<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12883" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/12883?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-01T09:53:29+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43855">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/38dcadc9cf0e4b6a8a783d1e0a1b908c.pdf</src>
      <authentication>e85d34340b5e57254f10d1cda9e8d7df</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="40424">
                  <text>•
hga 10-Tha Deily Senlii81

·- --Local Briefs:-Candidaie wins premium rebate
A generalllabWty rate Increase for the city of Athens was qlpOSed
by Athens Law Director Garry E. Hurter, candidate for state
represEntative, resultlng In a $43,410 pnmlum reduction.
Hunter said the rebate wUI reduce the lll86 premium Ill $119,538.
Last year, the city paid ooly $21,152.
AltOOugb the rebate Is good ~rws, Hunter said the reduced
premium st!U appears too high, based m the city's claim history.
When Athens agreed earlier this year to Jl&lt;IY the ballooned pm!lwn,
Hunter wrote a letter to the Insurance company asking It to justify
the premium.
Hunter saki the company Indicated It was unwilling to adjust the
rate. Only after Hunter flied a oomplalnt with the Ohio Department
of Insurance did Home'Insuranre grant til&gt; rebate, he said.
While Insurance companies have been hard hit by court decisions
concerning sovereign Immunity and by declining Interest rates,
Hunter said drastic rate Increases need to be justified In relation to a
political subdivision's loss experience. Hunter said Athens' success
In getting the rebate shows that cities, counties and school distrtcls
should not just sit back and accept large rate Increases.

Syracuse man suffers injury
Robert Taylor, 21, Syracuse, was taken to Holzer Medical Center
and !rea ted and released for contusions he suffered In an accident oo
Gallla County Road 3 In Cheshire Township Saturday.
Taylor was a passenger In a car, driven by Jai'DES D. Wright, 17,
Eureka Star Route, which went off the road, OVI'rturned and struck
some mailboxes and a house, according to the state highway patrol's
accident report.
Wright, who received only minor lnjurtes and was not treated, was
cited by the patrol for driving while under the lnOuence andfallureto
control the motor vehicle he was driving. The vehicle was heavUy
damaged.

Couples file for marriage
Filing for marrtage in Meigs County Probate Coort are Thomas
Lawrence KeUy Jr., 23, Middleport, and Angela Marie Pooler, 18,
Pomeroy, and Robert A. Venoy Jr.. 26, Hartford, W.Va .. and Usa
Ann Long, 21, Route 1, Ll'tart.

Money action filed in court
An action for money and another for dissolution of a marriage
bave been filed In the Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
The Home National Bank, Racine, has filed an action for money
due on a promissory note against Larry SeDers and Agnes Sellers,
PorUand.
Filing for a dissoution of their marriage were SheDa J . Baltic,
RacinE', and Mickey Baltic, Ravenswood. W.Va.
In other action of the court, thE' marriages rJ. Sandra Susan Roberts
and Richard Lee Roberts. and Anna Vlrgene HOI and Homer
Stephen Hill have been dissolved. An entry dismissing an Qrder to
appear has been filed in thecaseofLI'ta Fetty against Wallace Fetty,
who had been ordered to appear In court to answer charges of
contempt of court for failure to comply with a chDd support erder. An
entry noting that Fetty had entered into a wage withholding
agreement was also filed.
Ordered to appear In court on Thursday at 9 a.m. on a charge rJ.
contempt of court for failure to comply with a child support order
was WOllam W. Harris, Middleport. The action was brought by the State of North Carolina and Mildred Harris.
Also filed In the court was an entry ordering a sheriffs sale of real
estate owned by Richard D. Blessing and Stella Blessing. It was
noted that bankruptcy proceedings have been completed and that
the judgment of the City Loan and Savings Co., plaintiff, has been
satisfied.

Meigs EMS answers 11 calls
Eleven calls were answered by units rJ. the Meigs County
EmergPncy Medical Service over the weekend.
At 1:15 a.m Saturday. the Pomeroy unit went to Plum Street for
Thelma Grueser who was taken to the Holzer Medical Center; at 6:28
a.m. the Tuppers Plains unit took Clara Conroy to Veterans
Memortal Hospital; at 7:20 a.m. the FI:Jmeroy unit went to the
Pomeroy Health Care Center for Millard Van Meter who was taken .
to Holzer Medical CentPr.
At 2: 19 p.m. the Middleport unit went to the Stonewood
Apartments for Mary Gilkey who was treated but not transported; at
3: 25 p.m. Kenneth Rakhold was taken from Reedsville to St. Joseph
Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.; at 6:11p.m. the Tuwers Plains unit
was called to an automobile accident on Ohio 7 where Michael
Workman was treated but not transported.
At 7:52p.m. the Rutland unit went to the RuUandbaWieldfor Keith
Reynolds who was taken to the Holzer Medical Center; and at 10:28
p.m. the Middleport unit went to the MIQ:lleport PoUce Department
for Dennis Hart. treated rut not transported.
On Suroay at 12:01 a.m. Juanita Houcher was taken !rom Ohio 9!1
to Holzer by tbe Pomeroy unit; at 1:41 a.m. the Middleport unit went
to Park Street for Klm Armstrong who was taken to Holzer; at 3: 16
p.m. the Rutland unit went to the Rutland baD park i&gt;r Michael
Neas&lt;' who was taken to Veterans, and at 9:32p.m. the Pomeroy unit
transportl'd Virginia Conrey to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Revival services set in Rutland
Revival services will be held at the Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church beginning Wednesday and continuing throogh Sunday. A
different minister will speak each night and all proceeds wUI go to
"Bucks for Bobbie."
On Friday and Saturday the youth wlll have a rummage and bake
sale on the church lot. also with all proceeds to go to "Bucks for
Bobble."

Multimedia buys cable systems
GREENVILLE, S.C. - Multimedia Cablevlslon has announced
an agreemmt to purchase four cable systems In Kansas from
Karlan Communications, Inc., of New York.
The systems include Great Bend. Larned, Hoisington and
LaCrosse. Kan .. with a total subscriber count of 9,250.
Multimedia Cablevislon, a division ot Multimedia, Inc., currenUy
serves 278,ml basic subscribers and '!10,001 pay subscribers.
Headquartered in Wichita, Kan., Multimedia Cablevlslon Is ooe of
the top 30 Multiple Systems Operators in ~ natkm, with fNer 100
cable franchises In Kansas, Oklahoma, !Uinols and North Carolina.

Area woman named coordinator
GALLIPOLIS - A recent graduate of Rio Grande College will
coordinate a newly established county-wide crime ,r.revention
program through federal and local funds received by the Gallla
County prosecutor's office In AprU.
Mary Lynne Ruff wUl work closely with Sherlfl James
Montgomery and Prosecutor Joseph Cain's fiflce. Ruff wUI be
assisted by two staff members who wUI work with ber coordinating
various crime prevention programs.
The grant enabling the esta bllshment of the program is curren Uy
being lmplememted through Cain's ofllce.
Crime prevention programs was Introduced In Gallla County In
1977. During a three-year period, overall reported crfllllnal activity
declined 18 percent.
· .

•
Monday. July 14. 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Southern heat wave
enters s~ond week

Area deaths
Anna Hart

·\t·~

Gra!nwOod Cemetery. Friends
may caD at the funeral home from
7-9 tonight and from 24 and7-9p.m.
Thesday.

By JANICE KALMAR
Kansas and Nebraska as additional
United l'rells lnlenlatlonal
storms threatened low-lying are'dS.
The heat wave In the drought·
The searing temperatures and a
stricken South entered Its ninth day yearlong drought in the South are
today with forecasters predicting withering corn, wheat and saybean
several more days of the hot, 'sticky crops, pushing the region's belea-.
weather that has been blamed for guered farmers to the brink rJ.
three deaths and is threatening to disaster, agriculture officials said.
destroy thousands of acres of crops.
President Reagan has approved
"There's really not much break 25 soutb Alabama counties for
in sight for Georgia and South federal disaster loans because of
Carolina until the end of the week," the drought, but officials said it may
said meteorologist Pete Reynolds be too little too late.
of the National Weather Service.
"It's a disaster," said Bubba
"Georgia and South Carolina will Trotman, head of the Alabama
both have highs In the 90s to the lOOs Agricultural Stabilization and Con·
through at least Thursday."
servation Service. "The wheat crop
Columbia, S.C., reached 100 Is cut at leastlll to !Kl percent. Corn
degrees Sunday for the seventh ·is going to be very short. It's
day, breaking a record of six days already tw iSt ing in the middle of the
of l~egree or higher readings set day. It does not bok good at all. "
In 1977. Records for the day were set
In Virginia, agriculture officials
In North Carolina at Cape Hatteras. predicted the state may lose half Its
92 degrees, and at the New Hanover corn crop.
County Airport, 99 degrees.
With the hea t wave entering its
At least three deatffi In the ninth day today, officials in South
Carolinas durtng the last wpek have Carolina officials warned residents
been blamed on the heat. Georgia to be ready for water rationing, and
officials last week reported two farmers in Georgia continued to sell
deatffi from heat· related inju rtes off cattle because of drying water·
before the heat wave began and ing ponds and bare pastures.
The drought has also provided
Mlssourt officials said a St. Louis
man died rJ. heat stroke last week. ideal conditions for forest fires.
Outside of the heat-wave belt, Since July 1, at least 432 blazes have
thunderstorms rumbled today over burned 2,214 acres in South Carol·
the Rockies, Plains and New Ina, mostlY in remote areas.
"It 's physically exhausting to
England.
In New York Sunday, two fight these fires anyway, and the
chlldrE!l and four adults were weather just makes it worse," state
struck by lightning during a sudden forester Leonard Kilian said.
thunderstorm in Rockville Centre
on Long Island.
The victims were huddled under
a large tree watching a fireworks
display when lightning hit the tree ,
CLEVELAND (UPII - There
said Nassau County police spokeswere no top prize winners In
man Charles KoDer.
The most serious Injury was to a Saturday's Ohio Lotto ga me, mean6-year-old hoy who suffered cardiac ing the next drawing will carry a
arrest and was hospitalized In jackpot of at least $2.6 million, state
lottery official say.
critical condltim.
The numbers drawn were 19, 20,
Thunderstorms with winds up to
75 mph pounded Cheyenne, Wyo., 21, 33. 34 and 36.
Sales were $3.3 million. with a
and golf-ball size hail hammered
Herman and Blair, Neb. A flash jackpot was $1.3 million.
Some 291 tickets had five of the
Oood watch was issued for parts of
six numbers drawn for $859 each,
and l ,:i'i8 tickE'ts had four correct
numbers for $64 each.
The Daily Number drawn Satur·
South Central Ohio
day was 442.
~aS()Il ____________I~C~on~tm~·u=ed~rr~o~m~P~a~ge~1~'------- Mostly cloudy today, with a
chance of showers and highs in the
contest.
tary; Ellis S. Frame In, Nicholas mid !l5. Mostly cloudy tonight, with
Veterans Memorial
Republicans wrangled over hal· County, associate secretary; John a chance of showers and a low In the
toting, proxy votes and par liamen. Wooton, Raleigh County, treas· upper OOs. Partly cloudy Tuesday,
No Admissions S.1turday.
tary procedure, with each faction urer; and Bllly Burke, Gilmer, with highs In the upper !Jls.
Discharged
Saturday: Donald
jockeying for an edge.
The probability of precipitation is
parliamentarian.
Brumfield
and
Linda
Persons.
Moori' extolled his admlnlstra·
Committee members-at-large 30 percent today. 40 percent tonight
Admitted
Sunday:
Charles
Ll'mlion's ~s nearly an hour, ending are ootgolng state chairman Joe and ~percent Thesday.
ley.
Pomeroy.
his remarks with a brief endorse- Bob Goodwin, Marlo Prezioso of
Winds will he light and from the
Discharged: Maix'l Pauley.
ment ot Shaw. A third man i1 the Marion County, and Mara Watson west today and light and variablf'
Clara
Slater, and Lottie Bradford.
race, E!lgar Helskel, bowed CAll.
tonight.
of Brooke County.
"For the governor to come In and ,...-----------------------------------------------------------------00 this at the last minute troubles
mE'," Raese said of Moore'sspeech.
''I've wprked hard for this position.
I've worked harder than the
governor and harder than Mike
Shaw. "
Raese said the governor ca Ded
him late Friday and asked him to
drop out.
Because_electricity is so easy to use, people rarely think about
HaD, woo backed Raese, said ~
it. But, it's important to learn how to use electricity safely.
votes were assured but a shift
That's why we are offering you our free booklet on electrical
began to occur by Saturday, when
safety. Get one and share it with your family. It could save your
Moore's staff fanned out inside the
life, or the life of someone you love.
Marriott Hotel t&gt; buttonoole committee members.
The booklet guides you away from downed power lines, and
"It's pressure tactics," Raese
cautions against working or playing near overhead wires. It progrouSl'd. ''I'm tired of watching this
vides tips for the whole family on the careful use of household
constant .b arraglrtg of wr rElJ resm·
appliances, electrical outlets and more.
tatlves - having his keystone cops
out thl're twisting arms."
'Thke a minute and phone us for your free electrical safety bookAfterward, Moore's press secrelet. We want you to call anytime you have a question
tary, Jom Price, would oniy say,
about using eleCtricity safely.
"It was close. I'm sure the governor
Electricity ... making sure you can
thinks Mike would have worked
get
the most out of life.
better with him. "
Raese vowed to patch up any Ill
feelings within the ranks, saying,
"The most Important thing right
now Is to get united."
Some challenged the arithmetic
EUCTRJCm.__~-~
FLAIIELESS ,EFFICIENT, OEPE~
of the results, asking that baDots be
sealed: Elretion officials dl!lluallfied ohe ballot, leaving the total
number of ballots which oould have
~ cast to 129. But the results
showed Ill votes.
"I tptnk there's a lot of room to
challenge there," said Ann McCuskey, wife of state Finance and
Admlhlstrat ion Commissioner
John 'McCuskey, who held proxy
votes In the election. "I hope
whatever we do, we do quickly."
Shaffer said things were actually
niuch 'closer a day earlier.
'"I'Ill' United Mine Workers
mernll'rs whO were leaning my
may decided to commit toSaDy and
that IW8S the beginning Of a
bandWagon effect," he said.
Richardson's most recent state
job II(IIS that of chairman of the
Health Care Cost Review
Auttqrtty.
"Sally's convincing victory and tile support she received from
acrosS West VIrginia - siDws that
wr party has come together and Is
now United and ready to do ba!UE'
with the Republicans this fall and·ln
the )(ears
to come," Rockefeller
I
said.
W~lle Stowers of Lincoln Cwnty,

Anna Weyersmlller Hart, '11.
Pomeroy, died Saturday afternoon
at Veter~ Memorial Hospital.
Clifford D. Sovel
A homemaker, Mrs. Hart was
born Dec. 2: l888,1nMelgsCoonty, a
Clifford D. Savel, 65, Akron, died
daughter of ·the late JOSEph and Sunday at the·Akron City Hospital.
Kate Grueser Weyersmlller.
Mr. Sovel was born at Long
SUrviving are a son, Thomas .Bottom, a son of the late Harry and
Hart. Pomeroy; a daughter·ln·law, Mamie Kibble Hetzer Sovel. He
Cecelia Hart, . Pomeroy; three was employed by the Standard
grandchildren, Jack Hart, Pome· Slage Co., and was a member of the
roy; Lance Hart, Kenton, and HDda International Union Operators
Hart Tlracp,-Johnstown, Ohio, and Engineers.
.
a sister, Nonna Curtis, Pomeroy.
Surviving are his wife, Betty; two
Besides her parents, she was children, Debra Swinehart, Akron,
preceded in death by .a brother and . and Terry Sovel, Springdale, Pa.;
her husband, Edson Hart.
seven grandchildren; two brothers,
Graveside rites wUI be held at Hany Sove!Jr., Parma, and Garth
1:30 p.m. Thesday ·at the Bur- Sovel, Tuppers Plains; two sisters,
lingham Cemetery. Friends may Helen Bacher, Guysville, and
call at the Ewing Funeral Home Edythe Woodyard, Parkersrurg,
from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. today.
W.Va.; a balf brother. John Hetzer,
and a half sister, Janet Chichester,
Everett Roush
both of R.eedsvUle.
Friends may can· from 1-3 p.m.
Everett 'Roush, 85, Fourth Street, Tuesday at the Hopkins Lawver
Racine, died Saturday evening In
Funeral Home In Uniontown, Ohio,
til&gt; Intensive care unit of the Holzer where services wm be held ImmeMedical Center.
diately foDowing the calling period.
Mr. Roush was born March '!/,
1901,ln Mason County, W.Va., as9n
Ruby Russell
of the late JOSEph and Angeline
Weaver lroush. He had been
Ruby Russell died Sunday at her
employed with the Union Barge
residence
at 559 S. Second Ave ..
Lines before his retirement.
Middleport.
Arrangements are be·
Survlvlhg are four daughters,
lng
completed
at the Rawlings- ·
Dorothy •Hodge, Liberty, N.Y;
Patrtcia Faye Marcinko, R.eeds- Coats-Blower Funeral Home.
vUie; Ja,e Faye McCloud, New
Haven,\\Wa., andJudyKayeBird, State receives report
Racine; a son, James Edward
Roush, c);lumrus, and a brother.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPII - A
Eber Roush, Mason, W.Va . Also blue ribbon commission's report on
surviving' are l3 grandchildren and school finance in Ohio was to be
10 great-grandchildren.
presented today to the State Board
Besides his parents, he was of Education.
preceded ' In death by his wife,
The report makes recommenda·
Grace L. Roush. on June 25, 1985;
lions regarding equity, adequacy.
two daughters, four brothers, five accountability, and programmatic
sisters ~d a granddaughter.
aspects of school finance, a spokes·
Mr. Roush was a member of the
man for the Ohio Department of
Syracuse Church of God and the Education said.
Racine 1Fire Department. He
The report, which was tbe result
servedln theU.S.Armyduringthe of a six-month study by the
19!ls.
commission. will be used by the
Services wUl be held at 11 a.m. board to formulate recommenda·
Wednesday at the Ewing Funeral
tions to the 117th Ohio General
Home with Rev. Charles Coil Assembly for Ohio's local-state
offlcliating. Burial wUI be in the funding partnership.

Vo1.36, No.49

Ohio. ·

Ohio weather

- - =-

ililii

;~:c=~~::lost':c~;

Ohio Power

Part of American Electric Power

1 Section, I 0 Pago1

15 1986

A

Zl Cemt

MuHimedlo Inc. NeWIPIPir

Hemlock Grove man dies
following plunge into river

No winner named

"I'm glad you made me listen."

rnan,j was elreted second vice
chalrplan.
Other state pfflcers elreted In·
cludljd Paul Rusen rl. Ohio Cwnty,
first ~Ice chairman; Shelby Leary
rJ. Monongalia Cwnty, associate
chati·man; LuciUe Meadows,
Fayl!lte Cwnty, n!COrdlng secre-

en tine

•

TOP - At 11: 30 p.in. Monday, the truck Which
carried Terry L. Bertrand, 37, Hemlock Grove area
resident, to his death In a muddy Ohio River, rmched

lhe ' top of the steep
over which the
vehlele bad plunged about 9: 15
near Midwest
Stee~ East Main Street, Pomeroy,.

By BOB HOEFLICH
Seritlnel Stall Writer
A pickup truck carrted a Hem·
lock Grove area man over a steep
embankment near the Midwest
Steel Co .. East Main Street, to his
death in the muddy Ohio River
Monday night.
Dead as a result of Ihe accidmt.
which occurred abou t 9:15p.m. , is
Terry L. Bertrand. 37. 37785
TownShip Road 223. near Hemlock
Grow•. His body was recoverrd
from .the vehicle, sunk in water
estimated to be 25 to 30 fpet deep. at
10:02 p.m. b)' divers from Pomeroy
and Middleport.
Rick Blaettnar, captain of the
Pomeroy Emergl'ncy Squad, reported that Mr . Bertrand was
driving alone eastbound m his tru ck
on East Main Street. when he wrnt
over the steep. approximately
20-foot emba nkment.
One witness ro the tru ck going
over the emba nkment said he
thought rhe truck at first was just
pulling off the road to park on a st rip

of land between the railroad tracks
and the street. Another witness said
that Mr. Bertrand appeared to
&lt;lump at the whff'l before going off
the road and over thl' embankment.
Coincidentally, the Syracuse
Emergency Squad truck was tra·
vellng close by when the Bertrand
vehicle. left the road. Members
were able to pinpoint the bcation
unt ll FI:Jmeroy rescue workers
arrived at the scene.
First on the scene with his boat,
was Jim Webster, a Pomeray
Emergency Squad member, who
went to the scene and was then
joined by the Pomeroy !llUad boat.
Don Stivers and David Hoffman.
certified divers from the Middle·
port squad, along with Terry
Gardner. Greg Thomas, Jay Evans
and Homer Smith Jr., were also In
the water helping with the mission.
Mason and New Haven units were
on standby.
The swimmers and divers lo·
cated Mr. Bertrand's body of Mr.
Bertrand in the vehicle and brought

It to til&gt; surface at 10:02 p.m. The
body was taken via the WellstE!'
boat to the Pomeroy levee, where
Bertrand was pronounced dead by
Meigs County Coroner Dr. James
Conde.
Dr. Conde said that there Is a
possibility that something had
happened to be driver before the
truck plunged into the Ohio River,
rut the actual cause of death Is
pending the completion ct an
autopsy. The body was taken to the
Ewing Funeral Home and then was
taken toPleasantValleyHospltalat
Point Pleasant for examination by
Mason County Ccconer Dr. John
Grubb, since the body was trehnl·
caDy within the jurisdiction ct
Mason County ofllclals.
The body was then taken to South
Charleston, W.Va., to the State
Examiners Medical Laboratory for
an autopsy.
After the recovery of the body,
divers, swtnuners and other
workers In boats began the chore rJ.
(Continued on Page 101

I

Area ·investigator files $~ million ·libel. suit against sheriff
Meigs County Sheriff Howard Frank (aces a $2
million libel suit ·which was filed Monday In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by Gary J . Wolfe and
Wolfe lnvE"stlgallons Inc., RacinE'.
Wolfe alleges in his complaint that on three
separate occasions In 1~- July 15, Nov. 2 and Nov.
15- Frank willfully, maliciously, recklessly and in
bad faith, slandered him In the presence of a number
of people, making statements that he (Wolfe) was in
the business of Illegally dealing In drugs and
Innuendoes meant to convey the thought tliat Wolfe
was undesirable. unworthy and not fit for .•·•

--!!!'P~ll!es:'.b~'

Plaintiff claims that such defam atorv statments by
Frank were and are false, and as a1direct result of the
allegedly slanderous statements; his personal and
business reputations havP wn di rmaged .
Wolfe further alleges that durtiJg the period from
July '15 to Nov. 15. 1985, FrarJjk interfered with
potential business relationships a•f his , including his
relationships with Meigs Local alnd Southern Local
School Districts.
Said interference with busil1ess relationships
allegedly included slanderous 'I statements and
inferences to the effect that Wolfe 1_.vas not qualifiC'd to

' " ,..

Middleport clmrittier · ··
.schedules block party

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Zro, the educational rrobile unit of
Sentinel Staff Writer
the Center of Science and Industry,
Contests. cralts, educational dis· and Gerald Powell's Cloggers were
plays, and musical entertainment discussed .
will highlight the annual Middleport
Teresa Kennedy is In charge rJ.
Block Party to be held on Sept. 13 oooth location and noted that she
under sponsorship of the Middle- has prepared a tetter to be sent out
port Chamber or Commerce.
to area craftsmen inviting them to'
Meeting Monday at Blower's comE' to Middleport for the block
river patio, plans were .discussed • party. Also discussed at the meet·
for the block party and committees lng was the possibility of involving
were named by Bill Blower. senior citizens through their "Yeschamber president .
teryear" program.
He reported that again this year
Again this year several fund
some of the litter problems will be raising projects wUi be carried out.
handled through the Litter Control Bob Freed, Jason ·Ingels, Sue
Office. Steve Powell, litter control Sigman and Paul Sigman were
manager, and a 4-H club will be named to handle ticket sales for a
number of prizes to re awarded
contacted ahou t cleanup work .
Activities planned include ham- during the day.
burge&gt;r and pizza eating contests,
It was decided that T-shlrts will
IDI'S(' SIDE', paper airplane flying, be sold in maroon with white
and bingo . If the stage Is completed lettering. The staff wUl wear royal
at the depot In the Dave Diles blue shirts with whitE' lettering.
Riverside Park. all of the main
Hours oft he party were discussed
entertainment will be presented and while several favored changing
there. Sev~ral instrumental and the hours from noon to 6 p.m. to
vocal groups will be invited to noon to 8 p.m. No decision was
perfonn.
madP pending approval of Middle·
The possibility of bringing in an port Village Council .
animal display from the Columbus
(Continued on page lU) •

pertorm duties' for which he contracted, the suit said.
Wolfe alleges that such statemen ts were false and
that they were made with the intention of depriving
him of business.
He alleges that Frank during the same time perkld
made slanderous statem ents to the' effect tbat the
agency of Wolfe Investiga tions Inc. was not legally
authorizC'd to pertorm investigations. The plaln!Uf
states that his agency was duly licensed in Ohio on
Feb. 4, 1984. and since that lime 'ha s provided
investigative and security services in Ohio, West
Vi rgi nia and Kentucky, employing between one and

nine Investigators or security personnel In providing
those services.
Wolfe himself demands judgment against Frank,
Individually and as sheriff of Meigs County, and
against the county as a whole, jointly andseveraUy,ln ,
the sum of $00J,ml compensatory damages and
SOOO,ml punitive damages.
Wolfe Investigations Inc. demands judgment
against the defendants, jointly and sevE'!'ally, of
$000,mlcompensatorydamagesand$500,mlpinitlve
damages; attornE'y fees and costs.
A trial by jury has been requested.

~-'1:!1~.........-----:--------===-=----__;,;;,._~~
--··---'· New

,r::-.

-_: : - •: - : : l

band

'

director
is hired

FOR
and Brian

golf
recreation
following

.

PROJECI'S - Dick Owen
c!H!halnnen for the Meigs Jaycees
presented checks lor g;25 each for
'Ojects In Middleport and Pomeroy
. 1nday's meeting of the Middleport

O!runber of Commerce. BW Voung of the recreation
committee of Pomeroy V~ CwncU,Ielt, accepted
a
from Owen, with Conde presenting a meek to
BUI mower, light, of the Dave DUes Riverside Park
Conunlttee.

checl!

William Hall ot Colunirus Is
Eastern High School's new band
director.
Meeting Friday night at the
school. the Board of Education of
the EastE'rn High School voted to
hire Hall, who for the past year has
been at Westland High School,
Columbus.
A graduate of Ohio State University with a master's degree from
Catholic University, Washington,
D.C. Hall has taught In both public
and parochial schools. For seven
years he played with the U.S. ArrriY
Band.
While at Westland, Hall's band
took thrf'e superiors In comests and
participated In state competftbn.
The ratlr\gs rJ. superior were in both
marching and conrert band. HaD's
hiring followed Interviewing of
SI'Yeral applicants the evening
before.
Valerie Rarnsbottom was employed by the board as fiag and
majorette oorps advisor. Durtn)!
the meetln~ the lnard voted to
!Continued·on Page 101

!

Middleport council eyes i1 shortage in general fund budget
By BOB HOEFLICH
Sendnel·Stall Writer
A budget for 1!W Indicating a
$72,755 general lund dE'flclt was
approved Monday night when
Middleport VUiage Council met In
regular session.
All of the other funds lnclu~ed In
the proposed budget indicated that
rreelpts will exceed the expendl·
tures. However. the detailed rudget
Indicated that the general'!und will
be short the approximate$72,001 for
l!W.
Mayor Fred Hoffman Indicated
that either harsh cuts will have to be
madE' for the year or Income wUI
have to be Increased. Either avenue
will be a problem, he said. The
budget will P,ot he sent to the oounty
budget commlsslori.
Appllcllllon reje(lted
During last r\lglit's meeting,
Mayor Hoffman al10 read a letter
from the Ohio J)i!parl(nent. of
DeveiOJII1lenl which states that the
town's aPp,UcatJon for •a coniprehenslve housing rehab~lltatJon
grant ,has been turned down. The

tive grant program plus 11 special
category applications.
The amount requested In the 82
applications totaled over $48mllllon
and the special project a pplications
requested $13 mDIIon. The depart·
ment approved 11 of the appllca!Ions with the $4.7 million allocated
and six of the top ranking special
projects.
May0r Hoffman saki that State
Rep. JolYJlll Boster Is In touch with
the department to come up with
suggestions oo how the town's
application lot such a grant can he
more ~tive next year.
~ ~ due
Mayor Hoffman also read
another !E't~r. this one from the
Ohio Department rJ. Liquor Control,
lridicatlng that llcfn~ of allllquQr
permit holders 1'1Ust be renewed on
Oct. 1 and holders · must file
ai!PIIeatlons by 1that time. Mayor
Hoffman pointed oot ':; that ·the
council can reQllest a Jiearlng on
any or all of the applications but
mu~ notify the state board of the
hearl!)g l'l'guests lJ days be!or'e

L.=:::~~=-~:==~·~

have received ci!Jmpla int calls from
citizens about ([Jars and indicated
that council shollid take a hard look
at applicants a~; d the man agement
o_f these estab~
ll• t . hments One coun ·
cllman Indica t &gt;d that he . under·
stood that so 1e action mrghl. be
underway In th~i oommunity to vote
the town dry ·I' Mayor Hoffman
suggested coun~l :il confer with Chief
of Pollee Sid \.ltiltle on the experlen·
c.es of the poiiCIJ? department with
the various est1•blishml'llts which
sale liquor.
11
Council apprd ved the changes In
town ordinance!;. as updated by a
Cle\leland !Inn.
A]iprov es request
A request tt r the Rev. Mike
Panglo to cond~ ct outdoor services
oo tl)l' vlllagE' Pl!•rklng lot on North
SecOad Avenue, •· near the "T, " was
apPfOVed and 1, council members
Indicated they ~ ave no complaints
to Panglo's reqt.llest todo·evangellsUc work on the j ~reels of the town.
Coundl apprGIIVed the 191!7 re·
quest to the ~,tO ~artment of
'))'&amp;{iJ~X~rtatloll ,r public transpor·
tatlQn llllney to ,1\lie contlntla tkln of ..
the,\MI service I! fi\ Middleport and
I

I

jl

!

... J,, I
II

Pomero~ ·. The tot.1l request is for
$45,959. which includes $:&gt;3,789 in
fPderal funds and $12.179 in state
fu nds. Counci l members Indica ted
thai tix'v have hPard nothing but
favorabie romment s on the cab
service, which is operated by Bill
Snouffer.
The June report of Mayor
Hollman showing receipts of $3,375
in fines and fees was approved.
Mayor Hoffman acknowledged donations which were given on the
communi ty's July 4th fireworks
display . A large crowd was on hand
to en joy the fireworks and thanks
were extended to everyone who
helped with tbe project especially
fire department members who set
ofl the display. The department will
take an active role next year In
hl'lping raising funds for the 1987
fireworks display and Councilmen
Bob Gilmore and Jack Satterfield
will work towards extending' the.
Ju(y 4th celebration to Include a
,
parade and program.
.
"'
Cable complalnls
Coupcll gav~ a third resdlng and
adopted ·an erdlnance providing for
drilling for oil and gas on village-

owned property near the sewage
lagoon below Middleport.
Complaints were again lodged
against Consolidated Communica·
lions Inc., which provides television
cable service for the town. Cooncil
Preskient Dewey Horton said that
council had In the beginning of the
service stressed that they did not
want any Ohio stations removed
from the servlre.
Recently, WOUB In Athens was
taken from the service. Council
members also aired complaints
against a roDingtelevislon program
schedule which appears constantly
on one channel. Mayer Hoffman
said that he bas contacted the
company asking them to namE' a
price for the cost of lines and
equipment which It has m Middleport rut he has ra:etved no reply .
Thmlal extended
Council extended thanks il Carl
Hysell, Terry Gardner and their
workers for extensive cleaning liP
and painting the fence at the junior
high football field and for other
work performed In the·town. lt was
reported that Coonty·Engineer Phil
!Wberts is working on details of

.

.

'

establishing tlx' bicycle path.
Councilman Gilmore r£llol11'11
that Feenl') -BennPtt Post 1:18,
American Legion. has commlltl'd
to build a IIE'W sn"ctur~ . a m~tlnR
and oommunlry rulldlng. at the
former roadside park on Mill
Street. A letter of thanks from L.W.
McComas was read;expresslnR his
apprrelation for the town havlnR
honored him with a plaqur at tht'
recent Jayc('(' !lQif toumamrnt at
which he was rhe guest of honor.
Pl&amp;ro118 dlrlwllld
It was rerxrted that thE' tow11's
swimming pool wDI be closed until
Friday. A circulating pump went
out d order and Is belngrewoond In'
GaUipolls, thr mayor said.
Councilman James Clatworthy
brought up tlv' pr'Oblem of (i~J'Qns
In til&gt; town and stressed that th(olf
presence Is a a health hal8rd.'
Mayer Hoffman said that he had'
beellln. twchwlthJonJacob&amp;d~

Meigs Coonty Health Department
on the matter but had been aclvllecl
by Jaoob&amp; that there Is actually no
solutk&gt;n.
A product des~ed to jll!t rid ot
(Contlnu£&lt;1 'lit Page lOt
•

..

�,I

.

\

•

._.

'TuescaY· July 15, 1986
Pllge-2.· The Daily s.ntinel
..
Ohio

l1l Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MIIIG8-MASON AREA

~~ .,..,..,_.,_.,..,. .r.,.u:::::lu="'

ISim~
~v

.

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT

Publhber
~AT

WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

· BOB HOEFUCH

General Manarer

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The

United Presslnternattonal,lnland Dally Press

Assoclallon and the American Newspaper Publl!lhers Association.
LE:ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They !Jhould be less than :Q) words
Ion~ . AIIIC'tters are subject to ed,ltlng and 1111.at be signEd with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published: Letlert should be In
go od laSH•. addressln~ Issues. nol personalities.

:Never the twain
:shall meet

WASHINGTON -Tile Supreme
Cwrt batted hro forthreelnthesex
cases tbat came down toward the
end of term. The oourt was rlgh!,ln
the matter d. student vulgartty and
right In the matter d. a puijic
nulsanm masquerallng as a book·
~tore, but the oourt struci\C wt in Its
ruling oo Georgia's anti-!Odomy
law.
The student case arose In Span away, Wash., wben young Matthew
Fraser undertook to make a mock
nominating speech to a student
assembly. His speech was refresh·
Ingly short but undeniably bawdy.
Fellow students laughed, rut to
borrow a !X&gt;rase from Bertie
Wooster, Ice began to brm on the
slopes of the !K1nclpal's forehead.
Fraser was suspended for t110 days
tor USing "vulgar and offensive"
language. He sued fnr damages.
So trivial a case never soould
. have gone to lrlal at all, but both a
u.s. District Cwrt and tbe 9th

. White House reporters on the lecture circutt are Inevitably aslred which
· president had tbe'best rapport with the !R5S.
: The answer Is "none," 'f'!lere are sbadlngs, of course, depending oo the
. tenure of Ibe president- they are always nice to reporters atthe beginning
· of their terms - and depending on how !heY are faring in tbe highest d.ftce
: In the land.
·. The reason presidents and the press hav~ tbelr ups and downs Is because
. both are human and appear to be working frOm dlffl&gt;rent perspectives,
:although that is not necessartly so.
· . lnformatlon Is power, so presklents are usually loath to dlvulg&lt;&gt; their
actions until a decision Is made, preferabl;y not untO It Is a fait accompli.
_That way. they are not bothered bY wbat they consider premature
i:llsclosures or by a public debate on Issues where they feel there Is no
;argument.
: As a result, reporters often appear to be working at cross purposes with
-the president, trying to find out wbat he Is up to.
: .Presidents and their coteries, on the other hand, feel that the less they are
!"\posed to the publiC eye, the freer !heY are to act. Consequently, as lime
.passes, ~ccess to presklents Is usuaUy drastlcatly reduced except tor their
:~remonla l appearances.
- Every president in history has been upset with the JX'es5 and has felt that
l1e was treated unfairly. For a while, they try closing chanlll'ls of.
tommunicatlon, buill doesn't work. In a democracy, too many forces are
&lt;It play that require maximum publicity to portray a presklentln jllbllc,
iloing the people's work, and mt behind the scenes, sheltered, sequestered
and isolated.
Although legend bas it tbat Presklent John Kennedy bad a warm
relationship With the press, he became apoplectiC fNer What Was Written
~bout him and his famUy.
• "''m reading more and enjoying It l~ss." was his comment !OOn after he
i'ntered the White House. He also soughtrevenge,cancellingthe New York
flerald-Tribune, caUing publishers to rebuloe reporters, even· trying to
makP some correspondents persona non grata at the White House.
President Lyndon Johnson had a wariness of the press and suffered
~really when reporters discovered his cre:llbUity gap. He believed
reporters shoukl be in his camp, syrnpatbetlc and understanding. Much as
fie tried to woo them, they stUI went their Independent waywllhcrlllclsm
~wing in proportion to the escalation of the Vietnam War.
: President Richard Nixon had his troubleswllhthepressfromthestartct
jlis poll!ical career, culminating In the Watergat~ scandal that forced Ids
resignation. He too Ilied attheootset ct Ids presidency to win over Ibe press
bu!later established his "enemy list" of reporters.
President Gerald Ford had afalrly amicablerelatlonshlpwlthl)le press.
But not long after he was in office, he learned to duck and weave and run
Jrom !he press when the questions got touchy.
• President Jimmy Carter was fairly accessible at the beginning, but
became more and more Isolated and secluded as dme went on. ·
•. He permitted no coverage of his 12-day Domestic Sununlt at Camp
David that proved to be a debacle for him. Coverage mi~t have helped
him to see the light. He also blacked out press coverage ct the Camp David
: summit on the Middle East.
~ Presidenl Reagan Is totally managed In his press relations. He
: maintains an affable air with reporters. At the same time, !heY have little
•:. access to him, his aides protect and shield him, and his news conteren&lt;PS
:: are few a nd far be!wecn.
·· When all is said and done, Ills not dl!!lcult to understand why reporters
- ~ are not loved by presidents. Fortunately. each has a jOb to do and liking
~ each other has nothing to do with It.
,.

Berry's World
MAKiflll.ATf
ANti/OR
f,l(flOIT
SOMEONE.

TODAY

.~Today

in history

Today is Tuesday, July 15, the !96th day of 1986 with 169 to follow.
The moon Is moving away 11'001 Its first quarter.
·. The morning star Is Jupiter.
:· The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
· Those born on this date are Wider tbe sign ct Cancer. They Include Dutch
:)lalnter Rembrandt van Rljn in lrni; poet Clement OarkMoore, autmr ol.
:·"A Visit from St. Nicholas ('"Twas the Night BetoreCbrlalmal") lnlT19;
·JWman CalhoUc nun St. Frances Xavier C&amp;brlnl, the firSt US. cltlzell to be
:;canonized a saint, In 1850; lyricist Dorothy Fieldl In 1005; acllll'l Alex
:.!{arras in 19;1; 18&amp;" 51) and Jan-MichiM!J VIncent n l!IH 1aee 42), and
·:Singer Unda Ronstadt In l9t6 (aee 40).
:- On this date In history:
•• In 1912, led by aU-round athlete Jim Thorpe, the United states team took
::more medals than any other nation at the Olympic Games In Stockoolm,
:Sweden.
•
.:, In 1945, Italy declared war on ill fanner Axil pertner, Japan.
~ In 1971, President Rldwd Nixon divJooa! pl1111 to make an
;11~m:edented visit to the People'aRepubllcctChlna. He made the IUtorlc
~ In February 1972.
,
.
.; In J9ll',l, George Shultz wtu con11rmet1 as secretary of llate, .uCCEedlng
;&lt;AJexanl!t'r Halg, who resigned June 25 fNf!f IDllpeclfled policy dlHerences
:.with the Reaean admlnlslratiDn.

Circuit ""!:~,..;·,~dec~reed that'
The high oourt made clean hits, in
Fraser's c
righls d. my view, In ~bose two cases. It
tree speech had
violate:!. Last erred In affirming the Georgia
week the
Cqurt reversed, statute. "Thelssuepresented,"sald
on the
grounds ' that Justice Byron White for a 5-4
chUdren in a
school have oo majority; "Is whether the federal
to be smart Constitution confers a fundamental
alecks with
School ad· right upop bomosexuals to l'l!gage
mlnlstrators
have their In !Odorily." Obviously no such
disciplinary
held oostage right i! spelled out In the Constltuto frivolous
Amendment lion, but the toi'gotll'l! Ninth
claims.
Amendment speaks eloquently to
In Kenmore,
a suburb of the point: "The eitumerat!on ln.the
Buffalo, pollee cto~~elu•ded that an Constitution. of certain rtghls sbaU
adult bookstore
serving as a not be ' construed to deny or
front tor
and · &lt;X her .disparage· other~ retained . by the
Ullclt
Tiley closed · · people." Thti 14th Amen&lt;Vnent says
It as a public
The New tbat oo State . may deprtve any
York Court of
found It person 'cl :'Uberty" without due.
unconstitutional
local autoorl· process of law.
ties to close a
but Chief
The Georgia statute Is. not
Justice Warrell
addre.Ssed to ·. homosexuals only.
for a 6.3
tbat The law, simUar to laws In more
"First
values may not tban :Jl states, applies to consenting
be Invoked by
linking the heterosexuals also. It makes oral
words 'sex' and 'ljnoks.' "
contact between husband and wife

a crime. White avoided these
provisions of the Georgia Jaw In Ids
concentration on the aUeged "fun·
darr8ltal right to engage In
ll:Jmosexual 9Jdomy." He found oo
precedent IJr the claims that "any
kind of private sexual condu:t
between consenting adults" Is
constltutlonaUy protected by !llme
right of JX'lvacy.
With tbat opinion the high court
beat a retreat from a line of cases
thai had expanded precisely that
right - a right to be let alone. More
than :D years ago, In Griswold v.
·O:nmecticut, the court struck down
a Connecticut statute that provided
op to a year In prison tor my person
"woo uses any drug, · medicinal
article or instrument tor the
purpose d. JX'evenUngconceptlon."
Justice WUIIam 0. qot~glas, speak·
lng for the court, asked a rhetorical
que&gt;tlon:
"Would we aUow the pollee to
search the sacred · prei:lncts of
marital bedrooms tor teUtale signs
d. tbe use of contraceptives? The
wry klea Is repulsive to tbe notions
of pl'lvacy surrounding t~ marriage relat!onshlp." A right of
privacy, Dooglas added, Is "older
than the BUI of Rights, older than
wr political parties, older tban our
sdl.ool system."
In a concurrtng opinion, Justice
,Arthur Goldberg placed particular
emphasis m the "forgotten Ninth."
He spoke of a right to prtvacy In
marriage as "fundamental." To
say that 5o basiC a rtght may be
infringed becaus.&gt; It Is not constitu·
t!onaUy guaranteed In so many
words "Is to Ignore the Ninth
Amendment and to give It oo Effect
whatsoever."

To be sure, there Is a slgnltlcant
difference between a homosexual
relationship and the marital relationship. The state traditionally has
ton ned t re one and encouraged the
other. Even !0, distasteful as the
matter may be, homosexuals ooght
to have the same right to privacy In
Georgia tbat the court long ago
guaranteed to heterosexuals In
Nl&gt;wHaven.

Passing off
WASHINGTON - Why woold
anyone 'counterfl&gt;lt strel bolts? The
same reason 9Jmeone counterfeits
bUis: to make money by
passing them. off as the real thing.
Granted, you don't make as
much Wlcll profit from a fake steel
bolt as you do from a phony $100 ijU,
rut the counterfeit bolt Is a lot
harder to detect. In fact, It costs
about $200- real dollars, that is.to detennlne the exact metallic
content of a single boll. For tlis
reason, few tests are done unless a
bolt taUs. and then It's too late.
Why should you care whether a
steel bolt Isn't what It's supposed to
be? Consider tbat there are about
3,000 bolts In the car you drive, 7,000
In every Army tank your taxes pay
lor and perhaps 3 million In !llme
jet aircraft.
Consider also that alloy-strel
bolts are reliable to 800 degrres
Fahrenheit, while cheaper boron·
steel bolts tum to putty at ~
degrees. Recent bolt faUures bt
nuclear plants and military equipment suggest that fraudulent las-

noo

lack Anderson &amp; Dale VanAtta

teners mayalread~ ' bescrewedinto
America's vitals.
A
last April by the
Industrial
Institute oon·
eluded tbat Ill
of Grade 8
bolts the bardest and
most
on
were
counterfeit. Some
exporters have
using cheaper,
boron steel on
Grade 8 bolts
Instead of the sre,ilflted aUoy steel.
Wbat's worse
that some U.S.
importers appear be cooperaling
with the
bolt counterfeit·
ers - or even to
Instigating the
fraud.
Lynch was
slipped a letter
an American
Importer from a
Japanese
Dated June
10,1985. the letter *u':gests that the
Japanese firm
well aware of
the U.S. all&lt;))'·s:tel,~l requirement,
"rut that
!be pre:sent
crders
ship 1Gr:ade8 tx1ron
using 00-degree
spaced
head marking."
marking on
the bolt Is the
iaUy nwgnlzed
klentlflcalfon of Grl·ade8 alloy-steel
bolts.

Some Japanese bolt manufactur·
ers have apologized for the mis·
markings when caught, but
claimed that lbe U.S. lmporlers
requested them.
"l wouldn't put a kids' swing set
tog&lt;&gt;ther with some of tbe junk I get
in here! " grtped an angry dlstribu·
tor In Houston.
Unfortunately, It's more than
swing sets I bat fall becauseoffaulty
bolts - and the Injuries are far
graver than a rump 00 the bead for
a 4-year old. Here are some
examples of what some Industry
insiders caU "The Junking or·
America":
- Two military helicopters
crashed In separate accidents on
the West Coast last sprtng, killing
six occupants. Both crashes were
traced to faulty fastl'l!ers .
- A neighborhood In Texas had
to be evacuated In 1984 wren a bolt
broke and 5,000 pounds of deadly
poosg&lt;&gt;ne' gas spewed out of a
petrochemical plant.
- Five Ironworkers died when a
television/ radio antenna tower In

Houston collapsed In 1982 because
of a bolt failure.
-A 19&amp;1 study,costlng$2mllllon,
estlrnatid that almost halt of the
67,000 bolls In a Midland, Mich.,
nuclear plant did not meet specltlcatlons. The taUure of three main
bolls anchoring two reactors had
jl'Ompted Ibe study, The plant Is mt
in

~ration.

An alarming trend Is that many
foreign manufacturers oow sell
"g&lt;&gt;nerlc" bolts and other fasteners
- that Is , without Identifying
factory marks. This makes tracing
oounterfelts virtually Impossible,
especially wren the Importers deny
responsibility.
So why mt simply "Buy American"? Becaue almost half tbe U.S.
fastener manufactunlts have shut
down in the past 10 years due to
foreign competition. A Commerce
Department study in 1982 found
that domestic fastener makers
could supply only 45 percent of the
military's emergency needs, but
ruled that this did not threaten
national security.

Campus wars _ I__________R_o_be.,.....r_t-_~....;_al___;te_rs
commitment.
SEATTLE (NEAl - As a
They are not
. Across the
professor of atmospheric sclenres
nation,
more
,
3,
700
profesmrs
at the University of Washlngtoo,
and
senior
resea•·cl.fl.ers
as
well as
Dr. Robert G. Fleagle Is very
more tban 2,1ll0
students
disturbed by the itcreaslng oon·
in science and
depart·
lamination of the atmosphere I hal
ments at
au of tbe
envelops our planet.
He Is CODCI'rned about the
sitles bave
"Star
damage Ukely to result from
·
Wars"
increased carbon dioxide levels.
That act of pm,.fest Is far more
about tbe threat to tbeearth'sozooe
serious
than a citizen's casual
shield · from Duorocarbons and
signing of a petlth mat a shopping
about the release of toxiC materials
center because of the Importance
into the air.
But Fleagle is most distressed by academics attach to grants that
something else thoughtless people enable them to con educt research In
their specialized II elds.
seek to release Into tbe skies - the
The fl'deral gov 'l'ltJIIent long bas
Implements of war il the brm of
been
a majOr sou rce of research
the Strategic Defense Initiative or
money - and u nder President
"Star Wars."
The best way to deal wlth tlreats Reagan, the DefeJ&gt;se Department
bas assumed a m alor role In the
to the human race other than SDI,
Fleagle believes, Is to deploy a process.
Moreover, one F 'entagon official
"highly !Ophlstlcated space rerecently
warned th; 11 scientists who
search and monitoring program"
don't
"keep
their mouths shut"
with broad International support.
about
SDJ
research
' oould endanger
But SDI would create "a tremendous diversion of funds" from their ellglblllty I·~ government
clvDlan to mlUtary work, Fleagle funding ct other p oject.s.
rears. II ~W~uld, he thinks, eventu· Nevertheless, sc ·ience and eng!·
ally lead to the "militarization of nee ring professors , at more than no
space" and crowd out desperately ooUeges and wtlver sltles in 41 states
- Including such institutions at
needed ctvlllan research.
Last autumn, at the beginning of MIT, cal Tech, s'1 LDford, Harvard,
the 1985·86 academic year, Fleagle Princeton and lj orneU - have
,decided the time had oome to declared their ln&lt;Jt !pendence from
translate his theoretical ooiX.'em the "lll-a&gt;ncelved , and d~D~gerous"
Into a !lrm oommltment: He SDI program b y &amp;JinlnK the
I
publiclY vowed that he would never petition.
The
petition,
llOII! signers In·
accept any federal .funds for SDI
elude
15
Nobel
Lt
1ureates, wdrns
research.
thtit
SDI
"Is
astep
toward \he type
As chairman d. the local chapter
ct
weapons
and
st
:ralegy
likely m
ot United Campuses to Prevmt
Nuclear War, Fleagle Clrculatlll a trigger a 111clear ti IOiocaust."
Despite tlille ~ orts, the nation's
petltiop aroone his oolleaguee. It
academic
lnstln.l tjons· accepted
attracted the IUpporl, of rmre than
$8!1.1 j nlllton WOrth of
more
tban
300 faculty membera, graduate
SDI
research
con~~racts during the
students and teacliing 111111Istants
1985
dscal
year.
Hll(h atop tbat list
willing to make a similar

country;:s:;!mo!~s'r:;j ,~:~~~~~univer-

'

•,

\

COUft:.;. ·-~--.l_am_e_s_J_.
.
K_,_:.'lpa_tr_ic_k

Sex and the

The· Daily Sentinel

'

I

was MIT, with almost $59.7 million
worth of research grants.
'!.'he New York -based Couocll oo
Economic Priotitles says work on
SDJ and other mllllary projects
now accounts for 16 percent of all
federally funded academic research -a level oot attained since
the lEak of the VIetnam War In the
late 1900s.
Similarly, the Philadelphia·
base:! American Friends Service
Committee says "the Pentagon Is

ruylnglts way back onto campus In
a big way, mobilizing researchers
lor a quiet role In the arms race."
During the 1984 dscal year,
spending oo mUltary research
conducted by universities topped $1
lilllon - Including more than $18
mUllan at the University of Washington - a development Fleagle
says bas him "very much con- ·
cerned as a human being and a
scientist."

Houston 'down in the dumps' these d3ys

Scoreboard ...

16,

MAJOR LEAGUE STi\NDINGS
NATIONAL LEAGUE
E081
w L l'cl GB
New York ... .... 59 25 .702
Montreal.. .. .. .. . 46 38 .548 13
Philadelphia .. . 42 43 .494 17!&gt;
Chicago .. .. .. ..
36 48 .429 23
St. Louis .. ....... 36 50 .419 24
Pittsburgh .. .... 35 50 .412 24!&gt;
Wesl
San Franrisco. 48 40 .545
Houston .. ······ 47 41 .534 I
San DJego ...... . 45 43 .511 3
Atlanta .
42 46 .477 6
Cinci nnati .. ..... 40 44 .476 6
Los Angeles .... 40 48 .455 8
Monday's Games

By FRED MeMANE
UPI h&amp;lant Sporis Editor
HOUSTON (UPI)- Houstonlans
have taken to wearing their pride
on lhl&gt;lr shirts these days.
That's how far down In the dumps
people are around here. · When
Texans bave to wear T· shirts
telling everybody tbat lheY're
proud, you lmow. something Is
wrong.
Yet T-shlrts wlth the slogan
"Houston Proud" are a common
garb worn by the local cltzenry.
This Is definitely a city with a
complex, and It's a good klea
major-league baseball dhose it to
tt&gt;st the 57th AU-Star Game.
Forget the grim fact the game
wUI be played indoors lor the
second straight year. You can't
play baseball outside In lhl&gt;
summer here anyway. U the heal
doesn't suffocate you, mosquitoes
big enough to wear a leash wUI

llo&lt;kllcker, Bait 1H; Boyd, Bos
11-6; Rasmussen, NY and Schrom,
Ciev 10-2; McCaskill, Cal 10 -5;
Higuera, Mil 10-7.
15-~;

Earned Run Anra&amp;e
N:Hional Leaguf' -'- Honeycult, LA

2.00; Ojeda, NY 2.2&lt;1; Scott, Hou 2.29;
Rhoden, Pill 2.42; Forsch. StL 2.51 .

American League- Clemens, Bos

2.48; Higuera, Mil 2.76; Darwlrr, Mil
2.92; Witt. Cal 3.&lt;1!; McCaskill. Cal
3.32.
Strikeouts
National Leagut&gt;-

Scott, Hou 167;

Valenzuela. LA 134; Welch. LA 107;
Smith, Atl 105; Fernandez, NY 103.

AmPrlcan League- Clemens, Bos

146; Morris, 0.1 128; Wilt, Cal 124;
McCaskill. Cal US; Higuera, Mil U5

Saves

No Games Scheduled

.National LeaguE." -

Tuesday's Game

All ·Star Game at Houston. Texas

1\MERICAN LEAGUE
Eiult
w L Pet
Boston .. ... ... .... 56 31 .644
New York ......
50 39 .562
Clt&gt;veland ... .. .. 46 39 .541
Ba ltimore ... ... 46 41 .529
Toronto.
47 43 .522
IX&gt;1roll. ......
13 44 .494
MilwaukPe ...
41 45 .477
West
California ..
48 39 .552
TC'xas .... .. ..... .. 47 41 .534
Chicago ... ... .. .. 40 46 .465
Kansas City .. .. 40 48 .455
St&gt;attle ..... .. ..... 39 51 .433
MinnPwta . ... ... 37 51 .420
Oakland ..... ..
34 56 .378
Monday's Games
No Games Sched uled
Tuesday's Game

RE&gt;ardon, Mtl

20; Smi th, Hou 17: Gossage, SD and

Worn'll, StL 15; Franco , Cln and

Smith, Chi 14.

American League- Aase, Bait 23;

GB Righetti. NY 19; Hernan&lt;Pz, Del18;
7

Harris, TPx 15;
Stanley, 8os 14.

Henke, Tor and

9

10
10\?
13
14!&gt;

Transactions

1~6

Sent left -handed
pitcher Rich SauvE&gt;ur lo Hawaii of the

10%

Pacific Coast League (AAAI; pur·
chased contract of right -hander
Barry Jones from Hawaii .
San Francisco- Moved outfieldE-r

7!&gt;
8%

Ill?

15!&gt;

Geddes cops Women's Open
crown in Monday's playoff

Pittsburgh -

IAAA l fo r a 20-day rPhabilitatlon

/torn thumb ligaments).

Bradley -

College
Signed Coach Dick

Versacrlo l ·year contract.
NCA~- Placed Bradlry on 2-year

probation for recruiting violations.

Home Huns

National League- Da"is. Hou 20;

Schmidt. Phil 19; Marshall , L•\ 18;

Hornf'r , All 17: Cartrr, NY and

Parkf'r. Cin 16.
Anwrican Leaguf'- CanSC"Co, Oak

23; BarUf' ld , Tor, Pagliarulo, NY and
Parrish, D!'t 21; Hrbt&gt;k, Minn.
Joynrr. Cal and Kingman. Oak 20.

Runs Batted ln

NaTional LeaguE:'- Schmidt, Phil
66: Car1f'f, NY 65; Davis, Hou 60;
Hornrr, All 56; C' . Davis, SF and
Parkrr, Cin 55.
American Leaguf'- Canseco. Oak
7~ ; .Joyner, Ca l 72: Barfif'id and Bell.

Tor 65; Presley. Sea 64.
Stolen kases
NaTional LPaguE&gt;- Coleman. Sll .
~ : Davi s, Cln 42: Raines, Mt! 41;
Dunran, LA 32: Doran, Hou 31.
American Lf'agur - Hendrrson ,

NY ol ; Cangelosi, Chi 39; Mosrby,

Tor &lt;1nd Wilson. KC21; Griffin, Oak ,
Pr&lt;l is, Cal and Wl~~lns, Bait 20

Pitching Victories

NaTional League- Fernandez. NY

12·2; Krukow. SF and Raw iE'Y , Phil
11-5; Valenzuela, LA 11-6; Ojeda. NY

10·2: Gooden, NY 10-4: Knepper. Hou
10-7; Mahler. AIII0-8.

Americ-an League- CIC'mens, Bas

Football

Dall as - Release&lt;! S£"w'f'n rookie
free age-nts, Including : quarte-rback
Lanny Dycus; running backs Gerald
F'oggiE- and Anthony Gooden; UnC'·
backers JPrry Mikels and Harry
Roberts; df'frnslve back Gr eg Pur ce ll; and kicker Jotm Traut.
DPnver - SignPd lin ebacker BruCE'
Kloste-rmann, righlh· round draft

pick from South Dakota Sht le-, to a
ser ies of 1- year contracts .
Houston- Waived defensivE&gt; back
Chris Brown lneck injuries); linebackrr MikC' Kinsey /back proble-ms) ; and tackle DonJotm son f knfE'
problem'il .

NE:'w Orf'lans- Namro Bill Baker
Jr .. Tom Marino. and Carmen
PlcconP scou t.co .
Tampa Bay - Signed guard Clay
MJIIC'r. 12th-round draft cho ice from

Michigan .

Hockey

New York- Named Phil Espo sito
dirC'Ctor of operations. replacln,l!:
rra lg Patrirk .
So~rr

St.

pressure on her. It 1the pull I lipped
out and she drained hers."
Utile. seeking her nrst win In four
years after undergobtg a series of
physical problems, was disappointed at not winning but not In the
way she payed.
"I feel like I reaUy gave II my all
today," said Little. "I gut a little
tired oomlng in and l think that
accounted tor the stray soots I hit.
But, there's a lot of pressure when
you 're playing head to head.! feel I
never gave II away. I feel Jane
played well to win. II was good

By GENE CADDES
UPI Spol'ts Writer
DAYTON, Ohio (UP!l - Jane
Geddes believes she got the monkey
off her back Monday.
Geddes. winless in three years on
the LPGA Tour, although coming
close on several occasions, captured the biggest prize of all- the
Women's U.S. Open Championship
- In an 18-hole p~&gt;~Yolf with Sally
Little at the NCR Country Club.
Geddes, 26, shot a 1-under par 71
to win by two strokes over Little.
who at one time had led by three
strokes.
"I just felt I had something to
prove," said Geddes, who had
finished 72 holes Sunday tied with
Little at 1-under par '0,7, forcing Ire
18- hole playoff.
"I've played weU In the past,''
said Geddes. "When you have high
finishes and you don't win, people
say, 'okay, when arc you going to
win.'
"II started bugging me lor a
while. II started effectln!( my goa
game and my demeanor on the
course. I started putting a lot of
pressure on mysetl.l just had this to
pnlve to my sell and the people wbo
have been questioning me."
Geddes, who took u ~ gotl at age 17
and two years later was a member
of the Florida State UniVersity
women's golf team, does not lack
confidence.
"I'm a v~ry ~ll)pe1~ 1 play~r."
she said. "l reel Uke this won't be
my last win by far. I'm very
confident with my!l'l!. I've always
said when aU I need is my first win.
I feel Uke I can be a contender out
here. It's a learning experience a nd
I've learned a lot."
Little, after failing behind early
when Geddes lirdled Ire second
ll:Jie, went three shots up with
consecutive birdies on the fourth.
fill h and sixth boles. But, a double
bo~y by Lillie on No. 9 gave
Geddes a 1-sho l mar~n at the tum.
The two players were deadlocked
at 2-under after IJ, but Geddes
rolled In a 5-!oot birdie putt on tbe
14th and led the rest of the way. On
13, Geddes had made a :!!-foot pun
for par.
"I thought !bat was a very big
turning point." said Little, who was
putting for a birdie oo the 13. "I fell
U I made that. it woukl bave put

Dan Gladden from tbe disabled list to
Phoenix of the Pacific Coast League

Leaders

devour you.
This . Is the per1ect place for
baseball's midseason carnival be·
cause this Is a City badly in need of a
party. There Is trouble·in a place
niany prople believed was paradise
only five years ago.
Signs of·decay are everywhere.
Taxis, which once sprinted _back
and forth lo the airport tocoUect tbe
hordes of dreamers coming to seek
their fortune, now sit Idly by the
curbs.
Skycrapers, which once had
waiting lists for occupancy, mw
stand empty In the downtown area.
One estimate states there are 64
such vacant buUdlngs, unfortunate
monuments to more prosperous
times.
"We are in a very serious
recession right now," admits Jim
McConn, the city's mayor during
the boom years from 19'/S-81 and
oow an asslst.ant vice president of

Louis lMISL&gt; -Signed goalie

Pat Baker to a 1-year contract with
an optlon ye-ar; signed defe-ndPr
Sf(&gt;\If' Pec hf'r 1o a l·year con tract.

Scanlon upset winner in
1986 Hall-of-Fame tourney

*

WHEN I CLAP MY HANDS,
YOUR ONLY REALITY .

WilL BE TELEVISION ...

Newsp1per Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
New York . New York 10017.
'

POSTMA.STm: Send addrHs chanees
to The DaUy Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
Pon-.roy, Ohio 45781.

SlllliiCRIPTION IUoTD

w~~.~ ~.~~~

One
..
1do
One Month ..... .... .. ....... ........ .. ........80

One Year ................. ~·-· · ···· ....... $57.20
SINGLE OOPY
. PRICE'

.

Oa11}' ................ ... :.!.... ,........ 25 ·Centt

Subscribers not desJrinJ to pay thecarrll'r mtiY rt'mll In advance direct lo
The Dally

~ntlnel

on a3, 6or l2month

basis . Cred1t will be i$vencarrler e~Ch

week .

No stJbscrlptlons by mall permitted t;t
areas where home carrier service II
available.

IliaD 1!0-..-

•

992· 7022
[QUII Housing Opportunity

"We Htve ••• Key• to 1 BtHer Deal"

SMITH-NELSON MOTOI·
S
POMEIOY
JANE GEDDES

-BANKEeON£
Presents

The 1986 Ohio University
Communiversity Band

*

•n•

IN POMEROY*

·We Are ()pen 49 Hours
A Week
T~ Serve You!

Thursday, Jgly 17, 1986
'7:00P.M.

STOP ·BY ONE.OF OUR CONVENIENT
LOCATIONS IN MASON,
POINT. PL'EASANt:OR NEW HAVEN
CHANCES AR( WE'LL
OPEN.

a•

Ronald P. Socc:iarelli, Conductor

LOU\' &amp; IN ITALLMINT HOURS • •
Montley thru WHna...,;y ............ .. .. .. !tiCNi e.nl. To 3t00 p.m.
lhul'llley ........... ...... ..... ... ................ ..... tiCIO a.m. To 12 noon
frl41oy- .... .... 9tOO a.m. To HIO p.m. - Sr30 p.nl. To 7JOQ p.m;
Saturolay........... .. .... ........ ......... ............ ,;,oo a.m. To ltOO p.m.
DRIVI-IN &amp; WALK:.UP WINDOW HOURS
Monjlay thru Thunllay ........................ WO a.m. Ta StCIO p.m;
frlola'( .. .............................. .... ............. .. lr30 a.m. To 7t00 p.m;
· Saturday .. :.... .. ...... ........... .................... wo a.m. To 1t00 ,..,.,

CAPTAIN D'S WILL PROVIDE AN "ALL YOU CAN EAT''
FISH DINNiR THURSDAY 4 P.M. TO 7 P.M.

S4.AR1S

'

w..lu~~~..~~~.~~ .. $...:.~

!2 Wetkl ...... ,.:.... .. .. . :. . :..... .. .... ~~~~~ .

•

S2 CHILD•Iil 12 &amp; UliiDEI

*Brin&amp; yOur lawn chairs' &amp; picnic supper to the Pomeroy city parking lot for
a m!lslc-fi,led.eveninl.

.

24 Hour Dapooltory
&amp; ,,.. lank lly Mall.
.
.

as wee~u ........ :..... ,....................e 110
,j)

•Applicant must meet HUD income requirements
•Applicants must move into THE MAPLES no later than 30 days after
application paperwork is completed.
•
*Applicants will rmiw free rent for 30 days following move-in.
•Applicants must make full sectrity deposit payment prior to movt-in.
•Applicants must live in an eHicien~y ~ptntment _allHEMAPlESa mi~
nimum of si• (6) months orwillforfeitfree rent amountfrom security
deposit return.
•Applicants must be 62 years of age or must haw proof of handicap or
disability.
Call or stop in at THE MAPLES for more information

SQ US AND YOU WILL SEE

...., Melp Ce~•tt
U WeokJ ................. .. .......... .... . $11.51
26 Weokl ..................... .. ........... $2U2
52 Weeki .... .... ..... ...... ......... ...... S!lll.ll
13

31. 1986.

See: J. D. Story, Jimmy Deem. Ed Bartels,
Brian Houdashalt

ltll•ltOI

Advertising fteprH~mtatlv~. Bf•nh•m

•Applicants must apply or move in between June 20, 1986 and July

Meoter Cerd ond Vlu Welcome

• The Daily Sentinel

fnland Dally Press Assoclallon and the
Ohio Ntw!'paper Association. National

~Mit" ..,irements .~

MANY MORE LATE MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM

PH. 742-3088

Member : Uniled Press lnternattoaal.

l.SI~

'85 OLDSMOBilE DELTA 88 ROYALE

"8Enlll8 10U TIIRE SAFEL1"

lishing Company i Multlml!dla, Inc. ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Se-cond class postage paid at Pomeroy ,
Ohio.

COME TO THE MAPLES

4 Dr., split Hils, tilt whHI, cruise control, P. door locks. vinyl
top, AM/FM stereo cassette. Less than 7800 miles - one owner
-Saw Big.

A Dtvilhm of Mu.Uimedla, Jnc.

Berry's World

INTERESTED IN FREE RENT?

sa,r.

Ge&lt;ldes, a native or Hu nllngton.
N.Y.• who now resides in Dallas.
Texas, oot calls South Carolina,
where her parent reside, as home,
earned $50,000 for the victory. The
South African-born Lillie, who
became an American citizen in
1982. received $25,000 lor second.

RUTLAND 'TIRE SALES

Published every alternoon, Monday

"The AU-Star Game Is guing to
help," MCCorm said, "and I don't
mean just from tbe money it brings
Into our ecooomy. I don't think
anybody g&lt;&gt;ts too big or sophisticated to bost an event uke this.
"It stimulates lntere&gt;t not ooly in

!POrt~, but 11 dol's !Omethlllilor the
psyche. Houstonlans cari
'hey,
rere we are oostlng an ·ImPOrtant
!'lent Uke this.· And yoo don't evl'll
have to be a sports fan to be caught
up In II."
Sports already has helped oonskl·
erably in these troubled times.
McConn said.
The Rockets. led by Akeem
Olaluwoo and . Ralph SamJ:l'Ofl,
reached the NBA finals and
baseball's Astros are challl'llglng
for drs! place in the National
League West.
Later thls·mmthtrecllywUipay
ll:Jsl to the National Sports Festival,
which brings tog&lt;&gt;ther the natlln's
best amatl'llr athlete&gt; in varied
competition.

go~. "

NEWPORT. R.I. (UP!) - BUI easy forehand volley at ~- He
Scan Jon made tbe biggest step In lis then held serve, with Wilkison
c'Omehack bkl Monday by winning sending a backhand return Into the
tbe rain- delayed $100,000 VolVo ~t at set point.
Tennis- Hall of Fame Champion·
The lone break In the sa:ond set
ships at tbe Newport Casino.
came in the fifth game. With
Scanlon, 29, of Dallas, ranked Wilkison, ranked 32nd, serving at
!51st in the world. upset No. 2 seed 15-10, Scanlon whipped a llrj'hand
Tim Wilkison of Asheville. N.C.. 7-5, groundstroke that Wilkison could
6-4. to co llect S:D,OOO. Wilkison ooly nick with a strt'tch l&gt;rehand.
received $10,001 as runnerup in this Leading 3-2, Scanlon eas Uy held
lone- American stop on grass courts ' serve tbe rest of the way . He won
on the Grand Prix tour.
the JO!h and final game at bve by
"I've only bf&gt;ro In good sbape two Sf'rvlng an aCt' before Wilkison put
months now," said Scanlon, who a forehand groundstroke and two
was ooce ranked as high as 12th at straight forehand srrvie&lt;:' returns
tbe end of the 1983 season before Into the net.
suffering persistent lmee btjurtes
"I didn't serve that great, oot I
last year thai tumbled him to l80th. on~· got broken twice,'' said
"l want to g&lt;&gt;tmy ranking to what Wilkison, 26. who entered his 13th
!think II s~Id be It I stay healthy lour final (six wbts) with a streak ol
and strong the whole year," he said. 44 games without havbtg his serve
"How high do !think It should be? broken In the tourney.
Ask me at the end of the year."
The victory was Scanlon's sixt h
In 14 finals on the men's tou r, and
his first In tnur years.
"The best feeling about this is
that ! bad beenouta longtime and I
wondel't'll Jt I could come back."
LdWEST .PllaS ON PASSENGER CAIS
Scanlon said . "The doubts were
natural. But now I know I hal on my
AND LIGHr TIUCK niES
day I can bang In and do well, and
AUGIIIMINTS FIIOIIIT END WOIK
that's aU'! want to know."
*IAMIIES
IEPAII
Scanlon brOke WUkison In the
LOCATED:
MAIN
ST·
.
,
RUTLAND,
OHIO
Uth game of the first set lor a 6-5
OPEN
:
8·6
MON.-SAT.;
8-8
FRI.
lead when WUidson sent long an

through Friday, 111 Court St .. Pomeroy, Ohio, by the OhLo Valley Pub-

marketing for tbe Houston Sports
Association.
"A lot of people have lost their
jobs. We are a city closely tied to 1he
petroleum Industry and when lhl&gt;
price d. oU dropped so drastically it
reaUy hit us hard."
Lost lobs lead to lost pride and
McCoon sees tbe AU-Star Game as
an Important step in helping
Houstonlans feel good abouttbem·
selves again.

THE MAPlES "Free
Baseball

All Star Gamr at Houston. Trxas

(VSP8

The Deily Sentinel-.,....--3

Pomecov-Middleport, Ohio

,.

�•

.,
.Tuesday,

Ohio

..

Good~n ·to

Clemens,

'

By The Bend

on

The Daily Sentinel

·"'

iuesday,

mound in 57th All-Star
By RICHARD L SHOOK
UPI Spori8 Writer

CLEVElAND ALLSTARS - Three Cleveland

lake part Ill tonlgltt's 57th AD-star
buebaD contes lq. Houslon, Texas. They are, left to

lw!!eqe wiD

right, Brook Jacoby, who replaced the lajuJ'Il!l George
Brett; Ken Schrom, pltmer, and Pat Corrales, who
wUI serve the American League &amp;'I a coach. (t,IPI)

'Lefty' Gomez recalls hit in first
at-bat of initial All-Star encounter
single over shortstop Dick Bartell to
"They didn't srore off me in the
score Dykes.
three Innings I pitched. Babe Ruth
Gomez also threw thP first pitch hit a IDme run and made
HOUSTON iUPI) - Vernon
in
the initial All-Star Game, which spectacular catch."
· Louis "Lefty" Gomez, who started
was
held in Chicago.
Gomez, who was elected to the
five of the Orst slx All· Star Games ·
"I don't remember whether it Ha II of Fame in 1972 with a lifetime
and won three, draws one of his
was a ball or a strike." said tbe regu lar-season record of JB9.102
fondest memories from his first
at-bat in the mid-summer classic. · 76-year-old Gomez Monday before with a 3.34 ERA In 14 seasons,
the workouts by the American and compiled quite a mark in All-Star
Gomez, a llfetlme .147 hitter,
National
League teams.
and World Series competiti&gt;n.
drove in the first run in All-Star
"Mr. Mack and Mr. McGraw
Game history.
He was 6-0 In SI'Ven appearances
"You know, as lousy a hitter as l . were the managers tben," Gomez covering five World Series and 3-0
. was," he said, "I drove in the Orst'• said, still respectful of Philadelphia in five AU-Star Games.
Athletics owner- manager Connie
"I started five o! the first six
rwt Ill an All-Star Game. I think
Mack and New York Giants Ail -Siar Games," Gomez said
probably 8JO people fainted."
· · It was the second inning of the
manager John McGraw.
proudly. "It was quite a thrill. In the
J933 game and, with one out,
"I remember before the first game in Cleveland (1935, til&gt; third
Jimmy Dykes and Joe Cronin drPW
game, Mr. Mack gathered us all AU -Star Gamel I pitched the first
togethl&gt;r and told u~. 'Gentlemen, six Innings.
walks off loser "Wild" Bill Hallahan
"Nobody had pitched more than
we're out to win. Maybe some of
of the St. Louis Cardinals.
three
Rick Ferren lined out for thl&gt;
ou
won't
get
n
the
game.
Maybe
before thai. They changed the
Y
rule right after that. Mel Harder
second out before Gomez drilled a ' you wlll. But we want to wIn.,
finlshed up for me."
By RICHARD L SHOOK
UPI Spons Writer

.

a

,•

. .•

...• .
....
.·

.·

SLOAN'S - 'Ibis is Sloan's MIDor League Team
No. 1 o IIIII&gt; Pomeroy Youth League, which finlshl&gt;d
the 1986 !lellllOII wUh a 9-1 reconl. Memoors pictured
are lroal, 110 r, Cass Cleland, Travis Cutis, Joe HID,
Jamie Broderick, Monty Hunter, Travl&lt;; Abbott:

second, I 1o r, Scott Milch, Sha~ Mlteh, Josllla
WithereD, ,Jason Sheets, Travis IJpscomh, Jeromy
Hubbard, Israel Grimm, Adam White; back, I 1o r,
Coach Roger Abbott and an ••.Want, Hank Cleland.
Team member not pictured Is Paul Outpmoo.

United States whips Canada in WBC play
BARCELONA , Spain (UPII The United States defeated Canada
.· 77-fb
Monday night at the World
·• Basketooll Championships whlle
· defending champion Soviet Union.
BrazU and Yugoslavia claimed
semlfinal spots In the competition.
The Americans played strong
defense in the game at Oviedo.
forcing the Canadians into 34
percent shooting. The United States
again struggled at the foul line.
converting 1!Hlf·28 shots. In Sunday
night's loss to Argentina, thl&gt;
Americans made only 14-of·ll free
throws.
Either Argentina, 5-2, or the
•
United States, 6-1, wUI take the last
semifinal spot.
•
AIBO at Oviedo, Argentina de·
,
ft&gt;aled
China 97-~ and undefeated
•
Yugoslavia routed Italy 102-76. At
Barcelona, the Soviet Union
•, downed Spain 88- 83, Cuba rallied
• past Greece 74-66 and Brazil topped
,' Israel !KI- 75.
,
·:
Tuesday night, if Argentina
:.. defeats Italy and the United States
' ' loses to Yugoslavia, the South
Americans advance. Argentina is
•.. ellminated if it loses. If Argentina
• and the United States win, thl&gt;
• A!nertcans advance because of a
f:.- better record.
'•
••
The Americans woo desplte
;:: center David Robnson being called
•.. for live fouls in just 1f:42 ol playing ·
~ lime. He llnlshed with 3 )J(Xnts.
:•· Charles Smith , Jed 1111&gt; United
(.. ~18 with 18 points and Derrick
~ ··." McKtoy and !leve tc«r added 15

0ach . Kerr hilling four Jpointers.
Ca nada's Da n Meagher scored 19
points. Shoot ing ootside ttr lane,
Canada hit only 9-of·:il stuts.
Brazil. 6-1 , was led Oscar
Schmidt's .'D poims and hel d a 44-22
rebounding advantage aver Israel.
"Our team was nervous at t hi&gt;
start. becauS(' with Spain's bss, our
chanres were ro good," Brazil
roach Ary Vidar Vrotura said.
"But ,after we got ahead by 12. we
startrd to rPiax. take bettor shots
and play better defpnse."

The score was 40-40 at the half
before Brazil q&gt;enrd thl&gt; second
ha Uwith a 154 run.
Rimas Kurtinaytis scored 19
points and Valdis Valtcrs keyed a
second-half surgp as the Soviet
Union remained undefeated by
edging Spain.
The Soviets, 7-0, entered thl&gt;
game wllh an av.-rage victory
margin of 34 points. But they could
not ~~ away til&gt; Spaniards, 5-2,
wiD were bu~ed by a raucous
crowd of more than S,ml.

MPARE
· our services

HOUSTON (UPI) - Roger Clemens comes home tonight - and
the American League hopes to
make ttl&gt; most of the occasion.
The fuston Red · Sox light·
· bander, pitching for the first time as
a pro in his hometown. starts the
57th AII·Star game tonight against
Dwight Gooden of the New York
Mets In one of ttl&gt; more memorable
recent matchups.
Dick Howser, manager of the
champion Kansas City Royals,
gave his AL team a short pep talk
following Monday's workout - as if
it needed to be reminded thl&gt;
National League has won 13 of the
last 14 game5 and holds a 36-19-1
lead.
Omen seekers might look ner·
vously at the fact !bat {he only NL
loss of the past 14 games came
when Whitey Herzog managed the
team in 1983.
Herzog, already covered with
lumps from the beating hisS!. Louis
Cardinals have absorbed this year.
brought a · light moment to ttl&gt;
pregame news conference by an·
nouncing the NL Uneup from the
bottom up - "because that's thl&gt;
way things have gone for the St.
Louis Cardinals this year."
Or maybe Herzog announced
Gooden's name first because his
hopes for victory start with the
refo!ll1ing flame-thrower on the
mound.
' "I'll get tt¥-m out however Jean,"
Gooden said. "The main thing is I
just want to pick Whitey up and get
him a victory."
Gooden is 1().4 with a 2.77 ERA,
has allowed 106 hits, 44 walks, and
struck out 101 batters in 1ll 1·3
innings.
You'd take those numbers, right?
But Gooden is plagued by his Cy
Young Award season of 1985-244,
1.53 ERA, 198 hits In 'm innings, 268
strikeouts and 69 walks.
"Dr. K" is opposed by a pitcher
some say is more I han his equal in

Clemens.
Clemens, who struck w t a record
aJ bat!l.'l's In one game earlier this
season, has a 15·2 mark with a 2.48
ERA. He has walked just 35 and
struck wt 141i while allowing'!/ hits
In 145 Innings. He also pitched on
Saturday.
"I rope two days rest Is enough
for ~ey arm," Clemens said.
"Monday was ~ey day to tlrow, but
I doQ 't know if I'll go the IUD three
(Innings) since I went nine Innings
Saturday.
"But no matter how long I go, I'm
looking forward to It," hi&gt; added.
"It's been ftln hl&gt;re.
"The 20 strikeouts brought me
and thl&gt; Red Sox a lot of attention
and a lot of excitement. I put foG
much rressureon rnyselftodowell,
and that's a lot more than thl&gt;
pressure thl&gt; fans and the media put

•

· our commiSSions
· our convenience

Richards
singled.
Robbie each
Canaday
had the lone
Bidwell hit.

MANY MORE LATE MODELS ·yo CHOOSE FiOM

SEE US AND YOU WILL.SEE
~W• Hive .• •·~,,. -. te ·a~IHer De,l"

Cincinn~ti: 51~/651-~760 ··Ohio: 800/582-7391 .
OutsJde Ohao: 8001543-7331

_j

Liberty Weekend was impressive
for all of us- once more it'saimost
acceptable to hi&gt; patriotic.
The weekend was extra special
for the Ray Williams family on
Hysell Run Road, however, be·
cause of the appearance of till&gt; Iowa
which had such an impressive
record durtng the war. Ray spent
almost three year aboard the Iowa
durtng World War II.
In the birthday corner is Rachel
Chapman, daughter of Tammy and
C.T. Chapman. She'll mark hl&gt;r
first birthday on July 19.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Ables
Jr., Vale St., Pomeroy, have been
delighted to have as their guests.
Agustin and Carolyn Montanez and
their children, Carolee and
Shhawn, of Areciho, Puf'rto Rico.
The Montanez family came
especially at this time to attend t hi&gt;
graduation of Agustin Montanez
Jr., at Ohio University where he
received his B.S. in pollttcal science
ipre law) .
Agustin also was commissioned a
second !leu tenant in tbe Army
Reserve. He has been accepted at
Loyola University Law School in
New Orleans and will join a reserve
unit there as an officer In military
intelligence. Carolee will be a
sophomore at Yale University this
fall.
Whlle hl&gt;re, the famlly visited
numerous relatives in Ohio and
West VIrginia hl&gt;fore returning to
Puerto Rico. Another son, Tod:l,
was unable to aC91Jmpany his
famUy ht:'re for the graduati&gt;n as he
was on a senl:Jr cruise trip in the
Carrlhl&gt;an.

Downs.

Thl' 3-year-old, driven by Dave
Rankin, covered the mile in a
ilfetime best 1:57 1·5 clocking to
beat out U.R. Cagey by three·
quarters of a length. Uvious
finished third.
Sea Stolll1 returned $6, $3.~ and
$3.

Windle Dottle won the third race
to front a 1·9-2 trUecta combination
that was worth $4,(X)1.40. Cap's
Lucky Lady was second and Gypsy
Blitz showed.
A crowd of 3,370 wagered
$259,593.

~iiiiiii~i'-j~·~··

.

~NELS·ON

·

MOTORS

. ·. ,"o.-.6''

•

a prtrne example, usually ex))!· gralnes generally experience thl&gt;m
.rtence tllelr first migraine by age !rom ooetofourtimesa month. The
12. Generally, there is a strong hl&gt;ailaches last for about a day.
family history of thls kind of Bet~n episodes of severe mi·
hl&gt;adache.
gralnes, thl&gt; victim may also have
Question: How common are less serious tension headaches
migraine headachesZ
which can continue for several
Anllft!l': Somes estimates claim days.
that as many as aJ to 25 percent of
Question: Will eating large
Americans suffer from migraines. ·amounts of fish help prevent other
Migraine hedaches plague between kinds of headaches?
12 and 16 million people in. thl&gt;
Answer: There is ro evidence
United States, three-fourths of that fish oil hl&gt;lps alleviate other
whom are women.
kinds of hl&gt;adaches besides ml ·
People who sutter from ml· gralnes. Severe hl&gt;adaches can

Vacati:m Bible school at the
Middleport Church of Christ has
hl&gt;en set to begin on Tuesday, July
22 and will run through Aug. 1.
:
Classes wlll hi&gt; held dally from
, . 9:30a.m. untO noon and the school
.: : is tr ages three thrOugh the eighth
grade .

t------------

;:. -... :,"} ,,• '

Dorothy Downie. High St., Pomeroy. is for the birds- however.
Recently. Dorothy heard noises
in the attic at her home and
investigating found not once- but
on a half dozen dlfferent occasions
- that starlings had Oown into the
attic.
It appeared that thl&gt; birds had
entered through a defective decora·
live pirce at the top of the how;(•.
Son, Allen Downie, repaired the
hole and that took · care of the
problem.
However. lhP next thing Dorothy
kn&lt;'W there were l:Jud 9:&gt;unds
coming from Ule basement - and
these frightened Dorothy . She
called in next -door neighbor,
Lawrence Clark, and they
investigated .
It turned out that a pigeon had
gotten into thl&gt; basement and was
having a ball. They checked and thl&gt;
only way thl&gt; pigeon rould have
entered the basement was down thl&gt;
chimney. Not much ADen .can do
about that , huh!
·
Well, the pigeon was helped outand it was prooobly as glad to gaas
Dorothy was to get rid of it - so
again. things are rormal at thl&gt;
Downie home.
I know - it has been hot.
However. you ha ve refrigeration.
electric fans, air conditioning,
deodorant and ali kinds of help.
lf it's about to (Nertakeyou, think
about what it must have been like
before we had these things. · .
That should help you to kN'p
smiling.

A carnival wut be held on Aug. 2
for those children wh:l have at. troded thl&gt; school. The school wlll
include Bible stories, crafts, snacks
and othl&gt;r features. All children are
invited to participate. Anyone
needing more iofo!ll1atbn may call
the church office at 992·2914.

SPECIAL EVENTS- A lawn party will be held at
the Athens Dairy Bam lor Basket\\'eave exhiW!on,
Satunlay. Bring a picnic k1nch. There w8J also be
demonstrations on the lawn as well as que~~tion and
answers on basketmaklng. There are still openlnp m

the Jub' 19 Md 20 workshops In Appalallhlan
MOUJUin Egg llllllketry and tbe J uJy 26 wiJ'Itslllp on
vine basketry. For lnfonnatlon, caD Athens Dairy

Bam at (614) 5924981.

Mothl&gt;rs should continue to
breastfeed their infants despite
recent reports about environmental
contaminants, according to La
Leche League International, a
source of infolll1a lion and support
for breastfeeding women in thl&gt; U.S.
and Canada.
Recent news Items have focused
on dioxin conllimination of breast
mllk, causing concern and confu·
ston among nursing mothers, ac·
cording to Judi! he Thompson of thl&gt;
loca l La Lee he League. The repOrts
were not based on actual studies of
human milk but on data extrapolated !from measuring levels of
contamination in fatty tisssues
ul&gt;talned at autopsies from women
in New York State.
Chemicals such as dioxin are
present in food sources and in soU,
air and water. They are stored
prtmarUy In latty tissue. The
long-telll1 e4ffects of human inges·
lion of dioxin remain unknown. but
giving artificial formulas does not
eliminate thl&gt; risks, Thompson said.
Human milk substitutes may also
contain trace amounts of contami·
nants and are not rtsk·free.
Studies over the past ~ years
have demonstrated that breast·
feeding conveys signlflcant nutrl·
tiona!. lmmunoiogtcal and psychoiogtcal benefits to infants, shl&gt;
added.
La Leche League and consultants
rrom its board of !TI'dtcal advtsor1&lt;

have roncluded that current infor·
mallon about environmental COD·
taminants in breast milk does not
justtty deprtving infants of the
benefits of breastfeedlng, Thompson said. Suggestions that motllers
llmlt thiHenllfh ~ lime they nurse
their babies are also unwarranted,
shl&gt; added.
Thompson said women can min·
lmtze their exp:&gt;sure to environ·
mental contaminantS by following
these live ~sttons:
Reduce thl&gt; loss of pesticides and
herbicides In the home
environment.
Avoid quick weight loss diets
durtng pregnancy and lactation
(dieting mobllizes fat stores, thus
releasing contaminants into the
bloodstream.)
Avoid food high in fat.
Eat less roo meat.
Consume only moderate
amounts ol dairy products, partlcu·
larly those high in fat.
Founded In 1956, La Leche
Leall\le International offers support

breastfeed thl&gt;ir babies. Local
volunteer leaders are available for
phone · counseling, and monthly
group meetings explore topics of
Interest topregnantandoceastfeed·

The Society of Distinguished
American High School Students
announced today that seven stu·
dents from the Middleport Church
of Christ have hl&gt;en selected as
members in Its honor society for
1986.
The students, sponsor, AI Hart·
son, was presented wl!h !hi&gt; Socie·
ty's National Appreciation Award
for "assiduous devotion to the
development and encouragement
of student leaders" .
Membershipa in this national
h:lnorary is designed to be not only
an honor but also an incentive for
those exhibiting top performance
while In high school. To be
acct&gt;pted, students must have
excelled In academics, extracurrlc·

Honors scholarships given at RGC

:

The local recipients are Usa M.

:Henderson, Guysville; Judith C.
JJ

fll

'

Society, Spanish Club, ·Computer
Club, Junior Civttan Club and was
listed in Who's Woo Among Amei1·
can lfigh School Students. Sill&gt; is the
daughter of Carol and Dolly
Mowery, Middleport, and plans to
major education.
Grueser is a graduate of Southern
Hlgh School where he · was a
mernhl&gt;r of the bcitbaU team; the
basketooll and baaeball -~eama. the
NatiolUII Honor !bCiety, u.! Qliz
Bowl Team, thl&gt; Problem Solving
Team and the Cbolt; He h~ ·also
been an ~ctlve member- of . tbel
United Methodist Churdl. The ·10n
of Don and Janet~. Grueser'
plailll 111 major in'buailll!la.

mation for health professionals and
·sponsors an annua l Physician' s
Seminar.

ular or civic acltlvttes.
Local students ct the church
awarded thl&gt; horor ilr !986Include
Carol Smith, Daphne Dlllard, Jeff
Nl'ison, Sherry Cooper, Laura
Cobb, Kathy Thomas and Matt
Baker.
As members, these students will
have thl&gt; opportunity to complete
for college scholarships through thl&gt;
SociPty's national awards program. This scholarship program,
now in Its 17th year, is funded by 140
rollege and universit tes across the .
nation. To preserve the h:lnor,
names of thl&gt;se members and thl&gt;ir
accomplishments will be Hsted In ·
thl&gt; Society's 1986 membership
registry.

~fill!"

175/80113

•STEEL BELTE~

$3966
IUCIWAU
215/70114

S46 66

WllllEStDEW AU

•

c. MOOI'el'l' Mct:Ju11~

tng women, Thompson said. La
Leche League also provides infor-

Meigs students honored

•ALL SEASON TIEAD
DESIGN

Mowery McCarthY, Middleport,
and Kenneth Sean Grueser, Forest
Run Road, MinersvWe.
Henderson is a. graduate of
Eastern Hlgh School whereshl&gt; was
a member of the yearbook staff, thl&gt;
ne.,wpaper staff, the National
Horor Society and was president~
the student council a,n dslllbrclass.
She was also active in 4-Hclubwork
and the Alfred United Metlildlst
Church. The daughter of Harold
and Wllma Henderson, Guysville,
shl&gt; plans · to ll)ajor buSiness
manl!tllemerit.
McCarthy graduated from Meigs
High School where she was a
member . rt thl&gt; Natilnal H0110r .

Officers for 1986-87 wt&gt;re named
at the rrcent mN'ting of the Lewis
Manley Auxiliary 263, American
Legion . held at Dale's Smorgas·
bord, Gallipolis. with
Lucille
Saunders as hostess.
Elrcted werr Margaret Bowles,
president; Mrs. Saunders, first vice
president; Dorothy Casey, S('CQnd
vicP president: Florence Richards, r"
secretary: Lula Hampton, treasurer: AnnNte John.&lt;;on, chaplain;
and Mrs. Bowles, historian.
Chairman for thl&gt; year wlll be
Mrs. Richards, childrm and youth ;
Tomiko Lewis, veterans affairs and
rehabilitation: Mrs. Saunders.
community service: Mrs. Bowll's.
Americanism, and Mrs. Hampton,
legislative.
A round·rQbin get well card was
signed for VIrginia Winston Stat·
!worth of Corona. N.Y.
The group sang" America" , Mrs.
fuwk&gt;s read "What i; Amt&gt;rica to
Me" and there was a prayer for
peace by thl&gt; chaplain. Next
meeting will be held in Septemlx&gt;r
at the homt&gt; of Nellie Winston.

lALeche issues guidelines in dioxin scare____~

EQUIPMEfiT

.,

Auxiliary
new officers

•BUILT FOI O.IGINAL

• 1'llrEe graduates of Meigs County
· 'high schools this spring have been
: awarded honors scholarships to
: attend Rio Grande College and
• Cornmunlu' College.
: the honors schoklarshlp is
: awarded to one student !rom each
• high school in' Meigs County. The
: winners must be In thl&gt; top 10
: percent ol their l!l'aduatlng claSses
· and have a composlte-qt at least l8
.: on thl&gt; ACT. Elkh scholarship-Is for
• $1,0Xl for the freshlnan and sopln: more years and $2.ml for the jWI!or
: and senior years.

result from ear, nose or throat
infections, severe eye disease,
cancer, hardening of the arteries &lt;r
high blood pressure. These kinds of
headaches are a symptom of!1hl&gt;r
diseases which demand different
forms oftrealment than migraines.
Ask yoor doctor about the
benefits of ea ttng fish IJ'oduels
betlre yoo alter ywr diet. And
rernemhl&gt;r, the article you saw
'reported on the results of me study
only, and is not Indicative of proven
new thl&gt;rapies for headaches.

announ~es

Bible School slated to begin

&gt;

!

'84. P-ONTIAC ·FIERO · s.E~

datlons can be made about thl&gt;
consumption of fish oll.
Quesllon: What causes
migraines•
Answer: The constriction of
blood vessels in the head, followed
by their dlla lion, stretches the
nerve endings around the vessels
and causes the pain of a migraine
had ache. Migraines are brought on
by stress or by food or other
substances wthat are individual
and specific.
People who suffer from vascular
headaches, of which migraines are

I'm beginning to feel like some
sort of a rebel in reporting so
regularly on the contracts awarded
by the Ohio Department of High·
ways - and especially since there
always seems to be so little for
Meigs County.
Be that as it may, I would be
remiss lf I didn 't tell yru that the
department this month awarded
contracts totalling about $23.6
million for 36 highway improve·
men! projects. Should you ask me if
Meigs was included in any of thl&gt; 36
projects, I'd have to say no.

Judith

See: J. D. Story, Jimmy Deem, Ed Bertels,
Brien Houdashelt

CENTRAL TRUST

By BOB HOEFUCH
Sentmel staff Wrker
Residents of Racine Village have
a two mlll tax
levy facing them
at the November
election. However, nothing to
be upset aboutit's just a current
expense renewal
situation.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)- Sea
Storm notched his third straight
victory in winning Monday night's
featured eighth rare pace at Scioto

r;::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::;~

I

sufferers who ate the dally equlval·
ent of 12 salmon for 15 weeks. While
the experiment is preliminary and
the number of subjects sma)l, 10 of
the 15 adults experienced signlfl·
can t relief from migraine
headaches.
Other studies have illustrated the
beneficial effects of fish oil in
possibly protecting against heart
disease, and perhaps in improving
memory and intelligence. How·
ever, it wlll take much more time
and many more studies before
conclusive, long-telll1 recommen-

Rebel reporting

Gladden shipped out
By Unl&amp;ed Press lntemallonal
San Francisco Giants outfielder
Dan Gladden, on tile disabled list
with tom thumb ligaments, was
sent to Phoenix of the Paclfic Coast
League Monday for 20 days ct
rehabilitation.
Meanwhile. the Pittsburgh PI·
rates announced that left-handed
pitcher Rich Sauveur has hl&gt;en
transfered to their Hawaii team in
the Pacific Coast League (AM).
To flli his spot, thl&gt; Pirates
purchased the contract ot right·
bander Barry Jones of the Hawaii
team.

Does fish prevent migraine headaches?

Beat of the bend

Scioto results

11m Bissell had a single, double,
and rome run: Smith two doubles
and a single: Wes Holter a double
·and single: Durst two singles and a
double; John Collins two singles,
Brent Bailey a single, Toney Maxey
a single, and Chris Rees a single.
Donald Hunnell had thl&gt; two
Middleport hits.
Hawley and Carauthers suffered
thl&gt; loss. Hawley fanned 9.
In thl&gt; closest game of the set
Trimble defeated Bidwell 7-2 as
Charlie Gatchell picked up the win
with tlioeive strikeouts and seven
walks. Darin Smith suffered the
loss in a good effort. Smith walked
six and fanned sixteen .
Gatchell paced his club with
three hits, Buddy Vore had two
doubles, Trent Pettit, and Rusty

Black, auto.; sunroof, air condition, AM/FM stereo;
tilt wheel.

Professional Brokerage Services

By EDWARD SCHRECK, D.O.
A•Want Profe88or
of Family Medicine
Ohio Unlvenlly College
of Osleopalblc MedlciDe
Que8tl!ln: I saw a newspaper
article the othl&gt;r day that said
eating fish helped prevent migraine
hl&gt;adaches. Is that true?
Answer: A recent study done at
the University of Cincinnati Medl·
cal Center shows that diets en·
rlched with fish oll may signlfl·
cantly relieve migraine headaches.
The research involved 15 migraine

Trudeau must sign
contract by Friday

•

•

Family medicine:

Howser tailored hls lineup to get
Clemens some help. He decided to
lead off with Minnesota's Kirby
Puckett, who hasn't been hitting
INDlANAPOLJS (UPI) - Jack
home runs like he did at thl&gt; start of
thl&gt; season, and bat the speedier but ·Trudeau, the University of Illinois
perhaps more rome run rrone quarterback selected by In"dianapoRickey Henderson, New York lis in the NFL draft, must sign a
contract by thl&gt; start of training
Yankees' center fielder, second.
Wade fuggs of fusion hits third, camp Friday or he probably will not
followed by Detroit catcher Lance be signed, Colts owner Bob Irsay
Parrish, rookie first baseman said.
"Friday at 4:30, II Trudeau hasn 't
Wally Joyner of California, Balli·
more shortstop Cal Ripken Jr., signed a contract, his chances of
Yankees light fielder Dave Win· coming on this team this year are
field, and Tiger second ooseman about 10 percent," lrsay told the
lndlanapoUs News.
Lou Whitaker.
Trudeau's agent, Oeveland·
Herzog has Tony Gwynn of $an
Diego leading off, -chicago Cubs based Greg Lustig, has said
second baseman Ryne Sandlerg Trudeau wlli either sign by Friday
oottlngsecond , followed by the New or sit oot a year and wait for
anothl&gt;r NFL draft. Signing with a
York Mets' tlreesome ot first
baseman Kelt h Hernandez, catcher USFL team is also a possibility,
Lustig Sllid.
Gary Carter and right fielder
"Let him go back In thl&gt; draft next
Darryl Strawberry.
Philaddphia ttird ooseman Mike year. He'D be n thl&gt; 12th round,"
lrsay said.
Schmidt bats sixth, center fielder
Irsay said if Trudeau is not
Dale MufllhY of Atlanta seventh, St.
Louis shortstop Ozzie Smith eighth, signed, hi&gt; wlll seek anothl&gt;r
and Gooden, who is not a ood hitter. quarterback for the team, which
already has veteran Gary Hoge·
ninth.
boom, Matt KoOer and Blair Kiel.
Irsay said Trudeau wants a $3
million contract package, while
Lustig says the figure offered by
lrsay Is not even hall of that lgure.

Tuppers Plains and
Rutland nines advance
SYRACUSE - Baseball action
continued In the Syracuse BUI
Hubbard Memolial Uttle League
Tournament as the Tuppers Plains
Tigers rolled 011er Middleport 15-3
and Rutland defeated Racine J.D.
Drilling 10.0.
In thi&gt;T.P. game Tim Bissell was
thl&gt; winning pitcher and Jolllson
suffered t~ l:Jss. Bissell fanned
twelve in picking up thl&gt; win.
Tuppers Plains hitters were
Bissell with a single and triple, Wes
Holter a single and wubie, Jeff
Durst a single and double, Michael
Newland a single, Swain two
singles, Brent Bailey a single, and
Jason Carlton a single.
For Middleport Johnson and
Cremeans had thl&gt; ooly two hits.
Racine bowed for thl&gt; first time as
a tough Rutland squad rolled to an
easy win hl&gt;hlnd anothl&gt;r ro-hit
performana- by Terry McGuire.
McGuire fanned eleven and walked
just two.
Eddie Sawyer suffered the hss
with seven strtkeouts and just llur
walks lor a good effort.
Eddie Peterson had a home run,
Jason Rupe a double, and singles by
Terry Peterson, Adams, McGuire,
McGhee, and Shoemaker.
In othl&gt;r action Tuppers Plains
Tigers smashl&gt;d Middleport Vaughans Carc)inais 18-C behind fine
pitching and tlhree hits from Jeff
Durst.
Durst fanned 8, walked two and
gave up no hits, while getting rellef
!rom Michael Smith "who also
pitched well. Smith fanned six and
walked 1-ro, giving up two hits.

Page-6

Following Clemens for the Amer·
lean League wUI be left· handerTed
Higuera of Milwaukee and veteran
knuckleballer Orarlle Hough of
Texas.
Howser has mdicated he wUI go
with ooly tblse three pitchers,
provided they are afectlve and the
American League can do something it seems to have trouble doing
In AU-Star Games - scoring runs.
That's why, Howser said, he
decided to pick CJIIy seven ptchers,
rompared to thl&gt; NL's 10, and beef
up his Uneup with sluggers.
"There are always some good
.players !at off, but I can't make
excuses lor tile team we selected,"
he said. "We picked extra people on
thl&gt; bench because we need oots.
They may well make ttl&gt; difference
late In the game."

on me."

JulY 16, 1986

155/80.. 13 •••••.••• $39.95
185/75114 ••••..••• $46.50
195/75114......... $47.50
205/75114 ......... *48.95
215/7 5115 ......... *52.00
225/75115 ......... *55.00
235/75115 ......... *5.7.50

CHOOSE FROM
BLACKWALI., WHITEWALl
ALL-SEASON AND
CONYENTINOAL
TREAD DESICNS.

!NOT ALl SIUS IN AIL TIEAD DESIGNS)

POMEROY

600 EAST MAIN

992-2094.
co. Fot .2o ·naiS, 196•· tta6

I

�•

PornetoV..,..Middlepon.

Ohio

'

Tuesday, July 15, 1986
'

s
BUSiness ervices

Tuesday, July 15, 1986

Textbooks challenged in 'Scopes II' trial
Jt1 lACK MM.'l'IY
GREENEVILLE, ~ (UPI)
- lD a laWIIIlllllrldn&amp; back to the
Scqles ''manlcey trial," a fllllda·
meata1llt Olriltlan l'llllOier deII!Minceil a leJdbook series used In
~ ... adlools as . teechlllg:
~cllullon 14 fact and

WII'IU bid.

deplctlli, ·Ill

VIcki Froo was the leadoff
witness MOJIIIaY In the federal trial
dubbed ''Scopes,II.'' a calli! that has
drawn national attention, as well as
legal and financial support trom ·
both COII!Ie!Vattve and

Ube-ral

groups.
Froo, a 34-year-old mother ol
four, who said the books' lessons
were contradictory to the Bible, Is
expected to return to the stand

when the trial resumes today.
The case Is being beard In a town
just ISO miles from Dayton, Tenn.,
wllere the state prolia:uted high
school teacher John !!ropes In 1925
for teaching students the theory of

enters the Greenville, Tmn.,
oourthouse Monday. 'l1le mother of .,ur le!tllled m the lrflll

• READY FOR COURT - VIcki Fl'ollt
federal

called ''Soopesll." She and other lundamentall!t Olrlltlas are !lllmg
sdlool olllclals over textbooks used. (UPI)

evolution.
In the cui'rent case, Tennessre Is
defl!ndlng the teaching of evolution
In the textbooks.
l
The bookS be-Ing challenged today
are ihe wjdely used Half Basic
Readers Jl!lbllshed by Holt, Rlne·.
hart and Winston for elementary
schools. They have titles such as
"Can You Imagine?," "The Way of
the World," and "A Time to
Wond~r. " .and articles by authors
such as Margaret Mead, Isaac
Aslmov and Jane Goodall.
Frost and a dozen other fu oda ·
mentalist Christian parents from
rural Church Hill In Hawkins
Coonty say the textbooks teach
magic, the theory of evolution,
situation ethics and other values
they consider objectionable.
"I thought they would be- learning
hlw to read , goOd English and
grarrunar, andhowtodothelraher
school work," she testified .
Frost said she spent 200 hours

reviewing the Holt series and found
16 objectlona ble areas ranging
from "the skeptics' view of reli·
gioll" to "godl ess supernaturalIsm." The throry of evolution, shE&gt;
said, Is taught In the rooks "as
fact."
"Evolution teaches that the re is
oo God creator. and that violates
my religious beliefs and rey
children's and husband's." Frost
said.
She called attent ion to one hook In
which Goodall, a naturalist, labeled
the chimpanzee man 's "closest
relative."
Frost also complai ned the books
promote "pacifism" and depict all
war as bad .
" It says In Eccles iastes, there is a
time for peace and a time fo r war ,"
Frost said, and added 1he books fall
to show "the good side of what war
produ ces in freedom and
righteousness."
Frost. who maintained Christianity is the only true helle!. also

objected to "The Diary ol Anne
Frank." She alluded to a passage in
which Peter, a teenage boy, said he
cid not believe In any religion, and
Anne Frank answers he should
have some religion although it
"doesn't matter " which ooe.
People for the American· Way,
which was formed In 1981 to oottle
the religious righ t, Is paying several
Was hingtoo lawyers to assl't Haw·
kins Coun ty school bomd all orneys.
The parents' lawyers were supp·
lied by Concerned WomPn fo r
America. a conservative group
based in Washinliton.
The textbook disput.e began in
1983 when the school board oo iked
at deman ds by some parents for
allernative textbooks.
Frost. who was arrested fo r
&lt;lisrupting her daughter's second·
grade class by M manding a chol('('
of books, later sued school lificials
In federal court and won a $70,()))
judgment for fa l'e arr!'St.

By MICHAEL C. 11PPING

LOS ANGELES tUPII -

A
federal judge sentenced the first
. FBI agent convicted of espionage to
two life prison terms plus SO years.
saying a man who "hetrays his
country cannot walk again in that
country as a tree man."
Richard Miller, 49, who was also
fined $00,1XXl Monday, had been
convicted of turning over a classi·
fled counterintelligence manual to
his lover, convicted Soviet spy
Svetlana Ogorodnikova.
Miller will be eligible for parole
after serving one-third of the
~year sentence- nearly 17 years.
prosecutors said. Without the addi·
tional 50-year sentro('(', he would

,,
'I

r
I

l

''Inspector Clouseau·type''
bumbler.
Breaking his courtroom silence
for the first time In the nearly
2·year-old. case, Miller made a
rambling speech before Sl!lltendng
In which he said his conduct "did no
damage to this rountry."
''I did mt commit these crimes. I
never Intended to Injure rey
eountry or benefit the Soviet
Union," Miller .said.
But the judge said Miller, who
never testified In his own defense,
was a "tormented man" who
hetrayed the trust the nation placed
In him as FBI agent.
In arguing for the maximum
sentence, U.S. Attorney RDbert

have been eligible for parole alter
serving 10 years of the concuJTent
life terms.
"A man who deliberately, for his
own personal gain, hetrays his
country cannot walk again In thai
country as a tree man," U.S.
District Judge David Kenyon said
In sentencing Miller to the maxi·
mum penalty.
Miller was portrayed by prosecu·
tors as morally corrupt, financially
desperate and a classic recruit·
ment target for the Soviet KGB. His
lawyers said he was not a spy, but a
loyal American embarked on a
"James Bond fantasy" attempt to
penetrate the Soviet KGB that
failed because he was also an

Bonner said Miller, a mernll'r of
the Soviet counterintelligence
squad, seriously d~UT~aged national
SECurity and "besmirched the
reputation ol the FBI. The'stain Mr.
Miller has cast on the FBI wDI fade
In time, !Jut Is never going to be
erased .''
Miller was convicted Ju ne 19 on
six counts of espionage and brlhery
after a second lengtiiY trial, and his
lawyers said they have flied for an
·appeal. The first bial ended in
November with the jury dead·
locked. most favoclng conviction.
Miller rt!Celved life terms for
conspiring to pass classified docu·
ments and ·lor turning over the
FBI's "Positive Intelligence Re-

(:Orting Guide" - an outline of
worldwide U.S. Intel ligen('(' goa lsto Ogorodnlkova during their four·
month affair In 1984.
Miller was given 10 years for each
of two other espionage counts. He
was senten ced to 15 years for each
of two brill'ry counts charging him
with agreeing to accept $15,000 In
cash and $00,000 in gold for thl'
document.
Ogorodn lkova. 35. a Soviet immi .
grant servin g , 18 year s after
pleading guilty to es pi onagc
charges, did not testifY in Miller's
first tri al but was th~ sta r &lt;M&gt; fensP
witness In the second.
Ogorodnlkova recanted her con·
fession and gu ilty plea. and t£'ar-

fully testliied she and Miller wPrP
innoC!'nt .
Ogorodnlkova 's hu sband, Nikolai
Ogomdnlkov. 52, r&lt;r!'ived eight
years after the couple agreed to
plead guilty dlu1ng their trial In
June 1985. He too has recanted his
co nfession.
In addition to havin g roarrest one
of its own agents. the local FBI was
also embarrassed ~ a ll ega tion~
from within it ran ks that Mill£'r's
incompetence had been covered up
for yea rs lJy super iors who werr
fellow Mormons.
MiUer. the fattl&gt;r of eight child·
ren, was excommunica ted from the
Mormon Church for adult &lt;'ry 11'·
fore his affair with Ogorodnikova

One arrested in tap~pering scare, but threats continue
By JANICE KALMAR
United Press International
A Pennsylvania man was the first
suspect a r rested in a recent wave of
tamper ing sca res that ha ve
touched consumer goods ranging
fromm soh drinks to nan·
prescription drugs, with the decong·
estant Sudafed marked as the latest
targ£'1.
Nonnan Mark Allen. 21. of
Honesdale. Pa., is scheduled to
appear In court today on chargt&gt;s of
making false claims In telephone
calls to a local Acme store Friday
night and Saturday, saying Jell-0
· brand gelatin and Instant pudding
· had been (X)isoned. FBI spokesman
Jim Mcintosh said In Philadelphia.
It was the first a rrest in the latest
spate of contamination scares that
began July 7, with anonymous
claims say ing that such products as

Ac'('('nt flavor enhancer and the
soft dr ink Slice had be-en poisoned.
Officials of the store In northeast·
ern J&gt;Eonnsylvania r!'moved the
Jell-0 products from the shelves
after Allen allegedly told a store
clerk Friday night , "Your Jell-0
has cyanide In It, " and made a
similar threat Saturday, Mcintosh
said.
Allen, who was arrested Monday,
faces a fine of up to $25,\XM) and a
five-year prison term If convicted of
making the calls, Mcintosh said.
Sudafed· decongestant became
the target or the latest tampering
threat Monday, with Peoples Dntll
Stores pulling all forms of the
medication from their six Muncie,
Ind., stores after an anonymous
caller told one store. " YourSudafed
has been tampered," then hung up,
spoke:;man Charles Bethel said In

Indianapolis.
"There's oo Indication what, If
aJUithlng, has be-en tampered
wffh," Bethel said. "We thought
that rather than Ignore the call we
made tile decision to remove all
dose forms."
The non·prescrlptlon drug, avail·
able In tablet, capsule and liquid,
wUI be- Inspected today by the
manufacturer, Burroughs Wellcome Reseach Lab d North
Carolina, and the Food and Drug
Administration In lndianapoUs, he
said.
BUJTOUghs Wellcome spokesman
Thack Brown said ~ whl
bought the drug from a Munclr
Pl'oples during the past week
should return It to the store.
"It's another thing we'll add to
the Ust of !IUSpecled .lamperlngs,"
Indiana Health Commissioner Dr.

Woordrow Myers Jr. said . "Ass urn·
lng we do not confirm tl, we will
basically leave the product alone .
That Is, we will not Issue a health
warning."
The threat affects neither the
other apptoximately 8l Peoples
stores In Indiana mr the more than
800 stores in l3other states. Only the
six In Muncie were Instructed to
recall the Sudafed, Bethel said.
Jell-0 products, made~ General
Foods, were removed from more
than :JlO Kroger, A&amp;P, Jewel Food
Sloces and Dominick's store
shelves in four Midwestern stat es
during similar scares In the pait
week. The product also wa s
removed from stores in Atlanta,
and Westfield and Quincy. Mass.
All types t1 (X)SSII»y (X)Isaned
Pepsi-Cola were removed from the
shelves

house in Westfi eld in western said cya nide wa s placed in Pepsi,
Massac huSf'lls by Mo nday morn- but the local disn·ibutor sa id no
ing aft er an anonymous caller said decision would bf' made 011 a reca ll
four bottiPs bad be&lt;'n la intl'd with unt il It is determined whet her the
Liquid Plumber. a caustic dra in call Ls genuine.
clea n£'r, city Hea lth Direc tor Da .
Pepsi·Cola Corp. l a~t wePk took
niel Rea r&lt;bn sa id .
2·1il&lt;'r boll les of Stice oH shfolves in
'JlKo city a llo\Wd can s of Pepsi 1o New York and suburban WPStchcs·
remain on lhr shelves.
ter Count y because SC'pa rate anoOn Saturday, Westfield healt h nymous phone ca lls wa riiPd of
officials ordered the removal of cya nide JXlisoning .
JPII·O JXI\Wered desSf'rt mll&lt; es
Proples Drug StocPS in tlx'
lmm Edwards. the Big Y and Shop Washington, D.C. area removed
Rite supermarkets after another tulx&gt;s of Aquafres h toothpaste from
ca ll reported products In those its shelves because of cont a mlna·
stores had been poisoned .
tion thrf'ats, andPN Inc. cleared Its
Reardon said h&lt;' had ootilled th£' Ac'cent seasoning from star£'
FBI about the threat andplannedr o shelvl'S in fivf' m unt if's in the
consu,lt with a Food and Drug Houston Hrea becauS(' an anonym.
Administration r•presrn tal ive on ous lett N warned th at six oi its
the situation.
4 \7·0UI1('(' conta in£'rs m nt ain ed
Police in Nas hville. Tenn ., rf'· cyan ld~.
ported a threat
a woman who

.,

NEW YORK tUPI 1 - A court
ruling on MediCa id tha t could havr
natlonwkle impact will allow preg.. nan I women in New York to receive
pre-natal carr and ·children to he
Immunized even lf ·they are cons!·
dered Illegal aliens, lawyers said.
Tbe ruling also will allow New
Yolil City to be reimbursed by the
·' federal government for $25 million
worth of medicalcare now provided
. to illegal aliens, city lawyers said.
A federal judge in Brooklyn ruled
Monday the estimated 234,000
·· illegal aliens In New York may
receive Medicaid assistance.
The ruling by U.S. District J udge
Charles Slfton came In response to
a class action lawsuit that, although
restricted to New York, could have
national significance If adopted by
federal court.s elsewlll're.
Tbe plaintiff class in Ihe case was
drawn from those who llve In New
Yolil state but have no "green
cards" - legal permanent resident
status. The 19!1l census sa ld some
234,!MXI non- legal permanmt res i·
dents were In the stat.e.
Over Tl percent of the New York
state Illegal aliens counted In l!llll
had been In the country more than ·
.. five years and more than 44 percent·
had been here more than 10 years.
· The Ulegal alien poJXtlation generally comprises yoong adults
under 35 years of age, olftclals said.
Plaintiffs' lawyer Janet Calvo
said the decision will allow p-egJIIIIt women' lo I'I!Cf'JVe pre- natal
~

Sociel Serv i ~ Supervisor 111 .W.
Otpt ot HurMn ServiOII
ie ltt..,.,pttng to recruit qualified
epplicant for the lbove mentioned poeition. Under a~,.,vl ·
lion employ" in thil cl•litic:ation will perform c::omplex
tdminiltrttive. eupwvilory •nd
_.vltory HrvicM in the dey•Pment and execution at ap..:iellzed humen urvice progrem.
App liC~~nt ""'" be eligible for
licensure at 1 eoclal worker,
graduate tocial worker or certified ao cial worker by the WV
Board of Social Work Exam In ln.,,_ Sunlt rnumt to Joyce
C1mpbell. Coord. Sod1l SII'Yice
SupiNllor. 'IN Dept ot HU1na n
Services, 3135 11th St. fUJed .
tllnUngton , W. Va. 26702 by

ROOFING

NEW - REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
p
ainting
FREE ESTIMATES

O•ty

8

RIDENOUR

TV &amp; APPLIANCE

949-2263
or 949•2168

CHESTER-985· 3307
4/l/tln

2·17·86·tfn

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CLC COINS
Buying /Selling
Gold, Silver
14K Chains, Coins,
Collector's Accessories

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Prices"

Bullion
SUMMER HOURS
1·7 M·TH

Doy or ~ight
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-16.' 116 tin

985-3937
Call for Dl,.ctions

Roger Hysell
Garage

COUNTRY

CLUB
•GOLF LESSONS

Rf. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

6 FOR 140
•NEW GRIPS
lnslolled 12.50

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

ooALL

MERCHANDISE
50% OFF

Alao Trtnamhelu
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

PH.

h'

A

FREE HEARING TESIS WEDNESDAYS

T

Co~uterized Hlllrin&amp; Air Selection
Swim Molds - lnte..,retin&amp;
Services
't'
•

"

z_

a:

&amp;tort lmmodlotaly. Coli bo·
t-m
1o.l ., 114-211-2248.
A• for P1m .

C LISA M KOCH MS

Doliv"'Y,.,...n, owncor&amp;ins ,
wiling IO work hord. 4pply in
Donolll'o, Spring Volloy

ILl
•
• • '
~ licensed Clinical Audiologist
·~

=::•

Govemnwnt Jobt. •18,040 159 ,230-yr . Now hiring . Call
805·687·8000 Ext. A-9806 for
current fede r•llitt .

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

EASY ASSEMBLY WORK!
1714.00 per 100. Guer1nt Md

8-13

5. 1·1

J.R.'s 'REPAIRS
TYs, Antennas

SateHite Sales

HEAVY lARGE BIRD BATHS

Installation servite
All major appliance repair• (Including micro·
waves) . Electronic Or·
pans. Mobile service.

TV ·614-843 · 5248
APPl. ·614·949·214S
7-8·'86·1 mo.

~

JO'S GIFT SHOP

SYRACUSE, OHIO
The Selel• Oa ForJalfl

ARMY SURPLUS
&amp; CAMOUFLAGE
Sizes 4 Yrs and up
ALSO HUNTING,
SURVIVAL and
VARIETY ITEMS

AC~OSS

FROM

POST OFFICE IN
MASON, W. VA.
5-15.'86-1 mo.

6·JJ.tfc

ptyment . No "lee. Dettils send
atamptd .-.vetope: Elan-71 5
3418 Enterprlte. Ft. Pierce, Fl.

33482.

Readthe

..... '1......

$16.95.

•I'I.AOUIS

•PINS

10% OFF

•M.ALS

•TaAYS

lAMPS &amp; FIGURINES
r;, PRICE
OPEN ' Mon.-Wed .

•GA. Yli.S

CEMENT D.OGS &amp; CATS

~"l~

. t

Thu rs.- Fri. &amp; Sat

9 a.m. to 6 p.m .
Clo sed Tuesda

L_

&lt;HAIMI ·
NOW LQCAIID AT
241 SKond Au.

804
1
44
_:__ _ _

Go 11i.~ ,, ~~.

Pomeroy Heehh Care Center it
ecceptlno appllc•tiont tor AN ' s
in a pert time position. Must
enjoy working with elderty and
pleatant .,rroundings. S1lery
oommenturele. Contact Nancy
Ven Met•. O.O .N . through July

3 Announcemants
SWEEPER and sewing mtchin•
repair, part1, and supplie~ . Pick

26th II 114·992-8808. E.O .E.

up and delivety, Devil Vacuum
Cleaner, one hall mile up
~::.:_l:_:m:::':..J
·
Georg11 Creek Rd . Cell 8U ·

EASY ASSEMBLY

448·0294.

BOGGS

MIDWEST
SEAL &amp; STRIPE

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST

Serving this area
with PoweSeol seal
coating and striping
ond making of
Asphalt &amp; Concrete.

GUYSVIllE, OHIO
Authcrill!d John DHre,
Now Holland, lush Hos
Farm Equipment
Deoler

1-614-696-1337
1-614-593-8693

Farm Eqal~me11f
Parts &amp; Service

6- 23·'86·1 mo.

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP
F11 All rw P,i•ti•l Nni1

PLUMBING &amp; HEA nNG
New Locafion:
163 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 45760

PIUS: Offico Supplits &amp;
Furnituri, WHiling
and Grm:luation

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Stationery, Magnrli&lt;
Signs, Rubbor Stamp~

We Carry Fishing Suppl ies

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Here
JO...,r·- IU!INISS PitON!

CARPET
CARE

churehet, oa "1) .-.y
birthday Ptrti.. Md
family reun tons. Cell 614-384pic:niet.

33482.

2108 or 1·100·282·2117.

The Mefgt LoCI I Sdlool District
is currently 11eliing applications
from certified applicant• for en
Atsi1Unt V•rsity Football
CoiiCh. 7th .nd 8th Grade
FootbiH Coach , Boyt Bth Grlde
8esketbt11 Co.ch, Bov• 7th
Grade B11ketbell Coach, Junior
High Track Co•eh, Attit:t•nt
Junior High Trtck Coach. Held
Bauball Coleh , Attittent Bat•
bell Coech , Girls Volleyblll
Coadl. Girls A11it:t.. t VoUeybtll
Coach, Girls ReterveBPkttbiU
Coadl. Girls Aaaerve Soft~ll
Coach. GirlsJuniorHIQhBIIklt·
bill CoiCh . Vurbook Advi10r
and Junior High School ChMr·
IeMier Advisor for the 1986-87
tehooi year. App lictnts must
hold 1 valid Ohio leeching
certificate and for coeching
positions n118t meet certificl"
Uon requirement• of Ohio aportt
medic6ne 1nd CPR. Pertons
int.,ltlld thoukl contact Den E.
Morris. Superint..,dtnt of Meigs
locel Schools, 11 821 South
Third Ave. in Mkidleport, Ohio.

8111 Fl1hermen of Gelllpolls:
Would you like to mHt more
men like yourtelf7 If 10 here'•
how to do IL Join Ba tt-Anglers
Sportsman Society. For more on
t hie; ' " Chari• Blankenthip et
919 Second Ave. Apt. 9 , Galli po!;., Oh.

I will not be r81ponsible tor eny
debts contracted tor by anyone
other then myself. Roger 8 .
DiUon .

I·J.'86 tic

*VINYL SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULAnON

667-3513

Clnn.t,
protected ,

llhltlled
carpM •nd
upholstery.

DRY FOAM

Busintss Forms,
Copy s...... , '''·
2SS Mill Sl., Miclolltport
104 Mulbtrry b., Pomeroy

1614) 992-6550
RI!IOIN(I PHONE

Choice of
Materiels

992-3345

1614)

3/2/rtn

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

ELITE POLE

BUILDINGS

hrnlfoy. Ohit,

- Addont and ramodeUng
- Roofing and gutter woli:
- Concrete work
- .Plumbin g end elecuical
work
(Free Est imates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

CAll 667-3271

c••,.,. ... Qtltlllf

~92·621S

or 992 -7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

Befort Y:.tr:J mo.
RADIATOR
SER~ICE

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We i:an
also acid boil and rod
out radiators . We also
repair Gas Tanks .

PAT HILL FORD
992 -2196

Middlepo", Ohio
1 · 13-tfc

10·8-tlc

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

985-3561

New Homes Built
" Free Estimates "
PH. 949·280 1
or 949·2860
No Sunday Calls

9U·6771

All Maku
•Ranges

~

'l!!lii:.
'73 -'IO.M

73·80

Fender~ ....

S39

OM
Rod!• Panell ...... ...... t 15

•Refrigerator•

PARTS and SERVICE
4-5·!1C·

Restores Faded
Oxidized Finishes To
Showroom Luster
·•CARS •TRUCKS
•BOATS •PLANES
&amp; MORE

fernalo. Coli 814-441·7026

3 male puppi81-helf cackiPQo &amp;
half long haired Dadtshund. Too
cute to misa. Cell 814-218-

Cemetery sal• position• tor
wo men and men . Mutt enjoy
meeting people. Sal11 experilnCI Miptul but not nece...rt .
Cot'T1111tetr~lnlng provki ... Cell

Blond female cockapoo, 2 yeeq
old. Good wrth children . Cal
4 eix week

-•Y

~d

kitten•

to

614·949-2775 .

014·992-7440.

gNe

FREE to good home , ptayful
male or.nge kitten. about 8
week• old , 304·87&amp;-1053.

882·3799.

A golden opportunity -Join
Friendly Home Toy P1rtltt, the
lnder for 31 .,..,. _Openlngt tor
!lllnaglfl end detlert. We hwe
the l~rg•t end bn1lineln ptrty
pl., . No cMh invtstment, no
•livering or CDHectlrlg. E•m IHg
nDney plut bonu,. tnd trevll
lno.ntlv•. Call now toll fr" to

FrH Kittens, phone 304-89&amp;-

3886.

Puppiet. mothlf reg ~ Pin Bull,
tether unknown , 603 ht Street.

·Coli

304-875·3831.

I month -old half Aunr•lian
Sheplllfd. half Beegle, very
fri~ndtr end good with chlldrM.

6

S1tillfac:tio n Gu•r~t•d
FrM D•Wwwy II Tri StellAr..

GREAT BEND ELECTRIC, Inc.
N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

After 5 (all

lolt: Ledles blfoe~ls. M,._ Peerl
Williema. In itght tan c111. Cell

Vour pt"ior militatY 1..-vglce it
worth monty. AnE -4canatrn'u
much •
t131 . 98 for one
week -end 11dl month it the
Army Netlonel Guard. You c•n
qualify lor 160.000 lift intu ·
renee. p-orTOtton•. IC)eci.t tr~ in ­
ing. end retirement bentfits.
EduCition funding ia also weil •
ble to qu11ifled enllltMI. C•ll

742-2027
9
•Residential
•Commercial
•lndustril!l

"Free Estimates"

Installation Available
4/ I

Wanted To Buy

We prr c111l tor lat a mJdel c lean
ut ed Clfl
Jim Mink Chi'II .-Oidt Inc .
Bill Gene J ollnJOn

814·448·3872

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
end new• uted c1 r1 . Smith
Buidt -Pont lae , 1911 Eastern
Ave., G1tllpolit . Call 114· 448 -

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

54 Misc. Merchandise

VINYL

i AW.NUM

.
.
ADS

Iii• "" ..=-un:,..

"'~·

1-.. c:U.:;."&amp;;"t

·

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

~

.

.,~-

~,

.. .

workers' lltrlke cotllbiues lor lhe 14th lliralght day.
Officials estimate lhere Is 33,000 lo118 of tr.ash to Ill'
picked up II the strike ended today. (UPI)

PHONE
992-2156
Of Wr1lt tb•Mr Stnt•ntl
DtD1.

MGM Farm City Spociols
CllVERT- liMifB! !UPPLYtt
8" Culnrl ... Reg. 14.15 fl.
NOW ONLY S3.7S
10' Culwort ... Reg, $5.15 fl.
NOW ONI Y IUS ·
II hp Jacalnon lawn T R... '2,009.1111
NOW ONlY 11550.00
POMEROY, OHIO
614· 992·2181

~ County ProbiiO

Court.

C• No. 26.138, Oivld lim·

1\t;~dc~:.-.. &amp;:'.;': ~fg

oppolnted Adr'*'tatr..,r,
tho Wll Am. . . cf tho
ol Floyd H. llemhouoo,
!lw.lfnd, tote of Raute 2.
.........f. Ohio 46788.

Rolle" E. Budc.
Pro bitt Juctgo
Lilla K. Neaootrold. Clorlt
171 1, 8. II , 3tc

reserves "the right to reje ct

any or an blda.
Jon ·Budt, ClertHreaauror
VIllage ot Mlddtepon
Juno t7 , 24: July 1. 8. 16

.I

20 VtNirl

" Free Estimatoo"
CAll (OUECT:
Ph. (It 141 843·5425
Public Notice

8

Dttby Day. Also thatts
Bob Hoeflich

tor his

Lost and Found

wry welllwrded Best of

the Bend section of the
Sentinel alii WMPO for
their announclftllnts.
'

We are sorry we camot
rBnte·

ewry one lhat

helped or Sifported us,
· but we could oot put
this event on ewry year
with your help.
We Thank You All
· Meias County
· Fish &amp; Game

LOST

RAYMOND E. PROFFITT (MAC)
Office 949 -2438

EXOTIC BIRDS,
TROPICAL FISH,
HAMSTERS.
KITTENS, BIRD
SEED, CAGES &amp;
AQUARIUMS

RACINE, 01110
Emorgen,cy

lio. Coli 814-448-3119.

Uted mobile hornet. PrefM 1 0 '

HIGH PRESSURE PLASTIC
WATER PIPE

Middleport

Ne•t Doer fe Wt~t•n Auto

For Industrial or Residential

992-6784

Use

5·20-'86 '1 mo.

IJT'S IUILD UP TOCITNEI/ ·
•LIItAIIYOWftED •LOCAl LIIIOR
I

liti[IIIIVIIII~IIl
St~rv~tt~ : ~

PH. 742-265'6
RUTLAND MINE SUPPLY CO.
34~18 New l ima Rd.

\.

WAMSLEY &amp;GRAY

RUTLAND, OHIO

5- 14-1 l o

7-7.'86·1 mo.

B9S.lla6

305

Jac11- ...~

W~

VINYL SIDING

HAVE MO.ST All POPULAR IRANDS AT
THE SAME LOW PRKES

•Certainteed •Mastic~ •Aicola

,., ......

304•~72;5

Exp.,I.,Otd dNmmer fo r Mtab·
lilhld rod! bind . NMdiOrneane
lntlt...td In 'M)rtdn... on ....._Inial
•
......
mlt•lll • playing MUfti WMk.,da . We have good oonnK-

CUSTOM GARAGE BUILCMNG ·

J&amp;L 'INSULATION : ,
-

'

PH. 992-2772

•, "

&amp;- 30 ,. 16_11110 . .

Gr11n ~eree hat opening for
Hygienic Aid . Point Ple•ant
group home . Contlct Homer
Rutherford , 304-676-6009.

12

Situations
Wanted

.

Have v1cancv for elderty perd l...bled or retired. recouper•Ung, thort end-or long term .
In country atmoaphere. Have
rwferin011 . Call tnyt lme 614 ·

son•.

949·30t4 .

Room bo.-d 1nd laundry for
elderly. Aesonable ratee . 614 -

992·8022

Hou t ec:l11n ing Mond ay t hru
S1turday. Call614-446 -7106 .
TrM work wan1ed. pruning.
topping flrTIOVIIS. hedget &amp;
bulh• trimmed . Land deering .
FrM .. tim1t .. . Ctll 614-446 -

1832.

Will do lawn mow., rep.ir •nd
mowing rarda . 197 Kilton Rd .

992·11872.

OuiiHI.t Home Ec: teacher will
do •wine. elt•eUont tnd give
lrtltona. 304-876-1712.

Fm anm l

21

Businass

0 pportu n ity
I NOTICE !
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH-

ING CO. recommend• that · you
do butin111 with peopll you

know , end NOT to send money
through the mail until you heve
1'1YIIfig8ted the offering.
count lhoe s r:ore. LM1i11. Chikl·
qual ity rnerd'tll'ldlte. D11igner
IM)all Evan Picone. Lit Clei·
borne. AndrCIW' GeMer, landoUno , 9 Wett, But, Nina, A.melfi,
Hike. end meny more. 113 .99
Cl'epriceendup . 121 ,900 .00to

ut.eoo.oo inctudoo boglnning

inventory· In - ttor• treining fixtur• l'lttallad. PrHtige fe .
shiona 601 -329, 2312.

A golden opportunity . Join
Friendly HorM Toy Ptrtiet. the
Ieider tor 31 yurt . Opening• fo r
meniQ .... tnd l;ttel.n. Wt have
the I"'JII1 and beet tint in 91rty
plen. No cuh kiYIItment . no
daiiYiring or collecting. Eam big
mon.., plus bonu"' end triVet
lnoerniY•. Cell now toll free to
Cerol Dey 1 · 800-227 · 161 0 .

Sout•·ootOin
8us 1n•• Co II eg e 1
...
Th a trtlnW'Ig you neld l For. th e
4,::8::6:_·87
~
33:_._______1 ;obi you went . Fin.nciel •eitt·
tn01 1vailllble. Ca ll today: 814NEWI NEW! NEWt FrM trip to
992·6177
HIWeii c::.n bt you rt. Get in on
the ground floor of lrtll ni'WIIt
Open your own beautrtul dil ·
pllrty pl., with 11tlblishld
count 1ho 1 st o re . LedietC0"11•Y · Ladiul Hiring for
ChUdren s-ment . 40 r- rc ent 18v ·
work et hon. menegtr potl - ings to your rulto mers . All fi rst
tions. Flu.ilblehourt. OrletP•Y· Qt.lllfty merdl~nd iu . Designer
Dettill without obligeUon. CALL lib-'• Evan Pioone, Lil C lt iTOO AY! tco lloct1304· 744 ·
bom e, Andrew Gelle r, Ba ndo0124.
lina. 9 W•t. 8111. Nina, Amalfi
Nih , lf'ld m~ny more. 113.99
School t•cher need• blby t ttt er an a price and up . 121 .900 to
inhrumfor2pre1Chootchlldr.,.. • 39 900 includes bog· ·
s d
'
mntng
:.U':!'~n'::'::~=-110
inventorv -in - lf o re -t r e in lng fill tur• . in t talted -gre nd optnmg
C· 11 cere of Point Ple..ent promottOnl and round trip air
Aegllter; 200 M1ln St., Pt. Ph ., far e. Pr• ttga F11hiont 601 .
w. v 1 .
329 -2312.

iOJI

~===:::::;~=:J.::==::::::;::::::~

9339 deys.

RoutM tvelllble become 1 Dtify
S.ntintl oetT6er •nd 11m bl111.00 •nd no.oo •
fo r mort lnfvrmttkMt oontlct the Dalfy 8ent6n"' tocii!Y' 1t

tw""
w•

114&gt;11112·21&amp;8.

full · time houtekeeper ·
bllbYIIIt• In our homl. ProiM·
tiontll, nwd m•ture ldult to

co,.for 2t, (yr. old. R - rogulrod. ltgln Augull 11th,
Cioy ldloolorao.'CoN 114·211·
1733.

'M GIIY U APPT.

RIPley OHI~e

AnENTIONII Ma10n County.
W. Ve. and l awrence County.
Ohio. ONLY!ii Now hlrlngsup.,vitort 1nd demonl1raton. Show
Chriatn'lll dKOrltk»nl for party
pltn. Part-time or full -time,
mike your tl)urt. No collecting,
deliveringorinv"tment
11 .FrMkit
304
end training. C1 II co ICt
•

Help Wentad

t

SUil AIIIMAL NDUH
Mon ••wiii.·Thun. 3·5 pm
Tuts. •130·1; Fri. 1·2 pm
Satu*v JO.ii:SO am
l-IGI A~l&amp;

~i::~:::·~:~

11

· ollnt18t4·2U·I008
8t4·
i'1 th1 recordi'lg or
lndunry.
41·109 OftOI 7. 8"·448·

·tOWN &amp; COUNIIY
Paul E. Shockey, DVM
n. PIIASAIIT OFFICE

AVON . 3 open territor!• . c ell

992·3478.

industrial use, septic tank pipe
and all fittin g s.

llliltltl&amp;l
•All SIZES IVAIIABLE

curnc

304-875-t429 .

We also have b la ck gas pipe for

tl'ole ' '
8uildi115

YETUINAIIAN

Electr ic typewrit.,. Ctll 814 -

Woukt like to rll'tt or buy 1 lot
eround Llngtvtlle, Salem Center
Of DeKtlf. Mutt IIIVI hook · up
fur tr•illt'. Cllll14 -742· 2141 .

;;;

*Melli Builtliftcs

*-

800·842·3119 .

Buying dally gold . tilwtr coins,
ringt, jewelry, ltlfling were, old
coins. llrge currency. Top price~ . Ed. Burkett Berbtt Shop,
2nd. Avt . Middl~port, Oh . eu..

Dependlble lady to ttay with
eldorty women. stay;, preferred.
be your own batt, c ell304· 8763081 oltor 3o00.

rtr11 . Ment. 40 Plf'cent •\lings
1:1 your cu1tamert. AU first

MILITARY SERVICE

&amp; 12' wkl"- Cell 1114-446 -

446-41537 after 7pm.

qualify. 304-871·3910 or 1·
800·1142-311t9

PRIOR

An E-4 ooukj meke 11 much •
•1 31 .911 tor one wHk -end 1
month. Othtr benef its include
t50,QOO.OO life insuranc:e, promodons. •Kill trelning , rttir•
ment progrtm ltnd lduc:ttlonel
funding. Call to ' " if you
qutlify, 304-876-3950 or 1-

WANTED TO BUY uted wood &amp;
coal hlattn. SWAIN 'S FURNITURE , lrd. &amp; Olive St Gallipo·

MILIT4RY SERVICE

INDIVIDUALS -Earn extr• mon.., lrl the Army National Guard .
An E-4 muld mike 11 much as
$ 131 .90 for one week-end a
month . Other benefits include
$60 ,000 life insurence, promo·
tiona. special tr• lning, retirement progrem, end tduc•donat
funding . can to ... if yo u

Open your own bnutrful dis-

INDJVIDUALS· Etm e•tra mo-

0171.

59 N. 2nd ho.

7- 16· 86 2 mo .

to

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
Bid will be receivlld ..,til 3
P.M., J~Jy 28, 198&amp;. at tile
Mayor's ofllc:e ot tho l'ilea•
of Middtepo!l, 237 Roco St ..
Mlddtopon, Ohio 4&amp;780 tor
tho driNing Md production o1
oil ., d (IllS """" tho real eotore owned by tho liittege
litueted 'il SeMobury Town·
llhlp, Meigs COYnty, Ohio de·
aalb;d in Vokmli .227, Pll(lll
.7, ~olgs C::OYnty Deed Rt·
COI'dl. The &lt;&gt;"-' ID lo110 tho
r•l 011011 lhl11 provide thot
no well shaH be drilled whic:ll
wMI interfere with the a-.v~"e
dltjrOoet lecititleo oituned ,.,
.tho ••t Hlll11nd thottho VII·
1lgo rOIONH tile right tO II&gt;'
provo tho location oi,My dHI•
lilg altoo end the location o1
.,Y production linoo end/ or
""'lpment.
Tho Vi11ago o1 Middlepon

Worked in home area

The Meigs 0:1. Fish &amp;
Game Club that*s all
the persons &amp; busi·
resses of Pomeroy,
Middleport,
Racine,
Chesll!r alii all owr
Meigs O:lunty for their
support alii dwtions
toward Kids Fishi11

1 Card of Thanks

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS' COUNTY, OHIO
.EIIIII of floyd H. Born·
ho&lt;loe. Oecuitd. C111 No.
25.138.
NOTICE OF
APPOINJ'MENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On J .... 26. 118e, il .,.

Roofing of oil Typos

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Eatlle of John L Wldtham,
Deceased, c... No. 26,173.
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On June 24. 1988, in the
Meigs County Probeto CCJUrt,
Caao No. 26.173. Opet R.
Wlckhem. P. 0 . Boo 3, C,.,..
ter, Ohio 46720 w• lp·
pointed Executrix ot tho • ·
Ulto of John L WlckHom, doCOiled, loto of P. 0 . 8011 3,
Cheater. Ohio 411720.
Robert E. ludc.
Proboto Judge
Lena K. Noaaotroed, Cieri&lt;
171 1, 8. 15, 3tc·

Cl1n!htd
Ill Court Sl .. Pomt•GJ. Dt.•o 4~1"

Public Notice

Complete Remodeling

THE BIRD CAGE
&amp; FISH POND
PET SHOP

PRIOR

304·871·3960 or 1-1100·842·
3819.
ney i\ the Army Natlonel GUird.

2282.

0924.

Will do blbyllinlng in my ho me
tJr working mothen. Ctll 114-

10o00 om Mon . through Sot

814-992-2318 or S14·9927888.

GREAT POSITION II! Oon ' 1 mtts
thit opportunity I Work from your
home hiring 1nd training peopln. FREE training provided .
Weektv peychecks. Bonuset .
Ideal job for mothlfl , fOrmer
teechert. pany plen dealers .
CALL loollectl NOWII For detlils. lmy Va rano (3041744·

New praducu. E•ctll.,t income. Di1trlbute Mini·Vtuht.
Gu•rentlld in coma . No aeling .

years of ~e. P•r •dvtnWt end
promotk&gt;nt according to proor•tend•bllity . Apply In ptrton
at VtU"'-'' Cerdlnal before

Coli 814·446·2224.

1072.

814-448-317S.

M•ture. hlrd worldng person
with common ''"" end good
work ethics to fill tn tpprentiatdp meat poeition . No PP•
rilfiOI ntCMNry. Mutt be 18

LOST blue trifokf billfold , 11 . . d
of town , Chillicothe Ad. bridge.

leMing

Merrl Mac's gutrtnteed line of
toye. gifts. home decor i1ems.
etc. NO deliveting , collecting or
inv•tmen'l. Your houri. Cell
304· 816-5768 or 1-800 ·992-

Corol Doy 1-800-227-1810.

9t3 -637·2918.

Lost and Found

OPENINGS AVAILAaLE

18 Wanted to Do .

Handymen to finlth painting
houu. Pey 14 .50 per hour. If
r.t.,llted, cell J . Jon.. It

yellow. 304-876·1118.

FREE INSTALLATION
2 ~WARRANTY

FENCE COMPANY
PH. 992-6931

Fr. .· 2 cttl S. 2 kitttnt , tigers.
cetieos. black a. whit•. mele a

5 biiUttful llittWII to good
home, six W..U otd, 3 grwy, 2

Bod

Linen ............. ... Full 11715
· Mini 1185

ACCENT

448·3479.

208 9m StrMt,. PoJnt PINient.

73· 79 Fofd Fenders . . 139

TNcll

Kittens. liner trained. Ca ll 814 -

814-268-1343.

•Dryers •Freezers

APPLE it
POLISHING
SYSltMS

Giveaway

1343.

•Wa shers •Dishwas hers

3/ 11 / tfn

3-D11AUTO
CENTER
0'11 W. Main St .

RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL
AGRICULTURAL
Custom Design
Service

(CUT OUT FOR FUTURE U!!l

WORK!

1714.00 per 100. Ou1rtnteld
p1yment . No ul•. Detailt-send
ttemp«&lt; env~pe: Elan· 684 7
3418 Emerpriea, Ft. Piarce, Fl.

Schools.

v•.

July 21. 1988.

LoCIII Jewelry Store looking for
fuU tim111iespenon. Need to be
innovedve, enjoy working with
public. end willing to leam.
Serious 1PPHc1nt s send complete r•u.,. to The Deily
trlbun .. Boll T900. 825 Third
Ave .. Gellipolit , Ohio •631 .

..,",
,.~· CLASSIFIED ADS
c-.

4

TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

=

,.,

OPEN MONDAY
THRU SATURDAY

304-773-S222

GRAVEL - SAND

•·

~~ ~ ·

Rt. 7, Pomeroy, OH.
"Free Estimates"
All wo·rk
Guaranteed

T

N04H'S ARK ANIMAL PARK.

LIMESTONE

· The Daily Sentinel

_,

REPAIR

6·16.'86. I me .

JUST CALL!
992-3410

.r oN8 OF TRASH - A lone ...,nicipll worlcers
ca rr and allow chllden to re
The 1979-81 fEI)Ort t1 the New
1oob
ewer llle lllge pile o1 garbage acaunulaled near
immunized.
York state Department ol Social
WK 8tedh11 In South Philadelphia Monday as cKy
City lawyer Frederick Schwarz Services said 1.3 niDion people J r. sa id the ruling will allow the city or 7 percent of the17.6m1Uion state
10 be reimburs«&lt; by the federal
residents - already receive Medl·
government fo r $25 million worth ol cald at an estimated anrwal cost of
medical care it now provides to $'7 billion.
lllei(al aliens.
"If the 7 percent figure Is apjlled
" It is a very significant ruling," to the 234.1XXl total numbe-r t1
Mayor Edward Kodr said.
non·LPR aliens In New York, then
" If people are Injured cr Kl , they the class would rwmber appraxi·
should oot have to jump through rnately 16,381," Sitton said In his
Public Notice
Public Notice
bureaucrat!&lt;' hoops In advance of
!IJ.page decision.
PUBLIC NOTICE
trea lment." hfo said.
He also noti!d that f'Yen If a more
Bid• wut be r-w• until
NOTICE OF
The suit was hegunln 1981 ~nine conservative ft•nre,l percent, was 4 00
A
.
PUBLIC HEARING
p.m. ugull I, tIll.
Notice I ~-=
t•New York Illegal aliens claiming used as an ~-estimate of the by: 111111
for tho tattowtn:f. onJuty21•,''"'
n~.,
.,.,
~
11
ot7:30p.
1
the need for medica I care and proportion t1 Illegal aliens whl arpp 1 ... endr.oduall- • m. • public mee~., 8 wMt tie
Medicaid asstsanoe.
have be-en, oc wwid .., denied, •Y•"'r·. r the 1 11117 achool hold.., tho Budgennd Ro·
"""
venue Sh•rlna. ot tho PoIn his ruling, Slfton exiBDdl'd the Medlcald, the dillS woold
stUi
BREAD AND BREAD
moroy VHiogoliell.
·
class definition to InclUde" all aliens numbe-r 2.311 hdlvlduall.
PRC)DUCTS
Jeno Wolton,
residing In New York state under
Medicaid w.. """'ftlllly enacted
MILK AND MILK
VINogl Cierlt
d ,::,.v...,.., ed
the
PRbDUCTS
171 15, 11c
color of law who have applied or In """'
.ww' 811 »=I'J)Or&amp;t
Into
GAIOUNE AND DIESEL
have attempted to apjly ·for Social Security Act. It Is a .
l'iiEL
, _ _P_u_b_uc__
N_
o_
tlc_•~Medicaid but haY€) be-en crwoold re lederal·state cost·sharlng program
Dottveoy wit be mode to • ·
PUBLIC NOTICE
denied Medicaid on the basis or designed to mabie -"'lclpatlng the Cllleton lchoot for the .
,_.'
peolod of Autuot 24 , 11 M
The Amuot I!Udgetla
their alienage."
states to furnish mecncalallllfllllw ._,.., JUlio 3Q,
.
for In-don. On
The U.S. government, the stale, to perlons wh08e lnrome and IW. . . to 11e moltocl 1117
to tho a:H=.,~~p1 ¥~~=:
and the city were defendants in the fi!SO\Irce&amp; are ~lent to meet _.._JrWw: ..,d:
.,1101_. tho Townllhlp lud·
case. The dflce ~the Secretary of COSts 'of iw&gt;fougrv medical care lp•lflc bid detetlo ,_y be 1111 far tho fll'*l YNr ol
.•
oiNinedr,d w lll!!!ltltCtilg:
1817. A arm11111ry of tho
Health and Human SErvices arguj!d and _..;:;:;,-nc=::.:""::,;'
•;::~z_...,._...,.~---1
Mr.
Kllftr Ralr.
MiliCI_. budget lho!!!'lntl tho
that Illegal aliens were not eUg!ble ..:
·
OPeNIIGM Olroctot
lnt.,dod U... of Rov.,ue
lor Medicaid.
-~.~
P. 0 . ._ 107
lh"""a
fund• Md lnlorme·
11ANT
-Ohlo41778
tlon
.,PfljlftiJr;tfle
'budgn
Lawyers lor the illegal aliens,
Ml~
10tf9no tilton 1111 Town·
-.=dlttho" !lhiP
tOr P.Ublic
however, argued such a restriction
111 ore.:_~lllt
"violates the Medicaid statutes and
~1·~...
!t!.111-::.;:
' ,
·
...._ Coui!IY ._d Rot,. lhldo, ~.lrom-1
the federal &lt;;:onstltullon. .. They also
maintained their fmmlaratbn sta·
~- ::~re: ~~~,~r, Mondoy
tu ses were .,relevant be-caulll!
"'"'MIY iihlt iidimn
.. . .r..J,
Ctork
"alienage can never bar Medicaid
Lt.!~.=~
(1,
,
,
COVer&amp;Jt, ''
(7113, 14, 11, 3tc
• tc •·.

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

JRANSMISSION

af 1111. with good oarnmuntc•
t6on lkllll" Politiont tvtllblt to
-•k tar louthoo11om Ohio'•
outdoor •-ootlon ftm. No
uplflonoo noodod. Wtll trolnl

~---,---~'I Read the Best SeDer

WILt~HAUL

~edicaid

'WO''RU"
1\•I

Wonrod-Enthuuutlcandonu·

Help Wanted '

rene rng of ny ype
Backhoe Servioe
Plumbing
Service
Custom Weld ing
Lowboy Heuling
Septic Systems
Licensed &amp; Bonded
WIWAMS TRENCHING
SERVICE
Rr. 4, Hysell Run ~d .·
Pomeroy , Ohio 46769
Ph 16141992 ·2834 .
992·6704
FREE ESTIMATEs

AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATELUTE SALES &amp; SERVICE
WeiiiiJ AFill Tltll
Sho~ Teeh1lel..

Complete Gutter Work

Illegal aliens eligible for

11

Help Wanted

Pr~•18·21~n
r~~~~~~;;::~:;::::::::::::::;,;::::::::::::::::;,;::::::::::::::::;r;:::::::::::::::::t:::::::::::::::~~-t~p~n.
WE ARE YOUR SALES
Howanl L Write•l
. l&amp;S
TRENCHING IS OUR LINE

DENNY CONGO

process has been taking plll!e about
ll,IXXl years. scientists estimated .
They said part oft he gas cloudan area 400btlllonmlles mdlameter
-Is collapsing In to an \Diusualstar·
like Object that Is growing.
The baby star sll&gt;uld Increase In
sl1f as more Interstellar material
falls into Its core lalt It wDI take
lOO,IXXl years to develop as much
mass as the sun, scientists saki. By
that time, the Star should ~ge
fnm the cloud and become visible.
The astrommers who made the
dlsoovpry are Charles J. Lada,
Pltlllp R. MalOney', Christopher K.
Walker and Yoong c1 the UniverSity
d Arizona and Bruce A. WUJdng d
the University d Missouri at St.
Louis.

11

Elm good wag II tor tplr•time
u aembty- work 11 homt, pktt
mony othof1. Info dloll04-1141·
OOit .... 3117.

~ · 1 5' B6· 1c

. . Scientists watch first birth of star
By EDWi\RD B. HAVENS ,
for quitr a few years now,"
TUCSON, Ariz. IUPI I -For thfo astrooomer Erick Young said
first Ume astronomers have ob- Monday.
Astronomers long have susserved the birth of a star. a galactic
pected
that stars are cont.lnually
Infant only ll,OOO yrars old, the
forming out ofinterstellar clouds t1
University of Arizona announced.
gas and dust bu t the process had
The embryonic star was detected
llE'\Ier ll'en obsserved because gas
5~ light years from Earth, hidden
In the cloud of gas from which it Is clouds act as dark. Interstellar
being formed. by scientists using a wombs that hide developing stars
12-meter radio telescope at Kitt from view.
The Arizona radio telescope was
.. Peak National Obsl&gt;rvatory SO
able to penetrate the veil t1 dust by
· miles west of Tucson.
At present. the core of the observing radiation from carbon
· embryonic star cont ains roughly monosulflde gas molecules from
· ·:one-tenth as much ma terial as thr the cloud.
The observations were made In
·sun, astronomers said.
March
1985 and April 1986 and
"We believe it has quitr a bit of
Involved
an object In the constellasignifiCance because astronomers
tion
Ophiuchus.
The star t&gt;rmation
have been look ing for a concretr
,, example of thi s formation proCC'ss

e

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

C~nvicted FBI spy gets life sentences plus 50 .years

7

The Daily

Ohio

.

........ '.. "" ...... "
.......GiillTpolii······· ·· ..... "p··omeroy
.
Middleport
·
8a Vicinity
8a Vicinity
----·····--------···-------------··-- ·-···-·-····---- ·----··-· ··· ··

Twa famity ltg Vtrd Sate
2011l-\ ,.., EMttm Ave. lun.
dtN Tue. lun Mrt 1 :00 . ...,.,
lt1M1, home Interior , new
alolh•· DIIIW~nt from IMt yoor.

2 ftwnllv Ylfd Ill•. Aigg tcrest
Minor. July 17. from 8 tD 4 .
Clothll. bik•. ping-pong tlllle ,
chlln 1tc.
.

lolo Friel., • sowntov

.. ··· ··pt ·preiiiiaiif ··· ··

0or11•

11111 • 11th • . Antiquo
tlloll-. fllmlout. -ro. fN-Iart.
dolll. olodllnt. II .. plow~ 14 ..
bond!
.,tndor
· • KYI''
ltiiN. 11t
heuN-on Uttle
Rd . juot off R&lt; 7.
July

m"•·

' &amp; Vicinity
...... -...... -..... -.. ---.--· ...·Yerd S ele. 99 Burdette Addn.

14 ond 11, 9oOO 1111 1. Kill' •
roOjo.

~ uly

cloth•. toyt, Ktnwood 1..1m

�.

'. '

~

...

. .,.. •. -llo.~r · ·,

. ·~-.,.. ... ... ,, ' .. . .. . ,

•

~ ·-A

· -·"

• •• •

•,

•
Page-8-The Daly s•ntinel
21

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

BUiineu
Opportunity ·

LAFF·A·DAY

111

Whirlpaal hiiiYY duty w......
dtyor ...coda • - 1200. Coli
114·441·3112.

Have 'l)artmtnt houM for •I•
rtuon•blt. Ctll 114-9128022.

23

G-n llr cond~lan• t8,000
ITU. CaN otl• IPM, 614·446·
IIS7.

Profeaional
Service a

For ult good u..d: Color ftoor
madol lY'o. Coli il4· 4461t48.

Water welll HrVIced wad dritled.
Fr" •timtt.. Ca• 114·912·
5008 .. 8t4·742·3147.

ll t'd l

31

Pldl1n1 UHd Fumlturt. Good
quollly UMd fumituro. Opon Bto
I or cell far eppointrnent.
304-871·8483 ar 171· t480.

tsl.:li'

Llko now fluotMI llfond. rod e.
go~ Yllvlt IOfl. chlir for 1111.
304·171·t821.

Homes for Sale

4 bedroom houu, fifopjoco. 3
mi. oouth af!lolllpalil, U8,900.
c•1 dtys 11'.· "'·11115 or
evonlngo 8t4· 441·8222.

3 bdr. hornt,

~:lo..

lo town, 2

bttht. p.rtly fumlahed. Gu
hNt. ~w utiliti•. Cell81 4-245-

924B .
3 bdr., lergekl1dlen. blth. utiUty
room, lingle garage. 2 ctr
drivtw"ty, nfc:e y~rd , gften
tpatt,

finished

gtrlge. CeH

61·· . . 8 · 1358 .

For Hie by owntt 3 ecr• ftllt to
rolling with 12•81 mobile home,
-118,000. city tchool district.

One 18,000 btu air cond,
12.000 btu 1ir cond, 110 Zenith
colored floor model TV, ohelt
type fr~er. good cond, 304·

12 EvansHgt., Otllipoli.. 3bdr.,

remodeled ll:ltchtn. full ben·
ment with fif.ltce. 1 Nth. Call

.,"But
............_..............
you can't leave

Refrigel1tor

0100.00.

., . ~

your
job, Miss Barnes, you're the
only one who knows how to
take care of all these darn
plants!"

33

44

Farma for Sail

Apartment
for Rent

614· 446·8899 .
111J ltoriiS, 4 • 5 bdrt., 2 baths,
full b11em.,t. flrepiiCa. 14a20
building with g~rege, 8. 1 ICI"Ii
in Rio Grande near Bob Eons
Farms. 163.000. Cllll14-245·

8197.
Rio Grtnde new lowly 3 bdr., 2
tull batha. full btHment. great
view , 3 deckl, elder lidinl,
gable roof, t49,500. Calll1 446 -8038. Will considertrlde in
of mobile horne.

12'A let"l t.rn. 1 \11 .Cory houll.
bam &amp; aulbulldlngo, _...., far
trail•. HPtic tank, dMP weU.

4 bdr. houae, big 2 car lllrWII
with attached •'"' houal, fruit
cellar &amp; 3 acr ... Calll1 4-441·

B1B1 '
Quality home. mrwty r~al~
choice location on College Rd.
Syracu11, new complete kitchen
and laundry, air conditioned,
liugalot. 614·992·5324.
Govetment homes from t1 . (U
repair) . Delinquentt1a: property.
Repouaaaiona. Cell 805-1876000 Ext . H-9806 for current
repo lia_t

H~

blth, XL
living room, XL kitchen , utility
room. garage. ArbeughAddition
in Tupper• Pleina. Celll14-117·

6239 .
4 bedroom home on 7 ecras.
Hunters partdi•e in Chetler

.,,,_ 132.000. Ctll 814-985·

4392.

e room houte end bath with 1V2

acras. At lntenectlon of 143 end
7, tLJ m left, firtt grNn houu.

Home for 11lt by owner. 3
bedroom. family room. 1'h
baths, price reduced, Arbuckle,
304·586 ·9148 .

A frame house. 2 bedrooms.
Southside. W. Va . 304·675·

1186 .
4 b«troom , 2'/J b1th, bridl. 5
level acral. 1 mile from Ma1on
County flir Graund1 toward
river. after 5:00 nil 304·273·
4917
Modern 3 bedroom tlome, ,..
su me 8'h lolllft with small down
payment . Mev consider rent
with option. 304-875-3030 or

876·3431
Modem 3 b4Miroom home. re·
du ctd to $48,000.00. 304675·5047 .

32 Mobila Homes

for

Sale

PHONE 614-448-7274 .

118,9&amp;0. Coli 8t4·38a·8a01 .
1972 Flamingo UJt8tJ. mobile
hOme. 3 bdr .. 1'h beth. totl4
eltctrlc. p1rtly furnfthed. CA.
undlfpinnk1g, k10dlck. Hking

34 A. F11m. At. 1 Leon. Mlk1

Offor. t·904·881·8421.

11 Coull St. Z lldr.. 2 both.
ldtahon fum-. na pill, t321
mo. plu1 depo•M a ret•ence.

Colll14·448-4126.

36

Loti

II

miloo af HMC. Coli 114441-a221 .

._INd al UOO. Can.. CI VII·
illal loll-• Apl. Mlddi..,Orl.
8f4·912·nS7. Equol Hau~ng
DPI&gt;Grtunlty.

Porterbrook Sub- Yt acrelol. Call

Pa,.,.,. 2 lldr. Noylata Aun.

Building 1tt11 3 to 17

.ct"

~

8t4· 441·1828 .
Aolltan bulldlnt loto with public
water. mobite homw S*rNited,
304 -578-2336 ar 304·8182287 ..

Ht:lll ~ Is

41

H ousea for Rent

3 bdr. one bl1h. LM'ge T.V. rm
whh FP. 1. .1 y1rd on Rt. 31.
1350-mo. Aeg required. Cal

month. UtiUtlll ptrtialty tur-

nlohod. Na polo. Co118t4·141·
2213.
wortdng l.ty or ltlfdlernlft.
2211\.i! Mount V1rn011 Aw .•
Point Pl....,.l. Cal 114~982·

8B8B.

921 FINI Avo .. llollljlalil, Oh. I
rm. houH. C.ll 11-·l\4t·3945

APARTMENT FOR RENT · Now

aftlf 4PM.

~ecepttng

IPPiiCIII:ion• for rent1i
it Maeon Aptl Li·
mitecf, Two bedroom ~· 11
t 111.00 IMf month. Rentel
rat• miV be htlher depending
on inco~M. Houling wHI bl
svaillbte to NCh eppilcant regardltlu of t"-'t riCI. color,
religion, Ilk or
origin.
lnter•ted IPPtiCMtslltould Cll
3().1,-773-1011 or contect D•
nile Streib or Well• Justice at
the main office. 1171 Brice
Road, Atynoldtburg, Ohio
apartment~

2 bedroom fumlsh.t houN In
Middleport . Call 114·112·
5304.
2 bedroom D. .lu hOUII par·
ti1Uy furnilhld . Low utllltl•. In

Pomoroy. Coli doyL 814·192·
238t or 614·992·2809 0\lon·

Pomeroy. Cui 114·992-1413
lfttr 5:00 .

ICf•. outbuild·
ings . Depot St. Rutltnd . t275.

Hou11 with 17

614 -742-3008.
3 bedroom, 3 blths. fumllhld or
p1rtty furniahld, tchool bus and

mlil by door, children, no pet ..

""""el

43088 ..... 114·883·48144.
Fumlohod one -.am 111&gt;1 an
~-

Vemon Aw., newly remodeled, cerpet, air cond. hell end
water pakt. ftrat floor duplex.
llflf• tingle worldng edult,
1200. 00 month. depoeit.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bdr. fum . or unturn. convtnientlocetion, Upp• AN11 Rd .,
all utiliti .. peid IJtCapt electric.

Sec. dop. roq. Coil 6t4-4468558.

For rent SIIIPing Roome and
lltht house kMping rooms. P~rk

Roomt for rtnt. diY· WHk.
month. G1llia Hotel. C1H cn•441·1880. Aent•lowll 1120
manth.

814· 441 -2430 ar 8t4-4480508 .

both. &amp;lnglo milo. Coli 114·
446· 44t8.

2 bdr. trail• Wllhlf-dryer,
mtrtild wotldng couple. non·
drink•. 15 minutH from town or
Hollert. Ret. &amp; Dep. Trlth &amp;
wtter paid. Ctlll14 ·441·4013.
12x80. 2bdr .. Clark Chapel Rd.

Coli 814-446·3897 or 8t4·
245·5223.
14x70 tum ill had I hr.. bedroom.
beth &amp; 'IJ, cantril 1ir, 12&amp;0
month. t210 dlpoait . C•lll14-

448· 3793 .

3 bedroom mobil• hom•. furnilhed ..,o 2 mobile home lots.
phono 304·878·6812 .

44

48 Spees for Rent

Aplf'tment
for Rent

z

bdr. utllttl• peftillty fum.,

t178 mo. CoN 304·871·1104
.. 304-678· 7921.
Fum61hld 1111. 2 bdr •111.

131 .,.. 41h !lollpollo. Wot• pd.
Colllt4·441·44t6 otl• lpm,
Old• cauploo 2 bdt., i!G.~oo
ponly pold Ot80 ma.. Col
304-878·8104 ., 304·176·
8316 or 304·811· 7121.
Houtt

a IPiftmMt for .m..-.

radtc~i'ltld,
odu~o

nice loeetlon,

anly, n o -· Colll14448·2404.

land for ula,

••.ooo.oo. 304-171·1181.

I

2181 ar 30"'48B· t997.
New 12 tnm Cr1ftmtn wood
lathe. band't, 111 Freud woodtumito tooll. •&amp;oo. Cell &amp;14·

448·0t04 or 814· 448· 7321.

Euon, Charillton, W.V. 30••
348- 3911 . Dealer inquireyt:
welcome. 211· 862-41 34.

P•lan and

Starn•• kittens. AKC Chow
puppioo. Coil 8t4·441·3844

room HI. oth• fumiture . Cell

Be1M1II Ctrdl 7 ,&amp;00-8, 000
C*dt. •• in good shape d1ting
bad!; from lete IO' t up til now.

Coil far *180. Con &amp;14· 256·
8880.

.

448-3981 .

a82B.

W•tem thow saddle. bridla.
br111t collar &amp; halt•. other
saddlll, nylon helt1r1, bridln.
IIddie pld1, blll'tkets, trunk,

pony mono. Coli 814·448·2222

GoH clubl 85 M1cGragor Tour·
nl';'s. Ctll 114· 441-1807.
Surnmlf Hot S•lel Fl11hing
arrow tian t2111 Lighted. nonarrow •2:591 Nonltghtld '2291
FrM ilttlfll Few left. See

lacolly. 1-900-423-0183, env·

time.

Hoapttal bed. menutf t126 . 2
bedroom mobile home, IWning.
underpktnlng. cement ttept

18000. 114·992·1288.

AKC Aog1t1or .. Gorman Sh•

AKC
born
shot,
eoch.

20 guag•
Rtminoton
""""
Modt4
B10. Good
condition.
Cell

,14-912-1204.
Goulds Wlttr purf11 , Balanceflow. Old F"hion wet or dry
cooltr chest type frMzer. 14 ft.
llumlnum Stir Craft Boat. 2
motort. 114-992- 2919 .

Zero• 330011 copier. 304· 675 ·
1244.

47 Wented

to Rent

Buw.... men trenaterld toGeHipoMI. N. . . 3 bclr .. home. liM•
prlf••· Clll lift H•• work
448·1140 at Halld., Inn 441·

0010raam21l.

51

A1gl1terad Chow, red. 10
monthl old. Houaebroken .

N - big yord. n21. Coil
814·1149-2042 """' 3:30 pnl.

Us• Dura-lih 8 ' x2D' awning.

304·875·3000.

H 0 Model treln tet. l11you1 ,
l ·lh•pld, IIVIfal tniin•. ctrt.
mount1in1, Nnn .... scenery, 4
1111 loll, 1350. 304·871·6399.
Wonder coal -wood burner ,
1100.00. 1I lnd't virll bicycle

*28.00. Col 304·881·3098.
t971 Kowoolkl KZ 880. 4 eyl.

ltfllt bike. 115 . 000 mlln,
1700.00. 10 K rmgend necklace

UOO.OO. Coli 304-875 ·7890 .
Building Supplies
BUILDERS
CLOSEOUT'S
SURPLUS
BUY BACK 'S
1 New Nfvage steel door
blanks. nicks and tcratch• $15
to t25 11.
2. Th~tmal Plin an tharmal break
aluminum windowsstv•alsizn

*49.98 10 *79 .88 .
3. 8' atuminum patio doors 111
1111.98 weith lc.raen.
4. Octogan lid tltney Ul••
windowt 149. 915.
5 . 15 Ute pine Frtndl ctlorr B
tll.95 .
. 4lflll '14 Mesonite under ley mtnt •21.11u., ••4x'4 11.00

l,...

•••
7 . 41181.~ touno groov• waHie

·~-

t ond 2 ....
Ia
,.,. lor I bdr. t1'7t. • - ront
for 2 lldr. Ut2. -

lkiH• _Appllaftoet,
U - R - M. -IIIfto
c - _.,,..44e,nu.
rM . .I.

'

Coil for •11111. VAUOER FARM
SUPPLV. 304· 17S·20'7t.

••die for Nil ·and
.......... 304·812·2712.

Electric porttble pi.,o . Roland
Plus 70. 21argefloor•p..._.,.., 1
•m•ll apHk•. 2 microphon11.

Hay

&amp; Grain

Coiii14·44S·4053.

Good miKtd hay •uhe wegon,
.1 .00. 304·678·111171.

Upright piano with beginners
muaic l•aons. 1100.00. 304-

r 1d rrs p1 11 Li li rl n

Bundy flute, eJtc con d. onty ueld
3 monthl, 304-671-2028.
Bundy cilfin.r, ltand. us_. 2

months, 1300; 3 apeed bicycle.
150. Phone 304-875· 1919.

71

58

19al Ply-uth Duot•.

olzoo tl8.88 .

11. Wood prefinilhed vinyl
wrttpld oolonlaltrlm 7 pe , t100 .
11. Primtd tNrdrop wood trim

., .00 7 pc.
17. k · lux brick comn t1 .00
~·!!a~. 12 bol ltO.OO .

til. 32".-71" "" ther111111 tlm·
P•Id gl•• ,... 179.81 now
028.88.
11. Rock ftct brown trailer

oldnlng 21"190" 13.119 ...
20. 22" •33" otolniMo otwltO '
d..; llnllo ....... 019 .11 .
21 , 1-loo• 01111 111m•1inu

an

Cllrplti11. Ron

plttt

onglno, eaad -d. •700.00 or
blot after. Coil 304·678·298B .

72

1970 Chtvrolat 1 ton wrtcller.
1861 Chevrolet pidlup b111

ollor. Call 814-448· 820t ar
114-441·B113.
t882ilollordolopd .. olr, AM·FM.
.z,.q9. John's Auto Slln,
8ulwllo Rd .. !lolllpallo, OH.
IIPd. trans, I cyl., needa work ,

1972 Chevy PU. 307 engine,

ollndL 0380. Coli 8t4·2186880.

tan C-10 'l.lton pick·up truck.
305 VB tngint. Auto., PS, PB.

Z341 no Sunday1.

IIIHid d,., cop. 0791. Will

t17t Flborgluo Navi 327-321

MgOd... price. 814· 742·2334
.. 8t4·112·1320.

1977 Olds Cutl111 Supreme

1480. Coli 6t4·441·3t82.

1- - - - - - - - - -

1912 Plymouth Horizon

4 tpd .•

elr. AM-FM, wire rimt. 12. 218.
John' I Auto Sat•~ luleviNe Ad.,

1188 4k4 .. ortbod 301 V·8 4

IPIId ~ tDn . AM-FM ttaroo.lill
wheel. duat t1nlt1. 18800. 61 4·

918·4180.

1979 Dodge pick up half ton.
good tir11. •c running cond,
t2.200.00, negotleble

Golllpallt, Oh.

1978 Plymouth Trail Dutter
4x4. Will tr_., for a newer 4
whMI drive or an older car or
trudl in trade. 814-982-2912 .

1IB3 Chfvll• LIB•ron 2 dr., elr,
CNile. niiW tW•. 31,000 mi._ ,
PC. cond., 11,500. C1M 8fter

73

8:30 114· 446·3031.

1180 Chevy v.n ~~~:c. cond. duel
air &amp; heat. CruiM, titt, 8

FMill Suppl11:s

187t M. . .ry Zophyr, good
ll&gt;nd. Colll14·2118· 1448 """'
8Pioll.

_ . . . , , U,898. Coli 814·
378-234t ,., Sundoys.

(~ IIVI!S IIil:k

83 C.maro llrlinette AC, take

ov., poy,_.o, Coli 8t4-248-

Farm Equipment

1977 Camara,

1911 Chfyalar L11er Turbo
I . 000 mt111, AC . auto. 1883
Dodge Omnl 4 dr .. 4 1111d. Col
814· 378·2728

Utiltty bllfo. SPL 30'•40'~ol'
with 15 ·,.a• alld• &amp; 3' 1..-v.
door . 16 , 255 erected . Iron

Horn 81dgo , 6t4·332·9748

t912 'illuda RX· 7 ollvor wllfl
biiCk interior ...J IPd., am roof.
low mileege. ~1&amp;00 Cttl e14-

448-71154 otlor lpm.

Late model JD b.,., t99&amp; . 501
Ford mowing mechlne. like ni'W·
1395. AC reke t385 . I ton

runnitg 1111'1 1379.
Idea menure spreader

*350. Coli 8t4-288-11622.
HI C tractor wrth culttvatort,

with wtnch

U.&amp;OO. 246 DT K•bot•1ractor
wfth ffonl k&gt;eder • I)Oit driver
dinet 24 HPtiiOO hr1. Forddl•tf
loodor bucltot • blodof cyl. with
PTO. Coil 8t4·448·9993.

liloogo. Coli Joy 614-286-88ta

cond. asoo.John Datre manure
tprudlf good cond. 1300.
Oliver 3 bottom plows high
claarlt'let trip shenk good cond.
trttllf ,

tiOO. C1l

8t4-992·2315.
New Holland 487, 7ft heybtne.

good C&lt;!"d. 02.280.00. 304·
273·4211.
W1nted to Buy

1874 Dodg• Dart, automedc.
llant·lia: .,vite, teOO. C11
114-441-1410, can Itt efter
•

288·11622.

t800. Coli 6t4-378-2788.

1978 FolrMint 4 cyl .. 4 IIPd ..
goad cand. 1180. Coli 614·251 ·
1487.

8c00PM.

disk, plowt, I'TIOwlng m8Chint.
belly mower 1995. Cell 114·

Wdly' o ~- 380 •gino. 4 bbl..

w.,..,

dull .. nautt. two ron bws.
niw tJrn.
whtte spoke
tach. trill gu11d, wench 11 , 4()0 .

Now buying lh.U com or ••
corn. Cell forlet•t quotft , River
C~y form Supply, 114·441·
2115.

Ctv1Har ntw lllrM, AM·FM

U . l .... oluritlooumtlv•mal!h
raafaallling t22.11.
'· 'o W-oo. W-n.
Ohlt. I 10 I, I cloyo. Col

Cauft\Y~OO. Ina. Gaad ., .....4-.....
lrMITV 0111.
M,
10
· loliOft 111ru
.... ,, ... 441· 111t, t27 ·J.d.

Motorcycles

t918 Hand TAX·10 4·wllool
ATV, 1111 1 unct. w•rranty, llll.e
new I Purch~~old April 1910.
Muol Mil. Co! lt4·446·4864

t• '*:00.

tt78 Cho¥, • IIDar, C.....oo,
..... ...... .00 . . . . ..
P-h A... Polrlt _ ,;
304-fll·3271.

·ez a..

n... _

c.ele.~
......._
.... _ , . . . . .

PI,,
.. AC, lilt.
......
-..
·
A...,..
till 304-f?.. li27J 1:10 • t! :Ob

·~-·--------_,..,.

_________.........,_,..

J---'

1·

w

dock poses as a mercenary ..
in an effort to prevent an

~OUNP.

evi l landowner from oustan orphan squatter

UNSCRAMBlE LETTERS
FOR ANSWER

from his land (60 min.) (R) .
CIJ Dektari
l1l Roller Dorby (50 min I

.

(R).

Stan!., Steerner 2 room min-· :
lmum 120 per room . Gallia- •
Meigs- Vinton Countie~ . 1-800·

min .)

fJ) CIJ MOVIE: 'Sunburn'
Cil MacNoii·Lohrer Nowsh·

32l-6t38 .

our
(j]) Cl) il]) Sim~n &amp; Simon
On a search for a woman ·s
missing father. A.J. and
Rick find themselves in the

t813 Hondo Cl· ttOO, 1.200
*898. t117 CoiiiNoc Eldarodo
tUI. Coli 6t4·441·0148.

tl78 Horl"'' o ..ldoan FLH . Coli
6t4· 441·A31 ott• 5:00, 6t4·
448·NI7.
71 Hondo HoW- 400. oi.1ro nlco,
1,008 mlloo. 01,000. 304·878·
7224 r. 114· 44•· 7JJI.

ecoot•.

Motor
'M HMda Ella,
uc 11&gt;nd. IDodod. 3.000 mlloo,
UII.Oil. 30....2·1371.
11n Handa GoldWirla. tllring,

b . ., . . , . _, Lcrta ot ntrat.
104-PII-11•• Uooo .

1113
Cll
t·2 8. lkiollont oandl·
IIDn
· , 304
· ·171·2034.

6t4-448·8073.

middle of a drug smugEvergr""'· mulch , gravel. top
.aoll, firewood. tr• &amp; atump
removal. chain link fence•.
blockl. Cell Don Waugh 614-

1 OOUT '-.VUJ WAIJT
10 "TALK. AB:Xlr tT

Rotary or clble tool drilling.
Most Willi completed same day.
Pump 111• and service. 304·

89&amp;-3802

AAE Ya.J ~JNG l't?
I.AL.l1?-IE5 81R1HDAY

Ing. room lddhiona. painting.

~R'IY TOMORROW~

blodl, frn estlmetn, 304·175·

'

\

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

i11t y,.. Am. • • · _.,
oo11: u.30o.oo. 104·111·

II flot p

lt4·31 . . .0t'

M_..,,.,...,.
I

=

1

'

UNLE:SS "THel&lt;ffiAN INVITATJON IN
THEMAIL 60X '&lt;"MEN l t:i!':THCIME .

IJ$LY, FRIZZLF: HAIRED lv\ORON ...

I

I

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Founh 1nd Pint
Gallpolis, Ohio

Phono 614·448·3B88 or 614448·44n

.BARNEY

Excavating

I KICKED MY
FOOTBALL THRU
AUNT LOWeezv's
WINDOW

Oood-1 Ea:nv•ting. b•am'"ta. ·
footlf'l, drlv.weys, aeptic tanka.
llftd1oapino. Call •nvtima114-

445·4137. Jem• L. Oevflon.·

BOY!! I

't'EP·-SHE BLITZED ME

BET

IN TH' END

SHE WAS
HOPPIN'MAD

1··--·••'"'•a"''"'ft-._tt,.,.,,•••__,...__...,,___

nurser
28 Pat or hired
29Cargo

Alllwer ""
Ill Indited
31 Fragrance
37 "Last
Supper"

in ort
39 Sylvan
deity

41 VIm

6-+-+-+-t-

81 Tendon
83 Exclude
84 Toddler
85 Fabled bird
38 Wide open

Dolly and Kenny heat
up VIDEO COUNTRY wllh

40 Lyric poem
42 Count up

love~ tonight

43 Proceed

44 English

t1 :00 G (1) ll) Ill il]) 1]11 Newt
ill Bill Cooby Show
@ lneldo the PGA Tour
fJI I1l Lovo Connection
Cil SCTV
lllJ Water, Birth, 1he Planet

river

45 Bouffe
or comique

DOWN

I Fiddler on
the reef

2 Dwelllhg

(60min)
(Q) Soop
11:30 G (]) IDl Tonight Show
Gueat host Garry Shan ·
dling welcomes Judge
Reinhold and comsdian
Jimmy Aleck . 160 min .) In

DAJLYCRYPTOQUOO'ES -Here'• how to work II:
AXYDLBAAXR
leLONGFELLOW

One letter stands for IIIOiher. In this sample A is used
the lhree L's X for the two O's, etc. Single leiters,
1pollrGpbel, the ienath IIICI formaUoo of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dlffer~nt .

Stereo.

for

Cil Burns &amp; Allen
l1l S_portoContor
Cll llJ (I) Newo

7811 .

prayer

welght
80 Work unit

water in life is explored .

Jem11 Boy1 W1t., Sef'tlice. Also ·
pool a filled . C111 61 4 -256· 1 141 or 614 · 441-1175 Of 614·446·

ruiner
8 Devotlonal

24Bukbone
27 Nickel

Earth The importance of

General Hauling

1!1) 11J Ono Stop Beyond

Cil Soundo11go:

Ken 's Water Service. Wtlla,
clstet'ns, pool• and waterbedl
tilled .
'1 14-317-0123 or

c••

Gl ill! Simon &amp; Simon Rick
uled to

..
•

Upholltery
TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

I ':JUST FOUND OUT
SIR .. TI-IAT
' (~IMI'

-:

POOR C"UCK.I CAt-j JUST
IMAGINE I-IlM TRVIN6
TO CROSS A RIVE~ ON

A ROPE .• I WONDER
I-lOW l-IE'S DOII~6 .•.

1113 Sec. Ave., Gellipolis. • ,
114· •4&amp; ·7133 or 114· 448' • ·• 1

1133. .

len gambling bosses. (70
min .) (A).
ll]l Trepper John, M.D .
I.
12:00 CIJ Jtok Benny
Cil Top Ronk Boxlng from
Lll Yegu, NV (2 hrt) (R) .
(I) Goodwill Gemas Tape
deleyed coverage of mon'e
volloyball. boxing. end ten·
·n is. (4 hro.)
(I) Entertainment Tontoht
Vincent Price 11ke1 a closeup look otoome of Holly·
wood'I ·clalllc horror end
11rror films. ·iR) .
RIWhlda
8 (I) ABC Ntwl Ntoh1f!n1 •
CIJBOundellgO: Lowr loy
ill MOVIE: 'Tho Relnoor~"'
tlon of Peter PrMCI'
12:30
1]11 Lite Night with
David LAtWrmen Tonlgh1'1

.

Watterson'• Water Hauling, : ·
rMsoneble rites, Immediate ..
2, 000 galldn delivery; cii1ef'n). IJ. :
poolt, waN, etc. call 304·576·

.'

'·

J

ZBB S

DUA

JAGHFCDI

NZNCVJD

LABLYA'J

c y y

-

RFAAS R A J D

BDUAF

ENVVAFJ .

YBFS

GUAJDAFQCAYS
ONE PERSON WITH A
BEUEF IS EQUAL TO A FORCE OF NINETY· NINE WHO
HAVE ONLY INTERESTS.- JOHN STUART MIU.

. Y..U....,'t CrJpiG4110tA11

i....

c ,. tOng,...... 8wndJottl, tnc.

gutiii
...
comedian
Goorue C1rlin 1nd Bill
Z1nltar af thli Leernlng An·
nax. (80 min.) In S11roo.

em

I

e ())

,

c

c vz

testify against ruth-

BKV

ENV ' J

N

and A.J . are hired 10 pro·
loci a key wi1nou •ch•d·

Coal , limestone, grawel, etc.
Delivered 1 ton and up . J im • .
Lanier, 30•·875· 1247 or 675-

7397.

C&amp;YFI'OQUOTE

7-11

Rachel

ll) Allee

114· 387-774t •• 304·075·
1247.

•-------..!...:..

..,.,.~""""'~

ZONE

6 Denwre
7 Pantyhose

9 Malt sugar
Albert
U Anthology 21 Ungrateful
18 Greek
17 Dolt
wretch
letter
20 Curve
27 Jamalcan
19 Mistreat
23 Explosive
bay resort
21 Anc. clty
24 Jewish
29 Uncle
in Judaea
month
(Sp.)
22 Before tee 21 Model of 31 Stone
28 Ponder
excellence
marker

less derelict in an effort to
attempts on the life of

'Real

Margaret

5 Abundant

II Cosby's

et I 0 :30PM.
.
NASHVILLE •••

INt. 10 HP RaM fumtturt Mtnufitcturlnt

=::::....

holder
I Carriage
10 Wanderer
II Of the moon
18 Spanish
"'triend"
14 VIewpoint
15- canto

is profiled . (60 min I
10:00 fJ) Cil Soap
(j]) Cll il]) The Equalizer
McCall poses as a home·

•

8 Spanlsh
clty
4 Uttle

1 Tltle-

to il

lroll•. 81. Rt . '1;. Crown City, Oh. coli
'"""' wldi'I
., whh· .tit4·258: t470, Coli Eve. 814/
"'
0011
01811, Col d"'' 446 · 3438 Old 8o now · .., .
114•III·Dit .,d ...,. 114· Uplloolorod.

"""*

ACROSS

an old friend . (60 mm .) (R) .
lllJ News
10:10il]) News
10:30 ill Celebrity Chefs
f.l) iii INN News
llll Roughing 11

C.I\·I~'T'LII"t:

'""'e

LAURIE'S A F;D.T,

'{).,.

by THOMAS JOSI'H

musician Sergei Kuryoktl'in

Cell Emit Carpentery, remodel-

tKQ
• Q7 2
·~JI7

t~~,.

fate . (2 hrs.) Part 3 of 3, (R).
(]) 700 Club
@ AWA Wrestling 12 hrs .)
Cil MOVIE: 'All Quiet on tho
Western Front'
(j]) 8 il]) Magnum, P.l. (60
min.) (R).
lllJ Comrades: All That JaiZ
iCC) Russian JIZZ and rock

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

l·ll-M

......

Kleber and T .J . attain
power and prominence but
are linked together once
again by a bizarre twist of

878·208B or 875·738B.

NORTH

tl132

WEST
EAST
After pllllng originally, North felt +QH
he could do no leas than invite game. t76!
•Hau
Despite his nat distrlbutlon, South felt tKJ98!
tlOS
that his 14 points and two I 0-spots +H
••o ass
warranted a four-spade bid. A defen·
SOUTH
slve error gave South a chance to
t AK 10 6
brine home this shaky conlract, but it
'J 10 3
required alelgbt of hand.
West chose a neutral lead - the
+Q4 2
heart seveD. East won the ace and I
Vulnerable: Neither
could have sunk declarer by returning
Dealer: North
a dlamond, but made the friendly
tum of a second heart. There was now
Nort~
Ell I
a straightforward play for the ,con· Wet I
Paas
Pass
tract. Perhaps East held both the Pass
3t
Paas
queen and the jack of apaclea and could Pal!
Pass Pau
be finessed out of them. South thought
that unlikely, but perhaps the defend·
Opening lead: ' 7
er with a third ll)lllde would also hold
the king of diamoncla. If the·other suits 1
could be eliminated, a throw· In mlghl
work. Upon winning the heart In dum· West discardlng a dlamond. Then the
my, declarer played a club to the last club was ruffed. II West over·
queen. West won and cleverly ruffed, he would be forced to lead
switched to the spade jack. But South away from the dlamond king. When he
wasn't about to be cajoled Into playing dllcartled again, South sif11ply played
his last spade and our hapless defend'
East for the queen.
He won the spade ace, played a club er was caught In the same bind. You
to the jack and returned a spade to bla can guess what West said to his part·
king. Now he cashed the jack of hearts, ner about the heart return al trick
pitching a diamond from dummy, An· two.
•1 ... N'RIPAPER INTI:RPRISI: .\&amp;iN
other club wail played ~to the king,

otic wildlife. (60 min .) (R).
il]) MOYIE: 'Catablence'
9:00 II (1) IDl Celebrity Mack,

rienced c1rpenrer, eltetricien.
· mason. P•inter. roofing (including hot tar applicationl 304-

85

BRIDGE

region of southern Venezuela is known for its spec·
tacular waterfalls and aX-

AINGLES ' S SERVICE , expe-

87

. . . . . motof,lew
dwtll
lnder. • · Cllftd, f7.100. Cal

r.r

Q!Ing ring. (60 min.) (R).
Novi: Skydlvo to tho
Rain Forest fCC) A remote

Fetty Tr11 Trimming, ttump
remov11 . Ctll 304-176-1331 .

loetl

11.,..fi,Q-nfloh.oldmodol
t71 . . E...Ndl, 12· 24

Afodlh - Fllrh - Exert - Bloker - TIME le IT
. The llaher h~ lhe CI/1YU hard. "Don'l gill up until elahl "
n!,tr,aJner. Still dlzad, lhe b~xer ~ed, "Whal TIME

lllJ

EEK&amp;MEEK

RON'S Ttlevition Strvice .
Houte Collllll on RCA , Quo~~zer.
GE. Spacillling in Zentth. Ctll
304 -676-2398 or 614·446 -

29t9.
1nd·
Moton for Sila
,.

YEmiDAY'S SCIAII-IIn AIIISWEIS

1-------------J

Major League
AII·S1ar Game

in Houston , TX . (3 hrs .. 30

J &amp; J 'a Home Improvement.
Vinyl siding. overhang, storm
doors &amp; windowa, gutters. Cell

8152 .

I

re-I

ing

Live from the Astrodrome

J.A.R . Conltructlon Co.. Ru ·
tlend. Ohio. 814 · 742· 2903 .
l11emtnts. footert, Concrete. · .
IAIOrk. Backhoe' s, Dour end
Oitcher. Dump trucks. and• •
w liter - g1s · 11wer · elec1rical
~n11 . Charlie Helfleld operator. ·

••lol
-· .,....- -·
n.•o.oo
- ·whlto..
304112·-·

ln-...

Tl-fl$ TIM!!'

Baseball:

1880 KBX Kowookl t78 0280.
Colllt4·446·3152.

711

B:OO G (l)@ TheA·TaamMur·

Cll Ill Cll

Jr. ow,..,.

1883 Handa 200CC 3 whoolor.
Coiii14·S71·2'188.

till Cam- Roly Sport. Y8,
lutO, PI, P8, ltlf defrotl. elr,
18700. Cal 114·"2·130311-

'

IHl Alice
1Dl Jeopardy

and women's figure skating; and men 's gymnastics
and boxing . (4 hrs .)

oft• 1:00pm.

1971 OldomaWo. Gaad bady.
Good work Cllr. tiOO. CaM
814· 1113·7J90 oltorli:OO.
t873 Carvot11. A-1 -dillon.
*1900. Cal ., 4·1t2·1421 '
Con. il Coop• Chryolor,
Third lt. In Mlddloport.

~ONFU$6'

'

Now .......... _;,....., oul·
'77 c . . - . 1.12 lor .....
A_ G.....,... Oil.
304-171· ,, u ·.
· ,t ,t z·-·
1::::=:::-::~:---- .... 12.38 ft.,"'' · AI olooo.
'
'
Mowrey· • Uphollt8rlng letving
'. :
ll&lt;lllvtiY. W. ~ • lill gaac1 Holotilr! ....... Rtt· ond
11il · C - Ul, M,ooO J't 7t: 1l'IIIIAITAR .ba'!f.IOI !rlaauntvoroo2tyo111. Thebtot · •.. ,
'- .:110'•- 100 . . . h_.y. trodo. R".
. . . _ ....... af quollly ....... r,..inll1roi.Cia}""loloiO!i, lngoilllltt. l f - -, D.., · mllll -., ..,., Y·&amp; 1. . ~·PM - -· In "!•n~ure uphalotoring. Coil
turo. 111'1 l11torn llvo., ... 1002, Cllor!Oot..t, WY whh 4.7 lot. Col 114·-·
110.100.
104·171·
•.,J'=J.Ih !~~~:.~~ · 4154 far froo .
Qcllp.
2531t ' Coll104-~1·8211 '
~ -~4~;.~_._ _ _ _...._ __
1427.
' '
'
1 _.;._...,..~._...__......,,

.y...,. ,,.,.,... - • •.

•

•u

E.lterlor &amp; Interior ttucco. Plu·
ter &amp;"pinier replirt. low ratiS.:
Coli 8t4-286· tt82 .

83

I&amp;Bt Hondo CI'ISO ouotom,
law. mlloo, ••c. -.1. Coli
114·387·0317.

.a:uo.

o,..

drlvt, lutO, 310 Y-1. very GOOd
bally ond modi aand, 304·48B·

18B2·1":t:....Cor. 'u s. r .
Top. Ia
. •1eoo. Cantoct
1kltcll Aauoh 11114·112·7211.

1112 fonll_,_ IW, AC, -

'

A PRINT NUMBERED
'11::11 lETTERS IN SQUARES

Complole the chuckle quolod
by filling in lhe milling words
you develop from stop No. 3 below.

By James Jacoby

Uncondltklnel lifetime gueren-·
tH. locll referenc11 furnished
Fr11 ettimttes. Call cpllect
1-814·237·0488. day or night
Roger• Basement
Wererproofing.

Wogan-. 4 whiol

miiH, dune buggy, ma11 tu.l

l'loll '

Livestock

U . 4pG.-aollond-.both
011 12.1 .11. •·· 3 ond ""

.....l.....J.
L....l.....J•....;..t..-.1.

Taking advantage 1
of an error

(]) Goodwill Gamos Tape
delayed coverage of men's

678· t011.

74

I..IVEP Bt:F~E:. 0/l. :C
WOULDN'T' ~ $C

'.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

11'70 Ford Van, t1buih engine,
•ceHent t)r CUitamizing, 304·

·n .._

/

~

Home
Improvements

82

Dolaa rodla, AC, 24,000 mlloo.
18 R.,gor pldlup, AM·FM
- o . 18 .000 mlloo. CoM
814 · 248 · 1118 . 6t4 · 248·
84t0, .. lt4· 2111· 17t3.

· 'II, M......, Lyna.... aand,
304-17S·••a.

83

114·448·0..\38 oftor 5.

11t4.

448·7383

hor~e

1171 Dodae van 1100. Call

88 Flr...lrd. 400 onglno, 4op .
BHt offlf. lhlfP ... Ctll 114·

collect.

Int. do11r

Again-."

James Jacoby

about his role i n the upcoming TV movie. " A Pri·
son of Children"

Starks TrM tnd lawn Service.
iandtcaping. 304-1571-2010.

Col814·371·2768.

tors with wenlt'lty ovtr 75 used
tractort. 1000 tool1.

82

350 engine.

Body • lnloriar aaad. Now tkoo.
12000 CoM 8t4· 379·2380.

Oh~. C811 814-448·9777, lVI.
8 14· 441-3182. Up ln&gt;m ~...

2

, . . _ , n ,a5. Coli 814·
1174 Dadgo Aomdtorgor FWD
•ldng 19&amp;0: Coli 8t4·2566801 .

4x4: 1176 Oklt Starflre, auto ,

JIM "S FAAioll EQUIPMENT
CENTER . SA 38 W. !lolllpalio,

T·8

1980 Chwy ven eac. cond. dull
air &amp; heet. Cruiae, tilt, 8

tl78 LTD II AC, PI, PB. 4 d&lt;,

ll-5. Co118t4·2111·1484.

l: tcNow 'I.'v~ Ni'VIi"R

R~INCARNATION
SOCI~TY

B96·3886.

2464 .

W.O .

371· 2341 no 8unday1.

Not. V·B. 1172 Chovv llu•

S.E. Ohla .

Naw

llo 4

1970 Chtvrol... Auto, air, no

M11..,- Ferguaon, New Holltnd,
Buth Hog SsiiS &amp; Service. Over
40 Ulld tr~~etors td d'to011 from
&amp; 00"1''-lellna of new &amp; uMd
tqulprr.nt. largllt ttlldion in

w~gon

Van•

8024 .. lt4· 241-8880.'

•eso. Coli 8t4·..,.1·3013.

CROSS •sONS
U.S. 31 Wilt, Jack10n. Ohio.
614-288·8481 .

,.

Ctmper lleep1 6, 13 tt, g• or
eftctrlc, a1 ,900.00. Phone304·

81

ed a IIJ1111 plaque to my uncle
had qu~ tmoklng: "A Born

,.

takes a clo-

our
Cl) il]) Divorce Court
il]) Private Benjamin
@ Whool of Fortune
7:30 II (]) Cll Now Newlywed
Game
l1l Major League Bas•
ball's Greatest Hits: 1971
All Star Game (R) .
(]) Sanford and Son
fJl ffi'Tui
llJ CIJ (j]) Wheel of Fortune
Cil Fawlty Towers
Cl) il]) Entertainment Tonight John Ritter tali&lt;s

44'8-9848.

3 ton controiAC . trldetor a boat
&amp; motor. Ctlll14· 379-2240.

61

304-878-3278 .

Tn1ck1 for Sale

GMC .,.. ton pickup. Pickup
c....... Ca118t4· 441·1882.

HP chromtengine, M-22, 4spd.
trono . Colll14·•2·894t .

For Sale or Trade

Ctmping trliler. like new, 23 .
foot, t7,600. 2903 P1rri1h~
Ave., Point Pleuant, phone

Serv1ces

Ctdllltc coup de viMa, 1977

gollan. t385 . Con 814· 379·

j:;;:;;.::::;;;:;==;::::;=

814· 245·5559 .

Pedal

UOO. Coli 614· 251·6880.

little oil, 17 to 18 mllet per

tale, 16 .00

Hesvy dutv II brush hog 3 pl., ••·

10. 4x8• V• levan plywood B

Auto• for Sale

t97t Chovy folr aand. uo•vory

McCeualand F1rm and Garden.
Ctbbegt 4 helds 11 .00 , SwMt
Corn 11 .60 dol, Hell runnlf
baens, tOmiiOII. US AI. 35 8 ,
16 mil ... Southside, W. Vt.

21 ft. ciHI A eJtecutNe fully
equipped 30.000 miles, very

'72 IloilO Midget. t 275 cc. 4
tplld, v-.y good cond, com·

t988 Chevt 10 ton eaad body, 4

Fruit
Vegetables

*6.89.
14.49.

t97t Cho¥ 307 IUia •no.oo.
t&amp;78 Doll 8 cylouto liSO.OO.
1974 0adgo3tB IUia *180.00
t173 loiiiHflrl Jot ban 485 Oldl
onglno, 30"'d78·882B.

6838 .

1 8711 Old1nm bile Cutleu Su·
promo, PS, olr cand, 310 v.a

20 lcr• ttandi1t hi';', by the
bile or lh••· C.ncenaty atM.

814· 992 -715t ar 814-992872t .

59

'77 Ford Piruo. Y·l Mlto rlbulh

Whool, 304-48 · 1814.

64

tfttr 8PM.

w-.
.
.
.
.
·
'
"
"
.
.
,
.
,
.
,
.......
r:
-·far-...

belh.
upnolro.tor21dullo. '-lty
~·~ • rol•onoo. Coli 114448·0444,
Fum. ..,.,, 4 '""" •

- ·· Call ·l14·-·3111.
GOOD UIIO A"UANCIEI

your mllrlillllng dullf tmtll
Augua 15. Now tilling ord••·

Mutical
I nstru merits

Blackbeni11 for

I~==~::::::;::;:.:...,who
I:
r. .,.;I~. .;Ei:-l'.;_vrlu...;sl,s.;_l'.-1' G

llll MacNeii·Lohrer Newsh.

1971 24 h. Starcreh travel '
treillf Mlf contained. new tires ..
good eond.. IIIIPI e. Call·

onglno. AM·Fioll ClooOito, bacly
good ohope. 1780.00. 304·
IB2·322t .

Qranny was always dol rig
needltpolnl. Aa I gift, lhe hand-

1-Til

®Nowa

1980 Coachman 23VJ ft. travel
trailer 111c. cond. Call 61 4· 256·

304· 773·9tB8.

t.

BAV E0 .
S~l..;._,l;;....;rM

CII Nightly Business Report

1174 VolkiiiW1f0n , good con d.

Hort• and

&amp;

~

Cil Hogan's Horoao
liJ CIJ Jeoperdy

Arabiln HOf',., purebred Ara·

STEER 8TUFFER8 an olio 11

3766.

67

r. I' I I t _

wood 's classic horror and
terror films.

Autos for Sale

1873 Vo. . wagen nltde work

·. . :....

-r.-R_,.u...;.r_,.;r'-oMI :

fJ)

nlco, eB,OOO . Coil 814-4464897.

......,.., ai,. tor..., State Champ6on 1110 Quaner hor11 brood·
mo ... 30"'411·t8t7.

AKC BliCk Leb, fem1l1, 4
month1 okt wormed. full sho1
llfill, 150.00 . Call 304·882·

71

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

1178 Oldo StorFke!lT. •t .200.
o r - off•. 304·171·81 t8 .

BoiUIIful 8 yr aid 811ndonl brod

cag...
oquipmonl. 304·918· 3803 .

waod I t1 0.811.
9. 4xllf"'h 4 ply plywood 8

·--.,........ ..............

._.._...,............d

Vincent Price

ARLO Al\'D

oeoo.oo . Phano 304· BB2 2012.

411·1062.

Mu1t tell btcauu of llln•• au
my Caneri•.
with ell

Wanted on 1 forege bktwer for

13. Prlhung Interior doors all
Ill• ond finlohM U9 .98 .
14. PrMung ttMI penll doors II

.,.ron

:

Double ftluiR•• T.,n•••
Walking Hor11 Mart. Ieven year
old Bay carrying foal. MOO. Cal

bi1n ltUd MrVioe. lpeclll dl•counttlo youth gruupt. R. a J.
ArlbilnL Leon, W. Va. 304-

1150 .00.

bOwd ext•ior glu_. B '8 .81 .
8 . 4lfl.11.4 Twn&amp; groove pty .

U .ll.
12. I' redwood stain picnic table
whh 2 bonclloo 039 .98 .

I WAIN
AUCTIO~ • fUIINITURE 82
Oltvt It, Gilli!MIIil. Now • ulod
-·aaol olavoo, I " wood LR
ouho 1311, bunk 1111,
NCNnlfl: 181, new II
.............. "'h•. ,.,.....
- . . . w - . • -. Now

Livestock

8t4· 742·2080.

Bleck AKC regllttred Gtrmen
Shtplrd pups. Jerry's Run
Rold, Apple Grove, W. Va. Look
for 1ht tlgns . Sholl 1nd

30.t·l715· 7~2• .,.,;ngs.

11 . 4.1ll V4 utvage pan .. ing

Hou1ehold Good•

83

Coll814· 448·0708.

Commodore 84 Computer and
disk drlvt, ptu• extrsa. 1250.

4013.

Treiler spacn, 1m11i chKdren
accepted, Rt . 1 , lOCUit Rold.
beck of K • K Mobil1 Homt.

1----------...,~---------,

Reg: lahu Apeo puppiet
Mey 28 . Wormed &amp; firllt
2 mala, 2 lemalft, •176

WO~mld .

IJ (]) (I) Ill (I) ® Gl il])
IDl Newo 1
ill Groen Acres
l1l M6zda Sportslook

seup look at some of Holly·

gollon, 304·878· 180B.

Large privttt lot 145 month.
Centen1ry trM. Call ea-448·

Trlillf lpiCII. Sand Hill Aold
convenient to sdtools. store tnd
holphal. City • • ., IVtillblt.
Inquire RONIM, 304-171·4100
betwMI'I 1 :00 1nd 4 :00 weelit
d-vs.

d..,..

773-6378.

IMgo lot Addltan·IUIOIIIIIo Ad.
• 81. Rt. 7. CoA&amp;I4·448·4215.

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo Pork.
Rot.ne 33. Nonh of Pom•oy.

Two lttlgl tervlce 1t1tion typto
1ir C0"1JfiiiOr. C•H 114 · 99t:~
7354 nights or 814· 992·880'1•

ofler 7PM .

114· 448·010B.

66

Ltrgtlob . Call614-982-7479.

3 Mdroom furnilhld tr1H• with
front porch. ntwty Nmodeled.
depotit r~qulred , 304· 175·

UOO - ·
dip.~. Clolltof_......
lprlrlg Volloy l'leu. J 1868 ludcly. t2•88 w111t '174 EIIOtt Atoorl- 114•448.
two room tdd·a - room. 3tl1 . l~uol Houolnr
•••300.00. 304·812·3718. " ·OPIIOIIUfiiiY,
Trailer and

For ule: H•rlequin Romance
bookl 270 for 176, whtte
wooden table •2s. s" at 211

locolly . 111001423 -0163 ,
onyllmo.

Furnished Rooms

Fumilh_. room •111. Utilhi•
pd. 911 2nd !lolllpallo. &amp;h••

2 lldr. fumi- opl. nowly

MOBILE HOMES MOYED : In·
ratll, CtM
30oi·l7··23!1

EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jock·

oan. Oh. 814·288·1930.

46

Upplf River Rd . Will ICcept 2
children onty. ,., _ &amp; dep. Call

1980 Llbo~y 14.&amp;4. 2 bodrOOm. unfumilhed, vinyl undw-

lUNd .. I'MtOnlble

P11111c ciltem ltate approved,
pllttlc ttptic tankl. JJ'utic
oulvertt. m1111 culvert$. RON

Summar " HOT" SALE I Fi11hing
arrow lign t219t Ughttd. non anow t259 1 Noniightld 12291
FrH letters! Few leh. Ste

Conuol Hcnol. Coil 114-448·
0788.

lt04 ar 171·1311 or 304·171·
7126.

742·2fll.

Coli 114·251·6281.

rtfertnce.

304-4ti8-18a7.

CAPTAI~ EA!7¥
TO TELL HIM WE'Re
READY TO &amp;e6UJ.

Ohla. 614·446-8227 "' 8yr~l·

Coli 114·448· 0373.
ClllahM't Ul.. TWe Shop . Over
1,000 tir11, liz .. 12,13, 14, 15.
1t, 11.1. 8 mil• out Rt. 218 .

1 Hdroom tpt. In Ponwoy.
Ca. .loOoly . -... k•c•on
hrmilhod. AN now Ngo. 6t4·
112·82t8 "'8t4-912·2314.

8t4-446·4388 .. 304·878·
9760.

Coil oftor 1 :-M 614·34177172 . ., 8.800.

I!Woth•. Mull ooll. Coli 114·

Himt~layln,

FI~D

New lloll boclyporlo. 73·BOGM
tnd Ford pick-up findert, •31.
73-88 full dooN. 079 . Chevy Ia[~
91te1, tiS. Ford tail ga111. 1711t;
Over 1800 Item• to choote.
from. CaMAutoPartt, BidwiJ.t.. '

Dr.onwynd C•narv Kenntl.
CF A

excuse Me WHH.E I ,

ph•d pups. 8 wb. old, femM

AIf condltlon«-21 , 6008TU . Ea.
cond . 1300. Call 61 4· 441-

APARTMENTS. mabllo llamoo,
hou-. Pt P I - ond Gillipallo. l14-448·122t '

Furnlth• 2' bdr. apt. ut•lel
ponlolly plld. Coli 304·178·

Mobile HolM. Bulh·in microWive. TV, 1ter.a. 1nd dla-

MiiC. Merchendiaa

DP w!Nghtl cast ifon 24 2 lba. &amp;:
&amp;e. . bench t110 . Call 814 -

Nlco olltcloncy opt. ldeol for

1974 14x70 Guerdon mobile
home on :1,4 acre lot. rural water.

19J8 Cloyton D,...,. Hauoo

64

0178 ma. tt 00 ~lit yard.
pella, Coli Ill• lk&gt;m 6t4·112·
1188.

3.....,fumllhed ..... t110P•

01.200. Col 114-248·9847.

304-nl-&amp;873.

UZI.OO. EIICirlcstovel26 .00 .
Phone 304·911·38B8 .

BoiiUIV Shop oqulp-t. Dining

1 bedroom apt. for rent. l .. lc
r..t IUrtl t211. 1 month thM
lncludol Ill - - Ooe&gt;o•~

Acre1ge

Coli 304-671·1104 or Jo4.
678·83H ~304· 178· 7121 .

plnnlng lncludtd. Mutt 1111. C1~

good
ft01111

8 Caurl II. 3 bdt. , 1.,.. both.
IUtcllon fumilhod. na poll. t210
mo. Pilus depotit a ;lf•ence.
Coli 114·441·4126.

614-448·9286.

1979 ,4•70 ell ttec. 2 bdr. on
1 'h 1cr1S, range. refrtg . wath•
S. dry~r includtld . .U CMPIIId.

ft

t42 .., . 3 bdr. houoo. born, 2
pando, - ooll oil ao poll. CaM
614·245·9248.

1 2•63 Vlndlle. good cond. Cell

For sate or rant 1973 Freedom
, 2•515, 2 bdr., wather dryer
hookup, air cond .• Kyger Crltk
District. t4 , 700. 1115 rentlftd
1100 dep . c.nt14-441·3152 .

runs
CU

New T•tlfttenldllignernbrold·- AKC ragl11ered Collie pupplee,
tr; quilt, handm.te by church all colors. Champion PlrlrtU.
group ltOO. Coli 304·937· Huntington 731-9192.

3893

NEW ANO USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WEST. GALLIPOLIS, RT 35

porto. Con 814· 251·8860

for Sala .

harrongo ltftor• of lho
four ocrambltd wordt boo
low 10 farm four ~mple words

•

(]) Fe1her Knowo Best
fJI Cil Star Trek
Cil Reading Ra inbow ICC)
llll Hero'o lo Vour Health
il]) One .Day 11 a Time
6 :30 0 (])II) NBC News
ill The Rifleman
l1l Revco't World Closs
Women (R).
(]) Gomer Pyla, USMC
Cil Cl Cil ABC News
Cil Doctor Who
(j]) 01 il]) CBS News
llll Body Electric
il]) Welcome Back, Kottor
7:00 0 (]) PM Magazine
ill Man from U.N.C.L.E
l1l SportoContar
(]) Groen Acres
Cll Entertainment Tonlgh1

PU . 72Pin102000.,gino*t00, .

Bktek. At. 33, New Htvtn, W.

Coli 814·441· 71144 otl• t Ploll.

42

Bilevel house in Riggscrest
M111 nor. 9 rooms. clo11 to
schools. smeM barn. nice. Cell
614-986·4279 .

22

61C ~ .

auto. lrenl, whHia, rotort, other

v •. 304·812·2222.

Pets

6:00

302 tntlna t300. can hetr run,
auto. trens ., ell out of 74 Ford

Btodl, brick, mortar and m•
tonrv .,ppllel. Mount•ln St1te

PIZILII

EVENING

448·9227.

AAILAOAO TIES: &amp;Yo ft. by 8
lndt• by 10 lndtoo. •s.oo .,..
llo, dollvorod . Bill SliCk. 8t4992·2289.

timber, all mtnerll rlahtl 1ft.
otudod. Coli 6t4 ·441-1'703.

6 room tnd bt1h hou11for rent in

5204 .

Auto Part1, St. Rt. 180.

TIIAT DAILY

7/15/86

Prlcklg • Avoil ... lllty . .C 8o M.

'In•

!loiHpalil lladl Ca .. t23.,..
St., !llllipallo. Ohla Coil 114•
441·2783.

Toblcca b111. Caat lome

3 hedroomhome. 15 1crea, lerge

5 rooms . bath. utility room .
G~rege , air condition. canlrll
heat. good condilion. Re•on for
1 ell ing want to move south. for
more inform1tion call614·992·

Building meterl•l•, ament,
block• •!1•1111, yard or dllivwv.

66

Auto Parts
&amp; Acceuories

NtwStHIBoyPanell, Chav. fW •.
ttnderl, doort, bed sldtt~ taB '·
gltll, !JAic:h ptntll, cabcorn~n,
rocker .,., • • grill, grill lhlllt.:
bu""'• In ttock. Call F'or~

248·112t .

Oh.

ingt .

co al, oil, hot wat• heat, new
kitchen. Large yard with child·
rtns woodto pley center. Morn·
ing Star " "· Call 814·949·
2503

dowe, llntlla. etc. Cleucll Win..,,, Rio Orande, 0 . Clll 114-

tow ...... must hiVe ,...,.,....

Cell 614 -992· 7453.
I• e. Home h• fireplace. wood.

78

CARLYLI! ®br Larrr Wrlfht

JOT 'N'

Building lollotllloil ·
llodl, brick, - · pip•. win·

So. Founh Ave. , Middleport,

6 room hou1e. 1.2 acr•. Double
car garage. located on Roll Hill.
largeln priced tZO.OOO . Call
614-678·2513 .

tower level, Ru1tic Hill, Syrl·
cuse. 3 bedroom. large kitchen.
lo~~rgelivingroom . tlr. cond .. dish
washer. cerpe11d, large owage.
Price reduced . 114· 992-7478,
after 5:30 814-992-3402.

Building Supplie1

Fumlohod ar unhrmilhocl .... ..

%324 Uncoln. 4 bedroom. 304·

1171·2130.

66

Tuesday, July 15, 1986

773·1118.

Coil 814·448·B802.

3 large bedrooms.

Hou1ehold Gooda

Television
Viewing

IN1 of Grouoho
"IC
llawhlcll

NoM Nlghtflno
(II
(I) H1w1ll FI....O

-·

(I)) MOVIE: 'HIGh Sierra'

.

'·
•

Ill

il]) MOVJE: 'Tho Ulti'
mete Warrior'
1:00 (]) Doble Gillie
(I) Arohlo lunkai"I.Pieoe
• (II Wild, Wild Witt
1:30 (]) Fether K - 1N1
(I) NIWI
2 :00 (]) 700 Club
l1l Mazda SporuLook '(R).
12:40

'

�Plge-1 0-The Doily Sentinel

POrn~ Middleport. Ohio

...------ Local Briefs:-Lifesaving class date changed
Advance lifesaving Instruction a!"the London Pool in Syracuse has
heen changed to start on Aug. 17. Those needing tmre Information
may call 992·9900.

Wilkesville fish fry slated
The Wilkesville Volunteer Firemen's Association will hold its llth
annual fish fry on the square In Wilkesville Saturday. July 26, from 11
a.m. to midnighl.
There will heJ ivr entertainment during the aft erooon and evening
Including the Son Shiners and Joyfu l Noise at 2 p.m. There will be a
street dance from 9 p.m. to midnight and games will be ava ilable all
day.

Group to perform in area
RPsidrnts are invited to attend an evening of music to be present('()
by lhP Viclor Quartel and the Lordsmen Quartet at 7 p.m.
Wednesday at the First Southern Baptist Church, 41872 Pomeroy
.

p~

The Victors are from Cleveland. Ga., and are led by David Young,
who I&gt; a mu sic teacher. songwriter, publlsher and record producer.
For 10 years. Young has traveled as pianist and arranl&lt;{'r for gospel
groups including the Kinsmen, Sons of Song, Foggy River Boys, the
Prophets and tht• Cou riers. He has also worked as a studio pianist
and arrunger for groups such as the Rambos, StatemPn, Sp€t'rs and
the F'l01ida Boys.
The Lordsmen arc from Ironton. and madP numerous
appearances lhroughou t Sout heastern Ohio.

Squad$ respond to 10 calls

Hospital panel meets Wednesday
Mrig&gt; County Hospital Commission will met'! in ttl:' cafeter ia of
\ "!'trrans Memorial Hospital ~i::lO p.m. Wrdnc-;day.

Willing Workers meet Friday
Thr Wi ll ing Workers Class of Ent erprise United Methodst Church
will me('t Fridav al 7:.10 at lhr home of Marw fuwm .

Native son thanks Middleport
Midd lrpo11 Vi llage rcce1vrd a $1.000 gilt from an appr(('ia tive
nal ivr son M ond&lt;IY nigh t.

S.·nding thr gift to Midd lrpor1 was Dr. Edward Lt•wi s. Hennick('r,
r\pw Ha mpshirc. who Sl'nl along a IN!Pr rf('a !ling his rarlier yrars in
Middleport a nd extending apprf'C iation to lawn officials lor recently
hav ing named a &gt;lr('('l en thP Iown in mrmory oi lhe late Art Le\\'L•.
Art l.rwiS, a brolhrr of Dr. Lt:owis. g-a ined natbnwide recogn it ion
not onlv as a foolball player bu t also as a West Virginia Universit y
fool ball roac h. Hr. tbo. was reared in MiddlC'port as was Dr. Lewis.
They wrw sons of thr· la te Mr. and Mrs. George Lewis.
Naming of the slr(('t afl er the latr Art Lel'.is by council recenrl\'
was doni' al lhr suggPst ion of Councilman .James Clatworthy.
Upon rrcPiving lhc gilt Monday nigh! , council approvfd the
purchasr of nrw str('{'t signs for th£' town with the money. Mayor
Frrd Hoffman reponrd that the villag-P needs a number at new street
signs. thP cost of which totals about $2,500. H&lt;• airrady has on order
somr$1Jl1l wonh so th~ gift of $1.000 wi ll make thr pU rcha se of new
s1 1l'r1 signs nrf'{)pd almost rompiPI&lt;' .

Eastern board to meet
Easl('rn l.ocill Bmrcl of Fducation will ho ld special m('('tings
Thu rsciLJ _
\ . '1. p.m .. and Frida\. 10 a.m .. wit h ('X('('Uli\T• ~f'S5 ions on
pt•r somw l m ~li i Pr;o; .

.

Southern football meeting set
,\11 lx•l&gt; iniJ·1r·str-d in plaving foo tball al Southern High School

whuulcl ml'l 'l Tilursd"-'. li p.m .. at thr foolba U building ad jacpnt to
I h1• :-.r iUJOI.

Physicals Saturday at SHS
Ph_\_:-; w ; ll ~ v. _ill !)( gi vf'n StliU I'di!\'. 2 p.m .. for Southf'rn High and
.l lln inr ll ig h lnoltxJI I and \ 'OIIr~- bal l pla~·ers. and ch ff'rlcadf'rs.

I 'In ' ir:tl' "il l lp gi\m ;II Ihi· football build ing, adjact•nt lo Ihe high
..,d10ol. and ;!II \\'ho ;1n · intrr f':&lt;ilrd o;;ho uld atiC'nd.

Racint• .'ihrine plans event
/\n l'\ t•nmg
~.

Il l

lr'l'l' C'nlr •r tainmf'nt V.·'illlx• ofr('n'(! Sa turda v. from

:1111o Y p.m .. al lh&lt;' Shrine Clu b Pa1 kin Rarinr.
·
Sponsrll"rrl b\ thr· Shrinr Club Park Floard. thP cvrning will feature

cnunrr' and hluqr r&lt;~ss mu sic b~· t h&lt;" Be-nd RivPr Boys Band. Mak ing

up Ill!' IJOJnct arr I_. I"Jnk Clrlan rl. )\·an Pnwell. Paul

~VI"&lt;'

und Krn

Hwharrl ... on Thosv pl~.mning to attrnd ill'r ~ dvls&lt;'d to bring lawn
dl .~ ir.., l~ dn·~hmf'nt~ will lx • ;n·&lt;JilahiP .

Communil·ersity concert Thursday
,.\n

of fin1 · f'nt c·rt;linmc ·nt w ill lx' offt•rrd Thu n;dav on thr
I 'nrn1 ·r••.\ pc.1 rki ng IDt
..\ !Jrmcr~ m;1rkrt. ~po n snrr'(l b\ thf' BPnd Ar0a Mrrrhcmts
A-..~•ci;lllon . wil l he fc·atur('(L and \ ' i l l a~r sl orrs will n:•main open
until '7 pm .
Pomri'O~ · . \n•a ( 'ham txT of C'omm rrrr i~ sponsoring a Cuptain D's
('\ .1'11tng

fi.sh t" from l7 p.m. with lir krls fo r thr• "all vou can Pa t" dinnN
a1 :dlablr· !rom rhamix'l mrmbcrs.
·
,\1 4 p.m .. an oi.Jtclour CU TK'('rf b.\· t hP Oh io Univprsi t\·
Commu ni\·t·r,.it.\ Ba nd will h(' fPaturrd a t thf:' s lagrJrf'cJ.llin k On~·
is spon~oring the ('011Cf'l'l.
En'r;- one is invit('d ro &lt;JII('nd I he' rvf'n ing's frslivil ies.

-

Murder trial begins
in Gallia County court

Area deaths
· Maude Bailey

Thoo L Smith

Maude Bailey. 103, of 33500 Perty
Road, Long Bottom, died Sunday
evening.
Born April 22, 1883, in Mlnnora,
W.Va ., Mrs. Bailey moved to Meigs
County In 1965. She was a member
of the Minnora Methodist Church
and had been a residcnl of the
.Pomeroy Health Care Center for
the past 6% years.
Survivors include two daughters,
Mrs. Virginia Starcher of Mlnnora,
W.Va ., and Mrs. Greta Suttle of
Long Bottom; a son, K. Hu!':b
Kelley of Akron; one son·ln·law,
Jim Suttle of Long Bottom; 10
grandchlldrl'll; Z! great grandehlld·
ren and two gr e at ·gr e at ·
grandchildrl'!l.
She was preceded in deal h by her
first husband, Lymen Kelley, in
1912, and by her second husband.
Lester Bailey, In 1972.
Services Were held 2 p.m. today
!Tuesday) , at the Minnora Metho·
dlst Church in Minnora, W.Va. with
Revs. Kenneth Crookshank and
Johnny Alfred officiating. Burial
was In Prudence Chapel Cemetery.

'

Meig-s Cou nl) Emergency Medical Services reports 10 ca lls
Monda y:
TupJX'rs Plains ill 7:53a .m. to Long Bottom fo r Millard Ball to
· \"rlf'rans Mr·morial Hospital ; Pomeroy at 8:02a.m. to the county
infirman· for H01en Crabtn'C' who was trea led but not n·ansported.;
Rull;md at 12:32 p.m. to Mf&gt;igs Mine No. 1 for Gary Hixon to
O'TIJcn ness Memoria l Hospilal; PomProy at 1:44 p.m. to West Cave
Stm·l for C01 rl Hendricks 10 HolzPr MPdica lCE-nter; Syracuse at 4:44
p.m to Lu ndon Pool for Scott Carsey to Velrrans Memorial
Hospllal; Pomrrov at o: 17 p.m. to rhc Pomeroy Healt h Care Ct'ntf'r
for Richa rd Win ebren ner to Veterans Memorial Hospita l;
Mtddlepor1 at R: 1h p.m. Ia Pea r l Str(('t for Sally WaltPrs to Veterans
Memorial Hospit al: SyracusP at R: 19 p.m.· to an auto fire on
1\mlx•rgcr Road. no injuries; PomProy at 9:1.1 p.m. to East Main
Stm·l for Trrrv Brrtra nd who drowned whm his vehicle went Into
Ihe ri1w; :.1 idd1Pporl Rescue arrivrd at the scene wil h divers at 9:33
p.m

Tueaday. July 15, 1986

Ruby Russell
Ruby Russell, 68. of 5.19 S. Second
Ave., Middleport, died Sund ay
evening at her home.
Mrs. Russell was born May 23,
1915, to Mr. and Mrs. Denver Smith,
bot h deceased. She was a member
of the Middleport Baptist Church.
She is survived by a niece,
Kristen Friedman of Atlanta, Ga.
She was proceded in death by her
husband, Austin Russell . in 19&amp;'i
Graveside services will be held
1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Riverview
Cemetery with ReV. Earl Eden
officiating. Frk&gt;nds may ca ll at
Rawli ng·Coals·Biower Funeral
Home after 9a.m. Wednesday until
time of serwices.

Theo L. Smith, 76, Pomeroy,
owner and operator of the Sugar
Run Flour MUI, died Monday night
at Veterans Memorial Hospital
after a lingering Illness.
Born on Jan. 23, 1910, he was the
son of the late Harry P. Smith and
Effie Humphreys.
He is survived by his wife, Gladys
G. Smith, Pomeroy, two daughters
and sons·ln·law, Sue and Danny
Zirkle, Pomeroy, and Joy and
George Stamm, Chico, Calif.; two
grtll\dsons, Bryan and Brent Zirkle,
Pomeroy, and a granddaughter,
Lorrie Foster, serving In the U.S.
Arnny. Also suiVivlng are two
stepbrothers, Lee Humphreys rJ
Michigan, and Neil Humphreys of
Florida, and a stepsister, Avis
Donaldson, Florida.
Besides his parents he was
preceded in death ~ a brother,
Walter, his stepmother, Elsie
Smith, and his stepfather, Alfred G.
Humphreys.
He was ' a member of the
Pomeroy United Methodlst Church
where he served as g,perlntendent
of the Sunday school for many
years. Active In all bodies of the
Masonic Lodge, he was a knight of
the York Cross at Horm, a past
patron of Pomeroy Chapter, OrdE-r
of the Eastern Star, and along·lirne
member of the White Shrine of
Jerusalem. He was a past Jresldent
of the Pomeroy PTA and a former
member of Chester Grange".
In lieu of flowers, the family
requests that donations in his name
be made to the Meigs County
Cancer Society or the Pomeroy
Fire Department Emergency
Squad.
Friends may call at the Ewing
Funeral Home Wedn&lt;'Sday from 7·9
p.m. Funeral services· will be held
at 10 a.m Thursday morning at the
funera l home. The Rev. James
Corbitt will officiate. Burial will be
in Beech Grove Cemetery.

County happenings •...
TUE&lt;IDAY
LONG BfJI1'0M - Long Bot tom
Fla me Meeting will be held at the
MI. Olive Community Church.
Long Bottom. Tuesday. 7:30 p.m
with Charr Tott en of Winfield,
W.Va . formerly of the Davy J o
Hisson TV Show.
MIDDLEPORT- A fund raisrr
for Jan Michael Long-. candidatdor
state smator. will he held at the
American Legion Hall in Middle·
pon . :i:30 lo 8 p.m. TUesday.
Fea turC'd spea krr will he RpP. Mike
Shumaker. Tick£&gt;ts can be pur
chased at the door. $7.;-11 for
indil·iduals. and $10 for tvu ples.
wilh children under 12 free.

sack lunch . Day camp will be held
at Ca mp Klasruta July 21 through
July 2'i. Further Information on the
training &lt;X" the camp may be
obtained by calling !119·lll5. or
ffi2·5567.
POMEROY - Cindy Oliv£&gt;ri.
county extension agent , hom~
economics. will hold "safr kids"
workshop for ch ildre n at 2 p.m.
WC'dnesda)· at Pomeroy Library;
she will Introduce safrty p!"OC('·
du res for children at home along as
W£&gt;11 as Instruction on how to deal
with situations which. might arlsr.
Pr&lt;'Smtation also will include tips
on quirk and nu tri tious snacks
which parents ean easily provide .

RAC1 NE - RC'drdication revival
will he h('ld at the Morsr Chapel
Church. Racinr-Portland Road.
lhrough Sa lu rdav. July 19. Ministpr
is the Rev . Char les Bush. Rac inr.
and Ihe Rev. George Hoschar of
West Columbia will he a speakPr.
There wil l he special singing ni gh t Jy
and sPrv ices bej:ln at 7:30p.m. Parh
r•vrning .

obsC'r van('{'.

·

Hospital news
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges July 14 - TammiEAshwm1h, Tammy Cade, Phyllis
Daniel, Lulu Flshrr, Edgar Grlf·
lith. Georgp Harris , Mrs.. John
J£&gt;nkins and daughter. Gusta Man
non, Jes~lca Marcum, Mrs. David
Matheny and son. Mary Mayes,
Katie McCoy, Nora McMillan,
Keith Reynolds. Gertrude
Richards.
Birth July 14 - Mr. and Mrs.
John Carter, son. Oak Hill.

Council eyes ___ c_o_nt.:...in.;.;ued..:....;..lro..:.:m.::...:...Pa:::g::.e.:..11~-.:._1

has received no reply from Pome·
roy Village in regard to a sugges·
tion Ihal Pom£&gt;roy givr Middleport
Village a small section of ground
near the lower COilX&gt;ratbn limits.
Under thr plan Middleport could
then supply the sewage needed by
two oompanirs who plan to open
businesses in the Jocatbn. A
representative of one of th£&gt; two
compani&lt;'s had been In touch with
Mayor Hoffman asking the out·
tvme of th~ rEquest made to
Pomeroy, the mayoc reported. The
mattPr was not discusSed at last
week's meeting or Pomeroy VIllage
Council.

COUPON

HEARING TESTS IN

TUESDAY N16HT

MIDDLEPORT'

Eleclronrcs near ing tests will be given by Bellone Hearing AIQ Center

COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
DINING ROOM ONLY

· FOR JUST

Served with whipped potatoes. chicken gravy,
co le slaw, hot roll , butler and coffee: ~orry,
no substrlules except .beverage with additional
·

$3.25

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT .

PH. 992·5432

.

NIMEIOY, OH.

Fried Chicken

getting the truck out ollhe water.
Greg Thomas earlier had gone
oown under water to roJX' off the
vehicle in order to help with thf&gt;
accuracy for dlvPrs in recovE-ring
the body and the vehicle. DriVPrs
attached a hook and cable onto the
vehicle so that It could be p.~lled up
the steep embankment . It neached
the top of the bank at about ll:W
p.m.
Hundreds of residents lined the
river bank watching emergency
workers on the dark night wrestle
with the probl£&gt;m of retrieving the
body and the truck from the Ohio

River which Is extrem£&gt;1y muddy
due to the recent heavy rains.
Members of the Pomeroy Pollee
Department !l.Qd the department Qf
Sheriff Howard Frank were on the
seen£&gt; to hold the crowd away from
operations and particularly whep
the vchlrlr was pulled up the bank
what with the danger of a snappin~
ca ble. Pomeroy and Mlddlepor:f
£&gt;mergency members were also on
hand to help with the crowd at ili&gt;
site. Traffic through the area was
onr ·wuy and at times was com·
petely blocked as the vehicle was
taken from the river and· pulled
·

New band

Tif(jJlSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS - The 50th
annivrrsary ol the Rock Springs
Brtter Hea lth Club willlx• held at
ooon Thursday at thr hom£&gt; of
Francrs GociiPin. All memhers
and past memll'rs of the club are
invited lo at tend the anniversary

them has not been par tlcu larl~
•'ffrcl ivr. hP said. 1t was suggestrd
that •·esidents might stop fC'C'd ing
birds lor several months and this
sometimi"S Pncv urages pigeons lo
if'ave a community. the mayor
S&lt;Jid. Meanllmt•. owners of build·
in gs were as ked 10 make surr tops
of the Wildings arr closed lo
disoouragP nesting by pigeons.
Council discu~•C'd the ann('xat ion
of property below Middleport and i1
was rrported that attorney Strvr
Story and Bob Wilson who will
P•'O bably pass the pet It ion will he
ge nlng together on the maiiPr.
Mayor Hoffman rq&gt;ortrd that hr

flrea ______________~,C~on~t~in~u~ed~f~ro~m__P~ag~e-1~1--------

away~~ a wrecker .

WEDNE5DAY
MIDDLEPORT Vaca tion Bible
school. Rejoicing Lifr Bapt 1st
Chun:h. :m North S!&gt;cond Ave ..
Middleport . throug-h Friday, 9:.10
a.m. lo noon each da\. Informat ion
call 992 ·ti24~ .
·

POMEROY- Training lor llr
Big Irnd Girl Scout day camp wil l
he held Wednesday at the Ohio
Rivrr cam pgrounds. formerly
Roush 's La nding. heglnning at 9: 30
a .m. Those attending arc to take a

GALLIPOLIS - Jury selection ney, Donald Andrew Cox.
Mrs. Gilman has been coliftned to
began this morning in Gallla
the
At hens Mental Health Center,
County Common.Pleas Couriln the
rut
arrangements
have beeri mad~
trial of a 71·year·old Perry Town·
ship woman charged with murder to return her to Gallla County for
In theshootlngdeathof her husband !Jial, accordl1111 to court rerords.
The way was cleared lor trial 1)1
last Jan. 12.
Grace Gliman, Rt. 4. Oak Hill. · June when Roderick deternnlned
has pleaded not guilty and not guilty that Mrs. Gilman was cornpetent fD
stand trial, meaning that slJ!'
by reason of Insanity to the charge.
Court officials said sealing a jury understands court procedure and
was expected to take up most ott he the roles of her attorney anil
morning session. If a jury was Prosocutor .Joseph L. Cain. Roder·
seated by noon, jurors would be lck 's decision came following a
taken to lhc scene of the alleged hearing on the findings of thr~
crime at Mrs. Gilman's home on examiners who tes ted Mrs.
Cora·Centerpolnt Road In the after· Gilman .
At the same time, RDderlc)t
noon. Opening statements are
anticipated lor Wednesday ·denied a motion from Cox to
suppress statements Mrs. Gilman
morning.
reportedly made following tl\f.'
The trial Is expected to last a shooting. The statements were
week, officials said.
made to the late sheriffs Deputy
Mrs. Gilman Is charged with Erskine Blanton.
fatally shooting her husband, Jim
Roderick said it was proven
Gilman, 72, following an alleged Blanton had read Mrs. Gilman her
"domestic dispute." He was dead at rights and testimony from Rio
the scene of a single bullE-t wound. Grande College and Community
Gallia County sheriff's Investiga - College security officer Mike Wal·
tors said. Investigators recovered a ton "clearly corroborates this fact,
.~-caliber revolver at the scene.
and that the defendant made a
ThC' gun was ordered checked for knowin!'( and voluntary waiver Qf
fingerprints by Judge Richard C. her rights before she gave her
RDderick Jr.. with results to he various statements to the officers In
shared with Mrs. Gilman's attar· tt'i:&gt; caS(&gt;_"

!Continued fi·om PagE- 11
replace bandequlpml'llt reportedly
stol£&gt;n from tbe ochool at a cost of
$l,ll99 from Rex of Parkersburg.
W.Va .
Rosemary Keller, repr&lt;"rnting
the Eastern Band Booslers. dis·
cussed band camp wH h the board.
A resolution was adopted to partie!·
pat~ in lhe Ohio Hig!l School
Athletic Association.
.The resignation of Rick Martin as
principal ol Chester Elementary
School was accepted upon campi~·
tlon of paper work. Arrangements
were made lor Carol Brewer,
developmentally handicappE-d
teacher. 10 attend a clinic In
Columws.
Att~nding Friday night's meeting
were Jim Ca ldw~ll . Susie Heines . .
KatliY Manlckc and Roger Gaul.
board memhers. .lim Smit h,
another board memher, was at thr
Thursday night executive session.

Fire strikes home .
Damages to the kitchen of tllf'
Car l DeLong home on RDute 143
were estjnated at $2,(0) as the
result of a lire Monday afternoon:
Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles
Legar said the blaze started in thE'
kitchen from a tt&gt;aster ovrn. There
was smoke damage to the rest of
the home.

Veterans Memorial
Admissions - Avery Searles,
Middleport; J ohn Hunnell, Pome·
roy; Rose Curry, Racine; Millard
Ball. Long Bottom; Murl Harris,
Ew ington; Richard Winebrenner,
Pomeroy.
Discharg&lt;" - Peggy Taylor,
Preston Parsons, Arlher Schol·
de rer. Elsie Shahan, Edna Lee,
Betty Mankin.

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687

Ora nge Township Trustees will
hold a special meeting Wednesday.
7 p.m., at the home of Dorotby
Calaway. township clerk.

Statt Auto

,.ni..

lnsur•llc•

c...

ROYAL .OAK
RESORT CLUB
PRESENTS

LIVE COUNTRY MUSIC BY

·G
,
A
RY
LINK
FIOM FORT MYEIS,' FLA.
'Friday, July 1., 8·12 P.M••

THE TESTS WILL BE GIVEN BY A LICENSED HEARING AID SPECIALIST.

OFF OF STATE IOUTE 7 OUTSIDI.OF POMIIOY

COME IN. WITH COUPON FOR.
· ....,'

.;-. ..;.,w,

S6.00 PJISON-$7 .50 AT DOOI .

Jr SWIMING ·AREA

OPEN fOI' SvMII
' .99J•f111

oi'-·~~\I;""''I.'A•..,;U[I ..iHI"';-..4-'III):;;-;1:,;.;,~.'f..at.:..V:t""~'"·'~-11)1'4Ait~'!illl'~«.i'V e/~Jff

at y

Vot.36. No.60

en tine
2 Sections. 16 Pagoo

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday. July 16, 1986

Copvriphted 1986

Ohio EPA forms phosphorous cleanup plan
By RICK VANSANT
MIAMISBURG, Ohio (UPI) - Environmental
officials have worked out a derailment clean·up plan
that includes the "controlled burning" of phosphorus·
laden soil.
"It will be a safe operation and there should be m
health hazard," Ohio Environml'!ltal Protection
Agency spokesooman Pat Maplgan salo11n announc·
ing the plan Tuesday. "The Mlamisrurg Fire
Department wlll maintain a 24-hour suJvelllanre to
make sure nothing like last week ha~pens."
Last week, a derail('() 12,(0) gallon tank car of
phosphorus burned and billowed a white toxic cloud
for five days. At one point, about ll,OOO people were
evacuated from theh' homesandmorethan nlprople
suffered mUd skin and eye Irritation.
"Smoke and vapor In the clean·up will be kept to a
minimum," said Matll,gan. "II too much of a cloud

develops at any time during the controlled burnings,
the fire department wlll stop It with water or wet
sand."
Phosphorus remaining In the tank car and In a
stream at the derallment site also will be disposed al,
but officials expect no wmlng at those sites because
phosphorus, which ignites when exposed to air, won't
be In the air In !hose operations.
"We don't know how 101111 the clean·up wlll take
because we don't know the amount of phosphorus
remaining," said Madigan .
The contaminated soU and ballast from the railroad
track bed wUI he dug up and placed on a 20-by·ll·foot
steel pad for the controlled burning.
·" '"!be material then will .be tested for complete
reaction and taken to a disposal," said Madigan.
"The Ohio EPA and the city of Miamisburg have
directed O.H. Materials Co., the primary cleanup

contractor, to take precautions to minimize smoke
and vapor," said Madigan. "Both water spray and
wet sand are to be available to control smoke and
vapor.
"The city of Miamisburg will retain authority to
stop the cleanup and order corrective actkln If It
determines smoke or vapor are excessive," she
added.
Madigan said a three-Inch layer of "pbosphorus
mud" remains in the burned·out tank car.
' 'Tile outer jacket of the Insulated car wlll be
removed and the top half of the car wlll then be cut
away, leaving a bathtub-shaped container," she said.
"The remaining phosphorus residue wlll then be
removed from the car and placed In drums for
disposal.
"This operation will be conducted with the residue

under a layer of water and with a water spray wben
necessary to mlnlnnimlze phosphorus emissions,
After the residue is removed, the tank will be
decontaminated and removed from the scene."
Because phosphorus and sulfur from another
derailed car entered Bear Creek, a triWtary of the
Great Miami River, the creek will be diverted and
cleaned.
"Bear creek will be temporarilY re-routed front
above the spill site to the Great Miami River," said
Madigan . "Following the diversion. any remaining
sulfur and phosphorus will be removed from th4!
stream bed. Sediments (of phosphorus and sulfUr)
wlll remain under water during the removal
operation to minimize vapors."
Madigan said a plan to sample the Great Miami
River, Bear Creek and soU ln the spill area lor
pollution Is under developml'llt.

Senate-backed sanctions meet opposition
By E. MICHAEL MYERS
must be forced to negotiate ap end be may change current policy - did
· WASHINGTON (UPil -Prest· . to Its apartheid system of racial not mean he is willing to accept new
dent Reagan is looking lor new segregation before the strife-tom sanctions or a demand for U.S.
Ideas to shift administration poUcy nation buckles under "a massive limns to end investment In the
toward South Africa and stave off civil war."
region.
.
congressional pressune without glv·
"This has been studied to death.
" We are against punitive ecolng In to new Senate demands for 1t is time to lake action now,"
nomic
sanctions and agalnstdlslnv·
tough economic sanctions.
Kennedy told a Senate Banking
estment,"
said WhiteHouse spokes·
Reagan met with Republican subcornmlhee.
·
lawmakers Tuesday and asked for
"I think we are at the very end of man Edward Djerejlan.
"We would certainly be wllllng to
suggestions, while on Capitol Hill, the possibility of achieving peacefUl
Sens. Edward Kennedy and Lowell change," added Welcker, R·Conn. look at a different approach," said
Welcker called for passage of a "That Is why we should have the Albert Brashear, another spokes·
,.,.,..~
'.
man. He said Reagan told GOP
,&lt;'
·~ ~'.
House bill requiring a U.S. trade strictest sanctions Imposed now."
/
embargo against South Africa.
Reagan opposes the House mea· leaders: "We want belp from you
Kennedy, D·Mass., said the sure and aides said his request for and the Congress in developing
white-minority regime In Pretoria new Ideas - apparently Indicating oonstructlve Ideas."
Kennedy and Welcker said they
wlll try to force a Senate vote on the
new sanctions wttlin three weeks
or at least before Congress recesses
Aug.15.
They fac e opposition from Senate
.
.
Republican leader Robert Dole of
DETROIT (UPI) - Domestic firms have sold more than 4.3 Kansas, who sald the bill the House
million cars, about 4 percent below passed June 18 should be held untU
automak~ reported an 8.9percent
gain In car sales for the first lOdays the nearly 4.49 million units sold In after Congress retwns Sept. 8.
of July from year ago levels as top the comparable 1985 period.
The ntPasure, which would force
For the period GM's sales were 260 U.S. firms with nearly $2 billion
manufactu,rers extended buyer In.
centlve offers throughout the re- up 7.8 percent, while Ford posted an In South African assets to pull out ci
8.8 percent Increase and Chrysler a tbe oountry within six months of
mainder of the 1.986-model year.
The seven companies, General strong :5.6 percerlt gain.
enoctment, wlll be considered by
Among the smaller companies, the Senate Foreign Relatbn&lt;&gt; Com·
Motors Corp., Ford Motor Co. ,
Chrysler Corp., Honda Motor AMC's sales fell 55.9 percent from
mlttee next week.
Corp., American Motors Corp., year·ago levels despite ongoing
The committee also expects to
Volkswagen of America and Nlssan incentive offers. Sales of Honda 's hear t.estlnnony from Secretary of
Enthusiastic lbcal support lor a General. He has served as an Motor Manufacturing U.S.A., re- U.S.·Wllt models declined just 1.1 State George Shultz, who met
' native son, Jan Michael Long, now assistant prosecuting attorney In portEd Tuesday combined sales of percent, while Volkswagen's Tuesday with Dole, about the
an attorney In Circleville. was Plckaway County and assist law 189,441 cars In the United States domestlc·made models showed a administration's current review of
demonstrated Tuesday night when director ;lor Circlevllle.
during the first 10 days. This 49.7 percent Increase.
South African policy.
Nlssan said m domestic cars
a Democratic fund· raiser was held
Long has been an attorney sinee compares with 174,019 units sold In
were sold because Its U.S. plant Is
for Long, who Is opposing Sen. 1979. He was joined at the fund· the year ago period.
oown for changeover and supplies
raiser
by
Michael
S.
Shoemaker,
Oakley Colilns, R·lronton. for the
of
domestically runt Sentras are
17th District seat in the Ohio Ohto House al Represl'!ltatives
The daily selllng rate of 23,680
General Assembly in the fall member from the 88th district, cars compares with 21,752 for the exhausted. The carnnaker has been
which Is composed of Plckaway same period las t year. There were selling Japanese-made Sentras to
election.
The event was staged at the and Ross counties.
eight selling days this year, the satisfy demand.
Chrysler was the only one d the
American Legion Hall In MiddleSb:lemaker was the speaker for same as In the year·ago period.
Big Three to make a substantial
port . Long Is the son of ..Mrs. last nlght'.s fllnd·ralser using as his
The annual rate lor the lndustty
By HELEN 1110MAS
Dorothy Long and the late Lewis topic, "What Do You Expect from during the period was a projected year·tO·year gain in Its market
UPI While HOWle Reporter
Long of Middleport, and serves as Your Elected &lt;Xflclals?" stressing &amp;8 million cars, compared with 8.2 share, up to 15.7 percent from 13.6
WASHINGTON (UPI) special counsel to the Ohio Attorney responslblt? leadership.
million last year. So far In 1986, the percent .
President Reagan, playing
down concern about Pakistan's
nuclear capabiUty, expected to
discuss drug tnlff!C and support
for Afghan rebels in a meeting
a defense, we wouldn't be here
was a calculated act.
By PAM McCAI..Lf!TER
today with Pakistani Prime
Cox. In his OPffiing statement. said
tnday. If sy mpathy was a defense,
Mrs. Gilman, 7L has pleaded not the Gllmans' 47·year marriage had
OVP Slall Wrler
Minister Mohammad Khan
guilty and not guilty by reason of been a stornny one and that Mrs.
GALLIPOLIS - Attorneys on ·we wouldn't be here today,"
Junejo.
insanity to the charge of first· Gilman had suffered pbyslcal and
both sides cautklned jurors a~alnst Assistant Prosecutor Brent Saund·
A full ceremonial welcome
degree murder . ThE- defense aJ. verbal abuse at the hands of her
allowing sympatby sway their ers said In his opening statement for
w1th military honors was scheleges that Mrs. Gi lman Is psychotic husband. He added, however, that
judgments today In opening state- the state.
duled on the White House !lluth
and beVeved she was acting In "the case Is not about sympatby"
Saunders said the state would
ments for the murder trial of Grace
lawn for Junejo, who arrived In
self-defense at the time of the and said the defense would attempt
Gilman In Gallla County Common prove that Mrs. Gilman's alll'!(ed
Washington late Tuesday. His
shootin)(.
shooting of her husband, Jim
Pleas Court .
agl'!lda Included a luncheon
to JrOVe that Mrs. Gilman was
Defense attorney Donald Andrew ~ychotlc and had been ~ychotlc at
"'The crime is murder. If age was Gilman, at their home last Jan. 12
today with Secretary of State
George Shultz and a White
the time of the offense.
House state dinner In the
He added that testimony would
evening.
be Included to sbow that Mrs.
An administration official wm
Gilman believed and had told
requested
aDOI\Ymlty attempted
several prople that her husband
TUesday to dampen speculation
was having sexual relations with
that Pakistan's apparent grow·
three neighborhood women under
lng nuclt&gt;ar capablllty Is of
her bedroom window.
concern to the superpowers.
Saunders, who was first to give
He said the highlights of the
the opening statement, said evl·
state visit wouk! be an Increase
dence would show that Mrs. Gliman
In Pakistan's lllegal drug trade
had bel'!l preparing biscuits and
and
U.S. support lor the U.N.·
honey for breakfast on t.le morning
sponsored
talks on a peace
of Jan. 12, 1986, while her husband
settlement In Afghanistan.
Gilman sat In a chair in the llvlng
The official reiterated that
room. Mrs. Gilman, whom Cox said
U.S. aid to Pakistan Is aimed at
was a singer In her church choir.
forestalling developn'jl\t of nu·
was singing a hymn as she worked.
clear weapons by the Moslem
Jim Gilman mocked her singing,
nation, which is bordered by a
then threatened to throw her out In
longtime rival, India, that is
the rOad , Cox said. When he got out
believed
to have an atomic
of the chair and JIX)Ved toward her,
arsena).
Mrs. Gilman believed sbe was In
"Wt&gt; have certified each year
daniJ!r, got a .atkallber pistol from
to Congress that Pakistan does
her bedroom, and shot her husband
mt JIOIII&amp;e'IS a nuclear device,"
Gllman twice.
the olllclal said, responding Ill
The JrOSECUtlon added that Mrs.
reports that Pakistan is on the
Gilman had cocked the gun a third
verge of producing an atomic
time, then went outside and shot
bomb.
Into the ground. Saunders JJald
c,RD - Thill old, ~ ~ Pctmeloy fruin
"We see m reason at this lime
itlboaf 1••• DfipM111W &amp;lire, wltlch h d .. Gilt witnesses' testlmoi\Y would show
that when law enforoement ctficlals
to
dtaniJ! our conclusion," he
IIIIOh!J' era- Ealt •
8&amp;re111, '!'lall,.u IIDowD
pboto beloap *» Eimla .rue arrived at the house, Mrs. Gilman
M&lt;OWock, Rldbe.
81 Froal S&amp;reet 'l1le lrolle)' '.,...., .. ~
(Continued on Page 16)
lrUII lbrvu&amp;b tile c:oilliiiillq, Ill IJie ~ ..

Domestic auto sales
"s~owing upwar~ tilt

,.,.....,..,..,;,"- -.... ..d.~,w,1u,.it...,;,.,.~ ...... J'~i~ll.W.:

I

Joce'"' - ·

'

'

·-....,.- .... . ..... - .. ....... .... .... .
"-

~.~-

~

~

. .

I'

...-

.....

~

.... '

' '~· ··

-·-

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

26 Conto

A Muttimedie Inc. Newspaper

Opening statements heard in Gallia murder trial

Meet Wednesday

FISHING, CAMPING

•

"The matter should be on the
president's desk," Welcker In·
slsted. "That means acting now.
We' re not going to sit arqlllld and go
through a process Intended to stall
any decision."
If the bUlls passed before Aug. 15,
supporters ~rould have time to act
after Labor Day If Reagan vetoes hi
If It Is held up, they might not lx'
able to gather votes to overturn a
veto before Congress adjourns for
the year Oct . 4.
Congress approved some sane·
!Ions last year, Including a ban on
new commercial Investments, but
Reagan said they would hurt South
Africa's 23 m!Uion blacks and
opposed them untO tt was certain
Congress would override his veto .
He vetoed the blll but signed an
executive order imposing lighter
sanctions against South Africa.
Senators upheld his action and tht&gt;
tougher measures died.
1n a movt&gt; that could JIX)Uify !llme
critics, an administration source
coliflrnnEd TUesday that u.s. off!.
dais have spoken lnfornnally to the
South African government about
the possibility Reagan may name
black businessman RDbert Brown
as U.S. ambassador to South
Africa, replacing Hernnan Nickel
Brown, 51, a REpublican wm has
worked In the State Department on
South Africa and was President
Nixon 's top White House aide br
minority affairs, runs a p.lbltc
relatlons limn In High Pl&gt;in_t, N.C.

Reagan meets today
with Pakistani leader

DR•.UNIIN PICKENS
509 SOUIH TIIID AVENUE
· TH..SDAY, JUlY 17
FIOM 9:00·12:00 P.M.
who has •trouble hearing or understanding con,.,aatton Is tnvlled to
a fret hearing ttot to- it thla PfQbtem can bt hetpoctl Bring thla coupon
you tor your FREE HEARING TEST of S50 value. Adutto only. Please.

,

Local support greets
native son cantiidate

Middleport
· (Continued from page 1)
As in previous years. plans were
made for a merchants' luncheon on
Friday with the Kim Blower and
the stalls al Dr. Larry Kennedy and
Dr. Craig Mathews to have chargp
of arran!;"ments.
Other committees na med werP:
Entertainment - Dr. Mathews.
Dr. Kennedy, Blower, Yvonne
Scally and John Kerr.
Airplane com est- Blower. Brian
Conde. Bob Fred, Kim Blower,
Robin Harris and Ha rold Hubbard.
Stages and el£'C'trlc - Dr.
Mathews, Dean Harris a nd Blower.
Traffic control - Bob Gilmore
and Sid Llttlr.
Promotion: Dick Owrn , Dan
Arnold, Larry Byer, Caley Males·
lck, and Bill Ha ptonstall.
Trophies- Gilmore and Blower.

(tji*l

said.
The Washington Post reported
today the administration ex·
pects to conclude an agreeml'llt
allowing Pakistan il Wy sensl·
Uve American technology with
strong bans on the use of R In
nuclear programs.
Adrnlnlstratfon o!llctals told
the Post the agreement would
Ioree Pakistan il abide by U.S.
nuclear proliferation reslrlc·
tbns In exchange for technology
such as mainframe computers
and advanced telecommunica·
lions equipment.
The CIA reportedly has ga ·
thered lnlormat iln on a highly
socretive, advanced nuclea r
program In Pakistan. Report s
indicate the government of
President Mohammad ZJa ul·
Haq has sucro&gt;ded In develop·
lng l'llriched uranium.
The official who briefed repor
ters TUesday declined to discuss
a report of warnings to the
Soviets about the U.S. commit·
ment Ill Pakistan's security.
Uke Israel, South Africa and
Japan, Pakistan Is one of a
hanclul of nations oon&lt;&gt;ldered
capable of ruUdlng nuclear
WPapOIIS. Congress, OOJICI"rned
about proliferation, has required
the adminiStration to realfimn
annually that PakiStan is ·mt
wilding nuclear weapons as a
sttpulatlon for continued ald.
The ciflctal said plans call t&gt;r
a new six·year $4.2 bllllon
package or military and economic asslstanre to Paklstap
w~ the eurrent aid package rJ
$3.2 bllllon runs out next year.
"Wt&gt; want to dei!X)nstrate our
suWC)rt for the poUtlcal·Jl'ogress
evidenced In PakiStan," the
rillcial aald.

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="170">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2760">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="40426">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="40425">
              <text>July 15, 1986</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="272">
      <name>bailey</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="615">
      <name>kelley</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="275">
      <name>russell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7">
      <name>smith</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
