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                  <text>Page 16-The Daily Sentinel

Wedna1tlay, Auglllt 3. 1988

Pon181ot-Middleport. Ohio

··-

MIDDLEPORT ·oHIO

Corner of Gene,.. Hartinger ~.y and

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Vol.39, No.82
Copyrighted 19aa

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We take pride in bringing you the best every day
. Freshness and quality guaranteed!

~

6~

Qu~~ntity

.McARTHUR - The right to
long\1/ll!l mine at Southern Ohio
Coal Company's Meigs Division
was llpheld on appeal to the
•Foljrth District Court of Appeals.
In an opinion Issued Friday
(July 29), the court upheld a
decision rendered by Judge Cha·
rles H. Knight for the Common
Pleas Court of Vinton County In
November. Both decisions reaf·
firm the company's rights to
mine the coal by use of &gt;).ny
underground process, Including
the lo~all process. Sk&gt;uthern
Ohio Coal Company's Meigs
Division currently has two longwall o~atlons - one In Meigs

.

County and one In VInton County.
The case was brought by
several Individuals, members of
Citizens Organized Ag-ainst
Longwalllng (COAL), who asked
the court to find that the
company had not acquired a
property right to longwall mine.
Local Union 1886 of the United
Mine Workers ol America flied a
brief supporting the coal com·
pany's position.
In the longwall mining process,
a mechanized shearer shaves
coal from a wall hundreds olfeet
long while a series of hydraulic
supports holds up the roof and
·provides protection for the crew.

MIDDLEPORT - Following
10 days pf controversy and
uncertainty concerning· the loot·
ball program at Meigs High
School, the Meigs Local Board of
Education meeting In special
session last night, named vete,ran coach Charles Chancey to
head up the Marauder grid squad
this season.
Moving Into execullve session
Immediately, acting supertend·
ent James Carpenter, board
members and Chancey spent
some 45 minutes behind closed
doors white a group of concerned
parents and fans waited pa·
tlently for their qeclslon.
Upon their return, board
members In a rare unanimous
••
vote approved Carpenter's re·
commendation that Chancey be
placed In charge of the program.
The vote ellcl ted a round of
CHARLES CHANCEY
applause from those In
attendance.
Chancey. who stepped down as loss to Warren.
head coach at thecloseofthe 1986
Known and respected by his
season, had guided the Maraud- peers In football circles, Chancey
ers to a perfect 10.0 year and the has always shown concern not
Trl Valley Conference champion- only for his players but lor
ship. During his tenure as head members of the opposing teams
coach at Meigs dating back to as well. He has stressed good
1967, his teams complied a swrtsmanshlp throughout his
112-76-4 record as a member of career and, although sometimes
tile SEOAL and the TVC. His llrst . taking 'criticism regarding his
squad, a combination of players coaching methods as most
from Rutland, Middleport and coaches do, generally fielded
Pomeroy, 'won the SEOAL crown very competitive teams, even In
with a 9-1 slate. The only loss that . some lean years.
year came at the hands of Ironton
Named to assist Chancey; In
(8.0) who was not yet a member addition to those already emof the league. His 1985 team P Joyed by the board, were Fen ton
narrowly missed the state Taylor, Don Dixon, John Blake
playoffs after a heartbreaking and Robert G. Ashley. Jr.

.

r-Ights reser\led Not responsible for typogi'aphlcal or pictorial errors.

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Local news briefs-Patrol continues ,investigation

l-Ib.
pkg.

The Gallla·Melgs post of the State Highway Patrol Is
continuing Its Investigation of a one car accident at 11 a.m.
Wednesday on Kingsbury Road, one mile west of US 33 In
Bedford Township.
Troopers say a car failed to negotiate a curve and went offthe
road Into a ditch. There was no driver at the scene. Troopers
said there was no registration on the vehicle. The 1974 Pontiac
was teglstered to Belinda Goode of Pomeroy, according to the
patrol.

Probe breaking and entering
A breaking and entering occurred overnight Wednesday at
Joe's Country Market, Main St., Rutland.
·
The Incident was reported to the Meigs County Sheriffs
Department at 6:10a.m. and olflclals found upon Investigation
that an undetermined amount of money along with quantities of
food stamps were taken.
Entry Into the store was through a hole which had been made
1n the wall for the Installation of an air conditioner. Residents
with any Information on the breaking and entering are asked to
the call the Sheriff's office.

Sheriff probes plane incident
A plane circling overhead and some unusual Ughts In the sky
alerted residents of Reibel Road In 011~ Township to some
unusual happenings In their area late Wednesday night.
They summoned the .Meigs County Sheriff's Departme~tt to
the scene with officials spotting flashlights and plastic bags In
the top of a tree. Not having a ladder they cut down the tree. The
bap were empty and It appeared that they had been attached to
the two flashlights to act as parachutes. The small plll;ne
continued to circle overhead even after the officials arrived.
The Incident remains under Investigation.

Man senterwed by judge
Daniel P. Talbott, Jr., charged with aggravated assault, a
telcmy of the fourth degree, appeared for sentencing In the court
of Judae Cllarlel H. KntahtWeclnesday. Hewu sentenced totbe
Orient Correctional ~ceptlon Center for a term of not less than
18montba nor more tban ftveyearson thecharpwhlch resulted
from an lnddent at a Melp County bar.
Allo tiled In the court wu a petition tor dl180lutlon of their

(Conllnued on PIP 12)

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ISections,IZ Pages 25 Cants
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Appellate Court upholds longwall mine appeal

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1988

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Thursday, August 4, 1988

·Chancey returns as
Marauder grid coach

Sale D"ateS: August 1 thru Ausust

•

at y

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Partlb cloudy, low In mid70s. Friday, partly cloudy.
High In lower 90s. Chance or
rain 50 percent .

·

'I

As the shearer cuts away the ence to ·th&amp; . court: "Various
coal, the roof supports advance methods of mining are allowed
since the deed specifically au tho·
with It Into the coal seam.
In this method, the roof of the rlzed 'underground mining promine behind the roof supports cesses' (plural)," the court
collapses almost Immediately states In Its opinion written by
and land above the mining Judge Lawrence Grey.
The opinion goes on to explain
operation subsides In a planned
that under COAL's theory, the
and controlled manner.
The appellate court found that coal company would be llable'fdr
the language contained In the surface damage resulting from
deeds used to convey the coal any method of underground
rights to the company waived · mining - yet, that was not what
liability for any resultant dam· the language In the deed
contemplated.
ages to the surface.
The fact that the longwall
"Indeed, It IS · difficult to
process was the means used to conceive of any kind of damage
remove the coal made no differ- being done to the surface except

'

.

parties with whom we come Into
contact through our mining
operations.''
Southern Ohio Coal has a
program by which surface struc·
lures ar~ protected or supported
and then repaired. Property
owners are compensated under
the program for Inconveniences
associated with underground
mining operations.
"The ~ompany has concluded
amicabl~ arrangements with
more than 30 landowners In Its
work so far,'" Tompkins says,'
·'and we Intend to work together
with those whom we will affect in
the future."

Walbt••n is awarded sidewalk contract
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Seallael News staff
A contract for the construction
of new sidewalks along sections
of Main Street In Pomeroy was
awarded to Eldon Walburn at
Wednesday alternoon's meeting
of the Mefgs County
Commissioners.
Walburn was theonlybldderon
the county's portion of the
project which reportedly will be
comb! !ted with village funding to
come up with new sidewalk
Installation from near the Inter·
section at Locust St. to Butternut
Ave. Walburn's bldon the project
was $9,500. A meeting was set for
11:30 a.m. Wednesday for signIng the contracts for the
constuctlon.
Kim Shields, Meigs County's
development dltector, met with
the commissioners to discuss not
only the Pomeroy P.rdiect, but
also other projects which are
being funded with community
block grants from HUD.

Board
approves
transfer
Meeting In special session
Wednesday night, the Meigs
Local School District Board of
Education translerred high
school faculty member, .Michael \
Wilfong, to a guidance counselIng position at the high schooL
At a recent meeting, the
transler of Wilfong to the post
was recommended by Interim
Supt. James Carpenter. The
board failed to approve the
recommendation at a 3·2 vote
and In another motion trans·
!erred John Arnott, who serves
as guidance counselor at the ·
Meigs Junior High School, to the
high school position. However,
law requires tha! the superln·
tendent assigns staff members.
Atlast night's meeting, the board
rescinded the earlier motion
transferring Arnott to the high
school post and unanimously
named Wilfong to the high school
guidance position. The vacancy
In the guidance department was
created by the recent retirement
of Martha Vennarl.
·
In other actions the board
appointed a football program
staff and cancelled a special
meeting which had been set for
Wednesday.

Firemen contain
homing rubbish
Pomeroy llremen were called
at 11:35 a.m. Wednesday to an
area near the Intersection of Nye
Ave. and E. Main St. to contain a
burning pile of rubbish which
threatened to sprel!d to nearby
structures. They remained on the
scene for a halt hour. How the lire
started was not determined,
according to Fire Chief Danny
Zirkle.
AT 12: 40 p.m. firemen went to
the Route 33, near the lntersec·
lion of Route 681 where a .truck
was on fire. The tire had been
extinguished before firemen ar.
rived. Zirkle reported a fuel Hne
had broken on the truck, owner
unidentified, and a paulna water
hauler hadaallstecllnputtlngout
the fiamea. Tbe area was fiuahed
for gasoline by the firemen.

Action on awaralng a contract
for the construction of 32 curb
cuts lor the handcapped In
Middleport was postponed until
next Wednesday 's meeting pend·
lng further evaluation of the bids.
A resolution to enter Into
competitive negotiations for the
project of paving Welchtown Hill
was passed by the commission- .
ers. While the project had been
advertised earlier there were no
bids and at Shield's suggestion, It
was decided to t,a,ke the competlllve negotiations route.
Shields talked briefly about a
downtown redevelopment grant
proposal which he Is working on
with the Pomeroy Chamber of
.Commerce. He also announced
that the first public hearing on
new block grant montes has been
set for 7 p.m. on Aug. 23 at the
courthouse.
·
WU!Ialn Dlttoe. architect with
Burge:;s and Nlple, noted that the
new roofing on the courthouse Is
expected to be finished sometime
next week. He presented two
financial proposals for work on
the cupola on top of the courthouse which Is not Included In the
roofing contract with Danny's
United Roofing Co.
· The first was for $6,185 which

would stabilize the cupola, replacing supports. and damaged
structural features, as well as
repairing the roof In the leaking
areas, considered a temporary
repair project.
The second was for $15,985,
which would Include removing
the inetal roof, putting up new
framewook, applying a r1,1bber
ropfing membrane surface and
using a gold roof coating.
The more expensive proposal.
Dlttoe said, would take care of
things for probably 20 years.
while the first _proposalls more of
a temporary measure.
As Commisssloner Richard
Jones emphasized "The more
expensive plan Is the more
permanent plan' ' as he stressed
the Importance of retaining that
portion of the courthouse noting
that It Is a lAndmark in town.
Commissioners David Koblentz
and Manning Roush generally
agreed that a more permanent
job Is perhaps the better way to
go.
However, no action was taken
by the commissioners pending
some clarlflcation on extension
of the current contract with
United Roofing to include that

work and a meeting of the
commissioners with the budget
commission to try to come up
with the money. Dlltoe is to
return t:c Wednesday 's meeting
when some decision will be
made.
Also discussed by Dittoe and
the CommisSioners was the pro·
posed Installation of an elevator
In the courthouse to make It more
a~cesslble 10 the elderly and
handlca pped.
The tentative pian is to use all
of the 1988 block monies , expected to be about $100,000, for
the Installation of an elevator
which wouW operate from tlie
sidewalldevel.
The anticipated cost of the
project, according to the
architect, would be about
$130,000 . which would Include all
architectural fees as well as
necessary structural and the
elevator lts~lf.
A proposal for the required
preliminary work and plans by
the architect was submitted to
the Commissioners for review.
Count:y Engineer Phil Roberts
and Ted Warner of the county
highway department reported at
Continued on page 9
ov~rall

DHR _employees state position
By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stall
Employees of the Meigs
County Department of Human
Resources, who went on strike
Monday alter contract negotiations, broke down have Issued a
statement In regard to their
position and feelings In the
matter.
Their statement reads:
"We, the employees and
members of the bargaining unit
of the Meigs County Department
of Human Services would like to
take this opportunity to convey t6
residents, taxpayers and any
other Interested citizens of Meigs
County, a shortsummaryofwhat
our position and our feelings are
and why we have chosen by a
majority vote to be represented
by the American Federation of
State, County and Municipal
Employees Union.
"Our agency has never oper·
ated under any written set of
•work rules' . Decisions seem to
be made as a problem or a

situation would arise. Usually,
those declsons were never
consistent
"When we chose to seek
representation. the negotiating
team with the rest of the
membership were anxious to just
have an opportunity to go to the
bargaining table and air our
fj!ellngs and submit what we as a
team considered to be reasonable requests to Managemeni,'
Which, we hoped, Included at
least one County Commissioner.
To our display, folks, this did not
happen. Instead, the county
chose to bring In a representative
from a consultant firm In Columbus. Not only was he a total
stranger to us, buthecameatan
astronomical lee to the county.
Not once did we ever have an
opportunity to negotiate with
Director Michael Swisher or a
County .Commissioner!
•'Now let us say our Intent here
Is not by any means that of
putting down any one of our
County Commissioners. We feel

they have done man y, many fine
things for Meigs County. What
we musl say Is that in our
situation we do not believe thev
fully understand the severity of
our problems! 1
"The jobs (mostofthem) at the
Department of Human .Services
actlvlta te some very stressfu I
situations at Urnes, even If
working co~dltlons were at their
best. The jobs we hold have not
come easy. As a condition of
employment, you are required to
not only pass. but to compete on
testlng under Civil Service for
the State of Ohio. Rules and
regulations (federal and state)
are constantly !!hanging and
additional programs are fte·
quently added. We feel weare not
only professional employees, but
also very dedicated to our
clients. Our jobs are a constant
Challenge, but the rewarding
thing Is to be able to say.'! was a
pari or helping a needy family or
Continued on page 9

Swisher issues statement
Michael Swisher, director of
the Meigs County Department of
Human Services, Wednesday ev·
enlng Issued a statement In
regard to security and negotla·
lion matters relating to a strike
by· employees which got underway Monday morning.
·
Swisher said:
''The Meigs Department of
Human Services has hired
through personal service con·
tracts off-duty policemen to
assure the protection of public
property, clients and staff.
''Security personnel are paid
at the rate of $10 an hour.
Security personnel are placed at
the food stamp service office,
child support enforcement
agency, and children's services
offices, (Second A~.• .MiddlepOrt) and at the main office on
Race St.
•
''The Meigs County CommlsI

--------··'1

through subsidence," the opinion
states. "We find, as the trial
court did, that the languageofthe
deed which waives 'all damages
In any manner arising' must
have been intended by the parties
to Include the most likely source
of damage."
.
James R. Tompkins, vice presIdent and general manager for
Southern Ohio Coal Company's
Meigs Division, says that although the deeds to the coal free
the company of·any liability, "we
believe that It Is · In our best
Interest and in the best Interest of
the community that we continue
to seek to deal fairly with those

sloners requested the Depart·
ment of Human Services to
retain the firm of Clemans,
Nelson and Associates to negotiate for and advise the county on
labor relations and personnel
matters for the department The
cost for Clemans, Nelson artd
Associates Consultants Is $65 an
hour.
"Due to the long term ramlfl·

cations to lh e Meigs Co untv
ta&gt;payers, the commissioner's
felt that expertise in labor
management relations was
needed In the current set of
negotiation s. Both the union
negotlat&lt;lr and the Departmenl
of. Human Services negollator
have assisted their respecttvelve
part! es lhroughout
negoUa tJons."

Columbia Twp. voters OK levy
Voters of Columbia Township In Meigs County who reside In
the Alexander Local School Dis trlct o! Athens County voted 148
for and 77 against the school dlstrlct's6.8 mill operating tax levy
In a special election Tuesday. However, according to the
unofficial count for the entire district complied in Athens
Tuesday night, the measure carried In tile entire district by 10
votes, '961 to 951.

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�Thursday, August 4, 1988 - ~

Comment

Boston·gains tie for first in
AL East after tying ·record

Pege-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Thunday. August 4, .1 $88

It will be time to pay piper soon

The Daily Sentinel

WASHINGTON- America Is
the. victim of a curable financial
111 Court Street
disease but the cure Is so
Pomeroy, Ohio
onerou~ that the Reagan admln· •
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGs-MASON AREA
stratlon has chosen to live with
the disease.
~~
The next president won't have
ts:m:s~ ~'-"'T"'r'T'BI=•that
luxury. The U.S. economy
-q,~
has experienced 68 months of
ROBERT L. WINGE'rl'
continuous growth - the longest
·peacetime expansion In history
Publisher
unmarred by a recession. The
PAT WHITEHEAD
people without rose-colo red
BOB HOEFLICH
glasses at the Treasury Depart·
Aaalalallt Publlaber/ControUer
General Manager
ment, the Federal Reserve
Board
and on Wall Street are
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
debating
when, not If, It will. end.
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
Reaganomics Is the disease.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They shou!d be less than 300 words
The patient looks good oon the
long. All letter~ are subJect to editing and must be signed with name, address and
but the pattern of borrow
outside
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters should be In
and
s~nd
IS eating away, at the
aooo taste, "addressing issues, not personalities.
· Inside. A growing number of
trusted financial sources In and
out of government view the
current good news as a false
sense of well-being. Those sources predict that after the electlon, the government will have to
race up to the fact that our
economy Is sick enough to bring
By HELEN THOMAS
down an array of crises that
UPI White House Reporter
could parallel those of the 1930s.
WASHINGTON - President Reagan Issued a directive Tuesday
It Is a hard prediction to make
prohibiting federal agencies from firing anyone Infected wllh the In the face of such prosperity.
· AIDS virus as long as they do not pose a health threat and can perform
adequately on the job.
The order, aimed at eliminating discrimination against government workers afflicted with the Human Immunodeficiency Virus,
HIV, Is Included In a 10-polnt plan designed to establish guidelines In
dealing With the deadly disease.
The AIDS virus "Is a public health·threat that has touched the Jives
of Americans with alarming speed and frightening consequences,"
Reagan said In a statement.' 'It demands knowledge and attention by
the best experts In our society."
Reagan said his directive prohibits the dismissal of federal workers
- "as long as they maintain acceptable performance and do not pose a
safety or health threat to themselves or others In the workplace."
White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said the president was
acting on recommendations of his AIDS panel "to focus public and
private resources on the problem of AIDS."
.
The order also requires the Food and Drug Administration to
Improve the laboratory quality of blood screening tests and within 45
days to begin notification to recipients of transtuslons, dating back to
1977. In addition, the FDA was told to encourage self-donated blood
before surgery.
But " as a matter of first priority, the president ·has ordered all
federal agencies to eliminate AIDS discrimination In the federal
workplace by adopting the Office of Personnel Management policy
concerning HIV-infected persons," Fitzwater. said.
Those employees, Fitzwater said, "should be treated In the same
manner as those who suffer from other serious lllnesses. In other
words, you can't be !Ired for having this disease."
Noting that 38,000 Americans already have died of the disease, the
spokesman said, "We have seen ' Its consequences In friends and
famUy members lost. The president today Is adopting a 10-polnt plan
that focuses national effort on dealing with the AIDS dilemma."
Dr. Donald Ian Macdonald, the director of the Drug Abuse follcy.
Office, developed the plan after a review of 597 recommendations of
the Commission on the Human Immunodeficiency VIrus Epidemic,
which reported to Reagan last June 27.
.
Macdonald said an estimated 1 million to 1.5 million Americans are
Infected with the virus. Since 1981, there have been 68,000 cases of
AIDS.
BLUE RU-1 BACK
Th~ doctor also said that over the past seven years the
administration has committed more than $5.3 billion to research.
education and financial assistance In the battle against AIDS. But he
noted, "There really Is no cure.or vaccine on the horizon."
In his directive, the president also asked Congress to accelerate his
size '9'9"x 12
request for $2.6 billion for fiscal 1989 for attacking the problem as
early as possible.
But Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Callf., the chairman of the House
subcommittee on health and the environment, accused the Reagan
administration of stalling on the AIDS Issue.
"'This administration has done Its best to avoid making even a
single helpful AIDS decision In the eight years of the Reagan
presidency," Waxman said. "They hand-pick a commission, and then
don't even have the courage to accept Its recommendations."

President bars
firing for AIDS

The government recently reported that 346,000 new jobs were
created In June, and that
trimmed the unemployment rate
to 5.3 percent. Such a wealth of
jobs usually signals the birth or a
boom, not the death.
Middle America continues to
live well under Reaganomics In spite of a budget deficit of $200
billion, a trade deficit of $160
billion, a depression In manufac·
turing, a collapse In our oilproducing states, a devastating
drought and an unstable dollar.
The bills eventually must be
paid, the banking system Is
poised for a crash and inflation
looms over the financial picture.
What will force the nation to slop
dancing and pay the fiddler? ,
One possibility Is that the
Federal Reserve Board will be
forced to tighten the money
supply after November. The
timing Is political. The Fed wants
to keep Interest rates down
during the campaign. A tight
money supply mean higher interest · rates to calm fears of
Inflation.
.
The silver lming of that scenario is that Americans will have
less money to spend on foreign

By Jack Anderson and Joseph Spear
goods, ana that may close the
trade gap.
Peter G. Peterson, secretary of
commerce during the Nixon
admlnsltratlon, says the ugly
truth Is that we have placed
consumption over Investment for
'/•everal years, and now our debt
must be paid out of future
earnings of Americans.
Depression would destroy our
already shaky place In the world
trade picture. We would have to ·
surrender markets to Japan.

The United States has become
Increasingly reliant on foreign
·money to cover our budget and
trade deficits, but foreigners
won't Invest In a losing cause.
Government ecoAomlsts have
mapped a strategy for handling a
sudden decision by foreign Investors to back out of American
markets. The government would
have no alternative but to raise
the Interest rates that It pays on
the · borrowed money sharply,
and that alone could cause a
recession.

·a
pennies spent here
comes back folding money

WANT
ADS
WORK!
991·2156

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"Buv Now While the Selection is Good"

Short Rolls and Remnants

Limited Quantities

Today in history
By United Press International
Today Is Thursday, Aug. 4, the
217th day of 1988 with 149 to follow.
The moon Is wainlng, moving
toward Its last quarter.
The morning stars are Venus,
Mars and Jupiter. ·
The evening stars are Mercury
and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under
the sign of Leo. They Include English poet Percy Bysshe Shelley In
1792; Scottish comedian Sir. Harry
Lauder In 1870; "Queen Mum"
Elizabeth. mother of Queen Elizabeth II, 1n 1900 (age 88) ; and United
Press International White House
reportef Helen Thomas In 19a&gt; (age
68) .
. On this date In history:
In 1735, freedom ofthe_!nedla was
established In the American colonies when John Peter Zenger, pubUsher of a New York City newspaper, was acquitted of libel
charge;.
In 1914, Brttaln declared war on
Gennany, one day after Germany
had declared war on France, thus
beginning WW I. The United StatEs
lnitlaDy declared Itself neutral.
. In 194!&gt; more t!lan 6,&lt;XXJ people
WE!!'e killed when an earthquake
leveled 50 towns In Ecuador.
In 1972, Arthur Bremer was
found gufity of siKJOtlng and wound·
1ng Alabama Gov. George Wallace.
Bremer was sentenced to 63 years
In prison.
In 1984, the African Republic or
U-« Volta changed its name to
Burklra Faso. A tllough for the day: Harry
Lauder wrote, "Oh, It' I nice to get
up In the mornln', but It's nicer tone
in~:·

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MASON, Ohio (UPI) - No. 1
seed Manuela Maleeva defeated
Julie Richardson 6-3, G-0 Wednesday night In the second round of
the Pringle's Light qassic.
Barbara Potter bested Terry
Phelps 6-4, 6-4, Katht Rinaldi
topped Jane Forman 6·2, 6-1 and
Tina Louie-Harper beat Carol
Christian 6-3, 6-2 In other second
round action at the Jack Nicklaus
Sports Center.
In a doubles match, amateurs
Andrea. Farley and her sister
Angela Farley-Wilson, both of
Cincinnati, ·defeated Melissa
Brown and Jane Forman 6-0, 6-4.
Farley ,16,1s scheduled to meet
Beth Herr of Centerville, Ohio, In
a second round singles match
today.
The tournament runs through
Sunday. The singles champion
will win $50,000., and the top
doubles team $15,000.

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Rudolph, Carr lead Western Amateur
BENTON HARBOR, Mich.
(UPI)- Craig Rudolph and Tom
Carr eaeh fired 3-under par 68s
Wednesday to tie for the lead

after the first round of the 86th
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A

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
Busy Life set a world record as
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SAFE AT HOME - Ballimote'$ Joe Orsulak sUdes In safely
after Indians' catcher Ron Tingley placed I he tag but was unable to
hold on to the ball in the second Inning of Wednesday night 's game
In Balllmore. The Orioles won 8·3. (UPI)

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of two-run homers and Chill
Davis one for the Angels. ·
Orioles 8, Indians 3
At Baltimore, Jeff Ballard, 5-9,
ended a personal five-game
losing streak, throwing seven
Innings. Baltimore's Eddie Murray. Terry Kennedy and Larry
Sheets each -homered off Rick
Rodriguez, 1-2, with Sheets's
blast Igniting a four-run second.
Twins 8, Blue Jays S
At Toronto, Steve Lombardozzl
and Gary Gaettl each went4 for5
to pace Minnesota's 16-hit attack.
Toronto's Fred McGriff hit a·
three- run homer, hIs 26th home
run of the season and 11th slnee
the All-Star break.
Athletics 4, White Sox S
At Chicago, Stan Javier delivered a two-out RBI single in the
11th off Chicago relief ace Bobby
Thigpen, 5-6. . Reliever Gene
Nelson, 6-3, earned the win and
Dennis Eckersely notched his
31st save.
Brewers 8, Yankees 5
At Milwaukee, Dave Eiland,
making his major-league debut,
allowed three hits over seven
Innings and left with a 5·1 lead
only to see Dave Righetti get
pelted In the eighth. Righetti, 3-2,
yielded five hits and five rims In
one-third of an Inning.

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
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second and came home on Jody
Set to begin a five-game series Reed's single to make a winner of
with the hottest and best-hitting Dennis Lamp, 6-3, and a loser of
team In baseball, the struggling · Bobby Witt, 3-7.
Tigers at least can take solace in
"Unbelievable," said Morgan,
the fact they are playing the who signed a contract through
Boston Red Sox In Detroit.
1989 before the game. "We were
Handling a team with a 19-1 lucky tonight. We can't even give
mark since the Ali-Star break Is one away. 11
lmposlngenongh. Thetaskmlght
In Kansas City, Bret Saberhaseem. Impossible If the series· gen outdueled Frank Tanana,
were In Boston, where t.he Red who fell to 0·121n Royals Stadium
Sox have won 22 In a row.
and 8-21 lifetime against Kansas
Wednesday night, the Red Sox City.
rallied for a 5-4 victory over the
"After a ballgame like this,
Texas Rangers and a share of you see why I'm 0-for-Kansas
first place In the American City," Tanana said. "These are
League East with Detroit, 2-1 ballgames you should win. But
losers at Kansas City.
when the other guy pitches better
The Red Sox equaled the AL and your team doesn't score
mark set by the 1931 Philadelphia you're not going to \\lin any
Athletics. The major-league ·re'
ballgames period. "
cord for consecutive victories at
Saberhagen, who threw a four·
home Is 26, set by the 1916 New hitter, improved to 12-10 while
York Giants.
Tanana, \YhO gave up seven hits,
.
"If someliOdy told me at the slipped to 12-7.
start of this year, or early June,
Kansas City took a 1-0 lead In
that we'd be in the' record books, I the first on George Brett's RBI
wouldn't have believed it," said single. Detroit evened the score
Boston second baseman Marty In the fifth ana run-scoring single
Barrett.
by Dave Bergman. Pat Tabler
'We can't hope (to beat them) , singled home the winner an
we'd better beat •em. But nobody Inning later.
else Is . They (the Red Sox) have
Elsewhere In the American
killed this club - destroyed this League, Seatne outslugged Calipitching staff," Detroit Manager fornia 8-7, Baltimore pounded
Sparky Anderson said after the Cleveland 8-3, Minnesota routed
Tigers lost In Kansas City. Toronto 8·3, Oakland outlasted ·
"They're leading all of baseball Ch lea go 4·3 In 11 Innings and
Milwaukee shad.e d New York 6-5.
In runs scored andhitting."
In the National League,lt was:
Detroit heads Into its biggest
series of the year somewhat Houston 3, San Francisco 2;
down. The Tigers are 10-10 since Chicago 3, New York 1; 'Montreal
the Ali-Star Game and hitting 6, Pittsburgh 4; St. Louis 4,
just .227 In that span. Boston, on Philadelphia 2; Atlanta 4,San
Diego 2; and Los Angeles 5,
the other hand, Is hitting a
league-leading .293 and has lost Cincinnati 4.
Marine.-. 8, Angell 7
only once since the break and the
At Seattle, Steve Balboni's
hiring of Manager Joe Morgan.
Boston rallied from a 4·3.deflclt fourth hit of the game and 15th
against Texas, scoring once each ·homer of the seas6n, with one out
In the ninth, ended Seatde's .
In the seventh and eighth Innings.
four-game losing skid and CaliWade Boggs reached third on a
triple In the seventh and scored fornia's seven-game winning
on Barrett's groundout. In the · streak. Balboni had five RBI In
eighth, Ellis Burks wallred, stole the game. Jack Howell hit a pair

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..

�Thuraday. August 4, 1 988

Sentinel

The

Announce archery leaders

Reds
defeat
Dodgers
LOS ANGELES tUPI) - Jeff
Reed sJngled home Paul O'Neill
to key a three-run lith Inning
Wednesday night, helping the
Cincinnati Reds to a 7-4 victory
over the Los Angeles Dodgers.
O'Neill hit a one-out grounder
to rlrst baseman Pedro Guerrero, who bobbled the ball.
Guerrero tossed the ball to
Alejandro Pena, but the pitcher
missed tagging first base for an
er ror. Ken Griffey singled
O' Neill to third and Reed followed with the game-winning hit
to produce one of two unearned
r uns In the inning.
Ron Oester singled to left for
another run and Reed attempted
to score when Kirk Gibson booted
the ball. Center fielder John
Shelby picked up the ball and
na iled Reed at the plate. Herm
Winningham capped the inning
with an RBI single.
: Pena fell to 4·5 and John
Franco pitched two innings to
J;mprove to 3-5. Rob ~urphy
recorded one out for his third
Save.
· The Dodgers filled the bases
with two out In the ninth, but
franco worked out of his own
jam by inducing pinch hitter
Dave Anderson to hit Into a force
&lt;);ut at third ,
• The Reds had tied the score for
ihe third time, 4-4 in the eighth
(nning. With two out, Eric Davis
walked, stole second and scored
6n O'Neill's double.
· The Dodgers went ahead 4-3
iead in the sixth·. Gibson walked,
look third on Guerrero's single
and scored on Mike Ma rshall's
sacrifice fly.
: Los Angeles grabbed a 2-0 lead
In the first on 'Gibson's 20th
homer of the year, a two-run shot
(hat followed Tracy Woodson's
si ngled.
~ The Reds came back back to tie
the score in the second. Davis
singled and was forced by
Griffey. Reed walked and bOth
runners scored on Oester's
double.
The Dodgers went ahead 3-2 in
the third. With two out, Guerrero
hit his fourth home run of the
Season. The Reds tied the score in
the fourth when Davis led off with
his 19th homer.
: ·National League Roundup
Expos 6 Pirates 4
: For 2 hours and 47 minutes, the
Montreal Expos and Pittsburgh
·Pirates fought to better position
:themselves in the National
:League East. For 10 minutes,
·they just plain fought.
: The Expos defeated the Pl:rates 6-4 Wednesday night In a
;game that featured a 10-minute,
-benches-clearing melee.
~ Andres Galaragga ripped a
'} wo-run homer off John Smiley to
:Snap a 2-2 tie in the third. Smiley,
'9-8 hit Huble Brooks In the back
:with the nex t pitch. Brooks
:Charged t.he mound and punched
·s miley in the face before players
~ iled onto each other at the
.mound .
·• " I've told my guys all year that
If they think they are getting
t hrown at , do one of two things,"
Pirates Manager Jim Leyland
s aid. " Go to first or go to the
:mound. If Hubiefelthewas being
thrown at, he did what he should
have done. "
: Leyland would not discuss the
fight specifically and Smiley did
:not answer questions at ail.
' The Pirates remained four
g ames behind the first -place
:New York Mets. Montreal closed
;within 7 1-2 games.
·
·Astros 3, Giants 2
: At Sa n Francisco, Billy
Hatcher scored on a wild pitch by
Scot! Garrelts, 3·6, with· two out
l n the ninth inning to lift Houston.
Mike Scott, 11-3, gave up five hits
0 ve r eight Innings, struck out
~even and walked none. Dave
Sm lth pitched the ninth to record
his 19th save.
Cubs 3, Mets l
At New York, Rick Sutcliffe
pitched a seven-hitter and Ryne
sandberg knocked in two runs for
Chicago. Sutcliffe, 9-9, struck out
four, yielded one intentional walk
and hit a batter en route to
pitching his seventh complete
game In 21 s tarts. New York
starter Bob Ojeda, 8-9, lasted five
Innings .
Cardinals 4, Phlllles 2
At St. Louis, Tom Brunansky
went 4 for 4 with a homer and
ilrove In two runs to spark St.
Louis. Bob Forsch, 5-3, and Scott
terry teamed on a three-hitter.
Terry pitched three Innings of
hitless relief for his third save.
Kevin Gross, 10-8, took the loss.
Braves 4, Padres 2
AI San Otego, Ozzle Virgil
singled home two runs to cap a
three-run outburst In the eighth
Inning and Zane Smith pitched a
six-hitter to help Atlanta end an
elgbt-aame losing streak. Smith,
5-8, pitched his third complete
game In 19 starts this season.
Andy Hawkins, 10-9, was the
loser.

•

OXFORD, Ohio (UPI) - The
leaders in the National Archery
ChampiOnships at the University
ol Miami (Ohio) maintained
their leads after Wednesday's
third round of competition shot at
90- and 70-meters.
Champions will be crowned
after today's round.
Jay Barrs of Mesa, Ariz., had a
41-polnt lead over Rick McKinney ol Gilbert, Ariz., 1,973 to
1,932, In the men's division. Ed
Eliason of Stansbury Park, Utah,
was third with 1.921 while Darrell
Pace of Hamilton, Ohio, was
fourth at 1,911.
Debbie Ochs of Howell, Mich.,

EARNS FOURTH PLACE TROPHIEs- The
SyracusePeeWeeBoysteameunedfourlhplace
trophies among the 13 teams of the Big Bend
Youth League. Pictured are: front, Ito r, Michael
Ash, Kevin Fields, Billy Sheppard, Sco11t,r
Fryer; second, 1tor, Travis Lisle, Kevin ~~mer,

Tyson Buckley, Paul Chapman, Jay McKelvey;
third row, Mlck Barr, Jeremy Buskirk, Cass
Cleland, Ryan Hill, Robby Crow; back, Coach
Bobby Crow, Coach Jim Hill, Scorekeeper
Mullyn Deemer. Not pictured are Coach Mlck
Ash and player, Brian Allen.

Kumerow to start for Miami this we~kend
MIAMI (UP!) - Following a
successful professional debut In
London, Miami rookje Eric Kumerow will return to his hometown of Chicago .a s a starter In .
Saturday night's exhibition
game between the Dolphins and
the Bears.
Kumerow, the Dolphins' No. 1
pick out of Ohio State, will start

at right defensive end In place of
.the Injured John Bosa, who will
miss the next two exhibition
games with an ankle Injury. In
Miami's 27-21 win over San
FrancisCO Sunday, Kumerow,
6-feet-7, 255 pounds, had 1.5 sacks
and although he made several
rookie mistakes, earned praise
from the coaching staff.

NATIONWISE IS SPONSORING ME,
MOTOR EARL, ON "THE NATIONWISE RADIO WRITE-IN TALK .
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8100 N. HIGH ST.
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·'The ball game in London was
the big test and all of us we're
hoping he'd do well and he did,"
Miami Coach Don Shula said
Wednesday. "He showed some
good moves, and the thing that
was most impressive was that
when he had the opportunity to
make a play, lie did.

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The Daily Sentinel- Page-S

Tt••·ner fails physical, sent ·
back to Seattle by Browns

ClASS WINNERS · - These are the class.
w!Deera In a recent car show star;ed at Eastern:
Hlp Scbool by· the Eastern Athletic Boosters.
They are: froat, I to r, Bill Ruth, '66 Chevelle;
Uoda Crabtree, '81 Chevy; Sue Puntue, Chevy
truck; Tom Lowe, '40 Ford; Gene Enoch, '34
F!!rd; Becky WIIIIQn,lB'l5 Vet; Leonard Deal,1988
Vet; back, I to r, Fritz Gobel, '24 studebaker; AI
Newbank, '$8 Font; Mary Mansfield, '65 Comet;

t 1\rans- Am Challeapr; Uoda
WIUiams, TR'I; Leo · Enoch, '29 Font; Jeff
Persons, '5) Ford. Door prize winners were Gary
Crabtree, Jess Persono, AI Newbank, Vll'lll
Holslnr;er, Jim Lanham, Charleo Loughry,
Stephen Duncan, Billy Hopett, Calvin Perdue,
Patsy Chapman, Tom Lowe, D. W. Law110n, Gary
Crabtree, Sue Perdue and F. W. Goebel.

Gators get nod in

NCAC; OWU second
WOOSTER, Ohio (UP!) Defending champion Allegheny
College was voted the clear
pre-season favorite Wednesday
In the North Coast Athletic
Conference's coaches-media
football poll.
The Gators, coached by Peter
Vaas, received 21 of23 first-place
votes and 159 points. Allegheny
was S.0-1 avera')) In 1987, includIng 6--0 In the N(:AC.
Ohio Wesleyan University was
second in the poll with one
first-place vote and 117 points.
Denison University placed third
with a first-place vote and 104
points.
Rounding out the poll are the
College of Wooster (77 points),
Case Western Reserve University (72), Kenyon College (62)
and Oberllne Colle~~;e (52).
Vaas believes Allegheny will
continue the chemistry displayed .
last season. "We have a tough
conference in the NCAC and it
was a struggle," he said. "But I
believe we will have a better
team athletically. We are preparing lor a very competitive year."
The Gators return 17 players,
including defensive lineman
Mike Parker of Cleveland, the
NCAC defensive player of the
year.
"Mike Parker Is a great

player," said Vaas. "I find It
hard. to envisiOn a Division III
player who's better.~ ·
In his first year as Ohio
Wesleyan's coach, Mike Hallway
helped the Battling Bishops rebound to a 5-5 record from 0-10 in
1986. He also will have 17
returnees.
"We had a great cohesiveness
on the team," said Hallway. "We
want to maintain that. But we're
bOttom heavy, with only four
seniors and seven juniors. We
rushed the ball 692 times, but
only had one run over 20 yards.
We need to work at making big
plays."
Denison Coach Keith Piper Is
the unofficial dean of the NCAC
coaches, entering his 35th ye·a r as
the Big Red's mentor. He Is
famous for still employing t!Je
single-wing offense. Piper is
180-115-16 during his tenure and
went 5-5 last year.
''Playing teams In this conference is an ordeal," said Piper. "I
think we'll be competitive, but it
will be tough. We will design our
offense. around (fullback) Donis
Toler and see what happens." ·
The NCAC football schedule
opens Sept. 10. In 1989-90, Wittenberg University and Earlham
(Ind. ) College . will join the
conference.

Ohio
'
..fishing report

Llmtt12

277

Ohio

had a 1,906 score after three
days. Melanie Skillman of Laureldale, Pa., was second at 1,885
and Terry Quinn of Houston was
lhlrd at 1.860.
Chad Connor of Kentwood,
Mich., led In the bOys Intermediate group with 1,910. Mike
Plhalja of Howell, Mich., was
second at 1,875 and Jason Mattern of Sugarland, Texas, was
third at 1,872.
Kathy McCart ol Alvin, Texas,
led the, glrls 'intermediate group
with 1.806. Michelle Kelly of
UniOn Lake, Mich., was second at
1, 767 and Allison McDonald of
Orinda, Calif., was third at1,733.

OUR PARTS DEPARTMENT
IS NOW OPEN ON
SATURDAYS FROM
8 A.M.-12 P.M. FOR
YOUR CONVENIENCE

..

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) The weekly Ohio fishing report,
as prepared by the state Department of Natural Resources'
Division of Wildlife:
Central Ohio
Indian Lake- Walleye fishing
Is good In the Old Indian Lake
area. Trolling deep-diving crank·
baits Is a good method. Fish for
channel catfish at night using
cutbalts, chicken livers or
nlghtcrawlers .
O'Shaughnessy Reservoir
Largemouth bass fishing Is good
oft the east shoreline casting
buzzbaits. Fish for saugeye in the
Twin Lake area or north of Home
Road. Use crankbalts or ·Jeadhead jigs with twister tails.
Channel catfish fishing Is also
good using cutbaits or nightcrawlers lor bait.
Northwestern Ohio
Lake Lacomte - Fish in the
evening hours for nice size
bluegills and crappies. Use wax
worms or red worq~s for the
bluegills and small jigs for the
crappies. A good area to fish is
!he northwestern corner of the
lake.
Wauseon Reservoir - Eight
and 9-lnch yellow perch can be
caught using minnows or larval
baits. Fish olf the bOttom in 10-15
feet of water. Bluegill between 6
and 9 Inches are biting using red
worms or wax worms. Anglers
are having the most success from
7 p.m. to dusk.
Norllleutern Oblo
Berlin Reservoir Fair
numbers of walleye can be
caught by trolling crankbalts or
drlfltng Jigs with nlghtcrawlers.
Fish across points using buzzbalts or crankbalts for bass.
Catfish fishing Is also good using
natural baits.
West Branch Reservoir (. Anglers trolling large crankbaits
by the dam can catch some nice
slzestrlpedbassandmuskle. The
striped bass are reported to be up
to 39 Inches and the muskie up to
491nches.
Soallleutern Oblo
Salt Fork - Bass fishing Is
good using blue or purple rubber
worms. Muskle fishing is also
good trolling deep-diving lures tn
the dam area.
Muakingum River - Fish tn
the Ell II Dam area for l1a !head
calfllb wellblng up to 10 pounds.
UHIJve blf181111B tor bait. A lew
cllllmel catfllh and freahwater
drum can also be caught In this
area. The Devola Darn area near
Mlrletta offers aood fllbtna for
frelhwater drum.
&amp;Mill_._ Ohio
C.J ..Browll Relervolr - Fish
for walleye, aver•gllllll2lncbes,
In ~?!}. feet pf water using

,,

,.

crankbaits or weight-forward
spinners. Early morning o~ late
evening are the best times to fish.
Bluegills averaging- 6 Inches can
be caught in 3 to 8 feet of water.
Use red worms or wax worms for
bait. Good areas to fish are
around · downed trees or the
marina.
Cowan Lake - Fish in the
morning for bass using spinnerbaits or crankbaits. A few
bullhead catfish can be caught at
night using cutbalts or worms.
· Lake Erie
Walleye fishing is fair In the
western basin. The area between
Middle and West Sister Island is
good. The many reefs around the
Bass Islands ofler very good
fishing. Fish in 5-15 feet of water
on top of the reefs. Cas tlng
weight-forward spinners' or trolling with downrlggers are good
methods. Daytime fishing will
produce-smaller fish, but night·
time fishing should produce good
numbers of large fish. The area
northeast of Cedar Point just east
of Kelly's Island 6 to 8 miles out Is
also a good area to fish. Some
yellow perch can be caught near
shore In the western basin. Use
minnows for ball. The eastern
part of the central basin, from
Ashtabula to Conneaut, Is the
best area to fish for walleye right
now. Trolling deep-diving lures
8-15 miles out In 60-70 feet of
water ts a good method. The fish
are biting ln deeper water now,
a bout 40·50 feet .down. Fishing

Sports briefs
Archery
In the National Championships
at Oxford, Ohio, Jay Barrs, of
Mesa, Ariz., leads the men's
diVIsion; Debbie Ochs, a! Howell,
Mich., the women's; Chad Connor, of Kentwood, Mich., the
boys' Intermediate; and Kathy
McCart, of Alvin, Texas, the
girls' Intermediate.
Basketball
Southeastern Conference athletic directors have chosen
Orlando, Fla., as the site ol the.
· 1990 conference tournament. Orlando will be followed by Nashville, Tenn., Birmingham, Ala.,
and Lexington, Ky. .. . The
Phoenix Suns signed secondround draft pick Dean Garrett to
a multi-year contract. Garrett,
2I, a 6--foot-9 forward !rom
Indiana, was the 38th overall
selection In the June draft . ... The
expansion Charlotte Hornets cut
four players, Duke's Billy King,
Georgetown's Bllly Martin,
Loyola-Chicago's Andre Moore
and Oklahoma State's Leroy
Combs, from their free-agent
camp . ... The Milwaukee Bucks
Invited 12 players to continue In
the current rookie-free agent
mlnlcamp. The 12 who will pi8y
round-robin exhibition games in
Charlotte, N.C., and Miami are
Marvin Alexander, Bill Brackslck, Adrian Branch, Mark Davis, Keith Gatlin, Ron Grandison,
Tlto Harford, Mike Jones, Chris
McNealy, Dirk Mlnnletleld, Ennis Whatley and Steve Wright.
Boxing
. Heavyweight champion Mike
Tyson chose the William Morris
Agency of Beverly Hills, Calif., to
represent him· in the areas of
literary, motion pictures, televisian, commercials and personal
appearances.
Hockey
The Minnesota North Stars
named George Kingston, former
University of Calgary coach, and
Doug Jarvis, a veteran NHL
defenseman, to assist Coach
Pierre Page, who was hired this
summer. .. . The New · York
Rangers signed center Brei
Waiter to a contract. Walter, 20,
scored seven goals wlth20asslsts
last season for the University of
Alberta .... The Hartford Whalers signed free agents Larry
Trader, a defenseman who
p'l ayed with Montreal last sea·
son, and AI Tuer, a defenseman
from the Minnesota organiza·
t!On, to multi-year contracts ....
The st. Louis Blues announced
Machle Shllstone, an · authority
on performance and nutrition,
signed a contract with the team.
Horse Racing
Danish trotting star Halros will
compete In the 30th International
Trot Aug. 20 at Yonkers (N.Y.)
race track. Hairos joins A J
Speed as the early entrants in the
-race, which pits some ol the
world's best thoroughbreds.

r;::::::::::::::::::::::;-1
HELP WANTED
LABORATORY SUPERVISOR

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c:ltions niCIISII'J: IT (ASCP),
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penon to or eall 448-9620. The
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Gllllpoli1, blt-,n 8:30 . A. I.·

5:00 P.1.

$11A9s

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CARLISLE, Pa. (UPI) - Wa·
shlngton Redskins gllard Russ
Grimm, a four-time Pro. Bowl
performer, will undergo an ar- .
throscoplc examination on his
left knee Friday for suspected
cartilage damage, a team spokesman said.
Grimm, entering his eighth
NFL season, Injured the knee ina
scrimmage Saturday against the
New York Jets, then aggravated
the knee Tuesday in practice. He
skipped practice Wednesday and
was exam !ned by team doctor
Charles Jackson at the club's
Dickinson College training site,
Redsklns
spokesman Marty
Hurney said.
SEATTLE (UP!) - Former
Seattle Seahawks quarterback
Gale Gilbert was ordered to
perform 240 hours of community
service for an attempted sexual
assault on a woman he met at a
bar.
After the sentencing Gilbert
disputed his lawyer's statement
he was ·~under stress" at the time
of the ineldent.
. Kfng County Superior Court
Judge Norman Quinn could have
sentenced Gilbert, 26, to at least
two months In jail for his guilty
plea to attempted second-degree
assault. However, Quinn granted
Gilbert a first-offender waiver,
noting he had no prior felony
convictions.
Gilbert was released· by the
Seahawks In June after he
pleaded guilty to the attempted
assault on the24-year-old woman
he had met in a restaurant bar.
The woman reported the Incident
to authorities only after another
woman alleged she was raped by
Gilbert In January. '

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WAS
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NOW

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SMITHFIELD, R.I. (UP!) Prospective New England Patri·
ots owner Victor Klam said the
· debt-riddenfranchlseshouldbea
money-maker by the early 1990s.

$4195

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· sa~ny

from Rocky Rtver to Flarport

offers fair catches of walleye.
Tra Ding lures tn 50-60 !eel of
water is best. Anglers fishing for
perch are catching good
numbers using minnows In 40-50
leetofwater. Whitebassarealso
biting well. Fish near the surface
ustng jigs.
Ohio River
Fish the backwater areas of
Tanners Run and Old Town
Creek In the Racine Pool lor
crappies. Use shiners for bait.
Channel ·c atllsh and bluegill can
be caugM In the Racine tallwaters. Fish ' during the day using
live baits.

KIRTLAND Ohio ( UPI) ~
•'Within three to five years,
The Patriots, who reportedly
Wide receive~ Daryl Turner's , there's no reason New England lost $5 mtillon last ye~r, ~~
career with the Cleveland can't be profitable like any other believed to owe more t ~n
Browns ended before It started franchise," said Klam, owner of mUllan. The company tha ow~!
when a physical examination the highly profitable Remington Sullivan Stadium, a separa
Wednesday revealed a back Products shaver company in financial entity frqm the team, 1s
problem.
,...!~~!I!£!:!:.~
C:£o!!!nn!!;._ _ _ _ _..:.__i:in~b~an~kr~u~p~tc~y~c=:o~u::rt:_._ _ __
Turner, acquired from Seattle
-.
Monday night for 'a n undisclosed
-...-..........
draft pick, was returned to the
Seahawks. The Browns had
hoped Turner would take the
place of Webster Slaughter, who
has not reported to Cleveland's
camp.
"He has a congenital back
problem that (team physician)
Or. John Bergfeld was concerned
about," Browns Coach Marty
Schottenhelmer said. ' 'The trade
Is rescinded."
,
Just before noon Wednesday a
Browns intern brought the newly
acquired· Turner into the media
room at Lakeland Community
College. Suddenly, Turner was
whisked away by someone In the
public relations staff. Thirty
minutes later, Schottenheimer
walked in and announced the
reversal.
'The back was something, we
understand, he was having a
little bit of a problem with In
Seattle In training camp, " Schot1983TOYOTA 4X4
tenheimer said. "It was some' thing we wanted to take a look at
ourselves ,
"He (Turner) d ldn' t know
a bOut any ofthis. He had recently
WAS
NOW
returned from the (Cleveland)
Clinic. He was obviously disap$5895
pointed, as were we. But he
understood our position. It was
1985 OLDS DELTA 88
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the kind of situation that might
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roof, auto. trans., PS . PB . power
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i , 4 cyl., 4 speed, AM'FM radio, stereo
power seat, power door locks, tilt
Turner, a 6-foot -3, 198-pounder
control , AM'FM radio, stereo
NOW
i walls.
from Michigan State, has missed
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NFL seasons.
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1982 PONTIAC

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·

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�'
Page-6-The Daily Santin'!~

'

Pomaoy-Middleport, Ohio

·· Thunday, August 4, 1988

•

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
Thursday. August 4. 1988

•

Page-7

REACT meeting 7:30 p.m. Fri·
day at Pleasers Restaurant , W.
Main St., Pomeroy.

sesson n Saturday , 8 p.m. New
officers will be elected a nd final
plans will be made for displa ying
at the Meigs County F a ir.

SATURDAY

HARRISONVILLE - Regular
meetmg of Harr isonville Lodge
411, F . and A. M. wiil be held
Saturday at 7:30p.m. Work will
be In the master mason degree.
Ail Masons are welcome.

RUTLAND - Descendents of
W. and Corinna Cornell
Nicholson wll! ha ve their 54th
annual reunion on Sunday at
Forest Acres Park. There will be
a potluck dinner a t noon. Those
at tending a re to take pictur es of
pas t reunions. All relatives and
friends a r e Invi ted to a ttend.

Community

ONDO·Ir·

Cash&amp; Carry

Sllurday, I LIII ..Z p.lll.i a-diUIIdaJI

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CROFT ALUMINUM

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Mill Finish......................$7Q95

32" or 36"

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42

Cross Buck......$84

60

Style 163 White Finish ..'f'............

DRYWALL

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Style 464 White

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4' :X 8'

STUDS

32" or 36"
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Full View.......$1 01 96

1/2" X 4' X 12'
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LATTICE

FRIDAY
PAGEVILLE - The Scipio
Township' Trustees will meet
Friday at 6 p.m. at the Pageville
Township building.

$ 95

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50 Piece
Minimum Order

PRESSURE
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MIDDLEPORT- Bible School
at Heath United Methodist
Church will be held through
Friday , from 9: 30 to 11: 30 a.m.
each morning.

POMEROY -

HONORED -.Judith A. Wllllalllll, an employee of Brogan·
War-lnaiU'aiiCe, Pomeroy, ill shown receiving the President's
Award. R. Cary Blair, president of WeaUield Companies,
We~~Uield Center, preaeoted Williams with the award dlll'lng a
re&lt;leDt company function. The President's Award wu established
In 1988 u a special recognition for outstanding agency
perfonnance.

SHEET

O

59 ·

JOINT 6 TOPPING

COMPOUND

$ 60 EACH

Wolford transferred to 0 R U
Michael Lee Wolford, son of · at Oral Roberts University. The
Charlotte A. Wolford , Long Bot·
university, founded In 1963, Is a
tom, will enroll as a transfer
nondenommat!onal Christian libstudent from Ohio University eral arts school offering more
this fall at Oral Roberts Un!ver·
than 60 undergraduate majors
slty In Tulsa. Okla.
and master's degrees and ~octo­
rates in a number of fields.
Wolford, a graduate of South·
ern High School, plans to pursue
Enrollment last year at the
a degree In tele-communications
school topped 4,500.

--~
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THURSDA)"
POINT PLEASANT - Pomt
Pleasant La Leche League will
have a discu~lon on nutrition for
nursmg mothers an.d their faml·
lies Thursday, 7 p.m. at the
Presbyterian Church, 8th and
Main streets.

SUMMER HOURS:
Monday..frklay,la.m...:JO p.m.;

SEWER 8 DRAIN

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today • let us help
you choose the
Idea that's right
for your home.

INDOOR..OUTDOOR

•Green
·Red/Black

•Gray/Black
•Green/Black

~ARPET

$349

.

Sq. yd.

DISAPPEARING FOLDING·

A'ITIC STAIRWAY

$4599

PRESSURE
TREATED .

LANDSCAPING

59

Vernal D. Johnson Route 1,
West Columbia , has retired from
the Ohio Power Co. as a malnte·
nance mechanlc·A with 14 years
of service at the Gavin Plant.
An avid sportsman, Johnson ·
plans to continue fishing and
hunting. He and his wife, Effie,
who recently retired as secretary
with the Mason County schools,
plan to enjoy travelmg in

Dean's list

Star
SALEM CENTER Grange 778 will meet in regular

SUNDAY

RUTLAND The annual
reunion of the descendants of
Orlando and Katherine Davis
w!!J be held Sunday at the Fores t
Acres Park, New LlmJ Road,
Rutland. There will be a basket
dinner at noon. Rei live and
fr iends invited.

a

HARRISONVILLE . ~ Ic e
cream soc ial and tractor pull, 'IS
h.p. limit, Sunday at 1 p .m .
sponsored by Scipio Township
Volunteer Fire Departnnent.
Serving starts at 1 p.m . with
homemade ice cream, pie, cake
and sandwiches to be featured.

On patriotism, and memorization
Dear Aan Landen: I am sick and

And the rockets' red glare, the
tired ofaoing to baseballpmes and bombs bursting in air,
public ptherings where "The StarGave proof through the night
Spanl!led Banner" is played and that our Hag was still there.
more than half of the people move
0 , say. does . that siar-spangled
their lips and fake it because they banner yet wave
O'er the land of the free and the
don't know what comes after "by
the dawn's early light." Where did home of the brave?
these folks go to school anyway?
Dear A~n Landers: In a few da~s.
When I was in the fourth grade our ~n. will be 5 y~rs old. He w~ll
everyone had to memorize our be ehgrble for ktndergarten m
national anthem.
September. I don 'I feel that "Don·
"-nn, I'm askins you to perfonn nie" is ready for kindergarten yet.
an act of patriotism and print the He was ~ i~re walker and a . !are
lyrics. Please ask readers who don't talker (dldn t say a word until ~e
know the words to clip out this wa_s 20 months old). Also, he IS
column and memorize them. - A QUite shy a~d not as sure 0 ~ hnnself
PROUD AMERICAN
as ~ther ch!ldren w~o are his age.
DEAR PROUD: No one has ever
I m afr~ld he will be unable to
written to me about this before. 1 , keep up w1_th most of hiS classmates, ·
think it's a splendid idea. Thanks and this might get htm off to a poor
for sugses~ins it.
start.
I, too, have been amazed at the
My husband says Donnie is not
number of people who don't know aggressive enough and that the
the words to our national anthem. challenge will be. good for him.
Here they are. I hope ·that those What's your opinion? -TilE BAT·
who didn't learn them in school TUNG BROWNS IN BIRMING·
will make this their project for the HAM
DEAR BROWNS: I'm with you,
day.
TIIESTAR·SPANGLEDBANNER
Mother. Some youngsters can han·
O, say, can you see by the dawn's die kindergarten at 4 !;2 while
early light,
others are barely able to mana~e ~t
What so proudly we hailed at the at 5 1;2. It depends on the childs
twilight's last gleaming?
rate of mental and emotional devel· .
Whose broad stripes and bright opment.
stars, through the perilous fight,
If Donnie is unable to keep up·
O'er the ramparts we watched with his classmates, he may believe
himself to be stupid and withdraw
were so gallantly streaming?

to escape the embarrassment or
frustration . Also, his insecurily
could cause him to dislike school.
I hope you can persuade your
husband that Donqie shou!dn 't go
to kindergarten just yet. If he starts
six months from now he will do
much belter.
Dear Ann Landers: My husband
will be returning from a six·month
cruise soon. He was in the Persian
Gulf. Of course I was worried sick
the whole time.
My husband's mother and dad
and his brothers want to meet the
ship. 1 would like to have him to
myself forthe first 48 hours at least
1 can't understand why they are so
insensitive. How should 1 handle
this?_ SAN DIEGO
DEAR SAN DIEGO: Although I
• 1
I'd
d
u
.ee you are on so 1 grou.n · Y~
should lei your husband handle lt.
The suggesllon should come from
him, not you.
Dear Ann Landers: I didn ' t
dislike seat belts, I detested them.
Ail the usual reasons. plus since I
am a busty 4-fooHl, the shoulder
strap cut across me in ail the wrong
places.
Last year I married a man who
never orders me to do anything
I!XIIt!pr fasten my seat belt. Three
weeks aao we were in a god·awful
accident. The car flipped over two
and a half times and landed upside

Ann
Landers
down . Miraculously, we crawled
oul on our own, with nothing but
minor injuries. The car was totaled.
There isn 'r a shred of doubt in our
mi~ds: Those seal belts saved our
lives.
Ann, we were driving within t~e
speed limit, and the accident wasn't
our fault. Some fool who must have
been going 90 miles an hour
crowded us off the road and rhere
was no place logo but the ditch.
May I pass on a very important
message to your readers? Please put
it in big type. TitE ONLY PEOPLE
WHO DON'T NEED TO WEAR
SEAT BELTS ARE TitOSE WHO
ARE NEVER GOING TO BE IN
AN ACCIDENT. And, brother, if
you think that's you, you are dead
wrong. Sign me .. ALMOST MAN·
GLED IN MICHIGAN
DEAR ALMOST MANGLED:
Thousands (maybe millions) of
people have had a similar expe.ri·
ence. I hope every jlerson who reads
this will take your letter seriously·.
How foolish not to take that simple'
precaution. It can mean the difference between !ife and death.

congregation ana tne cnolr. The
choir is providing special music
for each service and Mr. and
Mrs. Riding join to present vocal
duets. The building is a!rcond!t!·
oned and a nursery Is provided.

retirement.
,
Johnson was hired as a malnte·
nance mechanlc·B In 1974. He
was promoted to maintenance
mechanic-A later that year. He
worked !or Imperial Electric,
Middleport as a toolmaker I 1955·
1974). He served with the U. S.
Navy from 1944 to 1946.
The Johnsons have three child·
ren , Gewanna Nichols of Mason,
w. Va.; Dale of Clltton, W.Va.;
John of West Columbia, W.Va .,
and four grandch lldren.

SEE US TODA~
* CARDS
*GIFT WRAP
*CANDY
*SUNDRIES
* PRESCRIPTIONS

Chevy chased
in 'Fletch II'
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Chevy
Chase has begun rl!ming in New
Orleans on his new· movie
"Fletch II," reprising his role as
the lald·back Investigative.reporter who gets Involved in all kinds
of adventures.
The film marks a reunion for
Chase and director Michael
Ritchie, who direct~ the or!gl·
nal "Fletch" In 1985.
This time around Fletch !nher·
its a riiD-down Southern planta·
tlon and quits his job with dreams
of slppmg mint juleps. Instead,
he becomes Involved in murder,
mayhem and romance with a
Southern belle played by Jull·
anne Ph!Uips.

EACH

VILLAGE
PHARMACY
992-6669
271 r,IOITII SECOND
MIDDLEPOn, OHIO

1911 SCHEDULE FLEA MARKET .

co•n FAll GIOUIDS
POEIOY, OHIO

AUG. 6-8-7
OCT. 7-8·9
SEPT. 2-3-4
NOV. 4-6-8
DUUIS WAII'IID--YIIS WAJITED

COMI . . - COMI ALL

..._ .... Set·• llahl'"'ihl. . S,..-Ovtlloor Space
WI'IL 511 YOU AI Ill PIIA 111111111'
POIINFOIMA110N CAU1 (IOU 412-41 .., (6141 742-2112
- - - · --

"

POMEROY -A combined ice
cream social a nd yard sale w!!l
be held at the Woodmen hall at
Burlingham on Saturday, 10: 30
a .m . to.6p.m. Besides ice cream,
sandwiches. pie and cake w!!J be
sold.

POM E ROY - Taylor reunion
w!JJ be held Sunday at the Poplar
Ridge Community Hal l.

REV. CLIFF COLEMAN

Jon Perrin. son of Mrs. Gay
Perrin, Pomeroy, and the late
Rev. W. H. Perrm, was named to
the dean's list for the 1988 spring
quarter at the University of
Cincinnati.

EGS

.I

POMEROY - Car wash, 10
a .m. to 1 p .m. Saturday at
Pleasers Restaurant by Meigs
High School Band flag and rifle
corps.

P~ll!p

Johnson retires from Gavin

50 Lb. - 8 Common .................. $16.99
50 Lb.- 8 CC Sinkers .............. $17.99
50 Lb. -16 Common ...............$17.99
50 Lb. -16 CC Sinkers............. $18.99

GRASS

,

Revival is underway at the
· First Southern Baptist Church,
41872 Pomeroy Pike, with the
Rev. CliU Coleman serving as
evangelist.
The Rev. Mr. Coleman was
reared in the Pomeroy ·
Middleport area, and is now
serving as Director of Missions
for a 10 county area that forms
the Scioto Valley Baptist Associ·
atlon. He is a veteran of both the
&gt;.' korean and VIetnam confliCts
ilnd ·Is a chaplain in the Navel
Rerserves.
Lamar O'Bryant, pastor of the
Pomeroy church, invites the
publiC to attend the services at
7:30 each evening and at 9:30,
10:45 a.m., and 7:30p.m. each
Stinday.
Music for the revival services
Is under the direction of V!rgll
Ridings · who !~ · . lea~ins , the

Meigs County

- --

ca~ndar

I

.. - -. - -.. · - - · - · - · - -

~-·-

1 1988.

. August 3 '
. ffer expues
ThiS o

There is a substantial interest peaalty for early withdrawal •CompoundeJ.
dally.

Call BANK ONE
for more information
992-2133 or
1-800-824-6954

BANKEONE.

Eighteen Thousand People Who Care.
BANK ONE. ATHENS, OHIO, NA I ONE PART OF THE CAlliNG TEAM

Member FOIC

'

•. .l - -

'

�,
.Pag1 8-The Daily Sentinel

4. 1988

~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday. August 4, 1988

DHR

Democrats say defense bill veto was political
WASHING'l"ON (UPI ) -Congressional Democrats say Pres!·
dent Reagan' s ·veto of a $299.6
bllllon mllltary spending bill was
desperation politics to help
George Bush, a move that wlll
backfire as the vice president
seeks the White House.
Angered by the Oval Office
action, Democratic leaders have
Indicated there will be no attempt . to override the veto.
Instead they will add their
spending authortzatlons to a
defense_ appropriations bill, the
legislation needed to put money
In Pentagon accounts for the
authorized military programs.

The final result should be a
package remarkably similar to
the authorization measure Reagan vetoed Wednesday. Effectively, It means the same battle
wlll be fought again In September
and the Pentagon could be stuck
with a ''continuing resolution'' to
operate Into the fiscal year that
begins Oct. 1 - a resolution that
would keep several desired milItary Items bogged down In the
process.
Republrans struggled vigorously but unsuccessfully to force
a veto override vote Wednesday,
only to see the legislation referred to committee to begin the

House pondering
victim .compensation
WASHINGTON (UPI)· - ·u human error was largely
responsible for the U.S. downing of Iran Air Flight 655, the
House Armed Services Committee chairman predicts Congress
may be more Inclined to pay relatives of the 290 victims .
A special defense policy panel of the committee led by Rep.
Les Aspin, O-Wls., called State Department and Pentagon
witnesses to appear today to discuss the compensation Issue.
Amid news accounts that at least one part of a special
Investigative report points to human error by the crew of the
Navy ship that shot down the airliner over the Persian Gulf July
3, Aspin cautioned Wednesday against reading too much Into a
single leak of just a portion of the Pentagon review.
The leaked Information Indicated the crew of USS Vincennes,
under stress from earlier combat with Iranian gunboats,
misinterpreted data from the vaunted Aegis computerized
weapons system, which quickly led to disaster.
Aspln conceded, "If It turns out that human error was a big
part of It, It makes Congress more likely to vote compensation
for the families .. . If we're called on (by the administration) to
approve it."
The chaltman warned, however, that there are other
questions to be examined, such as why the big Airbus A-300
mistaken for an attacking F -14 jet fighter did not respond to
warnings from the VIncennes and another U.S. warship.
Congressional sentiment about compensating the famllles .
has cooled somewhat, largely because of reflection on the 1979
capture of the U.S. Embassy In Tehran, In which U.S. diplomats
were held hostage for 444 days, and because Americans are held
hostage currently In Lebanon by captors linked ,to Iran.
Wednesday, witnesses told Aspin's panel that although there
Is no legal requirement under International law to make
payments, compensation should be given because It Is morally
right. They agreed there should be no linkage with the embassy
or hostage Issues, however.
Both Nahld Sadeghi of Norman, Okla., whose brother-In-law
was piloting the Ill-fated Flight 655, and International law
scholar Harold Maier of Vanderbilt University, strongly
advised against linking payments to other Issues .
"If anyone has any idea you can bargain with Iran with the
money, he can also believe In the Easter Bunny," Maier sal d.
He suggested a figure of $75,000, the upper ltmlt of an
International aviation convention that does not apply In this
case an amount that would put the total compensation at more
than,$21.7 million. The limit under agreements that might apply
Is $20,000 per victim, he said.
.
Mater added, however, that after making voluntary
humanitarian payments the United States should challenge
Iran to make similar compensation, without admitting guilt,
"for our embassy and Its hostages." The admlnlstr~ tlon also
should urge Iran to work to free the nine Americans now
believed held hostage.
"We should, In other words, challenge Iran to join the civilized
world," Maler said.
He agreed It would be important to make awards directly to
survivors. not to the Iranian government, to preserve the
position that payments were made "on humanitarian grounds
only, not out of a sense of legal obligation."
.
' 'There does not seem to be evidence of a violation of
International law by the United States, " he concluded.
. Sadeghi, a former Iran Air stewardess, said compensation
••may not be the popular thing to do right now , but It Is the right
thing to do. "
. ·.
The fam!Ues of the victims are ' 'widows and orphans, not
. terrorists who kill and maim. They are like you and me and our
neighbors; they are not our enemies," she told the panel.
Sadeghi said her sister and her three young children, one of
whom Is an American citizen because she was born In
Oklahoma, now live in West Germany where they were sent by
the late pilot, Moshen Rezaian, to keep away from the Iran-Iraq
· war. There are no survivors benefits for her sister, Sade!lhl
said, and Rezaian 's paychecks were stopped because she
refused to return to Iran.

unusual process threatened by
Democrat s.
Rhetoric flew thick and fast.
" (The Democratic ) ploy violates the intent and purpose of the
Constitution and makes a
mockery of our rules and procedure," complained House GOP
leader Robert Michel of Illinois.
"(This was) obviously a political move and obviously a politic al move of desperation," countered House Armed Services
Committee Chairman Les As pin,
D-Wls. "Clearly what the administration Is trying to do is raise
the visibility of the defense Issue.
"They somehow think that's
going to help Bush and help
Republicans generally. I think
It's golrig to backfire, " Aspin
said. "I think It's going to be seen
as an obviously political move
and It has united Democrats In a
way I don't think I've seen
(before). "
Assistant Senate Democratic
leader Alan Cranston of California was even more blunt about

the perceived bid to . bolster
Bush's claim to a stronger
defense policy than his White
House rival, Massachusetts Gov;
Michael Dukakls.
"On the critical Issue of national defense," Cranston said,
"the White House has become
Washington headql¥lrters of the
Bush for President campaign.
This Is an Improper way for the
incumbent commander in chief
to behave . And II bodes Ill for
what could happen should
George Bush become the new
commander In chief."
''There Is nothing the matter
with this bill except that It 's
August and the presidential
election Is In November and VIce
President George Bush Is ,18
points behind In the polls, "
agreed Sen. Alan Dixon, D-IlL
"President Reagan had better
start vetoing everything, and I
tell you now It won't raise the
(Bush) boat In the Jake one
half-Inch,'' Dixon declared.
Both Aspin and Senate ArJ11ed

WASHINGTON (UPI) - With
overwhelming bipartisan support, Congress managed to send
President Reagan a trade bill he
will sign, one that jubilant
supporters say "wlllmake'Made
In the U.S.A.' a label of pride
again."
" While this butts not perfectno bllll,128 pages In length ever
is -on balance It will strengthen
Amerlc·an 's International competitiveness," Reagan declared as
he accepted the legislation
stripped of amendments that
prompted him to veto It a first
time around.
The reform blll marks the
sharpest shift in U.S. trade policy
since World War II and Is
considered by RepubliCans and
Democrats alike to be one of the
major achievements of the lOOth
Congress.
The legislation, product · of
three years of work, Is designed
to open global markets to U.S.
products, to crack down on
foreign trade abuses and to assist
American Industrie s and
workers hurt by Imports. II al.so
calls for better coordination of
economics with major trading
partners and takes specific actlon such as repealing the windfall profits tax on petroleum
products.
The Senate approved the legislation 85-11 Wednesday; the
House had passed It last month
on a 376-45 vote.
"The Senate today has passed
a landmark trade bill," crowed
Senate Democratic leader Robert Byrd of West Virginia .
"(This) will make 'Made In the
U.S.A.' a label of prldeagaln. "
Agreed Sen. Bob Packwood.
R-Ore.: "This but will help the
label 'Made In the U.S.A.' appear
on shelves In Tokyo, In Bonn and
Paris .... I am confident you're
going to see this trade deficit go
down , and down , and down."

m

Sen. Lloyd Bentsen ot Texas, Is enough and move forward."
floor manager for the bill and the
Bynl called up the legislation
Democratic vice presidential Tuesday, only hours after Rea candidate. told colleagues, gan bowed to political pressure ·
"What you've seen here Is the and agreed to let a separate
most major piece of trade measure become law, forcing
legislation In 60 years.
companies to give 60 days' notice
"We' ve taken a situation In before plant closings and major
which In the last three years this layoffs.
country has gone from the No. 1
The plant-closing provision, as
. lender eatto_p to the No. I debtor well as a proposed celllng on
nation, \and) this legislation will refined oil exports from Alaska ,
start the turnaround In that were taken out of the overall
process," he asserted.
trade reform effort after Reagan
But Sen. Steve Symms, R- vetoed the entire package three
Idaho. one of 11 senators to vote months ago.
against the bill - 10 of them
Tne but requires the president
Republicans- said the package to retaliate against foreign trade
sends a "message that America abuses but allows him to choose
Is becoming more protectionist. the form of retaliation. such as
It Is absolutely Illogical for us to tariffs or quotas . It expands the
try to Interfere with a healthy, definition of unfair trade practigrowing economy. "
ces that can trigger retaliation.
After final passage, the Senate · The legislation also transfers
approved a separate resolution . au thorlty from the president to
lo dilute a provision allowing for the U.S. trade representative to
extended lmportsofe.t hanolfrom decide whether a foreign practhe Caribbean. The resolution,
approved 62-34, would not allow
extended Imports unless the
SUMMER SIZZlER SALE
president certified the domestic
SAT.
AUG. 6-9 A.M .-9 P.M .
Industry cannot fully supply U.S.
PT. PLEASANT
demand .' The resolution did not
On
Rt.
62
near
Grace Baptist Church .
stop the trade but from going to
SUSAN
HAYES-675-6057
the White House.
Hot Bargains on all .lypes of home
Democrats and Republicans
decoratin accessories.
joined forces Wednesday to
crush a series of amendments
offfered by Republicans , whicli,
if adopted, would have returned
the trade bill to the House for
consideration In the waning
weeks of the session.
" If any of these amendments
carries. forget the whole thing,"
Bentsen warned, noting that the
House did not want to deal with
the legislation again.
" If we start down the road with
these amendments ... I don 't
know how long we are going to be
120 SHEETS
here," he said. "We are not going
to accept any amendments . At
-l01f2"x8"
somepolntwehavetosayenough

CHESTER. OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS- BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODEUNG &amp;. R'EPAIRS

$SSOO

.............
z.....

ououn_,.,,
..,...

7 PC. WOOD

DINmE

'

ONLY

$1 4 999

992-2156

COLOR BY
COMPUTER

ONLY

STIC PENS
. PKG. 10

$115

ONLY

·
.
,·
•'

R•erving hawevw the
coal end ell other minerat.
together with right to mine
the eame without (ale, en·
comberance to 1urfece.

· :· R.terence DHd: Volume

:
··
;
,•
·
.

282. Poge 1029. Moigo
County DHCI Rocordo:
APPRAISED AT:
t20.000.00. The roolootato
Cllnnot be 1old for lel:1 than
two-thkdl the eppreiled VII·

:'· ......TERMS

OF SALE : Cooh
: on dellvory of dood.
,
Howard, E. Frank.
Sh.,itf of Molgs County
2B: 181 4. ,_ 3tc

.O

.

:m

I '

!

1

Cll .... lllffle..ll .fth.

Mon . thru .... . 8:00AM. 10 I P.M.
Sunc!t'!l tO·OO A.M . to 4:00P.M.
PAESCAIPTIONI
PH . 112·2-65
Fritndfv ltrvfce
£ M1!n
Pomeroy, Oil.

....

~.

ger P•kwlv. Middlpeort o.

!:i

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

z

Junk MAio'l witt! or without
"'otors. Cell 814-992-6418. ·

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2I04
417 Secood Avenue. Box 1213
Gal~polis, Ohio 45631

Government Jobt. •1 $.040·
$159. 230 .,. • . Now hiring. Your

or at

CUSTOM BUI.LT
PRE-FAB
ROOF TRUSSES

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949·2860
NO SUNDAY CALLS

Roger Hysell
Garage

0/
10

Pursuant to an Order of
Sale iaaued by the Common
Pt... Court of Meigs
County, Ohio. I will offer for
Mil at public auction on the
12thdoyofAuguot, 188811
I 0:00 o.m.. DST on the
1tep1 of the Court House in
uid County in the Village of
Po,_ov, Ohio the tol-ing described rlal ·nUite.
Sltueted in Township of
Lebenon, County of Moigo
1nd State of Ohio.
- • I n locoion 21, Town
3, R.,go 11: lltginning on the
oido of tho public rood
leoding lrom Buhan to Port·
land on the ... - - J. A.
Smith and U1v Smith and Ked
Lillo and N"""" ·Uole: thence
i lllid
yrood
·the ittll'
oidol of
to the
ooction of llid rood and the
public rood -D from Ho1101
to Old
T-n;
..
-lily
and
_thonctln
_ ., di-

rection along the noothlrtv and
noot--'1&gt; oido of llid rood
laoclng lrom Halli to Old
Town on tho line
land
lomollly by Kod Llo.. '
and Norrnoo Lillo and C. L.
Autl•m end N. Autherlon
.,d J. A. Smlh and Ulv
Smith to the oido of the
public rood laoclng lrom
Buhen to Portland. the ploco
of bes;ftnlng. containing 20

botw••

·: 2

,•

IN LOVING M!MORY
OF DONLEY REIBEL ON
HIS 70th BIIITHDAY
Horo' o another blrthdey

-..

blrt.... n-.
.,.

" - ' ...,._, you
lnotood of

PRICES
GOOD
UNTIL
MONDAY,
AUGUST 8,
1988

W!l'l .-I you tovo .,d

Tho ...,.,_ d

lngorl.

Ourlldnoo•-•-·

Hopy llrthdoy, "Don."

.,.

.. ""' - · you'l...,.
N - flllgott.,,
Wife, Iotty; Donna. FH
1nd Gr.....,lldrM

I.
l

In Memoriam

F•m•s

Bank 1nd

YHS

T~PE

lot uoco....-ttloosooldl!oYioo
&amp; Sli . . owtr to
VMS.

••1

U1L AMJ UITEI
01 IOI'S llfatONICS
446-7390
11/lf ll·lk

TAnoos ~, s•••r
2 Unceln Terrace
"-•roy, Ohio

RICNIII)'.

ptrlettCIIIId

11.-aJ Nllfllne 1nd llhlbil~
litlon
All: Wllll1111
36759 loti SDrinp
llotd. l'umiiCIJ, Ohio 457&amp;9.
Pllont 912-&amp;106.
'

li•. Cent•.

1-28-'88-tfn

Funher. the above colla·

tarat will be sold in the con·
ditlon it is in with no expressed or -implied
ties given .
J8) 3 , 4. &amp;, 3tc

BISSELL
BUILDERS

.EXCAVATING

warran~

•Dozer I. Backhoe Work

oWIII Do Hauling
Dump Truck

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

•Wrecker Service
•Jun"- Yard Businus

WANT ro lllf WRECKED OR
JUNI CAliS 011 TRIJCIS
-IIH ISTIIIAIISFor .., at thesu•vicH

"At

R~asottable

Prices"

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949·2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

614-742-2617
lotw•n 9.a.m.·6 p.m.
or lean Mo.!·~.,

4-16-8&amp;-tln

RACINE
GUN SHOP

·BOGGS

SALES &amp; SEIVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST

NEASE HOLLOW RD.

GUYSVILLE, OHIO

GUNS- AMMO
GUITARS
STRINGS

1&gt;14·1&gt;62·3821
Authorized John
Deere, New Holland.
Bu1h Hog Farm
Equipment Dealer

Signs
on· Bashan Rd.
PH. 949-2168
Fallow

Far• E~ulpt~ul
P11t1 &amp; S•r~lu

1-3-11-1 mo. pd

1-3-'H-Uc:

Ann ot;n cements
4

Giveaway

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL

•Roofing
•Vinyl Siding
•Roofing
•Home Roofing
•Wood Craft•

SERVICE
SYRACUSE, OHIO
Most Foreig" and

Domestic Vehicles
A / C Service

IIH ESTIMATES

SMITH'S SEAMLESS

All Major &amp; Minor

GUmR&amp;

Repairs
NIASE Certified Mechanic

CONSTIUCTION

ow••
1 lOX 13,, v•TON

lt.

IACIC TO SCHOOL
STUDENT ONLT
SPECIAL
'25.00 Perm .
For '21 00
Cut &amp; blow 01}'
1850
NOW THRU SEPT . 3

KAY'S IEAUTY
SALON

DEAD OR AUVE

ROOFING

Y.C. YOUNG Ill

992·"15 Ill' 992-7314
f'clmeroy,

Ohio

Hl-'811· tfn

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

Tecumseh
Weed Eater

Puppies to gtveiiWay to good
hQma. CM_I 114-388-9098.

5 puPIM•· Small bralld. Cell
114-388-81 32.

withOld.
children.
Call dog.
814-388·
yrs.
Good WlltCh
Good
9080.

Jacoblen

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY
Middleport, Ohle
992·6611

3-JO. '171f1o

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949·2969

NEW- IEPAIR

Dealer for
YARDMAN &amp; ECHO

Gutter•

IA&gt;catod Hollway be-

Downspouts

twaen Rt. 7

Gutter Claanlng
Painting

~•

S.han.

NEW &amp; USED MOWIIS
Soryico

FREE ESTIMATES

(Mier lor lyott
Products

8.7 Fin•ncing on Yardman
Service on All Make~

949-2168

PUppl•- ~ Germ~n

Lonely elderlv man looking for •
warnan companion to
and
•pend time with. P I - send
r1ap0n• to; Ernllt McKinMy,
78 Court St. Gallipolis. OH

Bortdl Broksl And Bluel Sell
Christmle Around tht World
dseoratlons untl Dec. Fun job!
Party oiMI. F- 1300 kk. No
collection ar deiMryl Work your
own houq;, Now hiring Damon11: ..101'1. Call Bftty C.r~r.
814-245-5383 Todl\'1

HOUDAV INN. O.Uipolil, OhloHotes• I Host·Cashler. Apptv in
person. No phone csls.
Now •tr:tna application• for
certlflad and/ or hpari~r~ctd
Nursing Aull11nts. Applr 8 :30
AM to 12 noon, Monday-FrldiiV
at· Scenic Hills Nurling Canter.
Buckrldge Rd.. Blclwoll. qtolo.
Equal Opportunity Employer.

A downtown clothing store fl
nowaccaptlng l'ftum• for •I•
cl•k. Send ,..ume to: Bo• Cia
180. cia Gallipolis Dalty Tribuna. 825 Third Ave .. Gallipolis.
Ohio 46831 .

Puppies. MIKed breed. To good

home . Coli 814-742-2792.

Female dog 12 months old.
Collie &amp; ShspMrd. Not too
llrge-. good with children. 304157~2188.

PAT IILL fOlD
992-2198

Middleport,

10·8-tfe

,,'

458~1 .

Ambitious, retpoMible p. .on
._._a pMition In sacretlrl•
ward proceellng ar• HM.ta
SJicellent trllning in t&gt;fping.
1horthllnd, computar, bulineu
mgnt., fill no. buslnMI communIcation• end office proce~~es.
can 814-843-5411.
WHI doMI~p•lngendinter'iot'
P-'n1lng,
I 304-875-5211
Catlr: for SttiVII)
~;::::::;:::::::::::::===
lnsur~r~ce

13

CaU us for your mobile home
ineurance : Miller ln1urence,
304- B82 ·2t45. Also: uto.
home. lte. h•lth -

Bv• Player for countryMltern band. Mull be at •••
21 YT*· af •ue. Call lifter 8 PM,
I 14-246-931 l!i 1111: for Kathy.

15

Part-time Regl1tared X· rey
TechnioJ.,, Varied hou,. No
weak ..dl. ull. or holldBJtl.
Appty 1D thl Medical PI•• 203

RE-TAAIN NOWI
SOUTHEAST!OA N BU SIN~SS
COU£0E, 529 Jackson Pika.
Ohio Instructional Grant Oa•dllne Aug. 19. Cell 446-4387.

Jackson Pike, Glllipolis between 8 :30-6 PM,

Need babr;'shter in my home.
Bidwell schools. 2 chAdren- 1
school age. ~It be rtliabl• &amp;
kind. PI Hie remh with raf811tflo
ceo 1o

Box

Clo 111. c / o

Gallipolil Dttily Tribuna. 825
Thlrd Ave .. Gallipolis. Ohio

Schools
lnlltru ction

Reg. No. 81-11 - 101518.

PrMrte plano lt11one. Phone
304-6715-2440 after &amp;PM.

18 Wanted to Do

1---------

Painting all type•. Rooftng &amp;
As per Article IX, Transfers and roof repeir, Free •timates. Call
Vacanci•. Section 8, Posting. 114-258-8!88.
of the Negotiated Agreemant
bft.,.en the MLTA and the Would like to beb{llt In my
Board of Educstlon. the Maigl hanw. Davornight lhlfts. Oo11
Local School District 11 poating to HMC, Cllll14-448-1721.
the follo....,.ng vacancy for Its
regular teaching sllff: Aainant I Will babrlitln my horne. 2 llf"811
Vaulty Football Coach 13 children. lllys. Clln hw. ref.
positions) .

304-175-1145•

r.::=::::==~r=:::l:::~~~~r===

·------o·ampolis ··---·---Yard Slit •pon•ored bv 51. Paul
UM Youth FelloWihlp. At Fran·
cis Florist in Pomeroy on Augu It
4th, 6th. 1nd lth. 9:00-5:00
pm.

&amp;Vicinity

Pu:fpi•. Collie mind, 8 weeks
o1 , M•• .nd femalt. 304-87&amp;-

~~2~:7~

G•r•ge S.I•EVM'Iings 4 PM-9
PM. Wed., Fri., Sat. In Aodnav
3rd houll right·Cort Mill Rd. off
581. Ollldren's clothel, organ.
tv. etc .

Shepherd. 304- 1 -ln..:.t.....,--io-n-- R-t.-160----c3,-2-&amp;--:IVI-nlon Ballpark). 4th-6th. FridiiV V.

8 Lost and Found
LOST: w.llet around ! :00 PM.
lund.., •• the P.-k Front.
R-•d. Clll 814-4411-4053.
2mal•lleealapuPIIn01d0e•ter
Aoed .,... 8 WM1c1 ald. Reward.
Phons 114-742·2428.
lD.t: Mon., In Citizen• Bantl
Envoolope - Tueldor downoown.
Laroy Poor. 108 Jonet St. Pt.

"-"'· wv.

50 Olive St . Thurs.-Ftid. 12· 15,
lots n!WV. u•ed jaan•li:re• 5- 7 .
Almost new •lf-clesnlng etac.

2155110.

Lost billfold. Rewtrd. Plelllftt
VIlli_,. S..,.-e·I.GI. Veryhnpor._1 piiP_.. Need. Pl .... call
304-882-21110.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction -

A~ . 3.4.5,8. 3091 9N•eee Rd ..
Middleport. Follow lign• .
Cloth•. hettll' boards.

5 famity . August 5th and 15th.
LDts af lr:ldsclotNng. 13 Rutland

St .• Middleport, Ohio.
Saturd.,-, August I . 10 :006:00. lnf.,tl, oirll and bovs
clothing . 440 Grant St . .
MiddlapOfl.

lnlorrnetion.

Garage Salt August 4th, 5th.
6th at Pall
bthind
Long Bottom Post OHioe. L•ge
color TV. mttching btdlpreadt.
drape~, tha,., dilhH, clothing,

Fri. l!o Sot. (Aug. 6 • 1) . 374
Debby Dr, 8 ·1 Aiding IIWn
mower, dUer, CB. TV. clothes.
to,.s ml~e .

a.

15 Femllfii·WGodl Mill Rd .•
Bidwell. Augu1t 1 thru l!i.
.t Famlty S.ta loU of furnltu,..
giMtMre a. mite . 9-? Porter Rd.
{old 160Jbat•• 554 • Cl.-h
Chaplll Rd. Thura., Fri. &amp; t.J.
3 Family lulavlle Pika Rd.. 4
mUM out. 8· 1, Fri. • SM.

VOid Soi•590Jor Or. Sot.-Aug.

e. 1-&amp;.

lla~rd

8

Aug. 4 and 5. Twofamity . 8lbv
mewnttv. ladies tall clothee:
Recliner. V.-i•v. 842 Pe..-t
Midcleport . 9-3 .
.
'

prlcel C•ll 814-388-8751 for

Sei•Thurs.• Fri.

Sat.. 8-noon. 11 Vine St.

g.s.

.

H.,.,_.,

....

Th. . ' s a time for .verythlng•.
inetudlng clt~rklg out tM hoult.
So--a big v•rd
Saturday,
Aug. I , 10-a.m , to 3 :00 p.m.
Oulltld bedlprqdl: with mateft.
ing drep•; ji'II'IMiry and knick
knKkli. meny neoN: clo'N't figurines: plctuN "*n81. Scad• of
jtlns, sins 9·14; COIIts, twaet.,., tops, Pliarna.. 4nd mONI
R•ln c.nc*1. Ch•len•Hodh::h,
109 ..gh so .. P&lt;&gt;moroy.

•I•

Aug. 5 end I . R•dovtan and
Neilan 'r'llrd IIIIa. Oarv Nelson 's
res.. on F1atwoods Rd. Dl1·
hwls,.,, bunk beds, 8x4 window , entiq.. love Slilt, traad
mftl chldl'lnt end a_.,tt clothes
and tO';'s.
Saturd,.y Aug. 8th 1 ·4p.m. One
dl'¥' on~ . Flut •I• thls · ,. • .
Irick St. RutJ,Md, Ohio.

SER~IOE

SALES &amp; SERVICE

d••

Need

range.

2 kltwno. 304-875-4132.

--·--..PfPreiisanr··---

Wt can ~ir and rtcer• ralliatan allll
heattr COI'II. Wt can
al10 acid boil and roll
aut radlatan. Wt aha
rtpalr Ga1 Tanks.

161 North S.COIIII
Mltlllleport, Olio 457'11

Situations
Wanted

Shepherd to

0008 ~

4-11-'atfo

PWMIING &amp; IIUTIIG

304-8711-4340. P I - t Vollor
Nufaing C.• Center il an Equal
Opportunity &amp; efflrmative
employlK,

good home. Call 1514-448-

Wo H - MC/Dilc/Visa

7·14-'U-1 mo. peL

highlv matlnted &amp;

Puppy m good homa-VJ Bolton
Terrier. Lavsble &amp; piiVful. Cell
814-448·1 810 anytime.

30158.

Hom elite

We Service All Make•
1122/18/tln

CARPENTER
-Roofing lAd gutttr work
- Concrat• work
•
- Piumblng 111td .. eclrlcal
work
!FREE ESTIMATES)

Briggs Ia Stratton

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
Howard L. Wrlftlll

SERVICE

Authorl1td Strrico
&amp; Pcrts

•Walhers •Dryers
.•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must •• ltpairmllt"

YOUNG'S
-Addona and ramodelino

SMALL ENGINE
REPAII

iS hiring

en•OIIIC part. thn• nursing ••·
•ls-.nh. Appli'*ltl mutt be
wiling lo work 1111 shtft1. H
inter•Wd call pel'llonnal office

2105.

S-25~tln

WANTED

As par Article IX. Transt.• •nd
v.c.,.ci•. Seetion II, Pottln(l.
of tho Nea&lt;&gt;tiiCOd A g r bttween the MLTA and the
BoMd of Educ•ion. 1he Melg~
Local School Diftrict il potting
the lollowtng wcancy far 11•
raogut.r 111echlng ...ff: Head
Foolbell Coach • Mel911 High
Bchool(one ve• only) .

12

Certified licensed Shop

7-13-'U-IIIo. d.

101-117-1000 E•t. R9801foreu..,.... Ftd.,.llil:t

NURSING ASSISTANTS PI,.

"DOC" VAUGHN

614-742-2235

•ea.

the Summar. Ott out of the '
hou•. becon-e • Dally Sentinel
~- Cll'rier. RouWI open In
Middleport. Clll Scott at The
Sentinel Offioe at ·&amp;14-992·

CALL 992-6756

Jeffny Soooith

457110-

45631 .

9 mo. old Collie/ Shepherd mill
pup, Good with kids. Call
114-379-2114.

Garman Shaphtrd male dog, 4

•Seamless Gutter

118 N. 2nd
Middleport, Oh .
982-27211

Sl-

6-17-tfc

submitted.

992-6857

7/:!G/If.lmo.

stills

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

lmm MOVIES &amp; SUllO to

EXCEPTING 2.38 acr11
conveyed \It Bruce Fleming
Jan. 1982"'lnd 3.00 acr11
elongCounty Road 31, fron·
tege of rul •tate to be sur-

Help Wllnted

teral prior to sale. Further,
the Farm..-s Bank end Saving~ Company' reserves tha
right to reject any or all bidl

Business
Services

,...,...

veyed at e later date.
REFERENCE Volume 270
pogo 493 Molgo County
Deed Recordl.
Terms of Sale: CMh for
not less then two-thirds of
the appr•MI value of four
thouund five hundred dol·
loro(I4.500.00J.
HOWARD E. FRANK.
SHEll IFF OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
181 30; 171 7. 14, 21' 28:
!81 4 8tc

' 992-5682
PH.
or 992-7121

to bid at this sale, and to
withdraw the above colla-

o.n ..t Hartin-

•nt VIlli., Nursing C. a Center

EAAN EXTRA MONEY during

992-6282

Al•o Tr••••lulon

I1----------t";.=;,;;::=:::::::;~

mile end the right tomlnetnd
remove the awne which are

tduCIIion. Education uperiMct htlpful. E.O.E.
Reslmt to Anterie~rt-l'o-

992-2156

The

Savings Com-y, Pom..-oy. Ohio. reswv• the right

min•• ·--

lUll II W~h P

OFF

that on Saturday, Al(gult
8th. 1988, at 10:00 a.m .. a
public aale will be held at
105 Union Avenue. Pomeroy. Ohio. to ooll for cash
the following collateral:
1987 Ford Eocort 2 Door
S# 2FAPP2198H81B1074

EXCEPTING oil coli. oil.
, . ond other
lying the ...... dllllribod Pi•

111)' and btintfits com11111·

..

PUBLIC NOTICE

-=r-.moreor .....

11

REPAIR

Help Wanted

CHESTER

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

Rt. 124, P-roy Ohio

11

~~~~. ~--·~d~~

r"umt to 441

AVON · All ar. . . Clll Marltvn
We.,.. 304-882-21U.

985-3301

7·6-88-1 mo.

3-11-tfn

NOTICE is hereby given

Cl.!Hts
C..h paid for antique or r.w
quifts. Applique, pieced. •nv
condtlian. Caii814-992-IS857.

Tour Guldei-Male• female, Our
top people earn 1800-11200
per 'Niek. Salery to ltlrt plus
comrrNukln. ptiiMM\t wortdng
condition~. A rNHy fun place to
work. Friendly, nest &amp; dep.ndll·
ble ers the tM~uifemente . Call
1·114-288-8422, Ilk for Sue .

IJAUM
LUMBER

"Free Eotlmotas"

Public Notice

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT,
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
' ·
NO. 87 CV 246
KENNETH LAWSON.
PLAINTIFF
VS
BRUCE FLEMING ET AL
DEFENDANT
NOTICE OF SALE

Junk auto' t . Top pries ptln. Cllll
614-992-5848 aft•l!li p.m.

Serv;ces

.... ....

=~~

oriented dent.l hygientst71ntereeted In wor.Ong In • modern.
progr-IYt den•l offic:.l p,....,_
antion and h•.tlh orient.d1
E11Ceptlan11 In ~al .,d communtca~ton ~~~? " to. our
office il: loolling lor • '"take
ch•ge" plf8on who h• init'-'
tlw Md cen mafn•ln her own
recall ,.,....m whllt being 1
mernbw of a t•Mt otlented

LISA M. KOCH, M.S . .

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM· SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

-~~-

A1"11 You•n en.-getic andJMOple

~

BISSELL
SIDING
.._ CO.,

Public Notice

Wanted to Buy Sllndng tlmtt.
• pulp wood . C.ll 814-3877619.

EllipiUVIIIPill

::-o:·::
Ill==:.

bv the

.,.th hou•hold. Fair

prices being paid. Calll14-44&amp;
3168.

Veterans Memorial Hospi

.,

~-

pf.ee or

. Mulberry Hcts. Pomeroy,

1:Er_-.:.;..

t..dv to do Ironing. Call 114-446-7900.

2nd. Ave. Middleport. Oh. I 14-992-3471.

-

·;e~-

-·

Ill--

Ship

$ 119

1 "

-

NURSING
lon1111m c1u txperitnCI
p1tferrtd. Stron1 lttdtr·

by MAJOR _
ONLY

} I

... -

DIRECTOR OF

HYDROCORTISON CREAM 0.5Dfo

IIIONkl H.nktto PI IIIII.

POMEROY, OHIO

:' North Street; thence with
the 1eld line of North Street
·• N. 13 deg. 10' out 18.6
feet; thence continuing with
, · llid otroet lino N. 64 deg.
; 40' out 49.44 - : thonco
; • whh tho Uno botwHII oold
, ' Iota 3 ond 4, South 10 dog.
: 09' - t 2211.48 feet to the
. place of beginning.

99(

K-Mth MoCullouott. Ill......

110 WEST MAIN

MMge end St1te of Ohio,
end more perticul•rty de~
ocrlbod u fol-1:
Baing known and cleoigneted on 1 IMP of Uncoln
Holghto and modo by B"""'o
end Cerper. Regi1tued ClvH
Engineer11 Huntington, W.
Yo. doted October 17,
1942. 1 copy of which mep
wu filed in the office of the
Recorder of Meigs County,
Ohio on o...mbor 17,
1942 and rocorded in Plot
Book 3 at pagu 43 and 44,
u lot #3 and being moro
partlculory doocrlbed 11 follow•:
Beginning au point on 1he
north Nno of Uncoln Rood It
the corn• between loti 3
.'. end 4 aa ahown on Mid m~;
~- thence with the Nkl line of
Uncoln Road; cornering to
tho right In o -torly dlroction whh o radluo of 110
feot. o dlstonco of 51 feet:
thonco with lhe llno bet' woonloto2ond3N.10dog.
•' 09' oNt 181.02 feet to a
' ' point on the south line of

69(

39(

t'

992-2284

10f 0fll WIOIIUO ..V

ein rendered. being C.e No.
88-CV-100 In aid Court. I
wll offer for •I• at the front
door of the CourthouM in
Ponwoy,
Moigs County,
Ohio. on the 9th day of Soptombor. 1988. ot1Q:30 a.m.
tho following lando and t.,•
.....,.. locltod It 1187 Un: coin Height1. Pomeroy, Ohio
45788:
Situated in the Cqunty of

992-7180

Sl!JISHFR l OHSE

$19995

- J . . Pflt l OllY
• IOiffll · · - ·

•nta. upon Jl Judgm1111t ther-

Never guess about ·
color again. FREE
with $5.00 Avon
Cosmetic purchase.

NEW S P(. WOOD DINEm

s. .......,.....

fiiiD.UHoPU

NOTICE OF SALE
By Wluo of an Order of
S.to laiUid out of the Common Pleal Court of Meigl
County. Ohio. In the CMo of
Diamond Savings and Loon
Company, Plaintiff. ••· Garold 6111.-o, ot o1.. oort.. cl-

24's

1 oz.

•••·•
.....

WM'It to buv: U-.:1 furnituN Md
•ntlqu.s . Will buy entire hou . .
hold furnishing. Millin W•cfe.
m..,.,. 114-246-6162.

Buyinv daity gold, sitv.r colnt,
ringt. je&gt;oWiry, lterllngwart, old
coins. lerge cur.encv. Top prtcet. Ed lurkfllt Bar.,. Shop,

!!!

-=
__ ___
---- iT=
...--- !tb:..:
==
=---==
==

Public Notice

BIC

ALL SIZES

• 1111
ttl.e

c•..

Television
·' Oapenda~le Hearing Aid Sales &amp; S•rvid
CJ Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

PACKAGE 10

s. ...... '44• •95

Reg. S239.99

~ • •oo•••uv110n

.- 1(100111 111'0-1
- I 110 0 Ill J\IUGAO

-UOUt~

YIT AMIN C.*~1mt'!'.t!IJ.. 40

F11111t drop-in bobbin • Sews
buttonholes, olutlc and llbrlc8 • Three neec1e P&lt;llltions left, center and rlaht • Bobbin

winder stop • Bulfi.ln oewlng light
• Needle-pial!! guidelines fDi
P81Mct. oiraighf eeams • Tim•
uvlng, snap-on prvsaer feet.

...,..te.o.nOIO

fUIIDA Y ·-~
-O.I&amp;P&lt;IIT .......
l10U•IDOIOO" ~

CRAYOLA
CRAYONS

NATURE MADE

011.

==~·

~••M•OIOI

SUNTAN PRODUCTS ••••• 1/2 PRICE

•·ohlneMadel3102

..

Halp wanted

Telented. er. .tiv• lftdividuaJ
wan'Md fOf.., ..:.iting
In
Adv.tiling SaiM. Qltl for 8ft
oppoini..... 1 -80Q-727-7885.
or 30..727-7185.

Furniture and epplltnCM

11 2211 mo.

Cl,..ijlerl fHP' ma~er ahe
jtJlldwinl reJepAone e..chnpt-...

COMPLETE STOCK

~

• -•

. ...

'

~ o,..,

PIPES ....................... 30 Vo OFF

SINGER SEWING MACHINE
1

····-~-·...
" ··

11

388-9303.

GENERAL CONTRACTORS

...

..,_~-

·-

DR. GRABOW

$1 OO TABLE

RATti

. ...

' ...,_

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

PENCILS

VALUES FROM S3.98 to S7.98

10""
1 oan
.......

Wanted To Buy

Cars wh:h or wl1hout
motars. C.ll Larry I.Netv-814-

986-4141
References

9

Junk

PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

...., ..., . .. .
............... ......... _,· ,e.o
-... .......

59(

ONLY

_
.__ -...

•-----_,...,.,.
...... -....... -.....,.
...... -·
_ .. =... - ......
.,
___
.....
....
_
.
_
......
·...::....10.
--·
_
.
_
..
...........__
_
.
......... _. --· ---··. -· ......
....__. .._..._,__
__ re•...,
......
~

40 SHEETS

ONLY

11¥11121

MARCUM CONTRACTING

.._,...
.. .., ' - " " w ,.,-.,.

TYPING
PAPER

Big Selection
of Fabrics
2S 0/o OFF

in Cabinet

NOW ON OUR

TO IUCI MAD CAll m.fl S6
MONDAY ..,_ ....., lol'.ll t• S P.M.
I A.a. UlltM . , . UMIAT
caosn SUNDA'
NM-'C. I

3 SUBJECT NOTEBOOKS

SUPER SUMMER
SALE!!!
ONLY

Uce Is unfair and requires action
If negotiations are unsuccessful
with countries that violate U.S.
"Intellectual property rights" ·
such as patents or copyrights.

AUGUST SAVINGS
FOR BACK TO SCHOOL
OR EVERYDAY ••••

Used School Zig log

$329~5

Business Services

Reagan expected to sign trade

SINGER SEWING
MACHINE

NEW

Walburn ...

• • • _ _:C~o~n!!t!!in:.:u:::e,::d..:f!:rom~CJP.::a:Jgi!e;.;l:_

individual' .
Continued from page 1
be destructive and violent. We
" Not only do we feel working believe that each and every one the meeting that the new bridge
conditions are far from being of us are good taw-abiding, on Township Road Sin Columbia
satisfactory, but we have not had up-right citizens and our records Townsh ip is expected to be
a wage Increase in four years. We can speak for themselves. We finished this week. It was also
all have a way of 'adjusting' to were In hopes that Management noted that paving on County
the Income we have , but when we would do something before the Road 27 will be finished this week
see utilities up, food skyrocket- strike date, at least aif~e to talk, and that blacktopping on county
Ing, gasoline prices up, rent and but at this late date It did not road 34 from Nease Settlement to
mortgage payments up, (just to . happen.
Bowman's Road ha s been
name a few) and our pay checks
"We also understand that the completed.
stay the same, then that 'adjust- Meigs County Department of
Robert s noted that this
ment' we made four years ago Is Human Services will remain summer hot mix has been put on
no longer Intact.
open while we are on strike. We more than 12 mlles of co.unty
"As . most of you probably do not feel our clients can
roads.
know, we had an 'lntentto strike' possibly receive the quality adCommissioner Koblentz redate as of Aug. 1, 1988. We hope vice and attention they so deported on a meeting at Forked
that each of you can understand serve with the understaffing Run Park Wednesday morning
where we are coming from. We situation that exists.
with consultants doing boat ramp
do not want to do anything ihat
locadon feasibility studies for the
"We are proud of our Union
would in anyway hurt any Meigs membership at this time. Each
Corps of Engineers . He said that
Countlans. We have held off for member who started oul with us
17 sites are being looked at and
four years and we feel now we has remained and we have
that four of the sites are In Meigs
have to stand up for ourselves picked up few new ones.
County- one at Pomeroy, one at
and our ·families. We think most
Middleport, and two In the
''We would also like to thank
of you have probably reached a the various Uhlons In the sur- Forked Run area.
point In your life where you just rounding areas for offering their
Koblentz spoke about the po'do what you feel you have to' and supportln so many ways. Weare
tential for Increased tourism If
for us, we have reached that most grateful to the many people
access to the river Is Improved In
pOint.
the area. He noted that vislt.o rs
who have contacted us after
"We have heard rumors that reading the news releases. Your
coming Into Forked Run now
special security, etc, has been support will be remembered."
· have to go to Ravenswood to
secured because we are
to
launch their boats.

Services Committee Chairman day to Reagan.
"That Is good national security
Sam Nunn, D-Ga. , said they had
pollcy.
We have got to keep this
no sign from Defense Secretary
country
strong," he said. " If we
Frank Carlucci or national securstart
cu
ttlng
our advanced techIty adviser Colin Powell during
nological
edge.
as that bill did, It
House-Senate negotiations that
would
not
be
good for our
any provision was objectionable
national security."
enough to prompt a veto.
Reagan complained In his veto
In fact , they said, Carlucci and
Powell wanted the bill enacted, message that he had sought $4.9
even If It meant just letting It billiOn In the next fiscal year for
become law without Reagan' s "Star Wars," his Strategic Designature. The pressure to veto fense Initiative, but the bill
It, acconllng to the lawmakers, raised this year's figure of $3.9
billion to only $4.1 billion for 1989.
came from political operatives.
·At
the same time, It cut back a
"Who do we work with
space-based
system pushed by
(now)? " Nunn asked. "Do we go
conservatives.
and confer with Robert Teeter,
Dukakls told reporters In Bos- .
the pollster tor the vice president, or do we go and find where ton Wednesday, ' 'National secur-.
Mr. (Lee) Atwater Is and see If tty Is not a partisan Issue. ... If
we can get the vice president's we' re serious about strengthencampaign manager to sit down Ing our national security, our
and confer with us on national preparedness, our readiness and
about making this country the
security?''
Bush, touring a defense plant kind of strong International
Annapolis, Md. , Wednesday, leader we must be, we need this
said he was pleased by the veto b!U."
decision he recommended Tues-

The Daily

Ohio

&amp; Vicinity

TOP CAIIH pold for '83 model
and ....., Ulld Clrl. Smith

luldo-Pontloo. Itt! . Eootorn
A,. .. GoiNpallo. Coli 8t4-448-

2212.

-----·'POm&amp;rov·----------

·----.--............ -.... ·--- ..

Middleport

C..P«t Sole . 1-4. Aug. 4 -1.
dothlng, dropM. ....._ m'-·3
mM11 outland Hll. Shrlnl Chlb

&amp; Vicinity

· ·~

flo ad.

Aug . 5

a IS. on• mile out S~nd

HIH lid. Husky &amp; Unlquo Items.

cloth".

'

�10-Tha Deily Sentinel

Page
18

Thurldlv, August 4, 1988

Pomaov-Middlaport, Ohio
411

Wanted to Do

Space for Rent

54 Misc. Merchancll..

JUT 'N' CARLYLEII by IMr)' Wrtpt

711

Moto111

Cetpentry. remodlilno. E•pe-

Spadoua mobile ho.,. lott for
r.m. Ftmlty Prkte MobNe Home
Park. Gill..,. Fet"ry. W. Va.

rlenced. hoMat. ,... onabte.
fNe MtimM•· Aef•tnc:M.
O.M. Oardan. 114-446-8158
eventnoe- Think You.

, I

-o·, '.

Y•d ewe. brulh cuttmg.. light
h ..Hn" ....,.treetrimmlnglrld
.nowt 811 SIIICk &amp;14-192·

30'-17&amp;-3073.

R.trl.,.tor-Worla goOd. Electrlcn.nge-Wor ... good. C.lll14-

Spat• for lht, tnlf• IPIC.,
wet• • uwer fu,.hed. Locust
Rd. Rt. 1. 30'-1711-107!5.

Floor •fe for •Ia Height 23
In eta., wh:llh 17 lftch-. length

Tnlf•
for .ent 3 ml• 9.
Pt. PI-nt lit V off Rt. 2 &amp; 12.

304-1711-3818.

2 kltt for ,...t Rt. 2 abou1 IS
"'ln111t1 from town. 17!. month
IJtus utiltti•. 304--175-3000.

F111 illlLI i1 I

22 ....... Coii11'-192-3-CIII.

711
lit

hooott lobr Bod. COmpl. ..
140. Pl.,pan (Uke new). t30.
c.llll14-742-2792 and•k for
HIH-~•Y

pi-·

51

I NOTICE I
nlE OHIO VALL£Y PUBI.ISH·

lNG CO. recorrmendl thM you
do bu•tn- with
I( now, and NOT to..., money
through the miMI until you h.,.
lnwttlg•ed the off•ing.

,.a:r.o ....

I

R~al Eolole

Household Goods

"When the masses chant 'We
love the king,' they don't
·mean -you, ·sire, they mean

B..,k bodo with bocldlng- •199.

Full . . mllttlets a foundation
tt•rtlng - t99 . Recliners
stllrting- 199.
USED· Bodo. - -· bedroom
sultet, •199-1299. Desks.
31 Homes for Sale
wringer waehtr, a complete line
of uaed turnttuN.
19815 M•rlette Mo~.., Home. "';;;:::::;:::::::;:::;;:;:::,-;:;;::::::;:::::;:::::;::::::~ NEW- W•tern boots- 130.
80x28. All el.ctric. C.. 3 BA ., 2 I
Workbools t18 &amp; up. (SteM &amp;
batho • ., ... ooom. dtn.,9 room. 33
Fanns for Sale
44 Apartment
•oft tool . eon 614-448-3159 .
To many ektras to lilt. Must •e
for Rent
to app.. clllt:e. 145.000. owner 105 prhiiKe lcrat with HIY
County Appliance. Inc. Oood
fhwncing, Call &amp;14-4,41- 1408 accnsne.OallipOiiiFerry.n..,.,
used ltl)pllence• tnd TV sets.
aft« 5 PM.
·
New completely furnished Op11n BAM to IJPM . Mon thru
3 btdroorn horna. worklhap, 2
extra loll with 'NIIIIt for nil.. .,.rtmant &amp; mobile home In Sat. 814-448-1199. 827 3rd.
Older 3 BR ., story A 'h. tul or buHclng, • 7 o.ooo.OO. 30 4- city. Aduttl only. P.-ldng. Call Ave. GallipoUa. OH.
b-ment. 1f2 aae. Centenary. 8 7&amp;..o4lll1
814-448-0338.
. Call 81'-4411-3044.
'
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Up•••,. unfurnished apt. Carw.. henl. drv••· ralrlgtntors.
Sacrifice. 2 SR. home. 1 acre. 2
lots •- Acreage
Peted. utiUttee ..ld No children. ranges . Skaggs Appll•nces.
mil• paa•d Vinton SchoOt. 35
Ql.
No !Mtt. Ctll 814-44&amp;-1837.
Upper River Ad, beside Stone'
Crett Motel. 814-448·7398.
Complately remodlled. New
wiring, lights. windoWI, blown11 Court St.-2 BR .. 2 bathl.
in inauletion. plumbing, kitchen For Sale 30 aer•. Morgam
ldltchen furnished. w / w c•pet.
LAYNE•s FURNITURE
cabinets, c•pat throughtout, townthlp, utllitylceelit. wHII811
No pets. Off 11,.« parking.
• d111pes &amp;aheers. AtsoWisherl d· all or •• lots. P.O . Boll 20357,
I 325a mo. plut Ullthiel. Dep. •
Sofas and .chairs priced from
,.,..,r, st!J\18, rafrig. G•den 11)01. Charl•on. W.Va. 2&amp;382.
lllf. Cell814-441-4126.
t395 to t9915. Tabl•
tnd
t23.000. 0.11814-388-848209'
up to t125. HldN·beds 1390
388-9864 tll10 PM.
9 Pus ac:rei (4 acres IIMII
Furniahad· 3 room• &amp; bath. to $595. Redlnlfl t2215 to
building loti plut 6 acrn
Clean . No pelt. Ref. • depotlt 1376. Lamps t~B to 11215.
1988 Redm~n Sectionel home. wooded~ . 110.000. 814-949- requlrad. Utilities furnished . Dl.n attn t109 and up to 1496.
2Bx58. 3 BR ., centre! air. Move 2389.
Adults only. Call 614-448• W~od table W·8 chalra 128'6 to
to your tot. Caii614-44B-B694
1619. '
t796. Desk 1100 up to $375.
after 6 PM.
2 gl'8vetolfoi' •I e. Mustbuold
Hutches *400 and up. Bunk
to vetertn . At Memorial Furr'liahed apt. 1160. Utiliti• beds complete w-m.. tru ..s
ae.,tiful Holcomb Hill. addi- O.dens. 8650. C.ll 814-992l*d. Share bath. Single rTNIIe. 129hnd up to 1395. Babybedt
tio..l lot. 3 BR., Ca . Call 7081 .
919 Second Ave.. Gallipolis. 1110. Mat'tfeQel or box IP!'ingt
814-448-0338.
-·
Call 441-4418 attar 7 PM.
full or twin 168, firm 178. and
Ashton, large bulll:ing lots.
QUeen eats 1225, King
1-bu• ForSale-2 story, 3-48R., mobile homn permhted. pt.f&gt;elc Ap . . ment. 2 SR .. unfumished. •350. 4 drawer ch•t •es. Gun
LR.. DR .. 2 b«hs. See at 813 w.ter. also river lott. ctyde 1175. WM8f Plld. 1138 S• ublnets tlgun. •bvmltt,.....
Seoond Aw. Call for appt.. Bowen. Jr. 304-578-2338.
cond. Galllpofis. Call 446--4416 135 • 141. Bad fram• 120,
a 14-448-8891 .
after 7 PM.
t30 • king frlme 160. Good
BaaJttfulrMu latsoneacreplus.
telectlon of bedroom tuitel.
2 BR . ho!'N compl•ed. ntM' public w•t8t, Clyde BoWlin, Jr.
Lu.urlous Tara Townhou• m ...l c.bine... headboarda tlO
plumbing, wiring, cablnel,, 304-576--2331.
al)llrtments. Elegant 2 ftoon. 2 and up to 1815.
BA., ful beth upetalra. powd•
.. ......... .
bath. Thermopane windowt.
vinyl 1iding. 49 Vine St. Call Two 1 acre lots with pl.bllc room downstairs, CA., dit· 90 Devt •me H c•h with
114-448-2805.
water , Jerrys Run Road. hwuher. dlspo•l. priwte en- approwd credit. · 3 Mil• out
• 4,900.00each, conaid•t•da. trance, prtvllte endo•d patio. BulevHie Rd. Open 9am to &amp;pm
3 BR ., utility, g. .ge. kitchen 304-1576--2383.
pool, playground. UtiUthts not Mon. thru Sat. Ph. 814-448.' with applianc:ea. EJCcellent oplnduded. Starting at $299 per 0322.
mo. Cllll 614-367·7860.
portunlty, Price to sell. Call Hou•lots. 304-875-6908.
814-446--1358 .
.
V..l., Furnhu"'
Acreage for •le 50 acres Crab Furnished efflclency -9 20 New and u•d furniture and
: · 108 State St. , Pomeroy. 2 or 3 ere• area. rural water. tobacco Fourth, Gallirolis. t180. Utili- appllcances. Call 614-448• bedrooms, carpeted. No I"NNo- allotment. minenl rklhtt, priced tiet peld. C•l 448-4418after7 7572. Hours 9 -5.
·" nable offer Nfu•d. Phone I 14- on in•pection. 304-676-3828.
PM.
J. S FURNITURE
· .• 992-3726.
Water, refrig. 8.
1416 E11tern Ave.
For •le 1YJ acr•. level land Yz Nice 2 8R apt.
~
3 lllrge bedrooms, mnm style. 2 mMeb1ckGienwood onblaclrtop st011elum. 4 1.-\ mi .. from Gallipo- 4 drawer ch•t, '48. 6 drawer
" living rooms, dining room. large roed. Real Nice. 304-578-22.88. lis. No peU. t225 mo. Call ch.t, 154.911. 15 pc. wooden
61 '-4411-8038.
dinnatte sets. t199.95.
kitchen. Gu heat. central eir, 2.
c• attached g.age. 28K34
Furfished apt, New. Ne•HMC.
PICKENS
separate garage. 1 Bx38 inRentals
1 8R . 1295. Utiltiet paid. Call
FURNITURE
ground pool. approx. 2 acres.
446-4411 after 7 PM.
Day 61~742- 2211 . night 111 44.
Dinettes. beds, bedding ,
687-3222.
Funfthed uJ)ftairs 3 room apt .. dreuers. Chell. couch•. chelr1,
41
Homes for Rent
utMiti• l)llld. 94 Locu ... 1210 lamps, coffe...nd 11bl•. Every ·
All etect:ric hoem in Leon on Rt.
per month. t75 depo.tt. Call d-v Specials. 1h: mile out Jerri6 2. Phone 304-458-1806after
Nicety . furnished tmaH hoUM. 114-441-1340 or 448-3870.
cho. 30'-87&amp;-14110.
6 :30p.m .
"
Adul1s onty. Ref. required. No
Apartments and hOUMS. Call StOp &amp; Check out our Inventory
Hou!!ll for sale. Rt . 2 ~pie pets. Call 614-446-0338.
304-0711-5104.
of quality furnltuN • c. pet for
Grow. 7 moms. full lize b•e·
low prlcet. 8 pc. wood suit•
ment, forced air furnace. 304- 28R .-% ofdol.ble.120SuteSt.
2 BR., ground 'ftoor, bu It-In back I 399, 6 pc. oak dlnettll!l-$226,
$226 monthly . Refarencet &amp;
576·2466.
•c. depoli1 required. Call 81~ pcNCh, big back .,..rd. BldtNell. Ctd loop carpet . .rtlng at *11.96
Call 614-388-9054.
a yd., commerdli carpet· t3.99 ·
Ni ce home Greenbrier Estattl, 4411-0254.
full baSemBilt w -famity room, 3
a yd . ~ge••ec:~tonofroomsilll
Furnished apartment. 1225 a remnlnta. No job too big or
br, 2 baths, forn.l dining &amp;. Conwnl~t 2 be*oom cot•ge
ma.
1
BR.
UtHhl•
paid.
920
in
Glllipolis,
$250
per
month
1m11ll. Fln.ncing • ins•llllllon
living room w -flreplace. kitchen
Foruth Ave ., Gallfpolls. Call available. Mollohan Furniture,
&amp; TV room w - woodburner. plut utiliti•- Call 614--446446-4418 aftlf 7 PM.
Upper Rlv.r Ad.. 446-7444.
Screened porch &amp; IMtiO, sitting 1890.
on 5 aaet . For appt cell
2 BR ., g . . ge. Deposit&amp; 1st mo. Small furnished llp8rtml!ll'lt. Cen- 14eu. ft. O.E. refrlg., Nnsgrltllt,
304-675-2365.
trally locllted. 1 or 2 quilrt•dutts. ·· $1150. Twk1 bed, new. i'n Ike
rent. Call614-446--1358.
No pets. Ref. S. Sec. dep. offer. C.ll 814-446-8100,even·
Mov ing: Hou• for sale by
inge.
owner. Call for appt. 30~875- Nice 2 bedroom hou•. Nice required. Call 615-44S.0444.
1913. Stucco dwelling. large c.-peting. cabinets, neighborlot. centml air, garage. clo• to hood. Middleport. 814-992- Furnilhed· nice for one per1on. Good:u•dColorTVfor•le. Call
Private. Call 814-448-3368.
614-4411-1149.
b111k.. schools, stonts, hospital, 5858.
c;hutehes. 3 br, kitchen. living
room. family room. 1 ~ b~h. lg. Small hou11 on Jetfenon Ave. 1 BA. apt .• new carpet, m~ge ,
deck. back .,..rd completely- Relsence Bl dapoait ntquired. frost free refrigerator' furnished. 53
Antiques
Water-g.bage paid. Deposit
Phone 304-875-1928.
c hain ~nk 5 ft. fence.
required. Call e14-446-4345. .
2 bedroom unfurnishi!td hou•.
507% 2nd St. New Hlven. Graclout living. 1 and 2 bedBuy or Sail. Riverine Antiques.
32· Mobile Homes
304-876-6278.
room 1partments •• VIllage 1124 E. Meln Street, Pomeroy.
for Sale
Min Of and Riverside Apart- Houn : M.T.W 10e.m. to &amp;p.m ..
Hou•: 1810 JeHenon Btvd . 2 ments In Middleport . Fram Sunday 1 to &amp;p.m. 614-992·
br, 2 baths, g.age. No Pett. 0182. Call 614-992-7787. 2526.
EOH.
. ·r
New Moon w / 15x30 exj:endo, 304-875-1825.
refriglf8tDt, SUMI, 2 air condi·
Antique oak buftet with Uon
tioners. new carpet. Excellent 3 bedroom , 109 English 2 bedroom Aptt:. for rent. Chrw feet . 304-1175-2884.
throughout . Call 614· 446· Rd. $250. per month plus udH- Carpeted. Nice •ttlng. LMirdry
hcilhiel ........ ble. can 814tleo. 30'-675-5542.
f 100, liVe' s.

'Elvis:"

•so

•ae.

992-3711 . EOH.

Shulb: 12K85, 2 BR. with 8~~:10

eJtpando. new ~umbing . U~fur·
n ishad. t4500. Cell 61.,:448.2981 .

1971 Bayview. 12d0, all electric. with cantf'lll air. $6000. Call
814-44&amp;..7865.
1974 Bubbr' 14x80 2 BR ., all
elec., underpinning, deck. &amp;
steps. Asking 87400. Cell 814446-8298.
4"h acres, 1 4x70 furnished
trailer. Gas heat, central air,
drilled well. low utUitiN. front
and back porch . NMtiO Forked
Run P•k. Day 814-742-2211 .
night 814-667-3222.
19113 NeW' Moon. 10~e615 ,
12x1 4 addition. Very 3ood
condition. Call 814-949-2 77.
1974 Champion 14x65 total
electric. underpenning . Ftu·
nist1ed or unfurnished. Ready 10
mow .• 86,900.00. 30.4-6711-

2383.
1978 Governor 12X85 2 badroom totlll electric, fulty car·
patad, cantral air.2 porctles.
Phone 304-882-2944.

2 bedroom hosua Camp Conley.
$200. dapoait; $180. month.
References Required. 304-875-

2829 .

42

81 '-992-5724 after 8,00 or
992-5119.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 • 3 BR. All utilities P.ld•cept
eiiiCiricity. eon ... niant k:lcatlon.
Call 114-448-8558 or 44~

4006.
Furnittled 2 BR. mobile home,
AC. lncated atKA Kon Eutern
Aw. Dep. S. Aef. l'lllquired. Call

61'-2511-1187.
Nice 2 BR . tt.ilerfor rent. Alto3
BR. wlblll:h--. tlalf. Call 1114379-2409, if no answer call

446-6726.

New 1 bedroom furnished or
unfumlshed ..,.rtments. One In
Pomeroy, one In Middleport.

Coli 61'-992·5304.
APAA'IM ENT9. mollllo h..,...

446-6345 -

3289 anytime.

5 PM, 4411-

5223.

2 bedroom mobile home.

-,~~~ 44

Now accepting applications for

2 bsdroom
oportmontL
c.rpated,
..,pllances.
weterfully
.nd

trash JHdlupa prowtdad. M•lnte-

nonce hoo HYing clo• totllop.
ping,. btnkl and tchooll. For

mo .. Information c ..ll04-882-

1979 Windtor mob41e home._ BJ-11. w- furmhod. DopCentdl air. 110\lt. refrigenttor. Dotit and ,.ference required. No
mnicro-wave. dishwrtthef'. 304- pat1. Caiiii14-388-B!i48.

momfl.

30'-882-2588.

30'-67~.

noo.

3711.E.O.H.

Gas stow •west.for•l&amp; C.ll
81

Ford engine 380V-B, 881r'Mthe
Tall hunter bow w ..ccessori•.

SALES •

SERVICE AEPAE·

SENTATN'E . W• •eloollfng for

persons who have the 1blllly to
c.ll on our ....-nt cu11omen
and . . .blilh MW ones. tnoome
in direct portio.. with p8ftoM
abilitv. Menag.,_.t opportur.
hy for dght .,.,.on. lnterviM 11
Wllllern Ann Motel, 91e 2nd
Aw. Oallipollt, Ohio. frfd8¥'.
.Aug. 5. 1 1 a.m. - 3 p.m.
Bunk be* 11 SO. free

81 '-8811-7311 .

27 acre f•m. 4 mi. down rfver.
12 ac:r• meedowt. bill.
Au•l - ' •· Hlrd 1op roed.
wlo. , mel rt Good blclll

wooca

lc-.

toto. Colt 81'-••e-zeOII.

Ferm. Trlbbi•RoM. 7mll•fw'orn

At

82. Mooon CO•'"V· 31&gt;1

.,;... Hou• Md builclnOJ. Cell

30'-7811-72tO.

·

opol. fu rnlohod,

55

1183 ,...,. Sent,., 4 door. S.
-.on. II&amp; N, 181r, AM-FM
•nroof.luggaa••cll.
74.000 mil•. Lookl ·and runs
G&lt;OIIt. · - 114811-2785.
187t 0o1to 81 Ohio. PS. PB.
...., win.._., I trecl..,.,,
MO. thlft onfloar. buclcat
oil now - ·
good condl·

c.-...

57

Mu1icel
Instruments

Building M11.-t1lt
Block, brick. IIWer pip•. wlnda~ llnbtls, etc. Clalde Winters, Rio Grande, 0 . C.ll 1114-

v...,

198'1 Oldo Cut- lu•IIOY S.
don. •doar. *alu.,.lmmocul•to. 210 VII. U485. Coli

11'-2n-1sze.

~ltar-.-'-lorthlo

114-112·1711.

loll. Coli Andy Pork 30'-17111027.

bloclt &lt;102. 12100. 814-992·

Sill'll''t ·
&amp;l1Vt,ltl.,

694-357B

Pets for Sale

21n.

Fann Equipment

cAoss•soNs
U.S. 31 W•t Jockoon, Ohio.
81'-281-8411.
_..., Fergu-. Now Hollond.

11'71

Colt 81'-4411-7372.

Full bloc.ied rat 1llrrier pupiJI-.
7 ·VIIItekt: old. C,ll 814-2455814 after 5 :30 or enytime s...
• Sundey.
Siam.. . khtens. t45. C.ll814-

Going Out Of BUIIIlMI-Fullstock
Red Chows. puppi••nd edults.

Col! 61'-379-251\8·

Siamese khtent. 8 wks. old. Sell
or Lilac point. Also Pedkl...
Dutch A1b~t1. 114-992·7f01.
8 week old buff oblol'lld femele
Cocller Spanl.. puppy. AKC
Reglst8red. t200. Clll 8142811-1311 after 6'~0 pm.
6 Beegle puppi-. Fulf..blood•d.
$25. •II or trade. 8 Walk•
puppi•. tegii'IINed. eso. •II u
trade. Call 1114-843-6248.
•

Cond. 2 new front ....._ 304171-2213 after 4 p.m.

IIW

Tandem Milo truck • T..dam
low boy MI.-. Good eand .

Tnu:torF•rrMMA Nnsgood. re•

•1110 or wll ooll ...,..... Coli
81 ....1-1038.

1-30'-8711-

1983 .,.u Plymouth pickup

Sen riding lewn tract..-. 1 HP,
42'' cut. 12715.. 304-1175·8822.

with srMII Clmpel' top. Only
40,000 mla
good condlt~. tHOOor wllt•d• fore•.

v...,

Coli ,1 .. 216-1281.

63

Uvastock

1871 F-100 Ford. Mach. bodv.
llr. COMI)r'Htar. 8000lbl. Orlf·
1hor• holtt. C.ll 814-21111211l.

Gentle Ten.,.... Wlllk• hor•
with •ddle. C.ll 114-245-

9143.

187SGMCIOOO. 311onglno. e
opood. 2 - d
utility
bottt. eooo lb. ..
new
tim. · 1971 Ford F 210
4JI4. new 14x31 Gumbo
mudd--. 310 •naine. 4 tDHCI.

_..,.Jo.
,o-c,.,...

Reg. SfntrMntal bun far •I e.
~

Coli 11'-2"11-8143.

For•la.Poii... Herlllordlull, 11
months old, ,...... Cell wan-

•~

tnpl1'-182·7"'8.

1977 Dotoun old&lt;· I'll· CAIIoftor
5p.m. 114-9112·7722.

71

Surplus.

Your area.

,.,.d.
lutn

r~ti 1 180I-II 7·IIOOO,

1977 C.mero. V-8. .,10, nns .•
PS, P8. c.n 114-441-1111.
ft 1 I'M •••12••
1
--

11711 -

huntlfti.

197!5 Dodge Alpon Stoilon
W-eon lleftl 1. Auna good.

81l-99Z.3224.

famala, lltii'/Od. UOO. 30'e95·3801.

0 ,.,.
81•~ 2••u- 811 .

uoo. Coli 74

'------v-·---:--

19M Yl\ul ... blld. All powor.

11000. Sh.,.l c.ll 114-318-

1178 Elearroallde. B!Jitdown to
Oldo. ,.,_ J bolt .....

- *2800. Coli 81"-192'l'OOIIi&lt; 114-192-3247.
1110 Ho . . 1(11 eo. Good
condltlon. UZI. 11•·841·
2:133-llp.m.

ShlrPI

trill-..,,... AC.. AM-

1811BDodgoiOOTurboCO-wlthalr. ""ldno *Billortrodo. Colt B1W81-17!18 or
216-1282.

1111 Hondo

19M Coi*"Y• dr.,.,to.. olr,
P8.. I'll. AM·FM- •
mi-.
·
·
Coli 11'-371-2112. or 371-

M•-· 11.000

1877 -

, _.. . . _ • .,.

711

80811 end
Motol1l for S.le

_.,pao ...

~-·lti.Colll1'-....
• •7.
Nod Hat b....,.ol Drug dill•
en...._ • • JOPo'd. au..
PM. Your w-. ...,.,. Guido.
1·1Dt-~~7.eooo !lt. •-•-·

- · - .. Md - · -0011111101\, wttl\
Did- IIWl•- •11.100.
1117, :100 Ktlu
.Jot aL
Clcocl ....,.,. •1110. Colt
Oo!r 81"-191-111,, lt•nlngo

•*I

114-192-JIIOt.

I

I
(

DMfard W•ar Strvfce: Poole.
Qswns, Wills. o.IIW'Iry Any-

tlmo. Coli 11'-441-7&lt;10'-No

a.nd-r clllts.

w-

...,co.

Swimming
Milo. Ph. 81'2"" 128 1.
'
R.AWotorl ....co. .... olo. '

J• J

" " ' ' ..._

'O((lX'AkJT :. .

£.\JERr'I30D( IS

NJ 'a&lt;1.m~JT.

-=

enrolls In Fraaler'a leer of
flying claaa 10 conquer
phobia. (R)
CJ) llftll of the MGI'IIter
Truclra lind Mud RIOing
From Worcester, .MA (T)
(l) (!) Myalal yl The Prime

. MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
1 Gar A CARD FllO'o\
NAsTY MC~F AT

CAMP.

r-----~--~--~--~-.

HE SA.Y5 HE'~
HAVING THE TIME
OF Hl5 LJFI:..

~'!!

ANOTl-IER.
SlJMME:.R C/lMP
Tf.lAT'U. 6E UP FOR

SALE THI5 WINTER.

Mlnllter conaulta Holmes
w11an a vital document Ia
stolen. {NAI 1:1
111 •
8llilon and Simon
A.J. llhUla Rick out of the
call when he protects an
ex~lt11tlend. {A)
11J1 LMy King LIVII
IIJ Tltui'ICiar Nlgllt Ftgrna
1:10
(J) IIJ) Chennal H The
gully lormar manager of a
Loa Angeles TV station
returns 10 har'ttometown of

a

e

Elmira, NY. detarmlned 10
reecue the tiny Channel 99
from failure.
New Country

a

10:110 (J) bight Talk
e (J) IIJ) Night Coul'l

HERE'S THAT
CUP OF FLOUR
I BORRIEO,
ELVINEY

YOU DOf.J'T
OWE ME ANY
FLOUR.
.LOWEElY

IT WAS ME
THAT 90RRIED
A CUP FROM YOU
LAST WEEK

IT TAKES 'ONE
TO KETCH ONE

Harry's In the middle of 8
literal fight over the
Conttitutlon. {R)
(I)UIACMklaetl
(I)
(Ill folfiouta Dr.
Maktlr'l -chmant 10 a
teenage patient jeopardizes

e

!lltlent, Ryan White. 1;11

.IDIIIDI.,-111'11
IIJII..alng Nawa
• CNoll and Chla

I '1111 ~ AfiE.
11£ ~ se;')(,&lt;;

10:31 (J) IIOVII!: , _ lor Taua
(NR) {2:04)
11:00 (J) Rlfttlnglon lhHie Steele
Among the IJYing

.......

Ill

·=

(l) Anllllc.n Art '«um
(!)llanOII

=-

ea:»&gt;- eonnac~~on

~
z- Walking
Dletlnol

PEANUTS

H11.

Dump .....k ~ollwrt -~~~...
luollhog mowing. 30'-87&amp;1110.

87 · Upholatrt

..._.0 U p - )........
trloounty•r•21,.••· The belt

-.

In •urtlt•te uoho...,Jng. Coli

...

304·171·4184 .for free

16 Ovenlike
IS M.D.'s

COME ON,MMCIE ..
6&lt;l Fi51l1~6 1

-meRE AREN'T At« LAKES
AIWVND ~ERE, SIR ..

TELL M'i llAf..tT'S
60NNA Be YER'&lt;

DISAPPOINiEO..

0 lllollaaalr: Pn111nl8
aYouCinleaiW
1 1 : 1 0 • : • 1a11t 111ow
&lt;ll-..C .... (l)

mane .. Onl

I Ii~
li\~Helf-=Lall
'a
PJ.

Nlallt A
wile him
O'llrln lnd Olambonl to
iOoltl hlr hulblnCL lA)
(8 Tt IPI U ololln. M.b. tn the

ir'~~

1 TV

SOUTH
+A 10
.AJ

....

~

4AKQJIOB
Vulnerable: North-South ·
Dealer; South

West

Nort•

Eut

SooUII

Pass
Pass

2+
Pass

Pass
Pass

7N1

Opening lead :

2+

+4

squeezed. A heart would make South's
jack a winner, and a diamond would
enable Chambers to sluff the heart
jack and take the last two tricks with
the A-5 of diamonds. As usual when it
came to bridge, my father, Oswald Jacoby, was ril!ht.

role

Glenn
Ford
(1971-72)
2 Medicinal
plant
3Scope
for

4 Soui(Fr.)
5 Climber's 20 West

31 Grovel
and Clark 32 "The Quiet
23 Vociferou~
Man" star
24 Queeg's
36 Chester

6 S~cky

group .•
19Ham it up
21 Newsman

Rather
22- king
23 Food fish
24 Studied

the

mixture

7 Macaw

ship

8 TV role
for Boone
11 Exact
14 Tropical
fruit
17 Japanese

city

. - Arthur

25 Downright 37 Soviet
26 Rise
news
27 Howitzer
ligency
and
39 Doll81' bill
Big Bertha 41 Mrs. ·
29 Playing
O'leary's

marble

culprit?

territory

27 Residence
28 Garfunkel

and
Buchwald
29 Greek "1'"
30 "Nestegg"
bank
account

31 Seabees
motto
33 Miss ·

to pals

34Have
311 "The Cat
in the - "
-38Give to
40 Florida Clt)'h.i-+-t42 Melody

4S.Ihsen
heroine
·.ami others
814

AXYDLBAAXR
laLONGFELLOW

a

(J)

+KJ8S
49862

+13

' o&amp;U:VCRYPI'OQUO'ii!S-Here's how toworklt:

(!) l11t1ndela
eOolaftal'lall
VldiOCountry

(J) (J) •

.KQ!08

·~
+Q.l0976

· ~ece

111-.10 (J) 1U

•

EAST
+J

Fabray,

on TV Sandy Hill hoats thla
video veralon of the popular
magazine, with feaiUrea on
Lady Diana and Sa111h
Ferguaon and lelnal!!_ AIDS

THE GRIZZ"WELLS®

+97642

birds
DOWN

aid .

record

hll tob-:.~.1;1
IDS

Pall Rupe, Jr. W.., lervke.

Watter.an't Water HauHng,
,...onable raw. lrntNdiMe
2.000 gllon d.U..V, cts11rns.
pcclo. _,1, etc. • • 30'-571-

8 Soft diet
9Texas
shrine
10Rumanian
city
12 Gift
recipient
13 City
in Mass.
15 Brain-wave

e (J) !Ill a-. carla

Dlaterne. wella. lmmedle1e-

I'Doto.clo.,no.wotla, Colll1'4 41- 3171 ·
·

....

Cll-.

"'Condo for Sale' Hmm .. .'Convenle~t to
f(eew8y, unobstructed view of neelby
·
19th-c6ntury townhouse ... "'

ADCRESSfD 10

Hauling

1110 Hondo w11101ttl00. •·
• - nlco. ..110. 1-IO..a711-

wttl\- hoi.11.10DHP
11.
2
.......
1ft.
AM.JIM.r=;-·
•DN. tiiO ~ 0.1
nac••llllillow..._
Dodge
Y.L outo.. - . faot 110u•1o. t'ul

up, Crown Ctty. 3 "'-r lott. 1
mile below dam. Eureka. C.ll

7.79.

.,..~

General

•Mtt drtve, a trM, 17,000
'"... for ....... trade. 304I'JI.I314.

11•Dwvoi•-1Bft. 1tn.
10
m-. •aeo.
._•,1.,.'-_l9__2-_2_7n_.- : - - : - - ~---·Col 1 ,._. . ._ ,-1 . . . 11ft..._LTVII_.,JO

2 . . . ~ ~-don """· hook·

21588. E.O.H.

..eoo

··

Ql eGII PIDpla Mllgllalna

86

••••

WFST

46 G.-aceful

tenn

e (J) IIJ) A Dllferwnt WOfkl

(!) 11\a 0., 1M UniVII'II
' Cl\lngld Look II the rise In
modem medicine. g

1.000or 2.0001-•dolhlwy .
Call 30'-e7... 70.

....,_IQd___..........,,..... HI'-.,
-· ......, -::r;- ...,..,.

Space for Rent

Aentll t ..u . .. Call 114-912-

c...cm c -

•o•. .

19M luloll COntiiOY Umltood.
mi.
.._
Coll11"171-21 .. 171-2137.

Rooms ior 18nt-wuk 011' month.
hrtlng at $120 a mo. O.llla

Motor ..Ucla

1-

FM·.......,, Cal1814-31...240.

bllh. Ctll-441-4411att•r7PM.

Refrlgel'etion

ACROSS
l Jewelry

DeniM tries to solve a
llnenclll crllla without help
from home. (R)
(!)
Tba Man llel\lnd
lite..,.,
t:OO (J) .,., Club

•100. 11'-H2-1881.

AKC Toy Pomel'llnlln, bledl

.-111.=000

c,Q) IJ/IJIJ(. .. IT'S

oqo&amp;lppod lor ftohlng.
a....,.,.g. New • • - .

1879 .loop C... H-op. 310
enalna. C.ll 814-112-7214 or

c.v.ll•·

HEY. &lt;.t:XJ ~ .J JUSr v.xliJ
10 MILLIOO OOUAI&lt;S IAJ 1Ht MAIL

point Job. 311 - · hood•L

:=·~ ~=Jg~~i

Jolt·

Electricel

lit

814-&lt;141-0877.

.•.

84

by THOMAS JOSEPH

T11at of 1M Qokl

. l:iloe (NR) (1 :58)

Excavating

773-ett39.

Wllllor !Al (1 :34)

1:10

Cor. Fourth 1nd Pine
Glltktolll. Ohio
Phone 814-441-3118 or 814-

Trenching •ervtca. water, OM
and electric AnM burled. 304-

lit 4 W.O.

EEK

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

73

1144...70211.

•~

11.700

Plumbing
l!r. H1111ting

blook. NOp.

Call8'14--441-7211

1911 Ch.vy

82

83

1977 Dodge pa1...,g1r y.,,
Rur11 but n... work. c.ll

:.;:.-:-..:.=:r:o.lo.;'ll!::::

=·

30'-8711-1451.

+42

CROSSWORD

1:01 Cll MOVII!: Al1llnlc and Old

1

Electrk:f-. Stlte Certlfi.t free
estlmatae, call Ed Sh.mblln

.976f!2

My father always said to me that if
he had 12 top tricks to take, he could
manage to work out a way to take all
13. That philosophy is shared by most
top players, and Neil Chambers is no
exception. Playing in the Vanderbilt
team-of-four in Buffalo last March,
Neil opened the South hand with a
strong two clubs. By agreement, his
partner's positive spade .response
showed two of the top three honors.
With that knowledge, Neil could count
12 top tricks, and perhaps his partner
held the jack of spades as well. U not,
Neil was willing to take his chances
that something would develop .
After the spade lead, declarer won
the ace and ran all seven club tricks,
discarding five hearts, a diamond and
a spade from dummy , West was left
with three spades and two diamonds.
EaSt still bad the K·Q of hearts and K·
j.a of diamonds. Now South cashed the
ace of hearts. West threw a diamond,
since he couldn't afford to throw away
a spade. Declarer now played to dummy's king of spades and cashed the
queen. East could throw one diamond
away, but on the second spade he was

:":.J..u~e Now

Ak. . Tr. .Trlmmlngendltump
r~ ~ree ... m..... 304-

4118-1 7111.

NORTH
1-4-BI
+KQB!

D PlluuNawa

0

-:r.

new • • new Pllnt. uc. eond.
114·441·8247 "' 30'-171·
8422.
•

Vans

ellliiiOVIE: Olfanlllluaa
(P013) (1 :37)

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE.
hou• coli
OE. Hot
Point. w•thers, ,.,_,. •n d
.._ .. 30'-571-2398.

Mieheel'• RMklent ... Air ConcN·
ttom.g · .nd refrigeration, I'll ·
ch.,.. one! ropolr •nolco. 30'-

et IH Rings

Around-ul •

304-8711-191511 or 30'-1782903.

448-4477

t.

(!) Vlctoly

StarblawnandShr.. Sefllloe,

11 a..,y· cturftp truck. 427
engln•, .lllr brill•. I ~. 2-sp,

Auto'8 For Sale

pupj)i•.. . 1988 a ...... _,lork. 4 dr.. AC.

Furnished room-919 Second
Aw., OelllpoUt. t128 a mo.

CDI.WTRV M081LE Homo Pork.
Aou• 33. North ol PD-ov.

1911Jllodge~ton

8911-3802

z-.

I r "'I~ port .rtwn

2337.

8 ·14-211-1213.

t3(H)O.

Rotary or cabl• tool dr•tno.
Mostwellscompl•d•mediiY·
Pump • • and service. 304-

41:4, IUtonlltic. power windows. M. electric tocb. c•pM.
n.v•dl•. e12.000.114--141-

~::4-:3:8:11-:8:4:8:6:.====:.Lwo::'::"'""::·:•::1:0:0.:3:0:4-:77;;3-:9:1:8:8~ -:-::=-:::---:::-7""-:::--:
8"'8.
..::: ' · · · ·.

fe.ty Tree Trimming. lt""p
••mo,.l. Coli 30'-171-1331.

4 opd. Rurw groot. Shorpl Coli
814-441-78·h- 5 PM.

ch.tn - • during O.UI• 11nd

noo.

72

--body,

MaoOII Couroy F•lro. SidoN
Equlp...,t 304-1711-7421.

rimo bod.
4038.

2464.

Truck1 for Sale

Chaftglcl L.aam the factor&amp;
lnvolvod In overturning_the
A~n doclri.., 1;1

8344.

dolollll•· 30'-·1711-181&amp;.

nM' ..lftt, manyn..,., ..,. .. 3110.

got -ndFREE.10por-'all

eo......

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

1;1

(R) (1:31)
(l) nailer 1M Uno'VII'II

RON EVANS ENTERPRISESStPtlc ... k PimPinG- ..0 per

GE. Spoclollng In Zenith. Coli
30'-&amp;76-2398 "' 11'-441·

a..,ratet C.aller.

1879 • WD Ch_, 1&gt;1 ton
plok·up. Aocornly

chtlin

AKC Ga"r_, Shophordo, 1
whka 2 bloc:l&lt; mol• ••d 1 block

a

Chlflcter. (R}

(I) Otympui lla'Jiy Racing (TJ
(I) • ell MOVIE: 'lmpulu'
ABC T1luNdlly Night -

Concrete Septic TMka • 1000
pl .. 11500gal. .,d.Mt Aar•tWn
tyltlm. F•ctorv wined l'lfPillr

automldc. ec. am-fm ..,110, Re•

1811

81 '-251-1031.

-

lhund 15 weeks old. thott

7:3511) Andr Qlfflllll
B:OG (J) Crur Like a Fo• Fox on
the Range
·
• (J) IIJ) Tba Colby Show
Rudy wrlt8s 8 fairy tale. In
wlllch every one plays 8

dll MOVIE: Tba Ulllmete

•

·o..·

.,.,.L ..

tl))lllnlon

RON'S Television Servic•.
Hou•· celt on RCA. Ou••r.

h-bock. 51.100 mil•. Exc.

1979

AKC oogl-ad mlnlotu'"

e'ITHE~.

S~EPER

1;1

a VldaoCountry

aeGII41ttoura

RED HOT b ....... 1 D
d ~
•v-ntplan•
. rug •
.,•• etn. boltl,

a

l-rS'i,

Jaopanlyl

Pointing: Interior • E&gt;torior.
Froo - m - . Coli 11'-44&amp;-

2 SiameH pu ..·bred WU.ns for
11le. Call 8VIIInln- 814-9492290.
4 Reg. AKC Mlnletute
Schl"'llurer pu,.. 2 main, 2
femal•. Salt .nd pepper irl
color. Alto heve Reg. AKC
Miniature Schneuzer Stud service. Cll1614·912·71tl3.

wormod. •1110. uch. 304-17114308.
.

o~ ··wrs~ST"

Rogersl1sement

I ::,.:

'II Plymouf'l Turisono Du.-r,
IC, ~ -fm lteNO, PS. Pt.

448-8317.

AKC Reglltered Germin Sh•
pherd, female. C.ll 614-3888488.
·;

4 cyl.,

you·~~

IOIId. Call1-800-531·9128.

Felr Specl.t buy oM

Poodle pups fOr ule-AKC
Registered-Red • apricot. Tailed
&amp; wormed. Sire OIIIT!~on tine.

NOT ON
THE ''tffAL.THIEST"
ANI'

1883 Ch..,r&lt;&gt;lot Mollbu -lon
wagen . •••10 O. 304 •87 6·
4480. .

Americltl &amp;khno PutJI . . UKC . 4 Inch C~wt•Deming puim·p.
Registered. 1100 each. Cell
350 QPM, 8 oyl. engine. 500ft.
61 '-3e8-8890.
ho• wllh -=tlon. 112750. C.ll
Coli._ pup.

.IJ)Judge

s.E. 0111o.

bel•.

Regll111tr~

•wSpaadWHk

RON EVANS ENTER·
1983 Pofttllc Orand Prix, new . ohop.
PAISES. Jack11011. Ohio. 1-eootim. ..... good. t3.400. 30'- 137-1128.
'
1711-3213.

Drllgonwvnd Cftterv Kennel. ·1000 Ford Dl•ol •ctor with
CFA Persian and Slam- ktt· Ford Dyn•ounce mo-Mng m•
tent. AKC Chow puppi-. New chine, NH
JO rlllke.
Himalayan kittens. ·Call 1114- I 3150. Owner wll flnM• C.ll
4411-3844 aft• 7PM.
11'-281-1522.

2-AKC

........

7:30•(2) Ill Hollywood

Bustl Hog Sill• • S.vioa. Ov.,
40 UMd t,.atOII's tochoa. from
• cornpt• tine af n.,., &amp; Ullld
~~qulpment. lMgen _.ICtkJn In

Groom and Suppty Shop-Pet
Grooming , All breeds ... AII
lt\'l.e t- lam• Pet Food Dealer.
Julie Webb Ph. 814-441-0231 .

pilL Ce1130'-736-91s:t

~ury Capri.

4opoocl. UI0.' 304882-3714.

BRIDGE
By Jameo Jacoby

7:115 IJ) Andr Qlfflllll

1-11 '-237·0488. dOl¥ "' nJilht.

Goorv• Crwoll Ad. Coli 81 '441-0294.

of

Ma!:".&lt;.:b....

UnoonditioMI ltflllt..,. pran. .. Loc.e rwt.... cee furnllhed.
Free lltlml'lll. C.tl coltect

1874 Now 3110. *400. 30'675-$1181ftor e,oo.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Engage - Arena - Virus - Hiatus - SENSE
The old college professor told his class: "Uf8 was like a
good book. Th6 more you get Into It, the more SENSE it
makes."

··Court

tBl lamar fllllfar

eASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

uoo. ,..,.,. 304-1711-7880.

f t PRINT NUMBERED
I
'r:ll LETTERS IN SQUARES
f t fJNSCRAMBLE .FOR
V ANSWE R

IIJI MolliJflnl

Home
lmprovemlll)te

low mleege. goad concltkan.

Complete 1he chuckle Quoted

.
.
by fdling in fhe missing words
_,__.___, you deiielop from step No. 3 below.·

elllla.rTNk

S1:rv11.e:;

1nd sawing mechlne
repe6r •
d auPIIII•. Pick
14' 1nd diiiMiry, Dwll V•cu&amp;m
Cleaner. one h•ll mila up

\,____.._...___,
_
.
_
_

Nlfllr lualna.. Repon

,-..,::t;.GII Wllael

1871 Winnebago Motor Home.

I

NITICE

Naw':',\~:00)

W...,proaflng.

1871 Dlltoun ZOO SX. 5·-d.

61

' *Deck Materilll1
Gusrenteed Oultlty
CETIDE . INC., Athens~ II14-

CAll 81'-NII-2280.

un Mon• Co~o. Foctorv big

I mn

and Bavelod Lop Sl$1g

56

11711hu....... d. R•al good

~--;,c.:...::,l-;'-'--\ris,-:r\-=-T,--1 G)

elll

1178 Dlryiler Le.,..on. 4 door,
nM pelnt, .,.., blt.-y, brak•.

..._

1:30. (J) IIJ) NBC Nlglttlr Newa

eC2lPMMagn...

1S71erw.Air_ho,.,ZO
11.
a- A. • - · · Loodod.
Coi130'-IB:Z.3237I p.m.

;

AHer working hard on a new
·
"'
halrsty18
lor 8 client, the woman
1
.
.
frowned and said, "That's okay,
. . - - - - - - - - - - , you're a beau1ician 1101 a -."

(I) lljlollaCenlllr (L)
(I) £niii1H- Tonight
(!) (!) M1ctlll/ LMnr

304-87&amp;-1394.

1

l

1---r:\Ts,..c.,
A\"'6"N--r\C--rE\-11

8:3611) Clrollumett
7:00 (J) RIIM\atlln 8lwltt Have I
got a Sllile for You

ooH conwlood. , . _ hitch.

Pho,.11'-742·3020.

I

~~~~·
a
voucan a. a sur

1971 Hollldly R•,.._• ,....
trell•. 22 ft. twin •xle. liMps I.

1887 DOdge Omni. AutarMtic,
AC. low mil•- COnsider "de.

I

TOFIM

~)I'-T'I...,;:--;1·.,.....,1

Ill eGI) CIS ellll Hopn'a -...
·
IIJIInatdiPoHcl

1974 31 fl. Coachnwn. ~rk
model wllh t.,_out. •lr. 11500.
11'-l•t-2319.

· 81

·=

2

Ill Good TlmetJ
IIJ c..-. ex_.
tll , • ....,..,
1:0&amp; II&gt; Allee

(!)

.10.800. 30'-'71-4. .0.

Loodod. •1200. Coli 814-992·
7214 or 11'-9112-3224.

«&lt;

DALLGY

'I!III

Cll elll ABC -1;1
CD lady IIICtdc

room. Coli &amp;1'-251-8717 or
211-8271.

••oo.

2141 .

5000;•cetver. 304-175-7435.

Concrete bloc:b· all lilel· ,.d
or delivery. M•on san d. Olllllpolis Block Co .. 123% 'Pine St.,
GaiUpolts, Ohio. Clll 814-44f.
WESlERN RED CEDAR
• Channel Rustle

..

I

. (li Lllfll* Side ol 8porta {R)

32 ft. Coechman c.m.-r. Air
condttion.. •ring. · re.- b•d-

1179 Ford Or.n.ta. Oaod concltlon.
co11 11'-742-

Individual guitar l1110n1. b•
glnMPt. Hrlout gu ..rlrt. Bruf..
...... Mulic. 81'-441-0887.
.Jtfl W•rr'llley Instructor, &amp;1.._
4411-8077. Ll.,_d Opentngo ..

24&amp;-5121 .

2783.

••s.

tlon. 11'-MI-2237.

IUmt.ll Pleno. I mos ... d. Excel.
oond. T*• owr ..,mem.. Call

10' _ , . dloh. Unldon--UsT

Furnil hed Rooms '

BEAUnFULAPARnwENTSAT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKION EI~TE8. 538 Jocbon
l'lko from •183 o m9. Wolk .,

shop and mouf•. 814-448-

Auto's For Sale

Building Supplies

304-$76-3788

W•'-· Dryor 48

8711-7731.

S.le

59 For Sale or Trade

2 BR . IPta. I clolllts, khchan-

hook-up, ww cwptt. nWtty
p-'ntH. deck.
From 117&amp;.
Rogonoy . .. c . AptL C.J1, 30'87e:-IJ104, or 175-5381 or

Pet1

grill. 304,875-3779.

Hotol-81 '-441-1580.
Big nWII 3 8R . horne, ,bu It on
your lol only. t1 e. 994&amp; up. Colli

•tv!• bike

eao. Amber chancller $25. Oat

lltllhloo oold. Slnglomole. Shore

Apartment
for Rent

~~~~;~~~==~~~;;~~~~~~~1
56
for
71

30'-875-7277.

Downtown 1 bedroom apt,
furnished, c•peted, AC, adutts
ontv. no pelt, cal •fl• 4 :00,

45

NEA. ~-

304-5711-2901.

mate. 2 fem•le. thott

loft hand goll clubs with bag.
Coiii14•4411-8173-0knlghtt
lfter II PM.

1, . . b"t

Air co~h:ioner, Wll1ar bed.
t1ereo-floor modei.1Gun cabinet.

propelled l.wn mowar· llka nww.

1 oat o1 men'o right hond goll
clubt with bag. 1 HI of men's

Cl

79 Mot0111 Home~
lit Campers

!

304-~82-3711 .

AKC black Lobrtldor

Be ItCh StreM, Middleport, Ohio.

2 BR . mobile home. fenced In
Country. Addavllletchool
district. noo a mo. Call I, 4-

Worte Tanning Bed. Uke New .

ln. 3 ood. bl"""'e. Soaro ooll

1602.
~rd.

wood
• 1Sf;orm. 1304Picnic wlndowt
uble. commode.
lot
875-2130.

femsle. Shots 111r1ed and
wormed. 304-418-11128.

llo. 514441-8221 .

2 bedroom furnlahed apartment
utMtt• .-hl ,raf...,ces. Phone

Antique mantel w-Jnirrot, 1918
Chwelle d00t1, glen etc. 19•
trl hul boot. 115 hp Evlnrudo.
304-875-18151. I

4 tir•-P 255-70R-18 hlghMy
tread, Sunbeem Stewart heavy
duty tnlmtl cllpl)8r1, lldl11 21

Cell61'-216-8311.

Two bltdroorn. mobile home In

Farms for Sale

londlcopeo. 61'-441-9148.

hou••· Pt. PleeuntandGaiUpo-

14Jt70 furnfthed or unfurnished.
3 BR ., alr. l•gelo1.g.-den spot.
Call 114-256-1283.

33

Need Horses Hoow1 Trimmed?
bedroom hou111 irl Pomeroy Call Jeff. 81'-4411-7307.
area. $200.1226 per monttl. All
-Sapphire Pendent .•
pertly fumished. Ret.rence re-· Diamond
qulred. Dey 814-992-2381 ev- Written appraisal Included.
*525 retail wlue. Mtke offer.
enings 614-992-6723.
Call614-44&amp;-8891 .
1 bedroom apartment In Middleport. t150. month plus utilhles. TreeS. stump ,.rnowl, trHI &amp;
stvubs, tondump-t17.60, 1987
Coli 81'-992-5548 "' 814- truck
camper. 132.60. Don' t
948-2218.

Furnithed 2 BR . Ca. cable. Vttltef
tewt~ge paid Foater'a M)blla
Home Park. Call 614-448-

1910 'Nindaot 12x66, wood·
burner, washer • dryer, elr
cotditianer. Musl be moved,

1983 14K70 2-badroom, 2
blll:hl. 304-773--69113.

870-9081 .

•16s.•1 B&amp;.oer momfl. 2 ..,d 4

2 BR .. loclled ln Evergreen on
prtvete lot. Cable TV hook-up.
Call 1114-441-3897 m 245-

67S-U94.

Wheelch•rs-new or used. 3
wheeled electric ecoottl's. Call
Aog8J1 Mobilty collect. 1-1114-

2 bedroom apts. Mlcklleport.

1978 Rosemont 3 bedroOm, one
air cond;tioner &amp; und•pinning.
$8,000. Phone 304-895-3427
after 6 pm.

Coli 304-895-3802.

Neowly- redeco1'8ted apartments
IMIIIabla. Utilities psld. 1225.
per month. depoalt tequlred. Call

54 Misc. Merchandise

304-1711-4038.

1711-7378

be·
low to form four simple words

111 111ow11z Todtly

75 Ot•y IIIIW motor • drlw
1reln. r... good. 4 Gumbo
Mudd. . , . . ftWf , t400. 1-

barNII. blued tlOO: Phone304-

(Jl

p~

•1111 Holppy Dar•

171-871111 .. 81'-371-2220.

Rugor GP 100. 357, 4 .lnoh

SWAIN

AUCTION • FURNITURE 82
Olivo St.• Oalllpollo.
NEW- I pc. wood group. 1399.
Uvlng room tultll· •199-1199.

throw-out_.._ AI

typn12 mos.,....,.....,, We buy
ju,. t .............: Call 30~

Wringer w.ther. tel5. Kenmo...
automttlc wnt.-, lind dryer,
112&amp;. Call 114-742-2352.

(J) (l) •

•

d fril

0 four
ileorronge letters of
scrombled wo rds

. Gll(1) lporlaLook
&lt;Zl VOJIQI of lite Mimi
(!) Dr. Who The Krotons,
Part 2

00~ •• low •
tlt,
ltendM'd clutch•. prueu,.

Soli
dolroot ""''""'"'· •100.
Hoo..- Portable Mlher. t110.

PUIZLIR

1:00 (J) 1110 Valley Danger Roed

. . :10 cllr• mkHrnum. Prloel
•19. up. l l o b u l t -

be-

THAT DAILY

Auto Pllrts
Acceuorl•

UMCI. rebultall typM, Gulr.n-

tofa. Uke

oew. CAll 1114-841-22q

Merchan!lloe

BusiniiBS
Opportunity

Television
Viewing

BUDGET TRANSMIIIION·

!fore 2p.m.

' 21

-t

The Daily Sentinei- Page-11

EVI!NING

u...

Brown

for S.le

11178 A - 11 ft
htboord 1 &lt;10 hp Mon:tuloor,
304-871-2214.

245·9&amp;48

•c•

2 289 eveninp.

PomeroyMidcleport,
Ohio
.
- - .
.

Boats end

~

letter stands for another. In this sample A is used

· .for the three Lrs, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnatiDn of the words are all
hitlts. Each day the code letters are different.
.
CRYPTOQUOTE
R
J -MW

XEZDO
N

POOZBXINDO

A, N D ' I

N

EZBXHD

N

DHFZK

WZNB
J

S H B

H D Z
.O . H K K N B X

MZ D

-

S B Z 0

JHPKO

JBRIRDL

MZ

AND

N

sz J

N K K Z D

YeatenlaJ'• C17PtocaUote: IT IS FATAL AS IT IS
·COWARDLY TO BUNK AT FACTS BECAUSE THEY ARE
NOT TO OUR TASTE. -JOHN TYNDAIJ.

�Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

\

--Area deaths.- - Zelma Hunlf.'l"
Mrs. Zelma Hunter, 78, Mason,
W. Va., died Tuesday evening at
Pleasant Valley Hospital afler a
brief illness.
Mrs. Hunter, who attended the
Christian Brethren Church In
Mason, was preceded In death by
her husband, the Rev. Ramey
Hunter, and a son, Hershel
11

Doc" Hunter.

Su rvlving are two daughters,
Roberta Harbison of Dayton, and
VIrginia Sue Malson, Tuppers
Plains; five sons, Henry of
Chester; HarryofChapmanvllle,
W. Va., Hansel of Custer, S. D.;
Herman of Mason, W. Va., and
Homer of Charleston, W. Va.;
five sisters, Inez Tokosch and
Mattie Chambers, both of Danville, W.Va.; Irene Hager, Turtle
Creek, W. Va.; Elsie Cooper of
Madison, W. Va., and Wanda
Queen of Greenview, W. Va.;
three brothers, Bethel Baisden,
Brooklyn, N. Y.; VIrgil Baisden
of Houte 2, Madlon, w. Va., and
Estel Baisden, Greenview, W.
Va. Fourtheen grandchildren
five great·grndchlldren and ~
host of friends also survive.
Services will be held at 11 a.m.
Friday at the Handley Funeral
Home in Danville, W. Va., with
the Rev. Alonzo Meadows offl.
elating. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 6 to 9 p.m.
Thursday.

llda Roach
Ilda Wagoner Roach, 83, Route
2, Little Hocking, died Wednes·
day at Selby General Hospital In
Marietta.
A homemaker, Mrs. Roach
was born at Altizer, W. Va., a
daughter of the late John and
Mahelia Starcher Wagoner. She
. was a member of the First
Chapel Church at Frost.
Surviving are a son, Doyle
rloach, Belpre; a daughter,
Edith M. Sampson, Little Hock·
ing, four grandchildren and three
greai.gran(!chlldren.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded In death by her husband In 1985 and a brother.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Saturday at the White·Ethrldge
Funeral Home, 125 Lee St.,
Belpre, with the Rev. Bill Lowe
officiating. Burial will be In the
Decatur Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 2 to
4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Friday.

ana Hudnall at home, and Carle
Nicole McCoy !lf Racine; two
sons, David Hudnall at home,
and Raymond Hudnall Jr. of
Athens; five sisters, Debra
Leach of Woodville, Texas,
Evelyn Starcher of Albany,
Luetta Phllllps of Athens, and
Nora Carsey and VIvian Yost,
both of Columbus; and four
brothers, Thomas and Lloyd
Hudnall of Athens, Dana Hudnall
of Holgate, and Dale Hudnall of
Ashley.
Services will be Saturday at 1
p.m. at Cremeens Funeral
Chapel. The Rev. E. Glenn
James will officiate. Burial will
be In Bates Cemetery In'Athens.
Pallbearers will be Art Anderson, Steve Baker, Charlie Curnutte, Mackie Gilmore, John
Prose and Gene Whaley.
Friends may call the chapel
Friday from 7 to 9 p.m.

Fredrick Cameron Sands

Thursday, August 4, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Local news briejs-&lt;Contlnued Iran page ll
marriage by Timothy M. McDaniel, Middleport, and Teresa A.
McDaniel, Pomeroy.
A divorce was granted to Wilda I. Brogan and John W.
Brogan, Sr., both found guilty of gross neglect of duty and
extreme cruelty. The petition fora dissolution flied by Margaret
Ellen Johnson and Chester Johnson was dismissed, while a
dissolution decree was !lied In the matter of Barbara Jo Stewart
and Robert Thomas Stewart.

4-H Style Revue this evening

EMS ·has 7 calls

Laurel St. tor John Leach,
treated but not transported; at
3: 34 p.m. Middleport to Beech
St., for James Milton, treated but
not transported; at 5: 30 p.m.
Tuppers Plains to State Route
681, for Mary Ann Hawk, treated
but not transported; at 7:20p.m.
Rutland to Meigs Mine 2 for Jeff
Hunter, who was taken to O'Bleness, and at 1:32 p.m. Rutland to
Salem Center for Danny Kuhn
who was taken first to Veterans
and later transported to the .
Holzer
Center.

Seven calls were answered by
units of the Meigs County Emer·
gency Medical Service
Wednesday.
At 3:53a.m. the Pomeroy unit
went to Lasley Street for William
• Watson who was treated but not
transported; at 11:59 a.m. the
unit went to the State Street
residence of John McKenzie and
transported hlm to Veterans; at
12:19 p.m. Middleport unit to

Ohio Lottery

Church
notices

Daily Number
429
Pick 4
5256

Page 5

The Melg County 4-H style revue will be held this evening at
the Senior Clilzens Center, Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy,
beginning at 6:30 p.in.
Approximately 70 girls and one boy will be mndellng
garments they have made during the summer. The publiC Is
lnvvited to attend. The event was originally scheduled to be held
at the fairgrounds, but, due to the heat and the possibility ot
rain, It has been moved to the Senior Citizens Center.

•

at y

e

-----Announcements·-----

DAYS!!!
SAlE

CAINIVAL

BRA SALE
Super Sport Bras of 100% cot-

HOSPITAL
GOWNS

ton lined. Sizes 32B to 400.
Colors: White or Beige.
~oft C~p and Contour Bras are
hJJhtly toned or with tricot cup in
Sozes 32A to 3BC. J·
Reg. 57.50 Bras .......... Sale 16.37
Reg. 511.00 Bras........ Sale 19,37
Reg. s12.00 Bras.. ,... Sale s 10. 17

Save thi• week on hospital gown•
~nd bed jackets. Poly/cotton blend
·~ aaaorted prints and pastels.
S1zet S 10 XL.

Reg. •s.oo to •t&amp;.OO

~'

r
~~~------~~~
SALE PRICED

$679,0$1359

Raymond Hudnall

' .GRAND CHAMPIONS - 4-H clothing projects
were judged Thursday and the annual style revue
held last night at the Senior Citizens Center.
Among the grand champions modeling their
.g arments co1111tructed as swnmer project work

were from the left, Meredith Crow, ad•entures In
clothing; Penny Aeiker 1 joyful jumper; Pam Ash,
dress-up folrmal; Donia Crane, clothes for high
. school and beyond; and Barbara ColeJll&amp;n,
dress-up daywear,

DRESS
SLACKS

FOR MEN, WOMEN, CHILDREN
Boys Denim Jeans

1/2 PRICE

11m Mel rllgUI• • • 8 to 18. Hn
kiel 8 to 20 ..d Sludent Iii• 26 to
$blight . . pr~wtthed

100% outton blue denim.

'11.95 Slim &amp;

Sizes 29 to 48 w•ist, big te·
lection of solid color• for
year round wur. Hubbard
slacks included .

BUY NOW FOR BACK TO SCHOOL!
Rtduced

20°/o

Hanes·

SALE!
MEN'S AND BOYS'

HANES UNDERWEAR

20°/o

TOP WINNERS - These five grand champion
winners modeling their Jl"annents at lhe style
revue Thursday niJI"hl and will be parUclpatlng In
a fuU 4-H model show at the Melp County Fair on
the hlllstage,&lt;Wednesday, 2 p.m. They are from

19" COlOII

TELEVISION ·

$248
SLEEPER SOFAS
ThHo -PII oofoo 111llv come

19" 1111011

COLOR TV

in handy when you need ..,

extra bed. Qu.aty construction

$288

innerspring mattre. .s. 1
Outen end fullizll.
with

log. $729.00 to '799.00

. ssaaoo

~:

DINETTE SALE

I piece and 7 piece dln .. tll.
L8mlnlted 1nd gl111 tope.

NEW
SHIPMENT
METAL
CABINET SALE

• lan Clotltinth

•UtUity C.W..tts

•wordrMts
•Chi... Ctllalnttt

179.00 WOOD OR IIASS

FLOOR LAMPS
SPICIAL

$4900
SEIIYA'S lEST

PERFECT SLEEPER

DHII piHow top qulhlng, lOIII lUI·

penllan lnnenpring unit Ia urtiUf·
PtiiMI In comfort •nd tupport, 1 e

v•r werrenty.

TWIN SET ..................... '349.00
FULL SET....................... S459.00
QUUN SET ................... tS79.00

Loans Subject

To.Qualification
Of Borrower

--"

--

economy. Some 70,000 new lactory jobs were added to the
economy, for a new total of 19.6
million.
Employment In the low-paying
service Industry a Iso rose In
June. by 200,000 new jobs.
Eighty-thousand of those jobs
were In retail stores, equaling
similarly strong growth In June . .
The· service Industry figures
were significant because three
out of every four of America's
non· farm workers are employed
In this sector of the economy.
A companiOn Index of unem·
ployment, coilllting men and
women In the mllltary, also rose
to 5.4 percent In July.
Overall, the unemployment
rate has declined slx·lenths of a
percentage point since July 1987,
the Labor Department noted.
Manufacturing showed con·
tlnued strength In July because
summer declines were smaller
than usual. After seasonal ad·
justment, factory employment
rose by 70,000 people.

Norman Robertson, chief economist for Mellon Bank in Pitts·
burgh, said he found the latest
figures "impressive" and
'jremarkable.''

"I think it shows that the
economy still has a lot of forward
momentum," . Robertson said.
"The gains In manufacturing are
particularly Impressive."
He echoed the views of many
economists who are concerned
about Inflation, however.
"1 think the inflation risks are
on the rise In the sense that the
evidence Is becoming quite clear
that the economy Is operating
very close to Its capacityltmlts,"
Robertson said. "I think this
morning's report has increased
the likelihood that the Federal
Reserve may tighten credit a
little."
·
'"l'he Increase would have been
even greater were It not for the
abSence from payrolls of about
15,000 workers In the shipbuild·
lng and lumber industries who
Continued on page 10

The· exposition, which runs
through Aug. 21, boasts the ·
world's largest junior fair, state
fair livestock exhibition and
state fair midway. The 1988
edition features more than 69,000
exhibits and more.than $1 million
in premium money tobepa\d out
to exhibitors.
"It's an abSolute highlight for
the state of Ohio," the governor
said. "It's a time to celebrate.
And It's a chance for many
families to take a break In a year
when their farms and lives have
been tested by nature."
Celeste was referring, of
course, to the drought . . which·
weather officials say Is the worst
In Ohio history but which fair
officials say has had little effect
on agricultural exhibits.
The theme of this year's fair Is

"Experience a Legend ."
"That theme Is about what the
fair Is about." said Celeste. "It's
about pride In agriculture and
pride in Ohio. It reminds us that
the fair was born of the facl that
agriculture Is our No. 1
Industry."
Foust. pointing out that Ohio's
is lhe nation's second-oldestslate
fair, said the 1988 theme Is
appropriate.
"It is a legend." he said. " I
contend It's a fixture not only in
Ohio but also throughout the
nation."
Flrst·day fairg-rounds activi·
ties included agricultural judg·
lngs, cooking demonstrations,
bee and honey judging, senior
citizen awards presentations and
a Celeste· led tour of new attr•c·
Continued on page 10

Meigs DHS strike in 5ih day

lnctudn entire set.ction - men's and
boys briefs, T·Shlrts, A·Shirts, Boxen.
Big tillS included. and Hanes pocket T.
Shirt.

SAVE

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Un- ·
employment rose to 5.4 percent
In July, an Increase of one tenth ·
of a percentage point, the Labor
Deparlment reported today.
The jobless rate In June - 5.3
percent - was the lowest In 14
years but analysts had said In
advance that IIIey expected the
unemployment rate to rise
sllghlly In July.
Many economists said the low
June figure reflected the timing
of the survey and the entrance of
students Into lhe summer work
force.
Despite the rise In the jobless
rate, other data In the latest
unemployment report showed
many facets of America's econ·
omy remained strong.
There was a healthy Increase
of 283,000 non·farm payroll jobs
In the economy - considered a
key gauge of future economic
growth.
Also, there was vigorous em.
ployment growth In themanufac·
turing portion of the country's

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) "The fair Is open: Let the fun
begin!"
Thus exclaimed Gov. Richard
Celeste Thursday evening in
officially opening the 135th edl·
lion of.the Ohio State Fair.
The governor was joined In
rlbbon·cu tting ceremonies by the
fair's first official visitor, . 10·
year·old Karina Mitchell of
North Jackson, as 10,000 red,
white and blue balloons were sent
skyward.
Speeches for the opening ceremony were peppered with
superlatives, General Manager
Jack Foust calling It "the largest
and biggest and greatest fair In
America" and Celeste Inviting
all 'Ohioans to "'the biggest and
best suite fair anywhere In the
United States."

MEN'S AND
YOUNG MEN'S

ALL
SUMMER CLOTHING

$19.95 Hoakr Sim..... 'IS.99
'22.95 Studtnt 5izn ... •U.39 ·

25 Cents

A Multtmedia Inc. Newspaper

Ohio State Fair underway·

SALE!

Rogvlar SiiM-.......•.....• 115.19

2 Sections, u Pages

•

UGUST

JO Wllilt.

enttne

.Nation's jobless rate
•
shows slight mcrease

Fredrick Cameron Sands, 52
Mill Creek Road, Gallipolis, died
Tuesday morning at Glen Wood,
Colo.
·
He was a retired manager of Morning Dawn Mason Lodge 7
the Kroger Company for 32 and was an ambassador for the
years, ln stores In Gallipolis and Scottish Rite Consistory Valley
Point Pleasant: He retired In of Columbus. He was a member
1983.
of the Aladdin Temple Shrine and
Born Jan. 20, 1936 In Clark~'
the Gallipolis Shrine Club.
burg, W.Va., he was thesonofthe
He was an area representative
late Fredrick Sands and Allee for the Gallla County Gold Wing
Mcintyre Geiss of Clarksburg,
Riders Association. He was a
W.Va.
special deputy with the Gallla
He Is survived · by his wJte, · County Sberllf Department.
Donna Parks Sands; three sons,
Ser.vices will be Sunday 1 p.m.
David and Danny, both of Rt. 1, at the Waugh·Halley-Wood•FunGallipolis, and Doug of Racine;
eral Home with the Rev. Denny
two grandchildren; and one Coburn. Burial will be at the Ohio
sister, Mrs. Lynn White of Valley Memory Gardens.
Weston, W.Va.
Friends may vlsltSaturday4 to
He was a resident of Gallla 9 p.m. at the funeral home.
County for 24 years. He attended Mason services will be perGallipolis Christian Church. l;le formed by the Morning Dawn
was a member and master of Lodge 7 Saturday at 8 p.m.
---t

Raymond (Ken ny ) Hudnall,
39, of Rt. ·2, Patriot, was killed
Tuesday night in Waterloo.
He was born on Feb. 14,19491n
Athens County, son of the late
Charles J. Hudnall and his
surviving mother, Marie Hudnall
of Athens.
He was a partner and a body
man with Stewart's Auto Sales In
Patriot. He also performed with
a professional country &amp; western
band called Kenny and the
Country Sound.
·He was also preceded by four
sisters, two brothers and an
.
infant daughter.
Other survivors Include his
wife, Carol; two daughters, Dl·

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday. August 5, 1988

·Fellowship meetlnJI"
Judrlng slated
Pomeroy Brownie Troop 1271
A fellowship will be held at the
Dexter Church of Christ Satur· will meet at the Pomeroy. Mini
day, at 6p.m. honoring Jack and Park at 5 p.m. to prepare for
Mary Nelson who are leaving the project judging on Saturday
area. Allfrlends of the couple are morning. For more Information
Invited to attend. Refreshments brownies may call Brenda Neutwill be served.
zllng at 992·5770.

Partly doudy, humid tonisht, near 70. Saturday,
cloudy, highs In mid 80s.
Chance of rain 50 percent.

SWIVEL
ROCKERS

Nylon ...,.1 c - l n
on array of cleoorator
colo11. Hol'dw®d f11mo
conotruotlon.

®
II

I

Negotiations between em· contacting the mediator and Is number l~ ot MM counties in
caseload ratio to employee in the
ployees of the Meigs County requesting a meeting."
Striking workers of the depart· state. The new programs in·
Departmenl of Human SerVices,
who went on strike Monday men! have released contents of a elude: at rlsk pregnancy pro·
.morning, and department man- let1er which they have directed to gram, SSlO case managemen t.
agement In Gal !Ia County Thurs· Gov. Richard Celeste. Congress· health check, generic application
day failed to bring a settlement in man Clarence Miller, Rep. Jo· and finally employment and
lynn Boster, State Senator Jan training programs. For each of
the four day old strike.
Long;
Patricia Barry, state these programs, tl\e agency
Michael Swisher. director of
director
of the Ohio Department received additional monies from
the department, Issued the .fol·
of
Human
Services and the Meigs the state but the agency ad min is·
lowing statement after the nego·
County Commissioners in regard !ration used the monies else·
tlatlng session:
where and made us, Ihe em·
''Representatives of the Meigs to their position. It reads:
"As elected and appointed ployees absorb the work load.
County
Department
of
Human
Meredith Crow, adventures In
officials, we know of your Inter- This situation has reached an
clothing; Jessica Karr, topping · Services and the American· Fed· est and concerns lor Meigs unbearable stage. The programs
eratlon
of
State,
County
and
your outfit; Penny Aelker,joyful
Municipal Employees met at 10 County. Currently, over 50 per- are more on paper than in·actual
jumper; Jennifer Mora, sports
a.m. Thursday along with SERB cent of this county Is on some existence. The programs do
clothes; Sara Machlr, sports
appointed mediator, Ron Au terl. type of public assistance. We, the require extensive training and
clothes spectator; Debra Frost,
The parties met for approxi· Union of Meigs County Depart· involvement by caseworkers and
clothes for middle school; Donia
mately one and one-half hours. men! of Human Services, are other staff. But we, the . em·
Crane, clothes for high school
No Issues were resolved. Unre· . concerned about the public's ployees, have only received bare
and beyond; Trlsha Spencer.
solved Issues from previous welfare and safety while the minimum training on operation
coats and jackets; Heather
meetings Include wages, lnsu· strike of employees Is going on. of the programs. We feel the
Franckowiak, lounging clothes;
ranee, management's rlg!ltS, :I'his strike commenced on Aug. agency admlnistralton is more
Barbara Coleman, dress-up day·
fair share (requiring non·unlon 1, at 7:30a.m. We feel that the concerned with building a tech"
wear; and Pam Ash, dress·up
employees to pay for union agency or Its admlnlnlstors had nologlcal dynas ly than the true
evening wear. representation) and the duration not clearly thought ,out their role of the agency to serve. Its
Reserve champions were
course of action. We ask as a citizenry. It is this unfortuante
ot the contract.
Patsy Aelker, Janel Spencer,
Union and as Individual voters policy thai truly concerns us
Anew demand fora no-reprisal for
Jessica Chevalier, Bobble White,
you to take a definite look at because monies tha t could be
clause was presented by the
Jennifer Mora, Elizabeth Dowthis
agency and Its operation!
used to Increase anu better train
nie, Jodi Brown, Jo Eilen Crane; · union to the county. This prop"We,
the
union,
want
It
to
be
the
staff is being used to develop
osal would prevent the employer
Jenny Clifford, Sherry Johnson,
or the county from Initiating any known for publiC record that this personal telephone systems and
Heather Finlaw, Elizabeth Bryaction or reprisal against any course of work . stoppage Is far ln·person computers without
ant and Tara Clark.
employees concerning the em- more than wage Increases. This training staff to operate Ihem. ·
Honorable mentions went to
"We, the employees, have
ployees conduct during the Is the last course of action we
Jenny Clifford, Cindy Roush,
have.
We,
the
Union,
in
the
past
severely
suffered in a working
strike.
·
Sarah Frydman, Erin Smith,
to
explain
to
the
condition
where
sick leave is high
have
tried
''The union presented a wage
Anna Wolf, Beth Clark, Michele
agency
administration
that
we
due
to
high
stress
and ·short
proposal calling for the employer
Laugherty, Elizabeth Lawson,
need
more
staff
and
training,
but
staffed
conditions
are
created.
to start paying the employees'
Heather Burch, Michele
not
received
favorable
The
staff
has
been
refused
have
share of retirement contribuLaughery, and· Greta Rlffie.
stateovertime
except
for
the
Chlldren
response.
The
Director's
tions (8~ percent) and a 25 cent
Selected to model at the Ohio
P!'r
hour wage Increase for both men! has been 'Do with what you SerVIce Unit and Cll.ild Support
State Fair were Meredith Crow,
the second and third years of the have as staff!' Weflnallygaveup Unit.
Jessica Karr, Beth Clark, Sara
''The stiff is not allowed to go
contract.
The employer Is prop- and decided to vote Union. This .
Machlr, Debra Frost, Trisha
decision
we
do
not
take
lightly
to
training meellngs outside of
osing to retain the existing salary
Spencer, Heather Flnlaw,
schedule for the term of the but as the last recourse to bring the agency In order to Increase
Heather Francowiak, Pam Ash.
about necessary change In the our efficiency . The agency ad·
and Barbara Coleman. Named contract. The union Is proposing agency for the benefit of all ministration stated for us, 'the
alternates to the Ohio State Fair that the employer pay 100 per· employees and the public.
work must be done.·
were · Patsy Aelker, Penny cent of the cost of Insurances,
''We,
the
union,
do
not
mind
We, lhe employees, In large
Aelker, Jennifer Mora, Elizabeth while the employer Is proposing work. That's why we have number have worked no I only our
to place a cap on the county's
Downie, Donia Crane, and Eliza·
accepted the positions. However, 8 hours per day, but have until
costs
at the present rate.
beth Bryant.
,
"No add!Uonal meetings were we recently had five i:lew pro- recent time putin additional time
Others modeling garments In
the style revue were Laura . scheduled. Future meetings are grams added to our already In the agency In the eveplngs,
Continued on page 10
to be scheduled by either party heavy casel~ds. Meigs County
Continued on page 10
' .

the left, Jessica Karr, lopping your outfit; Trlsha
Spencer, coats and jackets; Sara Machlr, sports
. clothes, spectator; Heather Franckowiak, loung·
lng clothes, and Debra Frost, clothes for middle
school.

Grand, re~enre champions of 4-H
clothing projects are announced
By CJ{ARLENE HOEFLICH ,
Sentinel Staff Writer
Grand and reserve champions
In 4·H clothing projects were
selected Thursday night at the
annual style revue held at the
Senior Citizens Center.
"Dancing on the Ceiling" was
the theme of the show narrated
by Bill Crane, 4-H advisor;
Pansy Jordan, 4·H program

assltant; Cindy Pitzer, 4-H actlv·
Illes assistant; and Missy Cala·
way of the 1987 State 4-H Fashion
Board.
. Cindy Oliver I, extension agent,
extended the welcome and intrO·
duce(l Jodi Brown and David
Rice, the 1988 Meigs . County
Junior Fair Royalty.
Selected grand champions In
the various categories were

.--Local news briefs---.
'

Record power usage reported
Customers of The Ohio Power Co. demanded more electricity
on Wednesday than ever before In the company's history,
Pomeroy company manager Ron Ash, reports.
In the hour ending at 2 p.m. Wednesday, the company's
630,000 plus customers used 4,971,000 kilowatts of electricity to
operate and cool their factories, businesses and homes.
Record·breaklng temperatures and high humidity combined
to send the demand for electricity to. the new peak.
Wednesday's one hour demand broke the previous all-time
peak, set on Jan. 15, 1979 of 4,950,000 kilowatts . Ohio Power
normally records Its highest customer demands for electricity
durin~~: the winter months.
fl1

Squads have 5 calls Thursday
Five calls were answered by local units Thursday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services reports.
·
At 6:05a.m., the Tuppers Plains Unit took Jody Smith from
county rrosd 9 to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 8:34
a.m., took Osler Sayre from Meigs Mine 2 to Holzer Medical
Center; Rutland at 11:43 a.m .. took John Morrison from Meigs
Mine 1 to O'Bleness Hospital, Athens; Racine at 9:10p.m. took
Shawna Davis from Its station to Holzer Medical Center;
Middleport at 9:39p.m. took Dale Nicholson from Third Ave., to
Veterans Memorial Hospital and he later was transferred to
O'Bleness Hospital In Athens.

~I

"'

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