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                  <text>·Ohio Lottery

Canadians
upset over
hockey trade

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Daily Number ·
418
Pick 4
8607

Page 5

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at y

e
Vol.39, No.66
Copyrighted 1988

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Partly cloudy, low In '108.
Thul!lday, .cloudy, hot and
humid, hlghs ' In mid 908.
Chance of rain 30 percent.

enttne
2 Section•. 1 8

Pomeroy-Middiaport, Ohio,· Wednesday, Aug. i 0. 1988

P•v•

2&amp; Centl

A Multimedia Inc. Nowopop.,

Ohio EPA probes waste found at Lake Erie
By United Press International
The Navy acknowledged It Is
the source of medical debris !hat
washed ashore In North Carolina
while Ohio launched a criminal
Investigation Into the dumping of
bloody syringes and o!her waste
found on a Lake Erie beach.
The potentially Infectious med·
leal waste In North Carolina and
Ohio Is only the latest discovered
on the nation's beaches this
summer, and Congress reacted
to public anger with legislation
Tuesday to combat ocean
dumping.
·
The Senate voted 97·0 to
sharply Increase penalties for
the lllegal disposal o! the medical
wastes lhat 'have closed beaches
throughout the Northeast. Under .

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I

Two young men were killed In
separate accidents In Meigs and
Gallla Counties early this
morning.
The Gallla-Melgs Post of the
State Highway Patrol lnvesti·
gated a fatal accident Wednes·
·day morning on .Yellow aush
. ftlla(l, 1.~ 11111es east of SR 338.
The vlctlm was 'ldent1fled as
David M. Talbott, 22, Rt. 2,
Rac.tne. Talbott was found dead ·
at !he scene of the accident.
Troopers said the wreck was
discovered by a passing motorIst. The accident apparently
occurred around 2 a.m: Wednes·
day, but was not reported until
6: 40 a.m., the time the wreck was
discovered.
According to the patrol, Tal·
bolt's jeep went off the road,
striking a tree. The accident
occurred near Talbott's home.
Trooi&gt;ers said Talbott was appar·
ently •enroute home when the
mishap occurred.
It was third traf!lc fatality
Investigated lnMelgs County Ibis
year by the patrol.
Meigs County Coroner Dr.
James Conde reported Talbott
died between 2 and 3 a.m. o! head
and chest Injuries received In !he
accident. His body was discovered about 6:40 a.m. Wednes·
day by a motorist David Proffitt
who was passing by. The Racine
Emergency Unit and the patrol
Continued on page'16

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(UPI) - In a thundering trial by
fire, the shuttle Discovery's
three main engines finally
roared to life today, 11 days late,
In a "super" 22-second un·
manned test ftrtng marking a
giant step toward the first
post-Challenger flight.
~. •'It was agreatsuccesstoday,''
'Rear Adm. Richard Truly. chief
of the shuttle program, said In an
· InterVIew. "The crew Is ready to
fly. The launch team Is ready to
count the vehicle down. We're
just Itching to get !his flight out of
the way so we can get on to the
next one."
NASA Is pushing to launch
Discovery around Sept. 29 or a
few days earlier, but Truly, while
clearly elated at preliminary
results o! the engine firing, said a
firm launch date for the first
post-Challenger ml~slon would
not be set until alter a dellber·
ately {tawed test boGster Is fired
In Utah next week.
In NASA's second attempt in
six days to pull o!f the critical
engine flrlng, the 12 million·
horsepower engines riashed to
life In a staggered burst of dirty
orange flame at 7:30 a .m. and

TEST FmiNG A SUCCESS - The shuttle Discovery's three
mala rocket engines belch orange flame early Wednesday
momlng, as 12 mUilon horsepower of lbrut rocks the craft, bolted
to the launch pad, during an unmanned test. NASA officials said
the crucial tes toward the first post-Challenger flight went well .

jury
...-Local news briefs----. Grand
•
Meigs fair entry deadline near

Future events chamber topic
Upcoming actlvlttes this fall were dlseussed when the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce met for a shOrt luncheon
meeting Tuesday at Trinity Church In Pomeroy, Presided over
by President Paul Gerard, the group discussed a Halloween
party for October, a musical by the Big Bend Minstrel
Association In November and a New Year's dance and party.

Coroner rules on Norton death
A ruling of death by self-tnntcted wounds to the head from a
.12 guage shotgun has been Issued by Meigs County Coroner Dr.
James Conde In the death of Carl Norton at hls home on
Ebenezer St. tn Pomeroy Tuesday morning. Services for Mr.
Norton, pronounced dead at Veterans Memorial Hospital, are
being arranged at the Fogelsong Funeral Home In Mason, W.

.va.

Autopsy being performed

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An autopsy ts being performed on five month Old Mellssa
Large who was found dead by her mother about 7:55a.m. on
July 29 Meigs Coroner Dr. James Conde reports.
· The baby was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital by an
emergency unit from the residence of James and Debora
Barker near Harrisonville where the mother, Debora Hlveley
and the bsby made their home. Thelnfantwas pronounced dead
on arrival at !he hospital. Dr. Conde said the autopsy Is being
performed by the Franklin County Coroner's Department In
Columbus.
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We have experts on !he scene."
"I personally view this as one
North Carolina Health Dlrec· of the most disgusting dumpings
tor Ronald Levine said the 'I've seen In Ohio," state EPA
chances of anyone catching an Director Richard Shank said.
Infectious disease !rom the de- "This Is !he first time we' ve ever
bris are "slim to none."
had a lot of hospital waste wash
Saturday, a swimmer found a up on a beach that we've
vial of a dark substance !hat Investigated."
appeared to be blood near
A piece of cloth that washed
Atlantic Beach, and It was taken ashore on Rhode Island's East
to the state health laboratory for Matunuck Beach Monday bore
testing.
the stamp of a Manhattan hospl·
200 Syringes Found
tal, marking the first time that a
The Ohio Environmental Pro- hospital's name .has surfaced
tection Agency began a criminal publicly In the series o! discover·
Investigation Into the dumping of tes o! medical w;~ste along East
about 200 syringes, some still Coast beaches lhls summer.
containing blood, and other medl·
The stamp, "Presbyterian
cal wastes found this week on a Hospital," has prompted .an
private Lake Erie beach In the Investigation by environmental
exclusive Cleveland suburb of o!flclals. The hospital serves as
the teaching faclllty lor the
Bratenahl.

Columbia Unverslty College of
Physicians and Surgeons.
Presbyterian was one o! 50
private and municipal hospitals
In New York City that was fined
between November 1985 and May
1988 lor not separating their
Infectious garbage from their
regular wast\!.
. Large amounts o! medical
waste began washing up on
Northeastern shores ·In July.
prompting the closing of numer·
ous beaches around New York
City, Massachusetts·, Rhode Is·
land and Connecttcu t.
Waste from sewage treatment
plants also has fouled beaches In
the region. Several beaches In
metropolltan New York City are
off limits to bathers because or
high levels of bacteria.

Discovery test ~Iring said a.
success; crew. ready to fly

Closing time for all open class entries of the Meigs County
Fair Is 4 p.m. Friday . Personnel of the fair board will be at !he
sectetary's of1lce on the fairgrounds from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. both
this Thursday and Friday to accept !he open class entries. The
horse pulling contest Is not Included In !he deadline.

.

wasned ashore Tuesday' and a
Raleigh television station broad·
cast film showing the : debris
clearly was marked "Property or
the U.S. Navy."
Capt. Paul Hanley, a spokes·
man for the Atlantic Fleet In
Norfolk, Va., conceded that !he
debris belonged to the Navy.
Hanley said the Navy sent sailors
to clean up the de]lrls and Is
lnves tlga tlng how It liound up on
the beach.
''We emphasize that at the
moment !here Is no Indication of'·
any risk to the publlc health from
this material," he said. "Navy
regulations regarding the disposal of trash, especially medical
waste, are very strtngent, and we
do not yet know how this refuse
came to be washed up as It has.

Two die
on area
highways

ASSORTED fLA~ORS

Bananas

the blll sent to the House, fines for
dumping medical waste would be
Increased from $25,000 to$250,000
a day and prison terms of up to
five years would be authorized.
The legislation also would
Ioree New York City and eight
other New Jersey and New York
sewage authorities to stop dump·
lng millions of tons of sewage
sludge at sea by 1992 or face huge
civil penalties.
" It should be clear to everyone
that we slmplycannotcontinu~ to
use our oceans as a garbage
can," said Sen. Frank Lauten·
berg, D·N.J., chief sponsor or the
bill.
In Atlantic Beach, N.C., two
garbage bags of needles, rubber
gloves, medication and IV bags

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rece-,ves more ·
Celeste data

CLEVELAND (UPI) - A
federal grand jUJ"Y Investigating
alleged wrongdoing by Gov.
Richard F. Celeste's admlnlstra·
tion reportedly Is now reviewing
the awarding of federal grants to
Celeste campaign contributors.
The " Cleveland Plain Dealer
reported Wednesday that the
grand jury has requested and
received records Indicating the
governor awarded federal Job
Training Partnership Act grants
to campaign contributors over
!he objection o! the Ohio Bureau
o! Employment Services.
In one case Involving a $134,608
grant, the newspaper said, Celeste was specifically warned
that the grant was "very strongly
_opposed" by state and local
· business and political leaders,
and was told the school's program "engages In sex stereotyp·
lng" by training mostly women
for low-paying jobs.
Celeste, however, awarded the
grant.
When The Plain Dealer detailed the award of the grants,
Celeste offlclala said !he governor was not aware of the
objections and suspended a state
worker for not fully lnfOI'Jlling
the governor. Celeste later said
he should have asked lor more
Information .

quickly throttled up to 100 per·
cent power In the first such
launch pad flrlng since Chal·
Ienger blew up 2 \7 years ago.
As engine operation stabilized,
the 6,000-degree exhaust
changed to a pinkish. almost
transparent, fire that Instantly
vaporized torrents or launch pad
cooling water, sending a blllow.lng cloud of steam thou$8nds o!
feet Into the Florldda sky,
·
Gulping more than 1,000
pounds of liquid oxygen and
Itquld hydrogen rocket !uel a
second during the critical
"burn," the three engines were
shut down, one at a time,
beginning a bout I9 seconds after
Ignition. The first engine started,
main engine No.3, was the last to
be shut down at about 22 seconds.
"We have a shot at the end of
September," NASA Admtnlstra·
tor James Fletcher said In an
Interview after the test.
In a brief talk to tired launch
crews, Fletcher said: "Congrat·
ulaUons on a super job by a super
team."
Discovery was attached to the
launch pad by four giant bolts at
the base o! each of Its two
solld·fuel boosters and elaborate

computer safeguards were In
place to make sure the spaceship
stayed put on launch pad 39B.
The firing appear~d normal
but complete results awaited
close analysis of test data from
$1.4 mllllon In Instrumentation
and sensors. Good results would
preserve a slim chance for NASA
to launch Discovery In !he last
lew days of September. an option
rpost engineers believe wlll ultl·
rhately slip away as Inevitable
problems crop up closer to
launch day.
In any case, Truly and
Fletcher agreed that a formal
launch dale would not be announced until after the booster
test flrlng next week, the fifth
and final such test required
before Discovery's blastoff.
The engine flrlng came 11 days
behind schedule but It nonetheless marked a critical milestone
on the road to resuming shuttle
flights .
The valve problem !hat derailed NASA's first attempt to
fire the engines )ast Thursday
was not In evidence today; thanks
to the Installation o! a $95,000,
Continued on page 16

President Reagan wants to
sign drought aid legislation_
WASHINGTON (UPI)- Pres·
!dent Reagan Is ready to sign a
$3.9 bllllon drought relle! bllllnto
law as soon as It reaches hls desk,
a step that will send disaster
checks to farmers struggling
with the worst drought In
decades.
The House gave final congres·
slonal approval to the plan on a
383-18 roll call vote Tuesday, and
Wlilte House spokesman Marlin
Fitzwater said the president
wants to sign the blll before the
end of the week.
"Farmers and their families
will know that relief Is Ol) the
way,'' Fitzwater said.
The Iegtslatlon, whiCh shot

through Congress In less !han one
month, Is !he mos I generous
disaster package ever lor agrl·
culture. It Includes an extra dose
o! help for farmers with the worst
crop losses so they will get a bout
half of their usual Income, a
three-month, 50-cent Increase In
the milk support price for dairy•.
farmers and a consolidated ald
program for livestock producers.
"We have kept the faith. To all
who wlll be helped by this .
legislation, our promise has been
kept," House Agriculture chair·
man Kika de Ia Garza, -D-Texas,
said as the ·House roll call
started.
Agriculture · Department off!·

cials say It will takeabout60days
to Implement the bill and
farmers should get !he ald at !he
start o! the fall harvesting
season, when farmers usually
begin seeing pro!lt from a year of
work.
The drought has stunted crops
in many of the nation's key
growing regions. More than
two- thirds of the 3,100 U.S.
counties have been a!fected. The
Agriculture Department has projected U.S. grain production will
be cut by one-fourth this year.
The grain trade says the losses .
may be even worse.
"Despite the huge crop losses
Continued on page 16

Board announces safety meeting
for Meigs school bus drivers
The annual school bus drivers bert 'White, Joann Newsome, and Deborah Grueser. Meigs
safety meeting was announced Elnora Bernard, Eastern Local; Local.
The county board approved a
for 7:30p.m. on Monday, Aug. 22, Bob Dudding, Wendell Ervin,
at Meigs High School when the Milford Frederick, Romaine welding II course of study and
Meigs County Board of Educa· Frederick, Roger Hlll, Thomas discussed an adult baste educalion met In regular ~sslon Hill, Daniel Hlll, Delbert Smlht, tlon'.program which wlll start In
Larry Smith, Ernest Spencer, September. The need for a
Monday.
SchOQI bus drivers approved Dan Smith, Don Smtih and speech and language therapist
for certification during the meet· William Downie, Jr., Southern was discussed. Applications are
lng Include: Paul Baer, Sandra · Local; Debra Burns, Letha COt· still being accepted for the
Cowdery, Flossie DIU, William terlll, Teresa Cremeans, Mary position from certified personHannum, Ruth Masters, Darlene King, Juanita Lambert, Carl nel. A special meeting will be set
Reed, carolyn Ritchie, Nita J. Morris, Carrie Morris, Leo Mor- at a later date to fill the post.
Attending the meeting were
Ritchie, Mary Rose, VIolet Sat· ris, Steven Morris, Minnie Thorn·
terfleld, Keltha Whitlatch, ton, William Thornton, Mont board members, Harold Roush,
George Wolfe, Okey T. PuUins, Vance, Charles Williamson, Lots Orls Smith, Bob Burdette, VIrgil
Gary Dill, Archie Rose, andy Wyant, Katherine Deskins, · King, and Harold Lohse, and
Rector, Bruce Myers, Kathy Donna Daniels, Noami Sroufe, Meigs County Superintendent of
Schools John D. Riebel, Sr.
Barringer, Joann Calaway, Ro-

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Commentary
WASHINGTON- The Ameri·
can people are fascinated over
the democratic stirrings inside
the Soviet Union. Readers have
questioned us about Mikhail
Gorbachev' s reforms. Most are
skeptical and they question the
Soviet leader's sincerity.
"Is glasnost for real, or is it
just another Russian trick?"
asks a NashvUle, Tenn., builder.
A student in Flushing, N.Y .. is
hopeful: "I am beginning to
believe that democracy is taking
root in the Sov let Union. Don't
you agree that democracy, like
pregnancy, is hard to reverse?"
Here is the picture that is
e'merging from intelligence

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS. MASON AREA
~lb .
ts:m~ ~._

......,r-rao=·-

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
I'AT WHITEHEAD

BOBHOEFUCH
General Mau~~~r

Asslslanll'ubllsber/ Controller

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
L.ETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
long. AIJ letters are subjett to editing and must be signed wlth name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI bf pubUshed. Letters should be In
good taste, addressing Issues, not persooalltle&amp;.

reports:
Clearly, Gorbachev has in·
ltiated some dramatic changes
that are taking on the dimensions
of an historic struggle. In a sense,
he has unleased a revolution
against the entrenched bureau·
cracy. Apparently, he believes
that .party-government appara·
tus must be restructured before
It suffocates the economy.
He can't afford an open revolt,
so he is trying to keep the
struggle within limits. His ac·
tions have alarmed party offi·
cials, of course. At the same
time, he has sought to reassure
them that there is no cause for

Jesse Helms loves
to talk about IT

Letters to the editor
Chester team thanks supporters
the friends who donated to us on
Tag Day at Chester, the umpires
who donated their time, and last,
but not least, ti)e coaches, Pat
Aeiker, Bruce Hawley, Howard
Well, Fred Werry, and Tammy
Capehart, and all the parents
who were our fans .
Texanna Well

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Today in history
By United Press International ·
Today is Wednesday, Aug. 10, the 223rd day of 1988 with 143 to
follow.
The moon is waning, moving toward its new phase.
The morning stars are Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury and Saturn.
Those born on this day are under the sign of Leo. They include
Edmund Jennings Randolph, the first U.S. attorney general, in 1753;
Herbert Hoover, 31st president of the United States, in 1874; actor
Jack Haley in 1899; actresses Norma Shearer in 1900, Jane Wyatt In
1911 (age 77) and Rhonda Fleming in 1923 (age 65), and singers
Jimmy Dean and Eddie Fisher in 1928 {both age 60).
On this date in history:
In 1776, a committee of llf!njamin Franklin, John Adams and
· Thomas Jefferson Sllill'e&amp;ted the United States adopt "E pluribus
unum'· - Out of ,many one -as the motto t~r its Great Seal.
.
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I

I! he is to have any chance of
reforming the cumbersome, im·
placable communist bureau·
cracy, he must have the full
support of the public. This is one
reason he introduced glasnost,
the policy of openness, whioh
apparently was intended to lift
censorship and unleash the media. An unbridled press, cautiously at first, began exposing
bureaucratic excesses.
This fortUi~ public opinion,
which already indicated little

I

By STEVE GERSTEL
WASHINGTON (UPI) -There can no longer be any doubt, if there
. ever was, that Sen. Jesse Helms loves to shock the Senate with the
language of sex. The words just roll off his tongue.
If he were a kid, he'd have soap in his mouth; if he were a teenager,
he'd be told to take a CQid shower; if he were an old man, which he is,
he'd be ushered out of ·the living room.
.
But Jesse Helins is a member of the U.S. Senate so his constant
haranguing over three days had to be stoically borne. No matter that
all those little tourist children in the visitors galleries were treated to
words they either don't or should not know about yet.
Words like Sodomy. homosexuality, safe sex, soft porn, AIDS,
condom, anal sex, fornication. Not once, but over and over again.
Helms;· ihe conservative Republican senator from North Carolina,
used the words in pressing, four times, his amendment that would
deny any federal money for anti-AIDS education programs except
those that stress abstinence and family values.
The correctness of his position aside- the' Senate is uncomfortably
spUt on the issue -why did Helms treat the Senate to his salacious
tour-de-force?
Much of Helms material was drawn from educational material,
partially paid for with tax dollars, including a comic book ani} a video
that he calls "garbage" and worse. Thernaterial, apparently, is quite
graphic.
But neither the comic book nor the video are new to his colleagues.
They have viewed both, courtesy of collector Helms, who has shown
them to senators and even President Reagan was treated to a view of
the comic .book.
Everyone, Reagan and the senators, was properly outraged. So
then, why did Helms feel impelled to go through his lurid
performance again, considering that he made the comic book and the
video public 'a year ago.
It is intriguing that senators who opposed him and senators who
voted with him did not feel obi!ged to stoop to the details that Helms
enumerated over and over.
This is the senator, moreover, who did not raise his voice or offer an
amendment during the entire consideration of the drought bill or the
farm and food agricultural appropriations bill. Yet Helms is
third-ranking member of the Senate Agriculture Committee. .
It would be unfair to dwell solely on Helms's penchant for the
S-word, without mentioning Sen. Gordon Humphrey, R-N.H., equally
conservative but not nearly as skUled as his North Caroi!na
colleague.
Humphrey, not wiii!ng to let Helms hog the spotlight, turned in an
amendment of his own that would forbid the "promotion" of
hOmosexuality.
In debating the amendment, which took up maybe half an hour,
Humphrey three times pointed out to his colleagues, ail persons of
ascending maturity, that there are "anotomical difficulties" in sex
between people of the same gender.
"It hardly seems that nature has fitted two mep, for example, or
two women to have . sexual relations," Humphrey said. What a
startling revelation for members of the Senate.
The Senate better be careful: Can graffitti on the chamber wails be
far behind?

Dear Editor:
The Chester Pony Girls' Soft.
ball Team would like to send
their thanks to ail who cheered us
on this year to Keebaugh's
Restuarant who sponsored us,
the businesses who donated to us.
Pieasers' Restuarant for allowing us to have the car wash there,

alarm. Meanwhlie, he is deli·
cat ely going a.bout the business of
dismantling and streamlining
the party structure.

~UST

HAVE A GREEN
TlfUMB,·r GUESS.

NOW OPEN 24 HOURS A DAY!

sympathy for the overprivileged
and underworked bureaucrats.
But only the media and the
i.n teli!gencia are greatly enthused about political reforms.
In the end, the populace wUI
judge Gorbachev by the economic improvements his reforms bring.

WASHINGTON (NEAl Enacted only 10 years ago, . the
Civil Service Reform Act was
supposed to protect the rights of
government whistle-blowers but the experience of one courageous, conscientious federal
employee illustrates its
inadequacies.
In the early 1980s, Bertrand G.
Berube was a senior official ih
the General Services Adminis·
!ration, the federal agency in
charge of all government build·
ings, transportation, communi·
cations and supplies.
As administrator of GSA's
National Capital Region, Berube
was responsible for maintaining
almost all government buildings
in Washington, from the White
House to the Pentagon, but he
was troubled by the condition of
many of those those structures.
Specifically, he was concerned
about health and safety deficien·
cies that included fire hazards,
asbestos contamination and
crumbling foundations in build·

THURS. I FRI. -LUCKY 8 DAYS

TUESDAY- SR. CITIZENS' DAY

RECBVEDOUBLETHECOUPONVALUE
ON UP TO 8 MANUFACTURERS' COUPONS

RECEIVE 5% DISCOUNT ON
MOST PURCHASES.

.

A CA9DINAL AFFIUAlED

·

8M Store For Det811a

8M Store For o-111 ·

MIDDLEPORT, OH.•GEN. HARTINGER PKWY. It PEARL ST.•992·3471
. _,,. r

Today. the shelves in the state
stores are bare and the food in the
pantries is meager. Gorbacbev
will succeed or fail according to
the digestibles he puts on the
tables and the consumer goods he
puts of the shelves.
Party offici!lls are contldentiy
waiting for economic discontent
to set in. This could create a
backlash that would sweep Oorbachev out of power, He needs to
improve Soviet living standards
quickly. One way would be to
decrease military spending and
increase trade with the United
States.
Several ·readers want an assessment of Yegor. Ligachev's
role .
There is no question that
Ligachev has championed the
embattled bureaucrats, · defended their privileges and opposed Oorbachev' s reforms. By
all appearances, he is waiting
expectantly in the wings to take
over when Gorbachev gives up
tilting at windmills.
.
Gorbachev has carefully refrained from attempting to purge
Ligachev from the Politboro.
This may be a measure of
Ligachev's power; he remains
the No. 2 man in the Kremlin and
as the symbol of the party
apparatus. But it may also be the
wily 6orbachev's way of reassur·
ing the bureaucrats and averting
ar! open revolution.

Whistle blown

The .Daily Sentinei- P&amp;ge-3

For Your Shopping Convemence ... Vaughan·s Is

Page 2-The. Deily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middlaport, Ohio
Wednnc1ay, Aug. 10 1988

.f

111 Colll1 Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Q!v

P011111oy-Middlapoet, Ohio

Glasnost is hot topic By Jack Andetson and Joseph Spear

The Daily Sentinel
·~

Wed11B1dey, Aug. 10, 1988

..
lnducles 2 pu. Chicken,
1 loll &amp; Cole slaw

CHICIIN
SNACK lOX

$109

88

•,

on federal ·laW__

ings where thousands of government employees worked.
Berube's superiors not only
rejected his appeals to remedy
those problems but viewed him
as a troublemaker and threa·
tened to retaliate against him if
he did not abandon his campaign
to publicize the dangerous
conditions.
Berube told his bosses that if
they pledged to make the needed
improvements, he would "stay
within the system"; if not, he
would "go to the press" with his
story. He was fired in 1983.
He then sought assistance from
the Office of Special Council,
established In the 1978 law as the
representative of legitimate government whistle-blowers who
have .!iuffered from reprisals
after identifying fraud, waste,
abuse or other forms of
wrongdoing.
If OSC investigations produce
evidence that whistle-blowers
have been subjected to illegal
retaliation, the agency is sup-

Ro_be_rt_wa_lte_rs

posed to represent them in
proceedings before the Merit
Systems Protection Board.
But Berube was rebuffed by
OSC, which instead claimed that
he engaged in unlawful "extor·
lion" and "blackmall" when he
warned GSA officials thai he
would take his case to the news
media if remedial action was not
initiated.
•
Thai' experience is hardly
unusual. In its 10 years of
existence, OSC has turned down
more than 99 percent of all
appeals from whistle-blowers. It
has agreed to represent only one
of the thousands of government
workers who have sought its
assistance since it was created.
Instead, OSC has become the
whistle-blowers' opponent, characterizing them as malcontents,
tutoring government officials on
how to fire them without being
caught, and turning over to
federal agencies confidential
materials provided by whistle·

blowers seeking help.
The Government Accountabil·
ity Project, a public Interest
group that aids whistle-blowers,
aptly describes OSC as the
fedetai establishment's "most
effective weapon against dissent,
identifying wounded dissenters
who come for help and then
finishing them ott."
Congress now has an opportunity to Institute needed reforms
because both the House and
Senate soon will consider the
Whistle-blower Protection Act,
which would prohibit OSC from
acting against the· best interests
of those who seek its help.
This also would establish a
realist.ic burden of proof when
whistle-blowers are subjected to
retribution, replacing the current standard under which
whistle-blowers who are pun!shed must prove ·that their
bosses would not have taken the
··same retaliatory action in more
normal circumstances.

...

.muoa
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Unmasking Jesse Jackson.___Sa_ra_h_Ove_rs_tre__;_e&amp;
Few Of us watching Jesse
Jackson's address to the Demo·
cratlc convention had any trouble realizing we had heard
ourselves a Speech with a capital

s.

shirt" story way back in 1968,
when Martin Luther King was
assassinated, although I didn't
know the that his story wasn't
accurate.

No one can empathize with the
The only member of King's
downtrodden and disenfran- organization to leave Memphis
chised, and those of us just right after the shooting, Jackson
plagued by the ordinary frustra· showed up on the "Today" show
lions of working hard for the the next morning with a story
ever-elusive dollar, like Jesse other King stalwarts label pFepJackson can. He draws us to him, · osterous. He claimed to have
pounds home the message to us "cradlecj the dying King in his
that he is us (just all gussied upln arms," a story the rest of the
a silk suit) , that he is our stand-in King organization call an outpicked by fate to express what right lie. They don't know how he
we're ail feeling.
got blood on his shirt, unless he
He exhorts us to work hard, climbed up to the balcony where
believe in ourselves, spit on King was killed and dipped his
drugs and not make excuses. He shirt in it.
may make excuses for us, rriay
There are other yarns Jesse's
try to draw some sympathy for been caught in, including the one
the circumstances that make it where he paints himself as a
tougher to succeed; but to us, to wronged athlete, not allowed to
those he claims kinship with, the be quarterback because he was
message is clear: No matter black, at the University of
what your . circumstances and Illinois. A little digging by the
how you got there, all is not lost. hometown paper back in
Be responsible. Work to change Champaign-Urbana turned up
things, because things can be the fact that another black man
changed. "Keep hope alive ... ."
did play quarterback when Jack·
This mixture of unrelenting son was there; and that Jackson
hope and personal responsibility asked 1:\ university secretary to
is a national treasure. If affects type up a magazine article for
people; it changes them. In 1984, him and turn it in as his own
25 percent of 25-year·old black research paper.
males voted; only 22 percent of
Then there's the sticky little
white men the same age voted. issue of PUSH. the organization
And I doubt if anyone with an Jackson founded to take his
open heart comes away com· inspirational message Into public
pleteiy untouched by one of his schools. It also provided him a
speeches: Like any good salary.
preacher, he makes us face
Because Hubert Humphrey
ourselves and come up short.
urged government aid for PUSH,
But as luck would have it, this the organization received $5
national treasure also has as million in grants and loans from
much taieni for changing the government agencies.
truth as he does men's hearts. He
But when the government
first captured my personal atten- wanted to audit PUSH's books,
tion wltb the famous "bloody Jackson refused. Later, when he

agreed, investigators could .find
no records.
Seems the man
.
keeping them died....
r.f
Jesse Jackson came al,!lazingiy close to a presidential
nomination this time. How close
he comes in 1992 depends on how
the Democrats and Amer~an
voters perceive him.
Of course, there's no predict·
ing what Jackson himself will do.
What he deserves from the
Democratic Party is the right to
~

be recognized as a presidential
contender, and a right to have his
feet heid"to the·flre,like anybody
else. What he deserves from the
press is a scrutiny as thorough as
any other candidate deserves.
Hopefully, the press and the
Democrats will start evaluating
Jackson by the same measure
they did other candidates, and
we, the voters, will have a
greater opportunity to know who
we're voting for.

•

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SABU DOES NEW ORLEANS

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Owlntl_l)' rlghtl - . NOI rtiPG"IIblt lor typographical or pictorial '"""'·

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'

�Paga 4

:The Daily Santiilal

Wednaaday. Aug. 10,

.~ed~.Aug.10,

(;r~tzky trade

Browns NewsQJDe sets sight
on Super Bowl this autumn

Canadians
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-----Sports
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-•

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..!'here are a lot o! disgruntled
bja (UPI) - Hockey great
fans, my sell Inc ),uded," said Lori
'f9ayne Gretzky's trade to the Los Nagy of llle Edmonton poUce
""geles Kings shocked and an- force. "However, nobody here Is
gered Canadians, with one prom- Jumping off bridges."
J;nent politician calling on the
Nagy said, however, that poc.overnrnent to buy the player's llee Increased security at Gretz.
¢ontracl and resell It to a
ky's tearful farewell press con~nadlan 'team.
ference In down town Edmonton,
.: 'The Edmonton Oilers without and gave him a pcli!ce escort to
Wayne Gretzky Is like apple pie and !rom llle airport.
y;ttbout lee cream, like winter
"We didn't want to take any
Without snow, like lhe Wheel of risks," she said.
Fortune without Vanna White .
owner Peter Pockllng·
\t's quite simply unthlnllable," tonOilers
announced the departure of
said a fumlngMemberofParua. hockey's most dominant player
ment Nelson Rlls Tuesday In at the afternoon news conference
pttawa.
. In Edmonton. The third-leading
• Gretzky, 27, the caplaln and scorer In NHL history then
tO-year veteran of the Edmonton boarded a Olght for Los Angeles.
Oilers, was traded Tuesday with
Speculation about a trade
teammates Mike Krushelnyskl began when Gretzky married
and Marty McSorley !or Jimmy Los Angeles actress Janet Jones
Carson, Martin Gelinas and In July. Details of the extravahrst-round draft picks In 1989, gant wedding made headlines !or
WAYNE GRETZKY
J991 and 1993, as well as an weeks, and thousands of fans
unspecified amount of money lined the streets of Edmonton on
trom lhe Kings believed to be as
lhe wedding day to wish the
)llgh as $20 mUllon.
newlyweds welL
· Gretzky captured the hearts of
Gretzky, who llolds or shares 41
~anadlans for his shyness and
NHL records, tried to talk about
pleasant personality, his modest his decision to leave the Oilers at
lifestyle, and his prowess In lhe Jhe Edmonton :news conference
C,ountry's nallona.l sport.
but broke down In tears and was
•· When rumors that Gretzky was
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
unable to finish.
jielng traded to the Los Angeles
slumping
Los Angeles Dodgers
At a packed h&lt;&gt;tel news conferhave
already
let the Houston
J{lngs were confirmed TueSday,
ence ~ later In Los Angeles,
the country's disappointment Grelzky, his wife at his !tide, was Astros and San Francisco Giants
back In JheNatlonalLeague West
quickly surfaced. ·
more composed. '
division
chase, and now Danny
, · In Ottawa, an angry Rlls told
"It's mixed emotions for me,"
Jackson
has helped get the
Parliament the trade amounted he said. "This morning It was
the sale of a national treasure. very difficult to leave the city and Cincinnati Reds In the lhlck of
: "Wayne Gretzky Is a national the PeoPle that have been great things.
Jackson lhrew a four· hitter for
symbol like the beaver, (aulhor) . fans lhe lastntne years. Tonight
Flerre Berton and (Toronto It's all uphill. I' 1m very excited to his !ourlh shutout of the year,
Maple Leafs owner) Harold be here. It's something I think leading Cincinnati to a 6-0vlctory
Ballard,· • said Rlls, of the social- will not only be good !or Wayne Tuesday night over Los A!tgeles.
tNew Democratic Party. "How Gretzky, and the L.A. Kings, but The left·hander struck out eight,
can we allow the sale of our beneficial to
the game of Including the side In lhe ninth,
and walked none In his leaguenational symbols? I just can't hockey."
high nlnlh complete game of the
J&gt;elleve It. "
season.
•• Rlls urged Jhe Conservative
Reporters asked Jones If she
"That's as well as I've pitched
government to Intervene In the
had
Influenced
the
decision.
In the last four or five games,"
i!ale by buying Gretzky's con"When this decision ~arne up, said the 26·year-old Jackson,15'5
tract and reselling him to a
· It was scary because a lot of after winning five In a row and
Canadian team.
people In Edmonton might think eight of hls last nine decisions. "I
~ In Edmonton, newpapers and
radio stations reported fans were thai I pursued hlrn to do this," got better as lhe game went on
calling to express lhelr anger at she said. "All I can say l!l that I and got my second wind In the
just supported what he wanted lo fifth or six lh Inning."
the trade.
do.
· : "People are upset Jhelr favorThe Dodgers, who were shut
"Maybe In his heart he thought out!or lhe second straight game,
Ite son Wayne Is leaving Edmon\on," said Tony Balls, a reporter he was doing something for me.;, have lost three straight and nine
In Calgary, which has a! ways of 12.
tor lhe Edmonton Sun. "We've
had
a strong rlvalrywlth Edmonbeen getting a lot of calls, and the
"We're just not hilling ·the
ton.
people overwhelmingly rejo- ball," said Los Angeles Manager
111ayor has said he was shocked,
but notlting really out of the Iced over llle tr .ade. ,
Tom La~orda," but we've we've
"Let's Just say lhat people here faced good pitching by Jackson
prdlnary has been happening."
· Radio reports earner In the day are dancing on the streets," one . and (Houston's Mike) Scott."
indicated lhat dlstrau1ht fans , reporter said. "(The Oilers)
Jackson, who lowered his
lovere calling the clty'4 distress don't realize just what they're earned run average fo 2.71,
and suicide prevention telephone losing In Gretzky. "
closed the game with successive
In Los Angeles, fans knew the strikeouts of Atredo Grlf!ln, Kirk
itnes. However, a spokeswoman
Jor lhe Edmonton pclUce sa ld lhe Kings were gaining one of Gibson and Mike Marshall.
hockey's greats.
~eports were unfounded. ·
"I can !eel the confidence of
our club," Jackson said after lhe
briefs-~--- Reds moved within six games cif
the Dodgers and brought their
contract wlth Citgo.
..
Bulletball
record
to a game over .500 (56-55)
Soccer
· The Los Angeles Clippers
for
lhe
first time since May 23.
The MISL
Tacoma Stars
1:-eached a settlement of their
"We're
playing like we're capa·
lJtlgatlon with forward Marques signed Coach Alan Hinton to a ble of playing right now, the way
Johnson making him an unres- three· year contract .... A capac- . we dld In spring training."
tricted free agent able to sign lty crowd of 25,000 watched an
Los Angeles saw Its division
)Vllb any team. Johnson, a exhibition game Monday In Bel- lead cut to a half-game over
· five-time All·Star, played justlO fast honoring George Best, the Houston, which Tuesday dejames In 1986·87 and missed all of former star 1or Manchester feated San Francisco. The Giants
last season after suffering a United and Northern Ireland .
are 3 'f.: games out. The Dodgers
Temnl8
9evere neck Injury. When he
Slobodan Zlvojlnovlc of Yugos· had a seven·game cushion
refused to agree to an operation,
shortly alter lhe ali·Siar break.
the Clippers suspended him and lavla will leave 1:hetennis tour for
"It was lmportant!or us to win
stopped payment on hls contract, a year alter the Seoul Olympics the !lrst game o! the series,"
worth $1.4 mutton last year .... to serve as a cook In his country's Reds Manager Pete Rose said .
The Philadelphia 76ers signed army.
"Jackson pitched a great game
Track and Field
free-agent Bob Thorton to a
and
we scored that early run for
Florence Grlf!ltb·Joyner, the
one-year contract.
him.''
flamboyant American sprinter,
Football
Cincinnati took a 1·0 lead In lhe .
Notre Dame quarterback Tony dressed lor a meet In Malmo, first lnping when Kal Daniels led
Rice will be academically ellgl· Sweden, Monday, wearing a blue off with a single, stole second and
ble to play this season. He, one-legged bodysult with a yel- continued to third on catcher
attended summer school and low bikini bOttom adorned with Rick Dempsey's wild throw for
raised his grade average above lhe Swedish flag.
an error.
2.0, lhe minimum NCAA !eYe! ....
Outside linebacker Eric Hill,
LSU's third-leading tackler In
· 1987, can rejoin the team, pendhlg review of his first-offender ·
program. He had been arrested
for fighting. . .. Penn Stale
announced that It will play
Soulhern Cal, Miami and
Brigham Young In hOme-and·
!)orne series beginning In 1990
replacing Syracuse, Alabam~
and VIrginia. J:&gt;enn State and
Syracuii'E! first played In 1922....
Assistant Vanderbilt football
qoach Bob Camplglla, who Is
tecovering from back sul'lery at
St. Thomas Hospital In Nash·
ville, Tenn. ., will be replaced this
season by the Commodores re·
erulting coordinator Van Holloway .... Southern Cal and Penn
State have agreed to play eight .
fdotball games a11alnst each
Two ri our Dllll popalor
alher In the 1990s. The home-and·
lll)los ... 'lod·ll&gt;
Sd...r price. Oiler includeo lpecill .........
home series begins In 1990 In Los
option~ ond- ...... (Full,..,. .....
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and
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Reds back in

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BACK TO

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only.
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deem.

I

... ril!r II llnilrdl

1992.

Molar Sporla
Kyle Petty will not drive for lhe
Wood brothers In Jhe 1989 NASCAR season, announced Eddie
Wood. Jhe manager of the Stuart,
Va., team. Petty, 28, lhe son of
veteran stoCk car driver Richard .
Petty, will beCOme a free-aaent .
when tlti.B 111!8100 ends. Petty,
who has driven tor the Wood
bro1hers Jhe pall four yeara, was
lllort1y
afterdeci.BIOn
belplnllast
lhe week.
team
told of the

lan4•.J1.5 mUllon apiiiiiOI'Bhlp . . __ _ _ __

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I

The Daily Sentinai-Page-6

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1988

·

KIRTLAND, Ohio (UPI) The 1988 season Is supposed to
have a story book ending for tight
end Ozzle Newsome and the
Cleveland Browns.
The Browns are supposed to
win lhelr fourlh straight AFC
Central Division title, advance .
lhrongh the playoffs and Into tM
Super Bowl !or lhe first time In
the history of the franchise.
Then, the team Is supposed to
win one for lhe "Gipper," In lhls
case, Newsome.
There's only one problem.
Newsome won't say either way If
he's going to hang up the spikes
after lhe '88 campaign.
·
Now In lhe lllh season In an
Illustrious career, Newsome re·
portedly conte.mplated retirement after lhe Browns' dlsap·
pointing 38-33 loss to the Denver
Broncos in the AFC Championship game last January.
''That's not lmporlanl right
now," he said. "The only thing
that's lmporlant Is lhat I'm
ready for the first (regularseason) game against the Kansas City Chiefs."
Browns head coach Marty
Schottenhelmer said Newsome
hasn'l Indicated he was going to
retire at season's end, "and
frankly I haven't discussed It
with him," he said.
Newsome, 32, had a career· low
34 receptions for 375 y&amp;rds·
(ll.O·yard average) and no
touchdowns last season. He has
averaged neai-Jy 58 receptions
and 707 yards a season over lhe
first 10 years o! his career, with
his 575 career catches more than
any light end In NFL history.
"It's my job to provide the role

that Marty and (quarterback)
Bernie Kosar wan I me to have In
our offense," Newsome said. "If
It means having a lot of big
numbers or medium numbers, II
doesn't matter. Whatever I'm
called on to do, I' 11 do."
Newsome, who hasn't missed a
game since lOth grade, said he
doesn't feel neglected In the
Browt\s' offense.
''We are a team that sprays the
ball around to a lot of players,"
he said. "When my number was
called, I did have some good
numbers In the last two games
(seven recepllons for100yards In
the two playoff games) last year.
'There's always a lot of
skeptics out there, especially
when you're used to getting as
many numbers as I was. They
are cut In half from what they
used to. We have some great
offensive personnel now. I don't
have to go out and carry ·the
whole load now, I just half to !Ill
my role. I'm not getting the big

numbers , but I'm getting the
wins.
"You get recognized more for
winning lhat you do !or personal
stats. I've gotten as much recognition from going to the AFC
Championship game than I did
for catching 89 balls." .
Newsome, who has caught
pasSes In 127 straight games,
came to training camp In tip· top
shape, unUke some olher players
who come to camp to carve of!
some excess poundage.
"I really worked my butt off to
get In shape to be prepared for
this (two-a-day pracllcess)," he
sal d. "It was tough today. This
was one of the worst pnictlces
we've had. When you get a· little
bit tired, you lhlnk about being In
the AFC Championship game."
But he has hls sights set on lhe
Super Bowl.
"Everylhlng has to fall Into
place," he said. "I've got the
thirst for lhe Super Bowl. I think
Jhe lhlrd time can be a charm."

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One man Is presumed drowned,
Jhree water pollce.-'and two
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sunk and many other yachts
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TOM PEDEN

Chflllllll •Oldlrrobill• Prilc •I!Uc:k, Inc.

ODitMan..fri,

8:30 alit 1118 p.m. Rl 21 Souih • Ripley
Sll., 8:30 • 6 p.m. 475 South Church St.
ClOSED SUNDAY

WOY

ll1l.
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372-2144
~.Q7!8

344-5147

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Pega 6-The Deily Seminal

Ohio

Royals edge Orioles; Bosox split twinbill with Brewers
By LEN HOCHBERG
t!PJ Sports Writer
Among the most lethal sports
situations in recent memory are
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar unleashing a sky hook, Wayne Gretzky
maneuvering behind the net,
Bjorn Borg guarding center
court at Wimbledon and Pat
Tabler batting with the bases
loaded.
Pat Tabler? Bases loaded?
If you don't know by now,
Tabler Is gaining cult status by
virtue of his heroics with men on
!irst, second and third. The
Orioles know that now, but by
now, it's too late.
Tabler continued his remarkable effort Tuesday night, lining a
three-run double with one out In
the ninth Inning to propel the
Kansas Clty Royals to a 5-4
decision over Baltimore,

Since Kansas City acquired
Tabler from Cleveland June 3 In
a trade, he Is 3 for 3 with the bases
full, driving In all nine runners
who were on base. This season,
Tabler Is 6 for 7 with 16 RBI In
bases-loaded opportunities, and
lifetime, is 35 of 62, a .565
avera~e. with 84 RBL
"I'm just trying to bit the ball
hard and get lucky, " he said.
"You just think' a·bout trying to
get those runs In to help the team
win."
"It's tile most amazing baseball statistic· I've ever seen,"
Royals Manager John Wathan
said. "He's Incredible. He seems
to thrive on it.
"We're not talking aboutlO or
20 at-bats llere; he has had a lot of
opportunities."
And Its surprising the Orioles
would put Tabler in such a

position to beat tbem. Kurt
Stillwell reached on a bunt single
with one out In the ninth. Mark
Thurmond proceeded to waik
George Brett and Tom Nledenfuer, 1;2, promptly walked
Danny Tartabull.
Tabler, who went 3 for SIn the
game, then did what comes
naturally, drilling a 1-0 fastball
into the rlghl·fleld corner. · He
wound up on second, the lone
Royal stfll on base.
Tbe rally gave Kansas City Its
lOth victory without a loss
against Baltimore this season.
"We had a chance to win It,"
Orioles Manager Frank Robin·
son said. "Those are the ones that
kind of stick with you and hurt
you a little bit because you hate to
let them get away. We were 0·11
against Cleveland (before win·

nlng four straight). But If we do
the things to beat them, we'll
beat• them."
Tabler's double made a winner
of Israel Sanchez, l-1, who threw
five llln1np' of relief to notch his
first major-league victory.
Elsewhere In the American
League, Texu tripped Detroit
. 6-2,. Toronto downed NN York
6-3, Milwaukee took the first
game of·a double-header, 3-2, and
Boston the second, 5-l, Kansas
Clty shaded Baltimore 5-4, Ol!k·
land routed Chicago 8-1 and
Seattle defeated CBIUornla 4-1.
In the National League, II was:
San Diego 5, Atlanta 1; . Cincinnati 6, Los Angeles 0; Pittsburgh
10, Montreal 8; St. Louis 7,
Philadelphia 3; Chicago 6, New
York 4; and Houston 3, San
Francisco 2.

Baapn 8, Ttpn J
At Arlington, Texas, Bobby
Witt, H, fired a three-bitter In
his sixth straight complete game
and seventh this season. Pete
lncavlglla homered an hit a
sacrifice fly off Walt Terrell, 6-9.
Blue Ill• I, YuU.3
At New York, Sal Butera
delivered a two-run triple to
hJihllgbt a five-run sixth Inning
off John Candelaria, 12-7. Mike
Flanagan, ll-8, pitched five
lnlllngs and Duane Ward four to
gain his eighth save. Jack Clark
and Don Slauglit each homered
for New York.
Brewen J.l, Red Sox Z.l
At Milwaukee, Joey Meyer led
off the ninth Inning of the opener
with a winning homer off Roger
Clemens, 15-7. Mike Boddlcker,
8-13, and Bob Stanley combined
on a seven-hitter In the nightcap.

.

Wedrtatday. Aug. 10. 1988

Boston scored four runs Ill the
fourth off Bill Wegman, 10-9.
Atbletblea 8, Wblte Sox 1
At Oakland, Calif., Dave Stewart,15-10, hurled a five hitter In
his sixth straight complete game
and major league-leading 13th
this season. Jeff Bitttger, 1-3,
yt!llded three homers. Dave
Henderson, Ron Hassey and
Glenn Hubbard each coMected,
Hubbard for the third straight
game.
Mariners f, Angels 1
At . Anaheim, Calif., Mike
Moore, 5-13, scattered six hits In
ending his losing streak at six
and extending Seattle's winnlniJ
streak to three, equaling Its best .
this season. Alvin Davis broke a
scoreless tie by slamming a
two-run homer In the fourth off
Mike Witt, 8-ll.

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Violent stor1n drives golfers from Oak Tr·ee Club coors~ . .
EDMOND, Okla. (UPI) -The
players who were caught In a
violent storm which struck the
Oak Tree Golf Club Tuesday had
to think that Sandy Lyle knew
exactly what he was doing.
That, however, didn't stop
them from being surprised.
"I hear Sandy Isn't playing •·
said Jack Nicklaus after the
storm had driven hbn from the

'.

OakTreecourselnthemidstofa
practice round for the 70th PGA
Championship. "I can' t believe
that he decided to slay home. But
Sandy bas always done his own
deal. I'm not in any position to
criticize anybody for skipping
the tournament."
The next-to-last practice day
for the PGA . was Interrupted
Tuesday by a storm that sent

'

Cowboys claim Atkinson ·on
•
wmvers; Woodard to retire
THOUSAND OAKS, Calif.
&lt;UPI) ·- The Dallas Cowboys
Tuesday claimed on waivers
placekicker Jess Atkinson, who
was cut Monday by the Washington Redskins .
Atkinson, from the University
of Maryland, is in his fourth year
in the NFL.
He h~s kicked 17 of 25 regular·
season field goals and earned 21
of 22 extra points.
Op his first extra point attempt
In the 1987 season opener against
the Philadelphia Eagles, he
dislocated his left ankle when
Eagles strong safety Andre Wa·
ters inadvertantly ran Into him.
Atkinson has also spent time
with the New England Patriots,
New York Giants and St. Louis
Cardinals.
· In his two career regular
season games and three playoff
games with Washington, Atkinson was a perfect 7-of· 7 in field

goals and 8-of-8 In fXtra points.
He Is the all-time leading
scorer for Maryland, but has
been cut by five NFL teams.

pointing 38-33 loss to the Denver
Broncos In the AFC Champion·
ship game last January.
Newsome, 32, had a career-low
34 receptions for 375 yards and no
KIRTLAND, Ohio (UPI)
touchdowns last season. He has
The 1988 season is supposed to averaged nearly 58 receptions
have a story book ending for tight and 707 yards a season over the
end O~le Newsome and the first 10 years of his career, with
Cleveland Browns.
his 575 career catches more than
The Browns are supposed to any tight end in NFL history.
win .their fourth straight AFC
Newsome, who has caught
Central Division title, advance passes In 127 straight games,
through the playoffs and into the came to training camp In tip· top
Super Bowl for the first time In shape.
the history of the franchise.
'.'I really worked my butt off to
Then, the team Is supposed to . get in shape to be prepared for
win one for the "Glpper," in this this (two-a-day practicess)," he
case, Newsome.
.
said. "When you get a little bit
There's eniy one problem. tired, you think about being In the
Newsome won't say either way If. AFC Championship game."
he's going to hang up the spikes
But he has bis sight's set on the
after the '88 campaign.
Super Bowl.
Now In the 11th season In an
"Everything has to fall Into
illustrious career, Newsome re- place," he said. "I've got the
portedly contemplated retire- thirst for the Super Bowl. I think
ment after the Browns' dlsap· the third tbne can be a charm."

one out In the eighth to lift the
Astros. The victory was the 21st
In 28 games for the Astros, who
pulled within a half-game of NL
West-leading Los Angeles. Juan
Agosto, 8-0, won In relief and
Dave Smith earned his 21st save.
Kelly Downs fell to 11·9.
lteda 8, Dodpn 0
At Cincinnati, Danny Jackson
threw a four-hitter for his fourth
shutout of the year and Bo !Diaz
and Paul O'Neill each homered,
sparking the Reds. Jackson,15-5,
struckoutelghtandwalkedllone
In his league-high ninth complete

game. Don Sutton, 3·6, went.
seven Innings In a losing effort.
·
Padrell, Braves 1
At Atlanta, Benito Santiago
homered twice to back Eric
Show's four-bitter, pacing San
Diego. Show, 9-10, waJked one
and struck outfour In his seventh
complete g11me. The rightbander Is 14-3 lifetime against
Atlanta. Both of Santiago's home
runs came off Zane Smith, 5-9.
Carcllnall 7, Pbiiiiel 3
At Philadelphia, Terry Pendleton keyed a seven-runetgbth
with a pair of RBI s tngles,liftlng

players and fans fleeing for
cover.
Lightning stabbed the ground
near the course and a monsoon·
like rain fell for more than an
hour. Although the creeks which
run through the course filled to
bank full, the only damage to the
course came In the form of small
tree lbnbs knocked to the ground.
It was the second big storm to

.summ

St. Louis . Dan Quisenberry, 2·0,
went one Inning for the victory.
Philadelphia . relief ace Steve
Bedrosian, 1-5, failed to retire
any of the four batters he faced.
Plrales 10, Expos 8
At Montreal, Sid Bream bad
four RBI and Bobby BonUla hit a
two-runhomertohelpPittsburgh
regain ~and place In the NL
East by a half-game over the
Expos. Brian Fisher, 7·9,allowed
four runs on seven hits over 6 2·3
Innings before Jim Gott notched
his 19th save. John Dopson, 3-7,
took the toss.

'

liiMIIliiED ITUI I'IIIJC"f-Each Of advenioed itemo is required to be readily IIYiiloblo lor oalt kl each
Krogor Stora, 0xcept ao opeciflcaly noted in thio ~d. If we do n~n 0&lt;1t of an lldvenload item, we wit offer
you your cho~ of a comporoblo hom when available, raflect.,g the oamo - · or 1 rolncheck which
wll entitle you to purchaoe tho adveriloed item at tha advenised price within 30 deyo. Only one vendor
coupon will be occoptad per item purchased.

•'

WUPOUIIID PO. SfOIES.

....

,

,,..

Jumbo Size California

•DeWI•

•Brouabam.l
•BeWiee

ELDORADO

$24,900

'

OLDSMOBILE
'88 DELTA 88'S

U.S. GRADE A FROZEN YOUNG
4-7-LB. AVG.

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE
GRAIN FED BEEF

..
..

Cuddy Farms
Turkey Bre~st

Boneless
Round Steak

. .'

·

Pound

Pound

:. . .

~ SI2,900

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..-

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2 doors &amp; 4 doors

c'

%"

OLDSMOBILE '88

TRIM

CUTLASS SUPREME SL

SJ:Z,900
40¢ OFF LABEL

'88 OLDSMOBILE
98REGENCY

SJ:S,900
,.

Tide Laundry
Detergen~ .........................:.........
.•

$9,900

sxo,9oo
1987 BERETTA

$7995

MAPLE RIVER 7-9-LB. AVG.

Whole Boneless
Smoked Hams

Kroger
Cottage Cheese

•

88
42-oz.

~---------------

...

REGULAR OR 2% LOWFAT

Pound

24-oz.

NONRETURNABLE BOTILE, CAFFEINE FREE
DLET COKE, DIET COKE,

Coca Cola Classic
or Coca Cola

••

..

~

•.

..·- .

2-Liter

•

•

1987 NOVA

SLICED
FREE

19B61ROC CAMARO

$7395

1987 CELEBRITY

$10,900

12-PAK 12-0Z. CANS ... $2.99

'

$6900

c. D. MelatJn, Mmaller at
•-eel
tba&amp; ..._ wiB1ar to
play m11 allll eurvllln the PI'DP'IIID llldll Aq. 11.
vtee pJWIIIellt ud

8:30 A.M.-9 P.M.
• 4 P.M.

·..

•

124 SHEETS PER ROLL 1-PLY. ·

Arts &amp; Flowers
ScatTowlls
Single Rill

I

HOURS: MONDAY THRU fRIDAY,

IN THE DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE
AMERICAN OR

Duncan Hines
Cake Mix
1~1Lkz.

Mustard
Potato Salad·
Pound

JUMBO 12 SIZE

California
Cantaloupa
Each

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SATURDAY, 9 A.M.
CLOSED SUNDAY

308 E. Main Street
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·Pomeroy, Ohio

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1986 PONTIAC
SUN BIRD

$9900

,.

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WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLD TO
DEALERS.
.

'

CAVALIER
•

lllo8e frGm New Baveulllld - - J!'lnt pi'Ddlee
-loallll'e .-for Aq. II wllb COIIdlttolllnldriDI
tlult wiU lut the eatlre week. For more
Jntormaajn call Hull Clelaad at tn-all, lgjy
Wllllanll at 11ft 1887 for Dave Jenklna at leH7ft.

.,

COPYRIGHT 1988 - THE KROGER CO . ITEMS ANO PRICES GOOD
SUNDAY, AUG. 7, THROUGH SATURDAY, AUG. t3, 1988, IN

'88 CHEVROLET

II Ia opeu te boJa BIKI J1r11 from tile Melp,
Soulben 8IKI ~· acbool dl •leta • well •

''

t

SUMMER
VALUE
DAYS!

DOOR

phylllcal• and for equlpmeat fltllllp for proapec·
live playera Involved Ia tblll ,ear'a program.
Parea18 nlpl wu al1111 oblerved. Sellted (1-r) are
Judy Wllllam8, third vice pl'fllldeal; Hank
Clelaad, Treuurer; Dave lenklu, Pre81deat ud
Mike YoiDJ, flnt vice prnldeat. !ltandlll{ are
Jack .WIIBams, Secretary; Rap lngela, teeOnd

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4

Larp. Jenldal

• • •

'

CIERA

BIG BEND MFL OFFICERS - OfOcer• of the

It Is almost unheard or for the
Following Lyles win at the
winner of a tltletomlssachance Masters, the U.S. Open was
to add another in the same year. captured by Curtis Strange and
''When was the last time the British Open was won by Seve
someone won a major champion- · Ballesteros . Both Strange and
ship and then didn't come to one Ballesteros said Tuesday they
of the other major tournaments found Lyle's absence to be
during that year?" Nicklaus was unexpected at the least.
asked.
"You do what you believe Is
"I can't remember," Nicklaus right," Strange said.
said.

'·

'·8 8 CUTLASS

BIJ Bead Mld&amp;e' Foolball Le11111e met Tuead.,
niJIII at the Seulor Citizen'• Center te coaducl

hit the area In four days, but
despite the rains the course was
re-opened for practice abouf 30
minutes after the last drops fell.
There was also a minor storm
of surprise when the players
arrtvjng, for tournament found
that Lyle .,.. winner of this year's
Masters -was not present.
It is rare for a top player to
miss a 'major championship, but

&lt;our

Cubs edge Mets 64 in rltSt completed night _tilt at Wrigley
By BILL WOLLE
by Ryne Sandberg. Mark Grace with a man on In the fifth for a 2·0
t!PI Sports Writer
singled home Dunston, and An- Mets lead. Monday night's two
The powers that be decided dre Dawson slngled"home Sand- home runs, by Philadelphia's
Monday night was not the right berg for a 6-2 lead.
PhllBradleyandChicago'sSandtime for the first night game at
"Four (RBI) with two out;
berg, were negated by the
Wrigley Field and then evidently
that's probably a record," said ralnout.
felt the Chicago Cubs should win Cubs Manager Don Zimmer. "I
Tbe lights got good grades
the first home night game in their can tell my grandchildren we from the players despite conwon the first night game at cerns that they weren't strong
history.
The first scheduled night game Wrigley Field."
enough to illuminate the park.
was held Monday between the
Chicago also received a break
''The lights and everything
Cubs and Philadelphia Phlllles, in the fifth Inning. With the Cubs looked good to me," said Mets
but was postponed because of trailing ·2-0, Vance Law singled Manager Davey Johnson. "I
raln.after 31·2 Innings . .
and moved to second on a didn't see a~tyone having any
In Tuesday night's official first groundou t. Palinelro hit a fly ball problems. Everyone could see
night game at Wrigley, fate · to left but New York's Kevin the ball."
intervened and kept the Mets McReynolds slipped, and the ball
Elsewhere In the NL, Houston
from hauling in two long drives,' fell for an RBI triple.
nipped San Francisco 3·2, Clncln·
helping the Cubs rally for a 6-4
"I was playing the man shal- natl blanked Los Angeles 6-0, San
victory over New York.
low and I was going back and Diego drubbed Atlanta H, St.
In the seventh, Jody Davis cutting and the turf gave way," Louis pounded Philadelphia '(-3
whO said he prefers playing McReynolds said.
and Pittsburgh topped Montreal
under the lights - drove a
Frank DiPino, 2-3, pitched two 10-8.
plnch·hit shot off starter Sid Innings in relief of starter Mike
In the American League, It
Fernandez, 6-10, to the wall In Bielecki.
was: Milwaukee3, Boston21n the
center, where it hit off the glove
The hoopla that surrounded first game of a doubleheader and
of a leaping Len Dykstra and fell Monday night's rained out con- Boston 5, Milwaukee 1 in the
to the ground. Rafael Palmeiro, test died down Tuesday night. second game; Toronto 6, New
who had singled, scored for a 3-2 The attendance was 36,399 com- York 3; Minnesota 4, Cleveland
Chicago lead.
pared to Monday's 39,008, and 3; Kansas City 5, Baltimore 4;
Roger McDowell relieved Fer- there were 556 media members Texas 6, Detroit 2; Oakland 8,
nandez and gave up four consecu- . Monday compared to 254 Chicago 1; and Seattle 4, CalUortive singles. Darrin Jackson, Tuesday.
nla 1.
pinch· running.for Davis, went to
As&amp;ros S, Giants Z
Dykstra hit the first home run
third on a single by Shawon during .a Wrigley Field night
At Houston, Glenn Davis
Dunston and scored on a single game into the right field seats singled home Terry Puhl with

.

The Deily Sentinai-Paga 7

3·LB. TUB ..• EACH •2.1111

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WadnNday, Aug. 10, 1988
•

By The Bend
In the spotlight

The Daily Sentinel

EASTMAN'S .. Your Independently Owned
Low-Priced Supermarket

Wednesday. Aug. 10. 1988
· · · Page 8.

Sales of bottled Water increasing in drought
1

By Cindy Oliveri
water. It's also a temporary
County Ext Agent
alternative if you're concerned
· Hoine Ec. &amp; 4-H
about the safeiy of your water, or
Mel gs County
If a well goes dry or Is being
Interest hi bottled water has pumped low.
increased during the drought.
People buying bottled water
But pe(lpie concerned about their for the first time wlll find a wide
water supply aren 't the only ones range of options, Bottle&lt;! water
drinking it. This week "In the comes from wells, springs or
Spotlight" takes a look at bottled public water supplies. Its producwater.
tion and packaging In Ohio Is
Sales or bottled water in- governed by the Ohio Departcreased 300 percent from 1975 to ment or Agriculture and must
1985. according to Judy Wessel, meet standards set by the Food
management,and equipment spe- · and Drug Administration.
cialist at Ohio State University.
Bottled water can undergo
Much or the Increase stems from little treatment or lots of lt. Its
beliefs that bottled water tastes taste, as with all water, depends
better or is healthier than tap largely on the amount of miner-

als in it Bottlers may add or
remove minerals to change the
taste of their brand. The bottle's
label can help people figure out
what they're buying. ·Several
terms can be used on labels:
Drinking water can come !rom
any approved source, Including
municipal water supplies. It can
be given any one of several types
of approved treatments. Orten, it
is filtered with activated carbon
and disinfected with ozone.
Natural Water can be spring,
mineral, artesian well or well
water. Natural water cannot
come from a public water supply.
It usually undergoes a minimum

amount "of treatment.
Spring water must come from
a natural spring and meet the
requirements of natural water.
Arteslsan Well water comes
from a confined underground
aquifier In which underground
pressure forces water to the .
surface. Bottles labeled as well
water may come from an artesian well, or from a regular well
in which water Is drawn up from
. the surface. Both must meet the
requirements of natural water.
DlsiUled water Is processed by
heating water and condensing its
vapor, which removes nearly all
the minerals. It Is usually used In

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. PRICES EFFECTIVE WEDNESOAY, AUG. 10, THROUGH
SATURDAY. AUG. 13, 188. USOA FOOO STAMPS AND WIC COUPONS ACCEPTEd NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR
PICTORIAL ERRORS.

steam Irons or batteries but not dioxide, which causes carbonafor drinking because of Its flat tion. It may occur naturally in
taste. Distilled wa.ter Is a type of the water or be added during ·
purified water. Other types may processing.
be processed by reverse osmosis,
Bottled water isn't cheap. It
in which water Is forced through ,ranges from 60 cents to more ·
membranes, or by de-Ionization, ,i than $1 a gallon, compared with"•
In which the water Is passed ,tap water's average cost of a few
through resins to remove most of cents a gallon. It should not be •
the dissolved minerals.
seen as a permanent solution to~ .
Mineral water contains at least water problems.
:
Free· bulletins are available- '
500 parts. per million mineral
solids. It is usually used as an from the bhio ·cooperative Ex.&lt;
alternative to soft drinks, not tap tension Service that · explain
water. It comes from a natural more about water testing. The:!"'
spring or underground source are Water Testing (AEX-314)
·a nd may be still or sparkling. and Water Testing Labs In Ohio-..
. Sparkling water contains carbon , (AEX-315), For more lnforma-~
tlon contact the Meigs County;;
Extension Office at 992·6696 or'}
write to Box 32, Pomeroy, Ohio. .
45769. T

.VanMeter reunion conducted
The annual reuniOn of the
descendents of the late ~acob and
Maude Van Meter was recently
held at the Stlversvllle CommunIty Church in Portland, The
reunion was hosted by the family
of the late Margaret Van Meter
Ward.
1
Recognized were Ada Van
Meter, Portland, the oldest;

Alison Woods, Pomeroy, the
youngest; April Fitch of Orlando,
F1a., who traveled the farthest;
Clarence and Iva Lawrence,
Portland, married the longest.
Door prizes went to Larry
Curtis, Racine, and Buck Van
Meter, Racine. Other door prizes
were also given out The children
enjoyed hunting for money hid·

'

Regional meeting held
.

.

SLIDES - Krislen Slawler operates a side projector to show
aspects of the miSsion of tbe week at the Church of Cbrlst Bible
school.

Record nwnber at bible school
The highest number of young
people in at least the past 10
years were on hand for the
annual vacation Bible school
held at tl)e Middleport Church of
Christ
On the top attendance day, 242
young people attended the school
and average daily attendance
was 217. Carrying out an Olympic
theme, the motto of the school
was "Champions for Christ"
with a replica of the Olympic
Torch being lighted each day.
School directors were Linda
Grimm .. Kathy Ihle and Lynn

Jackson. Besides Bible classes,
there were crafts, singing and
games.
On Saturday, !oiiowing the
closing of the school a carnival
was staged for those who at·
tended. Held on church property,
the carnival featrured a dilly
dunker. games and contests with
prizes, and refreshments of
pizza, sno-cones, corn dogs and
soft drinks.
The closing program was held
on Sunday with each class
presenting songs, skits and
reel ta lions,

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

I

Charles Blakeslee, , William
Middleswarth, and 1 Florence
Smith, Meigs County Council on
Aging, and Eleanor 1Thomas,
executive director, represented
Meigs County at the recent
meeting of the Buckeye HillsHocking Valley Regional Development Dis trlct Advls~ry Council on Aging at the Senior Center
In Athens.
·
Selections of tbe outstanding
senior citizens of ea~h county
were reviewed with , It being
noted that Fred am! Frances
Goegleln are Meigs, County's
selection this year.
The EMT o!the Chesterhill
Fire Departmeftt wa~ chosen to
represent the district as the
outstanding community service
prganization. Outslnnding seniors and the service organlza·
I

4th annual cHapman
Hill reunion slated
The fourth annual; Chapman
and Myrta Kerwood ~Ill family
reunion will be held Sunday at the
Shrine Park In Racine. Those
attending are to take a covered
dish fQr a potlluck at 1 p.m.

Kang hired
Dr. Bernard Nlehm' announces
the employment of HongS. Kang,
M.D., to Woodland's psychiatric
staff. Dr. Kang served as Medical Director of Portsmouth Receiving Hospital from 1983 until
July, 1988,
He is a member of the
American Psychiatric Assocla·
lion and the American Medical
Association of Psychopharma- ,
co logy.
Kang will serve primarily the
Jackson and Meigs Clinics and Is
available to provide a !u ll range
of psychiatric services by calling
446-5500 in Gallia; .992' 2192 in
Meigs; 28&amp;-5075 in Jijckson or the
toll free number 1-800-252-5554.

tlon will be hOnored at the Ohio
State Fair, Aug. 17.
Plans were made for the 1989
senior program funding, Requests will be reviewed by the
eight local Councils on Aging at
their August meetings and then
forwarded to the region for
further review,
The advocacy committee reported on its correspondence
with legislators regarding HB 803
which would eliminate the necessity for probate of simple Inherit·
ance. The Committee pointed out
that the provisons of the Medl·
care Catastrophic Coverage Act,
signed by the president on July 1
to take effect in 1989, are complex
and far reaching and urged
seniors to familiarize themselves
with the provlsons. A summary
of the act may be obtained from
the Meigs County Senior Citizens
··
Center.
On recommends lion of the
Advocacy Committee, the Regional Advisory Council on Aging
endorsed Sub. SB 226 to regular
Medicare Supplemental Insu·
ranee policies, and asked the
Ater Agency to plan a program
on the problems of Medlgap and
Long Term Care Insurance
Elderwalk on Sept 29 was
noted.
Next -meeting of the Regional
Council on Aging will be held In
Pomeroy on Sept 9.

GOOD USEe
WASHERS, DRYJRS,
REFRIGERATORS, TVs,
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES

COUNTY

APPLIANCES

627 lrd AYI., Gallpolis
PH. 446·1699
HOURS: 8 A.M.· 6 P.M.

den in the sawdust, and everyone
took part In a water balloon
game.
The 1989 Van Meter reunion
will be held on July 9 with the host
to be"the family of the late Ester
Van Meter Dalley.
''
Attending were Joe, Btenda,
Tyler and Adarn Johnson, Mike,
Chuck, Ryan and Mathew Evans,
Leota Birch, Jean Fitch, Doc and
Jonathon Dalley, Wanda Mon·
roe, Melvin, Melody and Patty
Lawrence, Nick Fitch, Arthur
and Lucille Allen, Mary, Bryan,
and Benny Dalley, Clarence and
Iva Lawrecne, Ada Van Meter,
Viole and Billy Brewer, all of
Portland.
Buck Van Meter, Jo Ann and
Alan Crisp, Larry, Julie and John
Denver · Curtis, Racine; Aplrl
Fitch, Orlando, Fla.; James
Ray, Barbara, Jennifer and
Jason, Syracuse; Alicia, Corey
and Alison Woods, J. J. tawrenee, all of Pomeroy; Cindy and
Ashton Brown, Minersville, and
Bryan Lawrence, Harrisonville.

-------------1
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Dr. David Ayers
~

BmLE - Junior class members enjoy refreshments during a
Bible class at the Middleport Church of Christ.

Blennerhassett drama ·
season scheduled
Eden on the River, an hlstori·
cal musical drama, will be
presenting the second annual
season on Blennerhassett Island
Aug. 3 through Sept 4.
Blennerhassett Island is located In the Ohio River between
Belpre, Ohio and Parkersburg,
W.Va. It is best known as the
early 1800's home of Margaret
and Harmon Blennerhassett with
whom Aaron Burr, Vlce Pres!·
dent of the United States under
Thomas Jefferson, became associated in an alleged conspiracy to
create a separate nation In the
LouiSiana Territory,
Eden on the River tells the
story of the meeting between
Blennerhassett and Burr that
took place on Blennerhassett
Island in 1806 - a meeting that

led to charges of treason for both
men. Although acquitted, the
trial for this alleged conspiracy
was the ruination of Aaron Burr
and the end of his political

&amp;

D-r. 'E dward Ayers
Ped4trics and Internnl Medicine
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announce the opening of their practice
at
Pleasant Valley Hospital
;

career.
Eden on-the River-is performed
Aug. 3-7, 10-14, 17·21 (no performance Aug. 20), 24-28 and· Aug,
30-Sept 4. The curtain Is 8::W
p.m., with boats departln{from
Point Park in Parkersburg,
W.Va. at ?p.m. andfromCivltan
Park in Belpre, OH, at 7:30p.m.
Ticket prices Include a sternwheeler cruise to and from
Blennerhassett Island. A limited
number of tickets are available
through Tlcketmaster at 1-800525-5900 or at any Tlckemaster
outlet For further information
or tickets call 30+428-1943.

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Page 1o-The Daily Sentinel

Wednaaday, Aug. 10, 1988

·Couples return from trip

Wednesday. Aug. 10, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Woodmen have meeting

YOUTH CHOm -. The All Ohio State Youth FalrCholrperfonns ·
one of s~ concerts dally for falrgoers In Columbus Tuesday. The

Cocaine a sneaky
drug in beginning
Dear Ann Landers: I just read an
obituary in your column that
touched my heart. Elizabeth Haggerty's family decided to go public
about the cause of her death, in the
hope that it would be a warning to
others. On Feb. 17. 1988, the day
Elizabeth Haggerty died from cocaine abuse, I entered a treatment
renter for cocaine a1diction. I
know too well the pain and suffering that dear woman must have
endured.
It is impcssible to describe the
terror that occurs with cocaine
addiction. You want to stop, you
try to stop, you hate doing it, but
you simply cannot live without the
stuff. The drug is sneaky. At first it's
fun. then it's like a vise whose grip
won't let you go. Unless you have
experienced this nightmare you
can't understand it. Only a person
who has been through it can rejoice
in the freedom that recovery brings.
I thank God every minute for
giving me a second chance at life. I
wonder, Ann, when I was still
using, would I ·have given any
thought to your article? Seriously, I
doubt it. The addiction has ·an
insidious way of making you believe you can handle it, and you
don't want to quit.
I pray for Elizabeth and for those
who loved her. I pray, too, for all
your readers who need help. For
God's sake, get it and escape from
this terrible addiction that will land

300-member choir Is directed by Its founder and only dlrecl~rfor28
years, GlenvUie Thomas. ( UPI)

'

Ann

Modern Woodmen of America
Camp 10900 members enjoyed a
family life piCnic on the bankS of
the Hocking River at Coolville
recently.
The Woodmen's Creed service
Included prayer by Martha Elliott, pledge of allegiance to the
flag led by Robert Henderson,
and "God Bless America" by
calvin Hawk, all of Alfred. Kay
Sheridan, Tupper Plains, led the
Women's Creed, and Harold
Dunfee. Little Hocking, explained the pledge. Group singIng was accompanied on the
autoharp by Marjorie Malone,
Coolville.
Sheriff Robert Allen and Major
Robert Daugherty of the Athens
County Sheriff's Depart111ent
provided a program on drug
a bose prevention In family,
.school and community,
The program, "High on Life:
·Not on Drugs ..,. Three Ways to
Keep Your Kids Off Drugs'' was
well recleved and there was a
lively discussion on the subject.
Speakers told of new drugprevention VCR tapes which are
available, free of charge, to
persons or groups req ues Ung
them from the sheriff's
department.
Ralph Henderson, Colville,
camp secretary, presented a flag
to John Breedlove an E!iwln
Rood, Coolville. The flag will be
flown for all boaters and vaca"tioners who pass the Hocking
River camp.

Bill and Dorothy Robinson,
Alfred, were congratulated and
presented a gin for their 50th
wedding cttlebratlon. The Robinsons are a 100 percent Modern
Woodmen of America family .
Frances Henderson, Coolville,
dlstrlbu ted and explained voterreglstraln materials and discussed precedures for new
voters.
Ronnie Lee Gillispie, Guysville, was welcomed as a new
member of the camp. Bryan
Ridenour, formerly of Coolville,
received the prize for. having
traveled the farthest. Ridenour,
Ills wife, andy, and son reside In
Winthrop Harbor, Dl. where he Is
manager of a Super-America
Store.
Following the meeting, group .
members enjoyed games, contests, gate drawings, fishing and
swimming. Cheer plates were
delivered to shutlns.

The wrangle heated up In July
In the Supreme Court when
lawyers for two children blocked
the $8.2 inUIIon sale of Marley's
companies; properties, name
and copyrights to Island Logic
Inc. of New York, a record
company owned by Chrll Blackwell, one of Marley's producers.
Lawyer Barry Franklon sucl cessfuUy ari!UM that. tbe price

Relatives and friends from out
of town here for the graveside
rites of Denzel M. (Billy) Cleland, which was held Suoday
afternoon at the Chester cemeterY were Dr. and Mrs. Billy R.
allen, Katherine and Robert,
Westerville; Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Baker, Marietta, Ga.; . Mr. and
Mrs. John Benson, Cletus Allen,

VFf use
harms
eye ·focus:
doctors

Agnes Dixon, Scott Pullins and
Laura Barber attended the 38th
annual C. V. and Jane Haning ·
Dixon reunion held in Lancaster
on July 31. It was held at the
home of Shirley Sims, greatgranddaughter of the original
Dixon family. Agnes Dixon bas
attendet\ all38 reunions and Is the
only member of the family who
has never missed one.

Stevens comes out of Shadoe

•

Insane. They ask, 'How can you following with "Sweetheart
be a disc jockey, go In a dark Tree" dedications and slgn-offs
room and play records?' They like "Keep your feet on the
get claustrophobic just thinking ground and keep reaching for the
about lt. But anyone who's ever stars.'' Stevens' on-air persona
been In radio has got that hook. resembled a stream -ofyou in a living hell. - RECOVERThere Is a magic to It, It happens consciousness philosopher who'd
ING IN CLEVELAND
In your head and It's a great seen too many Marx Brothers
DEAR CLEVELAND: Thank you
I'
high."
.
,· ..
movies.
for a poignant and powerful testi- don't have any common sense.
That
magic
began when Stevmonial. Only a person who has always db or say the wrong thing.
ens, born Terry Ingstad, was 11
been there could have written it.
That persona worked during
I
am
so
bumbling
and
inadequate
and growing up In what he
confidential to anyone who
his
tenure at several top-rated
described as a "Norman Rockwants to get off cocaine. You can't that I can hardly stand myself. It's
Los
Angeles
area stations, but he
well childhood" In North Dakota,
do it alone. Call the National almost as though I deliberately
gave
up
the
dally grind 10 years
where his hometown radio sta- ·
ago
after
Billboard
magazine
Cocaine Hotline at l·lro-&lt;:OCAINE sabotage my life. I quit a good job
lion billed him as "the world's named him radio personality
recently
and
now
I'm
depressed
and
of
or the National Institute on Drug
youngest disc jockey."
stuck
at
home
where
there
is
little
the
year.
Abuse at 1~2-HELP.
The station hired him on the
"I wanted to go out on top, so I
Dear Ann Landers: Please settle love. I'm not smart enough to get
strength of radio broadcasts that
an argument and save a friendship. another job and I'm miserable.
he transmitted from his bedroom left after getting the Blllboard
I know this letter is too dull and
My friend "Mildred" insists that she
on equipment that he built award,." he said.
His "Squares" stint came
has a relative who had all her teeth poorly written to make 'your colhimself - and no Idea . that a bout
by way of Shadoevlslon,' a
pulled and now wears dentures . umn, but I'm · praying that you'll
anyone was lis ten log In.
video
production company he
made from her own teeth. I say this give me a break. - DESPERATE
''1 even had contests built
owns.
He
is not pcssible.
around guessing the Identity of campaignssupervlsed.advertlslng
DUMBBELL IN KENTUCKY
for McDonald's and
Mildred says the relative's dentist
'the secret neighbor,'" Stevens Nlssan, among
DEAR KENTUCKY: First, try to
others, but made
said. "I'd play a portion of an a name for himself
told her, when he presented the new get your job back. Failing that, go
by appearing
Interview with 'the secret neigh- In ads as Fred Rated, the crazy,
dentures, "Here you are. You now out and get another one. Your
bor' and It never occurred to me
have your own teeth back." I say he biggest problem is lack of self-esthat people would respond, but fast-talking pitchman for a local
was telling her that the new teeth teem. Your reelings of worthlessness
then the phone started ringing audio store chain.
looked so much like her own that go back to early childhood. I urge
and I had no prizes."
nobody 1could tell the difference. you to get counseling at onre. You
He found out exactly how
After graduating from high
Mildred insists I am mistaken and
unpredictable life could get when school, he worked on the railroad
are
a
lot
better
and
brighter
than
The absurdlst streak Is still
that she is right.
"Squares" taped several shows for awhile.
you
think.
Trust
me.
present
when he Is asked how a
I realize you have many more
In New York and Miami. The
was
working
on
what
they
"I
boy
.named
Terry Ingstad could
Everyone
does
drugs,
right?
important questions to deal with,
ovations from audiences verged called the section crew, remov- adopt the name Shadoe Stevens.
Wrong.
And
today,
more
and
more
but I would appreciate an answer.on hysteria, and he often needed
"The name was given to me by
fJI!Ople are aware of the dangers in- pollee es~orts to enter and leave Ing and lhsta!Ung railroad ties In
MRS. W.A.C., YORK, PA.
Gackle
and
Zap,
N.D.,''
Stevens
God,"
he said. "It came to me In
DEAR YORK: Dentists do not voll'ed. Ifyou want to be in the know, the building.
said. "You have no Idea how hard New Mexico In 1969. I stopped
use human teeth in dentures, no too, write for Ann Landers' newly re"When they'd Introduce me, It work can be until you've tried there on my way to Boston for a
matter how "good" they are. You vised booklet, "The Lowdown on was like walking Into a thunder- that.
radio job and thus, a burning
win this one. Now kiss and make Dope. " Send $3 plus a self-addressed, storm," Stevens said. "When I'd
"1 decided ... that I wanted to bush spoke to me outside of the
.up already.
stamped business-size envelope (45 turn away, then turn back, they'd work In a situation where I could atomic state: 'Thou will be as a
Dear Ann Landers: I am a cents p&lt;JStage) to Ann Landers, P.O. · yell even louder.';
apply myself and actually enjoy Shadoe with an E. Go ye, out
However, Stevens has decided working hard. That was In among men.'
60-year-old grandmother and I still &amp;x 11562, Chicago, Ill. 6061 1-{1562.
to turn away from the kind of radio."
"I think my life Is written by
notoriety that television brings
Stevens arrived · on the Los someone In another dimension
and turn back to his show Angeles radio scene In 1970 after with an extraordinary sense of
business roots.
stops. In Tucson, Ariz., artd hurnor."
ABC Radio l!as signed htm as Boston. Radio was entering an
Spoken like a man whose life
was suspiciously low and alleged
Also hampering administra- host of the popular "American era of experimentation, shifting
has
Indeed been "predictably • •
that Blackwell may owe the tion of the estate Is a New York Top 40" syndicated series, where
Its
emphasis
from
the2¥.,-mlnute
unpredictable,"
but someone
estate royalties from records he court case brought by former Casey Kasem held court for 18
single
to
extended
album
cuts,
who
knows
where
he's going.
produced for Marley.
Marley music publisher Danny years. He Is scheduled to take and characters like Stevens were
"I
mean,
you
think
you are set
Justice Lensley Wolfe ad· Sims. who claims he owns many over In late July or early August.
welcomed
as
champions
of
the
up
to
do
things
and
you
work hard
journed the case until August to copyrights to Marley's songs.
After the overwhelming public new wave.
to achieve them. Then all of a
give lawyers time to assess the The case Is scheduled for trial attention, Stevens said he Is all
''There waS more freedom, sudden you are confronted with
estate's value.
this year In the state Supreme too happy to step back Into being more latitude and more selfcircumstances that are beyond
But this fight I~ only the latest Court's Appellate Division.
the man In the glass booth.
Indulgence
at
that
time
than
In
your control. And either you
In a series of controversies that
Marley's former partners,
"I never thought I would be In any other period that 1 worked In make them work, or you nee. I
have plagued the estate, Initially Bunny Livingston and the late radio again," Stevens said. "1
would prefer to make them
administered by Mutual Security Peter Tosh, who made up the called my wife after my audition radio," Stevens said.
While
Kasem
built
a
national
work."
Merchant Bank and Trust, a original Wal.lers group that rock- and I said, 'I feel as If I had just
court-appointed lawyer and the eted Marley to Carne In the early come home to mom and dad and
singer's widow, Rita Marley.
1970s, also have been embroiled everything Is good In life.' I felt
Don Taylor, Marley's former In the legal battles.
that good, that energized.
·..
manager, accused Rita Marley
"A lot of people think It's.
last
year of
Marley's
signature
on forging
documents
that 1
made It appear the singer transferred much of his property to
her years before his death.
2415 Jackson Ave.
Point Pleasant
Rita Marley admitted the
fraud and resigned as admlnlstrat or. She Is helping prosecutors
NOTICE; NEW OFFICE POLICY;
prepare a case agalns t her
Effective immediately, we are reducjng our fees
former U.S. advisers.
By law, Marley's widow reWaist, Tummy &amp; Hip Table
'
to 515.00 per office visit. It is our way of making
ceives 10 percent of the estate.
our servkes available to more peopl~ of our area
All his children get equal shares
Raises and l""en lep In a
of 50 percent of what remains.
due to the mass of unemployment that is
le&amp; lltllng motion. Helps to
The remainder Is placed In trust.
currently creating hardships on everyone.
trim Inches fllf your wals~
Rita Marley Is entitled to
interest on the percentage held In
·stomach, and hips. Also.
trust. At her death, that portion Is
LOW BACK PAIN·
8'18TEMIC DISOIIJ)ERSstnnalhens lower bock
PINCimD 11E1tVB11 (IIPIIIE)
tQ be divided among the children.
IIUTRITIORAL WORB:·VI'It
musdes.
RECK a: BBOllLDER BtNDROMB8COLI08B • 1RIBNinO
The children receive their
EX'IRBIIITIBII·IIEADAC!m
(SPINAL COJtVATIJIIB)
shares when they reach 18 and
SCIATIC·I'AILBD DISC SURGERY· INJURY: PEJI80RAL-A111'0
their mothers get an allowance
ATIILitTIC IKJIJRJE8
INDW'l'IUAL
Toning session (48 min.)
until then.
PHTBICAL
THERAPI'
X-RAY LAIIOIIATGRT
But Ia wyers say some of the
for 1111yone who tdps up a new e~ent tor six (6)
REFLEXOLOGY
ACCUPRBSIIURJ:
mothers of Marley's seven childsesalons or more.
ren born out of wedlock are
receiving as little as $75 a month,
HotJBSj
and two children reportedly are
Names of people who
on welfare In the United States.
Monday· Friday, 8:30a.m. • 6 p.m.
Because so much of the estate
sign-up new
be ellaible for monthly
With evenlne hours by appointment and 14,hour emeraeacy ..rvlce
went to Rita Marley, her children
drawinp • winner to receive three (3) FREE
- Including budding reggae star
671-t.UJ
tonl'ng sessions.
Zlggy Marley- have fared much
2411 .Jaeluon Ave.
PolntPielllnt
better than the rest of Marley's
rhlld""m thPV sav. 1

landers

By RUSSELL KISHI
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -In the
past year, Shadoe Stevens has
been swamped by thousands of
' fan letters and audiences have
accorded him the kind or adulation usually given to rock stars attention he never sought In the
first place.
Stevens, 43, was content as the
off-camera announcer on ''The
New Hollywood Squares" when
the syndicated game show began
airing nationwide two seasons
ago.
But the show's producers were
so Impressed with him that he
found himself on-camera on the
familiar tlc-tac-toe board occupied by the rich and famous.
"When they first asked me to
take the spot, there was no way In
the world I wanted to do It,"
Stevens said. "lt was completely
.out of left field. 1 signed on to be
the announcer and ·nothing more.
"On the other hand, I would say
that If there's one thing true
about my life, It's been predictably unpredictable."

r--:::=========:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-1

675•I620

FBEE

Community Calendar

luncheon buffet. They then TUESDAY
crossed the five moe long MackHARRISONVILLE - Free
Inac Bridge which connects blood pressure clinic Tuesday, 10
Michigan's Upper and Lower a.m. to 12 noon at Harrisonville
Peninsulas, and went to Sault Town Hall, sponsored by HarriSte. Marie where they took the sonville Senior atizens Club.
.
Soo Lock Boat Tour.
Their trip Included a ride In the
EAST MEIGS- Eastern Local
Algoma Central Railway 114 Band Boosters, Tuesday. 7 p.m.
mUes up to Agawa Canyon where bi'the high school band room.
at the park they visited the Otter
Creek Falls, Black Beaver Falls,
POMEROY - The Pomeroy .
and Bridal Veil Falls, and then Chamber of Commerce regular
took the wooden stairway trail of · meeting 12 noon Tuesday at
372 steps to the main lookout Trinity_Church.
point.
WEDNE!DAY
POMEROY - Pomeroy Boy
Scout Troop 249 will meet at the.
Pomeroy AmerlGan Legion hall
Columbus; Mrs. Robert kerry, Wednesday at 7'p.m.
Mrs. Audrey Rowan, Mrs. Patty
Brownrigg, , Mr. and Mrs. Don THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS- Election of
Lorentz, Mr. and Mr. Paul
officers
to be held when Rock
Rowan, Belpre, and Mrs. Evelyn
Springs
Grange
meets at 8 p.m.
White, Little Hocking. Offtclat- .
Thursday
at
hall.
· lng minister was Rev. Don
Archer and pallbearers were
FRIDAY
Billy Allen, Roy .Baker, Roy
TUPPERS
PLAINS- Meeting
Christy, Richard Gaul, Kirk
for
all
parents
of Eastern Local
Chevalier and Hobart Newell.
kindergarten students, 3 .p.m.
Frlday at Tuppers Plains El~
mentary School. This year's full
day program, schedules, class
The Modern
Woodmen
will haveof
a times and oth er aspect s to be
Amerlca,
Camp 7230,
fun night Monday at 6:30 at the discussed. Parents who did not
nd t
attend spring registration or are
lngs f I
Rock Spr
a rgrou s 0 new to district will need to
mark the opening of the Meigs
Counly Fair. lt will be l!eld In the provide copy of child's birth
certificate and Immunization
· grange hall. The Modern Wood• record.
men of America booth will be
___
prepared and the Camp wll
nr refresh
POMEROY - The Willing
provid e me Ions .,fp
•
0
.. 8 famUy door prize.
__

.

In area to attend funeral

Attend reunion

Who'll get Bob Marley's money?
By GAYLE YOUNG
KINGSTON, Jamaica (UPI)When legendary reggae star Bob
Marley died of cancer In 1981 he
left 11 children by eight different
women, copyrlg,h!s to hundreds
of songs, three music companies
and dozens of collaborators.
What he dldn' t lea've was a will.
The result Is a 7-year-old
international snarl of lawsuits,
forgeries, and infighting by lawyers, musicians, producers, children and associates of the tangle·
hatred singer who helped rocket
reggae from Kingston's ghettoes
to the International spotlight.
' ' (It) Is perhaps the most
complex and dllflcult estate ever
to be administered In Jamaica, If
not the Western Hemisphere as a
whOle," managing director Louis
Byles of the Mutual Security
Merchant Bank and Trust Co.
Ltd., which helps administer the
estate, wrote In a 1987 report. ·
Even the estate's size Is In
question.
The only audit, done a few
years after -Marley's death In
Miami at 36, showed the estate
had only $250,000. Official figures
are not available, but It Is widely
believed that In the 1970s Marley's earnings accounted for up
to 10 percent of the nation's
foreign exchange - all nonJamaican money entering the
country - a figure that could be
In the tens of millions of dollars.

Mr. and Mrs: Edison Hollon
and Mr. and Mrs. Vernal Blackwood have returned from a tour
of Mlchlgan•and Canada.
At Frankenmuth, Michigan' s
Little Bavaria, they toured
through Bronner's Christmas
Wonderland, the world's largest
Chrllt,mas store. From Machlnaw City they crossed Lake
Huron by an 18-mlnute hydroplane ferry to Mackinac Island
where they toured the ts land by
carriage, viewing Arch Rock,
SkuU Cave, the Governor's mans lon, and Fort Mackinac before
golilg to the Grand Hotel for a

(UPI)BERKELEY,
Long
periods In Calif.
front of
a VDT
screen may lessen the eye's
ability to focus, and Increasing
use of video display terminals
may be changing the physiology
of the eye, a University of
California optometrist warns.
Researcher James Sheedy
said Tuesday that deter !oration
In eye fdcuslng ability among
people In their 20s and 30s was the
major problem found In 153
patients treated at UC Berkeley's VIdeo Display Terminal ·
Eye Clinic.
He urged that workers using
VDTs not hesitate In obtaining
eyeglasses, and also have their
eyes examined on a regular
basis, especially as to focusing
abilities.
Sheedy's study, prepared for
delivery today before an Ohio
symposium, was the first clinical
report of focusing problems In
VDT users. He said his study
supported earlier evidence In
laboratory tesearch that VDT
work was linked with difficulty in
the eye focusing mechanism. _
· Sheedy, chief of the VDT cliniC
and associate clinical professor
at Berkeley's School of Optometry, said It was still not established that regular VDT use
caused the damage observed In
the Berkeley clinic because there
was no control population of
non-VDT users for comparison. ·
But the high Incidence of
focusing problems In such a
young group of people · was
"compelling," Sheedy
suggested.
The researcher said that while
a controlled study was needed,
the study raises "a question
about whether work at a VDT Is
changing the physiology of the

eye."

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Fun night set

meet at the home of Agnes Dixon
on Friday at 7:30 p.m:

tries and the public Is Invited to
bring In aluminum cans, glass
bottles and jars, and newspapVacation ers. Proceeds will go to support
PORTLAND church school at The Reorgan .. the program at the Carleton
lzed Church of Jesus Christ of _School-Meigs Industries .
·
Latter Day Saints (beside the
Lebanon Township Garage)
SUNDAY
through Friday from 6 to 8: 30
TUPPER,S,. PLAINS - The
p.m. for ages three through 16. annual Parker reunion will be
Nozl, the puppet, and his five held at the Tuppers Plains
friends will be an attraction of Elementary School at 1 p.m. on
the school.
Sunday.

Grounds on Gilkey Ridge Road.
Those attending are to take a
covered dish for the picnic along
with table service.
ALBANY - The 17th annual
Carr reunion will be heldSunday
at 1 p.m at Lake Snowd en near
Albany.
REEDSVILLE - The Connolly family reunion will be hel&lt;l
Sunda y at the Belleville Locks
and Dam, Reedsville.

CHESHIRE - The 21st annual
POMEROY -The 64th annual
reunion of the Samuel Allen Hayes-Young-Holiday s~hool
POMEROY - There will be a
Eblin famUy will be held Satur- reunion will be held Sunday at 1 mixed scramble at the Jaymaiday at 3:30 p.m. at the Kyger p.m. at the old Holiday School Golf Course Sund ay at 3 p.m.
Creek Recreation area. Those . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - attending are to take a covefl!d
dish.
POMEROY - Eddie Jo.nes of
Pennsylvania will be presenting
an hour of musl~ Saturday at 8
p.m. at the Keno Churcl). of
Christ.
CHESTER - Drama team
from Cleveland, Tenn. will be at
the Chester Church of God,
Chester, 7 p.m. Saturday. Potluck will be at 5:30 p.m. with
those attending to take a covered
dish. The group will also be
parllclpatlng at the Sunday service, 9: 30a.m.

HAMBURGER

64(

Wml FRIES ............. S1.19

-ADOLPH'S

POMEROY -Meigs County's
be h ld s
d
recycle day will
e atur ay
on the Kroger parking lot In
Pomeroy by the Meigs County
Office of Litter Control. ·Pickup
will be . from 9 a.m to noon.
Co-sponsor of-the event will be
__I-_M_e_lgs
__I_nd_u_s_
- JL___________________________________________

DAIRY VALLEY

~m~e~n~ts~.A~d~ra~w2l~n~g=wi~l-lbe_h_e-ld_f_o_r ~:n:[:~:~~rs:~:e:~h:s~:o:!::_h~:h:Eu:~:t~:rp-~~ls:~~-th-e_c_a_rle~to_n_Sc_h_oo

JJrick

'

.

.·

· The 153 patients In the study
had worked an average of six
hours a day on a VDT for more
than four years. There were
twice as many women as men in
the group. whose average age
· was 38.
Sheedy's report, co-authored
with Steven Parsons, an assist- ·
ant clinical professor at the
School of Optometry, found that
41 patients experienced a blur
when they tried to change focus
from near work to distance and
back again.
Another group of 40 patients
was older and was diagnosed as
"presbyopic,'' meaning they had
lost some ability in focusing on
near objects, but the researchers
noted that their loss was normal
for their age group.
The solution for both groups,
Sheedy said, was to prescribe
reading glasses to relieve the
strain on focusing.
Sheedy added thai people who
regularly use a VDT should get
their eyes regularly examined,
particulary for focusing .
"Patients In their 20s and 30s
who other~se might not need a
reading prescription .. . now
benefit from such a correction."
Sheedy said.
Sheedy planned to present his
· findings before a symposium on
the computerized office sponsored by the National Institute
for Occupational Safety and
Health at Miami University In

'

.

''.
•

Oxfo;rd:.:·_:::l_---:--:--------,

SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Quitting Smoking
Now Greatly Reduces Serious Risks to Your HeQith.

--.·-··

- ,I

•
' '

'f

,.

I

�· Paga 12-The Daily Sentinel

Wednalliay. Aug. 10, 1988

Pomelot Middleport,. Ohio

Quirks in
People in the news
The series will be shot over eight weeks in the
Boston area and on Cape Cod.
Durning will play John Fit.gerald, the father of
PRINCESS WI{O: It may be a lew days before Rose Kennedy, who will be pprtrayed by O'Toole.
Prince Andrew and the duchess of York announc.e Pollan, who recently married Michael J . Fox, w!ll
a royal name for Britain's new princess. The baby play Kathleen Kennedy. the oldest daughter of
and the mother, Sarah "Fergie" Ferguson, were Joe and Rose Kennedy.
LET'S MAKE A DEAL: There's a new twist in
·said to be resting and doing quite well Tuesday,
the
Carl Rowan case. The Legal Times, a weekly
the day after the baby checked In at 8: 18p.m. on
the eighth day of the eighth month of the 88th year newspaper. quoted sources as saying Washington
Mayor Marlon Barry wanted to cut a deal with
of the century.
An announcemnt on a name will come In the Rowan In which the city would drop weapons
next few days but the public Is leaning toward charges against him if Rowan would quit being so
VIctoria and Elizabeth while Fergie Is said to critical of Barry in his syndicated column.
The offer was supposedly made through Barry
prefer Eleanor. The new princess probably will
have at least two or three other names and Queen aide Herbert Reid to Rowan's son before the elder
Rowan was charged with unlawful possession of a
Elizabeth must approve.
. The royal family released no details on the baby gun after shooting a skinny-dipping trespasser at
. but Fergie's sister, Jane Maklm of Australia, said his home June 14.
Rowan refused to comment on the Legal Times
she had a report from their mother, Susan
story.
Barry soundly denounced it and Reid was
. Barrantes, who flew to London from her home in
unavailable
for comment. In a Jl!lY 1987 column,
Argentina. "She's really sweet," Mak!m told a
who
Is black, criticized the black mayor
Rowan,
· newspaper. ·" Mother rang and so this is a
as the reason many oftlclals In
for
citing
racism
. grandmother's description but what she said was
' that the baby has beautiful hands but she doesn't his administration have been investigated and
prosecuted by the U.S. attorney's office.
have much hair."
GLIMPSES: Country singer Crystal Gayle Is
HOLLYWOOD EAST: Wally and the Beaver
are moving to Florida with Lassie and Norman recovering from surgery for a tubal pregnan.cy In
Bates. Universal Studios Florida In Orlando a Nashville, Tenn., hospital. A spokesman lor
announced Tuesday the unfinished facility's first Gayle, 37. said she was "doing very line' • but she
feature film will be "Psycho IV," again starring had to cancel her bookings for the rest of the
Anthony Perkins as the homicidal mama's boy, month, which Included the final night of the
Norman. Two revived television classics also will Republican National Convention In New Orleans.
Gayle, sister of country singer Loretta Lynn. and
be shot at the center.
Soon alter the center is completed In October, her husband·manager Bill ·Galzlmos have two
"The New Leave It to Beaver," with Jerry children ... He who has the mo 0ey makes .the
Mathers and Tony Dow reprising their roles, will rules. Billionaire H. Ross Perot has agreed to let
start filming for the WTBSsuperstatlonand a new the Dallas Arboretum and BotaniCal Society keep
•'Lassie'' series starts shooting for syndication In a $2 million donation but he's canceled an
additional $6 million donation because he Is
the spring.
HOLLYWOOD NORTHEAST: Charles Durn· displeased with the society's plans lor the park.
Among Perot's complaints were insufficient
in~. Tracy PoUan and Annelle O'Toole w!ll star In
a television miniseries about the Kennedy and security and the fact that the city could s~nd the
Fitzgerald famll!es, tracing the clans from 1901 to money In better ways.
the 196llnaugurat!on of President John Kennedy.
By WD.LIAM C. TROTT
Unlled Press International

.

Spaced oul Senate?: WA·
SHINGTON (UP I) -The courteous treatment senators accord
one another Is called comity, but
Sen. Jake Garn, R·Utah, skirted
comedy when he noted many
Americans think the lawmakers
"have been spaced outfora lot of
years."
It happened Tuesday when
Garn, who new on the space
shuttle Discovery in 1985, was
trading compliments with Sen.
Wllltam Proxmlre, D·Wis .. as
they orchestrated Senate action
on a $59.4 bllllon spending bill lor
several agencies , including the
National Aeronautics and Space
Administration.
Proxmlre lauded Garn as "the
only senator who is a genuine
astronaut. He knows the space
program inside and out."
Unfortunately. Proxmire was
forgetting John Glenn. the first
American to orbit the earth and
now senior DemocratiC senator
from Ohio.
·
Garn spoke up, telling Prox·
mire genially, "Boy. have !got to
correct that and talk about John
Glenn. I have to correct that
before he hears it. "
Proxmlre responded that what
he had meant was that Garn was
"the only senator who as a
senator went out In space, and
came back, too."
"! certainly appreciate that,"
replied Garn, "bull think a lot of
people think a lot of senators
have ~&gt;~¥n spaced out for a lot of
years.''
Toum·l flilds 3.7&amp;-caral diamond: MURFREESBORO, Ark.
(UPI) - Talk about striking it
rich. A iourlst digging In Crater
of Diamonds State Park un·
earthed a 3.76-carat, canary
yellow diamond.
The gem·qual!ty, oval stone
found Tuesday by Patricia Albin

~he

Aug. 10.1988

news

of Branson. Mo .• is "very valua·
ble," park Ranger Marcel Hanz·
Ilk said.
"Right now It's going to take
someone in the business to make
a determination" of its value,
Hanzlik said.
While It Isn't an absolutely
flawless diamond, it was a good,
quality stone, Hanzlik said. A
flawless diamond Is worth about
$16.000 a carat. he said. ·
Park Superintendent Jim Can·
non said Albin and her husband
have been periodic visitors to the
park for the past 1 Y., years and
have found 130 to 1~0 diamonds.
A 16.37-carat stone, The Ama·
rlllo Starlight, was found In 1975
by W.W. Johnson of Amarmo,
Texas, and holds the record as
the largest stone found since the
crater became a state park in
1972.
A 40.23·carat diamond is the
record gem found at the crater
since its discovery In 1906.
Albin's stone was the 724th
diamond found this year by park ·
visitors, who pay a $3 fee to hunt
tor diamonds. More thlm 12,000
gems have been found by visitors
since the area was made a state
park.
GOP to get pori! rinds:
GREENSBORO, N.C. (UPI) To help VIce Piesldent George
Bush popularize one of his
favorite .snacks, two tood companies are giving sOine Grand
Old Porkrinds to members of the
Grand Old Parcy.
Carolina Fine Foods of Greens·
boro and Goodmark Foods of
Raleigh have packaged 13,000
bags of fried pork rinds to give to
the 4,000 delegates and alter·
nates at the RepubliCan National
Convention in New Orleans
where Bush Is set to win the GOP
presidential nomination.
The pork rinds come with a

2

Everett L. Caldwell
God needed a tose lor his
bouquet
So He. chose you 3 y11rs
today.
It left our homeso lonely
and sad
For He took 1 husband, a
friend and Did.
But ht couldn't take tht
memories
Thllare deep in oar htlrt.
One day we'll bt toaethtr
And never have to part.
For every pain that we
must bear
For every burden, every

HELP WANTED
LABORATORY SUPERVISOR

SATURDAY,
AUGUST 13, 1988
9:30A.M.

Tools including vises. socket sets, hand tools.
air tools, cement, roof paint, oil, tobacco,
nails, rope, baskets, garden seed including
corn, peas &amp; beans; furniture, clocks, ceramics, lamps, pictures. gifts·, ovenware, vases,
l~mp shades, watches, candy &amp; groceries.
More not listed.
NOTE: 99% of all merchandise never

bean sold.
Bring Your lawn Chair!

·'

Refreshments Next Door at Dairy Delight
Terms: Cash or Check with Pos.I.D.

"SPECIALISTS Ill OUR FIELD!
CALL THE CLELAND STAFF!"

HARRISOIIVILLE- Modern ranch home on .67 acres, level
lot. Excellent condition w/3 bedrooms, bright sunny
krtchen·dinin&amp; This home has qualified for FMHA linancing
- Call for details. $39,500.00.
LONG BOTTOM- SR 248- 2 acres of land 'with !II hook·
ups on srte. Electric, septic tan~ thone and well. Ready to be
moved on to. ONLY $7,300.00.
.
MIDDLEPORT - Excellent location! 2 story home located
near park &amp; pool! 2·3 bdrms.. original woodwor~ new siding,
fireplace and much more! Call for your showing! ASKING
$32,500.00.
RUTlAND - Nice ranch home w/3 bedrooms. equipped
·knchen and close to schools. Can assume loan of
$25,000.00. at 9\i% for 20 yrs., approx. $287.00/month P&amp;l &amp; T&amp;l, $4,500.00 down or owner will help finance.
$29,900.00.
MIDDLEPORT- 2 apartment un its in town. Needs some repairs. Has much potential. Nice neighborhood. ONLY
$9,900.00.
VANCE ROAD - FARM! If country living appeals to you,
then this larm w/approx. 50 acres olland should draw your
attenlion. Completely remodeled J.4 bedroom house. New .
·drywall throughouL new carpetina; insulated steel doors.
Large country krtchen, looted bath lub, many other neat tea·
lures! Barn, shed. $37,900.00.
POMEROY- Approx. 27 acres of vacant ground, close to Po·
mero_y .. Beautiful building srte lor' a special home.
$16,500.00.
HENRY E. CLELAND, JR ................................. 992-6191
J EAII TRUSSELL ...........................~ ................ 949-2660
DOTTIE TURNER ................ :.............. &lt;............ 992·5692
TRACY RIFFLE ............................................... 949-2807
JO HILL ........................................................ 985-4466
OFFICE ......................................................... 992·2259

ONLY!
&lt;B.&gt; "THE AVENGER"
RECLINA-ROCKER' RECLINER

RECUNA-ROCKER' RECLINER
La·Z·Boy, .Jhe first name in recfining comfort, has ollered us sp8cial savings on IWO
of our besl·seUing.La·Z·Boy Reclina·Rocker recliners and we're passilg 1he savings
on to you! Handsomely styled, tailored in plush velva!. Hurry! Quantities are limited!

J-----~~~~~~==~~~~~~~~~~~---1

• "This !lim will be a tragic
experience for tens of mUllens,"
Bright said,
In the wake of the uproar,
Universal decided to move up the
film's release date several
weeks. It will open Friday in Los
Angeles, New York, Chicago,
Washington, D.C., San Fran·
cisco, Seattle, Minneapolis and
Toronto.
Several theater operators have
said they will refuse to show the
!lim.

limited Time Only in Specially Selected Fabrics!

FRIGIDAIRE
FRIGIDAIRE 18.0 Cu. Ft.
EASY-TQ-CLEAN
1OOo/o Ultra-Efficient
ELECTRIC RANGE Refrigerator-Freezer
• Ullra efficient
• 100% host.prool
• ElficlenJ Meier Uiser compressor

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

• Convenent Electli·Saver swi1ch
• 31ul-wiclh adjustable
sliding shelves
,.

STOP BY AND SEE US AT THE FAIR

Cu. Ft. Freezers
Check Tbese Today I

FREE DELIVER • FINANCING AVAILABLE • 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH
WHY PAY MOll AID Gn USS, Willi YOU Cll PlY USS liD Gn MOB AT IU1UID FUIITUII.
.
IF YOU BOUGHT
01 lPPUliCIS SOIIIWIDI ELSE, YOU PAID.TOO MUCH. .
608

(

"HOME OF THE GRATE GUYS, WHERE YOU GET GREAT BUY:
,.

..

"'\

~

..

E. Main

POMEROY,O.
992·2259 '"

74J.Jt11
I

'.

BAUM
LUMBER

through Sundev. You never need
an apDOfntmtntet Fl ESTA HAIR
F~HIONS. 322 Second Ave,
ecroa from the park. 814-448-

CHESTER

9152.

985·3301

The .nnuel r:e~~nlon ' of tht
Samuel Allan Eblin and Mery
Ann Moen f~mlywll beheld on
Sat. Aug. 13th at 3:30p.m. at
the Kygll' Crtek ,_k. pt....
bring food, drlnk.lftd your own
.. ble-.loe. Fol' more .informl·

CUSTOM BUllT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Roasonablo Prkes"

TAnoos 1ty s•••,
2 Lincoln Terrace
P-ray, Ohia ·

PH., 949-2801
or I••· 949·2860
Day or Night

992-6857

NO SUNDAY UUS

1·3·11·1 mu.

ENGINE
REPAIR

Aulhorhod Strvke
&amp; Parts

RACINE

•Seamiest Guner
•Roofing

GUN SHOP

•VInyl Siding

•Roofing
•Home Roofing

1

Briggo It Stoatton
TacuiTllieh

•Wood Crofts

flEE ESTIMATES

Weed Eater
Homolito

J,ecobeen

VALLEY WMBER
&amp; SUPPLY
Ml·~~r~:~ ohio

SMITH'S SEAMLESS
GUnER &amp;

coNmumoN

OWIID: Jtlfroy s.tth
it. 1 lOX 136, YIJYOII

614·742·2235

7·13·'11-1110. d

How•d L Wrltael

SEhiCE

We can repair and re-

core radtators and
hHter cores. We can
alsa acid bail and rod
out radiators. We alsa

Gutters
Downspouts

NOW THAU SEPT. 3

lAY'S BEAUTY
SALON

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

•Dozer &amp; Backhoe Work
•WHI Do Hauling With

949-2168

BOGGS

614·742-2617

····lttw•n 9 a.m.·6 p.m.
or Ltavt Mtss111

2·1f=' ... tfn

CARTER'S

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
992-6282
319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

Mott Fontgn end
Oomootlc Vlhldoo
A/C IIIYice
AI~:.Minor
NIASE Cortlllod Moohenlc

CAll

99~!-t.J

NO SUNDAY

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949·2969

Dealer for
YARDMAN &amp; ECHO

LoC11ed Holtwev be·
.tween At. 7 &amp; . 8ahan .

Authorized John
Deere. Now Holland,
Buoh·Hog Farm

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
Strvia Cent• lor Ryan
Produds

,.,•• &amp; sar-lea

1·3·'16-lft

HUDNALL
PLUMBING &amp; HE4nNG
We Cony Flohlng SUiiiPII~

•••ias call

•·•-•lull

GUYSVILE, OHIO
614-662 ·3821

•Junk Y1rd Bualne11
WAN! 10 IUY WIICIED 01

For 111y of IIMst

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

7·14-'11-lmo. pd

161 North Slcond
Middloport, Ohio 45760

-FilE ISTIMAIIS-

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949·2860

FREE ESTIMATES

Dump Truck
•Wrecker SeNlce

AINI CAIS 01 TIUCIS

7·5·'11·1 .... tl

Painting

Fer• E••lt•••t

mo.

PH. 949-2168

"free Estimates"

Equipment Deater

169 N. 2nd
Middleport. Oh.

on Bashan Rd.

Gutter Cleaning

U.S. RT. 50 EAST

1850

7/20/lf.l

NEW- REPAIR

SAUS &amp; SERVICE

•2~.00 Perm
For '21 00
Cu1 &amp; blow DIY

992-2725

ROOFING

NEASE HOLlOW RD.
GUNS· AMMO
GUITARS
STRINGS
Follow Signs

SAlES &amp; SERVICE

Pay Your Phone
Cable Bills Here

and

. IUSINESS PIIONI
1614) 9'12-6550
IISIIINCI PIIONI
16141

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

-Conar• warlc
-Plumbing

..

11r1d .. ectricel

wook
(FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 or 992·7314

P-oy,

WANTED

DIAD 01 AUYI

•Wuher• •Drv••

•Range• •Freenn

•R.rrta•r•tor•

....., ...... u •
liN'S APPUANCI

SIIYICE
985-3561

We Service All Mtkeo
1122/1111111

•·U9 Thuood.,

tlon coli 814-99Z.S398 or 814992·2272.
Oenttem.n. 38 -Ilk• the better
things in Ita S..lact, with high
mo•ls for frl.,dthlp .,d pottt.
ble rnwrlage, thlt Uk• 1rrwll
f•m Ufe6 .wnlng leisure. Write
P.O. Box424, lllrbouraville. WV

251104.

4

Giveaway

to give away.
814-4411-2153.

Kittens

Applications now being tall., 1t
ORES In Gallipollt for the new
Pomet'OV·Mickleport Domino'•
Ptzd . Equel Opportunity Employer .

"

HELP WANTED: R•ldent C~r&amp;
Coordln .. lllr, Pl..,.nt VIII.,.
Nur..ngC•reCentlr II -ahlnv

for•n •partenotd~nd•.,..le'
19QitttNd nu,. to ... urn• tW
ntwfV crelted poellton of=~
dent c •e coordlnet:or.
ct.veloprMnt .-Jtty nsuMnoa
p~rlence II fW:IUired. The,.....
~dldM• lhoukl h.,. 2 to 3-

•

.,.., ar Ootlolrlc • SupoMioov
experlenoe with Ger..Wo~
Certttl-ion. H VCJU . . .,...,_:
eetlld end "'*'t to m•e a
&lt;Iff--a. In
lfe .,.
Peraonnel Office. 304-875-4340. 'PI-1 Vollor Nunlno
Cere Cotll' il lf'l ... . - oppor.r
tunlty • 8fflrm11tlve actlor(

eorneo,_

employer" .

. .

•

AVON. All•- : Shlr..... Spwa.
304-175-1429.
~
Babvsltter nMded -NI'W ·Hev_,

.... For 2 chll*.,· C.ll 304!
882·2427 ott• 8 PM.
•

Call

5 month old pup-half beagle,

helftoorior. Call814-44fl.7937
Milalora:V Paint Crtak Blptltt
Olun:h giving .w.y new Lana
Bryant Clothing, Church basem .... Thundl'{ 9 AM.
1 female biD 6 white kitten.
Utter trlllned. To give ""IY· Call

and •• willing to work h•d. .. Cell 1·800·282·1384.
Moncley·Thuood.,, 9 AM·2 PM

Pan-time Registered ·x -rav
Technk:l.,. V•led hou,... No
weekiWid&amp;, call. or holklava.
Apply .. tho Modlcol ..... 203
Jackson Pike. GelllpoUs bet&gt;Nean 8:l0-6 PM.

FEDERAL. STATE AND CIVIL
SERVICE JOtS
Now Hiring . Your Aree .
$13.650 to $69,480. lmmtdlote Openln·ga. Coli 1·31fi.
733-8082, ut. IIF27&amp;8.

Wegnlnctuded. Cllllftll' 5 PM.

614-448-1092.

Blb¥tltter Wan11td-fDr wacher,
A
2•·d 7 3"
b · I
egonn ng
ug. toddlerond1
~ .• : ~
3:30.2
chHcnn.1
bebv. tt tnterettect. pt-a .end
r•umewtth2rel.,.,c.sto: Bm
Clo 182. c/o Gelllpollt Dally
Trl..,no. 825 Third Avo., Gill&gt;
polll, Ohio 46&amp;31.

•u•

4rootter6 7 h•tfBe-alepuppill

446-4310 evening~.

8 puppl• to give awav·Mothlf
reglttered Bauen. Cell 8142&amp;11-1 &amp;83.
2 klttena to give away to good
hom11. Utter tralnacl Call 814-

Now accepting IIPpllcatlons for
WlltrftHI &amp; dr'Mrt. Appt\1' In
person 11 Vlllege Plua·Spring
Yeller Plue. Gelllpolil.

.-rt

Local m.chant looking for
time. Good worldng condftioiJa.
Some tv.Wng. Fun dme If ...,.
factory . Send retume to: Bo•

387.0549.

208, Gallipolis, Ohio 45831 ,

Well ~dded chldl wheel ch.alr
with haad
AG• 4 to 8 yr1.

r•.

old. 814-742·25411.
8 WHk old pups.
Collie. ,h Gernw~
Wormed. Perenta
WitCh dOgt. CIJI

1f.r Border
Shepherd.
excellent
614-992·

5819.
Full aile bed with boJt aprings
1nd mattress. C.ll 814-742-

2989.

Hair Stytlns. Acroa The Strut
ltyllng PIOn il •eking one
1dditionllll1vfitt who II ~ng
for more than ju•t another job.
Call Terri et 814-448-9610 for
dMalls.
Governman1 Jobs. t18.040·
159,230 v&amp;•· Now hiring. Your
• •· 805-887-8000 Ext. R·
9806 for current Fednlllat.

school•. Referent» required.
Stll't Augutt 28th. Call 814742·2897.

1 female dog, 8 mot. old, half
Beagi•Cocker Spaniel. Call
304-895-3801.

ROYAL OAK RESORT. Pomer(flt. Ohio, Ia ICceptlngappllcatlons for the followlng po1h:lona:
1.Sal• Managers 1nd Clollrt
2.Sal• A..odatet ·3.Cuttomer
Servlc•Public Ralllionl 4.Receptionlttl 15 . Secre1arlel ·
Cl.-ical &amp;.Telephone Reaerw tlonilts 7.Store cterk B. Security
Per1onnel. Some podtioM on
eomml11ion TOP PAY for TOP
PRODUCERS. Wo haYooq..llty
environment wilh top notch
tralnlna end mtnegement. For
en appiMntment 1nd lntervhrw.
call Mr. Anthony at 814-992·

Plano. Call304-875-8821 after

8PM.
To gM away-Carpet . Call 304-

878-3035.

Happy Ads

5

..•
'

Hll¥8 room In homefoi.eldlrtv of
handlc.p _peraon. Crown Clty:

Coli 814-288-1809.

13

:

Insurance
.

Call u1 for your mobHe home
Insurance: Miller lnturence,
304·882·2145 . Also: tuto.
honw.llfe. hHith.

;~::::::;:;:;:;===

15

Sch 1
00 I
Instruction

RE-TRAIN NOWI
•
SOUTHEASTERN 8U SINESS
COLLEGE. 1529 J1cklon Pika.
Ohio IMtructlo,.l 0,_,. 0.1cJ.

line A~ . 19. Call 448-4387.
Aog. No . 88-1 1·10'1188.

18 Wanted to Do

-----i.

Pelndng all type~. Raoftng
roof ftiPIIir, Free ldimftel. Call

814-288-888e.

C.pentry. remocllling, Expe-

rienced. honnt, re.~bfe .
Free estlm.t•. R.feren011 . .
G.M. Goodon. 114-44fo8S88
evenings. Thlr'lk You.

111111\'titt:lng-Do. vou need 1 llbttltutl Mommy during the
school ve• whHe you work?
Mothor of 2 achoologo chlcloon
will loYino c•• for your c~
during the d.,. or after IDhool. I

live 3 mA• from Bldw!IIJ..Po~
BabvaiUar needed for pre· . B.,.. For mo,. inform1tlon c.n

F.. e to good home yellow Lab.
male puppy. 2501'11:1 Uncoln
Avo.

2 Ctlloo Cala. Coli 304-87113598.

Situations
Wanted

elderlY lldy . Ught hou-0111.

814-4411-9292.

2562.

12

for an Interview. Mud be a high
~ehoal g,.cl.Mite.

Bab¥11tter ·for ldnderprter
boy. Nonhup, Centenary area.
Reference~ need.cl. Call 814-

lo glw . -··· Coli 814-379-

Pliny Truck Stop now ecCIIJ'dng

tppllcotlona foo cool!. Call 304&lt;
757·e387 bolwoon 10 AM·~
PM.
•

WAREHOUSE TRAINEES
l.e•n Inventory and ttock cOntrol. Limited opening~. Full PlY
v.tlile' tra4ning. If you ere ii'l top
physical 00. ndltlon, und• age 21

NMd pei'ton to live In a c•e for

814-389-8478.

Bob¥alttlng &amp;

Ollld

Coro

Servlce·.,.ar round. Hourly,
daitv, wNkly or after .::hoot
hourt. Hot m -'• • tniCkl

prO\tlded. Fenced In 'IWd wtth
ploylng equipment. VInton. Poo·
111'

a Blct.il er1a. E:~~:peilwn01d
•rt

working with chHdNn. Refw..
provided. Can
lny·
time. PI6Ue call 114-388·

8731 .

8498 Mon. thou Set. 10:00

All Makot

am-6:00pm.

Wt Honor MC/Disc/Viso

4-18-'. ·~

"LET GEORGE
DO IT"
HAULING
SAND-GRAVEL
LIMESTONE
• FILL DIRT

985-4487

FOUND: W.-tch In perldng lot
ne• football ileld at end of
Ced•St. Cln be Identified It the
Tribune, 825 Third Ave .,
Gelllpdlo.

.......G.iillipolis ........ ..

Lost on Rt. 1411 mile off Rt. 7
Byp111, white Lh.. Apso on
Saturday. Call Kenneth Delong
e1 814-992·2489.

&amp; Vicinity
ili~·oid.;y .• Fri;i,;;· i iii. ·e,: ·;iih~

9 to 4. 7 22 Second Ave.

8

Public Sale
8t Auction

8·8-1 mo. pd.

DENNY CONGO

WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

- Addonl and remodeling
-Roofing and gutter work

Wednlodoy.

8. 7 Financing on Yardman
Sorvico on

emploW'tt'.

or 304-727· 788&amp;.

Have • special night out
pllnned7 W.'H mKe you look
like I million! A Sh..,poo a Set
Is just $3.99 MDnUV through

BISSELL
BUILDERS

tflwnta. Applctnts mutt b'
wiUng to work II ehlfb. "
.......... cell J*'IOI'MI 0~304-875-4340. 111-m VIII.,.
NurtingC.ec.n. II•Eq...,.
Opportunity 6 lfflrmatlv.-

appointment. 1 ·800. 727· 78e5.

CUSTOM BUilT
PRE-FAB
ROOF TRUSSES

J.!-81·1 mo.

SYW:USI, OHIO

RUTLAND FURNITURE CO.

IU1UND

BILL SLACK

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEl
SERVICE

•

PER LOAD DBIVER!D

~ hloklg .. _
.. .....
anqot~eooi\..... n.......,oo·:

Tal.nted, Cre .. tva individu1l
Wllnted for an mch:ing E*'. . in
Advertising s.t•. Call for ..,

3 Announcements

SPECIAL

TIME

ALSO IN STOCK:
8, 16, 18&amp;21

401k blrltoola. Goodcond . Clll

304-8711-3788.

Annuu nce 111 en ts

SJUDENT ONLY

LIMITED

cleaning

985 -4141
GENERAL CONTRACTORS
References
112211 ......

EARN EXTRA MONEY during
the Summer. Oat out of the
hou•. become a Dalty Sentinel
.-P• c•rler. Rou111t. open In
Middleport. Call Scott 01 The
Sentinel Offico 11 814-992·
2156.

BACI TO SCHOOL

1 like New 5,000 BTU Uilll
Air Conditioner-Check This Outll

· • Flourescent worldlght Uluminales
cooklop
• Removable ifto()fl door for easy

Wen•d to tl.ly: Wilt buv

etandlna timber. 304-8715·
8328.

eommlltion. PIUMnt working
eondltloftl, A riltlly fun pl.ce to
work. ft'lendfy, nell • dependable are the ,..ulrem...ts. Call
1-814-288-8422. atk for Sue.

J.!Hfc

•

992-5857.

top people ••n •aoo.•1200
per ~Melt. Sel.-y to stwt plus

992·2196

...

qullta. AppNq ... /.1-.1. ony

condl15on. Call 81

PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

Acting Probate Judge •

Lena K. Ne11elroad, Clerk '
(7) 27: (81 3. 10. 31c
· :

Oultt
Ct1h peld for antique or new

Tour Gulct.-M ..•• fam~~l&amp; Our

Middleport, Ohio

8,000 BTU's, 18,000 BTU's, 24,000 BTU's

ONLY

Radnll Ohio 415771 .
Ch•rie~ H , Knight, I

CHESTER, OHIO
.
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS- BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING 8o REPAIRS

Serv1c1:'

PAT HILL FORD

NOW IN STOCK!

colna. l•ge currency. Top pn. Wo- 304-812.2148.
•
CM. Ed Burkett Blrber Shop,
2nd. Ave, MlddltPort. Oh. 814- NURSING AIIIIITANTI .......
982·3478.
-Vall.. Nu.... g Coro c.n ....

listening Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; ~erwici 1~1~1~H~e~lp~·~~·~lll~nt~ed~­
Hearinc Evaluations For All Ages

repair Gas Tanks.

•Extra Quitt Optratian
•Adjustable 4-Way Air Flaw
•Quick-Caeling "Pawtr Thrust"

GIBSON
FREEZERS

l•o of

11 Help Wllntld

[lllplllyllll!lil

AUCTIONEER: RODNEY HOWERY

SLUMBERMASTEI
AIR CONDmONEI

·&lt;A.l "SUBURBAN"

Roulh. 48380 Cormol Rood.
Rodno. Ohio 46771 . ,,.. "P'
pointed Eliii&lt;:Utrix of the-

AUCTION
.
.
. (RAIN OR SHINE)

For modern fully equipped physi·
cian's office laboratory. Oualifi·
cations necessary: MT (A$CP),
well versed in instrument opera·
lion and trouble shootina. Com·
petent in all lab areas. Excellent
benefits. Weekends off. Apply in
person to or call 446-9620. The
Medical Plaza, 203 Jackson Pike,
Gallipolis, belwifn 8:30 A.M.·
5:00P.M.
·

GIBSON

ONLY!

~ County Probale Court.
C.o No. 26917. Mlltv E.

$3$

Rul Estate General

LIMITED
TIME

Public Notice

Wanted To Buy

13

Buytn9 daity gold, anver coins.
ring~. J....,..ry. ••Una ware. old AVON- AI . , . .. C.U M•itvr\

MARCUM CONTRACTING

OAK, LOCUST, CHERRY

SPECIAL PURCHASE!
SPECIAL SAVINGS! .
After Allglllit 20th
'
These Prices Will Be El'
Hurry In Today!lratory,

Public Notice

9

care

Hot Days of Summer Sale
'

PHONE
992-2156
Of W.itt Olilly s.iNf Cllssilid Dt,t.

There is a rason.
But if we trust God as we
should
It all will work out for our
IOOd
,
He knows tht reason.
Sadly missed by wife.
Joanna end family.

movie

. "There Is notl)lng of that to be
found In this picture. It Is a
bumbling Christ, a Christ more
of this world than of the next."
Ward said the Na tional Confer·
.ence of Catholic B!s)lops gave the
film an "0" or morally offensive
rating.
·. The Catholic and Protestant
leaders who gathered Tuesday as
the National Coalition of Con·
cerned Religious Leaders
:CMrged that Scorsese had made
·a mockery of Christ.
Bill Bright, president and
founder ol .the Campus Crusade
for Christ, who tried to stop the
film's release by buying It frOl'I\
Universal for Its $10-m!ll!on
Investment and destroying It,
said the !lim makers showed a
!J1ck of respect for Christians.

Public Notice

In Lovin&amp; Memory of

Catholics

Universal responded that the
movie was actually an " aff!rma·
lion of faith," as Greek author
.Nicholas Kazantzakis had des·
crlbed his 1955 book on which
(!!rector Martin Scorsese's mo·
.vie Is based.
Tuesday the film was attacked
by mainstream Ca tholic and
Protestant leaders, including
Auxiliary Bishop John J. Ward of
the Los Angeles Roman Catholic
Archdiocese, who told a news
co nference, "Scorsese Indicated
he Is trying to portray Christ as a
loving figure .

In Memoriam

Will be selling the complete contents of
Jim's Market at Crossroads of Rt. 124, 3
miles east of Rutland, Ohio; Selling
complete line to make room for all new
merchandise.

. LOS ANGELES (UP!) :Mother Teresa, the legendary
Catholic nun, joined the chorus of
religious leaders from a range of
denominations In condemning
the movie "The Last Temptation
,pf Christ" as a blasphemous
Portrayal of a tOO-human Jesus.
In the latest In a series of
attacks on the film, Mother
Teresa, who has gained world·
wide admiration for her work
among the poor. called on the 53
mllllon American Catholics to
.pray for the movie not to be
'shown In the United States.
·'If they will Implore the power
of God through increased rec!ta·
tlon of the Holy Rosary ... then,
o0ur Blessed Mother will see that
.this movie is removed from your
land," she said In a statement
.read Tuesday by Robert Z!ener,
national chairman of Rosaries
l0r Peace.
: ·Agroup of evangelical Protest·
·ant leaders attacked the film last
month, saying it portrayed
.!=hrist as "a mentally deranged
.and lust·driven man, " mainly
because of a dream sequence in
.which Jesus makes love to Mary
Magdalene.

Business Services

lll Court St. ,.,....,, CMtit ·~ll!l

package of spicy hot Tabasco
sauce, Bush's condiment of
choice.
•'lt's like eating ketchup on
French fries ," said Alvin Bla·
lock, Goodmark's vice president
for corporate relations and
personnel.
.
Bush's taste for tried pork
skins with Tabasco sauce was
disclosed when reporters asked
him how he differed from the
"wimp" Image some have
tagged him with.
Labels on the Grand Old
Porkrinds carry the warning,
•','Not to be consumed by wimps."
The package ·also warns delegates "not to discard empty
packages on the Republican
platform."
Offficlals at Goodmark came
up with the idea, but the company
does not make pork rinds . . So
Goodmark called Carolina Fine
Foods, a company founded by
three former Frlto·Lay Inc.
executives.

The Daily

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

'

:~eery

.·

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL Dl

Rick Pe•son Auctlorwer, II·
c.nltd Ohio and Welt VIrginia.
El"llde. an11qut, f•m. liquid•
tlon ..... 304-773-57e5.

9

Wanted To Buy

Collectibles, cloth•. curtains,

etc.

Gorooe Soi•Ftlcley • Sotuod.,.

Turn right It CHpPif Mlil on
Orch•cf H•t Rd .. 1 mile folkJw
algn1. TVs. tc.a.un heater,
pl..,.pan, qulttt. crlft1, knhles.
c• a truck.

1-------Y•d Sal•2 F8mlly. Dllpot St.

Rutland. behind gravel ptt., 111
tnlil•· brown &amp; white. All dl'f.
Wod. to Set. 9 AM·7 PM.

We •c•hforiiHmodll deen
UMd cera.
Jim Mink a.w. ·Oidllnc.
Bill Gene Jahnton

August 11th lf'ld 12th. Toys
galore, clothing for women. men

and glrll, c.noP'( llt.lobofglrlt

lhoM. Vicki F.rrell IWIIdence,
behirtd Jeho~h Hall on St. Rt.

124.
Saturday's wonderful rain
pl..,..d havoc wtth my ~rd llle.
So--h wiU be held thlt Frid.;
evenlnf~ from 8 to 8 p.m. Lots' at

19 to 13 lizel), lllac:kt..
dr• ... winter hts1111d glows,
COIItt, ph•t gl...--re, knidll·
knacks, excellent OWfltuff.cl
ch1ir. Charlene Hoctnlch. 109
jHfll

High St .. Pomeroy.

Saturday, 13th. 8 :00-4 :00.
Fol'ftt Au n Ad., n•t to Forelt
Run stock Co. "'h inch inlulttad
window pane. flrepl-=e and
ltovaauppU•,I-nmo\Wf,lott
of men' I and WonMn'l clothes.
women '• tile 9·11. men'• 32-

38. Loti of s1'1'11111 .....

814-448-3e72

.. .....Pf.PJeasanr .....:

TOP CASH ptld lor '83 mociOI

•nd n~MM" Ul81;1 can. Smith
Buldc·Pondooc. 1911 Eottoon
Aw.. Golllpcilt . Call e14-44S.

&amp; Vicinity

2212.
Fl .. M•"-11- TradeOay, .
Aug . 13-14. Con«*tion . .nd·
lhlltefl • , . . . . Ull ..... •

F'" Admlnlo• • -Complng

Roger Hysell
Garage

• AUOIIon lundoo/, Aug. 14....
Col\':r.niiWitl Wllco.,.., Courttoy
· MI. Alto, WV.
304-e9&amp;-34471!!'• llwt

lt. 124, ........., Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Trt•,.leelll '
PH. 992·5612
or 992·7121
6·17·tfC

Junk C.ra wllh or without

motort. Coli l..oroy U.olv·I1C.

, . . . . .1

:r:::•u•., ontn
and

oae .,. '*
.,e

appll..

houothold.
Colll14-44fo

pr-~pold.

3111.

Uoocl - · Ho ..... Coli ""'
44&amp;-0175.

...... 'Pomerov........-..
Middleport

A-

&amp; Vicinity
••·~··•••n•••••~••~••••••••••••••

Rold

12th.,d
It .... .,

In ........ .

Y~

a.le: . , .. TUft·

d.,, Wtdnlodoy. 2407 Monrqo
Ave. Mite. hema.
3Fo.. I¥Vord5ol•lrd. &amp;laynl

- ..._.........

- . Ntw-. WV. tarfrom lhe
JIIOOI, Kwo
he•ter. bedtpr••dl. drapu,

twll•••••t

:::.co ...... -.milaJowolrv,
"m•

....

, •d loti of

12.13. eAMtiiii'M.

�14 The Daily Sentinel

Page
18

Wadneldey, A . 10, 1988

Porr.aoy Midclapoi'i. Ohio

LAFF·A·DAY

Wanted to Do

44

61

A.,-tment
for Rent

Household

Ooodl

74 Motor~cles

JOT 1N' CARLYLEtl by Larry WrlaJit

76411-

h--.l't. "-'llndQelllpo-

-

'"· 614-448-8221.

..... a........... -

1113 Hondo V 411. MogM . Good
oond. I.Dw rnHa Call 304-17~

r llldllcldl

.,..
..........
_.,,
••••u..

__

ND Job tao bfg

nanoe fr• lYing olo• to lhopplng. b.,kl Md oollocll. r:o.
mo .. lntoo•Mdoncal 304-1123711. E.O.H.

or

lNG CO. ~"""'"dl tMt you
do butln- with piiOP• you
knOW", and NOT to •nd morwy
t twough the mail untl yoo htve
· invltttgtled the offering.

Own your own apper• or shoe

ttort. Choo• from : )ten·
•portsvvear , ladies, men ' t ,
chlldren-mllternlty, lerge_ tlzM.
petltt, dencewe.,...a.-obic. bridal, lingarie or ecceuori• store.
Add color an•lv••· Brand
nem• : Uz: Cl•iborne, Hettthta•.
ChiUa..Lte. StMichtle. Forenu,
Bugle loy, L.wi; Camp 11\'trly

Hur
Grown.
Lucia.
- ., orpnlc•nr
2000 othon.
0. 113.99
OM

P•lco dooignOI'. multi tlw

pricing cliecount or t.mily lhoe
...... Rotoll p~coo ..,.,..,_blo
for top qUIIIty tholl norn.lly
priced from 119. to 180. Over

250 brands 2100 .tyles .
$17,900to *29.900: inwntory,
tNining.. fixtures. air••· g,.nd
optning. etc. Can cp11n 15 diiVL
r.tr. Loughlin (112) 888 4228.

Boaoty Shop a. equip. Coli
304 773-5121 .

.."The
.... pigs
...-....want
-··-'-the wolves to

Eslaie

S.c:rlfh:a 2 BR . ho~. 1 I crt. 2
mil• pas.-f VInton School.
Com~ nmodlled. New
wiring. li t1, windows. blown·
in lnttdat n, ptumbing, kltch ..
ellblnetl, c•r-t throughtout.
chpn.thHrl. ~IOMther/d ­
,.,ar, dove, ~efrfg. Oardtn·II)Ot.
s 23,000. Call814-388-8482or

388-986411110 P!\11.
Be .. tlfu I Holcomb HHI. addf.
tionll lot. 3 BR., ea. can

814-446-0338.
3 BR .• utilitv. g . .g-. kitchen

with 'IPPtiln~- E•ceU.,t op-.
porturity. Price to seU, Call

614-448-1358.

1979Ubooly14x70,3BA .• .,.,

•IC't.. c•pn. 'front poteh. u,..
dwplnnlng. *7000. Coli 614388-9844

mo~lo

building. Near Men:ervile. Call

614-256-6887.
MoGIIw home on .. rge tot in
Mercerville. Pool. AC. new

c•P't· O..tbuilding. Call I 14256-12&amp;8.
By Ow nll'~3 BR ., eKtlll large
f.mly room. 2 .6 acret, city

school dltt. immldlllte occu~
Pflncv. Owner will help finance.
can 614-44&amp;.9210 evenlnp..
Btidt 4018 sq. ft., to111 12
room1. 5 BRS , 2'A baths,
1Bx21 family room. l•o• kit·
chen. p.ntry, laundry room.
d•kroom. 12x21i storge building. 1.62 aero tD1111 or hou•
and .eperetelott. Hanersvilebv
appointment. Call 814-446·

1903.
Sutely, 2 ttory older holM. 4
bedrooms, 2 ful batt., LR. DR .
FR. larv- e11t-in kitchen, sun
pon::h, b ... men1. d•ched 2c•
onge with 1t0111ge spice. vlnvl
aiding, centml htllt and air,
comer lot. 158.000. Clll 814-

992-5458.
With or without acreage. 5 miles
from Meigs Mine. AlfDIInder
Schools (gocd bl.cktap roedl.
15 mil• from Pomeroy or
Athans. Hou• ontv 10 .,eart old.
3 bedroom•. 1 1f.r balh. $26.000.
Call 814-898-7231 .
For •'• or nmt. 23 acres wh:h 3
bedroom hou•. Phone 614992·8Q67 or •• Bill Clonch.

197&amp; Ouwy Malibu Outic.
AU1o, 350 eng. 61,500 mihtt.
Excellent running condition.
Body hlr . 1900. 814-949-

0&lt;

w..

..m. Call

nnoant~

located, Herr isonville •ree.
1&amp;000. Lind ocntnet ~tlble
with 20 pen::.,l down. 814-

2 bedroom, furnished. Air.
..,..•h•. dryw. *2215. p•month

742-3033.

otua u11kloo on d depoalt. Coli
814-992-7479.

1974 Ol•mpion 14x815 tDI:II
electric. """:-:.Cnnlng. Fur·
niahed or unfu
heel R. .dV ta
move . 18,800. 00. 304-5"18-

2 bedroom mobNe home, *200.
month. 304-171-1184.

.2383.
1970 Windlor 1b.815, wood·
burner. wtther • drler. elr
conditio!'llf. Mu1t bs moved.
304-89~3802 .

~"'*'&lt;:od

'84

Scl&gt;u~z

1979 Bly'4iew mobile horne.
14a70 wil:h 7:x21 , ex.-ndo,
t0181 alec. central air. 304-875-

6141 .

'73 28 ft. Oumplon motor
horne, flit contained. Very good

33

Fanns for Sale

Hou• a1dbulldlnga. Cell

304-755-7290.

35 Lots 8t Acreege
For Sele 30 •c:rea, Morgan

townlhfp. utility accat. wftl _.,
all or •• Iota. P . O . Bo• 20357,
Ch•le.ton, W.Va. 215382.

I••·

acre more or
Nice
building lot wtth foundation . AI

Y;

utltltiea &amp; c•ble TV. Good
neighborhood. -4 mlttt from
town . Ctll Smit"h Res! El'btle,
B14-441-8808 c:N" 379-212:8.

Alhton. l•ge buMdlng lots,
mobile hanwa permitwd. public
water, 1110 rtv.r ktl. Clyde
BIJMn, Jr. 304-&amp;78-2338.

• .,tifulriYer lau ~mucrea:tlua.
public
Clylte Bowen. Jr.

wtt•.

304-5711-2336.

304-57&amp;-2383.

.

2588. E.O.H.

Ups•lrt unfurn:thed

apt. C.r·

p•d. "'"". . fiOid. No chll .....
Coli 614-448-1537.

No'*'·

11 Court St.-2 IIR., 2 t.ths.
ldltehen furnithed, w/ w c•.-t.
No pita. Off atMM parking.
I 325e mo. plua utlltlel. Dep. •

ool. Coli 614-448-4921.

Furniahed- 3 room• a bath.
CtHn. No peta. Ref. • depoeh:
required. UUIItJH furnished.
Adu Itt only. Cell 81 4-441·
11!519.
Furnished apt. 11&amp;0. Utlitlw
paid. Sh_.. beth. Single mtllt.
919 Second Ave., O.lllpolla.
Call 446-4418after 7 PM.
Luaw-ioue Tara Townhou•
IPII'tmentl. Eleglr'lt 2 tloort. 2
BR .• ful bath ullltllra. powd•
room downa•lu, CA., dlshwaat.., , dtssx-1, prMte entiW'lce. prtvete ttndottd paUo.

ploy,..ound. UtHhl• n01

mo. con 614-387-7880.

41

Furni•hed etflclency · 920
Fourth, Galllpolla. 1180. Utlltloo ,.,d. Coll448-4416olm7

Furrfthed apt. NtMr . Ne•HMC.

441-4418 after 7 PM.
Apanments end houlltl. Cell

Foruth Aw.. GelllpoUa. Call
44·8-44-1, a~er 7 PM.

o 38,600. COli 304-578-2466.

3 bedroom horN, H !l blll:hs,
c.rpMtd. cenu.l tlr !hell. Loc•ld in PI , Pl.,.nt. Call

304-678-2702, 57&amp;-2147.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

pets. Cell &amp;14--448-0338.

Con.,.niiWit 2 bedroom cottage
In Gtlllpoll1, • 2!50 per month
plua ut•itlet. Call 014-4411990.
3 Br., utility, at•ched g.ag.,
llrge khchen. ... llect. 1 v••
le••· Firtl mo. refit !I d.pollit.

Coli 614-448-1368.

plum~ng.

Unfur-

nlollod. o4SOO.' Colt 114-44&amp;2981.

121116, 3 BR .. 1877 fedMI.

e.

Nice 2 btdroorn hou•. Nice
c•pating.

cabinet~,

1 BR . apt .. n• c•pet,

Appi'OOdmotoly 2000 Ill· ft.
1 Bot .llfloNon. I'« .,... ·

nMahbor·

hood. Middleport. 814'992·
5158.

Hou11 for ftntin Pom.oy, Ohio.

Coli 614-992-8144.

Nice 38A., 2bMtu.b•rntnt•

54 M lac.

Marchandlaa

ator•u• or offlcet. w.lk·ln

Wh-.......

Household

0&lt;-

!frost frH refrlgerttor fur·
nit . .d. Weter-9.-bllge plid.
Depo-. MqUired. C.lltl14.-441-

4348.

Furrntted rtdeoor~~ted apt. 258
State St. Adutu. ontv. Utlltiel

pold. no ..... noo.,.. mo. 1

mo•. 1Hee. Calll14-44&amp;-3117.
3 BR . apt. ~a"lally furnllhld. In

1---------SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 12
Olivo St.. (loll-.
NEW- I pc_ wood1I'OUP. U89.
Uvlng ............ .,....all.
Bunk b - with bedding- nil. ·
Full oloo m - &amp; fauniMion
ttlrtlng .. •••· Recllnert

111ntng- •11.

Hok oky .. ,oplt.. .dull Como In
now for • oondttlonin1 ....._.
rn.tf Md •• the •rr.aN»I

aultee, 1118-*289. o..kt.
wrinoer w.lhll', a oomplete lin•
of uted furnltlft.
NEW· W'lllt8rn bootl30.
Wo-1 •18 &amp; up. llhHI •

*

• .,...,, Colll14-44&amp;-3159.

County Altollll'lce. Inc. Good
utrld lfPpll..._ .nd TV •eta.
Open UM to IPM. Mon thru

2 ~t:~ . 1Partmen1. AJI vtlhi•

pol d. Coli 114-44&amp;-8723.
3 room IPI""*'t. *1 DO a mo.
Coli 304-175-5104.

- ·· ..,. Nloo. .tnylu.,....,....

"'""· t7980. Coli 614-4480175.
.

lin.-.
vinyl 614-44&amp;-33711.

•

2 AKCAaglsMIId tMieleegl-.
7 rnondw old. Jult .-rtlng to
Nn. lSI. •tch or eeo. pelr. Cll

a14-1....2143 .

Flillgittered Miniature

Sch-..zer. AlaoCooll:•lp~nlel
8oth molw pupploo. Cooh. no
· -· Colll14-t92·2107.
A K C - llt..,_a, 1
wltlto 2 block molw ond 1 block

f•mele. lhott at•rtect and
WGI II lid. S04-41&amp;-11521.

2

Ado•bte' ..... ,.d_puppl-.

lllltNmente

.

•ea.

ftrm 178, end

Outen .... *210 • up.

King •3110. 4 - c h _ , ....
Oun ceblnlta I gun. IIIJr
matt,..... 131 • I.S. IH
tr.n•
King tran~e '

68

*20. ·*30 •

h.-.

•eo. GoodHioctlonol-oom

90

mtl:ll Cliblnetl.
130 ..d ·UP tO •11.

o.y,

•m• •

c•h with

credt. 3 Mil• out
Bu)avlle Rd. Open 9lm to lprn
Mon. thru
Ph. 114-44 ..
0322.
approo..ed

s•.

1- -----------VIII_. Fu"'ltu,.

New and ulld furnlluN and
ap~llcan0111 . Call 114-441-

7572. ttou" 9-5.

J &amp; S FURNITURE
1411 Ealtwn Aw.

Aderne

Ferm~·CMnino t~­

Colll14-247·2086.

1811 Mctlo RX 7, *2800.
1813 Oldl. II..,.. W-n.

.2000..........~

1200.

"eta. pi••

Rod Hot bqolnol Drug dooiON
a..,
repo'd. SurDI&amp;at. Your .,.• . IU¥trs Oukle.
l·80&amp;-617-8000 EIIL 8·9-.

•r...

1178 a....... Lo-. 4 .......
new PI Int.
bt:IWv. brall-.

Air Condltioltllr.

I .rr11 Sillillll"-.

,\ 1 "r:

Reall1tlc eound ey.-:em, 4-

......... 1 0 0 - hoodo. 4
mlkoo. •&amp;oo. Coli 304-17&amp;3238.

--.""'·ClaUde

Co_. - o i l - · •d

..
... il~k'eo'Mtl!'"'12~d.PIQollfDo.
"
•~ no lit,.
Clot- Oltto. Coli 114-4411-

-

.1111 k

SNAFUtl by Bruce Beattie

Bootie. Top
shape. OoF1't ..,. on.
Clill

304-175-3802.

•eoo.

• AM· FM

...... Coli 304-il'fll-1818.
CROII.BON8
u .s . H Wort J o - . Ohio.
114-2a. . . .1.
_ _ , , _ _ -10ollln4
8uoltllotllll••- 0vw

40-t-cntooh-fram

a ODm••• liM of new •

eq,.._.. .... _

uM

· ' - n In

I.E. Oltlo.
4808 J.D., &amp;-.blodo, - ·
10% Melt. 1984 8280 Ford
truck. 302. 4opd.Col1114-44f.

'"'I"""-

Folr S..eclll
chain
. . . .-FR I .1 0 ,_. _ _
choln
·
dum1
Clolllo •d
Milan OOUIIIY Felra. • .,.
10'10D2 Cot. "'ftYMgfnowlth
Cot wonclt. "'"" oonl. U,OQO.

-

63

I:OOoill 104-87•2111.

Llvaetodc

72

Truckl for Sale

1113 - " ........... pickup
wMh Olmflli' top. On11o
40,000 ""• v.., aood ......

Vllnl &amp; 4 W.O.

tt•t diLP-

.......--•-••toll.lor
-

...., ........ -_ . .,.......

114-112-8:180.

f-

Doo

Jo.._

Oftlo 114-MJ.IIOII.

.,

...

-·t.

good coak"' tlnlt time
Fldo'l food dllh • • jllo mcti"

-4

- · .n.eo.
......
•t.80flll'
1oo. ..Grousttl
u.Mo .....
...
Ill.
l'lloy.
JO~ti7.Z011.
-·
·- · , .... Itt.

1111 Hondil Cu- CIIOO.
lllssft
..... tor ...... - 17,000
...

*""'· -'(

llo l . . . . .

"'':~ tnc:

2414.

eur 1 'DID 1HAT
LASTYEPR

~--~'

....:, ,

8t

TY MEEKLE AND
WHO AAE'I'FIOSE
GUY5 RUNNING.
FOR PRESIDENT
1'1-115 vt=AR "

•

/

-i

.,.,. ,I
I
· .;...!
,.
••.,

e

BARNEY
YOU CAN"( FORCE

THEM PIW POWN
PAW'S &amp;UIZLEf

ooc !.

denomlrnltlon Is dlvldad over

Blbllcllln=· Q

Gl

·••

limo. Coli 614-4411-7404-No
Ill nd... Cillo.
' .•·-1
J. J w.., 811Moe.lwlmmlng • ,;~
-..;il
pools. cll•ns. Willi:. Ph. 114- " ~ . ,.~

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

.11

tt Yldl ceo.

~ j.L

PEANUTS
TJ.1E MAI&gt;IAOER SA'I'S, ~50 IT'Li
MAKE OUR ROOM LOOK 8166ER! ''

Dumpuuclt--- ··: v

.. .

I

'

':'{\0:

.. ,:

. . . _ . . Up-nt-- 1
trloounlyarwu~ ... Tllebltt

--

&amp;bJ

FrtnchfL~ Amlllcln arlllll.

· ... 304-S7f.

Upholatery

.Qf76

+KJI07
SOUTH
+AJI064S
.IOU

•Au

••

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: We$t
W.lt

Norllr

Pus

I+
I NT

Pass
Pass

4+

Pali

Eut
Pua
Pass

Pus

'

Openin1Iead: • J

against hope that East held A·J·IO, out
declarer covered with the king and
eventually scored a heart trick to
make the contract. Notice that If declarer tries ID attack the heart suit before strlppins the hand of clubo and dl·
,amonds be will possibly lose three
heart tricks and be set.

acoustic,

e.g.

40Spanish
porridge
42 Garnish·
ment
431talian

DAlLY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's bow to work It:

lnttmallollll oopt a d - of

Wattereon' • Water Heullno. · ~
NIIIDftlbll retlll, lmmedi.U
2.oooo•on del'*¥. clttern1.- . ':

87

.AJI

city

of Steele
·
elll Cll • Cll 111 • c
fiiNewo
CD .... 1n1m on Center

•'
I

,.......

-----------

ave

11:00(J) llom~tgton 8tHII Sting

:_...

., ,. ,.

··

m~a~tenden
eo,.,,
....,,.

~·

'I

.QH
• J 105
+Q 86 4S

or

II LONGFELLOW

In furnll:• uf:tlla1f4. 0111
104·1711·4 a4 ,., " . .

..

MAMA MAMA MA 1&gt;4A!!

lle'":=:....
llllr.IIU

.l~at"'f•Q

.

-

eRYPTOQUOTE

8·10

HAR

E R ,

•

.W Q H

GYQCT

BWUR

•

125:-JJc~CIIU.
'

'

ZX,RRQ

,,~=s:==:r:-

!E .....

One letter stands for another. In this sampl!! A is used
for the three L's, X for the twD ·O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hint.,. Each day the code letters are different. .

Wee

. :,••..1.11
c.n .. a ...

8110

AXYDLIUAXR

10:30 (J) AnHIIICIIt lnlpahota

'·

'

EAST
+K5

I Curtain
415 Bring
fabric
to bear
6 Gambler's DOWN
portion
1 Get lost!
(sl.)
2 Ring
9Task
3 Pooch
10 Voiced
name
12"Cry me
4 Anger
a--'
15 Witli joy
13 Cattle
6- of arms
Yesterday's Arur.,er
breed
7 Vase
24 Cleaner's 33 Newman's
15 Soul (Fr.) 8 Philippine
concern
"The _
16 Decay
language 25 Light
of Money"
18 Likely
11 Of a
color
34 Actor
19 Court
wolf
26 EnWilliams
magician 14 Bullock
danger 36 Pavilion
21 Falsehood 17 United
27 Ancestry 39 Written
22 Viva
20 Star
29 FQr
letter
t9rero!
or Ranger
shame,
4 I Cowboy's
23 Volcanic 23 Dray
32 Expiate
nickname
tip .
24 Thorny
27 Beer
28 Trained
29Tree
30Snake
31 Uncut
315 Resident
of (suff.)
36Pagoda
ornament
37 "High-- "
38 Optic

MIICIII·tMIIOn M...,_
(2:28)
.,

=R-&amp;:-:R:-:V::---,-.:-onol--co.-:Pt&gt;-olo.:- ; ;;_
olaternt, wellt. lmmedl•te- .1,000or 2,000tllon•dt1Mry. -~ ..,
Coli 304-178-1170.
.
'

~;;::;:;::;:::;:;::===

Vlrinle

opttrallon. llka collin
slam~. shut. (R)
0 I
ng Newo
-~andCheee
111'.20 ([) lo1()VIE: 'I'M

Cis:terna. Wtlll. Dllh.wy Anvr ' ~

lw\lloa.
c.1111 ....

e liZ

cloHa the S

• 'I... ri

Dflllrd Wiler 8.,._: Pool-.

11110.

!leewltere Craig lacea up

iha glOves In an 11118mpt to
reclaim hll lost youth. (RI Q

~~~-·God and - ·
())
Mo,_.
Southern 8eptlat

Hauling ,

8uahho1 m0tllliln1. ~04-17a..

' Bill lllla.tof Bl

(!)

--------------- ., !

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

GIINowC-"J
10:00 (J) Strelgltt T••

A cruaedlng prlesl with a ,
drinking problem Is accused
or murder. (R) Q

:

241-8285.

SO WHO'S
FORCIN'?

Cll • (J) llpenoer: For Hire

I

T

Htl......_., c til Ed Shmblh•

-50~1NGc- OR- OTI-IEI1..

.~ ,..4

Electrical
Refrigeration

General

eol)SH ANDT!-00'
N::JBLEW\N.

YEAI-l, HE'-5 THE DUI&lt;E OF
NOBLEMAN'?

Ch'rislmaa Eve attraCis an
unu1111ally colorful collection
or folks. (R) C
(!) (J) In P8i!Onnence at lite
Wl1lte lfouM Shirley Jones,
StubOy Kaye and Lee Roy
Reams pay lrlbute to the
Broadw_IJ chorus line. (NR)
® e1121 WlMfiUJ VInnie
lean\s Sonny's Impending
marriage Ia pretext for gang
war. (A)
o urrr King
' 0 MOVIE: llldo, P1r111 (PG)
(2:00)
8:30 (l) PBA lloWIIng
CIJ
(I) Blip Mallwlll
9to1y Slap aageriy lakes
Judy 10 her ten year high
schOOl reunion . (R) Q

uvet

A•klenti.ll or oonwnerclal .wlr- ' 1
lng. ,.._, ....ac. or repeir1, "'
Uoen•d llectrtal~n. EetlmliUI
.r&lt;
fr11. Ridenour EIHI:rlcal. 30..._ 1

86

WELL,THERE'5

I

·~17U.

Monkey
'
• Nllllwllle Now

e

•

773-5138. .

·'.

o.orae

.....
..

1'1-encfting IMI'VIce. w.-, IM
1nd etectric Unee burled, 304-

WEST
+87

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
44 Permit

C01111C1J !PGI (1 :43)

0 Tille of t1t1 Gold

elll 1111
Sch'-tter'•
FunoyP-'tl
Cll
(J) tloaperntlln

('

Clolllpoll .. Ohio ,
Phono 114-4411-3188 .. 11444&amp;-4477

. .....

NOR'111

+QU
•Kts2
8KU
+AU

CROSSWORD

(!J MOVIE: llontlntlc

e

I

Cor. Faurlh and Pine

84

•

;
•

Excavating
--------------

Btarbuc~

9-8811 Chall1lllonallip from
Lea Vegaa: Final m
Cll
(I) Held a! iha Cllt11
Charlie chang88 hla old
faalllonad thinking a~ut
using computers. (R) Q
1:00 (J) 700 Club

1

83

7:35 ([) Molor lugut1 BaMbell
1:00 (J) Cre1y Ulre • Fa• Fox at
the Races

1:30 (l) llfllllnla World Open

\l
I

304-

• YideoCountry

1111 , _.....

___________ ..
flllmp Nlw .,d 88&amp;-3802

·

0 Clonllre

son of McCabe's friend . (R)

I

MottWIIIIIODmpl.e.d•meU,.

Q

D
lit) • liZ ·~· ind Ute
FalmM Jake and McCabe
lluall out • dlahonnt cop,

'

Ao•ry or cllbl• tool . .ling.

eo
-.or 1•111.,.
leeabel

wlna 2nd gold.

'1

Fotty To-• Trimming. "''""P
•-1.
Call 304-1711-1 331.

•'

lor the gold: Edwin Moses

•I"•

' '

Ttlltlgltt

Tenspeed Turner helps J .J.
track 'd own the klllsr ol ·a
friend . (II)
(l) Ug1111r Side of 8por1a (R)
·Cil .(I) Onlllll .......
Mike, buoyant from acting
succeaa, cuts claq to head
lor Broedway.(R) Q
(!) ()) 11 .,.,. of Qlory
Previous medaliall 1111'11Q01e

.'

au.....

Cllll......,.,_~

.(I) . . . .
lit) •~a~ 1111 Jeoperdyl

elll 1111 J.J.

Hou• ula on RCA.
GE. loecllllnt In z.,.h, Coli _, 1
304-1'78-2381 or 114-441· ... '

2111.

YIIMII• 10 Pour Whllf•. C1H

T·H~Es &amp;~ 10
0

J

1 ~~~~~-· ODW, •700.1bllall

..... , _ oow. · - · 1
.IN:wslll - . . - · UIIO.
Motor~c:les
Colllt4-~·1--------~
1 1 7 8 - 780. Good oonl.
· - Coll14-187·711111.
114 Hay &amp; Onlln

q-

-

Pointing: lntwloo- • E...no.. '
Fret Mtimalft. Clll 114-44&amp;- ~~· ... ~
IM4.
. •

hul Aupt, Jr.

814-44&amp;-H-.

••. ,200-1225 ..... - · " "
f10'111' lumllhod.
~~-- .,_
...
Dolo 114-lltZ.2381
onlngo 614-lltZ.1723.

,

..,
\'"I
.;
.,' ..

RON'S TeiiVIalon Servloe.

lci1DIIIIc lportl

(!Jien8on

.........:
• _,

w.r:1r1r,... ......

. . . . for ...... Coli

.

RON EVANS EN11!RPR18Eit- • ,,_.
Stp11c tank pumDina- •to .,.. ~~ij'!
food. Coii1·800-131·9B21.
""

304-175-1458.

11n a.""" e1o · - - Fo"
oond.. 280. 6 cyl, outo. Coli
304-1711-1144-IPM.

CONCI:~j/

..:.

Co,_. Septic T.,lis • 1000
gtl .• 1100gel. .,dJIIt Aem:lon
- ·RON
FoctOtV
ttalnodENlER'·
EVANS
8, Jacbon, otilo. 1·100537·1528.

1977a.wyplolwp \!o ton. good
oonl.. •1aoo. I ft. '""'k
· -· .,..,., Nfrlo. &amp; oink.
08110. "Coli 614-446-1877.

19770otoun olclt·~ CAH5p.m. 614-812·7722.

,.........

(l)-

- - C.IIOk Rd. Coli 114- . 1 ,
446-0294.
•...,.I

El_.._ 81110 Conlllod. fi'M

1184 8·10. · ...... ,...
............. Col1114-446-8715.

7:30elll~waadlqulrea

SMEPER .nd IIWing miiChlne •
r ....... ....... d ......... Pick •
up Md dlllvery. Devil V,au.m :. 1 ~
Cluner. on• half mile up ., 1

tloft. *2100• wiiMdtfarc•.

Coll614-21f.l261 .

7:05 ([) AndJ CltiiHHt

TuNc·UP, NoT
A

~

Roa•rtlteement
WataPiootl:•t·

1=:'::6....

I

-~i'?.,,

low boy llall•. Good cond.

73
R 11 ..... Mor.....

~

••

f&lt;oo _ , , _ Coli ooll..,.
1·814-237·0481. d• e&lt; night.

.

,/""" HEY • . .. J:
,, WANTeD A

.••'

Unoardtlonal ltfltlme gulr.,.. '
••· La all .-1.-.na. tur'*hlld.

TancHim Mtia truak • Tandem

• 5780 .. wllooll_ ...._Coli
114-4411-8031.

II

. .

"

Fann Equipment

CETtD't"'r'~ =-l14- ~~t 104-8711-7421.
119._,579

au,..

1111 C.Wall•, -...tt:IINtlc. 1\ir

3040.

WEI-liN liED CEo••
* ••
Dl•llll llultlc
.,d-·t..p81clng
• Doale Mot. . .

lmprovllinente

CAR11!A'8 PUJMIIING
ANO HEATING

1172 VW

-Il l

Home

11• 81 0, a.to. 4 wh..t driW,
..,.fm mdio. H, 700 or .._.

614-742·2879 .. 614-882l:!q.

oond., ,.... deft

81

Bullclnc.::llock.
-• · winWfn.
Wt. RID o.... dl. 0 . Call 1142411-5121.

SID'S, ~WI I&lt; I- FIX
· . .· GAAAGc

BASEMENT
WATER PROORNG

PRINT NUMBERED

What reason could you ever have for
accepting a same invitation from re·
spon~r when you opened the biddlns
with a balanced 12-point hand? Hold·
InK prime cards for your opening bid
- aces and klnp - would be ooe rea'
son. HaviDJiood support for respond'
er's known a1K-&lt;:ard suit would be another rt!UIHI. Since North bad both, be
bid four spades. South still bad to
catch a little luck and use a little skill
to bring In 10 tricks.
Faced with five possible losen after
the openins lead of the jack of dla·
mODels, declarer had to assume that at
least the spade finellle would work If
he Wllll to have any chance for his con·
tract. He alao saw that the spade fl.
neue combined with a 2·2 trump split
would live him a sure thlna. He woo
the king of diamonds and led the apade
queen. East covered with the king and
South woo the ace. Now he played to
dummy's club ace, ruffed a club and
played a low spade to dummy's nine.
When both defenden followed, he
ruffeil dummy's last club and played
ace and a diamond. West was allowed
to win the diamond 10 and perforce
had to play the heart suit. West made
his best play, the !'e&amp;rt queen, hoping

.

IIJMoneyi!M

Serv1ces

~uored

LETTERS 11'1 SQUARES

By Jemea Jaeol:y

(H) . _ , Miller

FRANK AND ERNEST

lho chuckl.e

by fdling in the missing word$
you develop from step No. 3 below .

BR

of

eor~

.,..

•

looked the puppy IN the EYE.',..
' -,.---------.,

==!~&amp;....t
Por:
..q,_llll WIIMI

1'
!

G) ~omplele

•

A friend waa having a hard Ume giving WNaY a litter of puppiaa. She hung a sign In her yard: "Don't say ' NO' Iii you' ve

Cll CurNnt Aftllr
(!) (J) MICNII/ L -

----------- ,,
81

•

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

ellJPMMegu~M
(l)~(L)

..... hitoh. - •

11711 IIDcldgo Q&gt;all- A·T
440. 4 "'""· ......... fo•
thow, not chfiP. Dulne W..,_

19M Sulak Alvono. 304-17&amp;·2214.

21.000 BTITo. 1300. Coli 114882·8507.

Building Supplies

CD ... in«&lt;,

•

Mysa/1 - Knife - Yokel - Kindly - IN tile EYE

Now
you s - 1t. Now you Don 'l

I

304-8711-8394.

AON'S APPI.IANCE 8EAV1CE.
hou• ooll - • 1 GE. Point, Wlii,_S, d,.,..., •n d
· - 304-5711-2388.
;;:;
-;~~~;;~;;::::=
82
Plumbing
&amp; Heating

otlw. 304-178-4140.

Troy Bult I HP Till• for ....

I==========.l=========~

r

.

1181 01111 CUt- CI'UioM Ito·
'don w..,~ lui* --.,. ve.
44811. Colll14-llt2·1719.

Coli 114-llt2-8380.

2 71i.

8808.

--··

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

...,mon. Oltlo 114-7 ...3312.

For hi•Zenlth TV·IIO. Call
114-4411-7148.

Hlf

.

a cas-.

7:00 (J) R-tglort -

-:-!

1971 Hollldoy Rombl• 11Wol
1•111•. 22ft, twlnoXIL oloopo I ,

8

.YouC..IeaBter

e-

'

.

'--L--'--''--'--'--'

1:35 ([) C.rol lunld

---------------- .~
Sconlo 15 ft . compor, v• ..-·~
eltiC· 11frlg., It«NNi, tclet. Atldng •
Good ohopo. Coli 614- ~·· .

317·0413.

•

9~•

:3

..oo..

_

I
I1-- --r,;..;:;,...::-,1,;7;...:.;..,.:.:..,,8,-l

o--··•

I'

&amp;Camp...

.

eo~~og~n·• - · -

we. W.buytransmlltlonl. call '~ '

Moton Homes

_

A teacher allowed the claN to
make up ru111 for conduct while
on a field trip. The ruleo included,
"No smoking, no drinking, no
radios and no language!"

Nlglalt Bnelne• Report

111 •

114·
441-0911. Rebuilding ~
Ulbl
...
"
•~ .

lootlw · · we.
I• 380
1111 •
13.000
......
Aoltlna

l..ondle..,-..; 114-4411-1646.

66

1171 fi• X 19, oonwrt:. Eu:lll.
coni. •2eeio. Colt 614-44&amp;-

(1)

:.;;=-r;;;;;;;;j;;;:Jift;;;;: •-

·at•k&amp;L.ownondlllw,.304-1711-3188 0&lt; 304-1711qiiOQ 614-llt2·8833- I e&lt; 2103.

• Ton dump truck.
good lftotor· t1710. Don't

mutah,.

tON for .... LMan Fill•. Ohla.

•ae.

1182 Buick llegol. lc-ooriOI.
....... coni.- o3800.
1878 Fonl l'ID II. •11100. Coli
814-44e-13118.

1881 El DaNdo 111. .1tz. co ....
pletely IOIId•dl Aatraroof.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

ful or twin

1879 Thunletlolnl, T-toc&gt;. oil
lltc .. nwt motor. new front end.
•to., PS. P8, AC. 12100. Call
114-2411-111188.
.

1178 'l'hu-•d. Aool good
llhopo. CAll 614-IIG-2260.

Hom~~ grown ~h•. Vlllow
Frweton1. W~gr~• FNtt F•m.

u n ... up to •3811. loflvbodl
•110. MelbUNtMorboa . .lnts

1il7 Fonl T._ GL Auto ..
Pl. ~8, AM-~M. tilt, nco!. - ·
U900 ft•m . Coli 61 4-441·
81tl.

7214, 0&lt;114-llt~·3224.

,.,.. .::.'::':. .....,.,, .......

Wh~rlpool

· !li lett ol AIM!Icln Muac!J
llagaiiMIRI
Cll e Cll ABC Newo Q
(!)llody--

21 mpg, 07800. Coli
114-40-8143 .. 304-5757117.

Lo-.•1200. Coli t14-112·

Musical

d,.,.,., •efl lgntora,
rangea. Skegga Appliance..
Up ... R- Rd. ltono

Hutch• *400 Md dp. IIMk
bedt compllbl w·m..,..._

"'*·
_.,

Coli 614-2Sf.1270.

- Coli

w..,_.,

o795. Dook •100 up to U711.

Coo-.

1187 IIDdgo - - P"*-'"'·
PI, I'll, AIW-FM
bod
Nnning booodt. 4 cyl. 5

Fo• •loby - · 1181 Pt&gt;ntloc
Trens Am. pt:one . 114--9413077.

f......

'i

m...

GOOD USED APPI.IANCES

Softt end ohtlrt priced from
1395 to 19&amp;1. Tabl• •so end
up to ., zs. HtdH·bo• neo
to U9&amp;. R - •221 to
U711. Lompa us to t1b.
DinettM 1101 end up to 1481.
Wood bible w-1 chairs *211 to

ltllldlrd clutch-. prweure "
ot-•ttoououtl:e-. AII ....

t...,.mlhktM. ~I 304- •'~
1711-17118 or 114-37$-2220.
Ueld Trtru:mlaalcM. M .._r. · ,_.
Mllr In~. 30 ...1_..,._ I

I_

1 I' 1

DE C ORR

8:01 ([) Alee
1:30 .Ill 1111 NBC Nlglttly Newo

·IU'*

~

r-----:---:--:--:--.,

0 c.rtaan Expra11

..

1

1-,NrAi-"'R'-TiC-'iK,......jl,.;
1

' IUOGET TIIANSMISiiON· ; •
."" ..:•
Us.t•ret:u 11 t ntVPIL · .....
1

79

I

.,_ngo

''~
.

Ii

FOPSO

f--T::-1':,.:1'._..I;...;1--l

(H)Ciood~

:•

- - - - - - - - - - --

-

RAGFUL

ea

:~::~~

;•

Auto 1'81111
&amp; Accell80riea

"'·

,..,..NIICollltwl""-,.bblt
• ~- AI for .11. Coli 1144
113.
......
•2•-- c ..,
81 _.. ••
21
~·
·
·-~
2
.,~;o;~· I - · Coli

Men• IUit:M. apGr'l:t ooata• . .
42 ....,11r, brown velour '"'

0182. COli 514·192· 7797.
EOH.

Coli 114-llt2·1304.

m.......,

57

Onclout living. 1 and 2 fM6.
room eptrtm•t• It VHllge
Manor lind Rherlide Al*t·
menu In Mlddl..,ort. "om

New 1 t:adrooen fu"*Md or
dnlurNehld ..-rtm..._ One In
Ponwroy, one · In Mlckl..,c:rt.

•I•

l.aond Ave., taro. from thl

bedroom hou.. In Pomeroy

tatllllec.. nwtc•ptt, w.ehlr•

c:rr;m.

""'"' 114-44f.t152.

2 - - ...... Mldclop""'
••6&amp;-t1111.1*monlll.
2.,d4

Fo...,.,

e'\io-:'.':' cJI

fiESTA HAIR FAIIIIONI, 322

Sot. 114-44&amp;-1611t. 127 :kd.
A... Cloll-. OH.

Furnished efficancy •pt .-3

448-4107 o• 441·2602. ·

kit:

AKC. t17S-. Coll304-8782728.

u &amp;EO.. • • · ctr....... bedroom

•oom• &amp; b. h. C.twt tl&gt;"&gt;uah- 4 "'-" ehwt. o46. 5 ....... .
out. Ptho1o a. qulot. Single chwt. 0114.91. 1 pc. w w-ng
only. COli 114- din- ooto. t199.95.

,...on

cr-'1':!110.

Goodl

-ga C.ll 304-1783030 .. 2 bedroom Aptt. for ,.,,,
Carpeted. Nice lllttlna. Lalndry
875-3431 .
Mlailllblt. t.ll 114192·3711. EOH.
42 Mobile Homes
Newly NdiOOI'IINd ..... billhlt
for Rent
...w...... Ut. . . . pold. 1225.
I* month. d-ooquftd. Clll
114-llt2·5724 6:00 ..
IU-S118.

Fun,.hod Z8A. ca.clbl• - uwege paid.
MDIIII•
Home Park. C•ll 114-4411602.

3

whultd IIIICIIIrlc _,oflln, Clill
llo. . . Mololty - - · 1·114870-1111.

Ml!l r;lldillllse

..n.,..: •ufNI.
bollnll

Clolllpollo. Coli 514-2411-5559.

Sh.dtJ: 1 2xl5. 2 BR. wfth 8x10
ex ..ndo, new

Small fumilhed IPM1ment. Centl'lllly loc•ed. 1 or 2 qullll•du Ita.
No pett. Ref.
Bee. dep.

1tquh'od. Coli 1111-448-0444.
Nicely furnlahed '"'1111 hou•.
Adults only. Ref'. "!C!Lii'lld. No

luy"' loll lllvorino Antlquoo.
1 124-1!. M . StrWt,. JlofNt'oy.
Houra: M.T,W 10..m, to lp.m.•

C•_, Motol. 814-44&amp;-7381.

mo. 1 BR. Utllltloo fiOid. 920

·Homes for Rent

Antiques

..,...., 1 to lp.m. 61 4-112·
2126.

For Lease

51

1 BA . *295. Utllkloo ,.tel Coli

304-676-4394.
ment, nl-=- lot. Excel. co...t.
Loclltd on At. 2 Apple GrOWl.

49

71 Auto's For Sale

Grooming. All br•ila .. . AII
otyloo. 1 - Pot l'ood Doll•.
JuhWIItbPII.I14-441-0231 .

I WHk old buff colored .,.,.,...
C...•
llponlol
· 114AKC
Aeglowod.
*ZOO.-Coli
28&amp;-1316""'"' 6:00pm.

co.-. 304-175-1431.

Acreage tor •I• t!IO aerea C reb
CrHk trea. Nml ¥1ft•, tobacco
allotment. mln..J right1. priced
on inapectlon, 304875-3828 .

G.lrage apt.. 4 rooms 81 beth 3 bedroorn, central air. Call
with appliances. 117.000. Call 614-992·8858 d ...... 1·814after &amp;:00. 304-87&amp;-25&amp;9.
· 692 · 5158 eveni ngs •nd
vwakendt.
1978 14x70 WlniOf. Large
kitchen, birth, 111\l...te·lauldry
room. 2 BA .• CA. atow. refrtg..
microweve. dltfwttaaher, aterea,
2 amp dleconnect. underpl.-..
ning, &amp; pOfCh. Excel. cond . Call

2 or more BR .. lui . . b. .

dog. PI- elll514-742·2017.

614-448-0338.

3 bedroom hou• in Middleport.
2 batha. newly CM"ploled. l.,.ge
lot. clote to chun:h•. ~ehools.
•hopping. call 614-992-705&amp;.

Moving: ttou• fo r sale by
owner. C.ll for eppt. 304-8761913. Stucco dwelling, large
lot, centl'lll air. gaf'lga cloll to
bank. achoats. tloret, hotpidll.
c ho.ctltt. 3 br, kitchen, ltving
room. lamltv room, 1%: beth, ig.
deck. back 'f'lrd completely
c hain Ink 6 fl. fence.

4311 for IPpoinlLL&amp;il.

Rent

country. Gtllla County. Outslcl•

New completely furnltMd
~~p~~rtrw-..t •
mobile home in
chy. Aduha only. P•klng. C.ll

Furnished epartm.U. t225 a

304-676-2385.

- -- - - b l ·
.......... Coli 104-1711-

675-773S.

PM.

Renl &lt;JIS

... lauoooldOak

Couple n. . . to Mnt hou• in

2 BA , IIP.,tl. 8 ciOMit, kltchenIPpl. furnished. W•her-Drver
hook· up, ww c•.-t n•tv
Pllln•d. deck.
From t175.
A o -. tne. Apt~ Coli 3041176-5104, or 1715-5388 or

Hou•lotl, 304-87&amp;-6908.

All electric home in Leon on Rt.

a. ......._

-~----- . 63

pool,

Coli 114-112·
.

;a;l7~4.=;::~:::;;;~===== + •
76

a

=.'ho
Seed} or Death,
Part2

typH12mot.Wiii•••ty.~elauy •...,

AI!D HOT bwaofnol Dnog d....
.,. o•a. bolEti, ~- .... d .
Su-'ut.
Your •••· Bu~ 1
DNtjo,. nd CettOIY Konno!
,,.
.,d 81 _
Guido. 111 eoe-187·8000. "'·
...o. AKC atowpuool-. N- 1-4612.
Him.,...
........ ·c..• 814- 1871Cimaro. V-8.ou
_ to. tntna.,
4,q.••44-7PM
· -...,-.,-.
PI, P8. Coli 114-44&amp;-1618,
1 .•:-:-----,..--,....-t' ,......, lpenlll pu...AKC ,U .tier 8 PM ..._1244.
In e
•
Hoi o1 ;:n..
1988 Sulek S':tlork. 4 d•.. AC.
114-"1•1-·
............... . ,cloth In••'"'·
•
Good ..-ton. 04180. Coli
AKC ~
........ puppl-. 8 614-44&amp;-0Sn.
~ old..
~ Clll
-·
1181 IIDdgo A~• SE. 4 ...
714
l14-44e-l
·
Soden. 4 opd ., Pl. Pl. hlllh
Fomolo a . t - . 18 mH•go. Wollmoldlnod. UIO
old. mole Chl...ltUI. I 01100 "' lloot
montllo old. Colt 114-44&amp;- otrw.
1114-4411-1700.
t211
·
1177Mon•Cono. Good cone!.
Poocle P'IPI for
AKC Rag., 11000. Ctilf 11 4-ZII-1218.
...
.
d a."!!!....~1.._ Coli : 1;.. 44 &amp;- 1181 Plymouth TC 3. 4 opd.. 2
hoiCh-. Coli 114-44&amp;4
0271-• I PM.

Halrt S.rblr 8hopbulcln .. I07 buff&amp; klloh• .... and a...
Nlaln St.. Pl. Pl_,t, Call ch-..1. . . 7 - - .

47 Wanted to

304-876-5104.

Nice home Greenbrier E.tatea.
full b.ement w-femltv fOom, 3
bi. 2 batha. fornwl dining &amp;
Uvirlg room w -fireplace, kitchen
&amp; TV room w -woodbumer.
Screened pon:h &amp; patio, lining
01'1 5 acrea. For eppt. cell

Otfl 01 rooms on mlin floor,

' Pete for Salit

Groom ... Supply lllop-Pot

f!.IMII!"!Iol_.._,. a..,. lolfiM end

Apartment
for Rent

lnclud•d. Starting at 1299 P•

1Wo 1 acre lou whh ptj)fic
water. Jerrys Run Road.
14,900.00each, cont~d•trade.

.,....,_,TV
- H I . All -

oond. CoR 304-17&amp;-HIIB .,
1711-2082.

your lot only. $·1 e.994.up. C.ll Pike from t113 1 mo. Wlllk to
114-881-731 1.
shop end movl•. 114-44&amp;.

~Mna.

611

co-- .,. .,.

whttil II d 0011n lUll; -~ 2

•

••• 30• dl¥•
Ulf. Rellua..
1....-.
~..!===:;::;:====;:=========~ 00
nlmum.
rnOII ]"
_.d n m low
•
en. ,.· ~

2 loti for ..m Rt. 2 ebDut S
CONDITION
mlnulll from town. •n. month EXC E'LLENT
I'll AMTUAE
plus utltu... 304-171-3000.

BEAU11FUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
Big new 3 BR . tlorT!II, bu .. on SON ESTATES , 531 Joc:UOft
Farm. TrlbbleAoed: 7ml•from
At. 82. Mason County. 31h

o--

long- I 10. Hen .. n1 w•gon
3 , . ••. ..ht.2_1na....
vottAt. 2• 12. - - • s o. AI - t o oxool.

304-1711-3851 .

2463.

8 2. Phono 304-458-1808olto•
1 :30 p.m.

"'-•••t

Ohio. COli 814-44&amp;-0508.

44

..,_lit.

fur -

Pt.
304-17&amp;-3a18.

Moble Homea far ..m. Evelyn's
Mobile Home Pwk. Kln.,ge,

14x85.

tatll electric, 2 b. axe. cond. 2
decka. 3(14-875-7113.

,.,......c.

•
Cl ••~~r~~EA. IM.

~a -blew.hlr/dryer

wtth~t~nd.eUO.Cell114-44•
8714.
w.tllr a
·call 11 ..,
44&amp;-2153.

Cotrct&gt;t•-.-.bloallollid~ U80. a. .....! upholoto•. tuffod bock, UO.
304-175-3013.
Corpot.CIIOIY - 1 1 fl.x14
ft .• 180. 20 ft. x 14ft.- 180. 11
Spac• for .ent. trllll• ...c-. ft.x 3 ft .. uo. Duowfoo.CIIOIY
..od-121n.-•141n.
_
Wit• • • - - ll,.htd.Loou• -UO.
1001n. -•141n.
Ad. At. 1. 304-175-1078.

guo . Coli 814-448-7473.
u

1

Sp•doua rnabMe horN! tots for
rent. '-mU, Pride Moble Home
P•k. Oalllpcle Ferry, W. VL

and 2 bedroom furnilt.d. Ken•
Nice 2 IR . trill« for

lit. 1

top
R-1 IIIII- Coli 114-lltZ. r71111.
.....7479.

Furnished.
~ ~ld. *200. No
peta. 1 or 2 pmplei only. Clll

•.,.,...,.
1 • 37• 2409,
Thrae tMdoorn mdMie ·home 446-6728.

can

COUNTRV MOilLE Helme Piwk.
Rou• 33. North of '-»~.

121155 · Dep. &amp; Aof. noquWod.

Nice 3 lo"'oom unfumlohod

ooot. ~·
-.a•MplodtlkJo-•olo
ew:llllllle wflh . . , - . . arldll:.

--no

'old.
GE
· ' W' - -· 4 '~'&gt;• 1
..... 1111e now.
•110. Coiii14-H7·0322.
~ -•.----.
- : M
t - M&amp;e.~ ldn.
... l:edloom oulto; til ...

304-675·

anytime.

eond. 304875-2341.

on 5 acres. Pond. out-

614-446-4369
87110.

814-448-0822.

61 4-742-23e1

Space for Rent

12:dU) unfun*hed. cent:NIAC.
1h mHe .. atHMConRt. 35. C.ll

homo,
plll'tlelty luml•hed. 12x.IS5, 2
bedroom, 1Y:I b t~~ha,l•ge Uvlng
room. ·undtrplnnlng,deek· 7x14.

1986 Modut.r home-3-4 BA ., 2

~t..

RoomefDrtent·MtkOimonlh.
Starting et *120 t mo. Gillie

Mobile Homes
fo R
r ent

8ood

1985 Mtrl«te Moci.l..r Home,
80x28. All electrtc. c.. 3 BR .• 2
bMhl. gr ... room, dining room .
To many extl8t to l1t. Must ••
to •p.-:1••· •45.000. OWntf'
fiiWiclng. Cd 114-448--1408
eftw 5 PM.

lec:.nd

room-11 I

..,,....,.._4411-Hso.

condition. Coli 814-949-2 77.
Homes for Sale

Fur"'-h-'

t:;::::;;:;:;:;=:;:====-r;:::;;:::::;:;;::===:i
46
32
Homes
42
1973 L.tl.,....

Furnished Rooms

41·Cic•••r
.4 mle on
,.._.
A.... Ball- t125. ~ Plko. OD., I AM·&amp; PM.
UtMlloo '*il. Slnalentllo. lh . . Mon
...a.. IuNDAY~ 12-1 PM.
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Wednesday. Aug. 10, 198! : .~

Page 16-The Daily Sentinel

---Local news briefs... -___,
Continued from page 1

EMS has three rolls Tuesday
Three emergency calls and two fire alarms were answered by
units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service
Tuesday.
At 10:36 a.m. the Pomeroy unit went to the Meigs County
Department of Health for Walter Green who was treatedbutnot
transported; at 4: 19p.m. the Middleport unit went to Broadway
St. for Chris Dalley who was taken to Veterans Memorial ; at
7:53p.m. Rutland squad transported Lucille LambertfromDye
Road to Holzer .MediCal Center.
The Olive Township Fire Department was called to near
HOckingport at 2:27 p.m. to extinguish a car fire, owner not
identified: at 8:47 p.m. the Middleport firemen were called to
State Route 7 for a brush fire. ·

July report released ·by police
Fifty-three arrests were made by tM Middleport Police
Department in July, Chief of Police Sid Little reports.
The department Investigated eight motor accidents and all ·
vehicles of the department were driven 3,580 miles during the
month. Parking meter collections totaled $638.31; there were
284 parking tickets written and merchant police collections
amounted to $34.
··
·

Fire department releases July rolls
A total of 64 calls- 54 emergency runs and lOfire calls- were
answered during July by the Middleport Fire Department, Fire
Chief Jeff Darst reports. All vehicles were driven a total of
2,320.2 miles during the month.

Sheriff rolls for July
The department of Sheriff Howard Frank received 1,006 calls
into the office during the month of July.
· Leading the way in complaints receive.d were "suspicion
calls", a total of 47 reporting susptcous cars or persons. There
were 38 calls teceived on behalf 6f the county dog warden and 27
calls on alcohol related fights. Domestic violence was
responsimble for 22 calls. Twenty-four calls related to juvenile
and children's services affairs. There were 19 calls for
assistance to motorists.
The department confiscated 2,263 marijuana plants during
the month making a total of 9,721 for the year. Of the total, 6,386
were destroyed by court order with the remainder located in an
evidence room for pending cases.
The department held 57 prisoners during the month, 10 of ,
those on charges of driving while intoxicated or without a
license and 10 on bench warrants. Six were Jailed on disorderly
conduct and public intoxication charges while five were in jail
on charges of domestic violence.
·
The department served 67 papers on defendants and
transported five persons to the Athens Mental Health Center
and five to correctional facilities. All vehicles of the department
were driven 16,199 miles during the month.

--Area deaths-Thomas Atwood
Estavonne Atwood
Thomas Atwood, 26, of Colum·
bus, great-grandson of Clara
Powell, Racine, a'nd the late
Chrissie Powell, and his wife,
Estavonne, were killed early
Tuesday morning in a twovehicle accident on Route 161 and
Cherry Bottom Road.
Their two children, Erika,
three, and Tara , four, are both in
critical condition in Children's
HospitaL
According to reports, the At·
woods had been to a party, had
picked up their children who had
spent the evening with their
grandparents and were enroute
hme when the accodent
occurred.
The driver of the other vehicle,
Alan Giuliano, 26, reportedly ran
a red light and hit the Atwoods'
car which was making a turn
troll' nor-thbound Cherry Bottom
Road. Mr. and Mrs. Atwood and
Giu llano were pronounced dead
· a t the scene. The children were
fl own to the ho spital by
helicopter.
Besides Mrs. Powell other
local relatives include Elson and
Dorothy Spencer, Racine, great·
uncle and aunt, and numerous
cousins.
Funeral arra ngments are being handled by MarrgarumpSchoedinger Funeral Home in
Gahanna. Services will be held at

the Shepherd Church of the
Nazarene in Gahanna with time
and place of burial to be an·
nounced la,ter.

· Mary Lou Flack
Mary Lou Flack, 55, of Wa·
shington Court House, died Tuesday morning at Doctor's Hospital
in Columbus.
She was bornonSept.l9, 1932 in
Minersville to the late Joseph
and Alice (Hendrix) White.
She lived most of her life in
Circleville before moving to
Washington Court House two
years ago.
She is survived by her husband, Alfred E. Flack; one son,
Jerry Paulins of Columbus; four
daughters, Pamela Davis of
Bloomingburg, Penny Hoffman
of Circleville, Patricia Allen of
Oak Hill, and Kimberly Paullns
of Bloomingburg; a stepson,
Steven Flack of Mt. Sterling; five
grandchildren and one stepgrandson; one brother, Joseph
White Jr. of Cheshire; two
sisters, Mrs. Verna Salser of
Shefield Lake, and Mrs. Ruth
Robinson of Orlando, Fla.
Services will be Thursday at
1:30 p.m. at Kirkpatrick Funeral
Home in New Holland . The Rev.
Jean R. Creamer will officiate.
Burial will be in New Holland
Cemetery.
Friends may call the funeral
home Wednesday from 4 to8p.m.

U. S. heat wave continues· to· take its toll
By KAREN LEE SCRIVO
United Press IDiernallonal
A bllsiertng heat wave that
kUled a St. Louis man and at least
four Chicago-area residents
hampered milltary exercises in
Arkansas and polluted air in
parts of Michigan.
There was no relief In sight as
·the National Weather Service
today predicted temperatures in
the 90s and lOOs accompanied by
humidity across much of the
country.
·
"We're going to continue to
have unseasonably warm
weather," said Harry Gordon, a
NWS meteorologist.

tUS PS 14~961))
A llivision of Multimedia. In c.
Published every aft ern oon, Mt;m day
through ,:'riday, 111 Courf St.. Po·
mPro)·. Ohio, by lhf&gt; Ohio Valley Pub·
llshin,g Compariy / Multimcdla, Inc.,
Po m eroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2 156. Se·
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy.
Ohio.
Mem ber: United Press Jn1M'na tlonal.

Inl a nd Dally Press Association and the
Ohio Newspaper Association. National
Advl"rlislng Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 7l1 Third Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.

POSTMASTER: Send address changes
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·:

But some areas got a reprieve authorities said.
from the heat Tuesday as tropi·
At least four people have died
cal storm Beryl dissolved Into a from heat-related problems In
tropical depression and dumped the Chicago area since las I week
heavy rains on the Gulf Coast.
· and a spokesman for the Cook
In Missouri; thunderstorms County medical examiner said
generated a small tornado at the the heat probably contributed to
Clark County fairgrounds in the a fifth, a 56-year-old suburban
town of Kahoka butnodamageor man who collapsed while mow·
injuries were reported , the High· ing his lawn SatW'day.
way Patrol said.
Some 18 soldiers at Fort Smith
.'). 42-year-old St. Louis man, and Fort Chaffee in Arkansas
identified as Alonzo Allen, died have been treated for heat·
Tuesday from heat exposure related illnesses since Friday,
after returning to bis apartment when 1,800 troops began summer
from outdoors. His body temper· training exercises, officials said.
ature was 109 degrees when he
Heat also dogged man and
was admitted to the hospital, beast at the Ohio State Fair,

Continued from page 1
Two d ;n
~···'---------- President ...
on the scene as well as Dr. the "Jaws of Life" to the scene,

were

but according to Marriner, the
Conde.
device
was not needed. The
The body was taken to the
Ewing Funeral Home where ofltcer said several men rolled
arrangements are being the car off tbe victim.
Slone was the son of Jack and
completed.
~imi Slone, ESR. Gallipolis. The
GaiDa Accident
A 16-year·old Gallla County b!ldY was taken to the Willis
youth was killed in a one-car Funeral Home at Gallipolis.
It was Gallia County's fourth
accident at 7:47a.m. Wednesday
traffic
fatality of 1988. Three
on SR 218, about three miles
dthers
were investigated this
north of Mercerville, according
by
the patio), the last one
year
to the Gallta County Sheriffs
being
on
July 29 when Phillip W.
Department .
Sloan,
21,
Northup, died in a
The victim, pronounced dead
at the scene, was ldenJifled as one-car accident on Bob McCor·
Chris Slone, ESR, Gallipolis. rntc~ R~ad.
Other Patrol News
Officials said Slone, who would
have lleen a senior this fall at ~n other patrol news, one driver
Gallla Academy High School, was cited ina two-car accidental
was enroute to football practice 6: 05 p.m. . Tuesday in Meigs
at Gallipolis when the accident County at the junction of SR 7 and
SR 681. No one was injured
occurred.
I
The accident was witnessed by according to the patrol.
Troopers said Angela M. Dela·
Gallla County deputy sheriff
cruz.
26, Reedsville, stopped to
James Marriner, who was en·
make
a
left turn on to SR 681 when
route to work at Gallipolis.
Marriner said Slone apparently her car was hit from behind by
lost control ofhiscar. The vehicle another vehicle driven by Jason
went off the road into a ditch, A. Drennen,l7, Palatka, Fla. No
came back onto the highway and one was injured. Damage was
overturned. The l(ictim was moderate to both cars.
The patrol cited Drennen for
thrown from the vehicle which
failure to stop within the assured
landed on top of him . .
'!'he sheriff's department sent ' clear distance.
Common Pleas Court
Three actions for divorce and charging gross neglect of duty;
one for a dissolution have been Kellle J. Jenkins, Racine, from
filed in the Meigs County Com· Stephen Olin Jenkins, Racine,
mon Pleas Court.
gross neglect of duty and ex·
Filing for divorce were Eliza· treme cruelty.
Filing for dissolution of their
beth S. McKnight, Cheshire,
from Nicholas J . McKnight, marriage in thecourtwereTerry
Middleport, charging gross neg- , D. Spaun and Angela Spaun, both
lect of duty and extreme cruelty, of Racine.
with the plaintiff nquesting
A dissolution of.their marriage
custody of three minor children; .has been granted to Carl Caster
Deborah Lynn Morris from Aa · and Golden F. Caster with
ron Lee Morris, both of Pomeroy, Golden being restored to her
· Pomeroy

May~~~etciiirtansbury.

Eight cases were processed .
Tuesday night in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler.
Forfeiting bonds were Glen
Werry, Hemlock Grove, $63, •
expired plates; Kelly Hawkins,
Pomeroy, $43, failure to yield
. right of way; Raymond Fultz,
Point Pleasant, no operator's~
license; Martha Erb, Mason, W.
Va., $63, expired plates, and $63,
Middleport

driving under suspension.
Fined were Lee Morris, Pomeroy, $63 and costs, discharging a
firearm in town; Harold J . Will,
Mason, W. Va., $213 and costs,
· petty theft; Tony Imboden, Ra··
cine, $400 and costs, driving
under the influence, no motorcycle endorsement, expired plates;
Truman Hall, Middleport, $63
and costs, expired plates.

~ayor's

Five defendants were fined in
the court of Middleport Mayor
. Fred Hoffmar Tuesday night.
They are Johnny Ratliff, Mid·
dleport, $425 and costs, three
days in jail, driving while intoxi-

Continued from .page 1
farmers are facing, there' will be
no food shortages," said Rep.
Edward Madigan, R·IIl., refer·
ring to large U.S. grain reserves.
He said there should be no large
increases in food prices.
The centerpiece of the bill Is
disaster payments to farmers for
losses that exceed 35 percent of a
crop, including crops not usually
eligible for federal benefits.
Payments would be figured at 65
percent of the usual price for
crops, as set either from federal
farm programs or the average
price in the past. A more
generous factor....: 90 percent- is
used for the portion of losses that
exceed 75 percent of the normal
yield.

Announcements

South Central Ohio
Tonight: ·Partly cloudy, with a
low near 70. Nearly calm winds.
Thursday: Increasing cloud!·
ness, hot and hull)id, with a slight
chance of showers and thunder·

Stocks
Dally stack prices
(As of 10:30 Lm.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of munt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

.

5-21-42-3-20-8

.

•

•

Licenses issued·

...

Thomas James Richardson,
29, Pomeroy, ·and Cindy Lynn
Souls by, 20, Pomeroy.
Charles Andrew FieldS, 22,
New Haven, and Chrlstena Carol
Goodwin, 34, New Haven.
Milford Earl Graham, 52,
Albany, and June Dale Harvey,
24, Albany.

:
:
•
;

·-

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Retail sales were up a surprisingly
strong0.5 percentinJulyonbrtsk
automobile sales and betterthan-expected sales of clothing
and other department store merchandise, the Commerce Departmen! said today.
Total retail sales .in July were
$134 billion, up 0.5 percent from
June and 5.5 percent from July
1987, the department's ·census
B11reau said. It was the thifd
·straight monthly increase.
Analysts bad expected only a
o.2 percent to 0.4 percent
increase.

''That was a little bit of a
Excluding thevolatileautomosurprise," said David Wyss, tlve sector, total retail sales were
chief economist for Data Resour- up only 0.1 percent, the poorest
ces Inc. of Lexington, Mass.
performance since a 0.2 percent
Car sales were up 1.9 percent drop In April, the bureau said.
from June to $30 billion as
Sales of building materials
dealers continued aggressive in· were ·down, reflecting the con·
centlve programs. It was the best tlnued slump in the housing
month for automobile dealers Industry. Gasoline and drug
since February when sales rose 2 store sales also dropped.
percent, the bureau said.
"Some sloWing of consumer
The strong car sales brought , demand was expected but this
total sales of long-lasting, expen· wasn't much slowing and it may
stve goods to $51.1 billion, an ·have been caused by heat rather
Increase of 0.7 percent, the than any real deslf!! to SIC!W
bureau said.
down," Wyss said.

ALL. SEATS $2 .50 ,

BARGAIN NlGHT TUESDAY $2.50

Gen.

denl Geofl'e Buab Introduces fonnerSenator Paul

$50.00 Cash Back
when you buy THE
RIGHT CHOICE
GLUCOSCAN'" Blood
Glucose Meter. and
Starter kit between
June 1 , and August
31. 1988.

100°/o

.

•

~

.•

..

.~

GLUCOSC~N:

THE liGHT CHOICE

01

eaee, 9nc.

:~ for

•'

lntrot:fucing Dr. Jack Levine
'
ll'asant Valley Hoapttal Ia pleased to W!!lcome
Jack M. Levine, D.O., to Ita medical staff. Agen~ .
eral surgeon, Dr. Levine eamed his DoctoJ!! of
o.teopatbtc M'edtctne from the New York College
rX OeteopathJc Medlrtne 1982. He cOma to
PoUlt Pleaun~ fnlm DebOlt Oeteopatbtc Hospital aDd
BI.COunty CommUDity Hoapb]ID MJchlgan. 1¥1t11 expenence In CerdloVucular, ~. Trauma.il'ediat·

•

m:

11c, Abdomlrwl and OyiiiCOlnjpc IUIIIIDY· Dr. Levine Will
haye o1llce hours Mcmday throuJh Friday, .froln 8:30

VAWY

.

.

There will be entertainment galore - and it's free- at the
Shrine Park In Racine SatW'day night.
Donating their time and talent to entertain at the park
Saturday night Will be Jan and Cathy, gospel music; Denver ·
Rice, Middleport, with golden oldies on the banjo; the Everett
Continued on page 16

?Meigs

"'

County receives grant

juvenile court program

to open store
in Gallipolis

from Ronald Reagan," he sat!!__
Wednesday. "(But) for the last
six weeks we've been spelling out
in considerable detail specific
proposals, and people are begin·
nlng to say this Is what George
Bush Is for and the convention
will help on that, I think, a lot."
:Bush was similarly upbeat yet
restrained about the issue of a
running mate, Insisting he had
not chosen a vice presidential
candidate and still planned to
keep the matter a secret until the
convention.
The Washington Post reported
today that polls conducted for
Bush have found none of the
prospective running mates he
has considered would boqst the
GOP ticket substantially on a
national scale. Sources told the
newspaper that two big-sta)e
GOP governors, James Thomp·
son of Illinois and George Deuk-

Dederick said when the ,revlsions are factored in "the second
quarter is now coming in
stronger than believed and that
implies we're going to get a
stronger (gross national product
growth) than expected."
.
"It's basically saying that the
consumer still is reluctant;to get
out of the way and let the,·other
forms of trade and business
spending have the stage to
themselves and therefore this
means that we continue to: have
the danger of overheating,"
Dederick said.

t

mejian of California, would not
even lift Bush significantly
within their own states.
In discussing his campaign
plans Wednesday, Bush· told
reporters he brought Laxalt .on
board as campaign co-chatrma11
to help in the West- generally a
Republican region - and to
coordinate Reagan's activities
after the usual Labor Day kickoff
to the fall general election race.
•'When I look at the goal ahead,
the West is very, very lmpor·
tant,'' the vice president said,
and Laxalt will work alongside
James Baker, who is resigning as
treasury secretary to steer the
entire Bush campaign.
Bush rejectedsuggestions that
every move Reagan makes these
days appears to be targeted
exclusively at ass is tlng his loyal
deputy politically .

Atty.
Celebrezze seeks
authority to initiate probes
COLJJMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Citing a need to keep ahead of
scandals, Attorney General Anthony Celebrezze Jr. says his
office should be empowered to
initiate and ' conduct ongoing
investigations of alleged public

corruption at the state level.
Celebrezze proposed legal Ian·
guage to the Ohio Senate Judi·
clary Committee Wednesday,
cautioning that if he is given the
power to Investigate, he will need
extra money to hire investigators

and attorneys.
The attorney general currently
must be ordered by the governor
or the General Assembly to make
criminal investigations, other
than in the areas of organized
crime and Medicaid fraud.

Names are drawn for September
tenn of Meigs County Grand Jury

Hills Department Stores has
officially announced plans to
open a department store In the
Ohio River Plaza, In the shopping
strip to be built along SR 7.
Hills' 41st Ohio store will be
62,000 square feet with 84 departments carrying a full line of
children' s, men's, and ladies'
clothing, footwear, housewares,
toys, jewelry and many other
items.
According to Senior Vice Prest·
dent Ray Brinkman, the com·
pany "employs local people
whenever possible." He stated
that employing local people will
enable the company to meet the
community's needs better.
Hills Department Stores, head·
quartered in Canton, Mass., is
the seventh largest mass mer·
l!handistng chain in the nation
based on Its $1.5 billion sales
volume.
The store is one of two anchor
stores for the 130,000 square-foot
shopping mall strip.

Names drawn for possible dutY
on the grand jury are:
Albert Goegleln, Pomeroy;
Margaret E. Ohlinger, Middleport; Margaret Virginia Bland,
Racine; Myron R.Miller, Pomeroy; Murl Irene Ours, Long

President

s~

'

Names of almost 300 residents
have been drawn for possible
duty during the September term
of the grand and petit juries.
Attending the drawing for the
jurieS held In the office of Meigs
County Clerk of Courts Larry
Spencer were Spencer and a
deputy, Marlene Harrison; Ruth
Frank, 1sheriff's department;
Jan tee Young, office of Common
Pleas Judge Charles Knight, and
Wallace Br~dford and I. 0.
McCoy, jury'tlommlssioners.
~

Bottom; Margaret A. Lallance,
Middleport; Walter F: Garnes,
Dexter; Patricia Ann Shain,
Racine; RobertR. Wears, Pomeroy; Robert G. Hart, Racine;
Edith Sisson , Pomeroy; Herbert
Hoover, Middleport; Connie D.
Cleland, Middleport; James E.
Hall, Racine; Clarice M. Erwin,
Middleport; Dennis L. Faceroyer, Albany; Glen T. Crisp,
Langsville; Phillip J. Wolfe,
Reedsville; Julia Murphy, Racine; Ray A. Eblin, Pomeroy;
Richard A. Flnlaw, Pomeroy;
Lou Emma Williams, Rutland;
Robin Lee Phalln, Middleport;
Gregory L. Smith, Pomeroy;
Gregory Todd Johnson, Pomeroy; Allen E . Ball, Pomeroy;
Lonnie A. Dailey, Portland;
Lawrence Ray Gluesencamp,

Include ·$15,98~ for work on the
cupola. This will include removIng the metal roof, putting up new
framework and support struc·
lures, applying a rubber roofing
membrane surface, and using a
gold roof coating.
Bob Beegle of Racine met with
thecommlsstonersandextended
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pres- "Dick, this )s your bill," the It's not a budget-buster," the
an invitation to them to attend !dent Reagan signed into law president said.
. president said, adding that "we
the free entertainment at the today a plan to spend at least$3.9
Under a special "low yield" must stick to -the principles that
Shriners Park on SatW'day night. billion to help U.S. farmers formula, farmers with the worst I've outlined. . .. Let's save the
Plans have been made to recog- through the worst drought since losses Will get disaster payments Christmas trees for the 25th of
nlze the county officials for their the Dust Bowl -an amount that · equal to abodt half of their usual · December."
help with community develop- will fall short of the losses they Income.
The legislation's centerpiece is
ment block grant money In suffer.
Invited to watch the slfllllng disaster payments to farmers
developing the park facilities .
"In all, hundred&amp; of thousands ceremony In the Rose Garden who Jose more than 35 percent of
Phil Roberts, county engftleer, of tanners and ranchers will were tbe farm families visited by a crop. The measure covers all
presented specifications for a benetlt," the president said. Reagan and Lyq during an farmers, even those who grow
Also read at the meeting was a new truck and a new salt "The bill expresses a distinctly Inspection tour of drought dam· crops such as fruits and vegeta·
request from Mead Fine Paper spreader for consideration by the American tradition - that of age In mid-July.
bles that usually are not eligible
Divlson In Chtiucotht: for the Commissioners. A report was lendlne a helplni hand when
North Dakota farmer Paul for farm benefits. There is a
appointment of a representative given on road repair and paving disaster strikes."
Scbloalll!r said he and his wife $100,000 limit on aid to each
Reagan, noting that the pack· were invited Tuesday but told to . farmer.
to a Citizens Advisory committee projects by Roberlll and Ted
·to advise Mead on land appllca- Warner, superintendent.
age Is the most generoUJ disaster pay their own airfare.
The legislation gives an extra
" tlon ot aludge for strip mine
It was noted that the contract relief plan ever for agriculture,
Reagan said be was pleased dose of help for fanners faced
reclamation alld all other land · for Pomeroy sidewalk work In saluted several congressmen the bill came In wtt)lln budget with total or nearly complete
the amount of $9,500 In commun- · . ·who rose above partisanship to constrain!I ¥~d UJ'I'ed that It crop losses. The package also
application p111'" aes.
lty
development block grant help bring the blli about. But his remain io. "'
The Commlalloneri extended
raises the milk support price the court house· roofing contract monies had been signed with special thankl went lO Agrlcui"This legt.slation Is helpful and the guaranteed prtce for milk ·_ 8fDaDIIY'I United Rooflq Co. to Eidon Walburn.
• ture Secretasy Richard Lyng. generous but al the ~me time by 50 cents for three .months

A grant of $8,898 has been
awarded to the Meigs County
·-. Commissioners by the Ohio De;; partment of Rehabilitation and
: Correction for a juvenile court
·• program, according to a letter
' ·read by David Koblentz, pres I·
•:. dent, at Wednesday afternoon's
\.. meeting.
.~ • The board discussed a meeting
~ in Athens on Sept. 6 at 1: 30 at the
· Extension Office regarding
House Bll1592 which requires the
formation of solid waste district
· In population areas of 120,000.
The new bill required development of a district landfill with
trans!er stations In each county.
-~

a.m. toSp.m. f:DSu1te211 ofthePieuantValleyHoepltal
Medical QfBee SuQdtng, For appointments, ~all - (304)

The driver suffered a minor injury in a one car accident at
1:30 p.m. Wednesday in Meigs County, on Township Road 143,
0.7 miles north of CR. 18, according to the Meigs Gallia Post,
State Highway Patrol.
Troopers said a car driven by Kimberly L. Dent. 20,
Pomeroy, hit a large rock laying on the roadway, and the
vehicle struck and embankment and overturned. Damage was
moderate.
·
.
The patrol cited Dent for not wearinljl a seat belt. She suffered
a minor visible injury but was not Immediately treated.

·Plan entertainment Saturday

MEDICAL EQUIPMENT &amp; SUPPLIES
115 EAST MEMORIAL DRIVE POMEROY, OHIO 45769
614-992-2310

678-14EM&gt;.

Laxalt, left, who will abare top campalp duty
with James Baker to maaage Buah's run for
prealdent. ( UPI)

Driver injured in accident

MONEY BACK GUARANTEE!

eonttnllitv

The department also revised higher prices rather than in·
its figure for May and June. creased volume.
Retail sales for May were up a
The retail report comes on the
much stronger0.8percentrather heels of the 'Federal Reserve
than the previously reported 0.3 Board's increase of the bench·
percent, ancl June sales were mark discount interest rate from
slightly weaker at 0.4 percent 6 percent to 6.5 percent, a sign
.rather than 0.5 percent.
that the central bank means
General merchandise sales business about curbing inflation.
were up 0.4 percent and clothing
Economists had worried that
was up 1.4 percent, the bureau prolonged increases in domestic
said.
,
demand,shownlnpartbystrong
Because . the figures are ad· · retail sales, would combine with
jus ted for seasonal variations but already high export demand to
not for price increases, some of stra}n U.S. factories and set off a
the Improvement can be linked to round of inflation.

WASHINGTON (UPI)- VIce
President George Bush, playing
his political· cards close to the
chest, says he has not made up
his mind on a running mate and
does not expect to be oversha·
. dowed by President Reagan at
the GOP convention.
With the Republican conclave
fdrmally opening Monday night
in New Orleans, the president
has stepped up his . personal
Involvement in Bush's campaign
and the two men ·decided to
include their wives In their
weekly White House lunch.
Bush, however, at a brief news
conference In which he handed a
top campalflll ,post to a longtime
ReaPII confidant, Iarmer Nevada Seh. PauiLaxall, brushed off
the notion that his boss's shadow
might smother him In the weeks
ahead.
"I won't be trying to run away

BARGAIN MATINEES SAT/SUN &amp;WED

Chek. and Dillscan,,in a study
at a major unlvenlty hol!)itall

26 Conti
A Multimedia Inc. New.peper

Bush .has not made up mind
on running mate for Nov. 8

i

category tested when compared to Glucome111r, Accu-

2 Soctiona. 16 P;g..

Nation's retaU sales jump 0.5 percent in July

S31 JACKSON PIKE· RT.35 WElT

GLUCOSCAN is the Blood
Glucose Meter chosen number one by the Ull8? in every

•

X

Local ·news briefs-- Hills plans

CASH BACK

-

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Thu111day. Aug. 11, 1988

Copyriat.t.d 1988

REBATE.

ssooo

•

.

Vo1.39, No.S7

storms. Highs will be near 95.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Extended Forecast
Friday through Sunday
Hazy and humid through the
period, with a chance of showers ·
on Saturday. Highs will range
from the middle 8()s to the lower
90s, with overnight lows between
65 and 75.

---

Pa'rtly cloudy tonight,
humid, low in 70s. Friday, hot,
humid, high in 90s. Chance· of
rain 30 percenl.

at y , enttne

•

THE RIGHT CHOICE

...J-=

\

Page4

BUSIIINTBODUCES LAXALT - VIce Preel-

Hospital news

•

Daily Number
358
Picli 4
4469
Super Lotto

·underway

"There's no question this ~as ,
been the worst (year for ozqne .
pollution) we've seen," said Joe ,
Holmes, district air quality su. pervisor for the Michigan .De·
partment of Natural Resources. :
"It's a regional thing. When; we •
have problems, the wind Is out of •
the direction of Chicago."
·
Grand Rapids, Mich., has ;
exceet!ed the federal standard '·
for ozone. pollution a reeo~ 19
times since mid-June, while •
Muskegon has topped It at least
32 times, Holmes said.
,
Statewide, there have been •
more than 60 recordings at the 17 ;
Michigan monitoring stations ·~

Am Electric Power ............. 26'4
AT&amp;T ..... ..... ...................... .26%
Ashland on ........................ 33)2
Bob Evans .......................... l6'4
Charming Shoppes ...... ........ 14%
City Holding Co ................... 34)2
Federal Mogul. ................... 41%
Goodyear T&amp;R ................ ... 59V.
Heck's ................................. %
Key Centurion .................... 17%
Lands' End ......................... 28%
Limited Inc ........................ 21%
Multimedia Inc .................... 74
Rax Restaurants ................ .. 4%
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 11%
Shoney's Inc ... ..................... 7% .
Wendy's Intl.. ...................... 5%
Worthington Ind .. :.... .......... 24'4
(Goodyear declared ex dividend)

Court

Practice set
Practice for ritualistic work
for Bethel 62, lnternatlonal
Order of Job's Daughters, will be
held at 2 p.m. Sunday at the
Middleport Masonic Temple. At4
p.m. following practice there wjll
~covery
be a swimming party at Vaugh·
""'
•• •
an's pool for prospective
Continued !rom page 1
members.
Veterans Memorial
Admitted:
James Evans, Mid·
I
th
Ia
t
rep cemen va ve over e wee· Reunion planned
dleport;
Mary
Haggerty,
kend • an d c hanges In co mputer
Myrta and Chapman Clarke Middleport.
programs use d I O mon it or va Ive Hill reunion will be held Sunday
Discharged: Helen Smith,
opera tion.
at
the
Shrlners
Park,
Racip
'
e.
Gl
·
th e 11 d ays 1os t There will be a basket dinner a, t 1 N enn Hudson, Robert Lewis,
Bu t glVen
1 t t
eal Bonecutter, Mary Eden,
let
try Ing t ocomp e theeng ne es
p.m. and fr·iends and re.latlves, of Delbert Henry, F rank Imboden,
I
I
I
I
I
fi r ng, eng neers say pr va e Y the family are invited ·to attend.
that Discovery cannot be r-----------'---an_d_E_rn_a_F_ro_s_tn_._ _ _ _ _
launched on the first post·
Challenger flight until around
Sept. 29 at the earliest, and that
schedule assumes no more prob·
!ems or delays.
The flight readiness firing, the
first such launch pad engine
ignition since Challenger's des·
!ruction in January 1986, was
designed to subject Discovery's
propulsion systems to the rigors
of the launch environmentfor the
first time since the shuttle's last
flight In August 1985.
The test firing last Thursday
was stopped on computer command just a half-second l)efore
the Ignition command was to
have been sent to main enginl!
No, 3 in the reverse-order start
sequence.
The problem: main engine No.
2's hydrogen "bleed" valve was
not rotating closed as fast as a
control computer had been programmed to expect. The valve
must be closed prtor to ipitlon to
Dr.JMIILntae
prevent 6,000-pound-per-squareGeunllwfiDa
lnch engine operating pressure
'
from damaging systems

where two hogs died as a result of
the 90-degree temperatures a11d
at least 600 people have been
treated for heat-related prolllems since the fair opened
Thursday .
Ozone levels in the western
part of Michigan have hit reco)'d ,
highs during the recent spell 'of
hot, muggy weather, state offi·,
cials said.

PGA play

------Weather

cated; Dean Whittington, Pome·
roy, $50 an costs, open container;
Mike Manley, Middleport; Cathy
Chapman, Middleport; Bill Ea·
kins, Pomeroy, · $25 and costs
each, all charged with disorderly
manner.
Johnny Ratliff forfeited a $100
bond posted on an open container
charge ·and · Tommy Gilkey,
Pomeroy, $100, posted on a
charge of destruction of village
property.

D;

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio Lottery

drought bill

Sr., Portland; Dale Lee Little,
Pomeroy; Victor Hannahs,
Pomeroy; Phyllis Mae Joachim,
Middleport; Nancy J. White,
Pomeroy; Fiorella May Barton,
Pomeroy; Joseph J . Davis, Middleport; Kathleen A. Mantcke,
Reedsville; Peggy M. Houda·
shell, Pomeroy; Kathy Lynn
Blake, Middleport; Stephen A.
Foulkron, Sr., Pomeroy; Jahn
Wayne Teaford, Chester; David
M. Mann, Pomeroy; Lloyd Dennis Moore, Syracuse; Juanita E.
Ratliff, Pomeroy; Everett T.
Calaway, Coolville; Michael w.
Ruchti, Shade; Dennis Eugene
McKinney, Rutland ; Betty Jo
Willis, Racine; Laura H. Cozart;
ErnesJ E. Griffin, Long Bottom;
Continued on page 10

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