
t3

+A97642

EAST
Could il ever be right to pass your i WEST
partner in a probable f · l fit when you f ; K to 7 6
.KJ9 7
have a 5·3 fit available? Look at the • ~ ~ :o s
• Q8 7 6
bidding of today's deal and tell me if +Q 10
+KJ83
North was not just plain crazy to pass
two diamonds with only a singleton
SOUTH
when be bad three-card support for
+AQJ93
•s
32
spades. Perhaps I can show method in
t A 942
his madDess.
When North bid two clubs, he antic!·
paled that East would bid a red suit.
Vulnerable: North-South
Tben North would compete with a
Dealer: North
two-spade bid aud subside if East·
Eall
Sootb
West continued to the three-level. But w..t
Pass
t+
the punitive double of two clubs by
Obi.
2t
East gave North an idea. Why not pass I NT
Pass DbJ.
Pass
two diamonds, giving East an easy op- Pass
Pass
2+
Obi.
Pass
portunity to continue in the rhythm of Pass
Pass
doublin&amp; for penalties? U North ran to
two spades only after two diamonds
Opening lead: +Q
bad been doubled, the opponents mighl
be lUred into a mistake. And that is ex·
actly what happened.
With the queen of clubs lead, declar·
er bad oo trouble makln.ll the doubled made by West. And that would no
contract. True, if tbe defenders led doubt have been the final contract if
three rounds of hearts eodlq in tbe North had confidently bid two spades
. ~band and then played a spade, de- over two diamonds, since East would
clarer IJilgh~ l,)e set a Irick. That would · be reluctant to then double with only a
still be a good result ag..,t a three singleton in the North·South trump
no-trump contract that coald easily be -•ult.

••

••

1...----------....J

..

..

r

~~·1£Jtif'
by

JOSEPH

THOMAS

ACROSS

DOWN

I Sound of
contempt

I " Reetle
Bailey "

5 Converse

charac i.Pr

9 Long,
easy
stride
10 Israeli
greeting

2 Ancient
Greek
colony
3 Run ofr at
the mouth

12 Freshly
13 ·Lassie, e.g.
14 Aunt (Sp.)
I&amp; Heart

:

Yetlte'rday's Answer 8119

21 Prolonged
24 Slu!rifice,
In baseball

25 Burrowing
beast

28 Dolt
27.Wise, cicy
30Hagprd.
novel
31

Summer

. • (f'r,)

.

3! - de tete

33 Wrongdoer

S5 Roster

38
37

hr+-+!....+-+-

S8. w•;:~~marfraJTlH'T

AXYDLBAAXR
la.LONGRELLOW
One l$er lllllndl! for ancitbtr. In this sample A is used
for lllf Utree 'L'.. for .tbe two O's, etc. Single letters,
aptlllropbell. ,lbe~andformatlon of the words are all
hlnlll. Each day the cvde letlers are different.

·x

,.

CllYPI'OQUOTE

. 11-19

KN

zv

CIJID e CIJ liD liD illloo:

VQ'

V(.l

cQp

VDQPOU~ .

L Q G.' V

MOVIE:.'Th• Rawn'

,
IIII Coaby ShoW
(!)towCon~lon
losp
(I) (I)) Bitt of Ctraon.

usznn

A Q G 'V

C QP

UZPYR

Ie ,

~~
Lost
"
.

18 NowKere to 2S Measuring
6 Actor
he found
deVIce
(Lat.) .
Linden
21 Venettan
(Brit)
18 Bantu
7 Imaginary
hero
27 N.H. city
8 Laboring ·22 Football
28 Celerity
language
17 Where lhe 10 Flat cake
tenn
29 Modify
A's play
11 Full of
23 Solitary
34 " Br.tndy _ ..
181nsect
subsiJincr 24 Raimondi 35 New
20 Not a soul 15 Chaplin
and
GuinPa
21 Horse
prop
to wn
22 English
emblem

IBi News

•
1 1:30

1-lt-N

+8 4!

By James Jacoby

~~

(!) INI',!

age

James Jacoby

10:30 (]) Celebrity Chtlt
MOVIE: 'Thorn'

'

SCilM·IfTS ANSWERS

BRIDGE

IBi Newt

••

quo ted

Wisely, the grandma answered, "You are young at any
Hyou are planning for TOMORROW."

on a country weekend ia
disrupted py a murderous
gang' threatening a young
Q!rl. (80 min.) (A).
(I]) A,.,.loan PlayhOUM
Movie FutiYII: Teatament
A Coiifornia fam ily 11·
temptl to survive in the
wlke of a · nuclear holo,coust (90 min .)

•

lhe ch uc kle

Powwow - Reslm - OUido -- Holder - TOMORROW
"Ware you aver young, Grandma?" quizzed the young lad.

cile with hia eitranged eon
•·

C omplete

_
•
_
_
.
by fd lmg 1n the moss.ng words
L......l---L-.:L-1--&lt;-..J you de ... elop fro m step No 3 below

' . gate a forgery case. (80
min .) (R!.
IIlJ Camradoa: Doclor In
Moacow (CC) Eye surgeon
Svyo1oolav,Nikolaevich ~v·
Odorov. whote operat1on
for nearsightedness has
'
made him world femoul, is
~ofiled . (80 min.)
.
10:00 • (I) (I)) 1888 (60 min I
(I}Q,ID ~Mr: For Hire
(CCI When an advice col·
umnis1 fells In love wi1h' a
tenor wri1er. she hires
Spenser 10 find and pro!eC1
hin\. (60 min.) (R)
·
liD
(!Z Tho Equollnr
McCall's•tinempt1o rocon·

or &amp;14-448-1115 or 614-•46· .. .

87

FIMODY
·--,~,;~~T,...;.;"1.1r"TI-'--,Ir.s--l

son is offered a big promolion. (fl) .
9:00 (]) 700 Club
(!) Top Rank Boxing from
Loa Vegas, NV (2 hrs.. 30
min .)
CIJ U 1IJ Moonlighting
(CC) An oged man asks
·Meddie and David to wi1·
ness h is self-arranged murder so he can receive Mis
insurance company pay.
mont (60 min.) (A).
()) MOVIE: 'The Houae of
lhe ·Seven Clablea'
(!D IIIII2i Mt~t~num, P.l. A
desperalo bin~ 1ollor locks
herself in a time-released
bank vault with Magnum in

G .e nerel Hauling

Jam11 Boy1 Water ServiCI. Alto
pools filled . Ct11114·2118· 1141

7111 .

Polil rc tans shouia learn tnat tacl.
.
.
.
.
.
. ~ 1s the art of convrncmg people lhar
, . - - - - - - - - - , they know more !nan .....

e

Jr. uwniN'.

86

~3:--r-IW'RI'A'IL_D,,--1, i
I
G
I

an effort to help her invetti·

book

11.800. Cal 114-441·728t

_.at

muon, painter. roofing tlndud·
ing hot 1M application) 304·

1

l

a corrupbon story and Ja.

RINClLES'S SERVICE , e•pe·
ritnced carpenter, electrlcien,

T1

l-tl l

when Maggie accidentally

Feny Tree Trimming. stump

1182 Dodgt PU light duty. 221
Wanted to Buy

EEK&amp;MEEK

Extertor &amp;: interior stucco. Plas-

removol. Coli 304·876· 1331 .

Now Holland l 171orO(Iaharwo·
tor. AK good cond, 304-273·
42t5.

ex-co n

who has fashioned himself
into a model citizen. (60
min.) (A),
·
IIlJ Nova: Goddess of tho
Earth (CCI . The controversial Gaia lhaory. which defines the earth as a living
organism. is explored. (60
min.) (A) .
(j]) The Thorn Blrde Based
on the novel by Colleen
McCulloug_h, this story

Home
lmprovemants

RON ' S Television Serv ice.
HouM calls on RCA , Oua1ar,

Excetl•t hltl'd bull1. extrtm.ty
aorr101. Reedy for 1111 ttrvlce.

..' .

&amp;f ...

1981 FO&lt;d Eocort, light blue, 2
doara, 4 cyl. 4 lpMd. air cond.
80,000 mH11, 12.000.00. 304882-3178.

Young bub Simrnant1l x Hare-

ford. Slrld by KJB·Signol. Wo
hMI'a one ~ end one ~ blood.

ALLEYOOP

304-882-3180 .

M liMY Fergu10n T 30 tractor
good condition. Call t14 -317·

7182.

7:35
8:00

Truck camper. Ve ry clean
Sleeps 6 . Mutt aell . 71 Chevy
lmpela. 175 Coli 614-98!5 ·

I cyl. CaN 114992·88191ft• 6:00p.m.

roily

,

weeks old wltt.paptra. 4F• 5M
10me tri colored . t715 . May be
...., at Rt 1 Ewlngton Or call
814 · 38B - 8132 . Gtorge
Twymen

IIZ-ZOU.

1911 M.O.B.G .T. Coupe. Col·

lectora item. Restored, new
u1•1Dr. Interior. etc.

?3 Tarry cemper 26 ft . AC ,
awning, good cond., U.OOO.
Cau 614·446-7371 .

EvergrHnl, lhade &amp; fruit tree1 ,
trH • ltump ..moval, mulch.
und S. gra11el. Ilona delivered.
Don's Ltndloap•, Don Waugh

Reg. English Setter puppi• 7

.6 7

1871 Che¥Y4WhHidrivt. Runt
Fod. 11800. tB82 Chevy
Camero. Oood ohapt 16000.
1984 Pot. Flrlblrd . Excellent
oo-lon 17.00. Call304·273"a&amp;.

"8· 2746.

1t83 Bulok Contry. 4 door. Ye
30 lltra rnol&lt;!r, AC, PS, lib
wheel, Fronl whatt drkl1. like
now. M,OOO mil•. 15,800.00
fi'm, 1-304-882· 2841..

9701 otter IPM.

CoN 114· 281-1109.

Pets for Sale

oplld. Asking t8000. Call 8t4·
1149·2102 ..... 8:00.

rior. Air auto. trans., PS , PB.
c.uiae, cargo boA. root air
evailllble. Asking 89.700. B11t . '
offer or trade, books for ,~..,
*12,000 need stetionwagon or
pesaenger van. Moving 814·

T - tup,

441-2783.

Pole Buildings by Outllly
Builders. Wor1tthopl, CllfPOrtl,
animtl thafters. garag•. FrH
utimat .. . Phon• 814-119-

1871 Corvette. &amp;7,000mlles. 4

7:06
7:30

lelf·contain ... lleep1 8. rebuilt

lntametlnel chopper with both
t.adl. IMII'IIational btower &amp; 2
1H1111 wegona. Cal 114· 311-

Building Supplies

lnatrumenu

COUNTRY MOillE Homo ,._II,
Routt IJ,. North of Poftl&lt;!rV'I.
Largo loti. Clllet4-9t2· 7471.

tameto•

5t4· 949-3014.

54

prlhung doors t89.96 .
11 . Steal prehung inauleted
doort and jaml 1VJ hr. flrt rt.

Canning

3 bloc!&lt; -mill 12.800. Coli
814-lla-8888 .

miuion. 6 cas• J .R. beer.
Phone 304-882-2081

8 panal l t . . ilnaulated

n3-5721 . Open 7 doyo.

WMd eatar end bNch cutter.
Mede by Troy Built. Paid 8360
ask '200. Used 1 aurnmar.

1987. 289 Ford Motor. trans·

Of

1978 Oodg' Aopon . 4 tt... Yinel
top, pd cond. t1600. Call
Can you buy J...,l, Cers. 4x4 '•
atlztd il drug raids for under
t100.00? Call tor facta today!
lett! 211·8701 ht. 518.

Gallipolis .

•10.•• I

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

Yellow FrH Stone Camino
PMCh• now available. CaR for
pric11 and ..,.rlttlll . Bob•a
Merket, Maeon. W. Ya. 304·

Stlell 50 per cent offll fl11hlng
srrow sign 121911 lighted, nonarrow t2691 Nonlightad 122911
Free ltttertll Few left. See
locelly . 11800)423 · 0113 .
anytime.

t599 .96 111. tingla U99.00

79

2 Kerosene Heaters ~ One
1t , 000 BTU . 140 .: other
14,000 BTU with blower. f75 .
Used 2 months. Call 814· 992·

County Appliance. Inc. Good
u1ed appliances and TV sett
Open SAM to 6PM. Man thru
Sn 814-446-1899. 627 3rd
Ave. Ga1Upoll1. OM .

8. Double side light door sets
with 'h gl111 ln11.1lated U60 .
9 . Double commercial entrence
door set's bronz aluminum

plcltld, 13 you plclt, Iring
con18lntr. Mll'lhiN Adtmt, Le·

e14·441· '1142 .

1980 Champion 19ft. trent van,

578·2287.

1360.

Canning tomato•. t4 bushel

114·448·3870.

c,...

cote masonite aiding or paneling
second' s t9 .95· B.91Spe.
2. 4JC8JC V4 m•onite undarlayment 12.99 ee. b4 11 .00 ea.
•econd• .
3 . •xexv. Iavan plywood 16 .98
11e0nd1 ~ 3 98 .
4 . 4x8x 'l. and 6-16tht wood
peneling woodgflin and prints
$8 .95 and t7.H 1econd 14.96 .
5 . 4•8x,A bland•• weter board
exterior glued Tplu16 t9 .96 ea.
6. Wood thermal pein bow
pieture windows 5JC6 82•9 .
7. Double steel Insulated en·
trance dOor set's with VJ glas1

1180 Ptrmouth Horll:un. Cell

tort Folio, Oh. 114· 247-2085 .

Four 14 inch Chevywhelllwith
Monte Carlo hubcaps, MO. Two
16 incfl Chevy whM11. '15.:
baby high chair, t28. and
car-nat. 116. Call 814· 992·

1 bedroom apartment in Middl• 8t4-8a8· 7311 .
port Unfumilhad. t150 . per
month plu1 utilitiM Call 614· Second'&amp;· Cloaeouts· Suplu1.
992-6546 days and 814-949· 1. 4d and 4x8x7 -161hs atuc·

opd. 19,000. Coli 114· 387·
0521.

3 trailer exalt 1nd tires. CheY.;: •
truekforpans. FourBholewhlte •
1poke wheels end tires. Call
614·986- 3637 after 6·00.

anytime.

Gold swivel rocker 13&amp;.00.
Brown r~teWner UIS.OO . 6ft book
cue c lo~ 130 .00 304·676-

Misc. Merchandise

81 Chrv•• Lu:•r blue, ex.
cond.• air cond., ,.., defrost. 15

U60. Coli 814·88S·. . t8 .

Two stage service 1t1Uon type
eir COR'4)rMtor. 814-992-6364
days , 614·992·7314 nights.

ture . 1216 Eutern Ave ..

Fruit

8 ft. Fibreglus tNck topptf.

Gold swivel roctler t35 . Brown
reclinet 135. 6 ft. bookcete
clocl&lt; no . Call 304·878-4192 .

Vellev Furniture, new a used .
Large section of "'ality furni-

8:50
7:00

___ .

&amp; Vegetables

Singer Touch and Sew. good
cond. 836 00. 30•·176-6876 .

Washers, dryen. refrigerators,
range~ . Skaggs Appliano. ..
Upper Rivtr Rd. betide SlOne
Matti. 614·"8· 7398.

Ill

318 Engine and trtn11ri11ion. : :
Very good condition. Extra · ·
transmillion fof 318 engine.
814-992·7289.
.::..:_::.::.::..:.:.:__

68

ComtndtaSIItronlx 1011 0 CB
base station. U&amp;O. Call 614992-3209.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

'.

r r1

-r.I~_,EI_N-r-lr...

(])The Riflemen
Revco'1 World Class
Women (R):
(I) CJ. (I) ABC News
()) Doctor Who
®i Clii!I2i CBS News
(j]) ,Body Elec1rlc
CII Headline News
II Ill PM Magazine
(I) Man from U.N.C.l.E
Ill SportsCentar
&lt;II En1ertalnmant Tonight
ET visits Kally McG1IIis on
1ha New York Ci1y sat of
her upcon'ung film, " The
House on Sullivan Street"
fj) CD Hogan's Ha•oos
0 &lt;II Jeopardy
())Nightly Buslnoao Report
®News
(j]) MacNeil-Lehrer Nowsh·
our
Ill (j]) Divorce Court
(j]) WKRP In Cincinnati
1!11 Whael of Fortune
(1) GrHn Acres
IJ CIJIIJ New Newlywed
Game
Ill inside 1ho PGA Tour
fj) CD Taxi
0 CIJ 1Di Wheel of Fortune
()) UJ' Pompaiil
Ill II2i En1artalnmon1 Tonight ET v1si1s Kelly McGillis on the New York City set
of Mer upcoming film, " The
House on Sullivan Street" .
(j]) Allee
·
II)) Jeopardy
([) Sanford and Son
1J (]) II)) little Glona ...Heppy 11 Last The true
story of the notorious
193 4 child-custody case of
1Q-year-old heiress Glona
Vanderbilt. (2 hrs .) Part 2
of 2. (A). ,
(]) Daklart
Ill AWA Wrestling (60
m1n.)
(ll D Ill Who's tha Boss7
(CC) Jonathan plays Cupid
when Tony and Angela suffer Valentine's Day blues.
!R).
fj) 1IJ MOYIE: 'Cool Hand
Luke'
lil MacNoii-Lohrer Newah·
our
® II) II2i Simon &amp; Simon
Rick and A.J. try to nab a

·.

Four Z-28 Cem1ro li"'" and ~ ~
gray wheats for aale. C11l 814:~.
992·1787.
..~ .

S. 6th Middleport .

Olive St., G111ipoll1. New'&amp; used
wood·coalttovll. 6 pc wood LR
suite 1399, bunk beds t 199,
antron recliners 199, new &amp;
used bedroom suitn, ranges.
wringer Wtlhers, &amp; aho81. New
living room suitn t199 -t599.
Iampi, tlao buying coal&amp; wood
ttovn. Call 814·446 -3169 .

CAPTAIN EASY

1T

1

..,_,

()) Reading Rainbow (CC)

(j]) Here' s to Your Heal1h
8 :30 8 (I) IBi NBC News

814· 379-2220.

4113 .

quelity used fumlture. Open 9 to
or eall tor eppointment.
304· 176·8483 or 875-1480.

AUCTION l!o FURNITURE 62

(]) GrHn Ac•os

Ill Mazda Sportslook
fJI (JJ Star Trek

Tranaml11lon1. All typea. Over.'
front. reaJ. 4 wheel drive. Pricet
stert 1100.. Will deliver Call

merchandlae. 1 Julana ater10
with Jpuktr. 1 Bundy tNIQ)It.
At Ctedlth"ift at American,
1 312 Eeltem Ave for more
information . Call 014-441-

·e

SWAIN

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Cell814-218·12&amp;t.

1 H&amp;R 22 calibur 7'h in.

New country dr.,m home Built
for you. t18,995 4 bdr ., 2 beth
See this model today Call

1 bedroom, garage apartment in

76

old , Co1t t800 wll••ll fur •400.

1149.

4192.

II)) News

Full 1b:e bu eprinp 6 mattretl

firm. like new. only 2 monlhl

IJCIJIIJOCIJ®IIl (J]I

8:00

Boats end
Motors for Sale

Inboard and outboard 18 ft.
Starcraft whh trailer. real good
ahape. Boat. moto r and trailer
13,800.00. 304-882·3'63.

ntW'

1210. Colllt4· "1·8744 oltor
3:00PM .

8539

Plaltic cistam state approved.
pl11tic septic ltnks. plestic
1 bedroom apt tor rent. Ba1ic culvens. metal culvert s. RON
rent starts t21&amp;. • month that EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jackincludes all utiliti ... Deposit son. Oh 614-286· 6930
required of UOO . Conuct Vii - I :~-:--::--:--:---­
itQt Manor Apt. Middleport. Chllder• SIW Supply, Vinton.
614-992-nBJ Equal Hou •ing Ohio . Call 61&lt;1 · 388 ·8684 . AuOpportunity.
gu1t Specials. 20% off Echo
11ws. 20% off Echo tnmmen.
Pomeroy 2 bdr. Ntylofl Run. HusqvtmiiiWI. ehainsewa 16 "
1176 mo. 1100 depoait, yard, 111 .60 Ber oil gal. 14 .00 .
pat~. Call after 6pm 814-992· Chain sharpening. repair work
6888
Open 8-5 Mon .-Sat. Closed
Wed . &amp; Sun .

2216 8\lenings.

76

Calll14·"8·11407.

For sale good used ftoor and
portablecolorTV Call614· 446·

HouH 2 baths, Carpet, wnher •
drytr, rtftrtnOIS end dlpo ..t .
Call after 5 , 814·441· 4182.

Beautiful home In lyrecuM. 3
bedrooma. Larva IIWn end CIN'·
pon. Rtfortn- """'wad. Inquire bltWNn 8 :00-1:00 at

12dl5 Qraywood. 3 bfdrooma.
Coli 814·742·2788 or 814742· 2n7.
•

waoher 196, Cliboonrefrigerato•
froot tr.. us. PhUoo retrigere·
tor avocldo green 895. Whirl-

43088 or call 814-883· 4114.

1973 14x61 Hetth mobile home
2 bdr .. 1 blth. u• furniCtl,
ltove. ref., washer • dryer.
lndu6tl underpinning. awning.
block central AC. prlct t7.000.

1 111.

!871 Hondo Kl310. 304·178·
M03

Kenmore washer •76, Kenmore
washer avocado l'een t76.

Cell 814·"8·3870.

plus dopollt. f14·812·71n.

1972 Freedom. Good cond., 2
bdr.. Ha14. P.. 6o. twnlng.
WathM • dryer. NIW underpinning lnctuded. Ctll 814·245·

AM·FM tumtHIICIIIilttl Pan ..
sonic 11are with 2 sp•k. .,

thN 811. 814· ..8· 0322.

14. '~ T plus prefinllhed bn.tce
otk floor rtndom length bundl•
178 oq.ft.
16. Brown 21 xl0 rock face
trsil., underpin aecond1 13 .99

ter 4PM.

Coli ·114·"8· 1780 or 814448-1724.

a••

188t Honda CB 750 .
11 .!00.00. Phone 304·882·
2442 .

tars, Rio Grandt. 0 . Call 114-

2 or 3 bdr. hou• In Middleport.
NEW

2 bdr. unfurnished apt. in Crown

City. Coli 814 ·268-e&amp;20.

utiUtiet ptrtly paid, nice. Call
304-676-!5 1 04 or 304· 675·

Lots &amp; Acreage

la rge storage building , acral and,
&amp;20.000 304-675 ·7681

for Sale

Furn . garage apt .. 1 bdr., 1235.
utlhti" paid, 29"1:! Neil Ave ..
Gallipolil . Call 441-4418 after
8pm.

Regency Inc. apartment 2 bdr ..

5 rooms . beth. celhu . oil furnace.

32 Mobile Homes

Apartment
for Rent

882·3366.

3 bedroom houae. half acre,

676 -1999

44

Fire

damaged building, 509
Main St . Point Pleasant. 30•-

Used Fumitura: Wesher &amp;
dryer,
range, electric range,
tmall co~r TV. wood tlble &amp; 2
bench•. btdl , drener. &amp;
rec:llner, 3 mil• aut Bula11illa
Rd. 01*1 9AM to 6PM. Mon.

Pickens Used Furnltu ra. Good

Furn . 4 roam. • bath cl..n. No
pett, aduha onlr. R1f. 6 dep.
required . Call 814-448-1119.

1 to 2 acres. Green School Dist.
or r111 nice home . Call 61 4 ·"4843Q7 evenings.

Norttt Park Dr1ve . two bedroom.
basament . c:entt al air con d.
forced air yas hut , dettched
ga rage. alunY'I sid1ng . good
location close to hoapltt l, bank.
drug and gro cery stor&amp;s JO•·

7389 01814-"1·7124.

101 acr01 for Hie Meson
County. m1nersl rights, no buildings. pl e•uyofwantar. 30•· 937·

36

3453

121150 edge of town deposit. no
pe11, t140 mo., partially furnished. petio Call 814·448·

1 end 2 bdt. aptl . tor rent. Basic
rent for 1 bdr. t178 . Basic rent
for 2 bclr. •212. Also UOO 1ec.
dep . req Close to Foodltnd end
Spring Vallrt Plell. Jeclc10n
E1t1t1 Apartments, 814-446·
3997 Equal Hou s 1ng
Opportunity,

Leon area. 7 rooms, yard, garden
spot . Sc h oo l bus r oute .
$16,000 00 Attar 5 00 PM
304-364 ·2469

3 bedroom houu. all electric. 2
lots. 2 c:11 r carport. 207 Founh
St .. Mason. W. '11. J04·B96 ·

2 bdr., fum., new c•pat, AC. in
Gallipolis. Call614-448-1409.

info Co11614-949·3014.

6239

304 675 -1279

4110.

Two 2 -bedroom mobile hom11,
2 mil• out Addison- Bulaville
Road. Gas hut. no pets, 1200.
plut utllitl-. 18curity deposit
required, 614·4•6-9846 .

35

Government homea from t1 . [u
repattl . Delinquent tu property
Reposaestions Ca ll 806-6876000 Ext H-9805 tor cu rrent
repo list

2 fulty furnished edults only,
utiliti• paid. Call 814-448-

Mini Farm for sale. 4 acr• more
or l•s Older 11h story home all
niJIN carpet. New fumace. ni'N
roof, utellite dlah, new bath and
4 bedroom. All flll'm equipment.
2 tractort. with ptow1, d•c
brush hog, blade and eeoop
buc ket boon pole. NtrtN sllstael
2 Clf gtrage. new 14x1 I
building with woodburning
stove. 88 Chevy dump truck . St.
Rt 124 2Va miiM from Southtrn
Htgh Sehoot. •so.ooo. For more

6 room house 1 2 acre~~~ . Double
car garag e l ocated on Roae Hill

Reedsville, bv owner Two for
the pnce of one 2 bedrooms,
livlng . dm ing room. k1tctlen .
battl with ext ra room All fu lly
c&amp;tpeted l arge porch. fenced
yer'd with satillite T.V. Also
epartment whid'l •nel udes 1
bedroom, liv1ng room, knc hen
area w1th bath. workshop and
garage. Forced air gal heat, own
water well , large lot end maintenance free siding *46,000. Call

814·448-1802.

Calll14-441-2300.

749 Third Ave. 1800 sq. ft.
Commercial or Wlfehouse.
Parking on lidt. Adjacent to
third 8t Pine St. Call 114-441·
2362 for tppoinem.-.t.

Call

Trailert for rent, Aueond .. ceble.
beautiful rivar viBW, Kenaugt .
Foater'a Mobile Home Park,

614-256·8B13 .

2726 .

to 18&amp;.

Motorcycles

Cellthen'• U11d Tlre.. - ,.'Ov•
1,000ti.... 1111012, t3, " · " '
18, tl .&amp;. ·a mil• out Rt. 218.
Coli 814-21~·8251.

Whirlpool dryer t7 , Whirlpool

Mobili Homes
for Rent

Small farm for ule 3 bdr. house,
3 bdr. uaiiiiW'. tobeceo ba•e. Call

34

614·678·25 13

42

1'x70 BayviM' 2 bdf .. unfur·
nlshed. very nlee. k)cated 2 mil•
t;rom Gallipolis, private lot.
Aduha only, no pets. t260 mo.

Qual1ty home. newty re modeled
choice locatiOn on College Rd .
Syracuse. new complete kitchen
end laundry. air conditioned ,
large lot 61 4·992-5324.

Bargam priced $20.000

w"'"'" ,

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Water well s servtced and drilled .
frea estimates . Call 614-9925006 Of 614 742-3147.

31

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160. Good JBiectlon of
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�Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

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

Area deaths

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

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

Danny Howard

Sylvia A. Wigel

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

BE ALIFESA~ER

Units respond to Jour calls

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

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

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

8

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~~~z. $18 9

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

BA K TO
SCHOOL SALE

WIN UP TO $100,000.00

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

NIIIIY II-TIESE SALE PIIIDEI 1001 DIIU
liiiiT Z4th, 11U OILY.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.

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Vot.38, No.75

SCALES

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POIYFOLIOS
,
ASSOITED' STYU:5

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

J

'
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p~nt time.

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

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

Powell;

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

·

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

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

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

,

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

..,.
'

'

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

sii Q!I' '""·

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

••r•

plOII'IIII.

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

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

Opposition
expected
to reform

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

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

Tax wmdfaii·may help c~t budget

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

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

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

Area man hurt

liT IHT

1-a~r

wreck
I

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

FLEA AID TICI

EXTERMINATOR {5.5 OZ.
WASP AND HORNET IIIWR 13 OZ.

99·

IIIOI'IIIal.

.
- y
JeCrny. Scoit. 3'lo Atbeils, was.

MRUUWIUt

N!)W

21 Centl

Meigs board approves required testing policy

in
.

N--

Poe-a
A Multimedia Inc.

2 Soctiona, 14

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

Copvrtphtod 1988

Celeste urges minority business support

~AfiiiC

1" oo sun

H Ol. ••rt 01 , IIR

NOW

139
PICK-4
2529 .

Wl!IMUtE

IIIITIL CLHI

-"'' 21'1
PAm SMIELIS

Daily Number

-Page 3

Racine
(Continued from Page 1)

OPENING SPECIAL

OHIO THE HEART OF IT ALL

Reds thump
Cards

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

BASHAN, OHIO

Gii01 PLAY TilE
~
01110 LOnERY

Ohio Lottery

,i viously. wrrr Tammy K. Chap-

ROSE'S GROCERIES
PEPSI COLA

'

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

NOW OPEN

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

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

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

Bus driver
meeting set

I

Middleport pool hours listed

.I

Tuesday, August 19, 1986

Pomeroy-Middlm Ohio

. bft $1.MIII '

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

..

::J.:r:,, ,,
(llfl) '

aceonJbi

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