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. Page D-B-Sunday Tinies-Sentinal

B url r.'le

o'l

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.
Continued from D-1

l ...·----------~~

Outdoors. men, Morrison Enterprls£"s,
$1.75; Mlrand-. Rawlins, GaiUa ·eucCB ·
neers, Myron L. "Bud" McGhee, Sl.25:
Brian Rawlins. Gallia Buccaneers. Mrs .
Harl.l)n Marlin, $1.25; Jason Williams,
Kountry Krltters, Norris·Northup DodgP.
$1.50: Howard Foster. Rodri.ey Rangers.
Wm. Conley, $1.70; Eric Fields. Advanced
Cleaning Servlt't", $1.60: Todd Kemper .
HIHbllliPS. J .L Davidson Excavating,
S1.!JO: Nathan BelvUle, Triangle, ClydP
Burnett, $1.80; and Brad Thomas, Sun·
dance Kids, "Kr~er·s. $1.40.
Timmy Jenk:tns, Hayseeds, Drs. Wm. B.
&amp; R.O. Thomas. $1.40; Shawn Montgo.
mery , Raccoon Rowdies, Farm Credit
Servl~ of S.E . Ohio. $1.50; Jeremy
Halley, Outsiders, RCFS, $1.20: David
Raynor, Our Gang, ShakP Shoppe, $150;
Missy Rus.seU, EnoSall On, Clyd e Burnl'tt,
$2.10; Ell Lambert. Southwestern FFA ,
Ricard &amp; Son, Shelly Co., $1.30; Scott
Wiseman, R.edskln Borderlln~s. Thomas .
Do· It Cent er, $1.50: Chr is Slo ne, Hannan
Trace FFA. Star Bank. $1.20: Shannon
Webb, Triangle, J.D. North Produce.
$1.30; Dean Queen, Gold Diggers, McDonald's.. $1.30; Chris Miller, Gallla Buccaneers. Sheriff James M. Montgomery,
$1.50; Tracy Jenkins, Hayseeds. Paul's
Tire Shop, $1.30; Chris WaUers, Hope's
Helping Hands, C.H . McKenzie, $130;
Robert Brannen, Ohio Raiders, Kroger's,
$1.l&gt;; Manny Kemper. HUibillies. Kail
Burleson. Sl.JO; Chuck Spurlock, Gallla
Buccaneers, Bill Smetzer, $1.20: Anita
Spriegel. Northup Lads &amp; Lasses, Kemper
and Haney Butcher Shops, $1.10; and Chad
Slone, 'l'wilighters, Haskins· Tanner, $1.:J&gt;.
Brian Altizer, Sundance Kids, Bill
Harsha, $1.35; Beth Bclvlns, Hop e's
Helping Himds, S hoe Cafe, $1.60: Tom
Kemper. Buckeye BuUdlng and LQan,
$1.20: Jamie Thomas, Sundance Kids,
Senalor Colling and Harsha for Judge,
$1.20; Wayne BrannB:t, Ohio Raiders,
Onee Sanders. $1.40: Mik e Champman.
CalHa Buccaneers, Tope's Furniture,
S1.20; Mike Brumfield. Gold Diggers,
Irvin's Glass, $1.20; Shawn Mon!gomery,
Raccoon Rowdies, RCFS. S1.ZQ: Kim
Gilbert, Gallta Buccaneers, ova. $1;
Gretchen H alley, Outsiders . Molly
(Va nco l Plymale, $1.10; William Chapman, Ga ll la Buccaneers, Anytime
Butcher Shop, Sl; Jeremiah Waugh. Gold
Diggers, RCF'S, $1.10: BJ Cox, Gold
Diggers. Wo ods Ins., $1.35; Jimmy
Kemper. Hillbillies, Buckeye Bldg &amp; Loan.
$1.15; Susan Skeens. Triangle, Joe Oalley
. Tire, $1.15; Joey Chapman, Ga lli a Bucca·
neer s, 0V B, $1; J£'-remlah Waugh, Gold
Diggers. Saunders Sutrolk Sheep, $1 .10;
Tim Ha1field, Gallla Buccaneers. New
Farmers Tobacco .Wal"ehouse1 Ripley. OH.
S1: and J ason Queen. 'IWIIlghters, Star

Tom Hatfield. CalHa _Buttaneff·l,

Ohio Va lley

Bank and Callt'y&lt; McKenzie llt'parafP .11 1\lmals,

Pacb Ill ; Jot')' Chapman, Galli a Buc('8neers, Bob

Evans Farm1, $1: Richard Nldlt.v. C.lllpolls
FFA. Dalley Tires, 11.15: Todd Sho •. Sulda~ ~

Jackson farm CenliE'r. $1.(~; Kul AldPr·
nwn. Raccoon Valley. Kall Bur~on. $1 . 10~ Ryan

Kld!i,

Slor.. Mercet:Yi.l le WIIO:ats, ShakeShoppe. ti .lO;

Dullr t..whorn. Dairy Qub,

FrE'ntl'l Cily f1()ffll

and Candy's Bto~n. 11;
Tonya Cochran. Koumry Krltters. Fallon

&amp;others Hoa Farms, $1.20: Jertmv Belvtlle.

Trlancte. Wiseman In!lural\("e, suO: Donnte
SlOnt', Twlllghters, f'ew Ftirmeu Tob&amp;ero
Wan"houst', IUO : Carrte WaURh. Gold Dlapr! ,
Jo9eph L. Cain, Sl.20: Jason Queen, Twlllaht~s.
Ch arleti and Kenny BareuJ. SUO; Josh Sites: ,
Gallla Buccaneeu. SJ .W; Misty Marlin, Early
Birds, Lewis Family Reslaurant!l ol Oak Hill,
SUO; Sh«ry Qu~n. 'I'wlllghtt!rs, H11rrlson

Farms. $1.20:

·

Brian Sto~;~t. Raccoon Villl')l, Pa ul t:)avh.•s

Jewf'lers. SUO; William Chapman. GaHJa
Buccanflen. Ohio \'alley Bank, SUO; Sammy

Garber , Ct'nfl.&gt;rville Yuunr Farmen, Galllpoll•
FF'A , Sl20: Nathan SprteAf'l, Northup l..ads &amp;
Las••· Bob Evans Farms. Sl: Mike Harden,
Gallla Buccanec&gt;rt, Jackson Farm Centt'r, $J.l0;
Olrls Filch, Su rdaiK'f' Kl.dl!. Jo~ephL . Caln,UlO :
Brian Crou!IP. Rf'ldy For The World, Anydme
Butch« Shop. $1: Tammy Chapman, Gallla
8Ut'C8~S, John Gill Trucking, Sl ;
Paul Bradb.lry, Rodney Ranprs, Jim Mink
Cbf'\'toll't, $U.5: CharliE' Waugh, Ohio RaidE-rs.
BobE~an,Farms, Sl ;._ JasonShrlver. Dairy Club,
Smith !I Ashland ' ~ration . $l.JO; Ch ariH
Ch am~rs , Ga!Ua Bu«aneE'rs, Jenmfer At ha and

DIXIE' Pallet Co., SUO: Brad Thomas. Su nda!V'e
Kids. Bob Evans Farms, Sl: Shannon Webb:

Trlanglt&gt;. W.R. l[llckl Brown JnsW'ance. Sl.20;
Bob~ Gordon, Little- Ky,Rer Valley B. Jenkins
Co zrreH'. $1.15: David Ra:o-·nor, Our Gang. OhiO
Valley Bank, $1.00
(to. be ounUnued)

New Car Dealers...
prlsEis, $1.50· Amy Metzler, Rock Hill
Ranchers, . Rlo Mini Mart, $1.75; Wesley
Saunders, Raccoon Rowdies, Carol Brown
Wau~h, $2.25; Mi chael Harvey. Raccoon
RoWdiE'S, Clyde Burnett, $1. 7S; Angie
Blakeman. Rock Hill Ranchers, River City
Farm Supply, $1.50; Jessica Roach ,
Redskin Borderllner, RCFS, $1.50.
Rod Brumfield, Rac coon Rowdies ,
Molly (Vanro ) Plymale, $1.50; Amanda
Brumne ld, RacCoon Rowdi es, Kemper's
Butcher Shop, Sl.SO; Matt Swain, Mercer·
vUie Wildcat, OVB, $1.75; Krlsty James,
Gallipolis FF A. OVB, $1.75; Jori Batley,
Centerville Young F , Jack &amp; Jill's, Gal,
$1.50; Paula Porter, Ridge Runners 12,
Haffelt's Mill Outlet, $3: Bradley 5aund·
crs, MercervUle Wll&lt;;lcat, Waunetta Atba,
S2.50: Kristy James, Gallipolis FFA,
RCFS , $1.50; Heather Swain, Mercervl11 e
Wildcat, Holzer Medi cal Center, S2: Andy
Brumnetd, Raccoon Rowdies, Kall Burles on, $1.25; Amanda Brumfield, Raccoon
Rowdies, Morrison Enterprises, $1.50;
T.C. Beaver, Raccoon Rowdies, DennJs
Salisbuf)', S2; · T.C. Beaver, Raccoon
Rowdies, Frozen Yogurt, Gal. , $2.25:
Angie Blakeman, Rock Hill Ranchers,
Jackson Farm Center, $1.75; Troy Dun·
can, Triangle. Star Bank, $2; Chrlsllna
Jagers, Riverside . Ranaers, Gall Ia Co.

Continued from D-1

GOP &amp; Club, $1 "rn; Pam Holi£Y, Thtv ener
Pioneers. Haskins·Tanner, $1.75: Kevin
Martin, Twutghters, Clyde Burnett, S2;
Brett Cremeens, Mercerville Wildcat, City
Ice &amp; Fuel, $2.
Keith Angel, Gallipolis FF A, Prosecutor
Brent A. Saunders. S2; Alan Queen,
Outsiders, WHUs Funeral Home, SL 75;
Bradley Saunder, Mercerville Wildcat,
David T. Evans, David Jackson, Triangle,
Ce-nter Trust Co .. $2; Shannon Franklin,
Raccoon Rowdies. Shake Shoppe, S1. 75;
Terri Queen, Oulslders, ,_Joel Atha , Sl. 75;
Jamm Franklin, Raccoon Rowdies, Jerry
Haffelt, $2.25; Stephen Fortner, Center,
vUie Young F, Richard JVIUler, $1.75: Pam
Holley, Thlvener Pioneers, Irvin' s Glass
Service, $2; Heather Swain, Mercerville
Wildcat, S:wain's Oeneral Store, $2.50;
Carrie Jackson, Rio Silver Thimbles,
Foodland Dell &amp; Bakery, $2.25; Jimmy
Harrison, Ridge Runners 12, Dixie Pallett
Co. , $2; and Oakley Collins, $2.25; Carrie
Hatfield, Gallla Buccaneers, Carter's
Tractor Sales. $2; John Jackson, Triangle.
Foodland Grocery 8c Bakery, $2; Carrie
Jackson, Rio SUver Thimbles, Lyon 's
Farm. Mudsock, $2..50; Michael Harrison,
Ridge Runners 12. Wiseman Ins.. S2; and
Car rie Hatfield, Gallia Buccaneers,
Nancy Tawney Framing. $2.

Food/and ...

August 7. 1988

NFL

Continued from D-1
------------------------~-------------

Kiser, Gall Ia tsuccaneers, Rodney Supply,
1.86; and Kenny WUllams, KC &amp;: Sunshine
Kleis. Bodlmer's Grocery, $.85.

Matt Neal,
Sundance
Kids,
S.S.
Logan
Packing,
Hunt.,
$.80; Matt
Toler,
Eno
SaU
On, Carters Plumbing and Heati ng, $1.01;
Nirole Clary, Thlvener Pioneers, Oakwood Reclamation, $.83: Jay Shriver,
SouthwestemFFA, Farm Credit Services,
$.81; John Ehman, Southwestern FFA,
Star !;lank, $.81; Crystal Mealge, KC &amp;
Sunshine Kids, $.81: Robbie Gilmore,
Little Kyger Valley Boys, Gallipolis Vault
Co., S.81; Bobby Crisenbery, Riverside
Rangers. R'uss Bros .. $.87; Tommy Sanders, 'Hayseeds. Creations by sandy, S.85;
Danny Beaver, Thlvener Pioneers. Mark
CUrry, $.89; JJmmy Skeens, 1'J'iangle,
OVB. S.SO: RodneY Brumfield, Racroon
Rowdies, Irvin's Glass, $.93; Jill Burdell,
Dr. Alan Nugged ' an,d Or. Alan Boster.
S.96; Tony Hughes, Hope's Helpln'g Hands,
Clyd e Burnett, $.91; Deanna Evans,
Triangle, Johnson MObile Homes, S.85;
Jotm Site-s, Gallla Buccaneers, George
Pope, $.92; Chris Alderman, Raccoon
Vall~, C.A.Du.ncan, $.85; Shane Swisher,
Satellite, Central Trust, $.93; and OJ
Harden, Gallla Buccaneers. Kuhner·
Lewis FH, Oak Hill, $.83.
David Walters, Thlvener Pioneers

Mike
Thcker. K~ &amp; SUnshine Kids, Mid-Slales,
Sortng Valley Pharmacy. $.86;

pre-season
roundup

Gal., $.87; and Matthew Sprague, Country

Kids, RCFS, $.82.

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

Bowman's

•

O'Dell Lumber. S.S!; Leslie Crlsenbery;
RJverstde Rangers, Farm Credit Services,

e

•

I••• 1111.. eare Stere"

• ADULT DIAI'EIS
• UIDEI,ADS (CHUIS)
• BEDSIDE COIIOD£S
• PATIEIIT LIFTS

• IIOIE 01?811
• WIIRCIIAIIS
• HOSPITM. BEDS
·• SHOWER STOOlS

$.83; David Jackson, Triangle. Union
Stock yard, Hillsboro, $.85; Brian Shadle,
Hope's Helping Hands, Martin Coal &amp;
Stone and L&amp;N Cleaning, S.91; Travis
Martin, Early Birds, Dyer Bros. Lumber,
Northup. $.81; Jason Halley, Early Birds,
Toler &amp; Toler Ins., $.86; Jessie Halley,
Early Birds, Rio Mini Mart, $.85; Barbi e
Adams, Hlllblllles, Foodland, $.8~; Chris
Howard, Sundance Kids, Kall Burles011,
S.83; Andy "' Howard, Sundance Kids,

Daily Number
564
Pick 4
2691
Super Locto
3-15-26-27·36-44

Page 3

Homecare Medical Supply

"Ye•r t•I!IPiete

Ohio Lottery

Vol.38, Na.l4

•

at y

-aMooyktlllcMnWI
-at.IIERII·

GALUPOUS

• LIFT CIIAIIS
• WUEIS
• DIAIETIC SUPPLIES
• IAIY OTHEI ITEIS

DDS. $1.20. '
Nat han Sanders, Early Birds, RCFS,
Sl.30: Jason Shriver, Dairy Club, Wiseman Ins .. 11.20: Grethchen Ha lley, Outsld·
en, A~tra-Co n Inc., $1.10; Ca rrie Waugh,
Gold Diggers, Irvin 's Glass, $1.20; Winter
Whirl , Ea rly Birds. Joel and Tim Atha,
Sl.lO: Cindy Wau g h, Cold Diggers. W.J.
Brokerage, $1.10; Missy Ru ssell. Eno Sail
On, George Pope, $1.50: Tina Sanders.
Early Birds, RCF'S, $1.20; Bra ndo n
Twyman. Raccoon Valley, Prosecutor
Brent Saunders. $1; Chad Angel , Rivers ide Rangers, J.E ."Dick' ' Cremeens,
$1 .30: Lus her Ma yo, Cou nt ry Kids.
Brown's Market, Sl; Ch~d Mayes. Gold
Diggers, Galllpolls Tobacco a nd Candy
Co .. $1.20: Jennifer Queen. Go ld Diggers,
Mike Sanders Trucking, Sl.lO; Sherry
Queen. Twiligh:ters, Danny Sheets, $1:20;
Chris Preston, Raccoon Valley, Larry
Miller Sohlo, $1.30: Dean Queen. Gold
Diggers, Carter Tractor Sales, Sl; Chad
An¢E'I, Riverside Rangers, Lynn Angell,
S1.40: Rayanna Rawlins, Gallla Buccaneers, Corbin &amp; Snyder F ur nltur(". $1.10:
and Mi ke Brannen, Ohio Raiders, OVB, $1.

••

446~7283

Ma!l~hrlver. Dairy a ub. Al117.erFar m Su Pfiy .
SU O; J'liathan Sanders . Early Birds, Musklngum
Llves lock of ZanesVIlle. SU5: Er ic Fields.
Surdance Fields. Engravl n ~ Plu ~ of Jackson,

SUO; Jackie Spurlock. Rodney

Ran~r .

Oh io

\' alley Bank. Sl; Tina Sand€'rs, Ear ly Birds, Sob
E:van s Farms, $1.10: Road Young. Raccoon
Rolol:dl es.

Mal!lf'rs Qull!

Suppl ~·.

$1.45;

T;~m m y

Garber . Cl'ntE'rvll!l:' Yo urw FariTl'rs. Dav id T.
E:vaM , $1.10; Jamie L:o-·aJ I, Redsk! n Border liners,
Sta r Bank. SU O:
Mike Bran!¥'n. Ohio Raiders, Rose Far m
Su ppl.y . $1.10: Er ic Sa u n:lers. Mcrcer\1lle Wild·
cat &gt;i, Cen tral !'uJ&gt;Py· HardwarE', $1.15; Wlndl&gt;l
UnriX'. River side Rangprs. ProsecuTor Brf'nt A .

Sa urder lii, $ 1 . 2~ ; Way IJ' Bra nren . Oh io RHiden,
Bill CarTt'r Ho~ Farm. SUO: Jason No r Thup.
Hannan Trace FFA, Ju rrbo al Cf'ntt&gt;nary , Sl. Hl :
Brian Alllll'r. Su rdance Kids. D. DPan EvaM,

Sl.l5: Anita SprleRel. Northup Lads &amp; Lasws,

N
,JW, t/t~O~===~·

~
···, 1~
, ~~··9290 '

CELESTE OFENS SESSION- Ohio Governor
RlchardCeleste,lett,openstbePienarySesslonof
the Nallonal Governor' a Assoclallon 80th annual

Scou's simmental steer came from Champion
Farms and placed 7th at this year's Market
Steer Sale.
·
Ohio Valley Bank was pleased to purchase
Scott's sieer as well as more than 20 additional
animals at the Gallia County Junior Fair.
Wtl 're proud to support the biggest and best Junior Fair in all of Ohio ........ because "We're
Homegrown, Too!"
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WASHINGTON (UPI) -CrimInal Investigators are probing
allegations of bribery, fraud and
conflict of Interest 111 at least14
Army missile contracts worth
J11~re than ~ mUUon, accord·
ln.i to Justice Department and
Pentagon officials.
The FBI, military Investigators and federal grand juries are
focusing on the Army Missile
Command's S4 billion-a-year acquisition of mlsslles and paris at
Redstone Arsenal In Huntsville,
Aia.
Pen!Jigon and Justice Department officials who requested
anonymity said In Interviews
that at least lour Anny missile
contract officials, seven large

defense contractors and 11 small
defense companies nationwide
are under scrutiny.
The lnves ligations are separate . from the "Operation Ill
Wind" Inquiry In which telephone wiretaps· and "huggings
were used to uncover alleged
corruption In as many as 85 Navy
and Air Force contracts worth
tens of billions of dollars.
One company under Investigation In the Army Inquiries,
Hughes Aircraft Co., has been
accused of overcharging the
government millions of dollars
on a $313.8 million contract to
produce TOW anti- tank missiles,
a company spokesman acknowledged.

the association, calling to order
the Initial plenary session.
Sununu said there Is concern
that the "critical chemistry"
envisioned by the founding fathers· tor the state-federal relationship may have been lost.
The Republican governor cited
recent Supreme Court decisions
pushing the balance of power
toward the federal governmeli I.
Attorney Lewis Kaden with the
firm of Davis, Polk and Ward•
well, observed that "Congress
over the years has whittled away
the zone of autonomy."
EarUer, Frank Donatelli, spe-

•

I

.

LOS ANGELES (UPl)
damez, 33, was killed In a
·Three nights of police sweeps and robbery Saturday night near his
hundreds of arrests failed to home In Hollywood, Detective
stem gang violence In Los Jim Bright said.
Meanwhile. an anti-gang poAngeles County, with three people killed and four wounded In llee task force dubbed "the
gang-related Incidents during hammer" by Pollee Chief Daryl
the weekend.
Gates arrested more than 500
Two of the shooting deaths people and seized 15 guns Friday
Involved members of the notor- and Saturday nights. Cmdr.
Ious Crlps gang, representattves William Booth said. More than
of which attended "peace talks" half of those arrested were gang
with rival Bloods more than a members, pollee said.
The sweeps by 250 · to 300
week ago In hopes of putting an
uniformed
officers continued In
end to the gang wars.
south
central
Los Angeles Sunln another shooting that may
,
day
night
but
updated arrest
have been carried out by gang
members, a recent Immigrant ligures were not Immediately
from El Salvador, Baltlzar Gal- available.

Economy topic of
President Reagan
CINCINNATI (UPI) - From a revitalized factory In the
Industrial 'Midwest; President Reagan today trumpeted the
stren~rth of the economy and derided his Democratic critics for
"looking at the world through mud-colored glasses much too
long."
"I've heard some people bad-mouthing our economy
recently," Reagan said during a campalgn-slyle appearance at
a lens manufacturing linn. "I think they must have stopped
reading the newspaper that day In 1981 when they handed over
the lease to the White House."
Halling the lowest 'unemployment In 14 years, the highest
post-war gains In productivity and the creatlonoll7 mUIIon jobs
durlng68 consecutive months of growth, Reagan took a swipe at
the Democrats In his role as chief surrogate campaigner for
VIce President George Bush.
Sharing credit with Bush for the po!Jcles his admlnlsiratlon
has put Into place over the last seven yellrs, Reagan proclaimed
the American economy to be "a global aucce~a story" jind
declared, ''These pollcll!l are the wave of the future."
His visit to U.S. Precision Lens Inc .• a company that has
undergone a dramatic turnaround In the last 18 years, was a
sidelight to Reagan's primary reason for being In Cincinnati: a
speech to the 80th annual meeting of the National Governors
Association.
But because political protocol dictated that his remarks to the
gowrnora be non-partllan, White House oHiclals added the
factory stop to provide a forum from which Reagan would be
free to deliver an ardent defense of hll record and contrast his
characteristic optlmllm to the doubts Democrats have tried to
Continued on page 10

..

.

clal assistant to the president.
reported to the NGA executive
committee that ol240recommendallons for regulatory refonn
submitted by the association, the
Reagan administration bas Implemented more than 137.
"They (the Reagan administration) have taken on our pel
~ve
and they've actually
helped us," said, Gov. Thomas
Kean of New Jersey; a Republl·
can. "I hope the next administration does as well."
·
Donatelli returned the praise,
(Continued on page 10)

Iran says Gulf War
ending 'with honor'
MANAMA, Bahrain (UPI) Iranian President All Khamenel
said today the S.year-old Persian
Gull war "Is now ending" and
Iran Is going toward "peace with
honor," Tehran Radio reported.
The pres ldent spoke hours
before U.N. Secretary-General
Javier Perez de Cuellar was
expected to announce a date lor a
cease-lire In the Iran-Iraq conflict. He described It as the
"biggest war since World War

Iraqi occupatiOJI, because there
was no reference to a withdrawal
to International borders.
Resolution 598, which Include&amp;
provisions lor a cease-lire, troop
withdrawals and peace !Jill's.
could become an "historic point'·'
lor the United Nations, because It
would Influence the organization
In the future, he said.
The Iraqi attack In Septembei
1980, Khamenel said, was aimed
at destroying the 1979 Iranian
revolution, which toppled U.S.'
backed Shah Mohammad R41za
Pahlavl, and at separating ourlch Khuzestan Province from
the rest of Iran.
"It was guessed then that the
superpowers were behind Iraq
and later this became quite .
clear," Khamenel said.
"We began our defense and did
not surrender, (until) under the
leadership of the Imam (spiritual
leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomelnl). we took the Initiative."
he said.
The Iranian president accused
Iraq of violating severallnterna·
Ilona! conventions during the
eight years of fighting, Including
those banning the use of chemical weapons, attacks on cllle's,
and attacks on passenger
planses.
The lslamlc Republic was now
''ready to participate and Invest
In every peaceful movement hi
the world," Khamenel said.
The U.N. secretary-general
has said a cease-lire could IJike
two weeks to take effect because
of the need for "preparations."
such as mobilizing a U.N. truce
monitoring team.
The anlljluncementcuimlnated
negotiations that began at the
United Nations July 26, eight
days alter Iran said It would
accept Resolution 598 and agree
to start discussing a cease-fire.

Another Investigation con- mand accepted possibly thoucerns whether Robert Yates, a sands of dollars In free drinks
senior mlsslle headquarters offl- from a subcontractor and, In
clal, helped System Dynamics turn, furnished him with sensiII., ,
Inc. win a contract before leav- live contract data.
lng the Army In February to
Durin~ a three-month Inquiry.
The otllclal Islamic Republic
wdrk tor 'thai cornpally ,- Atri\y·•• "U''!Itl!d Press' · International News AgellliY said three people
and Justice Departml!nt officials pieced together the dimensions were wounded today when Iraqi
said.
of the extensive Investigations of forces shelled villages near Sardasht, about 375 miles west of
Yates's deputy, Charles Sllz, Army contracting.
succeeded him and allegedly
Among the allegations under Tehran, In the first military
threatened to withhold future Investigation:
action reported on the front since
contracts from one company
-Infiuence-buylng by contrac- Thursday.
unless It Invited System Dynamtors seeklog an advantage on a
''This war Is now ending,"
Khamenel said at a conference f
lcs to be a subcontractor, a contract bid.
source close to the Investigation
-Government officials doling on the war In Tehran. The
said.
out favors to firms with which
objective of the Iraqi attack In
Investigators In a third Inquiry
they are seeking employment.
1980, he said, "was the overthrow
have been told that a contract
of the Iranian revolution."
manager at the missile comContinued on page 10
Iraq has maintained that the
war, which began with the Sept.
22, 1980, Invasion of Iran and Is
estimated to have lett at least 1
. mUllon people dead or wounded, .
was provoked by the Iranians. ' ,.
Tehran radio quoted Kha~e­
over
the
weekend:
A separate undercover task
nel
as saying: "We go to peace
-A.
reputed
gang
,
member,
force that targets gang members
with
honor and a desire that
who engage In drug trafficking Walter Cole, 27, was booked on
never
again will there be war
arrested 33 ' people and seized suspicion of murder In the killing
between
Third World countries,
nearly 5 pounds of cocaine and or VIncent Crabtree, 25, and
except
It
the oppressed rlse
$76,000 In cash over the weekend, wounding ol Terry Bullock, 26, In
against
their
oppressors and
a shooting at a south central Los
Booth said.
The gang task force opera- Angeles gasoline station late defend themselves."
Khamenel criticized the U.N.
tions, which have Involved 1,000 Friday. Cole was also wounded,
officers at times, have resulted In shot by a security guard at the Security Council lor Issuing
"cool, careless and threatening"
more than 18,000 arrests, Includ- station.
resolutions
on the war before
-A
16-year·old
Filipino
gang
Ing more than 9,000 gang
Resolution
598,
passed In July
member,
·
Edwin
Malabanan,
members, since they began In
1987.
.
was critically wounded when a
February.
Jl Iran bad accepted theearUer
band of rivals opened fire from
At least 177 people have been two cars as they swept by his resolutions, the president said, It
killed In gang violence In Los . house In Silver Lake Friday would have had to allow parts of
Angeles County In the first half of night.
the country to remain under
this year. A record 387 gangrelated deaths· were reported In .
1987.
In the latest slaying, · Vernon
Walker, 24, was gunned down
about 2:35 a.m. Sunday outside
his home In Compton, Detective
Ken Baratta said.
Witnesses told pollee Walker
clear distance after her 1985
was In his front yard when he was
A Pomeroy man was Injured In to the right knee.
approached by two men on loot. a one-truck accident Sunday at
Kevin D. Jewell, 28. also of Renault Alliance rear-ended a
The men then opened lire with 1:10 a .m., In Salisbury Township Rutland, was driving .a 1977 · 1974 Dodge Charger.,drlven by
one or two handguns, kUling onS.R. 7.
Plymouth Fury north when a 1982 Ernest P. Mundell. 28, of Rl. 1.
Walker, Baratta said.
Brian K. Bowers, 22, of 39572 Plymouth Reliant driven by Bidwell.
Mundell and Primmer were
The victim, believed to have Union Ave., was taken .by the Jason A. Rupe, 18, also of
been either a member of the Meigs EMS to Veterans Memor- Rutland, coUided with Jewell in a traveling south when Mundell,
driving ahead of Primmer,
Crlps or a close associate, was Ial Hospital. He was later trans- curve.
slowed lor standing water In the
recently released from county ferred to St. Joseph's Hospital In
jail alter serving a sentence on a Parkersburg, W.Va., where he
Rupe was cited lor failure to road (It had rained earlier that
morning) when Primmer hit
drug conviction, Baratta said.
was listed In poor condition yield.
Investigators suspect the Monday morning.
A Langsville man was Injured Mundell's car from behind. ,
A Dexter woman was cited In a
shooting may have been carried
Bowers was driving his 1978 In a one-car accident In Salem
two-car
accident Sunday at 1:30
out In retaliation for the death of Ford Courier pickup truck south Township Sunday at 6 a.m. on
p.m.,
In
Salem Township at uie
Demltrlus PoUdore, 22, who was when he ran ott the right side of S.R. 124.
junction
of Bowles and Old
killed In a drive-by shooting the road Into a dllch be!ore
Terry W. Mullins, 21, was
Thursday. pollee said.
bitting a tree. He was not taken to Veterans Memorial Dexter Church Roads.
Branc)y Y. Sweat, 18, was cited
In another gang·related homl· wearing a seat belt and was Hospital by a private car. Hewas
lor
driving without wearing a
clde, Derrick Young, 17, was thrown from the truck.
treated and releaaed tor multiple
gunned down about 11:30 p.m.
A Rutland youth was Injured In facial cuts and a bruise to his seat belt and driving without a
license alter her 1984 Mercury
Saturday In south central Los a two-car accident Saturday at 8 right shoulder.
Angeles.
p.m., In Rutland Township on
He was driving east when he Lynx was hit by a 1987 Dodge Colt
Two Crlps members are sought T.R. 46, about a mile north of ran off the rlght side of tbe road driven by Evelyn M. Burkey, 62,
of Dexter.
In the death, which occurred In C.R. 10, according to the GalUa- and Into a bridge abutment.
Burkey was driVIng South on
the midst of the IJisklorcesweep. Melgs Post of the State Highway
A Reynoldsburg woman was
Old
Dexter Church Road as
Another suspected gang Patrol.
cited In a two-car accident
Sweat was heading east on
member was wounded shortly
Jennifer Barrett, 15, was IJiken Saturday at 9:55a.m., two and a
Bowles Road. Sweat turned left
before midnight Saturday In a by a private vehicle to Veter11ns hall miles north of the Meigs·
to Old Dexter Church Road, anc)
drive-by shooting In Boyle J'demorlal Hospital, where she GaiUa County line on S.R. 7. -.·
was hit by Burkey's car.
Heights.
was treated and released lor
Melissa J. Primmer, ~. was
In other gang-related vlolenc~ bruises lo the forehead and cuts cited for not malntalniDR assured

Three die in violence over weekend ...

.

1988 BUICK CENTURY

Ohio Valley Bank. Sl: John Pll'rOIII. Outdoors·
m N l , William Eaeh&lt;ts, $1.35: Ricky Chapma n.
Gallla Bu ecan~rs . Rou Hamrick and Gary
Uow ls. SUfi·

II this sounds like the
opportunity you've been
looking for, send,us your
resume and we'll contact
j'OU for a confidential
interview.

meeting Sunday as chairman Governor John H.
Sununu (New Hamp!lhire), right, looks on. -

By LEE LEONARD
ClNCINNATJ (UPI) - The
nation's governors. looking tor
solutions to the shifts In power
between states and the national
government, hoped to hear the
federal position today when
President Reagan addressed
their annual meeting.
The 80th annual meeting of the
National Governors' Assocla,
lion, which began Sunday, had
discussions planned today on this
year's severe drought, the homeless, energy and the environment, and International trade.
Reagan was scheduled to address the governors on the main
theme of the annual conference;
the balance of power between the
federal government and the
states.
"There has been an erosion of
.power away from the states, a
drlftlilg, and a concentration of
power within the federal government," said NtlW Hampshire
Gov. John Sununu, chalnnan of

Army contracts being probed
OVB congratulates Scott Hunt of Vinton f~r
showing the highest placing steer that was
bred, born and raised right here in Gallia
County.
·

21 Conto

1 Section. 1 0 POIJII

A Multlmedlo Inc. Now-

Govemors discuss
state, federal powers

Bank. suo.

•Brand

enttne·
.

•

HOMEGROWN

Paul Bradbury. Rodney Rangers, Bob
Evans Farms, $1.10; Erin Deel. Raccoon
Valley, Toler &amp; Toler Ins., $1.45; Jer emiah
Watson, Early Birds, OVB, $1: Gene
Vanco, Rio Ridge Runners, Charlie
Shaver, $1.10: Barbara Adams, HU!blllles.
Blunt Ellis and Loewi, $1.10; Gwynne
Darnbrough. Just Friends, 5eiko'Inc., Col,
IN, $1.25; Jami e Lyall, Redskin Border lin·
ers, Last Chance Carry Out. 11.25: Carmen
Mayo, Country Kids, G &amp; J Auto Parts,
$1.15: Mike Kemper, Hillbillies, People's
Bank. P t. Pleasant, W.Va., $1.10; Wint er
Whitt, Early, Birds, John Clark Family,
$1.10; Willi am Gilbert, GaiiJa Buccaneers,
Mrs. Har la n Martin, $1.10; Jason Will i·
ams, Kounl ry Krltters, DouglaS K. Evans,
S1.20; Todd Shong. Sundance Kids, Paul
Davies Jewelers, $1.50: Chris Fil ch,
Sunda nce Kids, Sheriff J .M. Montgomery,
$1.3Q; J eremy Hall ey, Outs iders, Bob
Evans F ar ms. Sl: and Josh G,regory,
Reds kin I;Jorder lln ers . . Dr. John Sheel s.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Monday. August 8, 1988

Copy"f"tecl 1881

Wt WI Wcor~/Wcaitl and otlltr lnruriiiKII For '"'
THIRD&amp;PINEST.

'

Clear IODighl, loWll near '78.
Tueaday, BUDBY ud humid, II .
percenl chance of rain. Blpa
In mid 11011.

Pomeroy man is injured in
Rt. 7 ·accident early Sunday

'&gt;;·

--- .

..

•

. -- ·--~·,.

�"

;

.

.. . . .

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohto
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS. MASON AREA

~~
ts:mt:i!

I

~v

,....,_.._..,..,,....._c:~.-

.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
PubUsher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Asalatant Publlllher/ ControUer

BOBHOEFUCH
Geoeral Mana1er

A MEMBER o!The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Asspclatlon and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

~

CLEVELAND (UPll -A 13-10
exhibition victory over the Detroll Lions served to Intensify
several position battles for the
Cleveland Browns.
Jeff Jaeger made two field
goals Saturday night; Including a
decisive 27-yard effort 2: 26. Into
the fourth quarter, but he also
missed from 25 yards and bad a
37-yard attempt blocked.
Jaeger, a third-round pick out
of Washington and Cleveland's
leading scorer last year with 75
points, Is fighting veteran Matt
Bahr for a roster spot. IC!s
believed the loser will be traded.
"I don't fault him on the one
that was blocked," said Browns
Coach Marty Schottenhelmer.
"They got penetration on us. At
this point, I'm not going to draw
any conclusions until 1 have an
llpportunlty to evaluate the whole
situation.
"We're not going to make any
decisions based onanyonegame,
I can tell you that."
Bernie Kosar, the AFC's topranked quarterback In 198'7,
connected with Ozzle Newsome
on a 7-yard touchdown pass in the
first quarter before 78,065 at
Cleveland Stadium. Jaeger
added a 20-yard field goal in the
se-cond quarter.
Det rolt got a 1· yard scoring run
from Garry James In the second

a' By Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

WASHINGTON - The power· wh: has become the focus of
ful and much -respected chair· secret two-year fecleral lnvestlman of the Senate Armed Servl· gallon of fraud and bribery In the
ces Committee, Sam Nunn, Pentagon ' s p r ocurement
D-Ga., protected an Air Force system.·
cruise missile program that even
Paisley was Instrumental In
the Air Force didn't want. Now theNavy 'sdeclslontojolntheAlr
the $!()().million plant to build Force on the program In No·
thatmlssllefsunderconstruction vember 1984, when the missile
In Nunn's hometown of Perry, ·project was having serious tech·
Ga .
nlcal problems. Paisley was then
One who stood upwlthNunn for so adamant about protecting the
the · unwanted "Tacit Rainbow" project that he overruled the 1985
missile program was Melvyn recommendations by top scientPaisley, the former assistant lsts at the China Lake Naval
secretary of the Navy for re- Weapons Center In California.
search engineering and systems, They recommended cancellation

of the sole-source contract with
Northrop Corp. to build the
missile.
"We tried for three years to
cancel this program because It
wasn't working," a top Pentagon
official told us. "But Paisley and
Nunn blocked us at every tum.
They kept Tacit Rainbow alive.''
The military needs a highly
sophisticated drone that homes
In on and destroys enemy air·
defense radar. But the Tacit
Rainbow Is hobbled by the fact

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than. 300 words
Ions. All letters are subject to editing and niust be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be publlsbed. Letters should be In

gOOd taste. addressing issues, 1\ot personalities.

Ohio Politics

Inspector general
impartial, fair
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI) - As Gov. Richard Celeste Introduced the
first-ever state Inspector general to the media last week, the talk
turned to what documents would be made public from Investigations
by the !.G.'s office.
Celeste started to make a suggestion, bu !stopped himself, turned to
retired Ohio Highway Patrol Maj. David Sturtz, the new Inspector
general, and said, ''I'm not going to tell you how to run your office.''
"I appreciate that," the new appointee said with a grin, and
everyone laughed.
They laughed because there is a delicate balance required here.
Sturtz has been appointed by Celeste to ferret out misconduct.
possible crime, waste and other shenanigans In the executive branch
of state government, maybe In the governor's office, perhaps by the
governor himself.
, Heaven knows, there has been an abundance of what can most
charitably be termed bad judgment bordering on misconduct during
the first four or five years of the Celeste administration.
With his wry comment, Sturtz Indicated he Is not going to play toady
to the governor. It was his polite way oftelllng Celeste, "You hired me
to do a job, now stay out of my face and I'll dolt."
What Sturtz actually told skeptical reporters was. "I have certain
things that I want to accomplish (as Inspector general) and If I
couldn't, I can walk away. I don't have to bend or break (to the
governor's will)," he continued. "I can say, 'I do not believe that. I am
leaving."'
For Celeste's part, he has demonstrated his desire, perhaps a few
years late, to get serious about proving to the publiC that "we will not
tolerate wrongdoing In this administration."
If the governor were looking for a watchdog to make sure the
government operates on the up-and-up, he couldn't have found a
better one than Dave Sturtz.
Celeste himself described Sturtz as a ''straight arrow'' who has the
"absolute respect" of the law enforcement community he served for
30 years . .
Those familiar with Sturtz know that while he Is politically neutral,
, he Is extremely disapproving of some of the things that have gone on
· in the Celeste admlnlnstration and will not be bashful about moving In
I! he sees something amiss.
Sturtz said his antennae will be up for signals of wrongdoing.
"What might turn out to be substantial evidence often starts out as
just a scrap," he said. Yet any full-scale Investigation will have to be
supported by solid evidence. "You can't go around chasing your tall,"
he said.
Sturtz, 51, rose quickly through the ranks of the Highway Patrol. At
each step, he was among the youngest to achieve rank. He was In line
to become superintendent of the patrol during the administration of
Gov. James Rhodes, but office politics denied him that promotion.
As the .governor put It, Sturtz's appointment as inspector general
"Is an opportunity to cap off a very distinguished career."
Sturtz plans to select his staff, visit similar offices In
Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, New York and Florida and go In "as
. sterile as a surgeon" and start cutting out the abcesses In state
government.
Surprising even to Celeste was Sturtz's announced Intention to visit
the editorial boards of Ohio newspapers to let editors get a look at him
and what he's doing.
This should go a long way toward alleviating fears that the
lilspector general Is some military maniac or a furtive sycophant
conspiring with Celeste to keep the lid on things at all costs.

Field goals give · clevel~d
•
13-·10 pre-season ·grid WID

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomaoy-Middleport. Ohio
Monday. August 8, 1988

Unwanted missile program rolls on

"I knew they'd find something they have in common."

Who should Bush choose?_
Between now and the unofficial
opening of the election campaign
around Labor Day, George Bush
has one extremely Important
decision to make: the choice of a
vice presidential running mate.
Sometimes the choice Is fairly
obvious - as In 1980, when 11 was
plainly In Ronald Reagan's Inter·
est to "balance the ticket" by
choosing Bush, who cam from
the opposite wing of the party and
had been his longest surviving
rival. But - more often It Is
anything but obvious, and that Is
the case today.
More than 20 names have been
seriously put forward. Worse yet,
every single one of them has
Important advantages - and
also significant disadvantages.
Whomever Bush picks, the media are bound to declare that he
has blundered, and his alleged
lneptil)lde will be compared to
the "brilliance" of Dukakls'
choice of Bentsen.

Nonetheless a choice must be
made, and It must, If possible,
help the chances of the ticket. It
Is this latter point, I respectfully
submit, that suggests the dlrec·
tlon In which Bush ought to turn.
In the 35 years prior to 1966.
there were nine presidential
· elections, and the Republicans
lost all but two of them. In the 22
years since 1966, there have been
five presidential elections, and
the Republicans have won all but
· one of them.
What happened, at the level of
presidential politics, In the mid·
1960s? What happened was that a
large chunk of the old Roosevelt
Democratic coalition changed
sides. It currently pleases the
Democrats and their media
stooges to call these the " geagan
Democrats"; but In fact they
were off the reservation long
before Reagan, leaving Hubert
Humphrey with only 43 percent
of the votes In 1968 and giving

that It has to be dropped from an
aircraft such as a a-52 and, while
It flies fast, It doesn't have vital
hover capability.
" It runs out of fuel ·In 40
minutes," one source noted . If
the enemy simply turns off Its
radar for a short time, the ·
missile wlll drop from the sky
when Its fuel Is spent.
The Tacit Rainbow program
has been plagued with technical
difficulties that now have It
running more than a year behind
schedule. So far, It has experienced a huge 600 percent cost
overrun from the Initial
estimate.
. A far better option, our sources
say, Is the "Seek Spinner," a
slower missile which Is launched
from the ground and can stay out
a full four hours. -But Pentagon
officials and other advocates
were stymied by Paisley, before
he resigned in 1987, and by Nunn
who continues the fight.
As recently as June 15, a key
meeting was held In which I'lunn
appeared determined to kill the
alternative Seek Spinner. Rep.
Robert Davis, R-Mich., had
asked to meet with the congres·
slonal conference committee
hammering out the defense authorization bill.
The "big four" of the confer·
ence committee were present:
Senate Armed Services Commit·
. tee Chairman Nunn; Its ranking
minority member Sen. John
Warner, R-Va.; House Armed
Services Committee · Chairman
Les Aspln, D-Wis., and Its rank·
lng Republican, William Dlckln·
son, R-Ala.
The rule was that no staff was
to attend. Conference committee
negotiations frequently break
down Into raw debating between
members of Congress

_.____wu_·Lia_m_Rus_he_r

Richard Nixon every state but
Massachusetts In 1972. Jimmy
Carter managed to lure back just
enough of them In 1976 to eke out
a narrow victory over Ford.
Who are these· swing voters,
and what are their views? There
Is no mystery about it: They are
the so-called "social conservatlves." They Include while Sou·
therners, Northern "ethnics,"
Protestant fundamentalists and
evangelicals, and olderfashioned Catholics and Jews,
among others. They are gener·
ally to be found on the lower rugs
of the economic ladder, and do
not share the traditional Republican longing for balance budgets
(or the trendy new Democratic
concern over unbalanced ones) .
They are tough, patriotic, and
not at all easy to con. They
changed ·Sides In the mld·1960s
because they had had It up to here
with the hippies, rioters, drug
addicts, sexual revolutionaries,

neo-Marxlsts, welfare queens,
and miscellaneous lf·it·feels·
good-do-lt types who, they cor·
rectly perceived, had been
spawned by the liberal Ideo·
logues who had taken over
Democratic Party.
And today? To sum them up
briefly, they hate·Khomelni, like
Reagan: and wonder about Bush.
They know that Bush Is Reagan's
designated heir, and that cuts In
his favor. They don't doubt that
he Is a nice man, or that he knows
- better than they do - which
fork to use. They are not all that
bowled over by Dukakls or even
Bentsen, let alone Jackson. But Is
Bush tough as well as knowledgeable - "tough," that Is, In the
sense of firm, principled, and
wise In the ways of a wicked
world?
who best fills those speclflca·
!Ions? I will have a thought or two
on that subjest In my next
column.

Who did Reagan benefit? ___-·_R_ob_er_t~_ _;,a. ;. . . ;lte'- "-rs

WASHINGTON (NEA) - Af- lower now than In 1980, when
ter predicting that this year's Reagan was first elected
presidential campaign will be president.
But the gross national product
especially campaign will be
especially mean, If no downrlgh has Increased annually during
dirty, Republicans have begun Reagan's tenure. "Whenever the
fulfilling their prophesy with a GNP gets bigger, someone' s
package of deceptive television · Income goes up. If real wages
aren't rising, that someone Isn't
commercials.
The misleading ads, sponsored the average American," notes
by the Republican National Com- respected economist Lester C.
mittee at a cost of$3 million to$4 Thurow -of the Massachusetts
million, are being broadcast In Institute of Technology.
The Census Bureau reports
the late July-early August period
between the two major parties' that between 1980 and 1986 (the
pres·ldentlal nominating most recent year for which
reliable statistics are available)
conventions.
The unifying theme of the trio only the wealthiest fifth of the
of video spots Is that Republican country's population enjoyed anPresident Ronald Reagan has nual Inflation-adjusted Income
presided over seven years of Increases. Each of the bottom
glorious economic growth, while four-fifths - the home of all
his Immediate predecessor, De· middle- and low-Income workers
mocratic President Jimmy Car- -experienced a decline, with the
ter, dragged the nation through losses most severe In the lowest
four years of Inflationary rungs.
Additional evidence of the
misery. ··
All three commercials end by failure of Reagan's economic
boasting: "Seven years of jobs, boom to truly benefit the middle
By United Pret18 International
peace and economic growth, class comes from the employ·
Today Is Monday, Aug. 8, the 22lst day of 1988 with 145to follow.
brought to you by the men! cost Index, a BLS measure
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its new phase.
·
Republicans."
of the year-to-year changes In the
The morning stars are Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
It's true that Inflationary pres- total compensation (Including
The evening stars are Mercury and Saturn.
sures became Intolerable during wages, salaries arid benefits) of
Those born on this date are under the sign of Leo. They Include the the Carter administration and workers In private Industry.
In 1981, that Index stood at 10
United States' first professional architect, Charles Bullfinch, In 1763; that many aspects of the econ·
percent,
built skidded downward
poet Sara Teas!! ale In 1884; author Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings~ "The o.my grew robust during the
In
every
ensuing year until
Yearling'') In 1896; former Supreme Court Justlce Arthur Goldberg Reagan administration - but
in l!la! (age 80); actress Sylvia Sidney In 1910 (age 78); actor Rory those oversimplifications obs· bottoming out at 3 percent last
Calhoun In 1922 (age 65); aquatic actress Esther Wllllams In 1923 (age cure crucial disparities between yea,r. The Index this year regis·
tered Its first Increase since
64); country singer Mel Tillis In 1932 (age 56); actor Dustin Hoffman the rich and the poor.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics Reagan assumed office and now
In 1937 (age 51); singer Connie Stevens In 1938 (age 50), and actor .
reports that hourly wages of stands at 4.5 percent.
Keith Carra dine In 1949 (age 39) .
If typical workers aren't being
non-supervisory production em·
ployees, after being corrected for helped much by the long and
On this date In history:
In 1940, the German Luftwaffe began a series of daylight air raids Inflation, 'have not grown at all strong economic expansion, who
during Reagan's 7~ years In the Is benefiting? That question Is
on Britain.
answered In surveys conducted
In 1945, two days after the atom bomb was dropped on Hiroshima White House.
Weekly
wages,
a
recently by three highly reBLS
category
and ..Ven days before Toyko surrendered, the Soviet Union declared
.that measures both hours of work garded periodicals:
war on Japan.
- Business Week reports that
In 1968, Richard Nixon won the Republican ·nomination for and hourly pay adjusted for
Inflation, actually are 2.4 percent the 10 highest paid corporate
president.

executives last year received
$8.8 million to $26.3 million each
In total compensation.
-Financial World reports that
the highest paid financial servl·
ces Industry last year was a
33-year-old specialist In trading
stock Index futures . .He earned
$80 million to $100 million In 1987.
Ranking In second through
fifth places were experts In
leveraged buyouts, junk bonds
and other esoteric specialties.
They earned $60 million to $70

million apiece.
- American Law.yer reports
that the average income last
year for the 1,300 attorneys In the
country's 15 most porfltable law
firms was $739;000. At the top of
the list were three firms at which
the average profit per partner
ranged from $1.2 million to $1.4
million.
They are the people for whom
the Republican advertising cam·
palgn has a message. The rest of
us must look elsewhere.

Green wlll miss Dolphins' opener
MIAMI (UPI) - Miami Dol·
phlns linebacker Hugh Green
will be out of action until the
'regular season opener at Chicago
'Sept. 4 because of a broken rib.
Green suffered the Injury last
week during practice, but It
. wasn 't discovered until a presea·
son game/ with the Bears Satur·
day night, Coach Don Shula said.
·'He seems to think he got hurt
In practice Wednesday, but he
\lidn't say anything," Shula said.
"It's still good to know his knee
·will be OK when he Is ready to
go."
Green has missed most of the
last two seasons with knee
'Injuries. He was traded to Miami
from Tampa Bay during the 1985
season. A knee Injury sidelined
"Green In 1986, and he has never
performecj !9r the Dolphins at the
all-pro level he displayed during
'five years with the Buccaneers.
Green hasn't spoken with the
media for most of his lime with
'Miami, but opened up two weeks
ago during preparations for the
Dolphins' game with the San

Majors
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, Olympic prospects
win 90-82 contest

.........

"Next question: Which of tM following
campaign prom/- do yoo actually
IHJIIeve? "

.....

.......

~lpt

AMERICAN LEAGUE

[

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)The quickest way t.o Frank
shlngton, the Super Bowl Gansz' heart, and thus to a spot
Francisco 49ers In London.
on the Kansas City Chiefs' roster,
He said at that lime he was champion.
Is through special teams, a point
Brudzlnskl, a 12-year veteran
sorry he had disappointed the
that has not been lost on Kltrlck
fans and the Dolphins because of from Ohio State, had been a Taylor
and James Saxon.
hls Injuries, a ddlng he would regular at the other outside · Saxon rushed for one touch·
probably stop talking to repor' · linebacker for six years until he down and caught a pass for
ters when he returned to the U.S., was displaced last year by another Saturday night and later
and so far that has been the case . second-round draft choice Rick expounded on how he's going to
Shula said he wasn't upset Graf.
concentrate on special teams
Green didn't reveal his Injury
Shula said Brudzlnskl had been while Taylor made his mark with
before the 20·17 loss to the Bears. working at both outside positions a 79-yard punt return for a score
Apparently, the outside line· since last year and would have no in the Chiefs' 34-21 exhibition
backer thought the rib was sore, problem adjusting.
victory over the Cincinnati
not broken. ,
Playing without Green for Bengals.
"We're not sure when he go tit. most of the last two years, the
It was the fourth time In slx
I was_n 't aware of 11. He might Dolphin defense has had a years that Kansas City opened Its
have just aggravated It Saturday difficult time, finishing 26th preseason wjth a victory over the
night," Shula said. "Halftime among 28 teams In 198'7.
Bengals, 1·1 this season. The
·was when I was flrstawareofit."
Chiefs are 7·0 In exhibitions with
Reserve linebacker David
CHICAGO (UP!) - The Chi· Cincinnati.
Frye, one of Green's possible cago Bears emerged from their
Kansas City, through Its own
replacements, hurt his shoulder first preseason game a little less actions and through Injury, may
In the Chicago game. Shula said concerned about their offense, a need Saxon and Taylor, making
Mark Brown, who had an Inter· little more concerned about their their play Saturday even more
ceptlon against the Bears and kicking.
Important.
has been Green's replacementln
Each of the Bears' · three
Saxon, a sixth· round draft
the past, would be used on the quarterbacks · engineered scor· choice from San Jose State, went
outside along with Bob Brud· lng drives In Saturday's 20-17 Into the game after Incumbent
zlnskl In the preseason home victory over the Miami Dolphins fullback Christian Okoye !rae·
opener Saturday against Wa· at Soldier Field. Jim McMahon, lured hls right thumb. Taylor Is
Mike Tomczak and Jim Har· expected to replace punt re·
baugh each performed well as . turner Michael Clemons, who
Chicago's makeshift offensive was cut early In training camp.
line held up against Miami's
"When Clemons was released
defense.
that opened a spot," said Taylor,
McMahon completed four of who also had a team-high four
slx passes for 33 yards . Tomczak receptions for 46 yards. "Coach
w...
Oaldand
8!1 43 .Ill went 8 or 13 for 119yards and one Gansz gave me the opportunity to
Ml II 1ft DU.
61 a .au 1
touchdown and threw the game's show what I could do tonight and
11 S4 .Sit Ill!! .
California
II M .501 1%
Ka•- Cll)'
lone
Interception. Harbaugh I did a pretty good job."
48 ........ 1!1
completed
five of six passes for
Saxon rushed for 27 yards on
Chtcaao
... 12 .... ··~
Se.Uie
u
• .378 2t%
97
yards.
eight
carries and caught three
s .........,.•• ftellfil
"I
think
(offensive
line
coach)
passes
for 32 more, but knows he
Ku- Cll, It, Toi'OIIlo I
OttroK t , Bollon I
Dick
.Stanfel
has
done
an
outO.UU.dS,Su&amp;tle t
standing job with the line," Is
New York I, Mine-sa I
play.
a backup as long as Okoye can
llaUR.re 7, Mllwaa.er I
Bears
Coach Mike Dltka said.
"I felt pretty good _although
cr~•• s, Ts .. s
Callfor_.a l, Ollcap 5
"John Wojciechowski Is a fine there are a couple of things I have
9u .. Q' •• at..lt•
football player. I'll have to look to get stronger with, but I feel I
New York I, Mln.rall&amp;a I
Bo.._ S, Bet roN I. 10 In•
at the films to see what Caesar am young and will learn," Saxon
Kan . . Cttyll, Torellio I
Rentle did but his guy didn't do said. "I justtrledtonotmakeany
Milwaukee 7, Baltimore~
Cblc.,o I, Caller•• I
anything so he didn't do too mistakes, not let the quarterback
Sullie lt, Oakland 7
badly."
get sacked.
Texu 1!, Ol!nl•d 1
Mo ...,·. Gamet
Rentie and Wojciechowski got
"I like my chances of making
K.lt.nRM Oi)' tS•berMren 1!-IOJ al
starts at offensive tackle because the team about the same as
Toronlo (MIIIIeldUII S.l), '7:)5 p.m .
the Bears' three best tackles yesterday. I showed them the
t1ewl•d (Codlr..l 0-21 at Mln~~t­
starters
Jlmbo Covert and Keith type of player I am and l have a
-aU (.Uder•ll ..,., , 8:11p.m.
Van Horne and reserve Paul lot to offer. But whatever It takes,
Ddrok (TMUa 11-1') at Teus {RII•
Blair - are Injured.
seiiA-1).8 :31 p.m.
I just want to help this team
Suttle CLaftpt0111 7·1} at CaiiiOrals
Rookie
tight
end
James
Thorn·
(McC•WII W), II:Up.m.
win."
ton caught a Chicago TD pass, a
l.lllc-co (Left( H) .. Oakland CWelcb
· When both teams had their
IM). II: Sl p.m.
came
two
plays
25-yarder
that
first teams In the game, both
1'1181q'• Oamea
after he caught a 24-yarder to offenses had a field day with the
Toronl:e at New York. allhf
Bolton at Jllllwaulee, niPt
move the Bears deep Into Miami edge going to the Bengals.
OnelaadatMin-oca, nlpt
llallnore at Kaa . . Cll)', ntpt
territory.
Kansas &lt;;lly lead at halftime
Del:roli u re .....,,..
"He's a good football player," 17-14, but that was because of
seattle at CaUionl-. •liN
ctllearo u OaiiiMd.llll"
Continued on page 4
Taylor's first -quarter punt

Transactions

••aM

s .. FraaciHo .............

PROVIDENCE, R.I. - Danny
Manning and Dan Majerle each
scored 13 points Sunday to lead
the U.S. Olympic candidates to a
9().82 victory over a team of NBA
players. The U.S. team never
trailed In the exhibition, Its first
In a series against NBA players
this month.

OUr.lud- Placed rt.....fl ..der IJ&amp;ne
O.&amp;lver• •• llle 11'11• cllubled Hat,

retr.et.M •• "-1· I; rto..k&gt;d rtlht·
hM*rllmConllr.nTIICIOIMOfPadftc
Coa1t Leape (AAA).

,....,,n

NIGHT
SPECIAL

Tampa 8 q - Biped n,.,.... draft
plcll P•l Or•r. ellt~t~elt'e tackle, to a
IIW•JI.r~ltlll(t ,

HELP WANTED ·
LABORATORY SUPERVISOR

For modtm lullr equlpPid physician's offlc• llbontory. Oulllfi·
cations necessary: IT (lSCP),

well vened in instrument opelll·
1nd trouble shooti111. Com·
petent in 111 lab IJUS. Excellent
btnellts. WMkends off. Apply: in
person to or call 446·9620. The
lldical Pl1za, 203 Jtckson Pike,
Clllllpolls. betwlfn 8:30 A.M.·

5:00P.M.

.

quarter and Eddie Murray's
28-yard field- goal In the third
quarter.
The game also featured solid
performances from reserves
looking for roster spots. Running
backs George Swarn and Tony
· Baker, quarterbacks . Steve
Slayden and Mike Pagel, safety
Will Hill and rookie linebackers
Clifford Charlton and Van Walt·
ers all played effectively. Pun·
ters Lee Johnson and Shaun
Burdick, however, . were
l!_l)lmpresslve.
·
Swarn had 23 yards on four
carries and Baker ran slx times
for 24 yards. Both are challeng·
lng In a backfield that already
includes Kevin Mack and Earn·
est Byner.
"I provide more outside speed
for this team. I'm an outside
slasher," said Baker, a second·
year player from East CaroUna,
Byner's alma mater. "I can also
catch the ball and give them a lot
of juice."
Schottenhelmer has said he
will keep three ·q uarterbacks, so
rookie Slayden and Pagel are
looking to back up Kosar and
Gary Danielson. Slayden, a 12th·
round pick out of Duke, com·
pleted five of six passes for 46
yards and an Interception. Pagel,
a seven-year veteran; was 4 of 9
for 94 yards.

" (Slayden) did a nice job. I was.
particularly Impressed with the
one throw In the two-minute,
situation," said Schottenhelmer.
Slayden was awed by the
crowd support.
_
"I've played In places with
crowds like this, but they were
never on my side, " he said. "I've
been working hard In practice
and have been fortunate to get a·
lot of work."
Pagel said he performed "all
right."
"I had one bad throw," he said.
"But overall, It's a matter of
going out and doing the job."
Hill, of Bishop College, re·
turned an Interception 34 yards
while Charlton and Walters each
had a sack.
'·
''The Browns clearly have ~
mlx of young ·and veteran tal~
ent, " said Detroit Coach Darryl
Rogers. ''That makes It tough to
choose . between , players, but
· that's a good situation."
Johnson averaged 35 yards on
two punts while Burdick punted
twice for an average of 28.5
yards. It Is likely Lui Passaglla,a
34-year-old veteran of the Cana·
dian Football League, will punt
when Cleveland visits Tampa
Bay next Sunday.
The Browns had Sunday off
and will resume practice this
afternoon at Lakeland Comm.un·
tty College.

Punt return give.s Chiefs
34-21 victory over Cincinnati

Scoreboardu.

PhillidelpNa1', O.lcqo 4
HouSoa 4. Los Anplet!

Today in history

quarter touchdown Sunday while Minnesota
safety John Harris, number 44, looks on.

SAINTS SCORE - New Orlean• Saints' wide
receiver Mark Pattison, rllht, celebrates a first

Mon&amp;re.. 11, sa.

Berry's Worl

~

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

P01ll81 oy-Middleport, Ohio

Comment

... .r. ; . . . . . . .

S3.25

DINNER ROLLS

return.
"If the No. 1s had played the
No. ls,lt might have been 48-45,"
said Cincinnati Coach Sam
Wyche. ' 'They (the Chiefs) have
a lot of depth. I'm not sure they
step o(f much when they put In
their backups, vis-a-vis us.
"Specialty teams account for
the outcome of two or three
·games In a season, and this was
one of them. The punt return
changed the complexion of the
game. Instead of a matched
score where we're ahead,it was a
matched score with them
ahead."
The Bengals_ outgalned the
Chiefs 191·100, Including a 97-22
advantage In first-half rushing.
Ickey Woods, . a second-round
draft pick from Nevada-Las
Vegas, had a pair of 1-yard runs
for touchdowns. In addition to the
Taylor return, Kansas Cltycountered with a 1-yard burst from
Herman Heard and a 34-yard
Nick Lowery field goal just
before halftime.
The second half, however,
belonged to the Chiefs . The only
Bengals' points of the half came
late In the fourth period when
Turk Schonert hit Mike Martin
with a 2-yard touchdown pass.
The Chiefs scored three times
between halftime and that touch·
down, with rookies grabbing
turnovers to set up 10 fourth·
period points. Seventh-round
choice Troy Sted man covered a
fumble that set up Saxon's2-yard
touchdown run, while third·
round pick Kevin Porter Inter·
ceptedapassthatledtoa36-yard
Lowery field goal and a 34-141ead

with 4:18 to play.
Saxon caught a 10-yard pass
from Steve DeBerg midway
through the third period for his
other touchdown .

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

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What do
anele hant
an
a
•
nncrowave
have in
common?
They both wprk for peanuts.
A microwave and all the appliances
in your house work for
just pennies a day with
low-cost electric energy.
Today and tomorrow, electricity
is your best energy value.
~OHIO

fiijf POWia

I

•

�Monday, Augult 8, 1988

Pirates drop 6-2 tilt to Mets;
Reds 'walk' past Padres

SAFE AT SECOND- Padres' Roberlo Alomar
beats the tag by Reds' Ron Oester lo safely steal

second base In the fifth Inning action Sunday. The
Reds won, 4-3. ·

Boston stops Tigers; Yanks
hand Twins 5-l loss .Sunday
today and I was able to spot my fifth game of their series with the
By TOM WITHERS
Tigers. Bruce Hurst scattered
fastball."
UPI Sports Writer
six hits and Improved his record
New
York
has
had
inconsistent
Aft er being r e legated to
bullpen duty following a July performances from their s tar- to 12-4. Jeff Robinson dropped to
ters this season and teammates 13-5.
loss. Ri chard Dotson served
Royals 5, Bluejays 0
not ic e Sunday he intends to were encouraged by Dotson' s
At Toronto, Floyd Bannister
outing.
rema in in the s tarting rotation.
"It's heartening to see a guy, scattered four hits over six
Dotson tossed a four-hitter
over 8 2-3 Innings to pace the New who' s put on the spot, do the job, " Innings and Jamie Quirk hoYork Yankees to a 5-l v!ctorv · Yankees catcher Don Slaugh! mered and doubled to pace the
Royals. Bannister struck out a
over the Minnesota Twins. The said. ''It shows his character."
Leading
2·0
In
the
second,
season-high
eight while walking
triumph e na bled the Yankees to
even
his
record at 9-9. Jim
one
to
experienced
one
of
his
Dotson
s tay tied for second place in the
Clancy,
5-12
was
the loser.
few
tough
Innings.
Errors
by
Amer ican League Eastern Dlv·
second
baseman
·Randy
Velarde
Brewers
7,
Orioles 2
!sion with the Boston Red Sox,
and shortstop Rafael Santana put · At Baltimore, Rob Deer drove
three games be hind the Det roit
runners on first and second with In four runs with a home run,
Tigers.
Dotson. sent to the bullpen July none out. Dotson retired Gene double and two singles and Robin
Larkin on a fly out, then Induced Yount added a two-run double to
29 after yielding five runs on five
Brian Harper to hit into a 3-6-1 spark M!lwaukee. Mike Birk·
hits In two innings in a 7-lloss at
double pla y.
beck, 7-5, posted his fifth straight
Toronto, did not g ive up a hit until
victory . Jeff Ballard , 5-10, took
the fift h inning. He walked three
a nd struck out four in improving
"It's nice when you 're able to the loss.
White Sox 6, Angels 3
to 9-4.
pick up your teamma tes ," DotAt
Anaheim, Calif., · Carlton
The right -hand er 's pe rfor- son said.
Fisk
and Kelly Paris belted
mance impressed New York
Ken Phelps and Ciaudell Waback-to-back
solo homers in the
.Ma nager Lou Piniella . " Rich
shington each homered and
gave us a good g ame today, "
drove in two runs for New York. sixth to power Chicago. Chuck
Pi niella sa id . " I would like to
Kent Hrbek broke up Dotson's Finley, 6-10, yielded F!sk' s.IOth
. have- seen him complete the shu tout attempt by belting his homer and Paris' first major·
: ballga me. bu t when I went out to
20th home run with one out In the league blast, giving the White
Sox a 4-1 lead. Dave LaPoint
· ta lk to him (in the ninth) he told
ninth.
me that he was out of gas."
Elsewhere In ttie American improved to 9-11 and Bobby
Reliever Steve Shields got the
Le ague, Boston blanked Detroit Thigpen notched his 24th save.
Mariners 12, Athletics 7
final out.
3-0, Kansas City downed Toronto
At
Oakland, Calif. , Rey QuiAlter going 7-2 under fo rmer
5-1, Milwaukee clobbered Baltinones
went 4 for 4 and Jim
manager Billy Martin, Dotson
more 7-2 , Chicago bested Callfor·
Presley
homered and drove in
has struggled under Lou Pin le lia
nla 6-3, Seattle whipped Oakland
four
runs
to lead Seattle. Quiand spent the beginning of July 12-7, and Texas blanked Clevenones
r
ecorded
the second fouron the 15-day disabled list.
land 2-0.
"This is the Richard Dotson I
In the National Le.ague , It was : . hit game of his career and
know and f fee l he Is back,"
Montreal 11, St. Louis 5; New equaled club records with three
added P in iella . " He has made York 6, Pittsburgh 2; Philadel- doubles aild four runs , scored.
some adjustment s a nd we'll need
phia 7, Chicago 4; San Francisco The Mariners set a major-league
him the res t of th e way."
14, Atlanta 4; Cincinnati 4, San recond with five sacrifice flies .
Texas 2, Indians 0
The Ya nkees acq ui red Dotson Diego 3; and Houston 4, Los
AI
Arlington,
Tex., Jose Guz- ·
Angeles 2.
in the off-season in a dea t with the
man
pitched
a
five-hitter
to pace
Red Sox 3, Tigers 0
Chicago White Sox.
the
Ranger
s.
Guzman,
10-8,
Do tson had a s imple explanaAt Detroit, Todd Benzinger
struck
out
six
and
walked
one
In
tion for his s uccess Sunday. " I singled home Mike Greenwell
hurling
his
sixth
complete
game.
got them to hit 'em where they from third with none out to
lhls fi elders) were," Dotson highlight a three-run lOth Inning, Rich Yett , 5-4, took th e loss.
sa id. "I had
good cha nge- up e nabling Boston to salvage the

•

•

Manager Dave Johnson said.
By RICHARD RO'l"1'KOV
"All these serieS are important,
UPI Sports Wrl&amp;er
Despite a' slump, the Pitts· but there' s no such thing as a
burgh Pirates Insist they are not knock-out punch.' '
The Pirates, who trailed the
ready to walk the plank.
by only one game as
Mets
The New York Mets continued
their mastery over Pittsburgh recently as July 19, are 11-13
Sunday, defeating the Pirates for since the All-Star break. While
the sixth time In seven outings the Pirates are not ready to raise
the white flag, they find them·
over the past two weekends. The
·selves looking for answers for
~!rates fell into third place in the
their slump.
National League East, seven
·"Right now there 's not a guy in
games behind the Met sand a half
this clubhouse that can tell me
game behind the surging Montthey're not frustrated , " added
real Expos.
Reynolds. "Some teams just
"We can't look at ourselves as
burled," said Pittsburgh out- have your number and you don 't
fielder R.J . Reynolds following · know why."
Wilson's leadoff home run to
Sunday's 6-2 loss. "The Mets
have thrown qual!ty pitching,
right field on an 0-1 pitch off Mike
we' ve thrown quality pitching. Dunne In the top of the seventh
had snapped a 1-1 tie.
But they somehow or other find
"It's the right time of the year
ways towln.
. That comes from knowing how · to ·beat teams that are right
to win, from being at the top of behind you," Cone said. " Hopethe division, of going to the World fully this will get us on an·
Series. They know know to win. upswing. We were on a little
low."
But we'll be OK."
In other National League
The Pirates, after losing their
third straight to the Mets at games, Montreal topped St.
Three Rivers Stadium, are now Louis 11-5, Hous IDn downed Los
3-10 against theMets this season, Angeles 4-2, San Francisco pum1-5 at Three Rivers Stadium and meled. Atlanta 14-4, Cincinnati
24-61 over the last five years. trimmed San Diego 4-3 and
Pittsburgh has not won a season- Philadelphia defeated Chicago
7-3.
series with the Mets since 1982.
In the American League, It
The Mets broke a 2-2 tie In the
ninth when Kevin McReynolds was: New York 5, Minnesota 1;
and Gary Carter del!vered run- BostDn 3, Detroit 0 In 10 Innings;
scoring singles and Tim Teufel Kansas City 5, Toronto I; Milwaukee 7, Baltimore 2; Chicago
socked a two-run double.
Winner David Cone, 12-2, al- 6, California 3; Seattle 12, Oaklowed two runs, one earned, on land 7; and Texas 2, Cleveland 0.
Expes 1., Cardinali 5
five hits. He walked four and
At St. Louis, Tim Raines and
struck out one in eight innings.
Roger McDowell pitched the Tim Wallach slugged three-run
ninth. Bob Kipper , 2-3, took the homers and Nelson Santovenla
and Luis Rivera scored three
loss In relief.
"This Is a big series because times each to fuel the Expos, who .
they're closest to us," Mets have won live straight and 12 of

-- ..

their last 14 'ames. Montreal Is
11-2 against the Cardinals this
season, with a 5·1 mark in St .
Louis.
AslrOS 4, Dodlel'll 2
At Houston, Bob Knepper scattered five hits over 71-3 Innings
and theAstros took advantage of
two wild pitches and two balks by
Los Angeles pitchers. Knepper,
12·3, allowed one run, walked
three 11nd struck out two to help
second-place Houston move
within 21·2 g11mes of Los Angeles
In the NL West.
Giants 14, Braves 4
At Atlanta, Bob Brenly homered and matched a career
high with five RBI and Joel
Youngblood scored four Urnes to
power the Giants. Rick Reuschel
gave up six hits over six innings
to tmprove to 15-5. Tom Glavlne
las ted only two innings, yielding
five runs In falling to 3-13.
Reds 4, Padres S
At Cincinnati, Tom Browning
won his 11th game as the Reds
scored four times in the sixth
inning on just two hits. Browning,
11-4, gave up four hits in seven
innings, striking out four and
walking six. John Franco pitched
1 1·3 innings to register his 24th
save. Ed WhltsondroppedtoW-7.
PhliUes 7, Cube 4
At Chicago, Lance Parrish hit
a three-run homer and Chris
James belted a two-run shot, .
sparking the Phillies. Both home
runs came off l()ser Jamie
Moyer, 5-11. David Palmer, 7-8,
pitched six innings for the
victory. Steve Bedrosian went
two innings to earn his 21st save.
The Cubs and the Phlllles
conclude their four -game series
tonight with the first night game
In the 74-year history of Wrigley
Field.

CINCINNATI (UP!)- Take It
from Bo Diaz, he really wasn' t
looking for a walk, but that's
whai the Cincinnati Reds catcher
got.
Diaz walked with the · bases
loaded Sunday to send borne the
winning run as the Reds rallied to
beat San Diego 4-3.
His walk helped the Reds rally
for four runs in the sixth inning to
give lefty Tom Browning his 11th
win and move Cincinnati within 7
12 games of the Western
Division-leading Los Angeles
Dodgers, who open a three-game
series at Riverfront Stadium
Tuesday night.
He said he planned to look at a
couple of pitches, but If he fell
behind, he'd "be hacking like I
always do." Reliever Lance
McCullers never got close as
D!az walked on four straight
wide del!verles.
Actually, statistics show that
It's almost Impossible to walk

D!az. ln 274 trips to the plate this
season, he's now been walked
five times, twice Intentionally.
And his last base on balls came
June 3, 124 at-bats previous.
It was Diaz' second gamewinner of the year, with the first
coming almost three months ago,
May 151n Pittsburgh, when he hit
a sacrifice fly in the 12th inning of
a 7-6 Reds win after Cincinnati
had trailed, 5-0.
"Bo Is a free swinger. l!ke so
many Spanish hitters," Reds
manager Pete Rose said. "You
don't expect him to walk, but a
walk with the bases loaded Is as .
good as a hit. And nOJtf of those
four pitches he took were even
debatable, they were all wide. "
Ed Whitson, who had limited
the Reds two a pair of singles by
Barry Larkin in the first five
innings, had himself to blame
after walking Browning to.open
the sixth . ·
"I guess I started aiming the

Wrigley Field's first
tilt under lights tonight

CHICAGO (UP!) - Victorianstyle lamps were put up outside
Wrigley Field during the weekend , completing the arrangements for tonight's historic first
night game at the home of the
Chicago Cubs.
Harry Grossman, a 91-year-oid
Cub fan, will flip the switch to
Continued from 'p age 3
--------------------------~----- light Wrigley Field for the first
ttme. The Chicago Symphony
Ditka sold . ··r told J im he ca n be State -Fullerton, c aught fiv e
W)llte provides an added di- Orchestra will play the national
as good as he wa nts to be."
passes and returned kicks e ffec· mension because of his a bil!ty to anthem, and the ceremonial first
The Bears a lso scored on short
tl vely in Saturday night 's presea- ret urn kicks. He returned one pitch will be shared by former
'uns by Nea l Anderson a nd
son opener.
punt for 15 yards and one kickoff Cub greats Ernie Banks and Billy
rookie 'Eric Starr.
" In my situation, I have to be for 26 yards against the Jets.
Williams.
Kevin Bu tler ha d a 30-yard
Impressive every ti me out," sa id
"I'm a long shot to make the
fie ld goal at te mp t blocked and
Rick Sutcliffe Is to pitch for
McPher son, who completed 4-of team ," he said. "One thing that
backup placekicke r Tim Lashar 10 passes for 74 yards. " I was a should help Is my ability to make Chicago tonight against the Phifell trying the extra point after sixth-round pick and I have to returns . I had a couple of good ladelphia Phlllles.
the last Ch icago touchdown .
" It will be something I'll
prove I can be a quarterback and returns and It helped my confi"The kicking ga me sti nks ," can win the position."
remember
the rest of my life,
dence when I got In the game as a
Ditka said. "We didn 't do anygood or bad," said Sutcliffe. "I
Some teams wanted McPher- receiver.
th ing good on the fi eld goals. We son, who led Syracuse to an 11-0-l
just don't want an 'L' (for 'Joss')
had a lot of guys on kicking tea ms record iil his .senior se ason, to
after
my name."
TAMPA, Fla. (UP!) - Offenand I jus t hope when we have change positions, doubting he sive tackle Paul Gruber, the
The Chicago Cubs list tonightis
fewe r guys involved th ings will could be an NFL qt.oarterback.
fourth player selected in the game as the only true sellout of
get better."
"I think he's a good quarter· April NFL draft, ended a four- the season, meaning they have
The Bears defe nse had trouble
back." Philadelphia Coach week holdout Sunday by signing even sold all of the standingwith quar terback Da n Mar ino,
Buddy Ryan said. " I always a five-year contract with the room-only tickets available.
out he played only one quar ter . have. He scrambled well out Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
Fans have reportedly paid up to
Ron Jawor ski a nd Kerwin Bell there and he led the team well. "
$1,000 to scalpers for a single
completed their share of passes
McPherson likely w!ll be the
(10 of 16 co mbine d), but the
Eagles' third-string quarterback
Bears kept the Do lphins out of the
behind Randall Cunningham and
If H~ARING is your problem· and yo_u feel that
e nd zone In the second half.
Matt Cavanaugh.
"The rush Is pretty good, bu t
White Is competing a gains t
hearmg aids are priced TOO HIGH for your
we just have to do a l!ttle better several others for the fourth wide
BUDGET - then please contact us at DILES
job on coverage ," D!tka said.
receiver spot on the roster.
HEARING CENTER. We have many referral
The Bears fl ew Sunday to
' 'I felt good out there,'.' he said.
sources for assistance and you may qualify
Sweden where they w!l! pla y th e
" I think I made some good
whether you are regularly employed or not. It is
Mi nnesota Vikings in a predecisions ."
season game Aug. 14.
McPherson and White conour hope that NO ONE who can be helped should
nected on three passes fo r 50
be deprived of better hearing. Let us be your ad·
P HILADELPHIA (UP!) yards In the Eagles' 52-yard
vocate.
Don Mc Pherson and Todd White drive that ended with McPher- ·
made the Philadelphia Eagles'
CALL TOLL-FREE 1-800-237-7716
son's one-yard sneak In to the end
23-12 exhibit ion victory over the zone.
New York Jets the ir personal
"All the veterans were saying
s howcase.
It was just an exhibition game bu t
Mc Pher son, a six th-round
326 W. Union St., Athens, Ohio 46701
my Ute was hanging out there, "
draft chOice from Syracuse,
said White , who finished with five
(614) 594-3671
1-800-237-7716
scored one touchdown and di- receptions for 64 yards. " I was
rected the offense for the entire
We feature aids from: going after ever:(th!ng I could
1
second ha ff. while White, a
get,''
,;,;;I
N:,;C;;,·
_, .
seventh-round pick · from Cal

Green will...

DILES. HEARING

~~-_H_E;.;.A~R~IN~G;..;,T;.EC;,;H~N,;,;O;;,;L::;O;,:G:.;,Y.:.,,

ticket to the historic game.
The city of Chicago will provide 172 pollee officers to keep
peace In the basically residential
neighborhood , while dozens of
tow trucks will be on standby to
remove cars parked Illegally
along the residential streets.
· Cubs media director Ned Colletti has issued 560 .credentials
for the game, believed to be a
record for a regular season
major league baseball game.
The Cincinnati Reds Issued 275
passes for the 1985 game in which
Pete Rose broke Ty Cobb's
all-time hit record.

ball, " said Whitson, 10·7, who
gave up just four hits while
walking three in 5 2-3 lnnl01rs.
'This was an ugly game, and I
won't be able to relax over this
one," hl! added, obviously upset
at being removed In favor of
McCullers, who walked D!az with
the bases loaded and then was
. hurt by a 'passed ball by catcher
Benito Santiago that permitted
Eric Davis to score the fourth run
of the strange inning.
Browning, who started It all
with that walk, was forced at
second by Dave CoUins. Chris
Saba singled to left, one of two
llalls hit out of the1nfield in t))e
s!xt)t, ID send Colllns to third, and
Larkin walked to load the bases.
Davis singled to deep short to
score Collins, with Sabo taking
third. And Paul O'Neill's long
sacrifice fly to center sent Sabo
home with the tying run that
made It 2·2.
When Whitson walked Nick
Esasky to reload the sacks, the
veteran righthander was gone •
and McCullers was summoned
.from the bullpen. Four pitches
later, Dlaz walked, scoring Lar·
kin, and Santiago's passed ball
permitted Davis ID romp home to
make it 4-2.
·'I had trouble with my location ," saald Browning, 11-4, who
walked six batters and fanned
four in seven innings. "I don't
walk half that many usually, but
I n~er was comfortable out
there. I wasn' t keeping my fast
ball and slider down, but things
were falling my way today. And
we were able to take advantage
of their wildness in that sixth
inning."
"We took him out after seven
Innings because he'd thrown over
100 pitches (103, to be exact) and
it was real hot out there," Rose
explained.

,
H&amp;R Block to Offer Tax
School In This Area
Thousands of people are
learning tlie skill of income
tax preparation from H&amp;R
Block and are earning money
as Income tax preparers.
H&amp;R Block, the world's largest Income tax preparation
service, Is offering a baste Income tax course starting September 7th.
During the 13 week course,
students wm study all phases cf
Income tax preparatlon and receive actual experience In preparing Individual returns. Experienced Block Instructors .will
teach current laws, theory lind
application, as practiced in
Block ofll.ces nationwide. There
Is a classroom discussion on
each tax subject and practice
problems at every level.
Coul'!les are Pl'lllll'arnmed to
teach students lna-eas!ngly
complex tax problems as study
progresses. Students will find
the coune both ln!E!'estlng and
challenging.
Coul'!les are ideally suited for
people who want to increase

!..

their tax know ledge and learn ,
how to save money on taxes or
who are looking for a reward· r
ing career. No prerequisites :.
are required to enroll.
~
Qualified course graduates
may be offered job Interviews
for positions with Block. Many
accept employment with Block
because of 1,f!e flexible hours
available. However, Block Is
under no obligation to offer employment, nor are gradu11tes
under any obllgtion to accept
employment with H&amp;R Block.
One low course fee Includes all
textbooks, supplies and tax ·
fonns necessary.forthecompletion of the course. Certificates
and 7.5 continuing education
units will be awarded upon successful completion of the course.
Registration forms and a
IX'ochure for the Income tax
coune may be obtained by contacting H&amp;R Block office at
618 East Main Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,
614-992-6674
78-1().0636M

'•

The Daily Sentinel
Monday, August 8, 1988
Page 6

~

A vieu; of the police officer
Dear Ann Landers: I know this

LOT-0-GOLD - Klniberly and Clarlc~ Krautter of IUoC
.Jewelers In Pomeroy are shown wearln1 a gold money chain
valued al over 11 mUIIon. The chain was part of the UGI mUIIon
treasure reco:vered from the Spanish 1a11eon "Nuestra Senora De
Atocha'' which aank off tbe coast of Florida in 1822. Pictured with
the Krautters II Mel Fisher, who discovered the shipwreck and
took much of lhe sliver, gold and emerald treasure to Nashville,
Tenn., for tbe semi-annual Independent .Jewelers Organization
baying show al Opryland Hotel.

VideoView:

The evil and the dead
By Jeff Hilleary

the adults run· into giggling little
dolls that like to play rough.
Excuse the creaking door and
Written by professional writer
the hunchbacked butler, video
Ed Naha, this fUm borrows
fans but I had to borrow the
heavily from other writers for
needed props for this month's
the Ideas used In it but st!ll ranks
column so as to add the proper
as one of my favorite films for
ambience to the two journeys ·good-natured chills. DOLLS rims
that we are going to undertake.
for 77 minutes and Is rated Rand
come from Vestron.
Now let's hurry because I promised George Romero that he'd
EVIL DEAD 2 DEAD BY
have them back before his next
DAWN, however; Is one of those
gory films that may repulse you
movie.
Do you like DOLLS? Yes, I
at some points but still Is fun to
. know that I said the title in
watch for the macabre humor
employed judiciously and at the
capital letters. Because that is
the title of the movie that we are
right points with the touch of a
going to talk about for the next
true master.
'few minutes, dear fr iend. So pull
The original Evil Dead has
• up a poisonous mushroom and sit very seldom been seen but you do
down.
not need to see it to enjoy this
The story begins in the beauti- movie as due to the difficulty of
ful but storm-wracked country- finding a backer for it the film
side or England where a family of has orily been seen in Europe but
three is on the vacation of their
not here.
Jives HEH HEH! The little girl is
· Ill a lew words here Is the. plot
having to adjust to the requisite of the movie: A survivor of the
bad tempered step-mother who original movie meets new people
just so happens refuses to believe who are unaware of the horror
In magic and doesn't like other
ahead of them when they find a
women's little girls . Wonder of dusty old book and read it.
wonders. The car breaks down Suddenly her dead mother renot far from an old manor house turns as does a very mean spirit
and the trio is forced to stay the that moves faster than a speednight with not only the old couple Ing bad dream. Then It quickly
that owns the house but three becomes a case of chain · saw
other guests in the form of a man against reanimated corpses with
and his two young punk rocker blood everywhere. EVIL DEAD 2
girls who he had picked up DEAD BY DAWN Is rated R,
hitchhiking earlier.
runs for 84 minutes and is
And you want to knov.: somereleased by Veston Video.
' thing... ? The step-mother finds
Hark! There Is the rosy pink of
. out that there Is something there dawn ahead of us and It is ttme to
in that house that doesn't like· go home until the next time. So if
· mean old step-mothers either.
you will excuse me I better go to
From the point of Introduction the garage and rev up the broom
for the ride home so with a hearty
of the cast the movie becomes a
supernatural Ten Little Indians
hi ho Nightshade I'll say bye for
as one by one the girls and then
now .. .

Diaz gets first walk since June 3

a

•

By The Bend

slogan "at your service." This is Kevin Howard Dugan. I had done
sometimes hard, especially when a my best and wished him luck.
The morning the column apcharacter reminds him, "I'm a
taxpayer, I pay your salary."
pea red in print I was vacationing in
Cops get medals for saving lives, Connecticut. My office phoned to
stopping runaway horses and tell me that K~vin's mother had
shooting it out with bandits. (Some- . read the column and was trying io
times his widow gets the medal.) But reach me. She does indeed live in
the most rewarding moment comes Blue Point, N.Y., but had been
when, after some small kindness to widowed and remarried. Her name
an older person, he feels a warm is now Mrs. Anne Dugan Brown.
In a wonderfully excited voice,
hand clasp, looks into grateful eyes
and hears. "Thank you and God Anne Brown told me that she was
bless you, son."
still in bed when phone calls about
Take charge ofyour life and turn it the column started to come in.
around! Write {or Ann Landers' new Within half an hour she had heard
boolclet, "How to Make Friends and from people in three states.
Stop Being Lonely." Send a check or
Anne and [ spoke for a long time.
She has a son, Terry, 10 years older
money order for $3.50 and a self-ad· than Kevin. Terry, like Kevin, is
drwed, stamped, business-size enve- 6-(oot-5 and both boys loved to
lope (45 cents postage) to Ann Land· play basketball. Anne also has three
ers, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, Ill. daughters, 14 grandchildren and
60611.()562.
two great-grands.
The missing link was Gil Noble.
DEAR READERS: Rememlrr Gil But not for long. Terry Dugan got
Noble from Vista, Calif., the Army · Noble's phone number from infor·
lieutenant who asked me to help mation in Vista, Calif., and called
him find the parents of Kevin him up. He ran into Gil Noble's
Howard Dugan, an enlisted man answering machine. Noble, now a
who once served under Noble in business teacher, and his family
Vietnam? Noble had just been to were vacationing in Hawaii. But a
the Vietnam Memorial in Washing· neighbo r of Gil's was checking the
ton, and his fears about what had machine periodically and relaying
become of Dugan were cOnfirmed the messages. Within hours Terry
wheh he saw Dugan's name. He Dugan received a call from Noble;
wanted to let Kevin's folks know friends in Vista had seen the paper

piea! (by Conrad S. jensen) is Ions.
but I hope you think it's worth
printing. I came acr05S it a while
back and thought it was some!hing
a lot of people should xe.
My husband recently retired af·
ter 34 years on the police force. I
feel very fortunate that he retired in
one piece, but now my son is on the
force - more gray hairs. - MRS.
W.G.. EAST NORlHPORT, N.Y.
DEAR MRS. G.: This heartwarm·
ins essay paints a truly realistic
picture of some genuine heroes. It's
sure to be dipped by thousands of
readers who love a policeman. Here
it is:
WHATISACOP'I
Cops are human (believe it or
not), just like the rest of us. They
come in both sexes and in all siZes.
Cops are found everywhere. On
land, on the sea, in the air, on
horses, in cars, sometimes in your
hair. In spite of the fact that "you
can't find one when you want one,"
they are usually there when it
counts most. The besl way to get
one is to pick up the phone.
Cops deliver lectures. babies and
bad news. They are required to
have the wisdom of Solomon, the
disposition of a lamb and muscleS
of steel. They are the ones who ring
the doorbell, swallow hard and tell
you that a loved one is dead. They
then spend the rest of the night
wondering why they took such a
crummy job.
On TV a cop is an oaf who
couldn't find a bull fiddle in a
phone booth. In real life he is
expected to find a blond boy "about
so high" in a crowd of half a
million people .. In fiction he gets
help from private eyeS, reporters
and "whodunit fans.'' In real life
most of what he gets from the
·
public is "lclidn't see nuttin'."
If he serves a summons, he's a
monster. If he lets you go, he's a
doll. To little kids, he's either a
friend or a bogeyman, depending
on how their parents feel about it.
He works around the dock, split
shifts, Sundays and holidays.
When a cop is ROOd, "He's getting
· paid for it." When he makes a
mistake, "He's a jerk, and that goes
for the rest of them, too." When he
shoots a stick-up man, he's a hero,
except when the stick-up man is
"only a kid, anybody coullfa 'seen
that."
Many of them have homes; Some
of them are covered with ivy, but
most of them are covered with
mortgages. If he drives a big car,
he's on the take. If he drives a little
car, "Who's he kidding?"
A cop sees more misery, blood·
shed and grief than almost anyone
else. His uniform changes with the
weather, but his outlook on life
remains about the same, mostly
upbeat and optimistic, hoping for a
better world.
Cops like days off, vacations and
coffee. They don't like auto horns,
family fights and anonymous leiters. They have unions, but they
can't strike. They must be impartial
and couneous and remember the

Ann
Landers

_..._...
__
"NNIANDE.I8e

c...olan!tt-

.

and at least 20 excited pals had
called to alen him to Ann Landers'
column .
What excitement! Noble got
Anne Brown's phone number and
called her from Hawaii. Everyone
was thrilled that the lieutenant had
at long last located Kevin Dugan's
mother. I confess that I was as
thrilled as anybody.
What a privilege to have been
able to brighten the jjfe of this
lovely woman, whose handsome
son had been cut down at such a
tender age. And I made the lieuten·
ant happy, too. "He was walking on
air," Anne told me. "We exchanged
addresses and telephone numbers
and I'm sure we ·will get together
one day."
Stories like this one validate the
soodness of people. It proves what I
have known for a very long time that most folks are pretty darned
OK and if given the opponunity,
they can be downright wonderful.

that their son was one of the nicest r~========~;:~~~==========~
guys he had ever ~ - competent,
admired and respected by all the
men he served with.
A great many people write and
ask me to help locate sons, daugh·
ters, sweethearts, first-grade teach· .
ers and college roommates. I respectfully decline, explaining that
this is not what the eolumn is for.
But this request was different.
Here was an officer who wanted to
tell the parents of a soldier who was
killed when he was only 20 what a
wonderful guy he was. I simply
couldn't pass up the opponunity to
bring some pleasure to a family that
had suffered such a devastating loss.
KARL A. KElLER Ill, CPA
I printed Lt. Gil Noble's letter
and told him that I had phoned the
long-distance operator and ob·
tained the numbers of several
Dugans in the area of Blue Point,
N.Y., which Noble remembered as
618 East Main Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
the young man's home, but none
were related to nor did they know a

COMPLETE PAYROLL
PROCESSING AND
PAYROLL CHECK
WRITING.

KElLER BUSINESS SERVICES
992-7270

Community Calenr./4r
•

MONDAY
PT. PLEASANT - Gallipolis
and Letart Flame Fellowship
chapters picnic is Monday, 6
p .m., Krodel Park; meeting 7
p.m. , speaker Adrienne J _
Buckley.
PT. PLEASANT - Oogging
.- Class begins at the Pt.Pleasant
Senior Citizen Center; donation
. to Meals on Wheels; sponsored
by the Mason County Community
Action.
SYRACUSE - London Pool
will offer junior life saving
classes beginning Monday at 10
a.m. and 12 noon; cost Is $15 plus
book. To register contact the
pool, 992-9909 or Hel!dl Cobb at
992-3402.
RACINE - Southern Junior
High School football signup, 7
p.m. Monday at the Southern
Junior High building.

lean Veteran·s and Its Ladles a.m. to 12 noon at HarrlsonvUie
Auxiliary will hold their annual Town Hall, sponsored by Harripicnic at the Roadside Park, sonville Senior auzens Club. ,
southbound on Route 33, south of
Darwin at 6 p.m . Monday . Those
EASTMEIGS-EasternLocal
attending are to take a covered Band Boosters, Tuesday, 7 p.m.
dish.
In the high school band room.
PORTLAND
Vacation
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
church school at The Reorgan· Chamber of Commerce regular
!zed Church of Jesus Christ of meeting 12 noon Tuesday at
Latter Day Saints (beside the Trinity Church.
Lebanon Township Garage)
Monday through Friday from 6 to
8: 30 p.m. for ages three through
16. Nozi, the puppet, and his five
friends will be an attraction of •--~.----------:-.--1
the school.
----------------

1

1
SYRACUSE ...,: There will not

---

M.D~

Inc.

VETERANS .MORIAL HOSPITAL ,

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
"WE IIA~E HEARING AIDS''
CALL (614) 992-2104
(304) 675~1244

Tuesday, August 30, 1988
.

Reserve Your Advertising
Space Todayll!

TUESDAY
HARRISONVILLE Free
blood pressure clinic Tuesday, 10

JOHN A. WADE,

"

I

be a meeting of the Meigs County
Board of Mental Retardation
Monday, Aug. 8. The meetings
will resume on the second Monday of each month starting In
September.
'

POMEROY - Disabled Amer-

LADY RACHEL'S .
PAUl READING

A Special Edition
In The Daily Sentinel

Tells Past, Present and
Future - Gives Advice
on Love, Marriage and
Busina•.

PHO~E 992-215:6

HYouAnl. JIPY 111111
D•'t lnew WlllciiWay Te

.ASK FOR BRIAN Oll DAVE

, ..... c- "' ,., .,. OM Ylllt n C•na You

ADVERTISING DEADLINE IS
MONDAY, AUGUST 22, 1988

,... l1 A leH1r Way.

1510 OFf With 1111s Ad

614-594-3310

301

w..t lhllon St.

........ Ohio

1'I1

.,.

�'

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

- · - - 'I'

- •

. ... - ,.

' -

~ ~

....

..

.. • 'F'f

Monday, August 8. 1988

Pomeroy-Micklaport. Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Breast cancer linked to drinking, researcherS say
WASHINGTON &lt;UP!) - Alcohol consumption and the risk of
breast cancer appear strongly
linked, Harvard publiC health
researchers said Thursday . estimating up to 13 percent o! U.S.
breast cancer cases might be
attributed to drinking.
In the most comprehensive
study to date on drinking and
breast cancer, Harvard School of
Public health researchers pooled
the results of 16 previous studies
and found " strong evidence"
that as alcohol copsumptlon
Increases so does the risk of
breast cancer.

The Harvard team examined
both "case-control" studies, In
which past drinking habits of
women with breast cancer were
compared with cancer-free con·
trois, and "loUow-up" studies, in
which drinking bablts of large
groups of women were recorded
and the women tracked to see
who developed breast cancer.
Based on case-control data,
researchers calculated women
who consumed 1 ounce of alcohol
- or about two drinks -per day
had a 40 percent greater risk of
contracting breast cancer than
non-drinkers.

Dr. Matthew Longnecker, who
directed the survey, cautioned
that the findings do not prove that
alcohol causes breast cancer.
"There may be some factor
that results In both a tendency to
drink alcohol and a tendency to
develop breast cancer," the
researchers wrote In the Journal
of the American Medical
Association.
The American Cancer Society
says about one of 11 American
women will develop breast
cancer during her life, with a
family history o! breast cancer
the biggest risk factor .

,.

Others said the trauma toll
By JANE SUTI'ON
jumps
when daylight savings
United Pres• lnleraa&amp;loaal
School is out, the summer days dmebegins.
are long and sunny and the
"It's like somebody flips a
hospital emergency rooms are
filling up with children. It Is July, switch and the number of kids
midway through the accident who come through \he emerand Injury-prone period doctors gency 'room goes up, " sald David
Lockwood, assistant director o!
refer to as .. trauma season. "
It can be a fatal season. the Kiwanis Pediatric Trauma
StatistiCs show more children die Institute In Boston.
"From late spring to early fall,
from accidental Injuries than
from all diseases combined. we hit the trauama season, when
Federal safety experts say one warm weather, long days and
out of every four children under more activity result -in more
14 will suffer an accidental Injury childhood Injuries and deaths."
The Safe Kids Campaign, orserious enough to require medi·
cal attention thts year, and ganiZed by a coalition of governchances are It will happen ment, medical and social agen·
cles, has launched a five-year
between June and September.
"When school ends and sche- · campaign aiined at reducing the
du Jes begin to loosen, superviSion toll.
usually loosens and the number
Last year nearlY 8,000 child rei\
of Injuries soars. During the under 14 were kUled in accidents
school season, It's Friday after- and 50,000 were permanently
noon at 3, or any day about the disabled.
The safety coalition wants
time when school gets out that
you see the children in the parents to change their thinking
emergency room," said Nancy about childhood Injuries, to view
Reder, assistant director of the them as "predictable and pre·
natiOnal Safe Kids Campaign. ventable Injuries," not as "acci·
"During the summer, any lime Is dents'' that just happen.
fair game and they come pouring
A national Safe Kids survey of
ii1."
parents with children under 14
In Miami, for example, 839 showed most are willing to do
children were taken to hospitals more to protect their children,
with trauma Injuries inl987, lora but they misunderstand what
monthly average of about 70. But poses the greatest threat. Consethe monthly rate varied from 44 quently, they are least prepared
for the dangers that are most
in February to 90 In August.
Dr. Ellen Fine, who complies common.
Miami trauma statistics, noted
Asked what concerned them
that much of the August jump most about their children, 43
was attributed to children In· percent of the parents surveyed
jured In auto accidents.
Illegal kidnapping.
drugs and 37
"It's vacation time," Fine volunteered
percent mentioned
said.
Only 21 percen!~_lsted traffic

~

who also have a low risk of heart
dlsase are among those types of
women who may want to consider decreasing alcohollntake,"
Longnecker said.
Dr. Susan Chu, of the Centers
for Disease Control In Atlanta,
·said a "control case" study she
conducted of 3,252 women with
breast cancer found no Increased
risk of such cancer from
drinking.
"In my opinion, with exls ling
data, it Is far too early to make
strong recommendations for
most women to stop drinking,"
she said.

POMEROY - B~mobile
Schedule • Week of August 8-12,
Bookmobile Service Is provided
ln Meigs County by the Meigs
County Public Library under
contract with the Ohio Valley
Area Libraries (OVAL).
Monday - Dexter, 3:15-3:45
p.m.; DanvUie (Church), 4:15-

4: 45 p.m.; Rutland (Civic Center), 5:15·5:45 p.m.
·
Tuesday -New Lima Road (1
Mi S. Ft. Meigs) . 3: 00-3: 30 p.m.;
Portland (Post Office), 4:15-4:45
p.m.; ·Letart Falls (Effie's Res·
taurant), 5:15-6:00 p.m.; Racine·
(Bank), 6:45-7:45 p.m; Syracuse
(Ball Field), 8: 00-8:45 p.m.

___
.........
. -..·--··
1 G&lt;U'I
10111'11

UIAI'II
ltllo\..

&amp;

Dr. Edward Ayers
Pediatrics and Internal Medicine

announce the opening of their practice
at
·
Pleasant Valley Hospital · ·
Suite 12

~' .~~:~

.

,.(

Forappotnbnentscall(304)675-6015
Walk-Ins Welcome

na.•

• ·•
Ull.ll

.__... t»..

'fiiOiifl'll

rr •

... . .

ttt.•

tar.•

-..

Oil ..

-·

=-~·

::-::a.

t::"C:·. :

Public Notice

Public

Public Notice

on 1he aouth. .l corner of 1

9.8 ocretroct all and deeded
of from
John McCoy to An:lllo
Johnle C. Don-. I. Whole
lllt _ _ _ loRoute2, Let. recorded In Dood Book
.... 3711, ...... Pl-.nt, Welt No. 239, Pogo 7&amp;3, DNd
Vlrglnilo 211110, ha boon ord- Recordo of Moigo County,
Ohio; thence - t 346. BB
- t o - or pleod by Oc· fait;
thence North 13.9
1B, 1988, U&gt;acompllint
tied in Civl Ac:tiot&gt;No. C2-88- fMt. the piece of beginning

r

541 .09-Ethnic

and

WHEREAS • t he co dillcotlon of •uch ordlnan-.
together with the new mottor ·
to be odloptod, the mettero
to be amended and tholt to
be r-'ed 1 ,. beforo the
Council: now, therefore:
Be It ordained by the
Council of the Village of
Middleport 81 toflowa:

Monroe.

areu.

Washington

Counti01, Ohio, on lectlon
ATH-13·0.00 on State Route
13 in Athena County, Ohio
and vorlouo rout• and ope·
tiona In A.,_ GaMia Hoik·
lng. Molgo. Monroe. Morgon,
Nobla Vinton and W•hlngron
Counlill. bv p-ming. bol
bank otudy and CUMI lnvontory.

Project length: 0.00 feet
or 0.00 mile; Work Length:
Varloua

feet

or Various

mil•: Pavement Width: Yo-

riM,
"The date Jet for compt•
tlon of thlo work aholl be ao

intimide-

requ ir•

permloolon and notice to
SECTION 1. The ordln· open burn. reotrlcts bonfireo ·Director.
anooo of the VMiaga of Mid- and outdoor rubblo h fireo,
The Director raaervt~~~ the
dloport. Ohio, of 1 aon•ol and provkleo e ponelty for , right to reject eny and oil
bido.
·
and porman•t notuN, 01 r• vlolltlona.
vlood. recodified. r-rangod
SECTION IV. Thia Ordl·
BERNARD B. HURST,
and cono-Id Into oom- nanco ohell teko effect and
DIRECTOR
ponant - · tltlea, chept- be In forca from end after the (8)B. 11
ora and -lont within the "rflt1t dOlo provided by
Public Notice
11B8 Repl-rnarot.Peg• to !op~ued thlo ~Bth d- of
the Coolllod Ordlnan011
..
-•
.,. horeb¥ -owd and July.1888.
adotllod.
AttOit: JonCPio. Bkuck,
NOTICE OF REQUEST
FOR INFORMAL BIDS
BICTION II. The fallow·
r
1ng Hct1on1 ond chaptero
Dewey
Horton
MEIGI COIINTV
. Pr•ldont
ol Council
COMMISIIONI;R' !;Q!g
era horaby oddod. amandod (B) B, 11, 2tc
FORMULA GRANT
or npoalod • ,.poctlvaly F-.:......C-::-7-:::-:-:--:--- VILLAGE
OF BYAACUSE
Indlcettd In ordOf to comply
Public
ice
LONDON SWIMMING
. with currMt Stile law:
Traffic Code
POOL EXPANSION
NOTICE TO
The County of Malgo 1o •
311.42-Uttorlng from mo·
rooitolent of HUD Coriununtor vehicle. (Enacted)
CONTRACTORS
ity DovaloPII*M lloall Goant
333.03-BIIMCI UmMa.
STATE OF OHIO
!undo -rdod by the Ohio
lA-ded)
DEPAIITMI!NT OF
'338.011-Q......Ian. ule
TAANBPORTATION
Depart- of o.. •IDpmom
without Celtlflcato of tltlo.
Cotumbllo. Ohio
'for the VII• of IY~MUeoto
. (Aon.ldedt
.
July Zl. 1188
...... - enl•aa aon•eta
m•onry deak and oheln 11n1t
Contract Batao
337.01-Dioptay of "-••
ten• - o f london Bwfm.
"'-· 11!-dedl
L.aaal Copy No. 81-118
33'7. 1G-IJ01ot on llow·
UNl'r PRICE CONTRACT mlrrg Pool.
........,.vehlal•.
Beoled propooalo wit bo
The -~~~ Countv ComlAmondetll
-.c1 It the offlco of the mloolo-. hevo tletermlnod
337.21-Chld r-nt
Director of the Ohio Dopart·
-·of
the Ohio toAaviMcl
Code
ov-.n. (A-dedi
mont ofTrtnoportltion. Coi- -ding
lor
oontnlcta
loll
then
337.27-Seet belto.
umi&gt;uo. Ohio, untl 10:00 A.
(Amended)
M.. Ohio Stonderd Time. •1 0.000.00. the County w•
Ganerll Offen•• Code • Tuaoday, Auguot 23. 1988. dlo- with OUIIOmlry od105.01-Anlmalo Nnnlng for lmprovomonto In: Ath· VIItlolng .,d enter Into lnfor.
I

poool."

Each bidder shall be re-

to thanli Dr. Isom Wabr

for his many Y•IS of
care. Dr. Whiteley, for his
SIIYice end 1111 nnifll
petSOnnel of 5-E at Holzer
Medical Center. Rev. Don
Archer for his COIISOiifll
worils. Ewi111 Funeral
H01111 and the pallbea r·

en. Special thlrts to the
•

Ladies Auxilial)' and the
Chestlr United lllbodist
Women.
'Clarice, Cl•yton, Bill,
Karen. Katie and
Bobby.

to

FIREWOOD

TAPE

lol ............... old Mow ..
&amp; Ill.. anr to ••Y VHS.

OAK, LOCUST, CHEIIRV
$35 PER LOAD DEliVEIBI

or 101'5 RUTIONICS

BIU SLACK

CAll AMY UIITER

One of the Blndlto's
strikes apin at Dale's at
the age of '34'.
.

992~2269

1·1-'IIS-

_Signor Everett
Signorip MonzeHia
·
Family &amp; Friends

'

~

4

CUSTOM BUILT
PRE-FAB
ROOF TRUSSES

BAUM
LUMBER
CHESTER

986-3301

mol bidding. Such bido wil
be btood on the low•t and

7-6-88-1 mo.

re~erve

the

right to ,wolve all bido for

Plena. specification~, and
locatton of the project are

E. Main

available for inspection at
thll Meiga County Court·

POMEROY, 0.
992·2259

house, Comminioner'a Of·

floo,

Ho~tener.

thrH t 31 trade references.
Forms muat be returned to

the Meitfl County Commio·

sionera, Courthouu, Pom•·

roy. Ohio 45719, In a tooled
envelope not fetor than 2:00
P.M .. Auguet 24, 1118B.
Controotor(ol wtlt be ••·
lectod beood on experience,
troda rtf8fan-. abDity to
complete ,.olect on-tlmo
and on-budget, ond toto!
COlt
01tlmat01. Approxlmete atartlng date for con·
11ructlon wMI be BeptOJnbtr
e. 1988. wMh completion
expected wHhln lour 14)
weeks .

Tho Moigo County Commllolonero, and Vlllege of

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SloiNG
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

608

whltav• cauee det•mined.

Pomeroy, Ohio - Mary
Clark. and Syracuoo Vlllego Hall, Third
Str-. Syrecuoo, Ohio Janice l.awoon, Clerk, btl·
weonthehouroof9:00A.M .
and 4:00 P.M.. Mondoy
through Friday. AU hlrod
labor mull be paid Davia·

HARRISONVILLE- Modern ranch home on .67 acres, level
lot. Exc~lent condrtion w/ 3 bedrooms, bright sunny
krtchen-dining. This home has qualified for FMHA financing
- Callloo details. $39,500.00.
LONG BOTTOM - SR 248 - 2 acres of land with all hook·
ups on sile. Electric, seploc tank, phone and well. Ready to be
moved on to. ONLY 17,300.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Excellent location' 2 story home located
near park &amp; pool! 2-3 bdrms .. original woodwork. new siding.
fireplace and much more! Call lor your showing' ASKING
$32,500.00.
RUTLAND- Nice ranch home w/3 bedrooms, equipped
kitchen and c~se to schools. Can assume loan of
$25,000.00. at 9'4'li lor 20 yrs., approx. $287.00/monthP&amp;l &amp; 1&amp;1, $4,500.00 down or owner will help finance.
$29,900.00.
MIDDLEPORT- 2 apartment unils in Iown. Needs some re·
pairs. Has much potential. Nice neighborhood . ONLY
$9,900.00.
VANCE ROAD - FARM! If country living appears-to you,
lhen this farm wlappoox. 50 acres of land should draw your
attention. Completely remodeled 3·4 bedroom house. New
drywall throughout, new carpeting. insulated steel doors.
Large country kitchen, footed bath tub, many other neat lea·
lures! Barn, sheri. $37,900.00.
POMEROY- Approx.27 acres of vacant ground, close to Po·
meroy. Beautiful building srte for a special home.
$16,500.00.
.
HENRY E. CLEUND, JR ... ............ .................. 992·6191
JEAIITRUSSEU.. ,......... .................................949-2660
DOTTIE TURNER ............. ............................... 992-5692
TRACY RIFFLE .................._.............................949-2107
JO HILL ........................................................ 985-4466
OFFICE ......................................................... 992·2259

Syreoun, are equet oppor·

I CALL THE

employero.
Moigo County
Commloalonero
Courthou01
. Pomeroy, Ohio 41718
tBl a. 1to
'

tunlty

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
lllew " - luUf
•'l'r10 Eotimatea' •

PH•.949·2101
or Its. 949-2860
NO SUNDAY CAW

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. 124, P-oy Ohio

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Tr..aMIIIIOft
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
6-17-lfc

VAUQ.HN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERYKE
SYRACUSE, OHIO
Mall Foreign and
Domaotlc Vehid•
A/C Sorvlct
All Mojor • Minor
Repeiro
NIASE Conlllod Mechanic

Follow

Signs
on Bashan Rd.

PH. 949-2168
7'!-'11·1 .... "'

~

z
-

-FIR ESTIIIATIS-·

614-742-2617
lalw•n 9 a.m.-6 p.m.
or Locva Mltsaao

2-1~'88 · 1fn

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
992-6282

"DOC" VAUGHN

Middleport, Ohio

Certified Ucenoed Shop
25·tfn
'

1-28-'88-tfn

llow•dLWrltltll

YOUNG'S

ROOFING

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Gutter Cleaning

Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

7-14-'11-1 ma. pd.

-Addons 1nd r•• adllinll
-Roofing .nd guH• work
-Conaolte work
A
-PiumtMng .nd llectriGIII
-k

!FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-7314

Ride Pe~nan Auctlo,_, licenetd Ohio .nd w.t Vfrglnl1.
Et11te. 1ntlqut, f•m. llqukl.tlon .-1•. 304-713-57815.

NURSING ASSISTANTS Pr-

eent Vlllert Nurwlna c-eCanter
lo hWina highly m-od • .

.....r• ..,..... .......,. ...

si.-nta. ApoliCiftts rnu It be

wiling to wort. .. 1htft1. tf
inW..-c:l c ..l pe~ affi•
304-171-4340. P I - Volt.,
1\knolng Cou Conltr loan Equal
Opportunity &amp; affirmative
omployor.

HELP WAN'I£0: Rooldant Core
Coordinator, Pl ....nt v.u..,
9 . Wanted To Buy
Nurtint C.reC.n., II•IFC:hlng'
loran •perl..-.nden•v•Uc
WepeycMhforletemodet dMn . reglt-.d nun~ to ... umt tM
M~~Vt¥' cre~Md poeldon of I'H~
uled cart.
dint c.. cootdirurt:or.
Jim Mink Ch•.-Oidllnc.
-.topment qu1Uty MIU,..Ot
Bill Gene John10r1
•ptrlenollt ,.quiNd. The kfHI
I 14-44&amp;-3172
c.-.dic:llle thoukl h_. 2 to 3
TOP CASH pold for '83 modol "'"'
.. &lt;lorlotrle.
end OIW• UMd c... Smith • ..,1_ w+th Gerenteloglcal
c.rtlfle8tk»n
. H you •re lntierBulc:k·Pontlac, 1 91 1 Elltern
Avo .. Golllpollo. Call 614-441- Nted and ,_.., to mtkt a
clff.,.,..ce w. 10rneo,.. Iff• cal
2282.
Pertonnel Office. 104-t75Complete houllhoklt of furnl- 4340. 'PVNCC 1o on equal
opportunity. olfinnatlw ICiion
tan &amp; antiq\IM. Al1o wood •
coal t..t••· Sw•ln't Furnttu .. emp.,.,_..

...fl
au,..,....

Auction. Third • Olivo,
14-446-3159.

W.nfed. Mlnia1:un or Toy newv

8487.

Poodle, Call 114-381-

Buytng daly gold, altver colna.
rlnga, Jewelry, sterling were. old
colno. Iorge cu.,.ncy. TOp priCII. Ed Burkett B.lrber Shop,
2nd. Ave. Middl..,ort. Oli. 114-

SPECIAl

125.00 Perm
For '21 00
Cut &amp; blow Dry
1850
NOW THRU SEPT. 3

PAT HILL FORD

169N.2nd
Middleport, Oh.
992-2726

992-3478.

Qulllo

Cash Plid lor entku• or IWW
quiHo. Appllquo. pl-. any
condition. Call 814-992·1157.
1070Winted to buy: wm buy
•tanding timber. 304-1755328.

1-.-..

Htc*'t OttMrtment MM~gtf:
oport goodo •
wo{•
hou•. Minimum 2· yeMt ex ...
rltnce. Oppomfttial far adwnatrMnt. EllliCelltnt beneflll.
Cllll lor appolnt"*ll. 304-875-

M iddteport. Ohio
1·13-lfc

Ambiliuu1. retponalble p.-abn
ct.lrtt 1 potftk)n in •creitri..wOf'd pi'OCIIIIng ar... Hive
•ctllent nlning In IYIIIno.
_
shorthlnd. cumputer, bullneis
mgnt.• filing. butln811 communlcltionsend office procedures.

Call114-843-5416.

13

Insurance

Clll Ul for VOlJr mobile honw
Insurance: Mill., Insurance,
304-182-2141. Also: ano,
home. lfe. health.

15

Schools
lnstru ction

FIIIIJIIIVIIIt:ill
Sr:rv1t:1:o

KAY'S BEAUTY
SALON

992-2196

11
'·

Help Wanted

7120/IIS-Imo.

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR
Aulhorizotl Sorvito
&amp; Parll
Briggs • Stratton
Tecumaeh
Weed Eater

Homelllo

Ja~•en

Middleport, Oklo

3-l0-'17 Un

WANTED

DEAD OR AUYE

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949·2969
Dealer for
YAIDMAN &amp; ECHO

•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •F reezers
•Refrigerators
"Mvsl Be Repairable"

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE ·
985-3561

located Hallway b•

tween. Rt. 7 &amp;: Bahan.

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
Strvi&lt;e Co~ter far Ryan
Produds

We Service ~J\,~,~~:~

8 . 7 Financing on Yardmen

Service on All Mokao
Wo Honor Mc:/Dis&lt;/Visa

4-11-'R lin

FEDERAL. STATE AND CIVIL Y•d c•e. brulh cutting. light
SERVICE JOBS ·
Now Hiring . Your Area. hading. .amet,..trimming ind
113.650 to 169,480. lmme- rtrnD\111. BUI Slack 114-992·
cMate Openings. C.ll 1-315- 2289 evenings.
733-1062. .... #F27158.
S.bf.m.r . after school. CloM
to Ordn.,.u.. Monct.t-Friday
HULlERS/COLLECTORS lor onlY.
304-871-1058.
BLACK WALNUTS. Equl[&gt;ment
oupplod. SION upTODAYI Coli
Don II INDIANA WALNUT
PRODUCTS. INC. 317·483Fin~nc1ol
4040.

FM Uf(

INSURANCE call:

EFFWARNER
02 Weot 2nd St.
omoroy, Ohio
92-6479

SALES &amp; SERVICE

For any of Ihose sorvlm &lt;all

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

born

BACK TO SCHOOl
51UDENT ONlY

SERVICE

NO SUNDAY CALLS

WANT TO IUY WIICIED Ol
JUNI CAIS Ol TIUCIS

B

w.,t ta buy: Used furnltun~ and
antkluls. Will buy entire houae·
hold fur,_s,.ng. ,._lin Wec»-

We can r~ir and re·
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
olso acid boil and rod
ou1 radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

Day or Night

•Dozer • Backhoe Work
•Will Do Hauling With
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard BusinHI

,mlld'o pe1. R-d. Cell 114317-04113 or 441-11811.

•

·
or at
Veterans Memorial Hn•:nitol
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

PlUMBING &amp;
168 North S~eond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

AVON • All ar.... Call Marltyn
We- 304-I82-2Uii.

I

(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992-2104
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

"At Rea1011ablt Pri&lt;u"

PH. 949-2801
or les. 949-2160

On WhMoOok
biD part
O.ow pup.Rd.·o
8 yr.pu,.
old

m-. 814-245-5152.
·
18!)0.
Junk ea,. wtth or wtthout
motoro. Call I.Mry Uvoly-61 4- AVON. All.,.., Shlri.,Spoolo.
304-8711-1429.
:.
386-9301
Furnftu .. end •pPIIance~ by 1he 12
Situations
piece or entire houllhold. Fair
. ·' · Television listening Devices
prlooo being poi d. Clll614-446Wanted
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Servic4 3158.
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages
Wanted to BYV Stlnclrlg timber Lact,o to ~•in there expeniM.
CJ
• pulp wood. Call 114-367· No
drinking. No drug~ . No
7519.
parties . Contact:Bo11 721
~ LISA M. KOCH. M.S.
, Rio Or1nde. Ohio
Uood Mobile Ho.,.. Call 814- A.O.C.
a: Licensed Clinical Audiologist
48874.
441-0176.

CUSTOM BUllT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

319 So. 2nd Ave.

Downapouta

J•

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CAU 992-6756 ·

lEW -REPAII

I -~

1

8-8-1 mo. pd.

986-4141

992-6611

NEASE HOUOW RD.
GUNS- AMMO
GUITARS
STRINGS

11 Halp Wanted

GENERAL CONTRACTORS
References
7t 22t 1 mo.

GUN SHOP

3-ll·IIR

Guttera

.

985-4487

CHESTER. OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
.•KITCHENS ·BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS
PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

RACINE

lormod. The Malgo County

Commillionwa

SAND-GRAVEL
LIMESTONE
FILL DIRT

MARCUM CONTRACTING

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

belt co.t lOr work to be per·

-

(

tin

·Happy Birthday

r ======~~~~:::::::::
Real Estate General

oat forth In tho bidding propaul."
Bacon prevailing wag• for
Each bidder aholl be re- Molgo County.
quired to fila with his bid o
Either a Performance Bond
certified chock or caohier'a for 100% of tho contract
check for an amount equal price. or Payment Bond on
to live P"' cent of hlo bid, but the pert ol the Controctor for
in no event more than fifty
100% of the comrect price,
thouund dollaro. or a bond wHI be required wHh the In·
for ten per cent of hi• bid. formal bid.
payable to the Director.
Qualified maoonry con·
Bldd8fo muet apply, on the tractora must complete,
proper formo, for quollflca· along with fendng contractlon at • - ton deyo prior to toro. the "Roqu01t for Quothe dlto Mt for opening bldo tation.. form available at
In eccordenco wMh Chapter tho Commloolonor' o Office.
6128 Ohio Revlood Code.
Contractors muat prepere a
Plano and opeclllcatlono MCOnd page giving a brief
art on fllaln the Doportmont history of their experience,
pf Trana'portlltlon and the of- id"'!tily tho paot thrM 13)
flee of the Dlotrlct Deputy jobs performed. and provide

tlon. !Enoctodl
649.01-Weapon'a defini·
tion1. (Amended)
SECTION Ill. Choptor
1611 of the Fire Prevention
Coda entHied Open Burning
lo hereby omanded. Such
chapter ooto daflnitlona, eota
the rolotlonohlp of the chop·
tor to other prohlbMiono.
prohibita open burning In
rMtricted

Morpn. Noble,
and

171 11. 18, 26; .
181 1 , B. 15. 6tc

"The dlto 111 lor completion of this work ahell be u
set forth In the bidding pro--

ness

675-3157

Vinton

"LET GEORGE
DO IT"
HAULING

nin•-

COMPLETE JEWELRY AND
WATCH REPAIR DEPT.

ono, Gollla, Hoclclng, Moigo,

COun..W for Plaintiff

mile.

--=:-::-::--:-:--:---1 qulred to fila with hlo bid a
Public Notice
certllfed checlc or ceohier'o
---------1
check for an amount equal
for thil description; ttw,nce
Ia five per - 1 ol his bid, but
NOTICE
TO
0560 '" '"" Unittod fltal• South 78 dog. 11' W•t 100
In no event more thin fifty
CONTRACTORS
Diotnct Court for lhe Soul,_,
thouund
dollero. or a bond
foot:
thence
North
5
dog.
STATE OF OHIO
IJISirict ol Ohio. Eoot.., DM·
for ten per cent of his bid,
DEPARTMeNT OF
'.iion, Unhat StMM of Am•- 24' - t 83 feet; thef'ICa
payable to the Director.
TRANSPORTATION
ie!!l. Plai111itf. vs. .JohnleC. Do- north 87 dog. 11' Eaot 100
Blddor•mullepply, on the
· Columbuo. Ohio
' •nht te II. 11 el.. Def.,dint.. 1 - thenoo Bouth B dog.
proper
forma. for q~alifica·
24'
Eaot
83
feet
to
the
piece•
July 29, 19BB
pray "'II ·tor foredootro of a
tkJn at leal ten deya prior to
Contract Sal• ..
mongege deed rC~Grded in of beginning. conU!Inlng 18
the dote 111 for o-ing bido
mote or l•a.
Legal Copy No. 88-169
Volume 15&amp;. Pot~t 311 ol the ecr•.
in 1ccordlnce with Chapter
The lbovt dtlcrlpllon woo
UNIT
PRICE
C.
O
NTRACT
mortvlll e •ooordo of Malgo lumlohod
Ohio Rovlood Code.
by
Homer
Hyoall,
Sealed propooalo wHI be 6626
County. Oilio, whldl mort• Regloterod Surveyor No.
Plana
opoclflcatlono
received 01 the office of the are on fileand
gogo dlod io • ii• ....... tul- 2274.
I• the Department
Director of the Ohio Depart· of Tranapartation and the of·
lowing descr~bed r11l prop.
PROPERTY AODRESI:
ment afTran~portation. Col· flee
~rty situated in the State-of
of the Diotrict Deputy
Syracuoo.
Ohio
41779
umbuo, Ohio, untR 10:00A. Diroclor.
Ohio and described •• fol~
Failure to r•poncl to the
M.. Ohio Standard Time.
lows. to wh:
'
The Director reserves the
Tueodey,
August 23, 1988, right
The following real ett8te. complaint wll .-It In an
to reject any and all
Entry
of
Otfault,
Judgment
for Improvements In:
being in Syf8ClJM vm-.. ••
bldo.
Parta 1 thru 19 inctuaive
and in 100 Acre lot No. and Deer• in forecloaure,
BERNARD B. HURST,
295.
Sunon Township, sate of thll mortpaed prop- are offered as one con1r11ct
DIRECTOR
erty and extinguilhment of and wHI be .conoldtrod on
M ~ 1gs r. ountv. Ohio, and da(81
B.
16
olllntaraotoln
ooid
property.
tho bello of the totelomount
ocribed II foiiO'Wo:
JOHN D. HOLSCHUH bid.
Beginning at e 2 Inch pipe
Un~ed Stot01 Dlotrlct
PARTS 1 thru 19
Judge
A._ Gallia . Hocking.
Approved:
1 Card of Thanks
-go. M - Morgon, NoD. MICHAEL CRITES
ble and W•hingtOn countilo.
Unitod Stotao Attorney
Ohio, oa
brida• on
ALBERT R. RITCHER varloua
I'IIUt8l and oectiono In
Aalitont United Stotoo A-.., J3111Ma Hoddng.
We wish to express
Attorney Meigo, Monroe. Morgan. Noour sincere thanks to
Room 200. U.S. Courthoutl bla and-liiiiJiCI•Countioo.
our friends. ntilhbors
815 Marconi Boulevard by d-*'fl and ptintlng. and
and relatives for their
other Nl•ed work
Happy Ada
many deeds of kind'
6
Field pelnting of exiating
•-: Project length: 0.00
ness, expressions of
feet or 0.00 mile. Work
sympathy, the beautiful
Length: 0.00 loot or 0.00
flowers. cards, food and
all the heI p &amp;hen at the
death of our father and
srandfather, Denzel M.
(Billy) Cleland. Wt want

POMEROY - Matthew Ed·
ward Riffle, 21, Pomeroy, and
Kristin Gall Haynes, 19, Rutland
were recently issued a marriage
license.

SILVO BIIDGE PLAZA
GAW,OUS, OH.
AND GAWPOUS FEllY, WV.

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

Public Notice

Columi&gt;uo. Ohio 43216
Telephone: (114) 4611-6716

8 Last and Found

Bus-ness
Services
========;"''~========tiLOST:

. &amp;==:.:..'T...,.
-

Licenses issued

"We Trett You Rltht E11err Dtr"

at Iorge. (Amended)
506.13-Dongorouo and viciouodogo.(Amondod)
526.01-ootinitions.
IAmendodl
626.02-Folsificaion.
(Amended)
626.06-Foiluro to report
or re62~!n.:.~.::,;~.dl
•
ceiving improper com·
ponootlon. IAmendodl
626. 14-Unouthorlzed dioploy of low enforcement
omblamo. (Enacted)
629.01-Liquor
definitlono.
(Amended!
529.02-Selto to minoro.
IAmonded)
629 ·06-Prlnted wornlngo
to be polled. (Amended)
637.14-Dornootlc vlol..,co.
64(~~minel inlochlel.
(Amended)
641 _07 _Deoecrotlon. .
!Amended!

._

Cl.,.lfi.ed papt eo\ler Ill•
followi."f 14!1•pho..e tsdwi"Jft ...

LEGAL NOTICE

Harry Siders &amp; Sons Jewelers '-·

tl
_ lqt

Seeing patients
Monday through Friday
8:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.

...

un-.ap--.~anv.

culprit. Children under 10 can
sUp through windows that are
opened only 5 inches. And a child
under 4 can drown In less than 2
Inches of water -In the bathtub, ·
a kiddie pool, a toilet or a pall of
water.
Most of the injuries can be
avoided or reduce!l In severity
through simple safety measures
-using seatbells, child restraint
seats and bicycle helmets, set·
ling hot water thermostats at 120
degrees or less, supervising
children near the water, and
lnstalUng smoke alarms and
window guards.
That point was stressed by
Surgeon General C. Everett
Koop, honorary chairman of the
Safe Kids campaign.
"We've made such tremendous strides that Infectious dis·
eases have faded almost to the
point of obscurity," Koop noted
In a May speech. "Butln the case
of childhood Injuries, It Is our
Inattention to safety measures
that kills more children than all
diseases put together."
The parental surve~ also found
that the safety precautions parents took varied widely accord·
ing to socioeconomiC level.

446-3283

....

• ••

;No=t;ice==r=:;P;:u~bl;:ic:::;No:;:;tice:::=r-:::;;P:;ub;:;;li;:c:;No~t;:ice:;:=Ji==;Pu=;b;lic=No;=tl;:,ce==

.

Family Practice

'"" .........
•• •• o,. ·

M -·

r:·=::;P:::;ub;:;;ti=c

ORDINANCE
was being led to a shower room.
"Apparently the gentleman .
NO.UOO-BB
"He's slick," Ward said. "You just walked up and said, 'Here, I
AN ORDINANCE TO
got to watch him."
found this money,"' said John
APPROVE, ADOPT AND
""nd
k
1
1
10
Pajak,
a
county
pollee
spokes•
ENACT THE 1988
., , er eeper, oser ou
REPLACEMENT
PAGES
grand: PIDSBURGH (UPI) man at the airport. "We're still
TO THE CODIFIED
An airline worker who found holding onto lt. It's downtown in
ORDINANCES; TO
$10,000 In $100 bllls In a paper bag our headquarters."
REPEAL ORDINANCES IN
at the curb In front of the Greater
The money Is being treated as a
CONFLICT THEREWITH;
AND TO PUBLISH THE
Pittsburgh International Airport "regular lost-and-found Item,"
ENACTMENT OF NEW
terminal probalily will get to he said.
MATTER.
keep tile money If no one claims
The airline worker Is a USAir
WHEREAS, oortaln ,....
it, pollee said.
fleet ser vl ce agent w ho Ioa dsan d oiono w.."hin the Cod lflod 0 r·
( After finding the money Thurs- unloads cargo from planes, said dlnan- ohould be emended
·to conform with current
day, the man turned It over to an airline spokesman David Shl· Stott low 01 required by the
Allegheny County poUce officer, pley, who declined to release the Ohio ConetMution; and
whowasdlrectingtrafficnearby, employee's name.
·
WHEREAS. varlouo ordlnan- .of a general end per·
r!-p_ou_c_e_s_a_ld_._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~manant natura hove boon
puaod by Couno!f wliii:h
ohould be Included in the
Codified Ordlnan-: and
WHEREAS, Council hu
heretofore entered Into •
contract with the Walter H,
Drana Cornpr~ny to pro,...a
and publloh ouch riiVIolono;

Dr. David Ayers

accidents, 1 percent said drowning and 1 percent volunteered
fires or burns.
But the biggest kUiers of
children are traffic accidents,
drowning and bums, followed by
falls, poisoning l!nd choking.
Kidnapping and drug fatalities
are comparatively rare. In 1984,
the FBI had only 67 cases o!
children under 18 kidnapped by
strangers and many of them
were not Injured. The National
Institute on Drug Abuse reported .
only 57 deaths related to drug
abuse involving children under
18 In 1986.
'
By contrast, the Natimfal
Safety Council said 7,800children
under 15 died from accidental
Injuries that year, including 3,400
from traffic accldents,1,170from
fires or burns, and 1,200 from
drowning.
Misconceptions abounded ·
there too. When auto accidents
were discussed, parents assumed they were talking about
children who were passengers in
cars that crashed.
Actually, nearly half the child·
ren killed in auto accidents were
ped_e strlans hit by cars and more
than 600 were killed riding
bicycles. And a disproportionate
number of the pedestrian accl·
dents occurred In rural areas not on busy urban streets.
Other surprising findings: Hot
liquids - not flames - are the
most common cause of bur11s to
young children, and usually
overheated tap water is the

··-- ···-- ....-..
RAni

r;::=======================::.

Bookmobile routes announced

----.---Quirks in the news_____
By United Press lnler'!atiOnal
Crack-filled brassiere sparks
melee : NEW YORK (UPI) The arrest of a heavyset woman
carrying 421 vials of crack in her
brassiere near a welfare hotel
brought protests from scores of
users angry because they were
deprived of the highly addictive
drug, pollee said.
Port Authority Police officers
John Gilburn and Ron Nafey
were written up Sunday for
commendations for defusing the
situation with the help of city and
transit pollee with patrol dogs,
Sgt. Vincent Oliva said.
The two officers saw Judy
Fortune, 33.-pullingvials of crack
from her bra Saturday evening in
a bar across the street from the
Martinique Hotel. A policewoman searched Fortune, des·
cribed as 5-foot-10 and 270
pounds, and found 421 vials of
crack ln. the bra , nine other vials
elsewhere on her body and
"some white powder - regular
snorting type cocaine," Oliva
said.
Fortune was arrested forcrim·
ina! posesssion and sale of a
controlled substance, both felonies, bringing about 65 . people
pouring from the hotel in protest.
"It was a nice quiet night and
they weren't going to have any
crack," Oliva said. "They tried
to stop the arrests and there was
a lot of shouting and shoving."
Gilburn and Nafey called for a
backup and held the crowd at bay
unlil a city, pollee and a Port
Authority poUce dog patrol ar·
rived and dispersed the crowd.
"When they saw the dogs, that
was It," Oliva said.
'He's better than Houdini':
HINTON, W.Va. (UPI) - Convicted robber Jamie Gill has
escaped the Summers County
Jail so often that he has become a
legend.
"He's better than Houdini,"
says jailer Jack Ward. "He can
piCk anything. He's really good."
Gill, 21, servingtlmeforarmed
robbery, remained at large alter
pulling of! his third escape In four
months from the lockup. He
darted for freedom through an
unlocked door last week as he

sumption, .. the researchers said.
Although drinking may Increase tbe chance of getdng
breast cancer, researchers
noted, the health benefits of
moderate consumption of alcohol .
may outweigh the drawbacks In
many cases.
A study published this week in
the New England Journal of
Medicine Indicates moderate
drinking appears to decrease
sharply the risk that women will
suffer a heart attack or the most
common type of stroke.
"Women who have an In·
creased risk of breast cancer and

Summertime is injury time for·children

.---People in the news--.
By WILLIAM C. TROTT
United Press lnlernaiiOaal
GREENE WITH ELVIS ENVY: Writer Bob Greene Is an
Elvismanlac and now Is the proud owner of a letter o! 11ralse that
Elvis Presley once wrote to his laundry. "I should like 10
.commend your laundry fordoing a fantastic jobonmyclothes,"
Presley wrote. "You show exceptlonfl (sic) care. E.P."
Greene, a syndicated columnist and author, paid $1,500 to the
Signatures Gallery and Autograph Museum In Chicago for those
words, which are on stationery that proclaims "From the Home
of Elvis Presley."
ElLERBEE RETURNS: Linda Ellerbee Isn't through with
television. The oft-canceled Ellerbee has a syndicated
five-days-a-week magazine show called "And So It -Goes"
coming in January.
'"Think of us as a situation comedy about a situation called
reality,." she says in explaining the show's pilot. The New York
Times says Ellerbee also is working on "Our Time," a weekly
show akin to the "Our World" nostalgia program she did lor
ABC.
SHARING THE WEALTH: The Norton Simon Museum of Art
says II will loan a major part o! its valuable collection of
post-World War II American art to two Los Angeles museums.
Art collector Norton Simon plans to loan 21 bi\II!·Chip works of
American post-war art to the County Museum of Art and at least
13 other works to the Museum of Contemporary Art. ·
"It's very unusual and It seems very generous that Simon
would lend to more than one museum," said Elizabeth Driscoll,
an art administrator at the Smithsonian Institution. "It's
sell-effacing and that's rare in the art world." On display at
MOCA will be such popular works as Andy Warhol's "Brillo
Boxes," 14 drawings by Richard Dlebenkorn and Roy
IJchlensleln's 1969 "Long Modern Sculpture."
The County Museum will exhibit Dlebenkorn's 1954
"Berkeley 24," Sam Francis' monumental canvas from 1956-58
"Basel Mural," and Claes Oldenburg's 1967 soft sculpture
"Giant Soft Ketchup Bottle." Simon acquired the collection,
believed to be worth tens of millions of dollars, when he bought
the financially troubled Pasadena At't Museum In 1974.The
works go on display at the County Museum on Aug.ll and at the
Museum of Contemporary Art in late September.
GLIMPSES: Rock guitarist Eddie Van Haien donated his 1967
customized Volkswagen to Project Headway for a charity
auction. The money will go to the Project Headway Treament
Center for brain-damaged men and women ... Media mogul
Rupert Murdoch has expanded his empire. He is shelling out$3
billion to Waller Annenberg lor Triangle Publications, which
ipcludes TV Guide, the Dally Racing Form and Seventeen
magazine, among others .. . Madonna, heavyweight champ
_Mike Tyson and his wife, actress Robin Givens, have called a
news conference Monday in New york to announce the start of
registration for Sport Aid '88to bene.fit needy children arot.md
the world .. . Liberace's mental state during his flnaldayswlll be
the topic at a trial starting Monday ln Las Vegas, Nev. Five
friends and relatives are challenging the Jan. 22, 1987, will that
names Los Angeles entertainment attorney Joel Strole as
executor of the wjll, which was signed two weeks before
Llberace died of AIDS. The will leaves most of the entertainer's
fortune to a charitable foundation headed by Strole.

Estimates · derived from
follow-up data showed women
who had two drln ks dally were 70
percent more likely to get breast
cancer than teetotalers.
At lower Intakes, researchers
found a "weak or modest" link
between drinking and breast
cancer.
"From the distribution of alcohol consumption among women
In the United States and the
previously . mentioned relative
risks, It can be calculated that.13
percent o! all cases o! breast
cancer In the United States might
be attributable to alcohol con-

7

The Daily

Announce 111 en Is

Need penon to live in &amp; c•e for

We Corry Fiohlng SuliPII&lt;IIj 3 Announcements
Pay Your Phone
and Cable litis Hera
Ohio's •st Cerd Reading•.
. IUSINISS PHONE
Pahnlst. Altrology. 405 Flor·
(6t4) HHSSO ence St .• BelpN. Ohio. Phone
liSIDINCE PHONE 814-423-7292.
(6141 HZ-77!54
The annUli IWUnlon of t~

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
614-662-3121
Authorlzed John

Deere, New Holland,
Buoh Hog Form
EqYipment Dealer
ftr• E••lt•••t
P1rt1 &amp; Ser•l"
1·3·'16-t!t
•SeomiHa Gutter
•Roofing
•VInyl Siding
•Roofing
•Hom• Roofing
•Wood Crafts

S~muet Allen Eblin Md MirY
Ann Mo011f.-nly wll . . hltdon
ht. A"'JJ. 13th at 3:30p.m. at
the Kyg• Cf'lllk P.-k. Pl._

brtng food, drink. and your

tablt~

own

IM'VIct. For mo,.lnforrra-

tlon ceH 114-982-&amp;31&amp; or 11 ._

992·2272.
Gtnllernon, 38 . llkoo die belllr
lhlngoln life. Sookledy with high

moNII for frlen.hip end po~li­
ble ~e. that Hk• s~NII
farm life a Mo'lnlngl•un.. 'Wrtle

P.O. Bo•424. Borbourovllle. WV
281504.

4

a!dorl\l !edy. Ughl hou-ork. 21
W-lncluded. Call lfllor 5 PM,
814-441-1092.
Hili Stylltta. AcrOa The Street

ltyting ..ton is liNking one
adcltlonal stt;tltt who II looking
for more tMn just anolh• job.

Call Torn 11 11 4-448·95 1o tor

detllls.

Government Jobl. t18.040·
$159,230 ~· ·

Now

hlrtng. Your

9805 for current Federllllltt.

'"·'"·~ttu

lty ....,
992-6857

Real Eslale

01-todlng Advloa'l poo~lono 31 Homes for Sale
lnterlilted p•1011• • •
to co,.ctDr. Don Apiing. S..pt. 1885 Marlette Modular Home,
of Eestern Local School District 60x28. All oiactrlc. Co. 3 BR .. 2
II 814-985-4292.
baths, greet room. dining room.
.v~~ll.le.

Wanted: Lactt to wnh few

clolhoo to. elderlY ledy. 400 111
St.

To manv BKinll to lilt'. Mult •e
to appreciate. 145.000. owner
flntnclng: Call 814-446-1408
after6 PM.

Giveaway

Kfttw11 to go~

114-3711-2435.

horne. Call

t ...... bl... - Call 8144.11-7137 ollwl PM.
PuPJ&gt;ioo 10 glvo ....., to good

hoiiiO.

Call 114-381-80911.

Kitten•

to gtve away. c.tl

814-441-2183.

.......Gallipolis ........ ..

.......Pom&amp;ro;,;··: ..······

&amp; Vicinity

Middleport

&amp; Vicinity
·················-----··········-·

Sop-·

Augual 8th through
3rd. 318 Condor St.. Pomer"''.

Clottllng,
ltama.

alaaaWire, mite .

II L.oat and Found

......"PorTierov···--......
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

I UMaln terrae•
,_.,ay, Ohio

ING CO . .. commends that you
do butln- with people you
know. 111d NOT to .nd money
through the m•l untl you h.,.
lnWI1igMed lht offlring.

COach .,d AdviiOf'l Needed.
AetitWt Football Coach ., d
HighSchool. Junior HighSchool

SMITH'S SEAMLESS
GUnEI &amp;
CONSTRUCTION
OWJia ""'"nmlll
laltll

I NOnCE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH-

••· 8015-687·1000 Ex&lt; R·

IIH ISTIMA115

lt. 1 101

THE

Business
Opportunity

............p....................
reaaant
&amp; Vicinity
n

··········-·--···········-········

A1.w11t11
• ttft
, 4-lomioV
..to~
., Law.,.._
- d hrno.
lola: Mon r.. Tuoo.
d.,, W...lldov. 2407 Manroo
Mon. • Tun.
U11 Jolfor-•

r -... d-., jlugu111thand
,.,., N mH• FllhiNJO. Rd.
Ott,_, oto1h11, curlllns. •cord

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

.

Aw. Ml10. lt.ma. (

•,.

�Pau•
31

8-The Daily Sentinel

Hom• for

S.le

46

LAFF·A·DAY

Saaolftoe. 2 IR . horne. 1 eore. 2

.

ml• ....-«~ VInton Sehoul.
Com;:l l 11 remodlled. New
wtrtng, llahtt.. windowt. ~own­
In Nu'ldon. plumbing. ldtehen
c.W--. c•,.t tlvoughtaut

'

Furnished Room•

...,• • , ..... Aleo-hlr/ d-

tv...

1171 Honda 710. Good cond .
· - Colll14-317· 71111.

Room~

Wllh• &amp; dryor 101. t1911.l.own

Wldl Clllolo. ,.._ 3 bolt 4-lw,

Colt 814-44•

- •2800. Coli 114-H2·
7009 or 114-H2·3247.

tor .nt•WIIek or month.

mo-. *20.
7399.

1171EI•- lwttclo-to

Q.,...,

2 l•ge Iota
-·hookup, Crown Ctty. 3 river tats, 1
mile balow dam. Eureka. Ctfl
814-268-1293.

. . . . tlul Holcomb Hill, eddi--

tlonol lot 3 Btl.. Ca. Call
114-441-0331.

...

3 M .. utNitv. ••avo. lcltchon
w•h ;:rancee. E.::elln opportv
. Prlca to 1111. C.ll
114-44 1318.

-'

Att•ct"- attica tutta. V.y
prMte. LoE:Iftd In dovmtown
Gollipollo, ueo .... month. Colt
614-441-3432.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home P.-k.
ADu• 33. fWorth of Pomeroy.
Aon111 troll•a Colt 614--992·
7479.

11•Mo.-.llrhomo-3-48A ., 2
bM:hl, on 5 ecree. Pond. out·
bulclng. No• More-to. Colt
114-211-1817.

"I have a surprise. I invited
y· our
mother for the
k
d
wee en 9t

SpM:Iou• mobile ho,_ loti tor
rant. Ftmly Prkla Mobile Home
P•t.. Golllpollo fe&lt;ry, W. Ve.
304-175-3073.

w••

'

76

II

Kenmore WMhlr'""" 3 cycle. ExtN

Oak entiquetableowr 100ye••
old. I 1 - *300. flr111. 304875-1878.

BUDGET TAANSMI8SION·
ullld ••...,"'"' . _ . o -. . 30 de¥• mlnlnum. PfiDII
•H•up.Rolult-

---

·--

62 CB,TV, RediD
Equipment

r!:'m"'~-~;'r.'c:i:::::t!

-on.

co- u

11174 Ol.nplon 141118 toiOI
electric, under,.,.ninl. Furnlllhed or unfurnt.hed. R..dy 1D
mow. ei.IOO. OO.· 304-171·
2383.

12&gt;&lt;11 Dlt&gt;i &amp; Ref. ,.qulrod.
Furnlthod. Wotor ,.ld noo. No
poto. 1or 2 -ploo ..... Coli
114-441-otU.

11 70 WlndaiW 121lll, woodtumer. w11._ A cJr,er. air
condlt-. Mlot bt .,.,.d.
Coli 3114-ltl-3102.

-'-·d.,... *221. I * morolt

1t93 14•70 2 ..__ .. _304-773-1113.

. 2

Rooluiied '84 Sc..,ltz 14•81.
10101 oloctrlc. 2 br. .... cond . 2
d - 304-171-7113.

low •

, , ._

....... ,..._,be __

---·

I•'* -

t..- --n

...lp......

AutD'S

For

Sale

79

1140.

1987 Dodge-. . pldi-up,
P8. P8, AM-FM eo...... bed
. . .. nonnlng
4 orL I
21 ....... *7100. Cell
114-44 .. 1143 .. 304-1757117.

loa-

Rod Hot botgolnol Drug dool_,
c•a. boltl, plan• NPO'd. Sur·
plu1. Your era luyert Guide.

1·801-117-1000 Ext. 1·1-.

1171 - Colt
· Good.....
clition.
e9oo.
114-742·

Loodod.
euoo.
.......
- · ·Clll
- -114--112·
· brlk•7214 ... 814--182-3224.
1171 Thu-d. Aool good
- - CAIII14-948-2290.
1171 a. .., Cop&lt;loe. Good
"'.... Food j - .,.10 ....
-114-112-1881.
- - - · .20. Coli
For••~~~'-· 1111Ponlloc
""~"' 814-9411-

T...o Am.
3on.

FortunaQ
D l!ll Stir Trek .

tDI Monaytlne
aJ1 Iamey Miller

Home

_.t. prlcod to toll. 304-882-

w-

-Loco!..,_ _ ,.,.,.......

Fo~

IF .:c
Vol_ATER IT.

J' ..

D&lt;ll Judge
1111 • tDI iiJI Jeopardy! 1:;1
@CroiiiiN

aJilanlon

QD VldeoCoumry
1:00 ()) Crezy Uke a Fox Rosie
D (2) OJ) ALF The family
tries to cure ~~~ of amnesia
by recalling the past. ~R)
Gl Roltd to the Amerlca'e

"
SJ:IOUI..P

\&lt;:NOW

FrH ...- .. Colt ootloat
1-114-237-04111. dor or night
"ogert ·B•••ment
W-proollng.

s ·e

Cup
(I)

SWEEPER and .-wing m1d'llne
rwp~lr. f*l:&amp; •d tuppll•. Pick
up and dellwlry, Dwlt Vacuwn
Cl11ner, one half mile up
Goo- Croell Ad. Coli 814441-0294.

Movll C
(!) (!) Aetlonal Geographic
Special Explore the mystery
of the origins of the hUman
race.Q
1111 a1 OJ Newhart Larry,
Darryl end Darryl announce
they a~Cn to adopt 8

I

eo-

child. A

•1111

IE: Emma: Queen
of the South . . .., Part 1

OPtiiMNIWI

IB MOVIE: Creator (RI (1 :47)

0 T111t of the Gold

7&amp; Cordobl. alr--c;:ruile, good
cond. ee10.

RON'S Televltlon Service.
liou• · celt on RCA. Qua•r.
GE. SpecWing in Zonltll. Coli ,
304-171-2398 .. 114-448· '
24114.

1997Covotl•Z· 24ot.oc, CtUIM · '-tty Tr• Trimming. •lmP •
••· •n roof, CL lntlrior, I ya• remowl. Call304-87&amp;-1331 . ~
10.000 mi. . . .dad - - t y .
215.000 mil•- Toko ..., PlY· "'*rv or ceble tool drllina. ,
Molt w.lltcompiadNmecllrt. ,
m - 304-175-2821.
ftump ul• and ..-viae. 30~
11. Iuick Rlvon. 304-1711- 815-3102

Mankey
QD Nlehvtlla Now
8:30 Cll M,lc Yaare ln Sports
t982: om Watson (A)
01 D d2l cavanauglta Pop
and The Wusel racall their
courtship of the same young
woman.
e:oo &lt;D 700 ccub
D (2) iiJI MOVIE: · Vawe: The 81ory of a Merta
Wile' NIC l!orl$y Nlglrt II
the-11;1
@ Pro Roellil 1987 Nation-al
Finals High.lights from Las
Vegas (Tj
(!) The 81ory of Englleh Is
English going to be broken
into other languages as LaCin
was?
(!) American Mllterl
Capture the vision of the
genius of phOiogt'apher
Andre Kerteaz. 1:;!
1111 D cal Memoilel Then &amp;
Now Through segments like
Yearbook, Scrapbook and
Indelible Images, Chis
program takes a thoughtful
look at events and images
that remain In our minas. (NRI

EEK &amp; MEEK·
·
11-\E..1l&lt;nJeLE \U1H aJR

I116HLY &lt;OMPEIIIIV(,
FREE. ELECTIOIJ-~
e£M.RIJMEIJT IS ...

2294.

1911 CIWII•. 4 door, no air.
~~m-fm - - e420o. 304-175-

7341.

RON'S APPliANCE SERVICE.
colt - n g OE, Hot
Point, waeher•, dryers 1nd
. . _ . 304-571-2311.

i·~

1910 COnaord, no ruot. high
mHo., ,. .. good, • - tiN.
•eoo. .. boot - - 304-112·
2011.
79 Oldl Cutlou. 304-773·
1482.

72

TNcke for

WINTHROP

MORTY MEEKLE
82

EITHeR IT~ A FlRe .DRILL,
OR THE PIED PIPER 15
BACK.

Plumbing
8t Heeting

'

S.le

T.,dlm Moe truck • T.,dom
loww boy t•ll•. Good aond.
•&amp;710 .. wlloeiiiiPftto. Coli
114-441-8031.

8o laiTY
King Uvel
Prime nme Wrelllllng

CAIIlER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Goi-Oiolo
Phono 114-441-3181 or 114441-4477

CASH OR
CHARGE,
PARSON?

MY COLLECTIONS
WAS MIGHTY SLIM
SUNDAY, SILAS

Vant &amp; 4 W.O.

86

General

QD Crook end ChaM

10:20 (JJ MOVIE: She CNRI (1 :46)
10:30 (2) Converutloftl

me•.,.d..

.1111 Jelflreonl

QD VldloCountrr
t 1:00 ()) Rllllinglon Steele Vintage
Steele
• (JJ (I) • (I)
iiJ)NIWI

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

Oreatwt Hila '76 WOt1d
Series: ClnciMaU vs Boston
(!) Softlll 78: A Celabrltlon
Sir Georg Soltl'l 75Ch
birthday Ts celebrated wtth a
gall conoert from the
mejllttc Orchestra Hall In
Chicago featuring PlacCdo
Domingo end othen.
D1111 Love Cor•-tlon

J.JW_S....._Swimmllll
poal......n ........ Ph. 114241-92811.
R • A W- lorvtoo. I'Oolo.
oltterna, wellt. lmmedl.,..
1,000or2.000gol-doliwry.
Colt 304-171-1370.
•

~~til Hlleltaocll Pre11nt.

'

11•1 Rupe. Jr. W•r ..,._ .
- · clo. .n&amp; ....... Colt 114441-3171 .

lm-..

1171CJI- 111'1. 4-opoed.

Wttw dellwty. 1000 pllone.

304--1717e17 ....... 1-1 p.111.
·

....- . prlaoe.

-- 101.....1illdl
.,100......... -

........ Coi1114-H2·1271.

111 You can Ia • IW
11:15 (!)Bign Oft
1t:IO. (JJ 1111 Tonlgltt lhow

PEANUTS
00 V0U LOI/e ME? 1 NEED
TO
KNOW .R161lT NOW!
'

I DON'T LOVE

P.l.

goo,-~­

:..-.-.
"'!:. 1.811
Night Huntlr trackl oop

87

whO Chi CUI wtcelml by
vldaO gantiiCOIW. (A)
ill Ttl ppI r .!olin, M.b.

Hondo. 110 4·

:104-1.,......
·· 4 e1100.
10'IO'tl T1IX 1211. 4............ ...., ..d . . .

CIJ lllplldl

12:00 Cll .... cu..

Cll LJitiT lowllng Fllr Lanes
Oenvtr Clllllc from
Englewood.

4-wll-. .

.........
, . , II. . .GMol
1114-871-ll··10,11111nill IICIIC.

klllel

.,..u. . . . . .

Upholltery

co m

..... Cond. 104-111-1110.

-I

I'

......

NORTH
•QJBI
.KQ62

+76

+uz
EAST

WEST
tA5
• to 7 5 3
2

•au

••\J8
tAKQJI05

~g

' :

•a

.9t
••

., ,
..

SOUTH
.K1073

+AKQ1076

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Norllt

-

Eul

P"""

Pass
Pus
Opening lead:

+2

.
. set four spades unless biB partner hlp ·
either a club trick or a bllh spade. 0.
spite the poosiblllty that ihe - a df.
amond may cash the right del.East 1s to play back biB sln&amp;letoD al
the aecond trick. That thwartl del:larr
er's chances. West will&amp;et In with \lit
ace of spades and give East a ruff and
the contract will be set.
'

lor

.,'•

by THOMAS JOSEPH
2·Vacillate
ACROSS -3 Italian
1 Flooded
6- Curie
. river
11 Woody
4 Thus
Allen's
(Lat.)
.. _ Days" 5 Go-getter
12 Speechify 6 Virtuous
13 Throw out 7 "Whose
"
Honey
1y
14 ..,ueen
_You'!"15 Young
8 Tease
Yesterday'• Alllwer
sheep
9 Gt've
26 Burmese 34 Girth
16 Belgian
wht'rl
resort
knife
35 VacuDus
18 Before
10 Lamprey
27 Time
' 36 "Dead
19 In
17 Mushy talk
period
duck"
middle
20 Fright
28 Average · 39 Rounder
24 Cut off
21 Pallid
29 Fiery
40 Bustle
25 Aa-oftd
22 Seek
militant 41 Peas
T;mUG&amp;e
23
Sycophant's
.
(sl.)
holder
26
station
answer
31- chance 42 Work
29 Aaron and 24 9onr~d~s
33 German
unit
44 Life (Fr.)
namesakes
- Jtm
30 Saridarac

•.

'·
'
'

the

verb

ending
.38 Year (Sp.)
39 Prank .
43 French
resort
45 Bedeck
46 French
river
47 Avoid
48 Stop
DOWN
1 Mountain

•.

rrPNt

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES- Here's bow to work It:

818

AXYDLBAAXR

II LONGFELLOW

'

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are diffennt.
8-8

- I~;
•!.!!:
o-

I COULD I-lAVE WAITED
UNTIL. TOMORROW ..

...

CRYPTOQUOTES

wc:--&lt;Ll

luollllog mowtoe. 304-17..
3110.
'81 -

1111 • tDI

wMajor LHgue Beaebllt'•

Dll ... w........., Poolo.
Clo1orno. Wollt. Doltwry Any.
!liM. Cell 114-441-?~No

·

mr, . '
.'

CROSSWORD

tion
worker
34 Peruke
37 Biblical

D l!ll Honaymoo;&gt;~re
9 l!venintl ,....

Hauling

South was s~ping out just a little
when he bid two spades -over East's
two--diamond overcall. South had only
12 high-card points, but be did have a
good playlug hand if his partner could
either support spades or bid no-trump.
Four spades was a good contract. but
not without Ita pitfalls. If trumps split
badly, the coatract would probably
fall. The defenders would continue dl·
amonds and then simply hold up the
trump ace until the third round to play
more diamonds. Fortunately for declerer. the trumps did behave. Also
fortunately for declarer, defender
East misbehaved.
' East won the opening diamond lead
and continued the suit. South ruffed
and knocked out the ace of spades.
West returned a heart and the king
was taken by East's ace. Finally came
the play of the singleton club. Declar·
er won the club, drew trumps and took
the rest of the tricks. Making four.
East need only look at his own cards
to know that there iB little chance to

32 Construe·

e

,.....L

By J~mes Jacoby

Bicycle Classic (Tj
Branches of the WSPU are
established In London's East
End.
1111 OJ Magn..,., P.l. )-!Ired
to solve a routine caee.
Magnum Is frustrated by
Impediment. (A)

MINE'S BEEN SLIM
'' l'ER TWO SOLID
WEEKS!!

Don't wait
till it's too late

@Cycling International
(!) a~~-· to Shoulder
(!llhoulder

BARN.F.Y

...,

tree
31 Favoring

8:30 • Country
10:00 ()) Straight Ta•

1113 Plymouth pickup
with lnWI ........ top. Dn..
40,000mloo. Vorygood oondt- 83
E~tcavatlng
tlon. eaooor wllblldeforcar.
Colt 114-211-1251.
."'...
Trlnching nrvlce. waw. 1•
1971 F~Food. Mich. baotv. end eloctric 11- burled. 304olr,oo--.eooottoo. Grof·
thor• holot. Coli 814-211- 773-8839.
133.
~~;==;~===
Electrical
19710MCIOOO. lll.,glno. a · 84
opeotl.2_d ............ltv
8t Refrigeration.
boclf, 1000 • •to-arane. n. .
t
- . ·new
- · 14xll
1171 Food
F 210
4x•.
Oumbo
R•ldantW ar oarn.-clal wirIng. New .WDI or
olr,
nooo.
1t•llo••
'
1
6
,..,
310 ' "paw.r
- 4wlft..
- U-llld IIIOirlclon. Eotlmtoto
._,., .,tarn.tla.
!roo. Aldonour El... rlcol, 304olr......... loeb........ 1711-17118.
n_ . . . . . . 12.000.114-9412311.
Boctricl., Stoto Cortlllod, lr•
ntnt11, c~l Ed Sh lmlllin
11nDoloun pldo·• CAIIoflor 304-175-1419.
&amp;p.m. 614-112-7722.

73

D (I) 'Hol)'wood Wlvfl,

Part 2' ABC Monday Night

Pointing: lntorlor &amp; E-lor.
- - - - - C o l t 114-4418344.

*··

__ ,

BAII!M!NT

1f91 110, .,,., 4
d-.
.n·fm IMlo, el,700 or bolt
olfor. 304-171-4140.

Ch•y 4 wh.
3 sp on ool.
*1800. 304-1711-3812.

MICIIIIne
(JJ Major League Beaeball
Ell Ente111tlnment Tonight

AN
A~JzoNA tJEWSPAP~ THAT
&lt;iiV~ iHE- W~it'fl!~.
l'V! GOT A CACTUS
. ~LANT; ANP :t WANT io

WATEIIPADOFINCl
Unconolt- lllotimo _..,.

RON EVAN I ENTER PAIIEBSeptlc - k .......... flO ....
lcod. Colf1-80Q-&amp;37-9528.

3244.

I.'M LOo/&lt;ING

lmprov.-nente

ie a...., II SS. ...., . .- . 4

m.._

II) Alrwolf CNRl {1 :00) Stereo.
II Crook and Cltaae
7:05 (JJ Andy OrtHHh
7:30 D (JJ Hollywood Squarea
(I) Major Leagutt BeHINICl

FRANK AND ERNEST
b':=~;c5~::T~

Septic T.,lil. 1000
gll.. 1100gol.ond.Jot.....,lon
. . - .. Foctory !IOined ohop. ADN !VANI ENniA·
PAIIEI. Joclroon. Dhlo, f·II00537·9128.

BRIDGE

1111 D 1121 aJl Wheel ol

0\Ji-oF.'TbWN

fll1 !I DofOdo I I - . ComPletely loadedl Attroroot,
ltlolh.VB,
13.000 - · t•
\ICIC.310
Aoldill
..800114-912·1133- IIW
A S•i•

1
PRINT NUMBERED
LETTER S IN SQUARES

Vtilnly - Badly - Radio - Wiggle - READING

NewaHour (1 :00)
(I) Peopla'l Court

PAPI~S'

1171 Qlryol• Uiwon. 4 door,

Complete the chuckle quoted
by filling in the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

First gent: "I'm retiring soon and will be able to flnlllh
book." Second gene: "C didn't know you were wr1t1ng a book. '
First gent: "I 'm not writing a book, I'm READING it."

SporiiCeriter ~L)

•

Set vILLS
81

Q

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

(I)CutreniAH.W

1971CNIMNttmotarho..,20
ft. Cl- A. g-tor. I.Oiclod.
Coll304-812-3237 toft•&amp; p.m.

2141 .

1.-J.._J._-.I..-.1..-..I.-.J

8

''I wish Ccould wear a dr81111ke
ihac," sighed the identical twin to
her sister. "But if I wore it I'd look

~-1"

1--'T~-'T~--.,..,,....,Ir--.l"'ac-1

m (!) MacNall/ Leltrer

tlon. 114-141-2237.

Moe 2 be*oom on 111"'-.,.

1111 lllralow mobllo- 12&gt;110 2 br. At. 33, dep. • ref. ,
141170 Wllfl 7&gt;121, .......... , . . _ e171. unftl-hod:
noo. turnlohod. 304--al2·
1... - - ... _304-171- • 214llflor
I pm,
1141.

(I)

1971 Hollldor ~~- _ ..
troll•. 22 ft. twin- .. _ I ,
ooll coodllnlld, hitch.
3()4-175-1314.

••1.

E V0 S T I

I

7:00 ()) flemington sr..ce Steele
In the Fa.mlly
D (2) PM Magazine

1174 31 ft. CoiChnwn. perk
m - with tip-out olr. eaiOO.
114-941-2319.

8U1o. lhlft on floor, bucket
Ill new trM. Vary good condf.:

6
I 1 1 1

1:31! CIJ. caro1 lumett

17ft. 8nplroComi*.II.O,oll,
refrlg.,.tor. atove. ahower.
owning, Excol. oond. Colt 114211-1313.

1171 Dolto 18 Oldl. PS. Pl.
- L I bock-...

j

D l!ll Hogan'l - •
CIJ lntolde Polltlce '18
all You can Be a Slar

8t CampBI'I

1174 Monto Corio, 400 • ..,,
_,-.,117/300HPh-.
...... 4111 . Colt 114--44..

..

Clll D 1121 CBS ,._.

MotDrl Homee

pluo utiMito .,d dllpOiil. Col
114-H2·7471.

2 bedroom molollohomo. e20o.
montlo. 304-171-19114.

~s

_..I

F_..
·t_ E.._I"

. . -.;.:.R...:.H;.,.I:...
· .;..B...:Tr--ll'"..,·!

D (I) AIIC Newai:;J
(!) Body l!lectrlc
(!llllglttly lulliMU Report

-;;;;::;;;::=::::;;;::===

2 bedroom, furnlthed. Air,

In "Hine. Stcngeroom. •171.
P• '"'""h pluo utiMito. 114992·7218.

I~_T. . _I

(I)

wallllla.

71

T u R N.E I

I'-.. . .

(jj 0u1t1oor lporteoMn ~A)

114·448·0911. RolauUdlng
~~========::;:=====.,====:.J too.
We buy -omioolono. Colt

mobile home

1 :Z.IO unfurnllhad, cMtllll AC.
1h mllepaatHMConRt. 31. Call
114-44&amp;-4319 .. 304-1719710.

I

QD Fandango
8:05 (JJ Le- H To Beaver
1:30 • (2) 1111 NBC Nightly Newl

ltandlrd cluch•. ,,.....All
,.
typn12moo--•••1¥· W•Ilov
Colt 304171-1711or 114--371-2220,

8ood

,..,_ bedroom

•

D illl Happy Day•
tD1 Bhowllz Toelly

Uood ~..... , . - ·
nlllylnal*ted. 30d8UOUirlfto

Gur

•zo.

Rearrange letters of th e
four sc ramb led words below Ia fo rm fou r sim p le words.

Clll • d2l

o~r:..,..

.'

0

Part 4

1----------

Rentals

(I)

WOII
eAMI

ldlood by CIA Y •. POlLAN

(I) Sportel.ook
(!) Coloraoundl
(!) Dr. Who ll\e Krotons,

Pertl

&amp; Accel80ri89

Merchanrl1se

u,..,.,_

Auto

nico. *130. firm. _.,. 114307·0322.

Ae•"ttic Nwaho BaaettOchtn-

(2) (I) •

OJ)Newa

0

'

::~;~;~1 S@\\~lA-~t.tfs·

8:00()) Big Veley Hunter's Moon
•

&amp; dryOr o,t. Colt 114-

441-2113.

ch...

located. Harrltonville erta.
•1000. Und co nnct potslble
with 20 _..,. down. 114742-3033.

MONu AUO. 8

1

EVE NINO

Clill 114--742-2140.

vrounolp...oont.,na, .4 0chon·
nol TAC-440,
Mloronto
-.
nel
robin mobile.
•IN _t
p.-tt,
ly Ow--3
8A.,
oxt•
Iorge
Spoceo
lor
oont
trollor
apoceo.
room, 2. 1 Mnt, city
wmer .,...,...,. fllrnllh.ed. loeult
extra mien. enten.-~ 200 ft.
ochool clot. lmmodl. . OCCU·
. Rd. Rt. 1, 304-871-1078.
9
COOK oil. .,IO. 304-I 5-3078.
56
Pete for Sale
peno;o. 0wr'll!ll' will help fiRWice.
Colll14-441-9210 ovont-. ,__ _...,;·;.._ _•_ _ _,.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _., TroHor apecelor fOnt 3 mlleo S.
r
Pt. Pl ....nt at Y off Rt. 2 &amp; 82. 53
Antlqu• .
Brick 4011 oq. ft.. totol 12
. 304-a71-3818.
r - 8 lAS. 2v. INotho. 32 Mobile Hom•
44 Apartment
'
181128 fomlly room, Iorge kitfor Rant
2 toto tor "'"' Rt. 2 about I
_,ry, laondry room,
for Sale
min.., r.om town. 078. moiMh Buy or Soli. Alvlrlno Antlq-.
1124
E.
Main~ Pomeroy.
d•kroom. 121l21' 11Gr110 buldplus utlltleo. 304-171-3000.
Hourt: M,T,W 10..m. 10 lp.m.,
ing. 1.&amp;2 •cr• totel or hou• '73 28 ft . a,.mpion motor
SundiiV 1 to 8p.m. 814-982·
end ...,...elott . Hanenvlleby harM, •If mm.ln... Very good 2 BR . apts. I clo•s. lr.hch...,.
2121.
~ppolntmont: Colt 814-441oppl. furnlahod, W.""· Drver
cond. 304-875-2341.
~903.
hook-up, ww c~rptt,. newt¥
N~n•d. dedt.
From e175. 49
For lease
54 Misc. Merchandise
•108 SUite St., Pomeroy. 2 or 3 33
11•9"'"1'· Inc. Apia Colt 304Fanns for Sale
O..oame, c•peted. rw re.t&gt;
6715:-5104, or 875-6388 or
I = lponlll pu ... AKC 44
n.We off• nlfu•d. Phonei14175:-nll.
ApprO&gt;dm- 2000 .,_ ft.
c1o
..... 1 ...,_looio &amp; 8
892· 37H.
Whoelchllr•.
.
.
.
..
3
Big nfiN 3 8R . hOlM, bult on New completely furnlthed 1601 Jeff. .on. For •ore • wheel_. electric IICO,..t. Cell Holl &lt;JI Femo. e110 · -· Coli
) 1•111 bedrooms. r1nch stvle. 2 your lot anty. •16.994.up. Clll apartment • mobile honw In 1tor1ge or oHicet. Walk-In
Aogero Mobllty collec:t. 1·114- 114-311.. 1314.
Jiving roam~, dining room, lerge 11+881-7311 .
870-9611.
city. Aduns only. P•tdng. c.n cooter. 304-171-1431.
SPECIAL: AKC Dechl... ndo.
tdtchWI. O• h.._ cent• air. 2
114-441-0338.
mlnMuN, 2 young t.mal• clue
c• ettached a--t• 28~~:34 Fwm. TribblaRoed. 7mNMfrom
Need Hor... HDo....,· Trimmed? In
._on IOOfL t 121 e.ch. CaH
,...,.,.,, g.rege. 18x38 ln- Rt. 12, M•on County. 3'h BEAUnFUL APAR1MENTS AT
CoiiJoll. 814-441-7307.
Krft,
Hou•
.,d
buiilclng..
C1ll
114-44
.. 8927.
ound poal, approx. 2 acres.
BUDGET ,RICES AT JACK·
114-742-2211. night 114- 304-755-7290.
SDN ESTATES, 536 Jockoon
1 Mt of man'• right hend aotf S l - k-0-........ Int. Colt
11 ·3222.
Pika from t183 1 mo. Walk to
club• with bag. 1 •• of men••
loft hond golf clubo Wl!h bag. 114-44.. 1473, 11-1.
•hop .-wd moW.. 814-441- 61 Household Goods
36 lots 8t Acrellge
Ae~d 10 830,000. In RuColt 614-44&amp;-e173 -night•
21111. E.O.H.
tl~d. 3 ba~. c•tr.l llir.
1fter I PM.
57
Muaicel
\tlnyl siding, lntuleted. full
SWAIN
C•~Mt. p .. io. gwage, work·
Air conditio,.,._ 2 C8Hn'lant
Far Sale 30 aa•. Mors-n
Instruments
AUCTION • FURNITURE 12 wlndowuntt1. bothfor.-.21. Cell
loom, fenced yard, garden townthlp, utlltty acCIII.. w11•1
Upa•h unfurMhed apt. Car· Ollw St., GoiiJooNo.
•~ce. Also 2 bedroom, c•port.
814-441-0334.
811 or a Iota. P.O. Box 20357, p
- . utN~t. pold No chit-. NEW- I pc. wood FOUP' *319.
nlot hou•. t 1 &amp;. 000. Cell I 14- Ch•l..ron. w .v •. 25312.
No
poll.
Coli
814-441-1637.
ef-lc au~ &amp; 10 _ ,
Uvlng room l&amp;lltet- •1tl-t199.
912·1277.
loyt cfot"--all Ike nM. Cell Dliton
Gorilla ompllller. Colll14-241814-211-1118.
'AI acn more or 1... Nice 11 Court St.-2 BR .. 2 .,_ht. Bunk bodl with b - g . nu.
l220,
Full lin lftMt.NII • foundltion
'St..ely. 2 ttarv older homa. 4 luldlng lot wltl1 lound•lon. AI
ldltchan furnilhad. w / w c•pet.
ltoS&lt;_,., 2 ful botho. LA. DA.
utilit* • cable TV. Good No polo. 011 ItlOot perldng., ttartlng· t 9 9 . Aecllnart
otonlng. *99.
lndlv- ....... ....
FR. l•ge elt-ln ldtchen, tun neighborhood. 4 mil• from
gin,..., llll'lout aulwtat. Bruipo«:h, baement. d•ched 2 Cll' town. Call Smhh Re• Emta, U21o mo. pluo utiMt.. Dip. &amp; USED- Bedl. d1'81terl, bedroom
oet.
Colt
814-448-4921.
tuitet. • 1 99·•299. Oetkl,
g.agewtth ltOIIIgetp~ca. vinyl 6 14-441-6Bot or 37!1-2128.
..-o ""'""' 114-441-0117.
wringer Wither , • compiMIIine WOod Olio! w . - . r - from Jell w....... lnotruoto.•• , ....
Wdlng. cantr.l he.~ and lir.
'car'* lot. t58.000. Call 614- 9 plu1 aer• (4 ac:rea ,..,_. Furnithed· 3 roomt S. bath. of u•d furnltunt.
Lowa'1. New. *180. Call 814- 441-80n. Umltld Op-go.
Ct..,. No polo. Ref. &amp; dopoolt NEW- Wastern boot• e3Q. 992-7218.
)192·545a.
'
building lot• plut B acr~ requlrtct.
Utllltlet lurnlthed. Workbooto *18 • up, CStoel &amp;
Ma~ell amp. Fen• aupar
woodedl . •10.000. 614-9411' Adults on ...
Colt
814-441champ, KI'M'I• .,..,. Ham•
.......
,.
Colt
614-446·3159
.
.wtth orwfthautacreaga.lmlles 2389.
Wolfe
Tanning
Bed.
Uke
New.
1519.
flying_ V. Podol ba•d • pedolo.
tram Mei91 Mine. At..,.dlr
3()4-8e2-3711 .
304-812·3244-.
' .. .,,
County AppN.-.ce. Inc. Good
Sehoolo Cgood blactctop rood), Ashton. t.:oe buldlng loti.
'f5 mll81 lrom Pomerov or mobil a han.. permitted. p~lc Furnished apt. •150. UtMitl• u•d tppllaince~ and TV 1et1. Air conditioner, ~.. bed.
4th.nt. Hou•only 10'j18M"tald. wet•. e11o rtver lott. Ctv.de pMd. Shant beth. Single mila. Open SAM to 6PM. Mon 1hru tterao-floor model.
c•blnet. 68
919 Second Ave.. Golllpollo. 8ot. 814--44&amp;-1899, 627 3rd. 3()4-571-2908.
FIUit
Jbedraoma. 1Vtbllth. $2&amp;.000. Bowen, Jr. 304-871-2336.
446-4418
efl:er
7
PM.
Call
Avo,
Golllpollo.
OH.
·
j;oll 114-898-7231.
I
8t Vegetables
BeaJttfu I rlvw lot• one acre plua.
'
-for •I• or ..m. 23 ~with 3 public weter. Clyde BoWI!In. Jr. Luxuriout Tart Townhou• GOOD USED APPLIANCES
66 Building Supplies
IP8rlmeota. Elegent 2 'ftoora, 2 Washers, dryert, refrklenltort.
-bedroom hou•. PhoM 814- 304-571-2331.
8A., ful bMh u..-rt. PG'tNd• range•. Skaggt Appllancet,
Homo g..,_ - " •· Yolow
892-1057 or •e Bill Clonch.
~·
•a.b2.fcl1171 Twa 1 acre lott wh:h p!AIIic room do..wnt•lu, CA., dlt- Uppor A- Rd, booldo Stone
-wFrull F•m.
Bullclng Materi•
.
....,......,
Ofllo
814-741-3312.
hwashlr. dlapo11l. prMte en- C - Motol. 114-441-7398,
water. Jerry1 Run Roed, trence.
Block,
briclc.
IIW'er
plp111,
wlnprNete
en~
patio.
1978 Ouwy Malibu Oasaic. • 4. 900.00 each. contider t,.dt.
dowt, lln..s, etc. Cllllde Wlnpool, pl-ound. Utllltleo not
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Auto. 310 eng. 58,500 miles. 304-671-2383.
tera. Rio Grande. 0 . Call 114inc:luded. Starting 11 e219 per
ExceU.,t running condition.
I,,.,,, Si.i,JII.r :.
mo. Colll14-357-7110.
'
Softt 1nd chalrt priced from 245-5121.
Body folr . *900. 114-949- tbu•lott. 304-17&amp;.1908.
•39&amp; to •9". Tabl• t&amp;O end
&lt;\ lrVI 'I ill'
2413.
efficlency·9ZO up 10 • 126. Hld••·bedl *390 Concrete blockl· ell ... ywd
AcrNge for Mia 50 1cre1 Crab Furnlthad
ordeltwry. MMon..,. Gallipo4 be•ooms. 2 full bltht. Creek area. ru111l wet•. tobacco Fourth, GolllooNI. •1eo. Utll- to U9&amp;. Aedl""" *225 to
.-I d. Call446-4411aftar 7 •37&amp;. Lam• •:za to •125.
lle Block Co.. 123% ' Pine St.,
c•peWd b ...ment. chain Ink •totm.. t. minarlll riaht1. priold tl•
PM.
O.lllpolls, Dhlo. Colt '114-441Dinette~ '1091nd up lo '491.
te;nced back yard. fruit tiHI.
on lntpe:cUon. 30~875-3828.
61 Farm Equipment
Wood table w-1 chalra •28&amp; to 2783.
...elltta dish. 12x18 b•n type
tpt. New. NeerHMC. t795. !look t100 up to e371.
ou1buildi.ng, 6 mil• W•t of for •le1"h acrea, lewl land VI Furnllhed
1 BR . e291. Utlllt._ ..lei. Call
WESTERN RED CEDAII
CR-018. SONS
Hutch• •400 •d up. Bunk
Alp .... 32.000 oq ft. 304-372- milab1dc Glenwvodonblacktop 4
4
• at an nell Ru~c
u.s.
31 w.~ Joclroon. Dhlo.
bedl compl.. e w·m .. tmlet:
rood RuiNlce. 304-671-2288.
41- 418 elter 7 Pi\11.
3827 .. 372-3082 .
MOd -lod Lop Siding
614--291-1411·
a29&amp;onduptot395.Boi&gt;Vbodo
• Deck Mater(llt
uJ)1111rt 3 room ipt . • •110. Mltt,.....arbox IIPI'inOI
_..., , . . . , _ . , - Holtontt
All alectric hoem in Leon on Rt. ~tt, one acre. Level wooded. Furnlthed
U10 ful or lwin tl8. firm t78, 1nd
Guarontood Ouolltv
12. Phono 304-458-1806oftor city Wlter, J~~richa Road. Ovvner utlltt. pold 94
BumHoeiOI•&amp;
·
omonth. t?l dllpOiil. Colt •ea. Queen .... •zso • up. CETIDE. INC .. Atheno-814- 4
0 _ , _ . , . ,.._
,"
'"
8:30p.m.
finandnv. Good tlrrna. 304- ...814-441-1340
..
441-3870.
594-3178
1·
King
'350.
4
draww
ch•t
eea.
•
..,..,._
llno
of"""
•
u•d
372-8405 or 372-2675.
Gun ceblnett I gun. lab¥
Hau• for •le. Rl. 2 Apple
In
Apartmenu Md hou••· Call ""'"'
I.E . Oloto,
Grme. 7 rooma. tu• tile b••
us
&amp; e.a. Bod
304-175-5104.
mant forced air furnace. 304fr•m•
•30 • King frame
4 - Indo Cron .. Domlng pump,
•&amp;a. Good Hlect:lon of bedroom 66
171-2411.
Pets fo~ Sale
Furnllhed tpartment. •zz&amp; a tuhel, m 8181 Clbinetl, held·
350 GPM, I cyL ..-lOOft.
mo. 1 BR . Utllta. Plid. 920 bo•d• UO end up to t65.
ho• wltl\ -.etlan. t278o. Cell
Nice home Greenbriw Ettatet,
Foruth Ave., G..lipolit. Call
AKC Brittany Spaniel' puppi11. 8 114-211-8031.
ful baleman1 w·femily room, ·3
90 Days same at c•h with .,...,, old. Shatt, worrnad. Call
41 HDmes for Rent 441-4418elter7 Pi\11.
4101J.D .. Iwoyblodo. wonch.
1ppro""'d uedit. 3 Mil• out
814-441-8714,
ttin:
Smell furnithed aptrtmant. Cen· ButMI'ille Rd. Open Sam to 5pm
11011 troclo. 1994 8210 Ford
a. TV room w-\NOOCiburner. -:-. . . , . - - - - - - - - tralty
located. 1 or2 quletaGJtta. Mon. thru Sat. Ph. 814-448Screened porch • patio, lining Nlcetv furnished small hou•.
Female Chihuahua. 18 monthl truclo. 302. 4 opd. Col1814--44f.
on 5 acr... For eppt. call Adult• only. Aef. required. No No pats. Aef. &amp; Sec. d ap. 0322.
old. whlfe male Chlhulhua, 9 3040.
required. Call 8115· 441-0444.
304-671-2315.
.,
..... Call 614-441-0338.
montht old. Call 614-448Valllft FUrniture
1211.
Poir lpoclol buy OliO - ofloln
8Ft. apt., nM C•pat. r.nga- New and uMd furniture end
, got •oond FREE. 10 per com 1J11
Moving: Hou• for Nle by eon .... l'llent 2 bedroom cottage 1/ froat
free
refrigerator
furIn
Gtlllpolla.
e2&amp;0
per
month
IPplicancet . Call 814-446· 8 'Niflk old buff colOred female choln -o iluriM Golllo ond
o -. Colt lor oppt. 304-875Cock.- Sponlol puppy, AKC ,._on County ,..,.. Sid.-.
1 a 13. Stucco ctw.Uing. large pluo utHltiM. Colt 114-44!1- nithed. Wltar·g•bage paid. 71572. Houri 9-5.
18110.
Colt
614-441Depoalt
llquirod.
Regiltered. noo. 1CIII 114- EQ~ot 304-175-7421.
lot, centr.l aJr. g. .ga. clo• to
4341.
J &amp; S FURNITURE
28&amp;-1311oftor 8:00pm,
bll'llc. tchools. , l'lontt, hospital.
10
Cot. """' onglne wMh
1411 Eastern Aw.
Cat w.nclh, good mnd. e3,000.
ehun:h•. 3 br, kitchen, tMng 2BR .,g.-.ge. Depolit&amp; 1ttmo.
rent.
Coli
614-448-1388.
rediiCDr.ted
apt.
258
Furniahed
4
dr...,
ch
....
t48.
&amp;
driWW
I Beoglo pupploo. Full-blooded. oft•1:00co11_304-171-2159.
room. f1mlty ,room, 1112 b•h. lp.
State St. Adultl only. Utilltl• chett. •54. 95. &amp; pc. wooden
•2&amp;. 11U or trade. 6 Welk•
deck. b.ck -..rd complet~ty
pol
d.
$10
dep.
ezoo
per
mo.
I
Nice
2
b«&lt;room
hou•.
Nice
dlnnena Htl, •199.95.
puppl-. reQlltered. tiO. _. or
chein Ink 5 ft . fence.
mot.
1
.....
Call
814-441-31&amp;7.
e•petlng.
cabinlll.
neighbortrod~ Colll14-e43-1241.
1 O?OGarage ipl .. 4 room• •
63
Uvettock
PICKENS
bath whh appliaru:•. $17,000. hood. l\lllddlepon. 814--9923
BR
.
opt.
ponlottvfumiohod.
ln
5888.
FUAMTURE
2
Slam••
pu18-bred
ldnant
for
1-------~-­
Call after 5:00. 304-875-2559.
O.llloolio. Coli 814-245-5169.
Hie. Call evenlngt l 814-9493 bedroom, cenlral .tr. Clll
Dlnett . ., beds, bedding,
Ouroc!Tamaworth a... 110
614-992·8658 diVI or 1·614- Furnithad effleency •pt . -3 drw..,., ch-. couch•. chairs. 2290.
592 -5166 evenings and room• • b•h. C•pat through- IamPI. coffee-and tebl•. Every Rebbh•for Mle. .t5. and up. C.ll ""· Colt 114-245-9311.
=:-:;~-;-;-;--;:-;----- 1 weehands.
out. P\-Mite • quiet. Single d~tt Sped• . Va mile out Jerrl114-992· 3717.
1 Shnncctll oow. 1700. 1 black
worling _persOfl only. Call 814- cho. 304-175-1450.
32 Mobile HDmes
- -- - - - - .nd
....... ·holf•
- oaw.
for Sale
2 bedroom unfurnlohed houoo, 441-4107 or 441-2102.
2 AKC Aoglotorlld maleleogl•. Sim-I
ooll.eeoo.
UIO.1
507'h 2nd St. Stop • Chedl ca~t our inventory 7 montloo old. Jun ltlrtlng to ' Colll14-t41-2&amp;44.
304-878-8276.
Z BR. epartment. All utilhi• of ~ltty furniture • c.-pet for oun. *31. ooch ... eeo. polr. Colt - - - - - - - - pold. Coli 814-446-1723.
low pri011. I pc. wood tultt- 114-948-2143.
Shuttz 12K86. 2 Bft whh BK10 3 bedroom. 109 English
*399. I pc. ... din..,.. *225.
IKPindo.. newo plumbing. Unfur- Rd.$260. per month plua utHi- 3 room apartnwtt. t100a mo.
I r d11' iJ til I ;r IIIIII
cut loop c•pet ..,.lng .a: tl.95
nished. 04600. Colt 814-441- tiM. 304-875-5542.
Coli 304-175-5104.
• yd .. commercl~ carpet· U. 98
2981 .
•vd. lMgaHiectkmofroomtln
remnantt. No job too IMg or
1974 Bubbr 14x80 2 BR ., 111
tmall. Financing • lnttallatlon
71 Auto's For S.le
_.ec., underpinning. deck, &amp;
tvtllllble. Mollohan Furniture,
.-ps. Alking $7400. Clll 614Graciout living. 1 and 2 bed- Upper River Ad .. 441-7444.
441-82911.
room ~p~rtments at Village
Manor end Rlvenlde Allart- Goodu•dColorTVfor•le. C.ll
12&gt;&lt;88, 3 BR .. 19n Federal, 2 &amp; 3BR . AllutHhtll ..id•cept menta in Ml.d dleport. Fram 114-441-1149.
total elec. , newo c•pet. wether&amp; electricity. Conwnlent loe.. ion. *182 . Colt 81 4·992- 77e7.
dryer. extra Nice. ...tnylunderpin-- Coli 814-441-8168 .. 441- EDH.
nlng. 07950. Colt 814-441- 4001.
0175.
Furnished 2BR. Ca. cable. water
1979Uborty14•70, 38R .. """' MWage paid. Fo1ter' t Mobile
alect .. c•pet. front pon::h. un- Home Park. Call 114-441!1·
d.,..nnlng. HOOO. Colt 814- 1802.
3811-9844.
14x70furnithed or unturnit:hed.
1972 Wlndlor MobileHorrie &amp; 6 3 BR ., alr, l•g~~lot, garden fPOt.
acrH. on George's Creek Rd. Colt 814-251-1293.
Call Jerry Burcham. 61 .. 3889312.
1991 2 BeS&lt;oom ft811or. P.,tv
furnished on NeiGhborhood Rd.
1
4 f.r ec:NI, 14x70 fumiahtd Adults. wfll can~Tdar one child.
trtlll•. Gn heal, Clf4tr.l lir, Coil 814-448-1810.
drll_, wen, low utlhlel, front
.nd bee* pan::h. Next to Forked Mo bite home for IMt . WM8r,
Run P•tc. !loy 614-742·2211, NW.,, tnl'lh pidcup lurnlehed.
night 814-117-3222.
Ref. ...ulrod. Call 114-4410127.
1913 New Moon. 10x&amp;5,
1:Z.14 ldcllion. Vwy
28ft MoblleHomafurrUhedor
condttlon. Call 814-949-2 77. unfulrilhed. In Portllr. ' Call
814-38&amp;-9104.

f.,.,.

•

t•. Good co...-lon., tuna good.

Space for Rent

The Daily

Television
Viewing

1971 ..,., Dovldlon lport•

46

,,.,.._Sea-homo.
281118. 3 BA., cont.t llr. Mo ..
10 ,..., .... Coli l14-44&amp;-a&amp;94
oft• I PM.

ZII-l2lll.

•

JUT 'N' CAIILYLE® 11J 1.-, Wrtpt

17cu. ft . froatfretratr~or,
• 110. MIIII'O_... 0\181"1, """'
.100- Coli 814--441·
3834.

•-23.000.
Co11114-31
.. UUor
· -·
lllfylg. O.don
31 .._
11110 PM.

Mocll'-r home on large tot in
MercervMe. Pool, AC , nttN
e•Pit· Outbulding. Call 114-

61 Hou..hold GOodl

Furnithld room-11 a leound
Alii., Golllpollo. n 21 o mo.
UtiUtlel lllid.linalamlle. Sh . .
b•h. Coll441-4411oflor ?PM.

a.rting 11 e120 • mo. Gellla
llotol-8 14-441-9510.

Pomeroy- Middl_ef)OI't. Ohio

Monday. Augnll B. 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

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FIRED wrrH ENTHUSIASM IS APT TO BE FIRED. -B.

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FORBES
...

_

• ..

�POI'"IWOy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Tropical stonn moves m on Louisiana coast

cast on the past, J?resent and future course of the economy.
"I can't help but wonder it maybe Precision Lens can helpout
some of our critics," he said, never mentioning Democratic
nominee Michael Dukakis by name. "I think they could use a
.pair of high·quality lenses, because they've been looking at the
world through mud-colore$~ glasses much too long."
· Over the last few weeks, as the campaign has heated up,
Reagan has briStled as Democrats have disparaged the state of
the economy and his record of the last 7 12 years. In response,
Reagan has become a one-man GOP truth squad, using the
White House as aoplattorm and vowing to "tell the truth" to the
American people this fall.
In his prepared remarks to the governors, Reagan avoided
any mention of the campa lgn and instead applauded the efforts
during his administration to return power from the federal
government to the states.
" I hOpe that history will record that this former governor
went on to practice what he'd preahced," Reagan said, "and to
·fight the use of federal dollars first as bait , then as a Club, and to
return power and responsibility to the states, where they
belong."
Though less successful than he had hoped In completing the
monumental shift of government responsibilities envisaged In
his much-va unted New FederaliSm program some five years
ago, Reagan said the states have been given a freer hand to
pursue Innovative approaches to such concerns as education,
transportation urban development and welfare reform.
The trip Illustrated how the campaign has come to dominate
presidential decisions and actions In recent weeks. After
hearing today from Reagan, the governors were to ·b e
addressed Tuesday by Dukakis, who will appear In his dual role
as governor of Massachusetts and Democratic nominee. •
Ironically. the presiding officer of the governors' gathering Is
John·Sununu of New Hampshire, a vocal critic of New El\gland
neighbor Dukakls and one of at least three Republlcan
governors tagged as possible running mates to Bush.
On the eve of the meeting, Su nunu, who has spearheaded a
GOP effort to discredit Dukakls's record In Massachusetts, said
he wanted to make the event "the most non·polltlcal,
non-partisan ... we've ever had."
The trip to Ohio represented a brief change of venue In the
modified Rose Gard.en strategy Reagan has pursued to portray
the 1988 electlon as a referendum on his.pres,ldency. While his
direct praise for Bush has at times been sparing, Reagan has
gone to great lengths to depict the election as a stark choice: a
continuation of the relative peace and prosperity of the last 7·)2
years vs. a return to the policies of the Carter years.
Reagan has pledged to do all he can to elect Bush, and GOP
strategists consider him to be most valuable in defining the
Issues of the campaign and contrasting the futures offered by
the two candidates. Although the appearance bt'fore the
governors had been scheduled for some time, the White House
jumped at the chance to add a vis it to Precision Lens to
symbolize the strength of the American economy and the
success with which some American companies have withstood
foreign competitlon.
During the Democratic National Convention, aides to Reagan
bristled as Dukakls pointed at the success of Harley Davidson,
the American motorcycle manufacturer, in surviving competition from abroad. In fact, the company owes Its current strength
to Reagan. who deviated. from his phllosophlc abhorrence of
protectionism In ordering Import restraints that gave the firm
the breathing room it needed to become more competitive.

CINCII'&lt;'NATI (UPI) Sixteen
school disttlcts across the country are making significant progress Involving parents In education, detecting potential school
dropouts at an early age and
ensuring better school management and results from teaching,
according to the U.S. Department of Education.
The department Sunday submitted a report, ''Experiences In
School Improvement: The Story
of 16 American Schoo!Dis trlcts,"
to the National Governors' Association, which requested the
five-year pilot project in 1986.
''One of the most notable things
we're seeing Is the Involvement
of parents with the educatiOn of
their children," said Linus
Wright, undersecretary of Education, who addressed the gover-

Birmingham. according to Pentagon and Justice Department
officials.
A senior ·Pentagon official
famlllar with the rangeoflnvestlgatlons Into the three mllltary
services said "the evidence to
date suggests the Army Is no
better or worse than the Navy or
Air Force."
Justice Department spokesman John Russell declined comment on the investigations.
Frank Donaldson, the U.S.
attorney In Birmingham, also
decllned comment, saying: "Allegations may not pan out. If 1
comment, some Innocent defense
contractor or government employee might have his reputation
hurt."
Army spokesman David Harris would say only, "Much of the
information In several cases
being looked at by the U.S.
attorney's office In Birmingham
was developed by Army criminal
inves tlgators on the basis of tips
from Army employees."
The proliferation of lnvestiga·
tlons has stemmed, In part, from
the expansion of a special Army
fraud investigation unit at Redstone Arsenal last fall , a Pentagon official said.
The Army missile headquarters spent $4.065 billion last year
to procure about 20 missile
systems, Including TOW antitank missiles. the Hawk groundto-air system, the Pafriot
ground-to-air system, Pershing 2
ground-to-ground missiles and
portable Stinger shoulder-fired
missiles.

Area deaths

I

Mllltary graveside service wlll
be conducted by the Ell Dennison
American
Legion Post 467.
Andrew Myers, 72, of Rt. 1,
Friends
may
call at the McCoy·
Langsville (Danville Commun- .
ity) died Sunday at Veterans Moore Funeral Home in Vlntori
Wednesday from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7
Memorial Hospital In Pomeroy .
Born Oct. 26, 1915, at Patriot, to9p.m. as well as one hour prior
he was the son of the Ia te Everett to the services at the church.
and Esta Mahan Myers.
·
A member of the Danvllle
Holiness Church, he was a World
(Continued fr(Jll page 1)
War II U.S. Army veteran and a
member of the Gallipolis Area saying that on federal delegation
of programs, "the states have
Ostomy Association.
He married Nellle Miller Jan. res{lOnded to the challenge and
18, 1946, in Ironton.
they've done It with exceptional
Other survivors Include four excellence."
sons, ElliS Myers or Middleport,
"Governors have taken the
Joe Myers of Galllpolls·, and Tom lead In fashioning solutions to
and William Myers of Langs- problems," Donatelll said, citing
ville; four grandchildren; two welfare reform as an example.
Host Gov. Richard Celeste of
step-gr;mdchlldren; and one sister, Mts. Henry (Mlldred) Scur· Ohio welcomed the governors to
the opening session, {JOinting out
lock of Columbus.
Ia addition ~ IU&amp; parents, he this year is the 200th anniversary
was piECt*tl hi ••til ~ two of tbe foundlq of Cincinnati.
''We're here to do serious work
sisters, Nancy Goodall and Alice
and
also to have a good time,"
Waugh.
Services wlll be Thursday at 11 said Celeste. Sunday evening, the
a.m. In the Danvllle Hollness governors and their families
Church with the Rev. Rick were treated to a concert by the
Maloyed offlciaUng. · Burial will Cincinnati Pops Orchestra a}Jd a
·
follow In Danville Cemetery. laser llgh I show.

Andrew Myers

Gavemor's ...

....--- -....--

off Massachusetts, then skirted
the coast on Its way across Nova
ScoUa and Into the Gulf of St.
Lawrence. At last report, AI·
berto, Its winds weakened to 35
mph, was near Prince Edward
Island and sweeping northeast
across the gulf.
Forecaster Max Mayfield of
the National Hurricane Center
said "Alberto will be swallowed"
In the cool north Atlantic.
The storm dumped thunderstorms on Maine and blew cool
rains across New England·, dropping temperatures Into the. 70s
and 80s and endl~~g a heat wave
that lasted more than a week,
forecasters said.
It had been so hotln Boston that
pollee sent four extra supervisors and 20 additional motorcy·
cle patrols to the streets Saturday to quell any disturbances
that could ariSe.
The forecast called for tempel'atures In the 100s today In
Oklahoma, Texas and In the
desert Southwest, and heat records were reached Sunday ln. 13
cities In eight states. It was 100
degrees In Des Moines, Iowa, 103
In Kansas City and 1041nLlncoln,
Neb.
Waco, Texas, wltharecord107,

School reform report
presented governors

Continued from page 1

-Contractors attempting to
cut costs and increase profits
without notifying the
government.
-Companies secretly subs tltutlng inferior, low-cost materials Into products.
A federal grand jury In Birmingham, Ala., Is expected to
return two Indictments tn the
next one to three months based
on allegations that contractors
used substandard materials in
their mlsslle products, a law
enforcement source said.
Most inquiries into Army missile contracting are being overseen by the U.S. attorney's office
In Birmingham. Other probes
are being conducted by the
Army's Criminal Investigation
Command at the missile headquarters and U.S. attorneys In
Los Angeles, Phoenix and
Albuquerque.
The misslle command Is not
the only Army Installation under
scrutiny by federal
Investigators.
At least 22 other Army procurement contracts throughout the
country are under criminal investigation, a Pentagon official
said. Some lnqutrles focus on
fraud allegations Involving
McDonnell Douglas Corp. and
Unisys Corp. , both of which also
have been the subject of scrutiny
in the Navy Inquiry.
These other Army lnvestiga·
lions are being overseen by U.S.
attorneys in Washington, Los
Angeles. Philadelphia, Newark,
N.J., Alexandria. Va., St. Louis,
Tampa, Fla ., Tucson, Ariz., and

'

By JEFF WOODS
United Pret~~~lalernallonal
A tropical storm with winds up
to 50 mph closed In on the
Louisiana coast today, promptIng storm warnings alo~~g much .
of the Gulf Coast just as the
season's first Atlantic tropical
storm blew away from New
England.
The National Hurricane Center
in Miami said a tropical depression gained enough strength over
the Gulf of Mexico early today to
become Tropical Storm Beryl.
Small boats were wamed to
stay In port on theGuHofMexlco
from Port O'Connor, Texas, to
Pensacola, Fla., and coastal
residents In LouiSiana, Mississippi and Alabama were told to
closely monitor weather service
advisories.
·
The weather service said Beryl
had sustained winds of about 40
mph with gusts· up to 50 mph.
Tropical storm Alberto, mean·
while, puffed across Canada's
Gulf of St. Lawrence toward ·a
chilly death today, leaving New
England with sprlilg-like temperatures, while another day of
100-degree heat afflicted the
Southwest.
Alberto sprang to llfe Sunday

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power ............. 27)2
AT&amp;T ........................ , ........ 26¥.,
Ashland Oil ......................... 37
Bob Evans .......................... 17Y,
Charming Shoppes .............. 14%
City Holding Co ............ .... ... 35
Federal Mogul. ........ ........... 42¥.,

.

The NGA program runs for
three more years, and though
Galinsky lamented the fact that
his district Is receiving no
financial assiStance, he added
that "It would be tragic If you did
not extend this program through
1991."

'

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) The average closing prices (per
bushel) paid to farmers by grain
elevators In the principal ·marketing areas of Ohio Friday:
Northeast Ohio: No. 2 wheat
$3.45; No. 2 shelled corn $2.94;
No. 2 oats $2.77; No. 1 soybeans
$8.58.
Northwest Ohio: No. 2 wheat
$3.50; No. 2 shelled corn $2. 91;
No. 2 oats $2.87; No. 1 soybeans
$8.70.
Central Ohio: No. 2 wheat
$3.60; No. 2 shelled corn $2.97;
No. 2 oats $2.88; No. 1 soybeans
$8.68.
West Central Ohio: No. 2wheat
$3.51; No. 2 shelled corn $2.99;
No. 2 oats $2.90; No. 1 soybeans
$8.73.
Southwest Ohio: No. 2 wheat
$3.50; No. 2 shelled corn $2.99;
No. 2 oats not avvallable; No. 1
l
soybeans $8.68.
Trends: No. 2 wheat, lower;
No. 2 shelled corn, higher; No. 2
oats, unchanged; No.I soybeans,
sharply higher.

Vol.39, No.e&amp;
Copyrfehttd 1988

·"•
w

.........,.
' .•
.....
'

(-;.:,lSNOW

-RAiN w'~SHOWERS

FRONTS: . . Wann "Cold

.

Nation'S govemors
end annual· meeting

...

:~

i

Map s'-1 rnlrimum t8mperatulal. At iNst 50'11. ot IllY shilled atea iS tou1cast• ~
· to realve prec:ipilalion io4ct"''l .
UPI; "'
WEATHER MAP - Sower&amp; aad thulllleralorrns will be acallered ;· ;;
from Florida acrou sou&amp;lleut Loulslaaa, also ahead of a cold front ' :'
from upper Mlcbl&amp;aa acr011 eaalera Wllcolllln, aortllern Dllaolll, : ~
southern aad eaalera Iowa, the northwest half of MlaNurl and : ~
Kaasas Into central Colorado.
·
••
••

Sou Ill Central Ohio
Moslly clear tonight, with lows
near 70 and southwest winds 10 to
15 mph. Tuesday. mostly sunny
and humid, with a 20 percent
chance of rain and highs of 90 to
95.

'.

CLEVELAND (UPI) - No
winner In Saturday night's Super
Lotto game has raised the
jackpot for Wednesday night's
drawing to $9 million, the Ohio
Lottery Commission said
Sunday.
Numbers In Saturday's game
were 3, 15, 26, 27, 36 and 44.
However, 123 tickets had five of
those six numbers, making each
worth $1,000. The 5,993 tickets
with four of them are each worth
$84.
The Kicker number was 303573,

.
''...

_

with one ticket having those •
numbers IIi . that order. Thah ·
ticket Is worth $100,000.
: ;.:
Lottery officials said sales fou ':
that game were $715,824.
• '·
Seven Kicker tickets have the
first five numbers, each wortl) :·:
$5,000. Sixty tickets have the first :·
four numbers, each worth $1,000: ·:
Another 636.tickets have the first :
three numbers, each worth $100:
and 6,543 have the first two ·
·
numbers, each worth $10.

••

&lt;

Lottery numbers

SALES - SERVICE • TESTING

CLEVELAND (UPI) - Satur·
day's winning ·.O!IIo Lottery
numbers:
Dally Number
564.
PICK-4
2691.
Super Lotto
.3. 15, 26, 27. 36, 44.
Kicker
303573.

BROWN &amp; SNOUFFEI
FilE &amp; SAFElY
EQUIPMENT
172 ..,.h Seulllllft.
llldtl..,t, otH 45760
••• 16141 991·7075
Gary Snotlffw - 992-7446

*OFFICE DAYS
Monday, Thesday,
Thursday, Friday
606 Professional Circle
Ravenswood, WV
273-5335

Sarah Goswami, M~D.
Obstetrics and Gynecology

•

slookholders were hals, aausa1e blaeulls and lhe
new kielbasa sau~;:'ucts being Introduced
In stores and reslau
• (OVP photo)

NEW PRODUCTS - The approximately 2,000
who attended tbe Bob Evans Farms Inc.
stockholders meeting Monday were &amp;lven several
new products of lhe corporation. Given to the

.

By LEE ANN WELCH
OVP Staff Writer
The 25th annual Bob Evans
Farms Inc. stockholders meetIng was held Monday In the
sweltering heat of Its farm In Rio
Grande, with approximately
2,000 attending.
Daniel E. Evans, chairman
and chief executive officer an·
noul\ced the net Income for the
first quarter was $7.5 million or
26 cents per share, compared to
$6.2 mllllon or 21 cents per share
In 1987.
He reported a 10 percent
increase in net sales from one
year ago.
Net Income was $5.4 million,
compared to $4.6 m1lllon a year
ago. The sausage segment contributed $2.1 million, as com·
pared to $1.6 mUUon In 1987.
In the restaurant division, net
Continued on page 5

DANmL E. EVANS
Chalnnan, CEO
Bob Evans Farms IDe.

273-5335

ceremonies
for new finn slated Aug. 19

By BOB BOEFUCB
lleDISnel News Staff
Groundbreakl~~g ceremonies
for Middleport's newest business
- the Family Dollar Store- wlll
be held at 2 p.m. Friday, Aug. 19.
Mayor Fred Hoffman an·
nounced plans for the ceremonies Monday night when Middleport VIllage Council met In
regular session.
The new business will be
located at the corner of Mlll and
North Second Sts. Various dlgnatarles .from the state have been
invlted'toattend, the mayor said.
I'
Mayor Hoffman also an·
nounced the first of two public
meetings on community block
grat:~t funds for 7 p.m. on Aug. 23
at the common pleas courtroom.
The meetings are being held by
the Meigs County Commissioners. The county has been ap·
Executive VP, Chief Oper!Uing proved for $106,000 In community
Officer, Bob Evans Farms Inc.
block grant funds this year and

governmental subdivisiOns must coming Into the village treasury
file applications on their re- ff91Tl the new village lneorne tax.
quested project funding by Sept.
Mayor Hoffman reported that
he and Councilman Paul Gerard
15.
Council last night approved had met with a group which Is
placement of a one mUI tax levy making a master plan of recrea- a renewal for the Middleport tional facilities along the Obio
Fire Department to pay for River and the plan, subj eel to
equipment- on the ballot at the approval by the U. S. Corps of
November election and was Engineers, will Include boating
advised by Mayor Hoffman that facilities near the Diles Park.
the town has been approved for a Council approved the rates set up
state grant of $38,025 for the by the Meigs County Budget
continuance of the public trans· Commission for the •nnual
portatlon system for the elderly budget submitted recently by the
and handicapped. The system Is town.
·
the Blue Streak Cab Co.
A di!ICusston was held on the
Council approved the report of planned bike path along the river
Mayor Hoffman showing re- and Mayor Hoffman will check
ceipts of $3,607 In fines and fees on the 'status of that project with
for the month of July. Mayor Kim Shields, village consultant.
Hoffman reported that several
Attending the. meeting were
village funds are operating In the . Mayor Hoffman, Clerk Jon Buck
red but pointed out that the and Councilmen Dewey Horton,
financial picture should' Improve Gerard, Bob Gilmore, William
In August when money begins Walters, Jack Sattoerfleld and
James Clatworthy.

•
Local news briefs-- Summer heat wave continues around nation
Strike enters ninth day
A strike at the Meigs County ~partment of Human Services
today Is In its ninth day.
·
Union employees went on strike Aug. 1. Unresolved
negotiated Issues Include wages, Insurance, fair share
(requiring non=unton employees to pay .a fee for union
representation), contract duration and management rights.
A new demand was made by the union to the county at last
Thursday's negotiatiOn session, it Is reported. The union Is
demanding a no reprisal clause which would prevent the county
from Initiating any actiOn, discipline or repriSal against any
employees concerning the employees' conduct during the
strike. It Is reported.
It Is reported also that 12 employees out of 30 In the bargaining ·
unit continue to work In addition to six supervisors bringing the
total staff to 18 who are continqlng to provide services to the
· residents of Meigs County.
The department Is open from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Man charged with burglary
Robert W. Bays, Sr. 46, of Sttversvllle Road, Portland, has
been arrested on a charge of burglary, according to the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department.
. Sheriff Howard E. Frank reported that Bays allegedly
el\tered the Kurtis Rltrle home on Eagle Ridge road the early
part of May this year. All Items taken from the home were
recovered by the department.
Bays appeared In Meigs County Court Monday afternoon and
was released on $15,000 recognizance bond to again appear In
court on Wednesday morning.

Man dead on arrival

*Both doctors are on the staff of Jackso~ General Hospital andl
both have supplemental office .hours in their
. Ripley Office
.

array of big-state prQgrams to
Attorney General Cary Edtry.
wards of New Jeraey said law
Florida Gov. Bob Martinez enforcement and education must
outlined his state's efforts to the
be employed In balance to rid
Committee on Justice and Public states of drugs.
Safety;
. Martinez called his state "the .. Edwards said his s~te has
gateway for 70 percent of the
drug·free school zones where
•
..
a minimum three-year sentence
nation s cocaine, with 50,000 with no parole Is ta ked on to the
pounds seized In 1987 and more
c
anticipated this year. He said a sentence of anyone seiUng drugs
major step was In "recognizing within 1,000 feet of a school.
that we have a problem."
Edwar.ds also said a $500
"We could have said once we ~~:da~uge opedn ~~ sfgi:S~ c~~-0
sweep It Into GeoJ'ila, It's not our
r
c
problem," said the governor. local governments for preven''Illegal drug trafficking Is eve- tion and treatment programs.
rybody's problem."
Daryl Gates, pollee chleUnLos
Martinez said Florida has laws Angeles, presented to the gover·
pel'mlttlng aaents to seize Illegal nors his Drug Abuae Resistance
drugs, plus the profits from any Education program tn which
oganized crime. In addition, said uniformed pollee officers visit
the governor, any drug peddler's · schools and "teach kids to 'just
property, such as a condom!- $BY no."'
nlum, maybe taxed by up to half
He said 41 stales aretrytoithe ·
the street value of the drugs sold. program, and It toucheS 1.5 .
''We hit them where It hurts the million young people, mainly
most -In the pocketbook," said from kindergarten throuah sixth
Martinez.
grade.

Groundb~

.Sales up, Bob Evans Farms
,. stockholders told at m

'

606 Professional Circle
Ravenswood, WV

I

. CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
natlon's governors closed out
their 80th annual meeting today
wlthadlscusslonoffederalismthe delegation of authority to the
slates by the federal
government.
The governors planned to
·d
a opt a policy resolution on
federalism - the theme of the
three-day meeting of the ·Na·
tiona! Governors' Association
and a topic on which no concrete
conclusions have been reached
thus far.
The governors heard from
Presldent Reagan Monday on the
subject. Democratic presidential
nominee Michael Dukakls was to
arrive today, and planned an
afternoon meeting with all the
Democratic governors.
During Monday's committee
deliberations, the governors
were advised to use a comblnation of education and hard-nosed
law enforcement io halt the
rampant abuse of drugs, and
they were furnished with a broad

Exleaded Forecast
,"
Wednesday lbrOUih Friday : ~
Very warm and humid W.ed· .\
nesday with a chance of thunder; ~
storms. Highs will be 85 to 95 ~nd -'
lows 65 to 75. Fair and less humid ~
Thursday and Friday. with high$ :
In the 80s and lows In the 60s. · _,..

No one wins Super Lotto game

1 Section. 10 Pai• 2&amp; canto
A Multlmldla Inc. N - - . -

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 9 .. 1988

fi

Static "'Occlude&lt;!

•

enttne

.a t

.....:;
'

Every Wednesday

l

•

•

'If'

1nternal Medicine

,..

e

..

....,' .."
'

M•tly clear l•lpt, low 1a
70.. Cha.:e of rain • )181'eeat.
Wedaeedayt Partly cloatiJ',
hf&amp;hlla .... cbaace of nl• •
pereeal.

Page 3

"'J
: "~

Naba Go~wami, M.D.
'

Ohio grain report

Pick 4

7605

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT &amp;I • :

61¥.,~-fr;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;

Heck's .................................
Goodyear
T&amp;R .......... ......... %
Key Centurion .......... .. .. .. ..... 18
Lands' End ....... .. ................ 28')1,
Limited Inc ........................ 22%
Multimedia lnc ................... 73'&gt;(,
Rax Restaurants ............... .. . 4'&gt;(,
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 11%
Shoney' s Inc .............. ...... ... . 7%
Wendy 's Inti... .............. .... ... 5'JI,I
· Worthington Ind ................. 24')1,

Daily Number
979

.-

"I can tell you again and again
and again," he said, "there Isn't
a better Investment than a
program to discover at·rlsk
children at an early age."
Gov. EdwardDIPreteofRhode
Island said his state has Initiated
a llteracy program In kindergarten through third grade to
prevent dropouts.
DIPrete said academic, social.
and occupational counseling for
potential dropouts at Mt. Plea·
san t High School In Providence
has a success rateofmorethan 90
percent.
·L· ''·

there be
light'

In Chicago, the Illinois Envlr'
onrnental Protection Aaency •
issued a smog alert, the lOth this :
summer. People with heart and •
lung aliments were advised to ~
minimize outdoor activity.
··:,

------Weather·-------;.·~

nors' subcomlttee on education.
Also appearing at the meeting
was Harry Galinsky, superln·
tendent of schools In Paramus,
N.J., one of the 16 districts
participating In tlie pUot project.
Galinsky told the governors his
district has started a program to
identify {lOtentlal school dropouts by the time they are In the
fourth grade and soon hopes to
make It a a year earner.

··-·--~·.

and Dallas at a record 106, felt
even hotter with high humidity
boosting the heat Index - the
~omblnatlon of temperature and
humidity- to more than 110, the
weather service said.

Ohio Lottery

'Let

•

Economy... continued from .page 1

Army...

Monday, August 8, 1988 •

Carl Norton, Pomeroy, was dead on arrival at Veterans
Memorial H011pttal emefiency room following a possible
suicide at his residence Tuesday morning.
The Pomeroy unit of the Melp Couaty Emereency Medical
Service was called to the residence at 8:41 a:m. to transport
Norton, who reportedly suffered self·lnftlcted gunshot wounds
to the head, to the bo.lpllal.
Meigs County Sberlff Howard Frank and Deputy Jlmmer
Continued on page 5
l~l

J.r

By JEFF BATER
United Press International
A de!!dly heat wave roasted the
Plains with 't riple-digit tempera tures and drove Philadelphia
thermometers to record heights,
while tropical . storm Beryl
kicked up a fuss In the Gulf of
Mexico and forced at least 3,000
evacuations.
It hit 91 In Philadelphia Monday, tying a 5-year-old record as
temperatures reached the 90s for
the 41st time this year, and It
appeared the mark would topple
today, with highs forecast from
90 to 95.
·
The mercury never dipped
below 80 degrees Monday mornIng In St. Louis; Ottumwa, Iowa;
Kirksville, Mo.; and Kansas City
Monday morning. And by 2 p.m.,
Fort Worth, Texas, tied a record
106; Kansas City had 104, Okia·
homa City 102.
The National Weather Service
said Waco had a record 108,
Dallas-Fort Worth rose to 107,
AusUn Ued a record 105, and
Houston tied a record 102.
,
Four deaths In the Chicago
area last week have been blamed
o" the heat wave, with a fifth
death under Investigation. Ul·
llan Emmllng, 81, was found
dead Saturday In her apartment;
which had ciOII!d windows and no
air conditioning. Officials said
she died of arteriosclerotic heart
disease and heat stroke.
The NWS's medium-range
forecast for Sunday, Aug. 14,
through Thursday, Aug. 18, says
the heat Isn't going away, and
calls for temperatures above ·
normal across most of the United
States. Twenty states from Montana to southeastern New York,

New England, the mid-Atlantic
· states and the Ohio Valley are
expectedto have temperatures

,

..

''much above" nonnal.

Little or no rain was expected
In Texas, Oklahoma, California
and the southern and centtal
Great Basin, while below-normal
precipitation was predicted for
the mid-Atlantic Coast, northern
Florida and parts of Kansas and
Missouri. The rest of the nation
was likely to get near-normal or

above-normal rainfall during the
period.
.
Tropical storm Beryl thrashed
In the Gulf of Mexico with 50-mph
winds early today, throwing
squalls and Hoot waves at
coastal communities for the
second day.
Helicopters ferried 1,[i00 oil
workers over stormy seas to the
safety of shore as Beryl drew
strength from the warm gulf
waters, and at least another 1,500

people evacuated homes tn Loutslana's bayous and along rivers
In Mississippi.
The storm, slow and erratic,
swirled about 65 miles southeast
of New Orleans since developing
Monday into the second tropical
storm of the Atlantic-Caribbean
hurricane season.
The National Hurricane Center
predicted Beryl will drift south
and could gain more strength
Continued on page 5

Racine Council supports
effort for juvenile facility
Meeting In regular session,
Raclne VIllage Council adopted a
res,olutlon supporting the county
eff6rt to secure one of the ~bed
state juvenile detention facilities
for Meigs County
Mayor Frank Cleland reported
that communtty development
block grant Items for the park
have been ordered and council
approvedthepurchaaeofvartous
Items for the street department.
Vacation leave was approved for
Glenn Rizer with Jack Wolfe to
fW In durlnsr vacaUon
Council approved payment for ·
the roUer that lhe vlllaae bldoa
from Letart Township and the
fire cblef was authorized to have
a radio tecbnlclaln check on the
two way radio In the fire truck.
It was reported that Denver
Rice of Middleport and the
Everett Wedge Band of Point
Pleasant will be featured at the
Aug. 13 free program at the

Shrine Park Wtth- the Sumtse
Gospel Group of Chester appear·
tng later In the month.
Council extended thanks to
Carl Hyaell and his group of
workers for recently trimming
bush on the river bank 10 that
park visitors can view the Ohio
river. An Invitation was extoended
to attend ·a get-together with
.officials of National Gas and 011
Corp., at the Sbrlne Park at 7
tomorrow evening.
Council dlaeuaaed aarbage col·
lectlon and will be collllderlng
ralslni rates tor the service due
totncreaze costaatthelandftllaa
well as more time Involved and
greater distance required for
haullnlf.
'!be financial statement of
Clerk Jane Beegle was approved
and Included: cash balance In all
fundi, $147,987.06 lncludllllf
$22,914.06, reneral fund;
$'"
9"" •• • ...~
.... fu nd; ...,n
.................
_.
...,.,176,84,
\ f· .

fire fund; $3,797 .83, state hlghw· say fund; $51,239,69, water fund·
$3,870.15 cemetery; $3,565.97, w~­
ter deposits, and $6,500, cemetery endowment.
Receipts for the month of July
totaled $20,121.41 while expendltures amounted to $11,046.37.
Attendl~~g the meeting were
council members, Robert Beelfle, Carroll Teaford, Richard
Wamsley, Larry Wolfe and Scott
Wolfe; Glenn Rizer, street commllllloner; Mayor Cleland and
Fire Chief Robert Johnson
.
T~I...Lt'B L---lers
UUU8

vauea•
meeting nnatponed
r~
A meeHD1 of lbe MelpAIIIIellc

BoHlen IIClhedaled for 'J lbla
evnlq hM ..... Jllilllllld
.... 1 p.m. Weda•day a1 111e
lltpiCIMol.

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