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                  <text>·-·
Page D-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport-GaHipolis, Ohio-:-Point Pleasant,

w.

August 23, 1987

Va.

Truck, tractor pull draws big crow~

. •.

ROCK SPRINGS - A truck
and tractor pull packed 'em into
the centerfield at the Meigs
- County Falr Friday night as the
ann ual event again proved lis
popularity with fairgoers.
Taking top honors In the 5800
four wheel drive truck competition were Nick Swain, Ga lllpolls,
first; Thelma Story, Athens,
second: Bill Chaney, Washington, W. Va ., third;, Jeff_Johnson,
Reedsville, fourth, a nd David
· Wllloughby, Athens. fifth .
Winners in the 6000 fleld stock
tractor event were Elmer Sto ne
Dexter, firs! ; Rod Keller, ·ches:
ter, second; David Hive ly, Gallipolls. third; Lester St. Clair,

project Is finan ced through FmHJ\ us housing for
the elderly. II contains 25 apartments, each with a
kitchen, living room and dining area, one
bedroom, one .b ath, and a private patio or balcony.
Each apartment also has Its own eiectrlc heat
pump for heating and air conditioning

Finn begins operation in Athens
ATHENS - CLC Ltd.'s Gold
and Silver, owned by David
Ed\Yards and manage d b)• Fred
L. Young, both of Pomeroy.
opened its doors Monda y on
Richland Ave. In Athens. Ed wards Is formerly of V.D. Ed wards Insurance and Young
formerly of CLC Coi ns.
The business will carry a large
stock of 14K gold and sterling
jewelry. Gol~ and si lver coi ns
will be offeTed at . ;ll'cva iling

ma rket rate. CLC will a lso bu v
items at m arket ra te.

·

Access to nea rly one thousand
of the world"s dealers in jewelry.
bullion. coins a nd other coll ec tibles will be provided bv teletype,
as well as access to wa tc he-s and

and fifth to Jeff Hanger of
Newark.
.
E lmer Stone wa s fi rst In .the
8000 field srock tractor with
R,odney Keller. second; David
Hi vely, third ; Lest er St. Clair-,
fourth, and Steve Kinzel, fifth .

436

•

• . T

at y

Vot .37. No.74
Copyri9hted 1987

WASHIN GTON rUP l i -Cal ·
tte and ca i\'CS being fattened In
fcPdlots pr'iOJ' to being s~ nt to
s laughter totalNI 6.69 millio)l
head on Aug. I. up 6 perce nt from
a :vra r ago.
The Agric ulture Depart m~: nt
'aiel Frida , - that p roducers put
1. 26 million cattle in fc·l'dlots In
percent from il!S t vcar but 17
percent more than two yeors ago, ·

will .

Monitoring
begin September I

I

I

'

LE VELA ND (UPi l - It '
lime In Washln.:ton a nel
at lea t six or Ohio's 11 u.s.
Re prr,sent atlvcs, tllclr families
and s tair mt'mbcrs arc laki n ~
the ir s umm er tri ps ai taxpay rs '
expen e.
An additiona l five co ngressVll~illlon

m f' n are travel i n ~ at thP t•x: p£'n!ie

I

FURNITURE CORPORATION

trip this y~~r .
Rep, Bob McEwen, R-5; of
Hills boro Is schedul ed to travel to
Pa nam a and Honduras bctwecn
Aug . 26 and Aug. 29. a long with 1.1
sta I C' reprc-sen 1a1ivcs and sen a·

tors. who will bepaylngthclrown
way. The poUt ic ia ns arc makin g
the " fact findin g" tr ip aft er a
simil a r junket by Gov . Richard
Ce les te, who Is opposed to Ohio
National Guard un its tra ining In
Central America.
Mc Ewen. a U.S. Se nat e hopeful, a nd his press secreta ry will
ha ve their trip pa id for ' tiy the
gover nment because hr Is a
me mber of the House Veterans ·
Affa irs Commi tt ee.
Rep. Clare nce Mill e r. R-10. ol
Lancaster. will bP traveling to
Wes t German.v a nd Yugos lav ia
wlt h hi s daughte r.
By su mmer 's e nd Re p. Donald
Lukens will ha ve v is it ed three
countri es In two hemi s pheres. A
flight to Hondu ras ea rlier wa s
paid for by th e Action Founda·
lion, a n "education and humanit -

arian" int eres t group supported
by Lukens.
On Aug. 11 , Luke ns embarked

on an all -ex penses paid trip
orga-nl1.ed by the Taiwanese
gove rnme n t to lobby for Inc r e ased trade In his dis trict.
La ter thi s wee k. Lukrns will g ive
a co mm en ce m ~nt speec h a t the
U niversity of Costa Ri ca. which
w il l pay for his tr ip .
Rep . To m Sawyer. D-1 4. of
Akron, will travel to Palo Alto.
Calif .. later thi s month to appear
· on a Stanfo rd Univers it y pa nel
di scussi ng "educa ti onal iss ues.

Rep . Louis Stokes. D-21, of
Warren sv ill e Heig ht s. will be
makin g trips to Paris, London.
Athens. Frankfu r t a nd Is tanbul,
whil e Rep , Edwa rd f'e lgha n. D19, of Lak ewood will travel to
Turk ey. Greece a nd Ma lta .
Re p. Ralph Regula , R-16, of
Navarre. took a 10-da y tour of
na tiona l parks In Colorado a nd
California with his wife .
"'He' d never seen them . He
wanted to see wha t we were

ge tt lng for our mon ey out there,"
a n a id e sa id. adding that so me
wes tern parks face urban prob·
!e ms simil a r to those of the
Cuya hoga Valll'y N a tion al Re·
creation Area.

•

FACfORY
AUTHORIZED

SALE

SAVE
'35%

ON ALL ORDERS

Once again Norwalk Furniture Corporation has
chosen our store to participate in their annual Factory
Authorized Sale. They're giving us a generous discount
during the next two weeks and we're adding our own
reduction to save you hundreds of dollars on some of the
finest living rooms in America! During this event, you'll
save 35% .on all Norwalk sofas, chairs, recliners and
sleepers. Special order from 400 selections available in
700 fabrics. And you'll receive factory-fresh furniture
delivered to you in just 30 days.

CJ

disease in human s who work w ith
animals, the depa rt m ent sa id .
During the 1980s, lister ios is
emerged as a significant illnc"
associated with rood. '

ELBERFELDS
POMEROY

Board to meet
EAST MEIGS- E.; as tern Local
Board of Education will mee t Jn
general session Thursda y, 7:30
p.m ., at the high schOol.

of interest groups, accordl n ~ to
the l ~ve l a nd P lai n D a ler.
The annu al officia l tri ps. usu ally made In August durin~ the
congress iona l su mmer rec(lSS.
ha ve brco mc targets fo r crll lcs
of f'XCPSS gover nnwn tal s pend ing. Dcmot·ra t.lc p r(•sl d ~ n t ia l
ca ndidate Joseph Blden once
said foreign t ra\· ~1 by govern
men! of fi ci al s hJid "a dc,crvcd
bad re put atio n
There arr no accura te records
on how muc h the ~over lim e nt
spe nds on co ngress ional junkets ,
bu t the offi cial trip are es tl·
mated to cos1 taxpaye rs mil lio ns
of dol la rs eac h vea r.
- Rep. Dennis Eckart , D-11 . tol d
the paper that " official tt·i ps can
be valuabl e - If they're legit I·
mate work trips." Eckart said hC'
Is not taking a govl'rnmenl -pald

A living roo~ sale tailored just for you. More styles,
fabrics and choices than you can imagine ....
and all at .Factory Authorized Savings.

WASHI NGTON rU P l r - The
Agriculture Depa rtment says it
will begi n offi cial mon itoring on
Sept. 1 of cookt-d. rc;Jdv-to -C'al
me at and pou ltry for· a tiacteri!J
that ca uses a disease bla med lor
&lt;I deaths from cheese in 19R ~i
The bac teria. [.istcrla mono·
c~· t ogt- n es.
ca uses lister iosis.
which has long been recogn iu •d
as an animal dis easf' and ·as

race In thr quarter ho'rse racing of the Meigs
County Fair Saturday. See n•sulls, additional
photos on page 3.

Congressmen take vacations
at nation's taxpayers expe~se

NeRWALK®

STORE HOURS
9:30 to 5:00
MON.-SAT.

MONDAY, AUG. 24

:..=....J

I

VISA

We're your NeRWALK®Special Order Gallery store.
I

l

"DMI0!01 OHIO
t!. Ut , , lUI .

enttne

Harvey Wllioughby, 9, Gallia
C0 uniy, Is alive today thanks to a
tremendous effort by emergency
and fire departme nt members
and the departme nt of ·sheriff
Howard Frank Saturday evening
when the youth was stru ck by
lightning at the Meigs County
Fair.
Willoughby was lea ning
against a large poplar tree in the
area behind the grandstand on
the Rock Springs Fairgrounds
when the tree was hit by lightning
about 6:20 p.m. The lightning
s plit the tree from the top
towards the ground before strlk·
ing young Willoughby.
Trained personnel of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Ser·
vice and fire -department
members close by at the time
immedlaJely began work on lhe
youth who was in complete
cardiac arrest CPR. mouth to
mouth resusitallon and mass
trousers. were used to rev ive the

youngs ter. At the request of Bob
Byer , direc tor of the county EMS
service, the department of Sheriff Howard Trl!rik -kept all
unauthori zed personnel from the
accide nt sce ne. Granr Hospital
Lifefllght II a t Wellston was
called at 6:30p.m . and the youth
was moved t.o the parking lot of
nearby Meigs High School. The
helicopter arrived by 6:50p.m ..
and at 6:59 p.m . was enroule to

1 Section. 10 Pages

26 Cents

.'A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

HAPPENED - Lightning struck this large poplar
tree on tbe Rock Springs Fairgrounds Saturday night splitting the
tree from the top towards the ground where the lightning entered
the body of Harvey Willoughby, 9, GalllaCounty, who was leaning
against the tree. Willoughby was reported In stable condition at
Children's Hospital In C\'lumbus Monday morning.
Children's Hospital wtth young
Willoughby . Representatives
from fi ve different emergertcy
units worked wit~ the youth
before he was placed on the flight
·to Columbus .
Willoughby was placed in in·
tenslve care and remained there
this morning. He Is listed In fair '
condition and is reported to be

stable and alert. The youth
received first and se-cond degree
burns to the back.
Young Willoughby was camping at the Rock Springs Fairgrounds with his family during
the fair, it was reported . The
names of his parents were not
recorded Byer said.

South Korean worker's death
brings resignation ·demands
SEOUL, South Korea (UP!) An influen t'ial dissident organiza·
lion today demanded President
Chun Doo Hwan resign io the
wake of s trike Violence that
resulied In the dea th of a
shipyard worker.
The Na tiona! Coalition for
Democratic _Constitution , which
organi ze d na tionwid e anti ·
government protes ts in June
which forced Chun to agree to
sweeping democratic reforms ,
said the death of Lee Suk·kyu on
Saturday proved Chun 's reform
promise was "deceitful."
Lee died when about 3.0oo
workers of Daewoo Shipbuilding
a nd Heavy Machinery Co.
dished with riot pollee in a
violent protest on Kojedo Island
210 miles southeast of Seoul.
He was injured by a tear gas
grenade and died at a hospital,
news reports said. A funeral ·
service for Lee will be held
Wednesday.
The coalition, ,In a prepared
state ment. said the death
" clearly" showed that Chu11's
promise for reform was "false
and deceitful" and "served as a
precious lesson for those who
Indulge in a vague , Illusion of
democratization."
• The coalition said "to take

.

TO SfTURDAY, SEPT. 5
Elb.,Feldr

•

responsibility for the Incident
and seek forgivenes s of thepeople, there Is no alternative for
this regime but to step down
vo luntaril y."
The organiza tion urged people
to take an active part in mourn ing for the dead worker, and
asked radio and televisio n sta·
lions to suspend entertainment
and sports progra ms during the
mourning period.
Lee 's death was the first
fatality in more than four weeks
of sometimes violent labor di s·
putes that have paralyzed dozens
of industries.
National Police Chie f Kwon
Bok -kyong said pollee had to fire
about 1,000 tear gas bombs,
mostly hand-thrown grenad es, to
put down
th e labo, r
demonstration .
"When faced wlth violent dem·
onstrations , pollee ca nnot but use
tear gas," he sa id. '"The autopsy
s hould disclose the exact cause of
of his death. Pollee will be again
instructed to carefully s tick to
safety regulations in using lear
gas against demonstra tors."
Officials sent about 4,000 riot
pollee to the island to control the
protests, news reports said.
Encouraged by Chun' s reform
. promise, workers have staged

more 1han 1,600 protests since
July 1 seeking steep wage In·
creases and better working conditions. More than 500 disputes
remain unsettled as of this
mornin g, the Labor Ministry
said.
About 1,000 employees of Ko·
rea Air Terminal Service Co.,
who clean cabins, handle ca rgo
a nd provide olhe~ ground services for airliners, stag.ed a strike
for the third day at Klinpo
Airport, delaying flights from
one to three l!ours todlcy, officials
said.
Kia Motor Corp .. the nation's
third largest automaker, reopened Its assembly lines today as
parts and components began
flowing from suppliers where
strikes had ended . Hyundal Motor Co .. Korea's top aulomaker
and exporter. resumed production la st week .
Daewoo Motor Co., the second
largest auto firm. was planning
to reopen normal operations
soon, company offici a Is sa ld .
Officials at the Trade-Industry
Ministry estimated that the labor
protests have caused business
losses of $637.5 million including
$240 million In ex ports. t; ar
exports s uffered by $H3 million,
they said .

U. S. officials. dismiss report
pending summit this autumn.

2 WEEKS ONLY

992-3671

•

Quick effort
·by officials
saves youth
from death

di a monds. Current spot prices
for gol d, s il ver a nd platinum a re
avaiia ble also.
The company is open 9:30 to
5:30 Monday through Saturday
and may be reachecl du ri ng tho se
hours by ca llin g 592-2025.

LOCI\!. WIN NER - Pat Hill and son, ,John, '
representing Pal Hill Ford are pictured present·
log a trophy hlanked to 01~ Luc ky Deck, owned by
Jennings Recglr, ltucine, and winner of the-fifth

•

'' •

Gallia boy, 9, hit by
lightn · and survives

Holier has
champion bull
at Meigs fair
POMEROY - Roy Holter.
Pomeroy, exhibited the c ham·
pion bull, senior champion female, junior champio n. fema le
and the grand champion fem ale
In the Holste in breed of d a iry
cattle at the Meigs Count y Fa ir .
Judging of dai ry cattle at the
fair was he ld Thu rsday
afternoon .
In the Hols tein breed, Holter
won second in the bull, two years
and over c lass wit h ,Jerry Smith,
Racine, taking second; Holter
had the bes t cow, 4arid over with
Smith. second , and Don Smith.
Racine. third . Hol ter won the
. blue in the judging of cows. 3 and
under.
Jerry Smith took first in 1he
cow, 2 years and und ert hree with
Chuck Parker. Pome roy, taking
second. Jill Tay lor Pome roy, had
the first· place senior yearling
heifer with Holt er tak ing second .
Holter had the bes t junior yea rlin g heifer, ttre best senior heifer
ca lf, the best int erm ediate heifer
calf and the best junior he ife r
calf.
In the Ayrsh ire breed judging,
Don Smith,, Racine. won the best
senior female awa r d with J f'ff
Rose. Racine, showing the .ju nior
champion femal e and the gra nd
champion female. Smith won
blue ribbons for the cow, ~ yea rs
and older; t he~o w. 3a ndund er4.
and the cow , 2 and under 3 wi th
Rose taking a firs t place in the
senior he ifer calf judging. Smith
won a blue i'n the two genera·
lions judging.
Kathleen Pa r ker . Pomeroy,
exhi bited ' the se nior cha m pion
female ; Brent Ro se. Raci ne, the
junior champion femal e. a nd
Parker. the gr a nd c hampion
femal e in the J ersey judging.
Margaret Park er. PomPro y,
won a blue In the judg in g of cows,
4 and over with Ka thl een Par ke r
ta king second. Ka thl ee n P ar ke r
won a blue in the cow. :la nd undN
4 clasxs. with Brent Rose wi n·
ning second. Ka thl een Parker
won a blue for the bes t cow. 2 and
under 3 with Rose w inni ng a bl ue
for the best junior ye arlin g heHer
and K. P ar ker wi nn ing st-cond .
Pa rkt-r ex hi bill'd the best sen lor
heifer calf and Rose the bcsr
junior heifer ca lf. K. Pai·kcr won
blues in the produ ce of cow and
fhe two generations judging .

)

Cloudy tonight. Low In
mid 50s. Rain likely Tues·
day. highs between 75 and
80.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Mo·nday, August 24, 1987

.July,. down tR

SPV('n stat('~ in

I

Pick 4
9605 '
Super Lotto
6-17-28-35-39-42

brush firP on ·mus Road : Rac ine
at 1il'' 1~ p.m. to rtout e 338 for
Cora Webb to Veterans Memot·
la l Hospit al.

Feedlot figures
are up '6 percent

\~ ~ '

Daily Number

Page3

Squad reports eight calls Friday

POMEROY - Meigs Cou nty
Emergency . Medical Services
reports e i g ~t ca ll s Friday: Ra ·
ci ne at 9:01a.m. to Portland for
Helen Sams to Vetera ns Me mor·
la l Hospit a l: Middleport a t ll: 11
a. m . tO Sou th Front St. for Katlr
Ant hony to Veterans Memorial
Hospit al: Middleport Fire De·
part ment atll :43a .m . toabrus h
an piCniC
uesdaynre on Zuspa n Holl ow Road:
Tuppers Plains a t ~: 26 p. m. to
, POMEROY- The Auxiliary of
Route 681 East for Floyd Sa rTin ·
Veterans Memorial Hospital will
ger to Plea sant Va lley Hospita l:
Rutland at 4:48p. m. transported
hold its annual picni c for
Ra ndy Hudnall fro m th ~ fair m e mb e r' s a nd honorar y
members, a nd their families . a t
grou nds to Vc l&lt;'ra ns MemoriaW
7 p.m. Tuesday at the southbound
Hospit al; Pomeroy Fire Depart ·
roads ide park on Rout&lt;: JJ, Those
ment at 5: ~}p . m . to a st ru ctu re
fire a t E nt e rpri se: Rutl a nd Fire
a ttending are to ta ke a covered
dis h and their own table service.
De part me nt at 7:36 p.m. to a

PI

NEARS COMPLETION - Th e new Frenchtown Apartment Complex on Fourth Avenue near
downtown Gallipolis Is nearing completion.
According to Forest Mullins of Carter &amp; Evans, of
Gallipolis, the ge~eral contractor, the apartments
are scheduled lor opening on Sept. I. The SSOO,OOO

Logan , fourth, and Steve Kinzel,
Pomeroy, fifth.
Mike- Brown of Gallipolis..was
first In th e 6200 four wheel llrive
event with second going to Bill
Cha ney, thi rd to David Wil loughby, fou r th to' Jeff John son

Ohio Lottery

Molitor"s
streak
at 38

PET SHOW WINNERS- First place winners In
the Melga County Fair Pel Show were, left to right
Ill front, J.P. Davis with hill "most talented" dog
Sooner; Alyssa Hoffman with the "best ftsh,"
Sammie the piranha; Becky Meier, with the "best
cat," Molly, a domestic longhalred calico;
, Heather Mora, with the "best bird," Tad, atop hat
chlcke_n; Jenny Clifford, with the "most talented"
pet, hl!l' siamese cal, Bandit; and Mellssa~UIIerd
1

.
with the "best clog," Smokey, a welmerlner, or
German bird dog. In back are Melga Fair King
Scott Oberholzer; Tammy Holter with her boa
constrictor, Bobby, the "most unusual" and "best
overall" pel; and Melgll Fair Queen Pam Ash. Not
pictured Is the winner ol tbe ''best rodent"
category, Jessica Mitchell a11d her sable ferret.
The junior lair pet show Is conducted by the Meigs
County Boy and Girl Scouts.

SANTA BARBARA, Ci!llf.
(UP!) - President Reagan's .
administration professes lgnor·
ance about 1he basis of a reporl
that Sovletleader Mikhall Gorba ·
chev plans to meet with him In
the United States regarding an
arms control treaty.
"We're not aware of any of
these detalls," White House
spokeswoman Leslye Arsht said
In response to the report In
Sunday's Los Angeles Times,
which also said Gorbachev's
tentative .schedule Includes a.

.

visit 'to the United Nations.
The State Department was just
as blunt, Issuing a statement
saying, "'i'herelsnobasisforthe
story ... (and) no discuss ions or
current plans for a summit
between President Reagan and
General Secretary Gorbachev In
September:"
Senior officials with Reagan at
his ranch near Santa Barbara
denied knowledge of any Gorba ·
chev plans to visit the United
States for the U.N. General
Assembly beginning Sept. 15, but

~

they acknowledged · speculation
that the Soviet leader, who likes
to travEl! on short notice, could
a tlend the U.N. session .
If the res t of the report turns
out true, it would be the first
superpower summit In the Unl·
ted States since Leonid Brezhnev
met with President Nlx(J!(ihore
than a decade ago. The las·;'
U.S.-Sovlet arms accord, !he
never,ratlfied SALT II pact , was
made .by Brezhnev and President .
Carter In 1979.

•

�•,,

•

\

,•

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3
"

Commentary
The Daily' Senti'nel
111 Court Street'
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~

ts: m~
~v

-.-.I"T"'E!! =·""'

I'T1-.J , _

ROBERT L; WINGETT
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

A MEMBER of Thr Unit rd Prf'ss IniNna tiona l, In land Dati~· Prrs!'
Assoc·la tion and th(' Amrr lcan N&lt;'wspapcr Publishf'rs Association .
LETTERS OF oPtN10!'\ arf' Wt'IC'omr. Thf'~· ~ houlc1 br lf'ss I han .100 " ·orrl:lonc . A ll IPtlf'r!' a rr !'UbiN·t 1o c-cl I lin):! an c1 mu!'l hr &lt;&gt; ignN'I wIth n&lt;1 m r . a chi r f'!'S and
10lf'phonro numhPr. No twsi_gnC'I:I ll'I IPrs will b(• puhlish&lt;'&lt;l. Lf'ttf'r." shou ld bf' in
~ond t ;J~ 1 f'.

adclrf'ssing

\s!&gt;'U&lt;'!' .

not pNSonalitif's.

Page 2-The Daly Sentinel
PomeiOY-Middlaport. Ohio
Monday, .August 24, 1987

·H igh tech saleSL----=B::...z.r-=.J-=ac:..:..:..k. :. .:A:..:. :. nd:.:. :e..:. .:rs.::.:.on.:. . .a=.:. .:ml.:. :. . .::.D. .:.:.:al..:. . e......Va=--n:....:..A_i_;_ta
WASHINGTON - - The U.S.
, . • Intelligence communlly took far
too long to discover the Illegal
sale of submarine propellermaking machinery to the Soviets
by C. Itoh and Toshiba especially since major clues on
such diversions fr&lt;)m Japan were
available as early as 1984.
We can say this with. some
' authorliy because we were re·
· porting that year on the Soviets• ·
. legal and illegal acquisition of
high technology from Ja'pan.
Dale Van Atta flew to Tokyo to
lnvestig~tte the situation, while
our associate Ml.c hael Blnsteln
developed Washington sources.
The result was columns In
April and May 198~ that otfered
solid evidence that "the KGB has

found Japan a rich source of
high-technology products that
can be turned to military advan·
tage by the Kremlin."
We reported that the CIA had
uncovered "about three dozen
documented cases of high-tech
diversion by the Soviets through
Japan since 1968 .." More than
half of these, we noted, had been
approved by the Japanese government, which "put shortterm profits ahead of the West's
long-term security needs."
We even pinpointed the area of
Soviet Interest, reporting that
"the KGB has gone after microelectronic equipment, machine
tools, computers, telecommunl·
cations, automation devices and
specialty steel." The Itoh/To·

shlba sale was In the machinetool category, and enabled the
Soviets 'to develop quieter sub·
marllnes that are much more
difficult to detect .
Even If the CIA brass wasn't
reading our columns, they might
at least have paid some heed to a
highly sensitive report com ·
pleted In 1984 by their own
analysts.: Still classjrted "Se·
cret," the report not only des- ·
crt bed the kind of tricks that Itoh
and Toshiba later used to dis·
guise their Illegal sa le, but
actually.Identified Itoh as one of
five Japanese companies to
watch for Illegal trade with the
Soviets. The others were Mltsubl·
shl, Mltsulk, Marubenl and a
small trading company, Talrlku.

A cure worse than
the disease
By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON (UP!) - In his latest pitch for a constitutional
amendment that would require a balanced federal budget , President
Reagan threatened Congress with a constltutlonal cure that might be
worse than the ailment.
There Is no sure way of knowing how many of those who watched
Reagan's televised speech Aug. 12 grasped what he was talking about
w,hen he warned Congress that "the prospect for a constitutional
convention Is only two states away from approval."
What the president. was talking about was the long- running effort to
use Article 5 of the Constitution to convene a second constltutlonal
COI)Vehtlon to propose changes In the document that was drafted 200
years ago this summer in Pennsylvania.
' As of now, the Iegisla lures of 32 states have pet! tloned Congress to
c,a ll a constitutional convention for the purposes of drafting,
approving and submitting a balanced budget amendment to the
slates for ratification . If the total reaches 34- two-thirds of the states
- Article 5 appears to require Congress to convene a convention.
Any changes In the Constitution proposed by such a convention
would have to be approved by the legis! a tures or special conventions
In t!U'ee- fourths - 38 - of the states.
• The problem with the convention method of amending the
&lt;;onstltution Is that, except for the original Philadelphia gathering, it
has never been done.
And, while the states that have petitioned for a convention have
gfi!nerally specified that it should consider a balanced budget, many
constitutional scholars argue that the delegates coulct not be
restricted to one subject.
It should be remembered that many people believed the men who
went to Philadelphia were only going to patch up the Articles of
Confederation, and when they launched Into the design of an entirely
n~w structure of government, there was outrage and consternation in
some quarters. Indeed, one state, Rhode Island, was so suspicious of
the convention it refused to send a delegation.
The fear about a new constitutional convention is that it'would
become the battleground for every single Interest movement In the
country. Every controversial issue from abortion to vivisection
would be ventilated and the Constitution, which is basically a
blueprint for a government machine, would become a political
platform.
Whatever the merits or these single Interest Issues may be, it seems
unlikely that the Constitution is a good instrument to deal with them .
The Philadelphia convention tried to write a compromise on the
volatile Issue or human slavery Into the original document and it led to
the bloo!liest war In the country's history within five decades. More
recently, Congress tried to prohibit the liquor traffic in ' the
Constitution and that disaster gave us AI Capone and his organized
crime heirs:
: The point of all this is that the president, In trying to scare the
Congress Into action on a balanced budget amendment, is
bl-andishing an alternative that could lead to problems as bad or
worse than the pernicious multibillion-dollar deficit-s he wants to
abolish.
·
·
If Reagan wants to force Congress to make the hard choices needed
to eliminate the horrendous deficits that have marred his presidency,
he might be on a lot more solid ground If, for the first time since he
tQok over the White House in 1981, he actually submitted a balanced
budget to Congress.

Letters to the editor
Thanks
·The Racine Village Park
BOard wishes to take this means
to publicly thank the Stern·
wheeler Bluegrass Band of the
Ripley , W.Va ., area namely:
Delbert Anderson, Tommy
Anderson, Don Anderson of Ri. 2,
Gay, W.Va.; !;&gt;ave Bing, Rt .. l
Harmony, W.Va., and Ernl'st
Munda,y also of Rt. 1 Harmony,
and Racine resident Wllbur Donohue, for sharing their talent
and helping us provide our
residents with an evening of
' ' f r e e ' _' wholesome
entertainment.
The Park Board has extended
an " open invitation" to thl'

officials
Sternwheelers Band for our
future programs. If you folks
liked the music why not drop
them a line?
1
The Park Board also wants to
thank the area residents. that
have been donating pies and
cakes for the refrl'shment stand.
Our thanks also to the Bend
River Boys Band for the steady
·appearances.
Last but not least thank you ,
the residents, for attending help·
ing make our summer programs
a success.
Vlllage Park Board
Robert Beegle
Member

today in history
I .

':
By United Press International
·Today is Monday , Aug. 24, the 236th day of 1987 with 129 to follow.
• The moon is new.
·; The morning star is Jupiter.
• The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
.: Those born on this date are under the sign of Virgo. They include
ll}oneer British abolitionist William Wilberforce tn 1759; electric toy
train Inventor Joshua Lionel Cowen in 188(); English critlc and wit Sir
Max Beerbohm in 1872; Roman Catholic Cardinal Richard Cushing,
iirchblshop of Boston, In 1895; country music publisher Fred Rose In
1Q97; Argentine poet and author Jorge Luis Borges in 1899; and Ohio
S]ate football running back Archie Griffin, the only two-time
{Jelsman Trophy winner, in 1954 (age 33).
•
-·
.
~. Qn this date In history:

'·Jn 79 A.D, thousands died and the cities or Pompeii and
Herculaneum were -bu r led by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius . .
. fn. 1814, the British c~ptur.e.d Washington, D.C., and burned the
Qfpltol building and the White House .
: In 1932, Amelia Earhart became the flrsl woman to fly non-stop
a~ross the United States.
.
'•In 1968, France detonated Its first hydrogen bomb In the South
P'aclflc.

,•

fl. tl!ought for the day; Max Beerbohm wrote, "All fantasy should
have a solid base In reality.''

•

"If there Is a truth In Illegal
trade It Is that no two cases
Involving Illegal shipments of
goods to proscribed destinations
are ever the. same," the secret
report stated. a1.1t it cited as a
"typical example" the following

scenario:

· ~.

· ·~. ~

.... .

"First the Sovle.ts, through a
foreign organization, would lndlate to one of the 'friendly'
Japanese companies (hat' It Is .
Interested in obtalnlng,fl certain
piece of ... restricted technology .
"The friendly company ...
contacts a local wholesaler who
would place an order with a
major trading firm to import the
equipment that contains the
restricted technology from the
United States .... The wholesaler·
arranges to resell the Item to
either the friendly company or to
a 'cutout' f.lrm .
"Ultimately, thE' friendly firm
takE's possession of the article
and extracts the restricted por·
tion of the equipment. The
extracted portion is then installed Inside a low-grade piece
of machinery that is sent to an
exporter for shipment to · the
Soviets.
"The exporter and wholE&gt;saler
are often unwitting of the Illegal
nature of the.transaction, and the
cursory check by Japanese customs ofllclals Is neil surrtclent to
deiermtne the exact nature of the
machln .e ry's internal
components."
In thp Itoh/Toshlba case, this
scenario was followed almost
exactly . The Soviet foreign trade
organlzat ion, Tekmashlmport ,
contacted a "friendly" Japanese
company, Wako Koekl , which
then round a company that would
supply the desired technology 1in
this case made In Japan~ . The
company was Toshlbil Machin,
ery, a subsidiary oi Toshiba
,
Corp.
Toshiba Machinery then asked
Its regillar export broker, Jtoh , to
be the "culout " .rtrm lhat actu ·
ally handled the saie.

VICTORY - Don Sickle, winning jockey In
three of the five fast moving quarter horse races

of the Meigs (:ounty Fair Saturday evening, rides
Buggln' Bayou, owned by Kathryn Rilss, to
victory In the second race.

Molitor extends streak to 38; ·
Tigers retain AL Eastern le_ad.

A crime of the heart______W~ill~iam:.!!.·. ! R! :!u.~:! :!he: :!. .r
Now that the lran /.contra hearings are over, various Democrats are busy trying to put as
mu'ch hay as possible in the barn.
On television recel)tly I heard
Bob Beckel, the manager or
Walter Mondale's 1984 cam·
paign, declare happily that "A
year ago Ronald Reagan was a
candidate for Mount Rushmore.
Now he 'll be lucky to get back to
the Hollywood Hills. "
Well, things may not be quit e
that bad. Poor Beckel Is ob·
· vlously still smarting from his
tiger's one-state sweep, and may
be forgiven for ,exaggerati ng a
bit .
But presu mably Preside nt
Reaga n cannot escape all c ritic ism in connection with t·he
Iran /contra a ffair , so the ques·
tlon arises: What, precisely, was
his worst offense?
Since any reply I might offer
would be suspect , let me call on
New York Times columnist An·
thony Lewis, a liberal whose sins
assuredly don't include exces·
slve solicitude for Ronald Rea·
gan. Quoth Mr. Lewis:

.

North is

"The mosl shocki ng aspect of
the whole story remains the
decision to sell arms tO! ran In the
hope of getting American hos·
tages out of Lebanon. President
Reagan had called on the world
not to a rm terro.rist nations, in
particular Iran, a nd not to make
deals for hOstages. His warmest
su pporte rs co ndemn the arms
sales."
Actually, th e· pr esi dent's
warmest support ers (If 1 may
spea k of them ) think tha t a lot or
the critic ism or the arms sales Is
a spectacular example of being
wise after the ev ent. Moreover,
we th ink that the secret negotla·
tions with' ·potential friends In
Iran and the ensuin g arms sales
began as a perfectly sound
diplomatic In itia tive In th at vital
part of the world, and only
gradually took on the aspect of a
" trade" of ar ms for hos tages. It
seems likely that , to the bitter
e nd , President Reagan . believed
that , far from dealing with the
kidnappers, he was bringing
heavy pressures to bear on them.
-But thi s is Democrats' Day, so

let's-accept To~y Lewis's formu ·
lation a nd assume that Reagan,
In direct vio lation of his own
policy , deliberately sold arms to
terrori sts In return for the
release or hostages. One ca n
eas il y see the objections to this,
but as a mistake, just h01.\• would
you rat e it , on a sca le of lto ~o·
It was clear ly a cri me or the
heart . The president's mind was
too much on the host ages, knowIng (as you and I did noll that one
of them , our Beirut CIA chief Bill
Buckley, had been tortured and
then killed . He shared, too, the
anguish of their families . He saw,
as the rest of us did , their pltful
pleas on national television,
reproaching him for not doing
more.
No doubt he ought to have been
made of sterner stuff. But there
Is simpl y no denying that Pres!·
de nl Reagan Is extremely sens.l·
tive'to the human aspects or t.hese
grim event s.
.
I have heard reliably that, on
the night the U.S.S. Stark was
a ttacked by a n Iraqi jet In the
Persian Gulf with a loss of man y

lives, the president was orteled
lri the White House Situation
Room . The briefing ortlcer was
discussing certai n technical as·
pects or tHe •!tack when the
president Interrupted .
" How many of our m'e n were
killed ?'' ht&gt; .wan!ed to know . .
"About 38 'sir," the briefi ng
officer replied - a nd ihen
resumed his technical account.
The presldl'nt was silent a while.
Then :
" Where were they•"
"In the forward sleeping quar·
ters , sir," was the response followed by more technical gob·
bledygook. Anot!ler period of
silence from the prl'sldent . Then :
" Did they &lt;Jil' quickly? ",
The briefing officer aflirmed
that fortun~tely they had , and got
back to his discussion of radar
system s, etc .
Too much stress on the human
e lement - that must count as a
weakn ess In any president. But If
Ronald Reagan has to have a
weakness, I'm kind of glad It's
that one.

herO·~---------..:G:....::e.=...:or-'2.:ge:....:.M.:..:.:cG::..:::...:.::ove:..:::.r:....:.:.n

Few dev e lopments have
troubled me more than reports
that Oliver North is regarded as a
hero by many Americans, Jncludlng President Reagan.
To me North represents the
most disturbing aspects lnAmer·
lean life.
·
~
Consider the following:
Most Americans came to understand that our Intervention In
Vietnam was a mistake. My
son-In-law, Wilbur Mead, was
ever bit as much of a patriot as
North. He volunteered for ser·
vice In VIetnam. Seeking to learn
a "Pout the war, I visited him In
1965. He, like many of his
buddies, had grave doubts about
· U.S. actions. He had been
troubled especially by thl' killing
of a small VIetnamese girl.
No one condemns Americans
who went to Vietnam. The policy
makers who sent them there
were off base. But . In North's
case, according to a Washington
Post report , all Indications are
that he loved the war, Including
the most brutal killings in which
he took part. He has been
described by his buddies as "a
zealot" who "burned Inside" and
could not walt to kill Vietnamese.
Upon returning from Vletman
he became. a Marine Instructor.
Other Instructors thought his
behavior weird when he came to
class covered with camouflage
paint and armed with four guns
and three knives.
"He was pumped up after
VIetnam," one friend observed,
and returned there a few months
later to support a fellow Marine
charged with murdering 16 Viet·
namese women and children. As

the tria l proceeded, North volun·
leered his spare time to ser~e on
"killer teams" during night
patrol. As writer Barbara Ehren·
reich has reported: "Even har·
dened Marines thou ght this was
going a little far, 'hiding behind
trees and slitting throat s on his
own time.' "
Assigned to a routine Marine
Corps job in 1974, North under- .
went a spychotlc episode In
which he was found "b.abbling
incoherently and running around
naked, wearing a .45 pistol. "
North explained that once out of
the, war zone he had "nothing to
live for.' '
North was sent to the Naval
War College and from there went
to the White House as -an aide In
1981. There he devised the
Invasion of Grenada, assisted the
South Africa-supported guerillas
In Angola, Intercepted the plane
carrying the Ach1lle Lauro hi·
jackers and managed the covert
war In Nicaragua. As Ehrenreich
putS I\. "thehorrorolpeace"was
ended "once he reached the dark
Inner core of Reagan 's secret
government."
As the congresslonallnvestlga·
lion revealed, North seemed to
rellsh bypassing federal laws
blocking aid to the ·COJ!tras. He
told Congress It was necessary to
violate the law because Congress
had made a mistake In passing
the law. He said he belleved he
had the president's approval as though that somehow made
lawbreaking acceptable. He
showed no regrets over the sales
of U.S, weapons to Iran .
One has the Impression that.
North Is st111 proud of his role. His

only regret seems to be thai the
Congress and the public now
know the dirty secrets that he hid
from them . He did his best to
destroy the record or those
secrets by ordering his secretary
to alter tlocuments even while he
and shl' were shredtJ.ing"-olher .
docume nts as government lnves·
tlgators moved ln.
North wore his uniform and
medals to exploit the Image or
patriotism, but he has disgraced

his uniform and violated his
constitutional oath.
A black auto parts · man In ·
Washington, D.C., told me recenlly, "If I had broken as many
laws as Olivl!r .North did, I'd be
hl'aded for jail. This guy Is no
hero; he should be locked up."
Harsh words, but they come ·
closer to m y sentiments than the
president's notion that North Is ·
"a national hero."

,

'

Berry s World

the f~&amp;~~t moving horse. Sinith wu taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital by the Syrac':'se
Emergency Squad, one of the units of the Me1gs
County Emergency Medical Service, on hand
throughout the l\1elgs Fair.

.JOCKEY INJ URED - ParamediC!! and others
wer&lt;' on the scene In a hurry Saturduy evening to
help ,l'!ckey t\rt Smith ~&lt;• ho fell at the end offourth
quarterhOrsc tiiCl'. H~ ri•Celved arm injuries and
a p~~s~lhh· hlp Injury when he WIL• stepped on by

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The Daily Sentinel

Fast moving quart erhorse rae·
ing was a highlight of the Meigs
Count y F'alr Saturda y aft ernoon.
Adding to the li vely race
program wa s mu sic.by the Me igs
High Schoo l Ba nd .
First pla ce winners received
trophy blankets provided by
MGM Farm Cit y, Broga n -

Warner Insu rance, Cooper
Chrysler-Dodge-Plymouth, Pat
Hill Ford a nd R&amp;G F'eed a nd
Supply.
Hired Chic, owned by Mike
Doughett, A !hens, and ridden by
Beverly Hank! , Athens, was
winner of the first race ; Buggln'
Bayou, ridden by Dan Sickle and
owned by Kathryn Ross won the

il&gt;SPS

Puhli~hf'£1 ('\' P n · rtflr•rnorm. Monda\
lht'nugh F'l'id :,y. 111 Cn ur1 ST. . Pf1 - , "
mPrn.\ ·, Ohio. h~· rhr Ohin Val lrv Puh- ·
tl.~ h inc C'n mp:1 ny Mullimf'di&lt;~ . · In {'., ,

Pn m rrm rlhln 4!'17ti!i. Ph . fl!t"J - 2 1~. Sf'-

ennd r·la!' J' pns laC(' paicl Lll. Pn mrt·roy.
Ohio.
·

second; Mas ter .Jag4ar, owned
by Jennings Beegle, Racine, and
ridden by Sickle won the third;
DiablO Sannls, owned and ridden
by Don Gllck, Ashville, and the
fifth race was won by a nother
local· horse, Ole Luck y Deck,
owned by Jennings Beegle, and
ridden· by Sickle.

Mf'ml&gt;t •r : U ni iPII Pt ·t•ss Jntf'r na t io nal .
In lu n1 1
i lv P rr s" A .. ~ (l(· i:t li o n ami I hP
(&gt;h io NC'v.·.. r); ipf'r As .. oci :JI il •n . Na t i on&lt;~ I
Ad\Pr lisin.[! Rl"pt 'f'Sf' nl a i i\'P. Rra nhtt m

na

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BaMt· ~ll
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Kid~ AJUih'U

Onklund 6. Nt&gt;w \'ork II
T•·;\..- !1. ( ' hlt ·u!l(n ti
Kall'-lf'o fll ,y 1\, 1\IIIWIUikt"f. 7

lrom Tldt·watl•r ol lhf' hiCPmiiiUonul
l.eM~tUI' ( :\AA )IU! d pUc-bt•r-leff lnnhi' will
tw dtmot~'lllu Tldf'wllll"r.

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By f'llrri('r or Motor Rout"'

"He shoullln't have said those
slart the sixth. Robinson had
things,"
one Red s' player, who
pit ched into the seventh just once
asked
anonymity,
sa id . "Pete
in his prev ious fiv e starts after
bfginning the season In the . doesn't go for that."
But by and large th e Incident
bullpen.
Among Robinso!l's accusa- was treated as something to be
tions was Rose took him out too laughed at.
"You ' re going to second: guess
· soon, he was tryingtooutmanage
Whit ey Herzog and his pitching me today?" Rose chuckled at his
Sunday starting pitcher, Bill
coach was a puppet.
'"The Creature' speaks," Cin· Gullickson. " What we need from
ctnnati outfielder Dave Collins you is nine innings ."
"The door is shaking," one
yelled in the clubhouse before
clubhouse
man said after passing
Rose held his' meeting with
' Robinson . The outspoken Robin· Rose's office during the closed·
son' s nickname among his team- door session.
mates is "The Creature."
Rose came inti&gt; the clubhouse
steaming over. the remarks be·
cause 1\e felt his starter had gone
as far as he could, and had been
running the bases In the. bottom
of the fourth.

t

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Onr- Wf't •k ..

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Onf' Y C':l r ...... ... ................... ... ~ ~i~ . IW'I • 1

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l'lrr m :1y rPmit in : td\·~mt·f' clln•c·r rn
Thf' O:tily ~·nr l m •l nn u.l 1-i or· 1:! m0nth ,
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Nn suhs('l'ip! l n n~ b.\ m :dl pf'r mil lf'fi In " • .'1
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Modi Suhsc ·rlplions
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26 Wrrk~ ... ....
fi2 Wrf'b ..

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·~ ~ TIRED· OF YOUR

~o

As he has all. season, Schlmltar, driven by Dan Ater, took the
lead shOrtly after the start of the
one-mile race -with Overcomer
and his driver Mark Graber
racing on the outside In second
place.
.
They stayed head· to-head
around bot)! turns and Into the
stretch when Overcom~r made
one last push to edge Schlmltar
by a nose In' a photo !lnlsh.

,,

our Pa.~t.
Future
Giv(~.~ 4dvice On All· Affair.~ Of f_,(fe Such 4.~ [Jove. 'Warriage 4 nd Bu.~ine.~.~
All ~dings Guaranllied And Confidential

FIRST TIME IN l1IIS AREA - liltS. ABLE WfMYS TO HELP
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One Free Question - Call 675-7889

PRESENT

JOB?

AGGRESSIVE GM DEALERSHIP IN THE
POMEROY AIEl IS LOOKING FOR
CERTIFIED GM LINE TECHNICIANS. TOP
PAY FOR QUALIFIED APPLICANTS.
APPLY TO:
DAILY SENTINEL
P.O. BOX 8-21
POMEIOY, OHIO 45769

2217 Jackson Avenue, Point Pleasant

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pllt•ht•r

will hf' 111'1\Vut ed Mnmby

,:

POSTMASTER : Srnll addn•ss c-h; tn W'S
In Thr Dail.v Sf•ntinr&gt;l. 111 (OUJ'I SL.
Pom(•n •.v. Ohin l ~ i69 .

Pete Rose holds closed-door session
CINCINNATI tUPll- Ci ncl n·
nati Reds Manager Pete Rose
held a 40-minut e closed- door
sess ion with pitcher Ron Robin·
so n before Sunday's ga me
agai nst St. Louis to chastise the
right-hander fo1· criti cal remarks
he made of the manager .
Robinson and Rose eme rged
from the mee ting wi thout
comment.
Robinson was critical of his
manager after leaving Saturday
night 's game followin g the fifth
Inning with Cincinnati holdin g a
7· 4 lead . The Reds wen t on to lose
9-7 when four relievers failed to
prot ect. the margin.
Robinson faced 10 hatters in
the first three Innings but al ·
lowed a run in the fourth and
three In the flfttJ. He finished the
fifth, but Tom Hume took over to

ltil·900o

i\ Division of Multlmt'diu, Jm•.

Transactions

S....htll fl . !\llnm•~o :•t u .l
lh•troltll, f'l•·~· t•land ti

TOLEDO, Ohio !UPil.:.. Overcomer finally bested his sel'sonIong nemesis Sunday night to win
the $83,000 Rob€rt Cr!,t chfleld
trotting championship at Raceway Park.
The race was billed as a battle
of Ohio's top two 2-year- old
trotters, and Overcame posted
his first triumph over Schlmltar
.In several head-to- head meet·
lngs this season.

runs.

Red Sox 6, Twins 4
,
At Boston . •Don Baylor belted
his 12th career grand slam and
Dwight Evans followed with hl~'
29th .homer as the Red Sox
completed a three-game serle's
fun.' '
sweep of Minnesota.
Yankees 4, A's 0
Trailing 1-0, the Tigers took .
At
Oakland
, Calif., Rick.
advantage of an error by Cleve·
land lirst baseman Joe Ca rter In Rhoden and Tim Stoddard com-·
the third to score four runs, three bined on a two-hitter, and ClaudeJ.I Washington had three RBl:
on -Gibson's 18th home run.
· "I threw the same pitch right for New York.
~·
Angels 5, Bl11e Jays 2
before at the same speed in the
'At Anaheim, C~llf.. Wall:y,
same place and Gibson missed
It," said Tom Candlottl, 6-13. Joyner and Bill Buckner drllled.
"Maybe he saw It better the home runs to end Toronto pltchet
Dave Stteb's seven· game win·
second time."
·
Elsewhere, Milwaukee ' nlng streak.
6,
Mariners
5
Orioles
downed Kansas City 5-4; Boston
At Seattle, right-hander Ken
tripped Minnesota 6-4; New York
shut out Oakland 4·0; Baltimore Dixon allowed three hits over siX ,
held off Seattle 6-5; and Chicago innings and Larry Sheets and
to lead' .
Mike Hart each homered
whipped Texas 8-1 .
.
Baltimore.
Brewers 10, Royals 5
''
White Sox 8, Rangers 1
At Milwaukee, Paul Molll or
At Arlington, Floyd Bannister:
extended .his hitting streall to 38
ga mes and Bill Schroeder and scattered seven hits and · ~as ,
Greg 'Brock each drov e In three supported by a 13-hlt attacK,
pacing Chicago,

:t• .,

ii'! . r.tli

Toledo raceway results

"Well, if you MUST glom onto the surfer look,
I guess you must. "

got tired late In the game,"
Morris said, "I just got tough
when I had to. 1But) the team Is
scoring runs now and we are
winning games. You fee l better
when you are in a pennant drive,
and it makes the game more

'

Rno ·hr...a1•r W Tllii'Walt•r
.\ t uln•• ;tl Tul•••h1

S.t iurll a,· · ~ ltt • ,.,u l• ~

.'

By CHARLIE McCARTHY .
UPI Sports Writer
Two Tigers who have experience dealing with pennant-race
pressure took charge to help
Detroit regain first place In the
AL East.
Jack Morris hurled a fivehitter and Kirk Gibson slugged a
three-run homer Sunday, leading
the Tigers to a 4-3 victory over ·
the Cleveland Indians.
The victory , coupled with To·
. ronto's 5-2 loss to the California
Angels. gave Detroit a one-game
lead over the second-place Blue
Jays .
.
Morris, 15-6, fann ed seven and
, walked (ive for his lOth compl e te
game of t lie season .
" Morris was wUd but he settled
down after the fourth Inning,"
Detroit Manager Sparky Anderson said. " Jack gets emot tonal
about things and tha t's the part
that drives him. I hope he doesn't
change ."
The Detroit ace, however,
was n't content with hi s outin g.
"I didn't ha ve good stu ff. and I

Quarterhorse racing highlights
Saturday Meigs fair activities

Scoreboard ...

l.t~

\· '

•

of quarter horse racing Saturday at the Meigs Fall'
M with Master Jaguar, owned by Jennings
Beegle, Racine, winning.

DOWN THE STRETCH -These are the horses
coming down the home.stretch In the third race In

·~

�Paga 4 The Daly Sentinel

.Monday~ August 24, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, AugUst 24, 1 987

Pomeroy-Middle~. Ohio

The Daily Sentinei-Page-6

.----Local briefs--

t

One winning ticket sold for jackpot
CLEVELAND iUPl) - The
Super Lotto ,player or players
holding the single ticket sold for
Saturday's drawing bearing the
numbers 6, 17, 28, 35, 39 and 42
may claim a jackpot that had
• grown to $9 million , lottery
officials said.
Total sales !or the drawing
reached $6,481,891, according to
lottery officials, who also said the

Squads receives 18 calLs
ovMe:~•

Cou~ty Emergency Medlcai tServlces reports 18 calls
e wee end , 11 calls Saturday and-seven Sunday

er

~turday at 3:20a .m., Pomeroy to NyeAve. for JeffR~Itmire
W o was treated but not transported · Pomeroy at 1· 22

m to
Health Care Center for Allee Dllley to' vtt~r~ns
i e morlai Hospital: Pomeroy at 2:14p.m. to the sheriff's office
"l~r Jack Miller to Veterans Mem .. rlal Hospital; Syracuse at
04 p.m. to the fairgrounds' race track for William Smith to
eterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 5:28p.m. to a brush lire
.( ' ~the Eugene Davis residence on Manuel Road : Bash an Fire
partment at 6:53 p.m . to a brush fire on Bas han Road·
Rutland at 7:27 p. m. to Vance Road for Michael Norris t~
Veterans Memorial Hospital: Tuppers Plains at 7•48 p m to
Township Road 313 for Jack Lynch Ia Veterans' Me,;,o~lal
Hospital, &lt;;:olumbla Township Fire q.:.partment at 7:52 p.m. to a
~~~t !Ire on Township Road 405; Middleport at 10:05 p.m. to
Tu lams St · lor Harry Stover to Holzer Medical Center:
ppers Plains at 10:05 p.m . was called for but did not transport
Larry and Paula Lifer from an auto accident on Success Road .
Sunday at 12:41 a .m., Rutland transported Anita Kathy Smith
(rom an auto accident on Corn Hollow Road to Holzer Medical
Center : Middleport a t 2: 20p.m . to Route 124 lor Carolyn Biggs
to Veterans Memorial Hospita l: Tuppers Plains at 2-29 p m to
Reedsville for William Smith to Veterans Memorlai Hospital·
·Salem Township Fire Department at 2:45p.m. to a brush flreo~
RouteJ25; Middleport a t 6:14p.m ; to Route! for James Hensley
to Veterans Memorial Hos pital: Middleport Fire Department
at at 9: 09 p.m . to a false alarm fire on Story 's Run Road ·
Pomeroy atll; 23 p.m. to East Main St. for Christi ne Pullins t~
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

~omeroy

V

I I \flo t
/lt:I J' j•l. • t,

PAIR OF GRAND CHAMPION HOGS Whaley's Auto Parts, Darwin purchased the
grand champion pair of hogs, owned by Eric
Powell, ReedsvUle, lor $2.50 per pound. Whaley' s

Middleport, for S3 1,1er pound. Plctu.r ed are Kathy
Honaker, representing Fruth Pharmacy, Melissa
Guess, owner of the hog, Pam Ash, Fair Queen
and Scoll Oberholzer, Fair King .

RESERVE CHAMPION HOG - The reserve
champion hog, owned by Melissa Guess, Tuppers
Plains, was purchased at the annual 4-H -F
livestock sale Friday night
Fruth Ph1arn~acy.

also purchased one other anbnal. Pictured are,
lefl to right, Gene Whaley of Whaley's Auto Parts,
Eric Powell, owner ol the hogs, Pam Ash, Fair
Queen and Scott Oberholzer, Fair King.

wIll be

annual Installments worth
$450,000 befor&lt;' taxes are
subtracted .
Lottery officials also sa id there
were 208 tickets sold with live of
the six numbers. Each Is worth
$1,000. Another 8.697 tickets have
four of the . numl)ers and · are
valued at $86. Wednesday's Super Lotto drawing will be lor a $3
million jackpot .

•

o:f~f•i~n~20~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;j~

POCKET ·THE SAVING·S

•

•

DURING OUR
RETIREMENT

THAT'S CLOSE ENOUGH- Melg~ County Fair Pel Show judge
Kathy Powell, seated at right, didn't need a close up view ol
Tammy Holter's pet boa constrictor to know he was the most
unusual pet In the show. The show was held Frld!IY alternoon. The
other judges were Harold and Rhea Norris. ·

•

NATIONAL WEATHER SEFJVjCE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT 8·25"1171

Racine man cited by patrol
A Racine man was cited In anaccld!'nt Sunday, at 3: 03p .m .. In
Sutton Township on Ohio 124 , at th&lt;&gt;ln tersectlo n of County Road
35. according (o the Gallla ·Meigs Post of the State Highway
Patrol.
William W. Russell , 40 , was cited for makin!( an Improper left
turn when he tried lo turn left ro County Road 351rom Ohio 124 .
In the process of making the turn he struck a ca r drivPn by
Sandra E . Codner. 3.'1, ol Porliand. as Codner was dri ving east ·
on Ohio 124 .

•

Area Deaths

US) SNOW
FRONTS:

THE RESERVE CHAMPION PAIR OF HOGS
- The reserve champion pair of hogs, owned by
Michael Hoffman, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, were purchased at the 4-H -FFA annual livestoc k sal e, by
Big Bend Foodland, Pomeroy, lor 52.40 a pound.

Pictured Jell to right, Sheila Eastman, Robert
Eastman, owner of Foodland, Don Perry,
manager. Mi chael Hollman , .owne r of the
animals, Pam Ash, Fair Queen a nd Scott
Oberholze r, Fair King.

Ohio fair attendance
down from last year
COLUMBUS, Ohio !UPl i The 1987 Ohio State Fair that
ended Sunday nlf!ht had "som ething for everyone" during its
17-day run .
Siate Fair General Manager
Jack Foust was proud as he read
a hand -wrlttrn message from a
postal card from a fairgoer.
"You are to be compli·
me nted ." the vis itor wrot e concerning the 14 hours he spe nt at
the fair early In August. The
visitor had praise for the safety- ,
conscious factors and likened the
lair to a "'10-rlng circ us",
,
" It had somrthing for f'Vf' ryo ne," wrote the v isitor from
Murra ysv ille. Pa :
Foust seemed undaunted tha t
allendance fell below that of the
prev ious &gt;·ear.
"Still no other s tate will hgve
more peopl e, " he said. "Texas
had more peopl e Ihan we did, but
their fair ru ns for 41 day·s. We
drew well over three million ."
Today"s fair attenda nce wa s
220 . 841. down 8 percent over la st
year's allen dance lor the closing
da y or the fa ir. Over al l. this
yea r 's fa ir atrendance wa s down
&gt;.7 percent last year' s
attendance.
As Foust looked back on thi s
year's fair. he also looked ahead
to next .year.
.
" l'm soproud,soexci tedaboul
that sa nd scu lpture. I just marvel
at the work, especia lly the eyes,"
he said. "lhope to haveoneevery
year. Just liket hebut tercow that
we've had for 50 years.
"Everyone wants to know what
the butter cow display's going to
be," he said. "Maybe tha t sand
sculpture can be the same way."
Activity on closing day was as
busy as it was the first part of the
fair.
Litter crews continued picking
up traSli falrgoers ~dropped and·
exhibitors groomed their livestock as though they were going to
parade them before judges a nd
the a uctloneer.
Jess King and Cou nt ry Gospel
performed In the Gospel Music
Pavilion, Russ and Becky Jeffers
filled tbe Country Muslc Pavilion ·
and Teen Dream and Night

CHAMPION RESERVE
STEER - The reserve c ham pion steer was purc hased hy
Th• Farmers. Bank and SavIngs Company, Pomeroy Tuppers Plain$ for 51.50 per
pound Friday. Piclurrd lclllo
·right, John Karschnlk. m anager of Tupper s Plains
Branc h, Bruce Ro•cd ol the
Farmers Ba nk , Ted Reed.
preside nt of the Farmers
Bank and Sav ings, Pam Ash,

Ranger pr esented · s epara te
s hows in the Grands tand .
Sandy McLa chlin , a 16-yea r·
old from Ontario. Canada, won
the Gover nor' s ln vi tat ional tournamcnt that drew some of the top
horseshoe pit c hers in the nation .
Christi Bentley, 20, Sabina.
was cho sen Ohio State Fair
quee n for the coming yea r,
be sting 22 other co mpet itors to
s ucceed Joyce Scot! of Wood
County . Bentley, a · studen t at
Ohio State Uni ve rslly majoring
in agriculture educa tion and
bro adcasting, r E'prcse.nt cd the
Ohio Pork Indu s try Council.
Foust a nd hi s staff will star t
brainslorming soon fo r ideas for
next year's expos ition .
"I hopl' to co ntinue to stress
agriculture," he sa id . " Th a t's
lhe main reason we're here. We
don't dare lose s ight of that. "
There'll be some improve·
ments to the g rounds. particu ·
Jarly in Ihe e lec trical system.
" wha t peopl e don't see," he said.
"As we increase our electrica l
nE'€'d s, It becomes apparent our
sys tem needs upgraded, " he said
of the$600,000 projeclthat will be
co mpleted by . the time next
year's fair ro lls around .
"We're always looking for
so mething new," he said. "We
don ' t want people to say 'It's the
same old thi ng', We want new
things, things to create interest.
' Til get together with the s taff
and we' ll toss around ideaswhat worked, ,w hat didn't," he
s aid.
Foust hopes to have a pretty
good Idea of what's In store for
visitors for 1988 by the e nd of the
ye~r .

"We get le tt ers starting January first from people wanting to
know what's going on so they can
plan their vacations." he sa id.

Scoll Oberholzo•r, and •leer owner l..ee Ann Robinson.

Delicious Dishes!
Enjoy the very .flnest In home ttyle
cooking at the very best prices around I
M~NDAY

•

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MIDDLEPORT, OH.

992-2196

·.

WEDNESDAY

COMPLETE MUFFLER AND
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•

Pork Chops &amp; Dress•ng ......... ,~ .... .. 5349
~:~~s~~vRoast .............................. S349
FR!DAY •
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Fr1ed Ch1cken ................................
·

SO
Beans &amp; Corn Bread ..................... $1
SATURDAY

ADVERTISEMENT

H&amp;R Block To Offer
Tax School In Pomeroy

Ida F: . Young .
of Salem St..
Rutl;tnd . dl&lt;'d early Sunday
m or ning a t V('l&lt;'rans Me morial
Hosplral ufl &lt;'r· an f'x tf'ndcd
Ill ne&lt;s.
A hou"•wl!c , s hr " 'as born In
Meigs Coum ,v to tht' late Thomas
1\llo and Mllda Jan e Hudnall
Gil key.
Sur\·1vors lnrludf' hf'r hus band .
Will ia m A. Young of Rutl a nd :
'"'O d au~ htrr s. Ev&lt;'lyn Wlblln ol
Pagf'vl ll &lt;' a nd Ellen Thoma o(
Rutland ; onr so n. D~rrell Young
o l Sh ad ~: 10 gra ndc hildren ; 11
!(rent wnndchlldrrn: two brot hers . Paul Gl lkev of Lancaster
a nd Ga rold Ollkev of Ath e ns ; two
hall-brothers. K;· rmlt Gllkrv of
S ha de and F rankli n Gllk r\· of
Malta : and one stcp-slst(' r, Mar·
tha Va rner of Dun can Falls .
Besides hi s parents, hro was
prrcrd('(l ln dPa lh by lwu s lst t•rs,
two brothcrs a nd o n&lt;' half·
brother .
Sen·Jrc·s will fxo I p, m. Wt:'&lt;lncs·
dav at Blgony- .J ordan Funera l
Home. Al b,.n y. with Rev. RobNI
Mu ssm tm offlda tin!! . Burial will
Jxo In Burlingham C&lt;'mf'tt&gt;rv .
Frie nds ma y ca ll a t the funeral
homt• from 2 to~ a nd ito !) p.'m.
Tursd;'·' ··

ceive. actual experienCE" In pre-

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application, as practiced In
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are programmed to teach students Increasingly complex tax
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Students will find the course both
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Courses are Ideally suited for
peopl-: who want to Increase

1he tr tax Kn owledge and learn
how to savp money on taxes or
who are looki ng for a rewarding
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Qua lified course graduates
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text books , supplies and tax
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Registration forms and a br~­
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may be obtained by contacting
H&amp;R Bloc~ at Pomeroy, OHio,
618 E. Main St. , 45769-614-9923795.
.

HOUIS: MON. thru SAT. 6:30 A.M.-8:00 P.M.
992-7833
MIDDLIPOIT

WILLIAMS DINER

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Tlten yo u need a Peopl~ .• Bank VISA ur

MAST£RCARD .
)u .! t ltaving t.lt'af. "pi ece of pla.&lt;ti&lt;·" cqn l(it 'l ' .vou grt•atl'r
pf•ace of mind - e1;en if it ne1;er lea ve .~ yo ur poc~~f?l .
To receive your appli cation, 1:a/l Randv Van!Wel&lt;&gt;r ur
Mark Grove.&lt; or 675-1121 .

PEOPLES

BANK~
''The letter Bonk"

lEI. . F.D.f.C.

Slcallll Stnlt
....... ¥1.
713-5514

.........

Poilt F1 nnL W. Vtt.

-·
'

171-1121

Sill Awnlli
New HMII, W. Va.
112-2131

and

.James Eul(r.n&lt;' Neville . 4~ . of
Okm ul~f'c. Okla ,. forme rly of
RaCine , d ied Sunday Aug . Hi In a
Tul sa hospital "following an &lt;'X ·
IPndC'd llln('ss .
Born April 10. 1~:11( In Raci n&lt;'.
Mr. Nt•vllle was a son of Naomi ·
Neville or R;tclne. and the late
E u ~&lt;'n&lt;' N&lt;'\' llle. He t'ctlred from
the U.S. Air Fore&lt;' with 11 vcars
of spn·ic(' 'and was (J vctcr:an or
the Vietnam War. He operated an
au to restoration s hop at hi s homf'
and ha d bel'n c hairman ol the
C rN'k Capital Str('('l Rod Club
Swap MPet.
).•
In addition to he mother. he Is
s urvived by his wlfr , Ella Louise
Nev ill&lt;'. Okmulg!'l': thre!' sons.
Jaml'S and Da,·id NPvllle. both of
New Mexico. and Samuel Neville
of Okmulgf'C; three daughH&gt;rs .
Anna Marie T&lt;'rlault of Wa s hington
Teresa Cross and Eva ·
Hill. both of Irving, Texas; 11
gra ndchlldt'en; one bro ther ,
Alan N!.'ville of Columbus: four
s is ters, ,Janet Warner of Raclnr;
.Joan Rober ts. of Gallipolis:
Donna Fiske and Lena Lashbrook. both of Columbu s: and
sev&lt;'rai ni!.'C&lt;'s and nephews .
Besides his lather, he was
prcceded In dea th by an Infant
brother.
Cremation was handled by
Cantreii -Kelley Funeral Home In
Okmulg!'l'.

D.c..

Thousand s of pecple are learn·
ing the skill of incom&lt;' tax pre·
, paration from H&amp;R Block and
are earning money as In come
tax preparrrs.
H&amp;R Block. the world 's largest
In come tax prepa ratlon service
Is offering a basic ,Income tax
course starting September 8th
with morning, afternoon and
evening classes avatlable.
During the 13-week
' course, stu . dents will study all phases of In·
come tax preparation and re-

Alban~·

Kin A of

Jamt&gt;M Nt"\'illt•

..

ADVERTISEMENT

.Jack E . Kin~ Sr., ~1. of New
urna Road. Rutland . dl!'d Sun·
day at liol z('r Medical ('('nt ('r.
A former truck drl vrr for
llulllond Bottle Gas Co., h&lt;' was
born &amp;&gt; pt. R. l!ll ~ In Meig s County
to th lair Edw:Jrd and Frances
l·: llls King.
Survivors lncl ud&lt;• hi s wilt'.
Joa n Hudn a ll King, New l.lm a
J(oad : lour c hlld rPn. ,Jack Kin)(
Jr ... Jrff King , J e nny Klnj! and
Ju lif' King ,. all a t home ; live
broth&lt;•r$. Fra nklin . Char lt•s and
Edward King. all or Pomer oy.
William King of The Plains: a
hall ·s lstrr , Leota Norris of
Akron ; .iwo aunt s. Ruth Lowrf'y
of Marion and Bt•th F:lll' of
P o m£'roy ; a nd two u ~c l !'s . C u&gt;·
f. ills ot Marlon itnCI Charlt's Ell!'
of Pom crov .
llfosldPs · his parrnt s, h&lt;' was
prrcrded in deat h by " half
s ls tN. F'reda Coc h.
Servk'&lt;'' will b&lt;' \Wdnr,(la y, t
p.m .. a t Ewing Fun(·ral HomP ,
w ith Rl'''· .J ohn !':vans official ·
lng . nurla l will b&lt;' In Rl ~gs
Cemrt&lt;'ry. F'rie~d s may ca ll at
rhe f un er al homr• from 71o ~) p.f(l .
tonlg ht t Mondu yt. a ndfro m2to4
a nd ? to 9 p.m. Tuf'Sday. In lieu of
fl owprS. friPnds rna )' makC' pc' r·
sonal donut ions 10 the famil y.

Meatloaf ....................................... . 5349

At Pat Hill Ford

Ida Young

WaU ('r

TUESDAY

PAT'S
·MUFFLER SHOP

Ja..k King

.·',,
....'
·'.•

.
....,.
,.
I'

. .'

n.

Protest decisions
ELYRIA, Ohio t UPll"- About
l .UOO members of the United Auto
Workers union Saturda y pro·
tested Genera l Motors Corp .'s
dl.'&lt;"lslon to close Its Flshrr Guldl'
plant In Lorain .
Th&lt;' Jli'Otes tc rs marched from
the Local iRO UAW union hall in
F: lyrl a to' lht• c&lt;'nter of town.
ThNe. onlookers and m archers
heard pl&lt;'as by community lead ·
&lt;'rs and politicla ns forGM to keep
rhe plant open .
Warren Davis. a UAW regional
director for northeastern Ohio,
accused GM of being Insensitive .
saying the giant automaker
praised Fisher Guide as a viable
production plant just seven
months ago.
GM announced It will the plant.
pulling 2.100 people out of work.
afler a Milwaukee company
backed out of a deal to buy the
factory earlier thi s monlii.

Hospital news
V&lt;•lerans Memorial
Saturday Admissions - Allee
Dilley, Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges -Buddy
Kuhn, Anna Koenig.
Sunday Admissions - Roy
Howell , Pomeroy; Caro lyn
Biggs, Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges - Rosie
Searls.

11 Warm

m

•

-RAIN
SHOWERS
"Cold
. . Stalic
Occl~ded

ft

WEATHER MAP - For Tuesday morning, showers and
thunderstorms are lorectL•t lor parts oil he southern Plains with
rain and thunderstorms In parts of th~ northern Plains, the central
Plains, the central and upper Mlssl•slppl VaiiJ!y and parts of the
Ohio Valley. Showtlrs and thunderstorms are possible In most ol
th~ Plains stales and parts ol the south Atlantic Coast. (UP I)

------Weather·-----· South C&lt;'nlral Ohio
Sunny today. with hll'(h s be·
tw e-e n 75 and 80. Becomi ng partl y
cloudy lonlght, with a low In thr
mid ~ - Rain likel y Tuesday.
with hig hs between 75 and 80.
Thc probabllit~· of pr!.'Cipila ·
tlon Is ncar ?.era today. :10 prrcent
tonight arid 60 perc!'nt 1'ursday.
Winds wil l be from I he nort hw-

OFF
STOREWIDE
AFTER 38 YEARS WE ARE RETIRING
AND SElliNG OUT/
Sale Starts Monday, August 24th

•

est near 10 mph today and light
and variable tonigh t.
Ohio Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Frldl!Y
Scattered showers Wednesday
a nd Thursday. with fair weather
Friday. High s will range from 75
to ~5 each day , with overnight
lows b&lt;'twecn !i5 and 65.

Daily stock pri&lt;'es
(As ol 10:30 a.m. l
Provided hy
Bryct• and Mark Smll h
of BRhint Ellis &amp; Loewl

We're always by your side.

Firm
Prlc~
Am E IPc lrle Pow!'r ... . ......... 27%
AT&amp;T ............................ ..... :14tt,
As hland Oil ............. ........... 70 '"
Bob Evans Farms ....... .. ... .. 2W,
Charming Shoppes .... ..............l2
Fedcral Mogul. ...... ......... ... F ·l!t
Good&gt;·ear T&amp;R .................. .7.11)1
Hrck's lnc ....... ................... . 4\11
Limited Inc ....... .. .............. 48
Multimedia Inc .......... .. .. ... .. !i8';:j

...•

.

Every hour of the day,
electricity helps make life
so much better.
Electricity is the security
of a night light, the con·
venience of a microwave,
the ease of a power drill.
It's the twang of country music, the beat of
rock and roll, a late
night movie and the
early morning ·news.
Our job is to make
sure electricity is
there each time
you flip the switch,
push a button, or
turn the dial.
'IWenty-four hours a day, every day of
year.
And, you can always call us for valuable free information on choosing efficient electric heating and cooling systems,
electrical safety, and our equal payment plan.
. Electricity ... making sure you
can get the most out of life.

Rax RPsl clUrant s .... .... .. ........ 4 7 H

Robbins &amp; Mvcrs.. .. ...... ...... lO Y.
Shoni-:v· s Inc .·........ ...... .... .... :n 'Y.
Wrndy 's Inti. ........................ 11
Worthinf!IOn lnd .. .. .............. 25Y,

l..ottery numlw."'
CLF:VE LA ND (UPI! Saturdav' s winning Ohio Lottery
numbers with ticket sales and
payouts:
Dally Number
436.
Ticket sa les totaled $1 ,457.:154
with a payoff due of $582,891.
PICK -~

%05.
PiCK-4 ticke t sales ·totaled
$202.3995(). with a payoff dul' of
$~1.?:12.

P1CK ·4 $1 straight bet pays
$9,004. PICK-4 $1 box bet pays
$:!96.
Super Lotto
6, 17, 28, 35, 39 and 42.
Super Lotto t lcket sales totaled
$6,481.8!11.

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

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

Ohio Power

Part.of American Electric Power
.,.

I•

c• '

'.
I ·'

l

,J

�.

.

.·

·-

The Daily

Ohio

The ·Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Business Services

Showman of showmen

Kitten• to Cat Lov••·

·iii::

Free kittens to anyone aNing
them 1 good home. Call 814-

~ licensed .Clinical Aooiol ~ist

446·1630

c LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

the Showman of Showmen.

The winner was Aaron Sheets ,
son of Jim and Jenn!ler Sheets ,
Cotterill Road , Harrisonville,
who won in !he beef breeding
showmans hip to ,be eligible to
compere.
.
Runner· up was Ja yne Rllchle,
daughter of Elton and · Joyce
Ritchie, Tuppers Plains, a
member of the Meigs Coun ty
Beef Club. She won the right to
compete wllh her steer.

z

.

.

- (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
tin

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
CENTEI

CONIIMIQ -011 SYSTIMS
Ul'letdr Sr.
Middteporr, Ott. 4S760

c
•M•
s

PARTS - SEIVICE

Recording and Control In struments tor Home and
Commercial use. Monitors
t o display Furnace and Air
Cond. Hours or Min . of operating time. Valuable ' Data
that allows Daily GoalltD be
set .. Completely eli.,,nales
the end of the month Bill surprise.
( , F. Scott, MQr.; R. Crememn field

HRS: 12:00-6 :00
Monday- Saturday
CLOSED SUNDAY

•
.. .

H,Il~l~

Ph. 949-2969

·i..t IG.S

t:)U tiTY I~\;;.

BUY - SELL - TRADE
: 8 -7-1 mo.

Sa ..s Mgr .. Plu1 assotiottt:
Information and lrochwre

BOY WINNERS - Chad David Hubbard, at
left, Little Mr. Meigs County, present ed awards to
.. the winners in Saturday's Pretty Baby Contest at
' the Meigs County Fair. Boy winners in their
respective categories were, seated left to right,
Willie Victor Zahran, Pomeroy, with his mother ,
Janice Zahran, 0 to 3 mo. category; Ashton Well,
Chester, with · mother Linda Well , 3 to 6 mo.;
Adam Wolle, Chester, with· mother 1\tary

mo.; Heather EUeeQ Hood, Pomeroy, held by mother Rachel
Hood, 12 to i8 mo.; and Bethany Amberger of Racine, held by
mother Becky Amberger, 18m(\. to two years. Standing in back are
Jeri Michelle HUI of Racine, held by mother Bobbl HUI, two to three
years; Amanda Felty of Pomeroy, held by mother Janice Fetty,
three to lour years; ·and Jenny Long of Pomeroy, held by mother
Vicki Long, four to fiv e years.

Dempsey, 6 to 12 mo.; Curtis Jewell, Pomeroy,
with mother 1\tary Jewell, 12 to IS mo .; and Steven
AUen Dillon, Reedsville, with mother Tammy
Dillon. 18 mo. to 2 years. Standing in back are
Co rey Woods, Pomeroy, with mother Ailsha
Woods, two to three years; ,Joshua Bass, De•ter,
with father ,John Ba.'iS , three to four years; and
Christopher Smith, Pomeroy, with mother Connie
Smith, four to five years.

pull winners named

evening posed with Master Jaguar winner of th e
third race when it was presented a trophy.bianket
from R. &amp; G. Feed and Supply. The horse is owned
hy Jennings Beegle, Racine .

..

'

..

·

, FIRsT CONTESSTANT
CuUums of
Hemlock Grove was the first man to the log In
Saturday afternoon's chainsaw contest at the

Meigs County Fair with a time of 19.74 seconds.

Wolfe Pen
area notes
Mr. a nd Mrs. Tom Summ er·
field and Cryslai of Medi na, Mr.
and Mrs. Ronald Russell, Mandy
and Micha el of Racine, Mr. and
Mrs. Steve Haggy, Srephanl e and
Brad, and Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Russell local were weekend
vlsllors of Mr. and Mrs. Rober!
RusselL
Mr. and ,Mrs. Richard Wynn.
Weston and Matthew of Minn.
spent a week with her parents
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Thoma .
Julie Stevens of Fairfax, Va. ,
and her sister Ru th of Nebraska
were Saturday morning .vlsitors
of Iva Johnson and Mr. and Mrs.

~Cih;es;t;er;,;;al;;so;;a;~~~~~~s~~~C~h~a~r~le~y~S~m~ll~h~.~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;~

J .B. Ridenour
of I ,
seated
on the log.

Fairgoers saw a gcx:xi contest
Sawdust flew Saturday alternoon as residents armed with
chain saws vied for lop honors in
,,he annual sawing contt&gt;st at the
Meigs County Fair.
· The top two winners, respec·
lively, In !he various classes of
the stock chain saw contesr
were: 0·2 . - John Ridenour,
Chester; Terry Cullums, Hem·
lock Grove; 2.1·3.5, John Riden·
our, Lowell Ridenour, Chester;
4.6-5.1 - Brian Morrison, Ches·
ter; John Ridenour; 5.6 and up-

Grand cha mpions in Ihe weck ·
long kiddie tractor pull were
s&lt;'iected Saturday in lhe show
ring of the Meigs Count y Fair.
Dally c hamp ions me t ar the
show ring for Salurda y's puii ·off
a nd emergency as grand cham·
pion in Ihe 351o 55 pound division
was Jason Frecker of Pomeroy,
and Michael Smilh, Chesler. was
na med gra nd champion in the 56
to 75 pound compeliton . The
gra nd champions received rro·
phies, money and or her prizes.

Terry Cuiiums, Ed Werry, Hemlock Grove:
Winners first and second respectively, In lhe stock Stlhl
category.were J .B. Ridenour and
John L. Ridenour.
Firs ( and second place
winners, respectively, In the
modified chai n saw compelitlon
were: 0-5. John Ridenour, Terry
Collums; 5.1 and up, John
Ridenour and J, B. Ridenour;
unlimited modified, John Riden·
our and Terty Cullums.

I

TUESDA~

MIGHT SPECIAL

ALL THE KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN
YOU CAN EAT

COMBINATION DINNER ONLY

(Dining Room Onlr)
Served with whippeapotatoes, chiCken cravy, cole
slaw, hot roll. butter and coffee. Sorry, no su bs ti tutes except bevm&amp;e witll additional price.

FOR JUST

$3.25

NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE DINNER ROLLS

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

PH. 992-5432

POMIIOY, OH.

Frle4 Chkken

Pictured in front, holding the iamb Jennifer
Taylor, owner; standing left to right, Scott
Oberholzer, Fair King, !\terrill and Charla Evans
of River City Supply and Pam 1\sh, Fair Queen.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

t6141992· 3111ol992· l150
Middteport-Athtm-Porhmouth
1. \IJ. \mo. pd.

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

DENNY CONGO

"AI Reasonable Prim"

Will HAUL
JUST CAll!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL · SAN-D
TOP SOIL
Fill DIRT

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
NO SUNDAY CAllS

10 IUU AN At CAU. "2·11S6

.,..lT "-"• r•n I U . It S P...
• ..... Ultth ~ 5Aiuto.i.'l'

----. ·-----.......

-~·

nouo ~DAT

·-------;-----..·--- --····--- . -·-···
-::ra.t

c_ ... --~-- .. - .
.·-~---...........
·.... ·--·
.... ~ -............. . .·~' ':::;:...~;-·--- · ,

. ..

,...,,.

... ....

I U ..

.. .

,. .,..,

___ ....

, _, •

on•

•u .

....

... . .

me

....

.., .

._·-·~-------j

CalendarI happenings
MONDAY
POME ROY - Special meeting
of rhe Meigs Local School Dis·
!riel Board or Educalion will IX'
held at 9:30a. m. Monda y al the
ce nt ral office in Middleport to
discuss person nel and consider
a ny ot her business which ma y .
lawfull y co me befQre I he bOard .
POM E ROY
The Meigs
Count y Board of Elec tions will
meet at In sp!'Cial session at 4
p.m. Mond ay 10 ce rtify IM
validit y of P&lt;' til lons· fllt'CI lor the
Nov. 3 general lcc tion .
RACINE - So~l he rn Local
School Board will mcel in regu lar
session Monda y nig ht , 6::10 p.m.,
at the high school.
SYRACUSE- A free commun·
ity skin testing clinic will be held
Monday evening from 4:30 to 6::10
p.m . al the Syracuse Muni cipa l
Building. The resting will be done
by Joan Tew ksbary,R N. A blood ·

prcssurr cli nic will be held
duri ng I he sa me hours.
RUTLAND- An open meeting'
or lhr Ru tland Garden Club will
!)(' held Mond ay at 7::10 p.m .. a t
thC' Rutl and Ml•t hodlsr Church.
Mrs. Joe Bolin, pres idnet or thr
Ohio Associalion of Garden
Clubs. will make fl ower· arra ngemt'nt s. A mect lng ot 1he host clu b
wlli be held lmmedlalcly follow·
ing the op n meeti ng,
TUF..SDA\'
POM EROY - M ~igs County
Liner Conlrol Advisor&gt;' Board
will meet Tu esda y, 7:30 p, m .. at
rhc agriculture c•tc nslon ollice
on Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy.

.

=---=--

_&lt;!_..
-"'··......

Help Wanted

: :t.:t:...-z-

,, _

"

_ .. 11_

,._,,.

..._.._.,,
.......
:::c..'":.':t':."

..,.

n-•-"'_,.,

,., -·. ~·· ·­

,. ~ _,_,_

,_

~=t==~~=:.-

_

~·~-.,..~

Public Notica

Public Notice

PlJ8LJC NOTICE

ing
Jimmy J ae Wedge •.
2513 Jackson A\!e.. Pt.
Pleasant. W . .Va ., 304 -675 2722 . Bids must be Jubmi1 ·

be cohitructed on At. 36,
two miles from Point Plea·
,.nt. W . \Ia . Bid documents
can be obtained by contact•

181 24, 1tc

,..,t.

2. Away 5 "'lh!S per week (home
onds only}
A"rllt $11.000.00 to 's2l.OOO.OO the first yur, COIIPHIIIV£
SALARY plus comm iss•on. Expen se allowantt tor your ear and
IIIOttl, With tOfDOUII btntfiiS. 40 hour WOf~ Wit[
If you are:
I Pre.F!t over 72 jor respons i blt~ )
2. H11h scnooll'&gt;duatt with tour yurs
lull trmt work (uiH) "perlenco
3. Clr rer Mindedl&amp;ood Communiutor
Rt1ail, Jtwtlrw. cosmet ics. telephone nles or mlrket lnJ/ttlth·
ina back1r ou nd helpful. and fiomemHers now rreelo travel.
for perlon•l !nltrVItllf call John C. Ha ll's otfic:e lOll FlEE a1 I ·
lfl0.12l· IIB4 01 I 100·762-590). tlond&gt;Y lhrOUJh lhursdl1.
bttwfOn 1:00 1.m. to 7:00p.m. ONLY! Outsidt ol Ohro &lt;Ill i-SQ0~3· 5940, Pttast &lt;Ill on or before Thundly . Aucust 27th.
·
E0 f

MIF

•

US lOeSS

1987. Performance bonds
required.

BOGGS

.SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
A ;rulln: d•~:onllq

Authorind. Jolin 001re,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment

njNrl"q~;" ,

Now $ooking Home
Parties

KAREN FAC£MYER

Dealer .

Farm E,ui.mut
Path &amp; Set~lea

39 504 lradburl Rd.
Oh. 57 60

Midr~loparl,

I -3-'86 tfc

SYRACUSE - Remodeled 2 sto&lt;y horn e, 3·4 bedrooms. I\\
baths, basement, garage and old barn on ap pt oX~ma tel) I
acre ol ground. PRICED TO SEll AT $39.900.00,

- RUSTIC HILL- Ntce ranch

w~h

colontal

uur•c n:... rr« hvm g room w/ fireplace, 3 bedrooms, I I,) cat

central ai r and a large lol. $39.900.00.
POMEROY - NICe l 'h story home overlookmg the beaul&lt;ful
Ohro River. 3 bedrooms, fu ll basement, equ tpped kttchen, 2
car garage, cetling tan are olher added features with thts
home. Also. woodburner ,ftreplace, work shop rn basement.
eaHn ktlchen, patio, Iron! porch with a vew. $29,900.00.
MIDDLEPORT - La~ ge lot, equipped kitch en, basement,
ga rage. 3 bedrooms, Alee Iron! sttting po~ch, wa sher &amp; dryer,
to~l
s o has hookups lor tratlet, A/ Cun&lt;l s, ftrepiace, alutll&lt;·
num 'd'ng. This one you must see. $44,900.00.
POMERO -Just out ol town - Over 13 acre; olland, great
buildmg sties, hou se needs repairs. PRICE REDUCED.
$9,200.00

FENCE COMPANY

BUY OR SELL
Riverine Antiques

Let Us FaRce You In

1124 East Main St.
Pomeroy

RES IOENT IAL / CO MM ERCIAL

HOURS, Tut.·Wtd..Fri.
11 a.m. lo 7 p.m.

lundoy' 1 p.m.·1 p.m.
ly Chanu ar Appointment

RUSS MOORE

992-2526

FREE ESTIMATES

PH. 742-2027

-~mOo~
&lt;'~
11'
' . ,&lt;1u ,l1
~ ,1&lt;1.

"

~J

i-1 t0 I .' .

1·24-87·1 mo.

If you have questions - call French Art C.olony
446-3834 or Earl J'ope 446-0332. · .

AUTO &amp;TRUCK

REPAIR

Alto Traumlcsion
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

'6·l7·1fc

New Homes luilt

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION

PH. 949-2860

or 949·2801
No Sunday Calls
J.ii·tln

v.w.

PARTS

NEW AND USED
WIDE
SELECTION
ALL MAKES AND

MODELS
CA.LL 742·2315

8·1J.I mo.- pd.

MO~ULAR

HOME!
Carter French
.Residence
Corner of Fourth
and Palmer.
Middleport

Must see to appreciate .

CALL

614·992·3293
7·21 ·1 mo. d.

YOUNG'S

ICUT OUT FOR FUTURE US(I

985-3561

FREE ESTIMATES

- Concr'ete work
a'nd •lectrieel
work

- ~lumbing

992·6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

-

lUI Makes
•Washers •Di1hweshers

Howard L Writ111l ·

, •Ranges

ROOFING

•Refrigerators

•Dryers •Freezers

4· i5.' 86·1C

.Market,..;,No•l,,,.,f oatthe

111 the

.

..

Call

Hoael•e

Clelud Tu111l" .,

HENRY E. CLELAND, JR ......................... 992-6191

JEAN TRUSSELL ....................................949-2660
DOniE TURNER ................................. .,,992-5692

· TRACY Rl FFLE .....................................,.949-3080

OFFICE ......... :................., ......... ............ 992·2259

J&amp;L ..
INSULATION
HEATING &amp;
COOLING
•FURNACES
•AIR CONDITIONERS
•HEAT PUMPS
"FRU UTIMAT£5"

PH. 992-2772

· 8·4-1 mo. d.

NEW ....;. REPAIR

4·5·11c

Gutters
Downspouts
Guttar Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

OPEN FOR BUSINESS

324 E. Main St.

Pomeroy

Behind City Hall

ANN'S
Gift Shop &amp; Toy Store
Collectors Items.
Costume Jewelry,
Act ion Toys, Musical
Toys &amp;Trinket Boxes
Open 10 A .M . to 4 P.M .

949-2263
or 949-2168

Mon. thru Fri . or by
Appointment
Call(6 t 41 992· 7204
Wholesale &amp; Retail
8- 10-1 mo. pd.

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

4·22-87-tfn

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING
•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Window s

MARCUM
CONTRACTING

•Replacement Windows
•NeW Roofing

CMISTEI, OHIO

"FR£1 ESTIMATES"

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING •GENERAL
REMODELING &amp;
REPAIRS
REFERENCES

Phon•

Dar

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

).]1).'87-1 mo.

or h•ni•

985-4141

GEIIIIAL COIITUCTDIS

J.21H mo.

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
New location:
168 North Serond
Middleport, Ohio 4576~

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Carry Fishing Supplies

Pay Your

Phone Bills Here
IUSINESS PHONE
16141 992.USO
IISilENU PHONE
1614) 992-7754

25 Yoars
FRIE ESTIMA TfS
U., .001·111• '"""

PUll!( I"VITID.

INSULATION
992-2772

CALl

J.R.'s REPAIRS
TYs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation
Electronic Organs

WINDOWS

Mobile seivice

8+1 mo. pd.

' Service

Lost and Found

LOST - Bunch Oi keya at' Pott
Office In Point Pleasant. Plea~e
call 304-676-2'369 or 6757436 .

7

Yard Sala

.......Gamjjolls......... .
&amp; Vicinity
Friday, Saturday, 9· 4 . Corn11r
First &amp; Pine. Misc. household
and handyman items : gas heat·
ers, mentels, grate. trunk. can·
nlng jars. 1tonew1re jugs. CIIY
flower pots, carpeting, lighl
fixtures, kindling ,_ log splitter,
exhaust fan, ETC ., ETC.

4

Giveaway

• IEIIAIIE
8-20-'IIG tfn

5 Mixed breed puppl... Call

814. 448·3797.

For

more

imformation.

Call

614· 367-71&amp;9· Colloel 9 AM . &amp;PM . No in-..estment required.
LPN 'S WANTED : Be pert of '
growing oompany wh:h good
benefits. Need Immediate full·
tim.. LPN 1 1 PM · 7 AM . A.lso
hiring for LPN call In poaitkln1.
Contact Ohio Job Service. 614·

446· 1683.
Woman to ttay with widow.aM
INe· in with pay. Call 814-.WS}
1414 Dl' 446-1023.
~·

should include at l...t_two Yllrt
e.11perlence in substance abuse
field, some adminiltraiNe exp•
rience. and in proc"' ·of centffi
c1tion. Send letter and rMUmf
by September 30. ta Personnlj
Comminee. New Alternaliv...
287 Pearl Slreet. Jadl;aon , Ohle
46840 E._O .E.
Excellent Income for part tin11e
home aasembly work. For info.
GOvernment Jobs . t1$.040 •
$69.230 · y8ar . Now hiring. C. .

1· 805·887-6000 Ext. A · 98~
.:

for current feder.. list

Friendly Home Partin h .. open-

ings for managers and deal•s1n
&lt;tOut area. largest line in party,
plan, free kit, brand new christmas cat1log, toy. gift, ilnd home
deeor catalog. Over 800 itern li:'

Public Sala
&amp; Auction

Top comml•alon and ha11esj
gihs. Call for free c::atalog.
1· 800·227-1510 or call collect
0-61 8-462· 0091 .

Rick Pearson Auctioneer li·
canted in Ohio and West Virgi·
nia. Estate. antique. farm. liqu._
da1ion sales, 304· 773 -6785.

Needed; Dental Hvgent'-t for •
people oriented high quality
dental office. Send complete
resume to Daily Sentinel Box

8

Auctioneer Col. Oscar E Click,
license# 754 -88 . Cal1304-896·
3430 .

9

Wanted To

~uy

We pay cash fof late model clean
used cars.
Jim Mink Chev.-Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson
614-446-3672

729-K Pomeroy, Ohio.
8 career minded people
orlemed parson to work in a high
quality dental office. The perfec:t~
job for lhe right person. Pte. . send complete resume to Dailt'
Sentinel Bolt ·729-K. Pomerot

We need

~

Ohio.

twO

Need bllbySitter. One or
d..,.s 8 week. Two hours a d.y,
mornings. Referenc... t10. per
day . Danville 614-742-2162. '•.

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and newer used cera . Smith
Buick·Pentlac. 1911 Eastern
Ave .• Gallipolis. Call 614- 446-

Wanted; Seamstress ta aaw· f(!lr
lady living in Pomeroy. Catl
614-992-2021 .
.•

2282 .

AVON · All areas. Call Marilyn
Weaver 304-882- 2646 .

Buying daily gold. silver coins.
ring1, jewelry, sterling ware, old
.coins. large currency. Top pricas. Ed Burkett Barber Sttop,
2nd, Ave. Middleport. Oh. 614-

R.N . applications now being
.:ceptad tor full time positlon"Pieaent Valley Nursing Carp
Center, appty pertonnel offiCII
Pleasant Valley Hosp. 304-676.

992·34?6.

4340. AA·EOE .

Wanted to buy, standing timber.
Call AI Tromm at 814· 742 ·
2328 .
QUILTS

Antique-Pre 1940's. Call Marc.

Wanted Ia buy; scrap steal and
metals. Riders Salvage 61 4 ·
992·5~68 .

Left Handed Re-Curve Bow. Call
30•· 675-68•4 after 4 p.m .

Something New
Under The Sun!
Repa needed for Business Accounts. pan timlt. $18.000
potential; · full time, J;60.000
plus potenlial . Work own hours.
training provided . Call' 1 -812·
938-0019 M·f . 8 a .m. · 6 p.m .
tC .S .T.)
.
•
WANTED EXPERIENCED
Pilots and Dedthands for ful·
ltime employm'"t on Mononu•
hela and upp• Ohio RNer1.
412 -483 -6667.

AIRLINE JOB's AVAILABLE
NOW! Earn up to t60,000 .
Mechanics, flight attendants.
custemer satVice. 1- 316-7336062 , e~tl. A573, for
information/ listings.

E1111Jioymenl

Servtces

Babysitter wanted in walking
distance from Central SchQ.ol
immediately, 30•· 675· 7888.

1 1 Halp Wanted
JOB PLACEMENT' H;gh school
r•groao, let: us .help you ·dlscover
that fits you best. We
place people in over 70 career
fields . Jobtare full time perman·
ent po1itions wrth solid benefits.
Applicants between 17. 30 years
Old will be conaidered. Na Fee
Involved. Call toll free 1 · 800·
282- 1384, Monday - Thursdliy,
9im- 2pm.
Baby sitter needed In my home
for 13 month old 2 -4 days per
week. Plea•e mail ref . and phone
numt.er lo ; Rt.4 Box 147,
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631 .
Would you stuff enveloped for
1.000 waekly7 S2 for enveloplll!ll
you stuff. Simple, pleasant werk
at hamel Send self-addressed
enveloped tp HT-ENT- Dept.
ACT. P.O.Box; 7364. Hunling·
ton W .Va. 25776 ..

Babyshter in my home. two
children. Monday through Fri·
day, 8 lo 6. References required.

304· 675· 5895.

12

Situations
Wanted

Will do babysitting for infants to
two years old. Call Q14-9492290.
We provide cBrfl for .elderly and
disabled. Nunes aides are certified . bonded, insured and co·
vered with Worker• Comp . An1·
bulatory ar eonfinecl. 24 ho~r
care. overnight and live-in. P.M.
Home Heltlth Agency, IJ1•· 9t22667, 614· 992·2326 or 814992·7044,

15

Schools
Instruction

" Hiritlgl Government jobs· your
..-ea. S16,DOO· t68,000. Call
602-838·8886. Ext. 606" .
REPS NEEDED fer busineu
IICCOunts. Full-time, 860,000·
$80,000, ·Psrt ·time, s 1 2.000s 18.000. No seliing, repeat
business. Set your own houra.
Training provided . Call 1-612·
938 ·8870, M -F, 8am-6pm
(Centra' standard time)
AVON - Sell Avon for Christmas.
Make40 percent . Call614-446·

Income T~~.~t Cl111es begin Sept.
7. 1987. Here il an opportUnity
to become a pan of the fattest
growing incom• tax firm in the
area. Career-oriented p11rsons
contact DanTa•. Inc. Mon. or
Tues. 10 AM - 4 PM . Phone

446-8178 .
~

8 Wanted to Do

3358 .
SALES REPRESENTATIVE' Wo
are looking for a resPectable
hard working indlviduilll for new
end used
The right
p•aon should al.a be a self·
starter with th• potential to
h..,dle man~geial respontibili·
ties. BusinHI education and
a11.p•lence 1 plus. E11.cellent pay
plan with commis.Km and be·
nefitl. Send r"ume to: Smith
Buick·Pontiac, P.O .Box 807,
Gslllpotis. Ohio 45631 .

c.,

••1•.

McDonald's of Gallipolis is
tooking tor 1 few good workers
willing to work earty shifts end
weekends. Step in and pick up
an application.

Eltper. body m•n needed in
Vinton area. 6 yre. or mora
exper. Tools required , Inquire at
6 t "'388-16 !&amp;.
Beautician

Wlnted

for

New

614 ~ 388·

diploma or equtv1lency; good
communieatlon tkillt; accurKY
'whh figur"; be cMpendeble.
organl:ud. and retponJible.

Reduce ufe ind fut with
GoBete Tablet•. and E-Vap
" water pillt", Fruth Ph•mscy.

expll"ience needed. S.t your

Call312-741 -8400 ext. 313. :

3 Allnouncef!lents
'

Sal• Repr..entatNe nMdN for
R &amp; J Whot ...le Co. No

PAOGRAM DIRECTOR · Compr.tlanatve outpatient auMUn.:t
abuse program. Rftponaibilitl..
include program adminilotration,
supervision. counseling, and
public relations . Qualificatlona

Hourty ·Ciinic: Aide nHded part·
time In ftmity planning office,
bated in C,h...pulle 1nd Galli·
polls. Muat have high tchOol

614-843-5248
~EASONAILl

,

Ann UU nee menls

1-614-843-5425

FOR THE BEST IN
REPLACEMENTS
CERTAII\ITEED VINYL
THERMO · BOSS

6

Beauty Shop. Call
9093.

712l/2 mo. d.

J&amp;L

ahot1 . 304-418-1821 .

PH. 992-2772

.__ _ _...,;7.,;·l;;l).~8;,;.7~
- 1..;m;;:
· o:.J
.

Vinyl &amp; Alum. Siding
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing ol All Types
Worlcod in Home Area

- Roofing and gutter work

Half Sheph.,d, half Huskey,
male. white, 9 months. H8d all

POLE STYLE or
CONVENTIONAL

.CONSTRUCTION

- Addons •nd remodeling

kittens. 304-678 ·5419 .

CUSTOM BUilT

LONG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Free kittens-male ~ female. 2
months old. Call814-448-9329
after 6.

GARAGES

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

~~~8 : 00PM .

614-992 ·21011days) or1-5922461 evenings.

FOR SALE

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Please Make Check to JIM SCOTT - 1221 LOCUST ST.
SUITE 1401 - ST. LOUIS;MO. 63103

--------------------------·--·-·""'1

Rl. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

•vum SIDING

ACCENT

ANTIQUES

RESERVE BEFORE SEPT. 1st ·
Send •so deposit or '150 full payment

.PHONE _ _ _ __;:__ ____..."----------

Roger Hysell
Garage

PARTS and SERVICE

(Free Estimates)

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

10-S·tfc

"Free Estimates"

Services

lnll. Dt'orating Contultcmt

WATERCOLOR
WORKSHOP

NAME ________________________________

We can repair and re·
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.
992 -.2196
Middleport. Ohio
1-13-tfc

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

Due to Expans ion, Nallonal Corporation nnds 4 trainees
for Advertisin&amp; sales otfice manarers. CHANCE FOR AD·
YAHCEIIEHT / CAREER.
You would be: 1. Work1n1 smalltr to mrdium towns-state

.,d.

RADIATOR
SERVICE .

PAT Hill FORD

ted by 4:00P.M. Sept 14.

FREE GAS PlUS ROYALTIES are good but approXImately 80
wtlh a ntce 3 bedroom house rs betler. Seclu ded an d
make thiS tlte best ! Lo cated nea r RL 33m Salisbury
Otstrrct, lhrs home has been remodeled , tn sulated .
: c·;, ·. ~:: :'c•·· modern ktlc hen. In cludes 2 ponds, central a1r

•Paint under direction of an artist who
teaches as he paints - tells you everything
he knows.
·
•Daily demonstrations.
•Critiqes every third day.
•River sites, old houses, farm scenes
•Enjoy the fellowship of others with like in·
terests and talents.
· '

. . ._

Point Livfttock Market is
advertising for bids to erect
a livestock mafklt ftcil ity to

ARTIST'S

Gallipolis, Sept. 9 thru 14

··-·--- --.. - __ ....
.........
...._
...U
. .__
-··. _.-_......
·--··
·
__
....
_
.... ..

AMNTION: WOMEN AND MEN
MANAGEMENT TIAINEES/TIAYEL

!UPPERS PIAI~S - A 3 bedroom hom e wrlh a large
krtc hen, lneplace and wrap around porch. Storage burldmg,
all on a large lot. $23.400 00

Nationally Known
Artist At

t:=-··-- --

__......

:q • • _

M"•' •'*•

RA CINE - Southern Local
School Dlst rlct Sup!. Bobby Ord
a nnouncrs that" classes for students of all sc hools In the district
will begin Tuesda y morning a nd
sc hools will operate on Ihe same
tim e schedule as las! year.

OUR SECOND

.,

Cl••d}it!d pop•
fo llowi"t 1efrp"on1 p di•"P'···

. 1 - """" ~-

11

_

......::.-=::-~

-·

·~­
:-J:=.

STATE FAIR WINNER - Heather f'inlaw, Meigs County's
nominee lor the Ohio t-H Fashion Board, took "0ut8tandlns of the
Day•1 at the Ohio Stale Fair with the formal she mad e which was a
grand champion here. II was Meiss County's first such award in a
clothillg project In several years, according to Cindy 011\•cri.
Meigs County Extrnsion Agent .

4-16-86-tfn

t:·..__
~.:::?-.M

. .•. . llol · ·..
·.ttnl . ..M
." ' ... .n- • . .

___
_
.............._
'1--·--_·__

~-.!:;;":;: '

__..

,

ftA II! I

tt'alned. Call814·288-1793.

•I

Oay or Night

Roaring
tractors
provide
wmners

Kiddie traaor

BAND PERFORMS - Members of the 1\tcigs
High School Band ·which provided music for
quarter horse racing at the Meigs Fair Saturday

RESERVE CHAI\tPION LAMB- The reserve
champion lamb, owned by ~Jennller Taylor,
Pomeroy, wa.' purchased by River Clly Farm
Farm Supply, Gallipolis, for 58.:15 per pound 1!-1 the
annual t-H-FFA livestock sale Friday night.

Or~y

ltrlpe, 2 while. 2 black. Llt1•

Manufacture and Sales of

Located Halfway lefwttn
It. 7 and Ia shan

Help Wanted

own hourt. Pay topcommiuton.

Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
~ Swim Molds • Interpreting Services

Repairs on All Makes
Transexte Repairs

Even lhrcugh light rai n fell
Sat urda y eveni ng, II !ailed to
dampen the splril s of hundreds of
Meigs County Fair vis itors who
hung right in there to watch the
event s of the annual ' !ruck and
tractor pull.
in the 5800 modified tractor
class. Jess Pendleton, Lyndon ,
took first place money wilh Bob
Trefz, Lyndon. takln~ second,
and Avery Adams of Lucasville
took third.
Pendleton scored ano\her first
place In the 7200 modified rractor
category wilh Trefz raking se·
cond and Adams , third .
Keith Kinzel of Pomeroy, took
first pl ace In the 8000 field stock
competi tion wit h David Hively.
Gallipolis. takln~ second, ·and
Elmer Stone of Dexwr taking
third.
John Reo h, Mariett a, was !lrsl
in the 10000 field stock competition with Ken Brenei, Whippl e.
seco nd. and Bryan White.
Tuppers Plains. third .
In the 6200 four wheel drive
srock !ruck. first place went to
Frank Clary, Crown Cit y, with
Jack Waldron of Logan , ta kin g
second . a nd Terry James or
Ga llipolis, lhird.

11

•ft•

· Pag&amp;-:-6

GIRL WINNERS - Little Miss Meigs County
left, assisted, assisted In presenting awards to the winners the
Meigs County Fair Pretty Baby Contest held Saturday afternoon in
· the show ring. Girl winners in respective categories were, left to
· right seated, Ashton Brown ol MlnersvUie, held by her mother,
Cindy Brown, the 0 to 3 mo. category; Kendra Leigh Thomas,
Pomeroy, held by her mother i.aura Thomas, 3 to 6 mo.; Jessica
Ann Pooler, Long Bottom, held by mother Debbie Pooler, 6 to 12

Giveaway

Autom.tlc Wahing M•chin•·
Cell 814·2•6·5371
6 :00
PM ,

Monday, August 24. 1987

The Junior Fair Showman of
Showmen contest was held Frl·
day morning at the Meigs County
Fair.
The champion and reserve
champion showmen of . swine,
sheep breeding. market lamb,
dairy. beef breeding and beef
steer competed ' for an overall
award. Each contestant showed
an animal In each class and the
exhlbll or receiving the highest
number of points was declared

4

TralnW.g avallabl8 for lnllture
indivkiYBI who It sensitiv• to
reproductive heatth needt of
clltntl. lookireg for someone
·wtto it 181f-mattvated and c•n
grow In th• paaltlon •• need
Muat htve reliable trentportetton; ba willing to tl'llvtl.
Send resume. including two
employment reference• lo
Planned P•r.nthood of Sou·
theaet Ohio. 311 Richland

Can do tight hauling and reofing.
Reuonable rites . Mario!'
Snider. 614-949· 2629,
_.
GrOver's Lawn Mawer Repaif.

We' ll pick up snd deliver. Geed,
used mowers for sale. Call
614-742 · 2393 or 614 ·742·
3091 .

Financtal
21

Business
Opportunity
I NOTICE I

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH ·
lNG CO . reoommends thai you
do business witt'! people yo.u
know, and NOT to aend money
through the mail until you htiVe
investigated the offering ,

•

LOOKING - For 1 e...,ice tyP,
butln•s with an eacellent in·
eome potentielthat requlr" only
1 small investmenl7 Thi1 ·t• an
opportunity worth inve1tfgaling
if you are willing to undergo ••

tVCten•ive t81t

training

program~.

Franchise aveilebl• in the Pome;roy .,... For mora inloi'mation
write: OanTIIt, Inc .• PO 8011
Cla-811 c/ o Gallipolis Oaity
Tribune. 826 lrd. Ave. Gallipo'
lis. Ohio 46631 .

•ril•.

Avrtnul, Athens, Ohio 4&amp;701,
by Soptomw·e. 1987. PPSEO

Is

an

Equal

Emptoyer.

Opportunity

23

Professional
Services

Auctioneer Col. Oacar E, Clldf;
llcen1e # 764-88. 304-895-

3430.

'

•

�Paga 8-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Midd~. Ohio
61

LAFF·A·DAY
31

Homes fo r Sale

Nin , .. rt•
come

· r.. iremenl. or

proplf'ty.

2

8R .,

In·
lull

biHmlnt. t•o•tot. aoa Ridge
A"'. Rio Gr.ncle. Ohio. Shown

1w

App*tmtnt C1ll 1· 614-

182· 7424.

Houaa in Recine. nMt river, tully
fumlahall . t13,000. 114-9492213 or 114· 949· 2118.
Oovammam hom•troml1 . (U
Repair). foredoau,..., Repos.
TU Delinquent PropartiN. Now
-731-1375
your Ext.
.....3P-Ol4
C•ll 1-315·H for
cu~t liet. 24 houf'l.
•Own.-. relocating ere offerin'il 3
bodrocim. 2 bothhomolor ..leO.
the Rut1and. Ohio area. Kitchen
Cooks
Delight,
plantv
ca·
binete wilh
bf'eakfut
baroak
. 11ova.
dish
w
..
h
...
dedi.
mo••·
Priced
to sell . Cleland Realty, 601 Eatt
Mtln, Pomwoy. Ohio 46789.
Phon• 814- 992 - ~259 .
· ThrH

bedrOOI'T\

bridl

home.

large' living rgom, det:k. flee
wet•·•eptic, BY.. percent -loan
euumption. five mlnutea to
Paint Pte... nt. After 5 p.m.,
304-875-5301.

2 or 3 bedroome, double lot,
close to achoolf. and stores,
$18.000, 304-675 -7833.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
11179 Liberty. 3 BR ., on 1'A
acres off At. 160 at Porter. Call
614- 245-9234.

1974 tot.l electric 14x70, 3 BR .
Set up for woodburn•. New
carpet. Appllctncn and 28,000
stu AC . Ineluded. HaS been well
lcf!P,t. Call 814-2415-1183.
14•70 3 BR .• totalelec., undet"·
pinning, blockl. shrubl. sun-

deck. •s.ooo. Cell 814·387·
7267 evenings.
Merc•ville. · Ck)ae to s&lt;:hool.
Mobile home and lot re.cly to
move into . Ex&lt;:el. Cond .
t15.600. Call614-258-6476 .
1974 Granville 14x70. 2 or 3
SR ., central air, Ill 10 dec:k;, appl.
included. all g11. Call 814-2456134 after 8 :00PM .
1977 Victorian Deluxe Mo tille
Home. 14 x 87. 2Br .. 1 bath. g•
hut. 18600. Call 814-4462157.
With lerge living room and
bedroom addition. located on 3
acres. Call614· ?42· 3149 aher
5,00 .....
1979 Nashua . 14x 70. 3 bedroom, 1'II bath, all electric. New
10lll12 ft. deck with g .. es.
Channe~ Malter 10 h . satillhe
dish. Everything in ~•ry good
condition. Priced right. CaU
614-992 · 6710 or 614-992 ·
. 5895.
14•70 Windsor with 14lll30
addition, 3 bedt'ooms , pond.
appto• 3 acres, Gallipolis Ferry,
304-175 -1930.
·1985 Pine Ridge, 1 4•70. mobile
home. 304·875-3095.
1970 Uberty mobile home, 2
btKirooms. 304-875-3763 .

33

Farms for Sale

6 a&lt;: res with 4 BR . remodeled
house. Fruit trees, and outbuild·
ings In Rio Granrle. Call ~14 ·
245 -9595.
20 acre farm with 3 8A . houu,
Hannan Tra&lt;:e Roa!l. Glenwood,
W. 't/a. tor more information c ~U
304 -n3 -5118 or 773-5186
""" 5,oo.
34

Business
Buildings

Commercial buildings for lease.
Downtown Pt. Pleaunt . Starn.
offices. A-One Rul Estau.
Carol Ye~er . Broker. Call 304676· 5104.
Comm.-cial building, mtrtal. insulated. 50' • 100', approximalely four years old, 'h acre lot.
Four miles from new dam she.
304-815· 3030 or 676-3431 .

35

Lots

8t

Acreage

1. 84 acres . nice flatland .
Con~en . loc~tion . Calll14-448.7827 .
37 acres. Crown City'. Tobacco
base. $16.600. Call 61 4-266·
6406.
Trailer space .. 64 acres. Garden
spot, rural wal8f, 28 h . x 40 fl .
gMage. Total elect. hook-up.
Call 814-245· 9393 .
.
1 1h ac lot on Jerrys Run Ad.
Apple Grove. yvlth rural water.
304-578-2383.
PRICED RIGHT - One acre
building lots on Rt. 2 at Ashton.
Public water and mobile homes
permintd, 304 -676-2338.
One acre lots o n M..on 80 at
Ashton. public water. mobile
homes permin~ . S&amp;OO down.
SUiO per month. 3o.t-576·
2338.
LOTS 6 ACREAGE - Site
beside Ohio River. sitet along
At. 2. trailer sitn near Rt. 2 and
waterside sites. Phone 304171-2028.

.·

.

Houses for Rant

Nicely fumlthed small houu.
Adult• only . Reference~ r•
qui,.,. Off ttrMI parking. Ph.
814-448· 0338.
2 8ft , unfurnlthed houae with
g•aga. Acc•pt on• child. R•t.
and O.p. Ct11814· 441·9180.

.

•~

·

living room tuita wuh• and
drv•r. rtfrige re tor, 304· 17&amp;·

claM• wtth
attachment• ancl tcrubber.
1111. Rabult Mel 1tll ....,.,..
toed. c..h or ,...,., C.ll 814992· 7142 .

~

County Awtiance. Inc. .Good
uHd appllancn and TV ' tell.
Open BAM to 8PM . Mon t~ru
Sat. 614-440-1191, 127 3rd.
. Ave. Gallipolis, OH,

"MI·ss Pennm·gton, my watch
•
d ay
has stopped . What tune,
and ffi0fl. th IS• 1•t, please?"

Volloy
Furnitu...
Lerge 18ction
of ·-.~·eel·
quality, turni·
t11re. 1218 East•rn Ave ..
a.mpolia.

0000 USED APPLIANCES

Apartment

Wesh.-s, dryers, refrig•ators.
rar\ges RIVer
. Skaggs
Appliances.
Upper
f\d,· bt!alde
Stone
c•••• Motot 814-448-7318.

for Rant

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

t-=::;::=:===:;:::;::~r~=:::::::::::;:::::1 ·
41

Houses for Fiant

4 BR . haute on 1 acr8~ Excel
location. Aef. tall A-1 Real
Eata18 Broker. Call 304-675· ·
61 ~ .

Nic~y furnishlld amall hoUte. 3
rooms and b.. h. Adults. Nop .. a.
Ref. and Dep. Call 614-4462643 . •

Recently remodeled, 1 bedroom. in town. Oft-ltr..t 'park·
ing. washer-dry..-. Ral.-ences
requlr•d. 814 - 992 -5912 or
Bl4·992·6723 after 6:00. ,
Unfurniahed house and apen·
m.-.tt in Pom-oy. 1100.·1150.
plus utilitiea. Alao for .. le on
land · ~ontract . Call 814 - 99.~ ·
6059 or 114·992-761 1.
3 . bedroom . Adults. No . peta.
304·676-4384.
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 BR . trailer, furnished. n_.Ural
gas. Adultt onty. No pets. Call
614-367-7438.
For Rent: AC .. furnished. 2 BR ..
mobile home located at K • K on
Eaatern Ave. 1185 a month.
Dep . and R•f. r8quifed. Call
614-266·1187.
2 BR. 12'x 80 partly furnl1hed.
Deposit ,required. located ill
Centenary. Cal! ,14-448·4292 .
14•60. 2 bedroom trail• with
expand!) living room located on
large level lot in Middleport·.
Near schools and at or•. 81 • ·
992-2101 . after 7 :00 pm call
614-992-2319.
2 bedroom, fumished. 911 tta.t,
air conditioner. wa1her end
dryer. Aduht only, no pets.
t150. per month plut util.ltiea.
Coli 814-949· 2948.
3 bedroom with ·11ft bath.
located Zutpan Hollow. Prefar
elderly couple. Call 814·992·
3229 .
3 badroom. 2 bath. heat fur nlahed. 1215. p• lnOflth. AIIO,
nice lot. heat .furnished in
Harrisonville area, 81 4 · 742·
3033 attar 8 :00 pm.

"4
~

Remodel~ u.-.airs,
BA ..
unfurnished . utilitiet pa id .
Aduh1 onty. 749 S•cond Ave.
C. ll 114-446 -14.67 aft• 3:30
2

PM . •

Furnished Ap.nment : 4 rooms
and bath . Centrelty toe~~ted . One
or two adults. Ret. and Sec. D•p.
required. Call 114-440· 0444.
Apartment• lot- the Eiderty .
Frenchtown Apartments, 727
Ffjurth Ave. Opening s:oon ~4
units designed for Semor Crtltens (62 6 olderl• handicepped
persona. ·Rent Including adjunment for water. t.wege 6
electric is bued on ten1nts
income. Eq..al f'louslng opport unity. Applicattdns m~ b~
·picked up et Sprjng Vallay Piau.
Cell 44&amp;-4039, All electric heat
pumps.
Furnishfit 2 room apt, for rent.
Female or femeles only. Call
614-448-1414 or 448-1023,
Gracious living. 1 eild 2 bed·
room apartment• at Village
Manor and Aiverslda Apanments · in Middleport. From
t216. indudi,-.g utilities. Call
814-192. 7787. EOH .
Ap.,ment, tully carpeted. tit
cunditioned. total electric.
221 5Yl Mt. \(ernon Ave., Pt.
PleMant. Call614-992-6858 ..
Nice apartment on Third A~e .
whh range, refrigerator tnd
w.. her and dry•r hook· up.
1220. pltf mol'lth . Call Julie
before noon at 614-446-6880.

ii! beckoom

ap~s . and hou .. in
Middleport and Pomeroy . Pay
own utilitiet, Call 814-9922381 Of 614-992 -2720.

1 bedroom unfurnished apartment . In Middleport. t150. P•
month plus utilities. Call 614992-5645 doys. 814-949-2218
ev,ningt.
APARTMENTS. mobile hornet,
housH. Pt. Pleasant and Gallipo111. 614-448-8221 .

'

2 bedroom furnised apt, ref and
depolit, Ne~ Havea. W. Va ..
304-882 · 3287 •• 304 · 773 ·
5024.
.

2 bedroom mobile home, Y.. mile
out Jericho Road . call aher 5
p.m .. 304-175-8483.
2 bedroom• and 3 bedroom1.
Gallipolis Ferr&gt;~ . One with central
air, 304-875-4088.

Furnithed efficiency 1partment.
Downtown Point Pl ... ant. til
Two bedroom trMI•. Greer , utilities peid. Depos it required.
Road. Homestead Realty, 304- Coil 304-895· 3460.
675· 5540 or 304 -882-2406.
44

Apartment
for Rant

1 and 2 bedroom apartments.for
rent. Buic rent for 1 bdr ..
8183.00; 2 bdr., 1219.00. Alao
required a t 200.00 le&lt;:urity
depo1it. CONTACT: Jackson
Estates t)ept. Pl:l 440· 3997
Equal Housing Opportunity.
Furnish ad Effici8flcy 1145 . Utilitiel paid, shar• beth. 807
Second Ave., Gallipolis Ph.
446·4416 aft"' 7PM .
Upstairs unfurni1hed apartment.
Utilities paid. Carpeted, no children or pet1. Cell e 14· 441-1137
Furnished apt. next door to
Library. One profenional Adult
only. Perking. Ph . 441·0338.
Furnished . apartment. U 10.
utilities paid. 1 bdt. 920 Fourth,
Gallipolis. Call 448-4416 after
Bpm.
Modern 1 BR apartment. Call
61 '4 ·446·0390 .
Broakaide Apartmentt: 446 ·
1932 or 441-4639, One Bed·
room apartment with large
country kitchen, new applian·
en, utility room. water. 1ewer
and trash s ervices provtded.
Quiet area.
Furnilhed.downstaiu, 3 rmt.
and bath. Clean, No,pets. Adults
only . Depot it and Ref. Required.
Call614 ·448, 161.9 .
Ni&lt;:ety furnishiMI. 2 BR . apart·
ment. Nice location. Adult1only.
Call 61 • -«1· 2:404.
Nit.e, 2 Br. Apt .. Stove, refrig.
Furnished. Wet..- paid. Neer
Drive-In Theatre. Call814· 4487025.
Furnished Apt. Adults only. An
utilities paid. Get retdy for ·
winter. Call 114-448· 91523.

2 BR . apts ~ 0 cloeats. krtchen appl. furnished, Washer· Orver
hook-up, ww cerpet, newty
peinted. deck. Regancv. Inc.
Two Jots on Sand Hill Road. Apts. Call 304· 871· n38 or
Th~et miles from town, 304176-5104.
175-21148 .
FUrnithed Apt... 1 BR.. 1226
utilities paid. 007 Ind. Ave.
Gallipoll1. Call 814-448-4418
R1:nlals
after 8 :00PM .
41

"
D

Furnlthed. Woodbumlng fir•
place. Utllhl• paid. cabte~alla­
ble. One m., only. Foste..•s
Mobl• Home Park. Call 014·
441- 1802.

4 BA. houMfOf'rant. 3 mi. m . of
Gllllpolll. t300 a month plua
dep. R•t. required. Cell .114· 513ThlrdAve., 1 BA .. t180per
441-111•. &lt;\li• 5 ,~ PM .. coil month. Depostt required. Call
448-t24JI:-··
.
8t4·448·4348 •Iter 5 ,oo PM.

90 D1ys same •• CMh with
approved credit. 3 MIIM out
Ruleville Rd. Open Sam to &amp;pm
Mon. thru s .. . Ph: 814·448·
0322.
PARSON 'S FURNITURE
New wood I pc. living room
suitn. 1399 .96; New ltving
room 1uitn from 1179.96 to
t700 .; Ch•t of draw.,l, 4
drawer, t48., 5 drewer, f59 .95;
End tatHea from· 189.91 Sll'l .
Ut ed F'-'rniture: bedroom suitet,
full tlted t*:h, twin beds and
rock; era. Recliriers tram 199.95
and up
•·
THE WORKING
MAN'S FR IENO
CARPET- 9•12- aalow aa t50·
lott to pick from. Aim cu1
carpet, .8 .0o a yd. and up.
Financing lVIII. SwN-al roc*•s.
1 100 , Mollohan Furniture.
Upper River Rl#. Call 614-o446·
7444.
Oithwnher. S••l Kenmore,
built-in, harvest gold , Uted Iris
than 1 yr. t22!i . Call 814-388·
9008.
Used refrig•ato:r. and sewing
machine. New b!aby blilsinet.
Call 814· 4•6· 7513 eft• 4 :00
PM .
Couch tor sale. like new col"!d. 1
yr. old. 1175. Call 81o4 · 4484262.

46 Space for Rant
Office Spece tor Rent. Excellent
for Attorn..,,, Accountant, etc.
Close to Court House. Call
Wi1ernan R·eal Estate Agency.
814-448-3844 .
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33. North of Pomeroy.
Rantal tr8Hers. Cd 614-992 ·
7H9.
Sp1&lt;:1 for •mall traileft. All
hoak· upt. Cable. Alao efficiency
rooms. air and eMile. Mason.
W.Va. Call304 -n3-68&amp;1 .
Nice traiiiH' lot for rent. Call
614· 992-2101 , after 7:00pm
ta11.&amp;14-992· 2319.
SPACES FOR RENT - Trail•
lots, Rt. 1, Locust Rold. back of
K &amp; K. 304-875-1078.
47 Wanted to Rerit
3 or 4 Bedroom house in l(yger
Creek Schoo·! District. Aetaren·
en Ph. 614 - 448 - ~21 .
3 BR . home in or around
Galll~;~olis . Call614-448-3128 ..

2 sewing me&lt;:hin•. 2 vacuum
clean••. 1 electric typewriter.
c.n 814-441-1488.
3 WhAel bicycle. for ule. Call
8t4-258-8090.
Bolent -HuskY 10HP Wisconsin
42" mowerdeck , rotatiller,
Plow, •now blade and dump bed
tra~ler . t1400 or trade for ~an .
Call 814 -448-3459.

VIRA 'S
Open Tuet .· Sat. 9· 7. ·Elvis
Tapestries, $25. white outfit in
ooncert. Chalk item•: 28" root·
ter and hen , 120. 21" Collia
doge. 120 . Weather owls ,
11 .00 . 8" lamb•. cats. duckt.
dogs, t6. Variety of owls.
Furniture: 6 drawer drfti•r.
145. End tables. coffee tablaa.
Wooden baby cradle. 149.95.
Walkers. 815. High chtlri.
strollers. 12" BMX bikes. pillow,
, rugl. Plenty more to choose
from . Rt. 141 Centenary. '~• mile
down·LinColn Pike.

For lease

8 HP Dvnam~k - Ridln'! Mowitr.

r?.:""'{Oil ~LD fiA'ie

y ·~ ~l'llt~

OltiNU:

WI~

'«J\)'!q;i toT ~'.Y

' I

-- -

t· ~oi
..

·
---~
~

Used end Rebuitt uan1rNatlona.
lntemalty inepKtad .nd l':"fllft·
teed. ~nltlllletlon aveilllbl•. w,
buy junk tran•ml~ttons. Call
114-448-0981.
Chll'l'. •nolnM· 3~ 310
1V-Ifrontwhetl.fveorl-10 .

u.~ - i.ldwln A&lt;:ratoniC pieno. Good wad trumpat. t125. firm.
good condhion; Honda Twin Good Merching Rifle. n..,.,
Star motorcycla, tiOO. Pia... bHn uMd. 01•·192·8791 .
Call 304·8715· 7091 .
8wncty clarinet, e.11ceUent condiSURPLUS ARMY. DENIM , tion. uaed only two monthe. Call
RENTAL CLOTHING. IC.rh.n:1 304-411· 1813. See after 1!1
10% OVIf cott). Orlgin•l Army p.m .. 1225.
Camoufl•ge . H .0 . " Sall'l "
Signet clarinet whh rMd clip.
Somerville'•· Old Rt 21 ,
AIYIInSWDOd. Friday, Saturdll\', '*'· uMd onetchoot twm. Will
Sundav. noon · 8 p.m. Other sale for 1300., 304· h2· 3101 .
diiVS tppointmentl 304- 273·
5665 . !Kidl camouflage). grMn·
68
Fruit
metro.
&amp; Vegetable•
Full slrt firm bo• tprWtg end
mettre... like new. $71. 304·
Reel raapbarrl•. Pldl your own
773·6868 'or 882· 3710.
Or we pick . CaN Taylor' a hrtv
·Si• peraon Jacutrl for ule. P.. eh. 114-245-1014 or 448·
o ne· year-old , 13500 .. 304· 8812.
875 -1155.
o,..,__ rlpanld ,...,. Concord
Picture window with fum• and oth• wine. tulca and jelly
54xto. •8&amp;: entry door with verietv. Pick your own or buy at
s torm door appro llli mately 111" room. 0Uft AOVin Fruit
791ha35,A&lt;. t60; NOtcold ap.-t· farm. Rt. 111 H of Albeny. 0 .
014-818·8281. W•ekday•
ment aiJa eiM:t:rlc rafrig8falor. Call
1.8 cu.ft ., 17"17x23. id•.. tGr 10· 8 . W..._ I -1.
dorms. beMity shopt, etc. t&amp;G; Quelit-t Fruits and Vlgeteblll
304·171-1552.
... -'1 and wholeult. 8 • I
Yellow Amen• rafrigtfltor, 304- Produce acron from Ph:u Hut.
Gallipolis, Ohio.
875-2598.

••t

Apple butter kettle. IHiO: Sears
w indow I fan. 3 speed. 160;
304·675-1731 .
Early Amatlcan· console 2:4"
c olor tehrvision. Nnds soma
w ork. t 50. Phone 304· 675·
5418.

Building S11pplies

Relldy mix concre1e and ah
concrete suppliM. Call us v•ley
Brook Cement and S upplies,
30•· n3 -5234.
·
Pets for Sale

Groom and .Suppty Sho.,..Pet
Groom ing . All breada ... AII
atyln . Julie Webb Ph. 114-446·
0231 .
Oragon.wynd Cattllt'f Kennel.
CFA Himalayan. ·Ptrlian end
Siam•e illtt•ns. AKC Chow
puppies. New klnens; Siam-.
and Himalayans. Call 114-448·
3844 tfter 7PM ,
AKC Registered Chow Chow
pupples. Call 014-388·9031 .
Red Doberm.., pups. 6 wke. old.
Call 814-379· 2813 .
Half Chow C~ow puppies.
Mothet AKC Reg. Weaned.
Re.cly ta go. 125 tach. Cute. ·
Cs ll814-441-2108 .
Rag l1tered Cock• Sp1n i ~ pup·
pies ; Adult Miniature
Sc hn1urer; Siam•• kitten and
cat . Ctll 814-992· 2607 or
114-992·8518
Three young raccoons, 30•·
895·3972.
AK C Registered Norwegian Elk·
hound puppils, tl50 .; Pair
Smoke Pearl Martin Orawf rabbitt, 304-896· 3029 aher 5 p ~ m .
.:::
g

7

&amp;

H
El
I h L 1.
ammond evante w t 8118
speaker, topoftheline, e.llc•llent
condilion. 16900. Proctorville614·886· &amp;440.

·

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

1878 Chav. Malibu Claulc
wagon, V·B, AC ., AM , Auto.
Runs iQOd. Celle1•·...,·8324.
1979 llncotn Vare ..Mtt. bc.e. ·

cond. CJMtlc email car with
manv iutru. tl&amp;OO. Call 114448·004&amp;.
111e Carmaro. 310. auto. Ald.
Black strips. No rvat. Will , ...
reasonable . Call 014 -•40 ·
0327.
1982 Camero. lhlfP. Muet be
..., to apPfeclata, t 3195.
198• Chavltte, nice, t2711,
Call 014-218· 0522.
1180 Toy-ota Corolla, 31 ,000
mil•. aatcel. cond., fac:. 'air,
AM-FM -C.aa. auto. tl&amp;OO. Call
114-441-2113 .
1877 POnttac v-,tura .. V·l .
Auto ... AM -FM · Ceu. Rune
good.' Must 8•11 . t400 or best
oli•. C.ll814· 248-8157 .
1983 Chwett• , Standlld, 4
sp••d. in good co ndh io n.
48,000 mil•. , 32 Butternut.
Pom•oy. Ohio.
Slalnl•• ..... •heu.W 1Y1tema.
~ow euatom made for y~r
trvcll. motor hom• or dauic c•.
Wtth ttt .. tima Warrenty . Mum•
Maa, I Stimpeon Aw .. A"*"a.
Ohio. 1·100-843-3717.

Farm Equipment

CROSS. SONS
U.S . 31 W•t. Jacison. Ohiu.
114· 281· 6461 .
Meeuy Fetguaon. Ntw 'Hollll'ld..
lush Hog set . . . s ...vtc• . Ovlt
40 used trKtors to chOose ftom
• compfM•
line of neW
• uMd
Mtect;o'
n in
..u ~msnt.
S.E.• Ohio.

La,_,

113&amp; Ali&lt;:a Cf'i~tmar tractur,
t500. Set of turn plows on
rubber. 150. I tt. euUpaett•.
t75. Horn dr•wn wagon on
whe• i• . 16 0 . Home made
wagon on rubber, 175. Call
418· 184-4212.
.
115 Malley Ferg. g• traCior,
1-4100. 8 ft . c.Ctle rack. •200.
ShMI'er po•t clffv~. t600. Ford
3-14 Inch ptows. 1210. Ford 8
ft . dis~~; , 1200. Emco I ft . bush
hog. t400. At.o other equip ,
Call 814-311-9132 .
T030 feJg, tractor, riew tlrM,
paint, ni'W tnolor. wtthO ft . bush
1oog, . U280. Coli 814-216·
8522 .
Bars. chelns. and IPf'Ocket• to ftt
almost an_y uw . SIDERS
EQUIPMENT CO., Hender10n.
w. v • . 304· 175-7421 .

63

Livestock

1178 Olch -'••ion wafO"· ,an
Ford v ... 304-411· 1130.
1974 Dodge Sport. . ak CG ndttion. ""'"' good. n..ds tome
~Ody WO,!I . 3 04 ·8715-7 &amp;4,
Wartinfl.

I::..:::.:.::.::.:..-:----:---

1911 Ford EICOf1 etatlonW1gon,
~~~ ..... 773 -&amp;311'' ev 4tn ·
d.,time · _....
""' . 304· 773-8778 .

1179 Ford lTD, 1110. 304115· 3-430 .
1111 Dodta Daytona Turbo Z,
fed·Mwr. bid .......... ..,,.,
option,
~ean

•8600. and take 6ver 2
paymen1a, 304 -176-

53041.

1917 Monti Carta. ntw Eagle
ITt. 70.000or.lnatmllaa. Muat
..u. 1800. 304· 1111 ·.4131 aff•
1 !30 p. m.
CAR · 1910 Fiat JC11. ucellent
c::ondi11on. t3,200 . or belt oHer.
304· 115·8414.
72

TNcks for Sale

1174ChwyTruck. I cyl,, motOf
good shepe, body hu a little
rut1. 1100. Good _.,..._ Call
814· 251· 8111.

111&amp; El Camino Conquiata
pick· up. 151915 milft. Auto. 4
apMd, AC, PW: AM ·FM aeerao,
CMIM'I:I. t10.000. Call 814982· 7418.

Work HorN for ule. Appro.11.
1,000· 1,200 lbl. 1300. Cal· 1179 1 ton chewro111. ,_.c~lent
....,dhlon. 304· 812-2195.
814-317-7118.
Hay

&amp;

Woodcutter'• Special · 1175
Chevy truck. tiOO. Phone 30487&amp;-2841 .

Grain

1200 bal•· Good claen mhl:ed
hav. CaM 81•· 317· 7419.
•
H•y for nl•t! 1.28 per bale. Call
614· 9 9 2·1 g 9 •

Van·• &amp; 4W. D .
73
1--------:--:--

1110 Ford Rang• XLT Iuper
c,b. 4 eyl., ti lpd ., 4 WD ., quad.
ettreo. 10.000 mil•. t12.000.
Call 014-317·0438.

Ml•ed htY 11 . bale on wagon. I::.::_.::_.::_..:__:._ _ _ __
Hay for bedding IDe. 304-t?&amp;·

H••· • t

.oo •

bolo,_ 304· 773·

5185 .

1978 Ford F-110. 4_.4, •hort
bed stiiP skle. looka and runs

good. t139fi'. Call 814-2474292.
1179 J•ap CJ 7 , red and white.
flbe!rgiiU top, 17.000 mH•.
t3.100. Cell efl:tr o p.m .•
304-~715-4243.

71

Autoe for Seta
74

1983 Z-28 C.maro, 32,000
mMea on body. 100 m~l• on 31!10
engine. a ~ .pd . loaded, lounrs.
bra and Cll cover inch.lded, Call
114-248-8417.
1971 Ooda.. D•rt &amp;wlnlor 225
Slant Six. 0 tMt Cond. 100 or
· C.ll 8t4-2H-9301 ,
·8·1 1 PM.

*··

1171 Pontlaa Bonn..,llle. 2
PS .. PB ., tl~ .,d en~IN. AC .
heel cond. Call814-317· 0381

Household Goods

....I,OOPM .

1983 Camero Z·21. T·to'p, Pl.,
Pl .. PW.•nd locllo, AM·
FM·C•"· AC ., ..,,.nlce.llack.
C•ll 8t4-241·8040.
. "The
people wa~t us
to calli!: Dlmethyl-lsoglycerlda. "

'

ReQrronge leHera of
0 four
scrambled words

•

I

77

Struta. t119.15 p.W. inetalled.
Moat mod.ts. Muffler Man, 8
Stimpson Ave. Ath.-s. Ohio.
1-800-1143-3717.
78

Camping
Equipment

_ _ ___:_ _ _ _ _~-

11n c.m..., 11•1v Sport. P&amp; ..
Pl .. Auto. ttiOO. Cell lt4·
288, t141 orU8-1843.

Motorcycles

,Ill Harley Dtvkleon FLTC.
e.c. alwaye gar..ad. ' Many
acceaiOf'lll. Aaldrlg tiiOO. Call
Day· 114·440-1331, Evenlnt014·'"-· 4411 .
Hond• tl78. Madtl200. heel .
cond. Low mileage. llt110nllbl•·
Cell 8t4-4415- t 381.

I :

I

"
·'

-.

FRANK AND ERNEST

,,v

79 Motore Home•
&amp; Campen

:I.' IJE GOT AMNES'I A .

:r

'

Su~E

1-fopE' :t'M

Fofo&gt; IT!

q~rv~

,.'.~~
, ..

1971 Ven1ura Campet, told
type. ....... e . v-v OOOd
........ ion. 304-175· 1511.

.

.

1/-

N

&lt;;EjriNG *AiMENT"

21 ft . Chaietu C.mper whh h.IM
balh, liMps II•. Good condh lo n.
Awn'"t encl TV antenna. Call
814· 985-4418

.

'
aJ

f~
I

l
•
i

•

·ALLEY OOP

Sl:fVILI!S

81

Home
Improvements

• ·,.
oI

IWfEPf lll and MWinQ ml(;hlna • •
repair, Plf'IL and tuP91T• . Pldl.' •
up and deli¥..,, D•vis· Vacuum •
C l.. ne r, on e half mile up
O.or... Cr... Ad. Call 81~441·02t4.

EEK &amp; MEEK

- -....-..;---,
~HI(\-\ OfJ£. l'S l'HIS ...
1 GOTTA WI A~
AIJM~~ G(fT.__............_
f:.CW. SIL\I£R , FlATIWM 11
~ 11-E WIFt ...

RON ' S Tele~·is ton S11~ lt:e '
HouN ~ .... on RCA. Ouuer.
QE Speclalino tn Zenith. Call
304-578-2311 or 8 14 -441 2414.

1H£ SAME.
A') AlL1}-lf:

Fatty Tr.. Trlmmlnl: nump
ramOYel , Celt 304-67 · 1331 ,

OtHER'.S ..

Rotary ar e!M)Ie tool dl iUing.
Mvat we41s c:ompl•ed same d~ .
Pump 1llaa and serwice. 304·
190-3802

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

OLIVEAS Tr.. Trtmming .. top:.
ping, trimming. pruning deed
wood. storm damage, tak• ·
downs. Fr• Eatimat... 3o.t171-3S17.

r----------------.~----·

''rOW HAVE ALREADY
1M:JN A N EXTREM ELY
\IA.LUA 8 L E Pf2 1ZE' .'

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor .. fC1fJr1h and Pine
· GallipoliS. Ohio
Phone 114 · 441 · 388~ or 114·
, ••. 4477

&amp;

', ......,

•

Refrigeration

Waaher and dryer 11Mce and
repaM . Reaonabl• rat•s. 30
years exp•ience. Ce11114-3870322.

BARNEY
1

THAT SHORE WAS
A POWERFUL
SERMON SUNDA'r'.

,

Aesidentlel or comm.ciel wirIng. New tervice or rapaiu.
Licensed electrician. Enlrnate
fr" . Ridenour Electrical. 304876· 1788.

B5

'P.5. IF 'YOLJ ARE A
DISTRI CT AT TORNE'Y,.
WE 'RE JLJST K IDDI NEf. "

'l-fO'.JST' YOLJ'VE: ALR&amp;ADY
'AON A S ENSATION.AL,
'AONDE'RFLIL PRIZE' !

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

;8;;4;:::::;;E;Ie:c:;t:;ric:a::;l:=~,

General Hauling

Dillard Watlf Serviee: Po'ols,
CieltWnl , WeUs. Delivery Anytime. C.pll 614· 440 -7404-No
Sunday calla,
·
J &amp; J W"er Set'Vice. Swimming
pools. cittarnt. walla. Ph. 614·
241 · 9286.
R 6 A W~er Service. Horne
cisterns. wells. poola filled.
Formerty James loyt Water.
C•ll 304-175· 1370.

1HANKY.
MA'AM

''

'.,
•

- .•
.'

.,!,

111 l!2l

II]) ~ardyl

IHl Soap

liD Cil Major

Q

Leagut

BaH ball
7:35 (l) .Honeymooners
8:00 ()) Dak11rl Judy and The
Vulture
1J (2) 1151 ALF ALF gels a
touch ,.of gambling fever and
winds up In trouble. {A)
@ Unllm1td Hydroplane
Racing Budweiser Qolumbla
Cup from Tri Cl11e s.
Wash ing1on (A)
(I)
(J] NFL Foo1ball
(!) Rlv• Journeys Brian
Thompson 1rave1s from Juba
to 1he Nils Del1a. C
iW Ill il2l Kate &amp; Allie Ka1e
has job burnou1 and qui1s
her job, whi le Allie loses her
job. (R) Q
[!) River Joumeyo Grear
explo res the northeastern
r99ion of Brazil in a paddle
s1eamer . Q
ail Prlmei'lewa wrap ups of
the day 's world news and In
· dep1h feature reports. (1:00)
@ MOVIE: The Adven1ureo
ol Herculeo II (PG) (~:00)
6:05 (l) MOVIE: Oxford Blues
(PG13) (1 ;37)
8:30 11 (]) II]) Valerie Michael's
o ld buddy's bullying ways
cause a rift in his marriage.
(A)
iW lll il21 My Slo1er Sam
S am gives a good·lool&lt;ing
Slranger a $ 50 loan. (A). Q
700 Club
.1J (]) 1HJ 'A Year In 1he Llle,
Part t' NBC Monday Night II
the Movfeo Q
@ Surfer Magazine (T)
(}) I!J) American Mastero
Family me mbers and friends
lalk abou11he man and 1he
artist.
®) tll il21 Newhart Dick 's 61h
grade teac her turns out to be
his new 1yping instructor.(A)

a

Larry King Uvel In dep1h
interviews with top
newsmakers and celebrities.
9:30 (J) Volleyball Pro Beac h
Volleyball from Boulder,
Co lorado (T)
®) lllil21 Deolgning Women
Charlene's latest date caus~s
an uproar among the
Sugarba ker g a ls. (R)
10:00 ®) Ill~ Cagney and Lacey
Mary Belh ·s gunned down on
dir1y tenement roof bt_
robbery sus pect (A) 1;1
(!)) Evening News A wrap up
of today's news and a look
ahead to tomorrow 's news
stories. (1:00)
@News
10:05 (l) 'MOVIE: Mee1balls (PGJ
(1 :32)
10:30 Ill Tom From the Land
@ Baham. . Family roland
Rega111 (R)
(}) Alive lrom OH Center
This video opera by Jaap
Drupsteen is besed on
Stravinsky 's 1 961 work .
iiJl Newo
Ill Cll USA Tonight
t t :OO ()) HardcaeUe and
McCormick
CD
(J] ~W
~
II]) NeW11
®Sign 011
iiJ) Women: Myth and Rnllty
Explore changes 1ha1 have
occured for women at work
and wl1h families.
(!)) Moneyllna Curren1
reportS on world economics
and financial news wHh Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
IHl Talellrom ~ Darkeldo
111 CIJ L...,. CanniCIIon

e

'·
I

..

Wettenon ' t Water Hauling, ~&gt;·
rtiiOfiable ratee, ;·m rriediat•
2,000 gallon delivery, tlst.,.,..,
pool1, well, etc. call 304-578· I !•
I ~2_11_1_9·:' .- -- - - - - - ,.
Formerly Ken'• now John' e I • '
'
Wtt• S•vica, John Wattenon.
Jr, Owntr. 1.000 or 2 ,000 gal • •
'
....~co. 304· 871-2248.

..

:I

.......

B7 .

a

g,oo m

Starks TrH end lawn &amp;afVIce.
iawn c•a, landscaping. 1tump
r•moval, 304-171· 2142 ot
578-2103.

82

Bll!11011
Rocky
7:05 (l) Sarilord and Son
7:30 1J t2i (D Newlywed Game
@ NFL'o Supero11ra Meh
Who Played the Game:
S1aalers
(J] Judge
®) Wheel ol Fortune Q
il2l Croullre (0:30)

a

.-

8AIEMENT
WOTEIIPROOFINQ
Uncondit ion al Nfwl im'• guerart·
t ... local rei•encee tumk hed
frM 111im11... Call collect "'
1·114· 237·0488, d~ O f nigh,t. ~ ~
A 0 g t r 1 B 1 I • m tn t · ~
WatlltJMOOflng.

'.Is

'. PEANUTS

Upholstery

1877 Honda Ooldwlng 1 000.
Oood .... d. etooo. can 114·
448-987t .

R • M Custom Couch" and '
Raupholt~ery, St. At. 7 , Crown ~
1910 Honda CA80 Dirt bile. ' C~y. Oh. 814-218-t470, Eve.
Good Cond. t.rt25. Call 304· lt4·441-3431 . Opon dolly 9 to
8S2·2422.
4:30, Sat. 9 :30 to 1 :30 . Old &amp;
new Uphottered.
410 Nlghthewlc. bcallent con· 1:;::-- -:-::-- :- :- - - - ' q
dlt6on. •110. C.U 114-441· Mowrey'• Upholatering aerving
4081 .
trl county a rei 22 years. The bast ·~
In furniture uphotlterlng Cell ~-~
1171 Honda Trail 80. t410. 304 - 17&amp; · 4114 for free
304--171·1731 .
tetlmatet.
. I

••

' ·'

:J

·..!

I:

I

.

rn a

m

t t ::IIi 1J (]) 1HJ Bell ol Co~n

•

The tired clerk lifted the grocery
bag, and Its bottom gave way.
" They don't make bags like they

I
:;_.yl....;;;.lrl8rl

CO0 B I E

used to, " she moaned. " That's
~~.ed to happen in the

~-,,-=-;,17rTI

A Complete the chuckle quored
V
by filling in t he missing words
L._...L_J.......J'---L-...1..~ you develop from sfep No. 3 below.
.:!~. PRINT

NUMBERED
~ LETT EiS IN SQUARES
A

UNSCRAMBLE FOR
ANSWER
J

iIll Cll

,

1183 Skyl•r~ 22 .11 . otlf·
contained, e.i.cetlant condiUon.
king tllebed, tub. Ca1130-t· 87&amp;3276 after 8 p.m.

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

,_,,::c,r,..;W~H~H-1· ~
I 16 1 1
~=-==·:;:~·;=~·:::;:_...,
1-:-

@ Spe,C.nter (l)
(I) WRKP In Clnclnn•tl .
(J] Nlghlffne C
®) ® Trapper lohn, M.D.
tiD Thlo Old ltouM
(!)) Sporbl Tonight Action
packed sports highlights wl1h
Nick Charla., and Jim Huber.
10:30)
.

a

e Q1 'Simon 11111 Simon'

CBS Late Night A.J .'s ofd
girlfriend hlreo 1hem 1o tln.d
her bro1her's killer. IR)
ea&gt;LeteShow
t2:00 ()) Bums and Allen
. (J) Sportalook IR)

•

' ,

I

YEstERDAY'S SCRIM-lETS ANSWERS
Placid - Bylaw .:_ Plush - Hamper - HAPPY
Sion hanging over the desk of top. executive: "'It AI First You
Don't Succaacl, Think How Many _ People You've Made
HAPPY"

..--~-,-------, '

a

Auto Repair

..

f-,3.-1....;IN:....:,jr..:.:/-rt-i-1_,1 1

V

&amp;:35 (l) Leave It To Beaver
7:00 ()) Hardcistle and
·
McCormick
1J (2) PM Mag. .rne
@ SportoCenter (L)
(I) En1ertalnment Tonlgh1
(J] People' s Court
(}) iiJ) MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewsHour (1 :00)
!W News
01 Moneyline Current
reports,on world economics
and financial news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
Ill (!)) II]) Wheel ol Fortune

'C htvane, goOd ' ~
mDtOf', laM lor SJ4rt8. tlOQ. ' •
304·812·3323.

f~·

LAVSIU

IlliZi Yogi Biiar

c~.,.,y

1877

th•

be-

low to farm four simp le ward~.

York.~ 0,30)
®Jefle~n•

"'ufft• ,..._,

Ht72 W lnnebaeo. motor hom a.
etO,
. IIOO. 304·178. · 173 1 ....

1982 Ch..,yTruck. Goochh.,e,
lots of axtr... Call .14-112 ·
27&amp;4.

Duroc Boars. Bred jult like the
boer• we '"tad at the Ohio
Testation th.t gained aver 2.1
Jbt:. par day. Rover . .ntley,
Sabin•. OH. 513· 584· 2398.

64

w.-!·!'-

1882 ford EXP,' Sun r·oot. PS .
PB . AM ·FM . UOOO. C•ll 8 14·
448-08011 attar 1 :00 pm.

New H~land 711 forage h""'t•· 1970 Ch.-, , ttuc::k. I eyl., short
tar; N•w Hofland 4t7 7 ft. hay wh ... b... AC . Good truck.
bind; Gehl grmdtr mi•er. AN C•lllt4· 441· 1&amp;22.
good condition. 30•·273-•2 15.
1172 White FrligtnNn• COE
3150 C - o Englno. t 1t.OOO
mil• CM.lt of fr.,ne maiof, RTO
62 Wanted to Buy
l- - - - - - - - - -- 1110 uanamiea~. Rockwall
4:11 ratio reers. 10:22 tif" oq
budda. , , • . •• 1· 4422.
Now buying shtlll ~orn Of • •
corn . Call tor latest quotH. River 1917 S -10. PS . Pl. 4 opood.
Chy Farm Supptv .. e14-4U6· longbed. 1500 lb. p.-rlold. FOf'
298&amp;.
Nle or trade. Call 814-992·
8171.

l rdllspllrLI!illll

Mm:lld 11111 s I!

EVENING

TII&amp;T DAI!T
PUIILII

e

·k:- • • ..

clOwn

pm.

61

·,•

e•hault kits, .I&amp;I.M
•tailed. Moat Forda . Chvy .. ·!~
trucl!s. Vlfll; 4x4't .
Min 9 Stlmpmn Awe., Athans.
Ohio'. t -800-1143· 3.717 .
•

ttl• Mumng. Llet: ti2QO., MH
e4400. C•lll14 - 192 - ~190 .

1181 8vi;k $kylwk. Runsgvod.
30 mil• pet gallon. Priced to
..... 814-112-1311 aft• 3:00

IIVI''Iill.k

Musl"cal

Instruments

C0MMA1-.!DAI'ITE )C.,
COME; QUICK l-Y !

Oldt., Pontiac. or lu!dl. C.H :
pick-up. 310 auto tra'*"'uion· ...•.., • ._
814·2•6-1087.

1879 Ch,.,...,. Musl ' " to
appreci ate. C.ll814· g•&amp;· 2&amp;11 .

f.11111 Siiliiilll''

Be~room dr.. ser. suftable fOf
child'• raom. 1 35. 304· 67t!i ·
•831 1fter IS; 30 p.m.

55

MON., AUG. 24

6:00 Ill Big Valley Four Days 1o
Furnace Hill
11 CD
&lt;1&gt; ~W 111 l!2l
IHJ Newt
@ SportoLook (TJ
(}) D.r. Who The Power of
Kroll
iiJ) Secret CHy
IHl Good Tlmeo
Ill Cll Howdy Dl&gt;9dy
6:05 (l) Down to Eanh S1ereo.
6;30 II (]) II]) NBC Nlghdy Newa
@ John For'a Du1door
Adventur. . (R)
(I)
(I) ABC Newa 1;1
(}) NlgiiUy Bwolnu• Report
iW Ill il2l CBS News
iiJl Voyage altha Mimi
(!))ShowBiz Today News o f
1he en1ertalnmen1 world Is
anchored live from New

enem-.

· M~'~"~-~~~
l.~;:=~~~::~::::::::r~~;~~~~
71
Autos for Sale 1
o.u~

TONv·s GUN REPAIR'S , hot
reblu4ting. now teki"'ii ord•
ordart fDt' cuatom MauNra. call 67
304-17&amp;·4131 .
Musical
lnatruments
1978 Pontiac Sunbird, green
911 rang a, brown twHd r~inar,
solid wood TV clbinet .with Electric guitar and amp.-V~matt•
' doori . Jo4on.d a 10 motorcycle. U: llring aeoultlc. ll!oth ••eel.
304·875-8072 oi 175-2381 cond. Aleo other guitera. Call
114-441·0681 ,
.tter5.

E'-ctrle dryer and refrig•atOf,
phone 304-871 -2148.

~. WII. L YOU ~TAY

...

WITH ME, S E;N ORITM

Homelite Chain law. B fl.. trvck
topper. MeytagWring•W.. her.
Call 814-&amp;BII-3839 or 614986-3131 .
Approx. 3000 p.avement brick
for sale. t . 30 •ach ur t 710. for
aii. Call814-912· 7292 .

Gas 'ange t17&amp;; ma"'"' ee6;
drnMr 140. Can be seen at
2311 Li ncoln A~nu e, Tundey,
Wednesday, Thu,edty, 9 lill 6 .

Television
Viewing

•

CAPTAIN EAS.,.;..Y___,

76

38 inch cut with thoW biHe.
C•ll 114-992-2714.

FOR LEASE: Apertment whh
completely remodeled kitchen,
bath, bedroom and Uvingroom.
Av.ailable .middle of August.
Se&lt;:Ond floor. corner Second and
Pine. Parking ••• provided.
t; 2215 . per month. or 12&amp;0. whh
kit&lt;:hen applienees furnished.
Call 8i4-448·2325 or 441·
4426 .

26 inch Sylvania Con sol• TV. 2
lamp tables, coffM teble. Lane
R•dlner rock•. mfa. bed wllh
new Potturepedlc Mattrea, 3
ltmpt, picture fremN, dllht~o
gltuwara, Teppan 'Microwave.
amallappliancu. etc. Cllll14·
992' 6289 .

.

ro a

FOR LEASE : one-bedroom
apartment o~erlooking city paril.
1175. per month. Call814-446·
2325 .. 441-4425.

51

.

Pontoon Boat· 80 HP . Johnson, ' •
"""•· t2780. C.l 114· 448·
4043 after 1:00 PM.

...,.---;:--;,.----- j...;;=====-- ..L;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;==~ ::.:61:.:..79:._.--:::-:--:--:-:-:--=::49

Boats and
Motors for Sale

Sattlllte Dish. 8 ft . D•xcel
Reoeivw. Pantu. Track..-. AI
ramote. Onty 1760. Call 814·
992·1379.

56

Plaatic cil1ern state approved,
plastic septic 1ankl. pl11tic
culverta, metal cutvens. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jacltson. Oh. 814-286· 5930.

76 ·

...

'The

Onto

Cat elyllc eonvert•n. only
181.II. Moat mocleh. ln.UII•
tlon •tao tvahable. Muffler.Maq,
9 ltimpaon Ave., Athene. Ohlo.
1-800.843-3717.

Concr• t• blocks • II 1l1es yerd or
deli\fery. Mason und. Gallipqlts
Block Co.. 123'h Pine St .,
Gallipoli1, Ohio Call 114· 448·
2783.

Callahan's Used Tire Shop. Over
1.000 tlr" , sizes12. 13·. 14, 15.
18, 11.5. 8 milaa OUI Rt. 218.
Cell 014-266-8211 .

KIT 'N' CAlli.YU ®ltJ LarrJ Wrlglll

Kirby Vaouum

1969 12x80 Nenco W•her
Dryer. Almott new carpet and
refrigerator. air conditioner. Cell
814-986·4421 efter 5 :00pm,
Antiques

24,1987

motor, ...... Mlaa. lt..... 23
Pine. Call 814· 448·1120.

Air conditioner. 18.100 BTU .
Only uud 2 montht, c.u
614-258-1911 ahftrf5 ,

53

-.

tt:r, dtMne Mt. 11 ft. boat.

Buikllng Mtterialt
Block. briclt, sewer pipes, w i'l·
dows, lintelt, ate. Claude Win.t efl, Rio Gr1nde, 0 . C•ll 814·
2·15 · 6121 .

Roomli for rant. dav. weak ~
month. O.llia Hotel. Call e,..
446:9580. Rent aslow11 t120
month.

Furnithed apt .. 2 BR . 1111.
Water peid. 1131 2nd. Ave.
Oallipolit. Call 814· 441· 4418
aft:Uf 8:00PM .
2 BR .. with 1tove and refrig. 3rd.
Ave. t210 a month plus dtp.
C•II814-241· 91N.

Sotaa and chairt Pricad from
t395 to t995. Tablea 160 and
up to l12&amp;. Hid•a·bedt t390
e&amp;95 A I'
0225 t 0
to
· ec •ners
·
t376 . L..mJR t28 to 1125.
Dinett" 1109 and up to 14115.
Wood table w-1 chain 1281 to
1795. Desk I 100 up to t375.
Hutchet 1400 end up. Bunk
beds complete w-mattrea ...
1216 and up to 1391. Baby beda
1110. Mattr...esor bo.llapringa
full or twin tl8 , firm 178. •nd
eaa . Queen seta 1225. King
t3&amp;0 . 4 drawer ch•t t69. Gun
· cabinltl I gun. G11 or elect.rle
range 137&amp;. Baby mattr81HI
t3&amp; &amp; ••s. Bed framaa 120.
t30 6 King frame t&amp;O. Good
selection of bedroom auites.
metel cabinet• . .hNdbqards •30
and up to $8&amp;. ,

45

Furnished room . t75. Utilities
paid. Sh.-e beth. Single male.
919 Second. Gallipolit. Call
446-4416 after 7pm.

...,..,.lnl!!t c,.,.

Wat..-bed.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 82
OIN-• St., Galllpolle.
NEW- I pc. wood group- .1 318.
living room tutt"- •111-tiUI.
Bunk beds with beddinl" t111.
Full slH mlttr... &amp; foundation
atartlng · til . Aecllneu
ttartlng· 189.
.
USED--hdl. dresMre, bedroom
euit••· t199 -t299 . D81kl,
wringer washer, a complete line
of used ·tumiture.
NEW- Western bootti- 130.
Workboau· 118 &amp; up~ (Stelri •
soft toe} . Call 614· 44_6 · 31-59.

c.n

Misc . Merchandise

OE aPif'tmtflt atze . - . •
d...r. U21.; RCA Whirlpool
trMh ootnPHtor. t171. 304·
178-1731 . .

8208.
For S al e by Own• : o&amp;-1 IIA, 3
bolhl. A,.,...,. ........ 4000 ....
ft . 21 act.. with tennis court.
e 173.000. WIN soil - h only 5
act'. . for t1515 ,000.
for
.ppolntm.-.t 81•· MI-3381.

64

HouMhold Goode

~·'·

BRIDGE

NORTH
+A3
.KQ5
tA02
+A Q 10 9

A handy play
for a rainy day
By James Jacoby
On a good day, today 's declarer
would score up the heart slam with an
overtrick. He. would w.ln dummy's ace
of spa&lt;les, draw trum.Ps and then play
on clubs. If the club Jack came down,
he could throw his spade loser oo the
fourth club and take a diamond finesse
for 13 tricks. But the experienc ed
player knows that there are not that 1
many good days at the bridge table .
Forget the ove rtrick, but look for the
bes t percentage play to get your 12
tricks.
&amp;Iter a little study, even the novice
knows about elimination plays. You
draw trumps, eliminate a suit or two,
and then put one of the. defenders on
lead so that anything he plays for you
will be helpfuL It's easy to set up s uch
a play when you have plenty of

8-!f-.87

EAST
+7H 2

WEST
+KQ9 8 6
.62
• Q 10 8 7

.94 3

+96

+84

+J76 2

SOUTH
+JIO
.AJ1087
t KJ5

+K53
Vulne rable: Both
Dealer: Nortb
West

North

1+

2 NT

••

Pass
P ass

1.4.

Sou1b

PasS

3.4.

Pass
Pass
Pass

Eau

P ass

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening l ead:

3+

4 NT

·s•

+K

trumps. l~'s .allw. possible to ,set up a trump to play, he must ~ither contuiue
partial ehmmat1on, and that s the se- spades allowing decla r e r to trump in
cret of success with t~e current,dea~ dummy while discarding a loser from
Declarer should Win dummy s _a
his hand or lead a m inor-suit card,
of spades, play a heart back ~ 0 hiS 10 . which
assure 12 l[icks another and another heart to dummy s qu~n. : way Notice that declarer had nothing •.
That leaves a trump still outstandmg to Jose with this play _ it simply gave .
wttb the defenders. Now let declarer him a sure shot whenever West started
play a second spade. West wms the 1 ' th
t
hearts
queen, and since he does. not have a WI on1Y. W
_?
__

win

·-=,......,...,.

6&amp;~'-wtr'

.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
DOWN
l Rick
1 Light
Blaine's
meal
pianist
2 Wholly
4 Unclose
3 Spring
(poet.)
symbol
7 Festal
4 Swedish
8 Territory
is land
10 Total up
5 Chum
ll Exhausted 6 Invigorate
Saturday's Answer
13 Brazilian
7 Stare
22 Irish
29 Mrs. Ponti
tree
9 Widen
fabri c
30 Fragrant
14 Wordplay 10 Coal
23 Wasp
plant
16 Stevedore's
product 24 Queer
:il Outburst
union
12 Spiffy
25 Carter's 32 Summt&gt;r
17 "Electric 15 Yorkshire
vice
(Fr.)
Cowboy''
river
president 37 Guido's
star
18 Renown 27 The
note
19 Large
21 Mining
"S" in
39 "-'s Little
barrel
find
R.S.V.P.
Acre"
20 Drink
21 Latvian
22 Subject
25 Currency
26 Put on .
27 Turf
28 Go wrong
29 Ancestry
33 Spanish
quee n

,.

,.

34Hoary

35 One of
the Coles
36 Stop
38 Sprightly
40 Floor
covering
41 Taste
defeat
42 Container
43 Dutch
town

..

...

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTFS- Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR

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

CRYPTOQUOTES
8-24

B

YBW

B

KVQW

NQBFCW

A C C G

,G C Z W A

B

. ..

VB F
D C N

CWQ

VBF

UVZWA,

A C C G

HQUUZWA

w c u

--·-

D C N

vQ

NQBF C W

zu

B H C W 'Q . - U V C Y B F
F I C U U
Saturday'• Cryptoquote: IF PEOPLE DON'T WANT
TO COME OUT TO THE BALL~ ARK NOBODY'S GONNA
STOP 'EM . - YOGI BERRA

..

�•.
Pega 10-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Monday. August 24.

1~

Temper~tures drop, residents get firSt taste of autumn

s!:~:.c::~~~~~

Reds'

By United Press International
A blast of cold Canadian air
spread south today bringing
pre-dawn temperatures down
Into the 40s In the upper Mlssis -

Federal tax reform gave utllltle$
a tax break, but Ohio Consumers'
Counsel William Spratley com.
plains that the utilitY companies
In turn are not passing the

slump
•
continues

sippi Valley, the upper Great
Lakes and the northe rn
Appalachians.
At Hibbing, Minn. the mercury
dropped to 37 degrees overnight.

C

rlous management problems and
ineffective program reviews
have cast doubt 'on the reliability
of the MX missile, the House
Armed Services Committee 'has
concluded.
·
In a repor t released Sunday
based on four days of hearings In
June. the panel criti cized the
Northrop Corp . ·s Electronics
Division pr ime cont ractor for
the mls;il!''s guida nce . and control system, as well as the Air
.Force, which has hailed the MX

·

.

•O' S

Ohl

hi•ghway·S
By United Press lntematlonal
Fifteen people. Including a
pedestrian who was struck by a
driverless motorcycle , died In
traffic accidents across Ohio
during the weekend. the State
Highway Patrol reported today.
There were seven deaths Sun. day, fi ve Saturday and three
Friday night , a patrol spokesman said. Alcohol was involved
In a t least eight of the 13
accidents, and at least eight of
victims were not wearing seat
belts.
Among the victims was a
Cincinnati inan who died Saturda y whim he was struck as he
walked alon g a s idewalk by a
motorcycle whose driver and
passenger had been ejected
moments earlier when the cycle
collided with a station wagon.
The motorcycle operator and
passe nge r esca ped seriou s
inj ury.
The weekend victims also
included a Middle town man and
a New York woman who were the
only two peopl,e not wearing seat
belts In a car carrying sixpeoplt'.
The four people wearing seat
belts survived when the auto
crashed Sunday on the Ohio
Turnpike in Sandusky County.
The patrol counts fatalities
resulting from accidents on the
st ate' s public roadways be tween
6 p.m. Friday and midnight
Su nday each non- holida y
weekend .
The victims:
Sunday
Lancaster: Kelly S. Lewis. 19,
Lancaster, in a pickup truck
accident on a Fair field County
road.
Toledo: Darius Spangler, 32,
Malinta, in a two-ca r , head -on
collis ion on a Lucas County road.
Fremont: James N. Bythewood. 22, Middletown, and Dina
Lapira. 21, Long Island, N.Y., in
a one-car accident on the Ohio
Turnpike in Sandusky County .
Niles: VIrgini a M. Wilt rout, 50,
Niles, in a one-ca,r accident· on a
Niles street.
Troy: Reba D. Chi ck, 67,
Lakeview, in a two-vehicle collision at the in tersection of Ohio
rou tes 201 and 571 In Miam i
County.
'Marion: Joe Bla ir, 16, Fostoria , in a one-car cras h o n a
Marion street.
Saturday
Portsmouth: Chr istopher C.
Ramey. 26. Lucasv ille. in a onecar accident on Ohio ~'l.'i in Scioto
County.
Woodsfield: Marion J . Ma r mie. 22, J erusa le m , in a one-ca r
crash on Ohio 145 in Monroe
Count y.
Toledo : F rancine A. Gregory,
3:!. Toledo, when s tru ck by a car
aft er she attempted to r un across
I -75 in Toledo.
Wooster: Samuel F . Hawkins,
27, Brinkh aven, in a two-ca r,
head-o n coll isio n on a Wa yne
Co unty road.
Cinci nnati: Richard J. Varlas.
40, Cinci nnati, when struck by a
motorcycle that careened onto a
sidewalk after colliding with a
station wago n on a Cincinnati
street.
Friday night
Lebanon: David M. Caughell.
19, Fairborn, in a one-car accident on a Warren Cou nty road.
Warren: Terri K. Bell , 64, and
David Moore, 32, both of Hermit age. Pa ., in a two- vehicle
•1 acCident on Ohio 82 In Trumbull
. ''-COunt y
involving a tractortrailer rig that left the scene.

Announcements
Auxiliary Velerans Memorial
The annua l picnic of the
Women' s Auxiliary of Ve teran s
Memor ia l Hosplt a l will be held at
5 p. m. Tuesda y at the so uthbound
roads ide park on Route 33. Tlw
even t is lor members, honorary
members and their families.
Those at tending are to take a
,.covered dis h and their own table
service..
\
Harrisonville seniors meet
The Harrisonville Senior Cltb
zens Club will meet at 7 p. m.
Tuesday at the town hall.
Mel gs Boosters to meet
The Meigs Athletic Boosters.
wUI m eet at 7p.m. Tuesday at the'
football s ladlum. AU parenis of
bot h junior and senior high
players and coaches are asked to
attend.
Uoggl~ ,'\lasses
.
Clogging' classes will be held
from 7 to9p.m. Wednesda y at the
Community Building In Hartford, W.Va., with the class to be
Instructed by Bruce Wolle .
Anyone wit h questions may call
Wolfe at 949-2404.

- -------·-·

• aJ

.w:!~G!.*~~~~~~test pro~~~'!~s.

Fifteen
•e on
dl

A frost warning was posted In
parts of Pennsylvania.
While the North east was
treated to its ,first taste of
autumn, · temperatures In the

South and Southwest were ex·
peeled to remain more seasq!'able, with 90-degree readings
forecast through parts of Texas
and Georgia.

Hurr ica ne, Utah was hit with
th~nderstorms late Sunday that
dumped nearly two Inches of rain
and triggered flash flooding
along highway 89,

t~~or l?~~lze

~~ w~~d p~bl~ms~th ~:i~;~~1[Jt~iu~i::t~~m~~~~~~

qu t •

.
.
Committee Cha irman Les Aspin . D-Wjs .. said his panel's
Investigation "shows that only
five of the 17 (MX) test shots
have used the produ ction version
of the guidance system as op·
posed .to the (research and
development 1 version. And of
those five shots, two fell far
outside the target zone ."
The committee report said
senior Air Force offi cials had
"continued eit her to present to
the Congress an optimistic pic-

MX ·t• b •t• t

benefits

of

the

cut

on

Ohio Lottery
Daily Number
152
Pick 4
3596

to

Page 4

adverse
the
disclosures" about the MX g ul- MX that go back years . But when of Ohio offalllng to hold a formal
dance system despite repeated we look at the reports sent to us, public hearing on the matter,
co n cer ns from lower -level we fl~~ nothing but glowing res ultin g In Ineffective regula :
offices.
words.
n- tlon and unequal compliance,
Rep. Sam Stratton, D-N. Y.,
The comm(ttee report co
which has deprived consumers ol
chairman of the committee's eluded that "as a result ~f ra te cuts.
.
research and development sub- significant management defBut a PUCO spokesli'oma n
committee, compared the MX · clencles and Ineffective monitor- said hearings are not necessary
problem to those of the B-lB lng, serious questions of con~l- because most utilities have pres=
bomber.
dence In the deplo~~ MXmlss l e en ted written Information a bout
"A few months ago we found
force have a risen .
the effect of the tax cut. Compa,n,
ma jor problems with the B-1
There was no Immedia te re- les point out that they also lost
bomber that the Air Force had sponse offered by the Air Force · deductions under tax reform and
papered over fory ea rs,"hesaid. or Northrop.
have madesomeratered uctlorls.

•

at y

Cloudy tonight. Showers
and lhund11rstorms. Show·
e rs and thunderstorms
likely Wednesday . High s In
upper 80s.

en tine
1 Section, 10 Pages
A Multimedia Inc.

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Tuesday. August 25. 1987

25 Cents

(

\.
MASTERPIECE Guests at Monday's luncheon In honor of th e
reopening of the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge were In
awe of the beautiful cake which wa.~ decorated for
the nccaslon by Karen Williams of Kroger. Betty
Writesel, sup•nl'Wr of the Kro~er Bakc ry,llt tell,
WIOS one of the deSigner s of the co nledloncry
masterpiece. On one s ide of the huge c ake Willi the

W1 Ate H.rltrg ACM/IttliMI! _, Joltl Ut Fit Tltt S.rlttlf $Iff Of TM Y•t. Wt
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Fine Bedroom Suites From Makers Such
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With The Purchase Of Any Bedroom
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Receive At No Extra Charge - A20
Piece Set For Four of World Famous
"Rogers 24 Karat Gold "Electro
Plated" Tableware Valued At
$}59.95_

Upon the recommenda tion or
the Middleport Board of Public
All~lrs,
Midd leport VIllage
Council Monda y nig ht gave a
first rea ding to ordi nances providing lor 20 percent In ere a s In
water and sewage rates .
Mayor Fred Hollman pointed
ou! that balances In the water
and sewage fund s have been on
the decreasc lor the past year
even with no major pro]c&gt;cts
underwa y and In the n('x t year
required E nvironme nt a l Protection Agency Improvements must
be carried out.l n regard to th '
town's sewag~ di sposal sys tem.
The ma yor also stated th at
Middleport wat er a nd sewage
rates are considera bly lower

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Middleport council has first
reading of water rate hike

·

Rec~ners Priced

than !hose In surrou ndin g towns.
A 10 perc nt discount lor sen ior
ciTi zens and handicapped persons will remain In effec t.
The council ~ave the Increase
ordinance the llrsl or three
t·cqulrcd readings . The ma yor
Also reported that a preapplication lor a $168,000 grant
lor water a nd sewage Improve·
mcnts has been !lied with the
State of Ohio.
Coun cil gave a second readi ng
to a n ordinance on dangerous an d
vicious do~s . Th ordina nce
Incorporates all of the provisions
or the stat.e 1i11v so that offenses
can be tried In the mayor' s court.
plus a few minor additio ns . No
one was present 10 protest the

By KAREN A. KIOJ)
OVP Summer Intern
A London. Ohio man was killed
a nd a nother man In jured In a two
tractor -trailer acciden t on Route
3.'i just out side of Henderson at
11 : 36 p.m , Mond ay, according to
the Mason Coun ty Shet·lff 's
Department.
Jackie L. Cave, 52, the driver of
one of the tractor -trailers . was
transported to Pleasa nt Va·ll ey
Hospit al by the Point Pleasa nt
Eme rgency Medical &amp;•rvlce
where he was pronounced dead in
the emergency room, according
to a hospit a l spokewoman.
The body was tra nsported
from th e hospital to the State
Medical Exami ner's offi ce in

Each

$469.
Maytag Dryers
$389.

·Sout h Chal'leston by the Mason
RPscuc Squad. a sheriff 's spokeswoman sa id .
Denny He nsley. 48. Ashvil le.
Ohio, driver of the ot het· truck,
was trea ted and relea sed from
Pleasa nt Vall ey Hospital. the
spokeswom an added .
The accident occ urred when
the nort hbound 1981 lnl erna tiona l tractor -trailer opera ted by
He ns ley ra n off lhe right side of
the road, ca us in g the driver to
lose control or the ve hi cle.
according to a s he riff's depar tment spokeswoman.
The vehicle came back onto t he
highway a nd went left of center
a nd off the left side of the road ;
th e spokeswoman sa id . When

Buy The Best---Buy Moytag

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TRAFFIC RESUMES - The Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge· reopened to traffic about II : 25 Monday
morning. Traffic above flow s to and from West

Vlrgnia shortly after the structure reopened. The
bridge had been closed lor repairs since March 30.

Bend
bridge
reopens
•

The "joint effor t" between
Meigs a nd Ma son Coun ties wa s
noted by eac h speaker at Monday
vill age action on .the ordiance .
morning' s ceremony for the
reopen ing of Ihe Pomeroy-Mason
Plans lor the an nu a l MiddleBridge. The barricades were
port Chamber of Commerce
dow n and traffic was f low ing by
Block Party were outlined by Bill
11: 25.
Blower, president. Blower reThe bridge has been closed
ported that a car show has been
since
March 30 when Malden added to this year's activity with
Jenkins
Construction , NelsonDuane Weber servi ng as chair·
ville,
began
the $1.39 million
m a n. There are some 14 classes
re pair job to the sixty-year-old
of ca rs to be Includ ed in th e s how
s tructure. The contractor stayed
which will be staged In the a rea of
rig ht on sched ul e a nd was over
the vill age parking lot just off
the contract's a llotme nt of fo urMill 8_1. Blower stated a lso that
months to complete the job onl y
two other ·new fea tu res will
because of a n unanticipated
Include a bubble m achine a nd a
universe laser lighted exhibi t delay, in the arrival of steel.
A ferry which opera ted befro m the Center of Science a nd
tween
Pomeroy and Mason while
Industry In Columbu s. The uni the
bridge
was closed was a
verse exhibit must be In a
prime
exa
mpl
e of the joint effort
Cont inued on page 10
referred to by the ceremony
spea kers. Meigs a nd Mason
County community lea ders and
businessmen. along with sta te
offi cials and private e nt erprises
He nsley tried lo bring hi s vehic le
in Ohio. were Instr umen tal lh
under control and back Into hi s
putting the ferry in service. Signs
la ne. the trailer portion went ont o
pointing
the way .to the ferry
its side, ca using the tractor to
were
taken
down soon after the
'
over( um , s he added.
bridge
was
back
In service .
Cave. traveling so uth , was
Speakers a t the ceremony ·
unable to avoid tne Hensley
Included Pomeroy Mayor RI vehicle a nd struck th e tra iler,
chard Seyler , Ma so n, W.Va .
w hich was on Its s ide In the
southbound lane, the spokeswo- Mayor George Nichols, Bill
Nease, president of Pomeroy
man said .
Area · Chamber of Commerce,
T he Point P leasa nt Volunteer
Fire Department used the Jaws
George Dougan , deputy direc tor
of the Ohio Department of
of Life, air bags and ot her
Transportation, West VIrginia
hydrolic eq uipm ent to free the
victim from the tractor, accord-' State Se nator Mike Shaw a nd
Ohio Sta te Rep. Jolynn Boster.
lng to a fi re d e partm e nt
Taking · par t In the ribbon
spo kesman.
------~~
" II you could see" the truck
cutting were Bruce Reed, a grea t
gra nd son of W.F . Reed, who
(Continued on page lO)
played an import a nt role In
ge tting the bridge built in 1927,
Seyler, Nease, Dougan, Boster
and Nichols.
Following the brie f ceremony
which was conducted by Ron
Ash, manager of Pomeroy's Ohio
Continued ori page 10

Truck driver killed in Mason wreck

Maytag Auto. Washers
I

state seal of Ohio. On the other side was the state
seal of West VIrgin a and a bridge crossing a rjver
wa.• In the center of I he cake . From Jell to right
alter Wrllesel are Richard Seyler, Pomeroy
mayor, Dick Warner, Pomeroy Kroger manager,
Geor ge Dougan , deputy director of the Ohio
Oepartmt•nt of Transportation's Marietta office ,
and George Nichols, Mason, .W.Va. mayor.

'-

LAST BARRICADE - The
in front of the
Pome roy-Mason Bridge came down Monday morning following a ·
brief reopening ceremony with numerous slat e and local officials.

'

Name Fisher assistant
Meigs High principal
Gordon Fisher was hired as
assistant principal a t the Meigs
High School Mond ay w hen the
Meigs Loc a l School Distr ict
Board of Education met in
specia l sess ion.
Fisher replaces Fenton Taylor
who was recently nam ed princi pal · of the hi g h sc hool. His
appointment is for two years a nd
was e ffectiv e as of yesterday.
The board hired Julie Ran dolph as an elementary teacher
fo r the new school year and
added to the su bstitut e teacher
list, Gordon Ball, Mary C.
Canady, Maney Basye, Conn ie
Smith. VIcki Ha ley, J eff.Skinn er
and Uretta J. Dunp. Rick Edwards was na m ed junior high
football coach for the· new school
year . The board entered Into
purchased services agreements
lor l'ransportation of handica pped stu dent s for this school
year. ,all ren'e wals, with Edward
Baer, a student to the hearing

imp aired clas~ in Jackson ; Gary
Fife, a student to the Ohio School
for the Deaf; Deborah Fisher, a
student to the Ohio School for the
Blind ; Blue Streak Cab Co .. a
student to a special cla ss at
Pomeroy E lemetnary and a
handicapped student to the
Meigs Junior High Sc hool.
The high sc hool st udent hand book· was a pproved and Rosa
Snowden was employed as a
custodian in the district. Bernice
Garnes was hi red a s a cook for
Harrisonville. The resignation of
long-time teache r , Jeanette Thomas as a teacher in th e district
was accepted. She is going on
di sabilit y reti reme nt. ·
.
Minni e Thornton and Charles
Williamson were reinstated as
bus drivers for the new school
year pendin g rei nsta tement by
the board's fleet Insurance catrler. It was agreed to participate
with other d is tricts in ~ natural
Co ntinu ed on page 10

$399.
$349.

Many Styles &amp; Colon!

MASON FURNITURE ·co.

Mason, W. Va.

(304) 773-5592
FATAUTY -A London, Ohiomanwaskllledln
a two tractor-trailer accident on Route 35 late
Monday night. Jackie L. Cave, 52, was pinned
lnei!le his vehicle, above, and the Jaws of Ule, air
bags and'other hydrolic equipment were used to
free him. according to a lire . department

r
•

spoke801an. The driver of the other truck was
treated and released at Pleasant Valley Hospital,
according to a hospital spokewoman. The
accident Is stUI being Investigated by the Mason
County Sheriff's Department.

JUST GLAD TO BE HERE -Summer vacation _ "bright eyed and bushy tailed" as these first
Is over and all Meigs County schools
back in
graders at Syracuse Elementary, then It's going
session.·II students throughout the county were as
to be a great year.

are

.II

I&gt;

.,

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