<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12921" 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/12921?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-06T14:20:26+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43893">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/5dcc86c891e20ead5bed1fb3f02d09c8.pdf</src>
      <authentication>7e2b77e30e0f15d0d2c2af20304e37d3</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="40538">
                  <text>Pomeroy-Middi!'PQrt, Ohio

Page 10-The Daily Saatiael

.---Local Briefs:-__,

Cyrn D. Arnold

'

..

Plans for the F~U Festival to he held In Racine, sponsored by
Racine Merchants, were discussed at the recent meeting of the
association held at the Club Restaurant.
Plans for the festival wtll he flnallzed at the Sept, 8 meeting. Those
wishing to pat:llclpate In the lestlval or have any suggestlnns, are
welcome to call or attend the Sept. 8 meeting, Ill he held at 7 p.m. at
the Club Restaurant.
Theme for this year's event Is "HalVes! Moon." Those wishing to
p.artlclp.ate In the flea market should make reseJVatlons for spaces.
Additional !n1onnatlon can be obtained by calling Racine Clothing
Store at 949·21m or VU!age Cut Rate at 949-2140.
Attending were Joan McLain, preslden~ Jeanette Lawrence, vice
presldenl, Beverly Moore, secretary, Shirley and Gerald Simpson,
Eher Pickens, Bill Cozart and Howard Writzel, members.
Guests attending were Ann Layne, Alana Lyons, Margaret Yost,
Pete Bearhs, Stanley Turley, David Yost, George Cummins and
John Holman.

Ohio Lottery
Daily Number
488

PICK4
1584

-Page 3

•

•

at y

'

Next week's trash pickup In RaCine will be on Tuesday and
Wednesday Instead of Monday which Is Labor Day. Also due to the
holiday, RacineVillageCouncU wtll meet Tuesday, 7p.m.,!nsteadof
Monday.

Emergency units answer 10 calls
Meigs Counly Emergency Medical Servlres reports 10 caUs
Monday .
Pomeroy at 3:03 a.m. to CuUums Road for Russell Cullurns to
Veterans Memorial Hospital: Racine at 5:39 a.m. to Barringer
Ridge for Francis Hewitt wbo was dead oo arrival; Tuwers Plains
at 8: 27 a.m. to Barr Hollow. Road for Margaret RDgue to
Camden-Oark Memorial Hospital; Rutland Fire Department at
12:54 p.m. to a structure fire at the MerUn MltcheU residence oo
Salem Street; Middleport Fire Departtnentat 1:02p.m. wascaUed to
assist Rutland; Rutland Fire Department at 3:19p.m. was recaUed
to the Mitchell residence where the fire had rekindled; Pomeroy at
5:00p.m. to Mechanic Street for Jeff H1lllary tn VeteransMemorlal
Hospital; Rutland at 5:25p.m. to White's Hill Road for Eric Walker
to Holzer Medical Center; Mlalleport at 6 p.m. transported Shirley
McClelland from the fire station to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Rutland at 7:21 p.m. Io Salem Street for Carl Morris to Veterans
Memortat Hospital.

~

Ohio, area weather scene

~~:. ~~ ~= fl:ti

EHS grid ticket prices set

____________

All persons (adults and chUdren) wiD wtll be attending football
games at Eastern High School wUI be charged $2.!il a per~m at the
gate.
However, student tickets will he available at aU schools In the
dlstrtct, the day of the game, for $111 was anrounced today.

RUTLAND TIRE sA·LES

Fair board meeting date changed

"OEmtll 'tOIJ JIIRE SAFB't"

Murtel Bradford, secretary to the Meigs County Fair Board
announced today that the regular board meeting that was to held on
Monday night has been'chang!'d, duelo Labor Day. to Tuesday, Sept.
2, at 7: :ll p.m. In the secretary's office.

•um•s •n•

I

Freak accident investigated

~~~an~d~roordlna~~~te~a~tta~c~ks~on~Amert~~-~~~~~~~M~a~l1~er~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;~
·
MER SOME OF THE ·FINEST YOUNG
PEOPLE IN MEIGS COUNTYI

Afreak accident on Powell's Parking Lot, Second Street Pomeroy,
caused havoc to say the least.
According to the Pomeroy Police Department a car was parkli'd on
the lot driven by Robin Southern, 319 Mechank: St., Pomeroy,
Monday at 5: 00 p.m.
The car jumped out of gear and came out of the lot backwards
struck and broke off a parking meter and went through one of
Powell's larg!' windows.
Southern was cited on charges c:tex(tred llcenseandno Insurance.
Lucklly there were no !njurtes.

Community group to meet
The Long Bottom Communlty Association wlll oold a rronthly
meeting Wednesday, 7::.! p.m., al the community building.

Square dance slated Friday
There wUI be a square dance Friday, 8 p.m., at the Long Bottom
Cornmunlly Building In Long Bottom.

•

Couple files for divorce

Capt. Crow's
predictions
for Friday

'
''

Trash pickup day changed

I

'

son-In-laW, Vera and G:orae Buch·
anan, Pomer-oy; one sister, Loretta
Beegle, Pomeroy; one slstei"·ln·
Two appo!nbnents have been
Cyrll D. Arnold, 79, cl Rt. I,
law, Bernadine Meter, Pomeroy,
made at two.SouthernOhioCoaiCo.
Stewart, died at his residence early. and several nieces and nephews.
mines.
·
Tuesday rooming. Arrangements
Services wtll he held Thursday at
Pomeroy ~rea native Martin J .
are to be announced later by the 11 a.m. atthe Sacred Heart catmnc
Broderick
hlls been named general
White Funeral Home, Coolvtue.
Church with Monsignor AntiDI\Y
mine supervlsur at Raccoon No. 3
Glannamore officiating. Burial will • mine and Rlc)laro Hayes has been
Ruth Ann Douglas'
I
he In Sacred Heart O!metery.
appo!nle!l general maintenance
Ruth Ann Barnhart Douglas, 93. Rosary services will he held
supervisor at Mellis No. I mine.
~
23900 Htu Road; Racine, died Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at Ewing
Broderick Is responsible for all
Monday night at Veterans Memor- Funeral Home. Friends may call at underground i operations at thr
'
the funeral ho!}1e Wednesday from mine and repol'ts to Roger Kimble,
ial Hospital.
••'
Mrs. Douglas, a homemaker, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
mine superintendent.
•
was horn March 11, 1893 at n-ace Frances E. Hewill
Broderick ·began wocldng for
•
Fork, W.Va .. the daughter of the
Southern Ohio Coal In 1974 as a
•'
general
late Calvin and Dorotlzy Huffman
Inside
laborer
at
Meigs
No.
Frances Elf2abeth Hewitt, 65,
i,
Barnhart.
Barrtnger Road, Portland, died 2 mine. 1n 1975 he rroved lD the
_..
!
In addition to her parents she was early Monday at her residence.
safety deparbnent and the next
/
·:
preceded in death by her husband,
Mrs. Hewitt was born March 11, year he was' promoted to section
•
Harry 0 , Douglas, on Jan. 11, 1969, 1921 at Bluefield, W.Va., the . supervisor.
ooe daughter, two sons and one daughter of the late E.A. and
1n l!W, Broderick was named
grandson. She attended East Letart Emma Pedigo Osborne. She was IongwaU coondlqator at Meigs No.2
•'
Metlndlst Church .
Kleban! Hayes
·~
also preceded in death ~ ooe and In 1983 was p:-omoted to general
She ts survived ~ two sons, brother, Don Os!x&gt;me, two sisterS, mine supervisor In charge. cl
;1
Denford Douglas and Harry Dou· VIrginia Dick and MUdred Cox, a longwaU. Last y!\ar, he was named
.
·
~
glas. Jr .. both of Rt. 2, Roclne; one son and daughter-In-law, Harry and longwall superlntenrent at thf:, Charleston, W.Va., as a mechanlcl/.
Meigs Division oll!ce.
The following year, Hayes wa.i::
daughter, Ilessle Boggess, Rt. 2, Linda Hewitt.
Broderick
and
his
wife,
Nancy,
promoted
to maintenance supervl';
Racine, and seven grandchlldren.
She Is suJVIved by her husband,
sor at Central Rebulld and In ~
Services w1ll be held Thursday at George Moore, Portland; son and have two chUdren. Joshua and
was named general maintenance.
1 p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home. daughter-In-law, Robert T. and Holly.
In
his
new
capacity,
Hayes
ts
supervisor.
:
Burtal wlll be In Letart Falls Donna Hewitt, North Lewisburg;
responsible
for
managing
the
shop
Hayes
succeeds
Donald
E.
My-:
O!melery. Friends may call at the son, Michael Hewitt, Pomeroy;
ers, woo was recently named~
funeral home from 7-9 this evening daughter and son·!n·law, Beth and at Meigs No. 1 mine. Mlnlng
equipment
1s
rep.alred
and
renosuper!ntenrent
at the O!ntral Re-;
and anytime on Wednesday.
Gary Knotts, Ravenswood, W.Va.;
vated
at
the
shop.
budd
shop.
~
three granalaughlers, Bolily HeElizabeth M. Hepp
Hayes
first
joined
the
American
Originally
from
Fairmont;:
witt and Terry Hewitt, North
Electric Power System In 1972 at
W.Va., Hayes and lis wife, Connie;:
Elizabeth Mae Hepp, Ill, 403 l.e\VISburg, and Fannie HeWitt, Southern Ohio Coal's Meigs No. 2
now Hve In Given, W.Va .. with tile~~'\
Sprlng Ave., Pomeroy, died early Portland; one grandson, Jason mine. 1n 1977, be inoved to AEP's
three daughters, Robin, Stepha~
this morning at Veterans Memortal Hewitt, Wooster; ooe sister, SUe O.ntral RebuUd SIDp In South
and
Stacie.
:l
Smith, West Jeffersbn; one trother.
Hospital.
~
Mrs. Hepp was born May 1, 1898, David Osborne, cant.; and several
In Pomeroy, thedaughter&lt;i'the late nieces and nephews.
SeJVIces wtll be held at 1 p.m.
Phllllp and Sophia Grarer Meier.
Soulh futlral Oltlo
She was also preceded In death by Wednesday at the Rawllngs·Coats·
Showers
and thunderstorms the uwer 60s to the bw 70s eacli:
Blower
Funeral
Home,
with
the
three sisters and four brothers.
likely
tonight,
with a chance of day, with overnight bws In the low:
Rev.
Lawrence
Gluecencamp
of!l·
Mrs. Hepp, a IDmemaker, was a
heavy
rainfall
and a low In the to mid 008.
'
elating.
Burial
wUI
be
In
Stlversville
memrer of catboUc Women's Qub
upper
60s.
Showers
likely
Wednes·
·;
Cemetery.
Friends
may
caU
at
the
and Meigs County Senior atlzens.
.•
11
She Is sUJVived by her husband, fUneral home today from 24 and 7-9 day, with highs In the mid '1Us.
The
IrQbabUity
of
!l'eclpltatlon
Is
Property
lranll•el'8
;
Franklin Hepp; one daughter and p.m.
_.tl
70 percent toolght and 00 peroent
Helel1 M. Shuler, dec. tn Char'..,:
Wednesday.
- ,._
fte~aJl
IC_o_nt_ln_ued
__hum
___P_a_ge_l_l_____
Winds wtll be from the southwest
L. Hess, cert. of trans., Middleport.
at W to 15 !l1ph tonight.
vUlage.
• ~:.
Ubya to cease Its terrurtst done what we had tD do. U
" L L Ex'-ded' .Fo--~
James L. Davis, Mary Donna'.
poUcles."
necessary, we shaU do tt again."
"""" ""'
,.....,.
Davis to Striker 011 and Gas Olrpr'
Tlul!lda.v llrough Salurday
Speakes noted there had been "no
Officials said evidence abounds
A chance of siD.rers Thursday,
rlghl of way, .Olive.
·'
overt, major terrorist activity" In that Gadhafi, said to have been
the immediate aftermath of the jarred ~ the AprU attack, bas
Aprtl raid. He said there have been continued and even lntens~led his
a number of alleged terrorist plots, Involvement In terrorist plans,
but refused lo romment on any Including operations aimed at
purported Libyan connectbn.
Americans and U.S. InstaUations In
"We rertalnly have reason to Europe.
beUeve that the ubyan state
The w.u Street Journal. quoting
LOWEST PIIGS ON PASS ENGEl CAIS
headed ~ Col. Gadhafl bas rot U.S. and European Intelligence
AND UGHT TIUCI tilES
loresaken Its desire to create officials, repocted Gadhafl bas
·
terrorist activ ities worldwide," he expanred his terrorist base beyond
*AUGI-1'5 *FIOII END WOII
said.
his network of Libyan embassies to
IEPAII
Speakes confirmed the United Ubyan airUne of!lces, cultural
LOCATED: MAIN·
RUTLAND, OHIO
States wUI approach European centersandtrad!ngoompanlesthat
OPEN: 8·6
· 8·8 FRI .
aUies on "the posslblllty of fUrther are being used to recruit terrorists.
:,
PH. 74::l·ll08'8

Racine merchants plan festival

i

Area deaths

Appo
. intments mdde · ..~~.
.at two Meigs ·mines ·.,~

Marvin K. Gardner, Ewlngton, has flied for a divorce In Meigs
Cwnty Common Pleas Court from Berdena M. Gardner, In care of
Opal Barr. Ewlngton, charging gross neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty.
John Leonard Bass, Dexter, has filed for a dlvcrre from Stella M.
Bass, Dexter, also charging gross neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty.
Karen Lynn Haines, Minersville, and Dana Eugene Haines.
Syracuse, have tued for a dissolution of their marriage.

Suit filed in court

certed Western action to tighten the can and European targets.
high-level consultations" on con·
economic screws on U~a .
Officials said loose measures
could Include barrtng subsidiaries
of US . firms from doing business
with Libya. restricting other exports to Libya and closing down
Ll~an offices In other countrtes
that the administration ronslders
front lor terrorist activity.
In addition, officials said, contln·
gency plans lor further mllltary
strikes against Libya are being
readied, and the United States,
througll the CIA, Is Increasing Its
effOrts to promote and exploit
political dissent within Libya.
Ar.y military strlke.o!flclals said,
would exact a hlgller prlce than the
one In April, which concentrated on
mllltary targets In an effort to
minimize casualties. Adrnlnlstra·
linn o!flclals denied that U.S.·
Egyj1lan plnl naval exercises this
week In the Mediterranean were
Intended to provoke Gadhafl Into
acllon that would warrant a U.S.
mUitary response.
The latest planning by the
administration has Its roots In the
warning Reagan delivered minutes
after U.S. warplanes struck 1rlpoU
In mid-April: "Today, we have

grass. GUmore pointed rut that In
the state by Sept. 19.
1n orrer to remain eligible to addition to being an eyesore, the
apply for Communlty Development high grass rould become a haven
Block Grant funds, rouncll was lor snakes. He also questioned what
required last night to adopt a 1ype (111quld would have last been
resolution for a pl1111 to relocate stored in the tanks . at the site.
families In the event that a CDB:i Hollman said be wruld he In touch
fllnded project would req utre tear· with the owner d. the tanks In
!ng down (1 an existing musing regard to the p-oblems.
Councl1man Jack Satterfield restructure. As expalned ~ the
ported
a complaint of Inadequate
mayor, the state requires such
IIJbtln&amp;
oo South Frurth
.
street
plans be n place even If there Is
Street
wbere
liOI'Ile
petty theft and
never a need for relocation.
vandallarn
have
taken
place. Sat·
Cou!ICU also adopted a ttre~rorkS
terileld said he bad received a
ordinance for the village to comply
complaint from a resident Uvlng In
with a new state fire works law.
Brought up by Cooncllman Bob that area. The street llglltlng '
committee wiU check Into the
GUmoll! was property at the end (1
)I'OIIII!m and make a recol1lQ1ellda·
Beech ~treet. where empty tankers
lion
to councU.
••
are •lillnll In til! midst (1 high

au.meu

I

IE-FDIC

MASON, NEW HAYEN, POl... PliASA~
I'
"•,

'

RIO GRANDE - Three new
members have beeq appointed to
tile Rio Grande College Board of
Trustees- Dr. W. ArthurCuUman,
. Jack E. Fruth and Dr. C&amp;rol M.
Sholtis.
Their !n1tlal appolntlnentsrunfor
four years.
CuUman, professor emeritus .In
the department of marketing at the
College of Administrative Science
at Ohio State University, has been a
member ot that school's faculty
since 1947.
A speclallst In strategy, po1Jcy
and advertising, .Cullman was
director ot graduate Pl'!lgfams In
bu'slness from 1966 10.' ~- He
served as chairperson of the
marketing departmellt trorn 19'10 tn
. 1973, and was presldl!nt d the
.American Marketing Association
trom 1977 to 1978.
'
Born In New York Qty, Cullman
prepared A1r college at Hotchkiss
Scbool, Lakeville, Cilln. He at·
tellded Yale University, where he
received a bachelor &lt;if
degree
In 1937. He recelvedl. a ~s
del!ee ln .""'m ·adilllalstratlon
'l nlm Harvaid
School In
l!lill.
,. He

w

... THE amER IANICI ,

(,l,lhl

When asked if he t~ught O.leste,
wiDm he bas criticized strongly,
has been a good goverror, Kucinlch
PartY."
said,
"I've known him llr 19 years
Austin also said the move wiil
had rur dlfferenres. The
and
we've
help Celeste more than former Gov.
question
Is,
woo do you want, Dick
James Rhodes, the Republican
O!leste
or
Jim
Rhodes. That's not a
candidate.
"It's no secret that one of Jim close question."
Kirk balled Kuclnlch 's decision
Rhodes's strengths Is to get a third
as being "In the larger klterests of
p.arty candidate to take votes away
from the Democratic candidate, so the Democratic Party and the
citizenry of this state."
he (Rhodes) can win," Austin said.
"I think this selfless act Is going to
"Obviously, most of Pennls' votes
make
the vital dlffermce In
would have been taken away from
Celeste. I think this wtll help II!' 1'&lt;ln maintaining the Democratic govern1il'i!i!P In ·the state (1 Ohlo,'' 'Klrk
""' ~;::
.
"
"'::ifUt:~)Siierk, '·a sP&gt;IHnan said.
· Kuclnlch sald his nmntng mate,
A1r Rltddet; accused Celeite'1 allies
(1 eng!neer!ng Kuc!nlclfs wttldra- Davtl KeUey, a Medina teacher,
wal · and called It the "greatest agreed wltb the decision.
The most recent statewide poll,
rnbcalculatlon oo the part of the
.c;onducted
by The Cohun llis Dis·
'Celesllals' 1D date."
p.atch
in
early
August, showed
"It's obvklus they have roocluded
Kuclnlch
with
only
9 percent of the
that they could not win the
vote
and
m:&gt;st
PQlltlcal
observers
governor'.s .race with Kuclnlch-on
t!Dught about two-thirds of his
the ticket. Their ~g surpriSe Is

votes would come from prope wbo
otherwise would vote for Celeste.
Kuc!nlch has been oneoflbemost
colorful polltlclans In Ohlo since
bursting on the scene as a
Cleveland city councilman In the
early 1970s.
1n 1977, at the age of 31, he was
elected mayor rlCieveland, becom·
!ng the yrungest big-city mayoc In
the United States.
He survived ooly one term and It
was an exceedingly rough rtde lor
t!Dse l\Wl years. The city defaulted
on $14 mUIIon In bonds In December
i978, several montls after he
suJVIved a reca.Uelectlon by a mere
236 votes.
1n 1979, he lost to Republican
George Volnovlch, who bas won
re-election twice since then.
After losing a race for secretary
of state In 1982, Kucinlch made a
comeback of st&gt;rts by winnlng
election at a Cleokiand city councU·
man In 1983.
He Initially planned to chaUenge
Celeste In the Democratic prtmary,
but Instead decided to run as an
lndepenrent, attacking both p.ar·
ties' candidates.
However, he attracted Utile
attention In his camp.algn, which
Included a 500-mUe walk across
Ohio In the spring, and he said be's
$700 In debt.
No one·oo the Democndlc &amp;Ide
would say if Kuclnlch had bO...
ollel:ed ""1ibbbsln return for his

dedoli!a1'0ili'OP ..a.

'1 do hlive a 11111" COIIIt~
tuency In Oltlo, bull came to the
conclu8IOn that llllhovp I have a
1arse coiiiiiiUency, II would not
he ......... lo win," Kudnlch
said. '1 bad lo look al what
would happen as the ..-1 ol !l1Y
candldocy Ill couldn't win."

---r\

.
Dr. Carol M. Sbolh

/

'

.

CM Media Inc., camp lndlstrtes
lnc., Columbus Soow case Co.,
Columbus Veni\IJ'e Caphal Corp.,
Decor Corp., Dlstek Inc., Hunting·
ron Bancsbares Inc .. The Limited
Inc., Matryx Corp., OCLC Inc.,
Sonsotec lnc. and Webster
lndll,trles.
In 1953, Cullman was named
professor ot the year by students In
his coUege. In 19f.ll, he received the
Ad Man d the Yearawardfromtbe
Columbus Area Chamber of Com·
merce and was also named Ad Man
ot theY ear by the fifth district d. the
Advertising Federatbn d Amer·
lea. He was awarded the Alfred J .
Wright Award t&gt;r service to
students at OSU In 19t!6. In 1978, he
was selected to receive the Achievement In Marl!etlng Award from the
Columbus Chapter (1 the American
Marltetlng Association.
Fruth, a Point Pleaaaht resident,
Is the president of Fruth Pbannacy
Inc., a family of retaU pbannacles
q&gt;eratlng In 0100 and West
v~.- .

He graduated with a bachelor's
degree IIi p,_
,_ __
.. _,, trorn am 1n
~ He 18 a ·member olthe West
Vh'Rinla Phatmaclall Association,
tl1f ~atloMli\BIOclallon .&lt;1 Chain
Drug ~torea. the Natlon,al AIIOCia·
tlon of Retail Drugglall. Asloclate
Chllln Drug ,stores and Kapp.a Psi
,Phannaceutlcal Fraternity.
·
Fnlth Ia active In civic and
ronunun1ty affairs and Is a

~t

..... ..&amp;&lt; --

·•

_ . . . . .... ............ . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..... , • • _ . .

4 , ..... . ,

....

--- ·~· .. · · ~"

. ...

~ ........ .

.

~

..... . . -

...~-. -- . . .

...

~ ..

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newapapar

MAKE'l DONATION - After purchasing lhe
grand champion lamb at the Meigs County Fair,
Poople' s Bank of Point Pleasant, Mason Md New
Haven donated the lamb lor resale, wlich was
JOII'Chased by Plckms Hardware, Mason Fumlture,
Hogg &amp;: Zusp1111 Materials Co. and Rlverslre GoU
Couroe. ProceOds of this sale w..-e donated to
Carleton School. A sizable check was then pre!ellted
to Lee Wedemeyer, superlntatrent of the Meigs
County Board of Mental ReUu-dallon. Wedemeyer
said the donallon wDI be put Into Carleton's special
ldlt account and may be U5ed to purchase additional

cla.sroom computers ·tor the school. He ex.., eed
thanks and appreciation to the Mason merdlaotB and
bu............., Involved In the donation. 1'1 mlilrlhe
check presentation were, !ell lo right, In front,

Wedemeyer: Randy VanMeter, Poople's Bank vice
presldelll; and Mike Ueving, Poople's Bank senior
vice president; left to right, In rear, Keith Arnold,
representmg Riverside Golf; Charles Radilrd of
Plclum Hardware; Jolm ZUspan of Hogg &amp; ZUspan;
Jolm Grate of Mason Fumlture; and TrEnton RDush
of RtveTS!de GoU.

Rescue teams begin helping
sunrivors of gas disaster
returning to Barnenda from hls
mission west of Lake Nlos.
"In the first vlllage we came
graves in four vUlages around a
~ross,
we saw men, women, laying
-muddy volcanic lake today, bury· relief effort•.
dead
on
the ground, sometimes In
Officials said they believed ooly
ing the more than 1,500 people kflled
by a cloud of toxic gas that bubbled one woman and her chlld suJVIved front of their huts, or still stretched
In Nlos - the largest of the lour w t In their beds, sometimes on the
up out ot the lake bed.
lakeside
villages. They estimated street," he told reporters.
Cameroonian Lt. Gen. James
Hom said he visited the affected
700
to
I,OOJ
people had been killed
Tataw said his men \voukl soon
area
Saturday and that, In one
start remov!ng,bodles of those who there.
village,
suJVtvors complained (1 a
Thousands of dead cattle littered
died in straw· and wooden huts
p.a!n1ul,
burning feeUng In their
around Lake Nlos when the gas the disaster area - a region of rtch
chests.
enveloped the area Thursday night. land used for cattle and nee
Many Inhabitants &lt;t Nlos, SoRescue teams, -Including Amerl· Ianning - and heavy equipment
cans, French, Israelis and Came- was called in to remove the bum, Cha and Fang were overcome
by the gas as they slept. Officials
roonian soldiers, began caring for carcasses.
The U.N. Disaster Rellef Agency said the fUmes seemed to have
survivors of the gas cloud that
roUed through a 6-mUe area along In Geneva estimated Tuesday that dissipated within ~ hours .but
the lakesoore In a remote area d. 1,534 people were killed and 300 people were warned to stay away.
were lllspltallzed in the Isolated Some, IDwever, refused to leave.
oorthwestem cameroon.
"It makes no difference where I
Tataw told reporters Thesday area aflected by the gas, which
that troops had cleared the dead turned the blue waters d. Lake Nios live," said villager Chia David
from the streets but expected 1o find muddy-brown as It 'lJewed ruL The VamiDn, woo remained in Sobum,
more bodies Inside homes In the agency said about ~.OOJ people mourning his two children killed by
the cloud that roUed INer the
vlllages of Nlos, Soburn, Cha and lived In the area.
village.
"It
was
as
~
a
neutron
bomb
had
Fang, whlch ring the lake.
"AU !l1Y famlly Is dead and !l1Y
SoiPJers said they were burying expoded, destroying oothing, but
wife
Is In the IDspltal," he told
killing all Ute," the Rev. Fred Horn.
bodies, not counting them.
reporters.
"Where can I go?"
"Fifteen hundred to 2,1XXl (read) a Roman Catoollc p:les~ said upon
... could he equally correct," said
Col. Michael Wiener, heading an
lsraell medical team that jolnl'd

BAMENDA, Cameroon (UP!) Troops, their laces masked, dug

Rehnquist opponents request
FBI probe into allegations

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Four
Democratic opponents of chief
justre nominee William Rehnqulst
want the FBI to further Investigate
allegations he defrauded his ailing
member d. the Point Pleasant- brother-In-law when Rehnqulst was
Mason Coonty Chamber of Com- a lawyer 25 years ago.
merce, the Mason County DevelopThe request for a more complete
ment AutiDrtty and the Pleasant FBI investigation came In a letter
V&amp;Uey Hospital Board d. Trustees. sent Tuesday to Sen. Strom ThurHe Is past president ot each d these mond, R-S.C., chairman of the
organizations, as weU as being a Senate Judiciary Committee,
rqemher and past chairman of the which earner this month voted J.3.5
Advisory Council of the West to recommend that the Senate
VIrginia Department (1 Human confirm Justice IU&gt;hnqulst as chief
Resources.
justlre.
Sholtis, of Gallipolis, Is a special·
The letter was sent by Demo1st In Internal medicine (bematol· eraric Sens. Edward Kennedy of
ogy and oncolOgy) and rurrently Massachusett.,, Howard Melzen.
practice!! at Holzer Medical Center baum of Ohio, Alan Cranskln of
and at O'BleOess Memorial Hospl· California and Paul Simon of ·
tal in Athens.
DUnols.
.
A nattve (1 Weirton, W.Va ..
Kennedy, Metzenbaum and
Sholtis · received her bachelor's Simon voted against RehnQulst' s
lEgree from xavier University in rominatlon In committee. CranstOI!
19'10 and was awarded her medical Is not on tberommlttee, but anaide
degree from the Medical College &lt;if said It Is "likely" that Cranston,
Ohio In Toledo n 1973.
wbo votfd against Rehnqulst's
She received post-grad'uate train· nomination to the roitrt In 1971, will
lng at Upstate Medical O!nter, also oppose his promotion Ill chief
Syracuse, N.Y.. Michael Reese justice.
Medical fuller In Chlcago, and the
At Issue Is whether Rehnqulst
Medical College (1 Ohio.
defrauded his 01 brotber·ln·law by
Sholtla Is a member of the setting up a trust acrount tor his
American Medical Assoclatbn, the cllre and then kl!eping It secret
American College (1 Physicians, from him.
the Ohio State Medical Society, the
The smators' letter referred to an
Central OIDi Society (1 CUnlcal Aug; 15 story In The New York
~li 'and' the·Gallla County Times that quoted Rehnqulst's
Medical Society. She served as brother-In-law, Harold Dickerson
president of the rowrty medical Cornell, 73, of San Diego, for whom
society 'In 1tllli and 18 president of the trust account was set up In lll61
the GaUia Ccwtty IIOCiety this ~ar.
while Rehnqulst was a· lawyer In
l)rlvate IJ'SCtlce In Phoenix, Ariz.

RGC board names 3 new trustees

PEOPLES -ANK

~lite
IMIInlllce

elected."

Jade E. Fruth

,

St•t•

going to come on Election Day,
when they disrover they can't win
with him elf the ticket," Duerk said.
"I think toosewoo support Kuctnlch
will move to Rhodes In large
nwnbers."
No one on the Democratic side
would say If Kuc!nlch had been
offered anything In return for his
decision to drop out.
"I do have a large ronstituency In
Ohio, but I came to the conclusion
that although I have a larg!'
constituency, It wruld not be
enough to win," Kuc!nlch said. "I
had to look at what wruld happen as
the result of !l1Y candidacy if I
couldn't win.
''I know ~ I were to remain In the
race, I would have made a decisive
dlfference in making sure that
(Gov.) Dick O!Ieste did rot get

t

1

rOMEROY
992·6687

By MICHAEL ()'MALLEY
CLEVELAND (UP!)- Now that
lndepend!!nt Dennis Kuc!nlch bas
made the race for Ohio's governor a
two-man affair, both sides are
claiming the surprise move wUI
help their own candidates.
Kuc!nlch, lite former "boy
wonder" mayor of Oeveland,
announced he was dropping mit at a
late-afternoon news conference
with Paul Kirk, ·chairman of the
Democratic National Committee,
Obio Democratic Party Cbalmnan
James Ruvolo and Gerald Austin,
campaign manager lor Gov. RJ.
chard Celeste.
The announcement capped two
days of negotiations between Kucl·
nlch and Kirk.
·
Kuc!nlch chose to go through
Kirk, said Austin, "because he
didn't want it to look like he had cut
a deal with Ruvolo. He respects
. Kirk as a leader of the Democratic

I

THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF PEOPLES
BANK OF MASON, NEW HAVEN, AND POINT
PLEASANT WOULD LIKE TO CONGit-A'f·
ULATE _.)'HE MEIGS COUNTY FAIR BOARD
FOR THEIR
GREAT PROGRAM.
. .
214 EAST MAIN

2 Sections , 14 Pagel

Kucinich withdraws
from governor's race

..

PEOPLES BANK IS PROUD TO HAVE PURCHASED ·
THEIR ANIMALS AT THE '4•H·FFA YOUTH
LIVESTOCK SALE AT THE MEIGS COUNTY FAI••

Middleport__I_Co_ntln_ued_trom_Pa..:...ge-11_ _

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio; Wednesday, August 27, 1986

,.,. A

JENNIFER TAYLOR- GlAND CHAMPION
AARON ROWN - STIER
SHELLEY SMITH - LA.

Household Finance Corp., VIenna, W.Va., has fUed an action
against Gene Wise and Sharon Wise, Middleport, requesting
judgment of $1,495.86.
George Lemley, Cheshire, has flled an action against The Hocking
Domestic Coal Co., Nelsonville, claiming adverse possession of
property In Sallsbury Township.

•

.

Veterans Memorial
Admissions - Shirley Taylor,
Pomeroy; Robert Burke, Tuppers
Plains; Frank Wolford, Vinton.
DJ.charges - Darlene Hicks,
Cecil Frazier, Maxine Hobbs.

Vbt.36 . No.BO
Copyrighted 1986

Cloudy klnight \\1lh scattered
showers and a low In the upper
508. Partly cloudy Thu...U.V
with a high In the upper Ills. Tbe
probabUity of preclptlatlon Is 30
percent tonighi and near zero
Thursday.

~~~

I.

• .,,

The nmes quoted Cornell, wiD
suffered frommultplesclerosts,as
saying tbat ~hnqulst "committed
a serious breach c:t ethics" In
setting up the account. Cornell
claimed In the story that he was
unaware of the account, despite Its
JlUlllOrted pulllOse of providing him
with funds during his lengthy
lllness.
The senators said that even
though the FBI conducted "a

limited investigation" oflbe aliega·
tion, "a number of funditmenlal
questions remain unanswered."
Among them, the senators said,
was whether Cornell ever got any
money from the trust fund, whether
Cornell's standard of living dropped
below the level specified In the fund
and whether Rehnqulst cr any ~her
member of the family stood to gain
financially if Cornell was not paid
trust fund benefits.
•

Reservations needed
for Middleport event

¥

Booth spaces for the fourth annual Middleport Block Party are
rum!ng out last, according to reports from Mlalleport Chamber of
Commerce officials.
However, chamber ofllclals note that If a chamber member bas
p.ald dues for 1986, his or her block party space Is free &lt;t.char~'? .
Anyone wishing to resl!rve space br the event which wtll tAke p~e
Satunday, Sept. 13, should contact Tere'sa KennedY at !112-6658.
Anyone wishing to -sell tickets for the more than 100 prizes kJ he
given away at the block parly, Including a color 'IV, or anyooe
wishing to purchase tickets, should contact Bob Freed at !1!2-al44 oc
Sue Sigman at 992Jl48.
Block p.arty events wtu lnclure the second annual Ohio Pape1
Atrplane''Flylng Contest, ~ arts and crafts, hamburger and
pizza eating contests, a IDtw shoe pitching tournament, liS well as"
live music by SWeet MOUI)tall,l Sound, Charlie LUiy, Crossover, Mud
River, Denver Rice, and the Lone WoU Band. Gospel singing will also
be 'featured, In addition to old-fashioned, toe tapping, high stepping'
clogging.
And for the first time, bOth the Center d Science and Industry and '
the Columbus ZOO wm have exblblts at the party.
·
Middleport Chamber notes that Umlted edition Mlallepcrt
Christmas bulbs are In and wtll go on sale for $6 each at the blbck ·
party. Thel(mlted edliiondelilgnsare part &lt;Ia series of designs that
will change from year ID .year.

..

- -··~

.... .

......,"'

�Wednesday. August 27, 1986

-.
•

Comment
The Daily Sentinel
ll1 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

~lb

ts:m~

~v

""'-'._....... ,...........,c:::l,o=o

ROllERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslstul Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
AMEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPlNION are welcome. They should be less than :n1 words
long. AJlletters are subject to editing and 011st be signed with name, address and

. ' telephone number. No unslg n«i letters wUI be published . Letters should be-in

: good taste, addressing Issu es, not

~rsonallties.

Business Today
;.

''

Who

WOn On

They are argutrig about Wbo Will

•· DEVIJrED TO THE INTERES1S OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

In the new tax billS, the liberals or
llr conservatives. It's rattEr fun
that a bill that seeks to s1mpllfy
sbould end by being 90 abstruse as
to flnd people differing Ill llr
question.
Professor James K. Galbraith,
an economist at the Lyndon B.
Johnson School d Public Affairs at
the University .of Texas, "asso·
clatoo,"ln the words ctE.J. Dionne
Jr. of 1h&gt; New York Times "with
the Democratic Party's left wtng,"
is enthusiastic about the bUI. Mr.
Dionne summarizes Galbraith's
evaluation: "any bill that shifts
more than $100 biiUon from Individuals to CQrporatlons, drops 6miltlon
poor people from the tax roils, rids
the tax core d. srores of loopboles
and taxes capital gains at the same
rate as earnoo Income alUld mt he
all bad from his (the left wing) point
of view."

taxes?______.__w_,_'llia_m_F._B_u_ck_ley_J_r.

:me

HEY,

WE'VE

GoT

THE~E HUGE DEFICITh, AND THE

E.CONOM'/ '~ GoiNG aouR; AND THE ARM~ RACE
I~ OUT OF CONTROL, AND WE.'VE TURNED OUR
SACK~ ON THE PooR 1 BUT
I FEEL..
GooD A6our AMERICA.

GOIH

oday in history
: Today Is Wednesday, Aug. Z7, the 239th day of ~ with 126 to t&gt;Uow.
: The moon is moving toward Its new phase.
• The morning stars are Mercucy and Jupiter.
: The evening stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn.
: Tho8e born on thisdateareWKierllrslgnctVirgo. They Include German
,.IWP!pher Georg Hegel In 1TIO; novelist Theodore Drelser In 1.871;
EngUshauwmakerCharlesRollslnl871; movlemogUISamueiGoldwynln
11182; nove!lst e.s. Forester In 18!11; J..amdon BBIIIeiiJohnlon, 36th IJI'fSident
r1 11r United States, In • Nobel Peace Price Wtimer Motber Teretaln
1810 (age 16); actress Martha Rayeln 1916 (age701; sln(ler-actorTommy
Sands tn 1937 (age 49), and actress Thesday Weld In JN3 (lie 43).
• On this date tn·hlstocy:
: · 1n J8!1!, the first successful oil well In the United States was dr1lled near
'lltuavllle. Pa.
· ;In 1928, t1r KeUogg·Brland Pact, outlawing war as a llll!,.ns kl settle
U.ternatbnal disputes, was signed by 15 nations t&gt; Parts. World War II
{li!gan 11 years later.
.
.
• ' 1!!;19!1, Adolf Hitler served not!oe 111 Enl!landandFrance that Germany
~ wanted Danzig and llrfollsb Contdor.

starts In at approximately SI!8,11Xl.
But let's plant an example that
lllu8trates the complexity d. the
fancied beueflts.
One hundred and twenty lillion
dollars In extra taxes are going. to
be paid by corporations, as Mr..
Galbraith bas not«J. Bli, as
evecyone sbould have notoo, COJllO·
rations don't pay taxes, they pass
those taxes along to consumers and
to Investors.
So consider, will! abbreviation
vecy much In mind, the man wbo
has retired and Invested all his
money ($1 mlllkln, to use round
figures) ln AT&amp;T. He is now paying
33 percent In taxes, which would
certatnly appear to be an Improve- .
ment over 50 percent. But AT&amp;T,
n~ to pay more taxes, will do
one of two things, and probably a
certain amount of both. It wUI
charge more for pbone calls and It
will reduce its dividend payments.

We touch interesting points here.
A great deial, In . tax law, Is only
faintly visible, as t&gt;r Instance, after
a whBe excise taxes on gaSoline,
booze and cigarettes lllld .il
decrystalllze ln tiE purcbaser's
mind. If John Is etlJ'IIlDg $M,CDJ a
year,ls paying an Effective tax d.25
percent with the mar&amp;lnal rate set
at 50 percent, a decrease In that
marginal rate to, say, 25 perrent
can, but does oot necessarily,
Increase Jolm's Income. Why?
Because there are other !actors.
We know that In i988 there are
going to be three basic rate;. The
first Is 15 percent, the seco,nd 28
percent, tile third 33 percent and (11
you wish tO count tt as a separate
rate) afourthof211 percent, reached
approximately after an mcome of
$150,(8) per year.
Now, that would appear Ill be a
substantial reduction over the
Incumbent 50 peroent rate, which

.Companies catering
.~9
desktop publishers
.

By RENEE HAINES
. !)AN ANTONIO (UP!) -TercyWeakly'scompany is oolyoneyear old,
but so is the lndustcy, and he's already planning a major expansion In
.catering to the latest customers d computer technology - desktop
·publishers.
: ''Wttbout sounding too cliche, It's given 11r power of the press to the
:people," says Weakly, owner of Lazer's Edge In San Antonio.
· "It's a revolution that will have extremely far reaching capabilttles. as
:much as the electronic spread sheet did In the 70s," he boasted.
: Publishing was an expensive and time-consuming business In 11r past,
Ill! said.
· To produce that newsletter or magazine page or book or advertisement,
.!J't!t had to know bow to design pages, how to choose and change type sizes
and margins. A lot of cutting and pasting was mvolved, as well as kmg
~a!tlng for printers and even longer Hehanges were needed .
• Now, tbe technology has become available and affordable to 11r JX&gt;Int
:that anyone with a personal computer can do It fast and cheap.
: "Everything is done and drawn on the screen," Weakly said.
• W~akly's business steps in to take the production-ready copy, either
from the computer disk carried Into his establishment or over the
:Jelepbone via modem, and feed It Into either a laser printer or higher
quality typesetter at a charge of between $2 and $15 a page.
: "You can be your own pub!lsher. That's why I got into it, to help bridge
}he gap between technology and the people who need it," he said.
• "We do several magazines. 1h&gt;y simply design their pages. modem
lheir pages to us and they can have tll!m back tiE ~xt day and ready lor
:the printer. It's an Immediate turnaround," Weakly said.
: Large companies use the process for production and technical manuals.
; "We have small buslnesseswboaretcyingtocutcosis. Theycansltdown
1111d spend their time, as opposed to a lot of dollars at an ad agency, and
:'produce their own advertisements." he said.
: Individuals can publish their own books. .
• "It's putting the power&lt;lthepress!n the hands cttbe individual. whether
'You're a closet revolutlonacy 0r a new Hemingway or whatever. You now
have total, direct access to capabllltles that most professionals out there
• ~·t even have In llrir shops," he said.
· ;·"A fHth grader can use this kind of technology," he said. His daughter
: u·sed the process to produce capfuns for her fifth grade science troject.
:: .Weakly, 39, roowner from l9TI untO 1984 of a San Antonio computer
· iitore, said, "This wbo!e !ndustcy started last August with the Introduction
: pt:a program called PageMaker," klw-cost oonware made by Algus Corp.
; • · Laser printers had been Introduced, and In what has become nearly
· lnevltable in computer technologies, startoo sporting lower prtce tags. A
:.cOmputer language for the printers, Postscript, appearoo, he said.
: : : The competlton Is intense.
· ~· : 'This Is such a hot lndustcy. evecyone In Silicon Valley is doing
:everything they can possibly do to get into this ruslness," Weakly said.
•: •!"there are quite a few laser shops that have sprung up, pr!martly with
: ~le wbo are tcytng to capitalize on this, offering access only lo laser
; ~ters. Vecy few have the doUars to buy tbe typesetters. We have$100,(00
~worth d equipment here," he said.
;"·: "We're positioning ourselves for the ~xt phase... " he said. For example,
use of photographs Is now a stumbling block.
-; ;'The technology is changing so quickly, I would Imagine within the ~xt
:three months - at the outside- an Individual will have the capabUity of
· &amp;canning a photograph Into the system electronically," he said.
: : .. "We're fixing to open a sbop In Houstoo, and working on some other
•
We will be expanding quite rapidly."

Captain Crow likes Meigs over PPHS; Says
Eastern will win: .Southern forecast to lose

Pege-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Wednesday, August 27, 1981

~

"Hi, ho- I'm with the President's War on Drugs. Since we receive no
federal funds, would you like to make a private donation?"

By CAPI'AIN PROW
Football, southeastern Ohio style, lies around the corner ·and to
help make small arguments Into tbose larger, the ole' blrds~e
predlcter Captain Crow returns with tre latest oo 'wbo wOl do what to
who when'.
SEOAL
My pre-season pick to wtn the tltte, Galllpotls, flexes a strong
·
defense and wipes out Rllck Hlll, Z1 ~.
Jackson. may meet some rare rompetltbn from Its Jackson
County rival, Wellston, bot the Ironmen prevail, 20-12.
Parkersburg South fights_off an Improved Marietta eleven,13-G.
Logan wtll be In the hunt for a championship'and proves tt with a
30·7 pounding over New Lexington.
TVC
Defense will be the name of the game at Pr. Pleasant as Meigs
holds back the Big Blacks and tiE 'Pt. Pleasant Curse' In a 13-7wln
for the Marauders.
Belpre finds ltseH In an odd sltuatkm d. not defending a
championship and are out to change things this year. But the Eagles
!aU at VIncent to the SEOAL·hound Warren Local Warriors, 22-14.
Athens fields probably Its' best teamdthe8l'sandstartsd.fwltha
28·13 win over Coach Dave Boston's Nelsonville-York Buckeyes.
The SVAC's Oak Hill Oaks expect a powerhouse and are more than
Alexander can handle, the Oaks dominate the Spartans, ~

The next situation of the man I!
measured not· alone by the Incremental · tax he pays m tbe tcp
dollar, but 111 how many top doUars
there' are. To Illustrate vta oor old
friend reductio ad absurdum, If yru
charge a maximum tax d.1 perrent
and the objective ecommlc sltua·
tlon makes It Inconceivable that you
wtll earn more !han $10,CDJ, why,
you have not greatly profltoo from
the tax reform.
On the other band, there is no
denying the solid philosophical gain
in'the phtlooophicalp:~stulates cttiE
tax bUI. As recently as In the laD d.
1984, when Ronald ,Reagan was
debating with WalterMondale,Mr.
Reagan proclaimed that WKier Ids
administration "progresstvlty" In
taxation had been malntalnoo at
the same level as the Democrats
had had It at. He saki this with·
manliest satisfaction, witch was a
great disappointment to all those
wbo for years have viewed the
progressive feature of 11r income
tax as the Acbiltes' heel of.
democracy. Now, thanks to the
startling development of the
Packwood-Bradley bill, Mr. Rea·
gan can chanee his tune here and
declare proudly that progress!vlty
has sharply d!!cre&amp;S81 under his
administration. Although If yru
count the 6 million Americans wbo
wt11 oo longer pay any federal
income tax, llrre is stilt a good deal
of progressMty, measl!f'ed as the
distance hewteen zero and 33.
So It is a compUcatedsltuation we
are . moving Into. No ooe, for
instance, knows exactly what the
consequenre ·wtll he of the In·
creased rate of taxation on capital
gains (tbe law wlll be blind as to any
distlnc;tlon). All tbose awful anti·
social loopboles may end by
&lt;Eprtvlng us of certain Intangibles
oo which we found we relied !Dr
beatti!Y'growth. All those questions
are up for heavy and protracted
ventnatlon. The ooe grrot and easy
enemy is: the surtax, so tempting,
!ll easy, suchfun.Itwould breaktbe
phtlosophlcal spinal rolumn ct a tax
law that, on llr whole, sbould be
welcOmed by those wh admire tbe
rule of law and wish to approximate
u In the tax code.

he owned belore he took over the
Haitian government. He declined to
move Into the presidential palace;
llr opulence of Its former occupant,
ousted dictator Jean·Claude "Baby
Doc" Duvaller, disgusted him. "I
was aware of Duvaller'sexcesses,"
Namphy told me, "but It was 1111ch
worse than I had Imagined."
Face to lace, the milttary strongman is disarming. Cl medium
physical ptoporiXIns and stocky
buDd, he aeems throullh !lOme
!mack d carnage to be larg!r and
more JX&gt;werfulthan he ts. Htl·basan
arrestln&amp; face, wltlipleatlallt, amla·
ble 11nes yet an Intimation ct .
rul!iedness. His woole pefaonauty
lights up evecy time he smtles. He
displays an athletic condltlolilq,
yet he talks enthustasttcally about
books and asked knowledgeable
questions about my own latest
book.
.
I spent an evmtng with Namphy,

three intlrmal hours, while his
small daughter tugged at him,
struggled into his lap, hugged hls
neck and begged !Qr snacks.
I questioned him 10 dl!teren t
ways about his political am~tbns.
The answer was always the same;
he had none. At last he became
exasperatoo wtththe subject. "I am
a pillltary man, and I have m
Interest In ctvnlan d.!Ice," he said In
his •native Frel)¢i, speaking
throullh an In~. ·:Buti!Vm.#
I were a ctvlllan and rumed wtth
polltlc~ all!litbn,l would
W3llt
to be lftSiden lot 'tfliltl." 'l1le
nafun's rroblems, he expaliu!d,
are too overwhelming.
· .
He spoke gravely about Halt!' s
terrible misery. 1be trmsucy has ·
been drained; the economy Is close
to coUapse; the land has been
sappecJ; llr populafun is ImpoverIshed. He has made repmted trips
Into the hinterlands to visit with tiE

mi

people and find out t&gt;r himself what
their needs are. Onre he drove a
pickup truck, Wlaccompanled by
aides, bodyguards and presidential
!rappings. He asked questions
witbout revealing his klentlty, Wltn
!llmeone recogn!zec1 hlm.Clearly, Na~hy ~ tonnenled by
what he learned. As he talked about
the JieedS of the poople, he ·tmtr
Into fjng~. "These are 110(1
fli'OIIIel" he $afd. Then he tunled to
me; .li!S
\J!Oist "Yes;" he
~. '.alley are~ ~pie ."
Associates 'lold me he anaulllhe~
CNer th!! plight of the poople. Sa!f·
F~;Minlster Jean. BaptjSt l:fl·
~II'e: .•'f.know this man.I know how
be
iutten!d." · · .
· ., ~ .l}nitoo States seems j,reoo:
C:,.~ i Namplly said, with•
t~ons: ·:~ash!ngton Ia In a IIJrry·tor ·
us IO~ lli!mme a'.democracy," lie
said. "The peopJt .cmn't wa~~t
democracy. They Wllllt Jobs."

By JOEL SHERMAN
UPI Sporis Writer
EAST RUTIIERFORD, N.J.
(UP! 1-The Kickoff Classic serves
as the ultimate campaign start for
top Heisman Trophy candidates.
The annual game at Giants
Stadium gives several top players a
chance to capture attention with the
college football world focused on
the first game of the season.
Tonight's fourth Kickoff Classic,
between Ohio State and Alabama,
features several players wbo have
received preseason recognition for
the Heisman, annually awarded
college football's top player.
The toP. preseason candidate In
the game wilt be Alabama quarter·
back Mike Shula. The son ct Miami
Dolphins Cooch Don Shula dis·
playoo a dramatic touch last
season, and a dynamic perfor·
mance tonight can help jump him
Into closer contention with Miami
quarterback Vinny Testaverde and

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Wide
receiver Ira HUiary was placed on
Injured reserve by the Cincinnati
Bengals to' enable the club to reach
Tuesday's roster limit d 50 players.
Hillary, a rookle from South
Carolina, has a sprained ankle and
a sprained Achllles tendon.
Arilong ·eight players cut by 11r
~gals .o~ . !'&lt;I~Y !\-as _veteran
ruD?trtg ba~il Charles Alexander,
who was starting his eighth season

Jack Sachs' first surprise was
walking Into the middle ct a beauty
contest.
He saw no reaSOilto object. Quite
the contrary.
"See," he jokingly illd a travel·
lng companion, "when I lay
something oo, I do tt first class."
That was early In the morning of
Thursday, July 10. The two had
arrived In Panama City to dlsoJver
the Miss Universe Pageant In fiiU
swing at their bote!.
Sachl, a New York attorney, and
IU companion were represmtln&amp; a
client In a ban)dng transacfun.
They had an appointment the
following morning with a Pana·
manlan law firm,
They never kept 11.
The trouble began with a delay
over their rooms at the hotel desk.
They were finally assigned to
dl!termt !loot'S.
· Then Sachs was banded a letter
- left tlr him at the d!sk- that he
instantly read as big trouble.
1be two were told to leave
Panama witbln eight hours. They
ltves and tbose of their families
were threatenoo If they did mt.
Sachs took It ·seriously. He knows
Panama well, has been there ltten
and had heen 1118rrtoo tJ a
Panamanian. He is fluent 1n
Spanlah. He helleved the anonym.
0111 writer's warn1Jii: "You are Ina
counlly that tortures and ldUa
people.n
He booked space oo 11r nnt
available fll&amp;ht out. That wun't
Wltn the next morning, after the
letter's deadline. 1'b!y IWUld not
leave the ootel unt!lllrn.
About 6 that evening, there was a
lmock lXI the door and a (II'OUP d.
men "flalhtnll t.dael" puabed Into
Sacl!ll' room. I.ucknY, Sacl!ll' com·

pan ion was on the phone with their
client and alertoo him that' they
were helng arrested. They were
ordered to pack tiE!r begs and
check out d tiE hotel1mmedlately.
A five-day nl&amp;htmaretll!n began.
In the rustody flnl of Panamanian
securlty pollee, they were alter·
nately Interrogated and locked In
ce!ls. Requests to contact the U. S.
Embassy and their famfites were
denied.
·
"As far as I knew," says Sachs,
"nobody In the world knew where

•

the anonymous.l!ltter to get'oot and
did npt · seek · tiE · asatstailiJ! c1
Injure me d. tiE conte~tallts, break Pll)lamanian .autboritles.
up the wbole thlnll."
.
"With thalldnd.d. JIOVeml!llllt "
Sachs is very D'llch aware of the he !lliks, "whatautboritlel do
'
.
recent reports out d : lj'anama, to?"
Including allegafuns that strong· .
Now he hal heard he-can retunt
man Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriega to Panama once the deportation
may be involved In blg·league order Is !isted - but for a p'ice. It .
drug-trafficking, money · bas, bowever, come down consider·
laundering and gun-running. For ably - to a
$5,1XXJ.
that reason he heeded tre advice d

)dido

mere

wew~."

Ultimately' throullh i!Je·eltortl d

Berry's World

Sacl!ll' client, word Jlt throuilt. An
embassy 1qRe1ientatlve and a
Pan!II!WIIan attol'lll!y were al·
lowed to- tbem. On Monday, July
14, a court ordered their relmse.
Their captors dkl oot liVe up so
msily, bowever. Sacha 111d lis
compankln ..yere turned over to
Panamanian lmrnlgrati&gt;n autbort·
tles and jailed for 111otller night.
They were told their free&lt;IOm had a
price - $00,11Xl. Not u a fllie, but
simply as a fiver ., the lmrnJira·
tlon fetklws.
They did not JIIY. ftnllly, tll!y
were fried lfter !llplnllatatements
tElaiowleclglq tllat IIIeY were
being deported.
Sachl, blck In New York, says he
stlll doesn't kiiOW wltat It WBI all
abwt. Neither )It
1U client
know wbat, If lillY. coiilliiCtlon It
may baVe bid With tbe h,,,.,
that ilok blm to ·~. .
Hll prole • ~ liUa'n;iptlon . jo.
CUII!d 111 wbeGier be,1t1ew Clel1aln
people, ume d. WIJlm be did. It

.

Pu l&gt;llshf'd , f'very afternoon. Monday
th rough F r ida y, 111 Court St .. Po·
mNo~. Ohio, by lh&lt;" Ohio ValiPy Pub·
llshlna Company / Mul1!mrdla . lnr ..
Pomt&gt;roy, Ohio 45769, Ph . 992·2156. S£'·
rond class postaar paid at Pomrro)' .
Oh io.

Mf'mbN: United Press lnl£&gt;rnatlonat.

POSTMAST'ER: Sl'nd addrHS chal\gt"S

to The Dally S(tont~ el , 111 Court St ..
Pornrroy. Ohio 4571ll.

SUBSCRIPTION RATI!S
By CarrtPr or Motor Route

OnP W('('k ................................. $1.~

for Cincinnati. Bengal dficlals said
Alexander offered no complaints
when told he was being cut.
"He just said, 'It's time,"' said '
Bengals' assistant personnel dlrec·
tor Frank Sroouse.
"If evecybody was as fine a
person as he Is," added Smouse.
''there would be oo trobiems In this
business."
Saki Bengals' head coach Sam
Wyche, "Dlarley Is all class. He

Onr Mont h ...................... ........... 15.4!
Ont• Yeur ..... .. .......................... $85.00
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Dally ................... ............... 25 C&lt;"nts

Subsrrlbers nor desiring to pay the car·
rttr may remH In advance dlrf'C't to

Matt tlllbo&lt;rlplltoo
lneldt!l Melp Cou11J
:
13 Week• ................ ..... ........ ..... $17.29
26 Weeks ............................ .. ... $34.06 :
52 Weeks .... .... .......................... SE6.56
Oatotoiellelp C.ooiJ
t) Wee~• .................................. fiB.~
26 Weeko ., ................... ............ $.111.10

52 weelrs ................. :..... ........... f67.60

~

-

.

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER'

INSURANC'E.
111 Second St. Po-roy

YOUR INDEPENDENT '
AGENTS SERVING .. ·.•
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

Attention Miners:·
WE HAVE ALL SIZES -

"Age didn't cut Charley," Wyche
said of the 29·year·old Alexander.
"He's a good back and he can still
play. He probably wUI (play for
some team) this year."
As for why the Bengais cut
Alexander, Wyche said, "We ju"t
had a lot of good backs wbo are
playing well. You have to make a
decision and live with !1. We did."

RUBBER SAFETY TOE BOOTS ·
WE HAVE IN STOCK LEATHER

MINERS BELTS

PICKENS HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.

....,.,.w,,,..."

6.:=,.,.,.,

CLOGGING CLASSES

$500 CASH BACK
OR8e5°10 ~

•

ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE FINANCING*

STARTING TUESDAY,
SEPT. 9

~+Jilt..:.--++ o·o
.Speeltl of the Week .
1:

t

l

W-I-QUE SJHDWICH

·~~ ..~!I.~"~. ·~···

No subscrlpllons by mall permUted In '
urees wherE&gt; home C'arri{'r service Is
9VBIIabJp, I

.... ....

wished us well. He had his head up
and Is going on with whatever is
next for him."
What's next for Alexander could
be anotber NFL team - If they
wish to pay the price.
U the Bengais had kept Alex·
ander, he would have earned about
$.ll0,11Xl this year. If another team
acquires him, they must pay him
that salacy . Wyche figured some
club will .

•

""''"r:,r,..,,.

wt'fk .

\

"I like the Idea of playing against
Alabama with Its tradlt kln and I
like the Idea of opposing Mike
Shula," Karsatoo said. "Beating
Shula would reaDy get me off to a
good start."
Several other players competing
tonlgbl have drawn some Heisman
interest.
The 1986 college football season Is
being caUed the "Year of the
Linebacker," and Ohkl State's
O!rts Spielman and Alabama's
Cornelius Bennett! - two d the
hest linebackers In the nat.km bold an rutside shot at being namoo
the first defensive players to win a
Heisman. However, Bennett is vecy
doubtful with a pulled bamstrtng
and ~Ieiman Is a junior, which
p.~ts another strtke against him.
Spielman, an Intense, fi.foot·2,227·
pounder, can use the contest as a
starting spot to unseat Oklahoma's
Brtan Bosworth as the Butkus
Award winner as the nation's top

team In the past few years, Appalachian St. 24 Wl'5!ern Carolina 1.1
switched to a passIn g often se Bat!
Arkansas Sl. Il So. !l!lno!s 21
St. Zl North..-n I!!!nois n
during the spring. They wtll come Delaware St. :11 Southern u. al
out throwing against Miami.
Easrl'l'n ntlno!s 21 !l!lno!s St. H
But Joe Morrison's Gamecocks ~l: ~(:JT''tt~o;ot/h"'n 7
will he overthrown by the glftoo Jacksoo St. :n No. Carolina C.nlral 10
Testaverde. Give It to Miami, by a ~=~!.~~~'fz.~:umo!s H
3H4 count. Har-rumph!
Marshall :II Wesl V!rg!nJa Tr&lt;h :!)
F1orida ' s Ga t ors, 111
1
to
Gale
Miami 31 South Carolina 14
·· r
n N.w
Mexico St. ro An!l"lo S&lt; 14
Hall over the past two years, will Nevada-Reno 211 Fullerton S&lt; 21
JX&gt;!Ish up their offense (for a Sept. 6 Nort hern Arlzoru 211 Soulhefn Ulah 7
Tennessee St 22 Morns BrW~n 17
meeting with Miami l by trouncing Texas EI Paso 24 North«n Michigan 1
out·manned Georgia Soutlrrn, 42-7. Moi'Miay, s.,.. t
II will be much the same at Maryland 211 P!nsburgh 21
Tallahesse, Fla. - coach Bobby
Bowden's Seminoles, No. 13, will c.,., G"""'"
7
tune up (for their Sept. 6 game with f"ortMnOUth
,.,~...,,.mWl'11!
Po"'
"""''" F.•·" ' "'"
Z2 Soutb Polnl J)
Nebraska l with an easy trtumph K.v!!t'f c-ID r-., """'""'"
over Toledo, 49-17.
....,.. 1.1 """ "'"''""' "
Elsewhere, llr Air Force Fa!· ::';;;'u'1
cons, 12·1~ and the Bluebonnet M1u..rua.n.un1on s
26 symrnt'$ Vallrv 6
Bowl vtct or over Texas last season, OW&gt;Iallftlk£&gt;
AI"'"' 211 N~ ..... ur...rorkK ·
are rebuUdlng._The dfense needs a 1&gt;1m"" 'G""' 1
lot of work.
"''""''
wa""" '""~ o
VInton Cw.nty 21 Zanr TraN' n
But llr Air Force stilt appears E.u"m 22 w'"""'",
ready to handle the visiting Hawaii """"' "N"' """'n~on ll
Rainbow Warriors. In a close one, ::"'s.':.!.'::~~~.,:~•.,"'
we are calling It J5.Z7 for the J"'""'" "w,,.,"' o
Falcons.
eampou• " ""''s.~··aun('JI
""' o
Which brings us to the Macyiand """""' Tr""' I! tronoon" ·""',.
VS. Pitt game on Labor Day.
North Gal!io !Horumouh NO 14
As t1r ACC defending champs, r;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;~
Macyland, No. 31, has bllllt Its II
attack around RB Alvin Blount,
'
who averages 5.4 yards every time
he carries llr ball.
The Pitt Panthers, comtngofftwo
disastrous years, llave a ~w coach,
Mike Gottfried, and a new attitude.
POMEROY VIllAGE HALl
Returning QB John Congemnl
AUDITORIUM
and RB Charles Gladman, wbo
gained more than I,(XX) yards In '!6,
ADVANCED 7 P.M.
sbould give llr Panthers new llfe.
BEGINNERS 1:30 P.M.
But they stilt won't be able to
GIG POWELL, TEACHER
contain llr Terps.
FOR INFORMATION CALL
It's Maryland, by a 2S-21decislon.
992·2822 - 992-8720
Solurda.r.
• %7
Air FOI'tft """·
~ Flawall

The Dally Seritlnt&gt;l on a 3, 6or 12 month
Ill~ is. Credit will be gtven carrier each

room at tbe ootel 111 tbe floor
reserved . for Mill Ualvene
~lplllll.
.

- -

(USPS UHf41)
A Division of MuiUp1edla, Inc.

Nf'Wspapf'r Sal€'5, 733 Third Avenu e.
Nf'W Y ol'k, Nrw Y or k 10017.

·,-.:heel tl2'pomtd.abllll'dl~wben
he was 8CCUied d. manliDI a

.

The Daily Sentinel

Inl and Da ll}· Pre1iJi Association and thr

nor

.

b

By MaJ. Alll08 B Hoople
.....
Fearless Forec.....,r
Egad, friends! The 1986 college
footbaU season Is opening wtth
some real battles.
The three Flortda powers Miami, the University of Flortda
and Florida State - get started (JI
Saturday. And the Air Forced
Falcons en,tertaln Hawaii In the
WAC lld-IHter.
Then on Labor Day, Macyland
visits Pittsburgh (ESPN·TVl under
the ltghts.
The Miami Hurricanes. No. 4 In
the Hoople ran kings, wUI be tested
early as !bey play South Carolina
(ESPN·TV) In a night game at
Columbia. S.C.
Led by All-America QB Vinny
Testaverde; the Hurricanes are
I
ready to pay.
Miami had some anxious mo·
ments during recent weeks as the
NCAA investigated the status of
several stars, Including RBs Alonzo
Highsmith and Oeveland Gary and
DT Jerome Brown. All three were
cleared - good news for Mtaml.
South Carolina, a run-arlen too

Ohio NC' wspupcr Association. National
Advrrtl sl n~ Rc •prMentattve, Branham

0

Michigan State running back Lorenzo White, Heisman frontrunners.
Shula set Alabama records last
season with a 60.3, completion
percentage and 16 touchdown
passes. However, his junior campaign will be remembered best for
Its first and last regular-season
games. In those contests, he
engineered last-minute drives to
respectively beat Georgia and
Aurum, both hitter Southeastern
Conference rivals.
"Let's play the season," Shula
said of his Helsman Cbana!s. "I'm
Oattered to even be considered for
thai booor."
SllUia's tresence In the game
enables his counterpart to receive
nafunal attention. Ohio State quar·
terback Jim Karsatos' name has
ellclted some Htlisman notice after
a season In which he too set school
records for completion perrentage
(61.2) and truchdowns (19) .

12th· round draft choice, was placed
on Injured reserve because of a sore
ankle.
:
Davis spent four of his eight years
in the NFL with Cleveland. Tlie
30·year-old product of Alaban1a
who was slgned as a free agent four
years ago became expendable as
Curtis Dickey, Greg Allen and
Herman Fontenot have beOO
chosen to complement the ooe:tw.o
running attack d Kevin Mack and
Ear!l{'St Byner.
·
Dickey has yet to play In tne
preseason, but whispers around
Cleveland's training camp is that
he plays an Important role in llr
attack of new offensive coordinator
Lindy Infante.
In addition, tight ends Harcy Holt
and Travis Tucker has been used In
blocking situations that used to be
Davis'

Hurricanes can swamp Gamecocks

*·

"They said I must be a terrorist
wbo had plans 1o either kidnap or

UPI Sports Writer

...

Har-rumph!

w;

Welcome to Panama·--~---'---n~?.n.. . . c_ra~ff
.

By ROBERTO DW

BEREA, Ohio (UPI) - .Johnny
Davis told everylxldy within ear·
shot that he always would consider
hlmseH a member cl. the Cleveland
Browns.
The popular veteran fullback was
among nine players waived Tues·
day as Cleveland trtmmed its
roster to 50 players.
"I have absolutely no regrets
over this," he said. "I en joyed
playing here very much, and I was
treated very well. I felt
appreciated."
In many ways, Davis imprtnled
his character on the team. His
reputation as a fierce blocker was
belted by his gentle nature in the
iockerroom, where he often treated
teammates to cassettes of the
gospel music he played every
Sunday at the Cleveland Church of
Christ.
"There's no questlon that Johnny
linebacker.
was
one of the most· loved
Ohio State center Bob Maggs and
Browns,"
said head coach Marty
Alabama ooseguard Curt Jarvis
Schottenhelrner.
"And he was a
are two of the top players at their
heavy
hitter
they
didn 't call him
positions In college football. A
'B-1'
for
nothing.
Johnny
is the
dominant game by either player
would catapult him into contention classic victim of the numbers
lor the Outland or Lombardi game."
Also waived were were wide
trophies. Former Boo ton College
receivers
Jeff Bovd and Glen
Eagle Mike Ruth began his !J:lm.
Young,
nose
tackle Mark Catano,
bardl Trophy·winning season last
tackle
Bob
Gruber,
running back
year in the Kickoff Classic.
Senklrs AI Bell of Alabama and Marek Harrison, cornerback Harcy
Crls Carter ct Ohio State are among Skipper and guard Jeff Wiska.
In addition, free safety· comer·
the best wide receivers In the
hack
King Simmons, the Browns'
countcy. Bell produced a touch·
down cr first down :Ji of tbe41 times
he touched the tell last season.
Carter hauled In a school· record 58
passes m19!6.
"Carter may be their Imst skilled
player," Alabama Coach Ray
Perkins said. "He can lake anyone
out with his moves and be could
break it from anywhere on the
field ."

Cincinnati Bengals reduce roster to 50 players

·.its

:··,

Miller Is much lmprovoo Wider Coach Joe Wlnneberg and from
early reports, look much hetter as two lasses were seen practicing
among the Falcons. The female Intervention proves great for
morale, Mlller opens with a 12~ wln over Berne Union.
Trimble slices apart a Green defense to claw out a 31-W Tomcat
win.
Vinton County takes on Scioto VaUey Conference member Zane
Trace at Kingston and the VIkings under first year coach Scott
Blakely open with a 2().6 win.
Federai·Hocklng gets its' first win since 1984 with a W-14 win ewer
Kyger Creek at Stewart.
SVAC
Eastern is small, but quick as tbe Eagles run past a slower
Waterford team, 26-12.
Soullrrn hosts the Panthers of Ross Southeastern and fall to the
Ross Countalns, Z1·22.
Southwestern sports a greatly-Improved team and jumps out of
11r gate with a 146 win over Portsmouth East.
Chesapeake defeats ex.Ohio Valley Conference foe, Symmes
Valley, who has since returned to the SVAC, by a 12·7 count.
Saturday night, Ironton St. Joe edges Hannan Trace :Il-18 and a
sharp-looking North Gallla Pirate eleven walks over Portsmouth
Notre Dame, Z7-7.

Browns release
Johnny Davis, 8 ·
others Tuesday·

Long college football season begins this evenl•ng

What Haiti needs ________J_ack_A_nd_e_rs_on
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Halt!- On
a smaU, dusty farm beside a gravel
road oo the ootsklrts of the city, I
discovered the rarest d aU political
animals: a leader who doesn't want
to lead, a ruler witlllut polltlcal
ambition, a mtUtacy strongman
wbo wants tohandhls JX&gt;IW!I'cwerto
clvUians.
State Department officials told
me about this uniQue person; they
said Lt. Gen. Henri Namphy didn't
seek political power, doesn't want It
and assumed it ooly ootof asenseof
duty. Out outgoing ambassador to
Haiti, Clayton McManaway, confirmed that the chairman ct Haiti's
mUitacy junta Is driven by duty, not
ambition. Wltbout exception, people wbo know Namphy describe
him as a patriot of uncommon
Integrity, wiD ~ as bonest as he is
blunt.
Stilt, I didn't believe them untO I
met Namphy for 11\Yself. I t&gt;und
him stilt living on llr modest farm

The Daily SerJtinei.:....Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

~

l

:

POIDOY, OIL .

·

Pll. 992·2556

•

NEW CHRYSLER NEW YORKER
'•·
•
CHRYSLER'S 5150 .
SUPER SELECJION
PROTECTION PLAN - ~
IMMEDIAtE
See llmHed warranty at dealer. C&lt;:Ners engine: · '
Chrysler
powertrain and against outer-body rust·
··
DEUVERY
through. Excludes teases. Restrictions apply. ·:

0

IHE WAY WE'RE DIAUNG••• EVERnHING GOES.~ .
SO HUR.Y IN NOWI
.:

Cooper Chrysler, ·Plymouth, Dodge Inc.

DAllY VALLEY
· "It tM W .. tile ,_,_._ •ldtt

399 South Third

.

: O&lt;J+~••••o

• Annual Percentage Rate Flnanolng for
Dealer contribution may allec:t final

,,

'

... .

•

" ADOLPH'S

••
1

•

992·6421
retail bu)lirs thtO&lt;Jgh

(iher financing

(i ,

Middleport
I on
. dealer StOCk..

�'

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday,

Byars
cleared
for play
PHn.ADELPHIA (UP!) -The
r~ iladrlphla Eagles appear to have
won t~ci r draft-day gamble with
nmn mg back Keith Byars.
Philadelphia made Byars the
10th player taken In the draft
overall. des pite fea rs he could miss
some or all of the season because of
a toot injury.
After an exam ination Tuesday,
however, Byars was cleared to
en .~age

in full· contact practice for
thr fi rst time since undergoing

surgery in January.
Coach Buddy Ryan also said

B' ars whom he has dubbed a

"fran~hise player," will probably

play when Philadelphia opens the
"'"son agai nst Washington on Sept.
7
· I t's

ttw luck of thE' Irish, baby,"

I{, an said .
Li p !'0-;('S

"Evety thlng's coming

Bya rs. who gained 3,200 yards In
his Ohio State carE&gt;er , had a piece of

l&gt;• ne grafted to his foot in January
has ix'f'n engaged in rehablllta·

•mrl

l i{Jn since then.
He• was exa mined Tuesday In
Cc,Jum hu s, Ga.. by Dr. Jack

Hughston. who perlonned the
surgery, :111d clearro to practice,
l••&gt;:inning toda y.
'T vC' tx·en waiting for It !bra long
limr." B)•&lt;~rs sa id. " I ca n't walt to

···-~.

:MCENROE UPSET - Jom McEnroe holds his
htad during TuesdaY's opening round malch against

'I''

gP! uul there."

'lhinPr OtiD Davis was ecstatic

"''

;1.&gt;-. llP made thr announcement.

unknown Paul Annaeoll!' in the 19861 1. S. 011en Tlw
ninth-seeded McEnroe wa.s upset, I-ll, fH ~~~. 6-:1.
(UPII

John
McEnroe eliminated in first
.
~ound of U. S. Open tennis tourney
By: FREDERICK WATERMAN

had six months off, I know I'd he In
The womf'n 's fourttJswcl t KJ~·~ to
better shape than I've ever teen in '" a\'oid reinjuring the n ght an kit· shelor tennis, but mentally- that's the sprained two weeks ago But ., hp
bard part."
said rt&gt;turning to the sit e ot t1&gt; r t h!rd
She recalled McEnroe's lmPt'e'f: Grand Slam tit le bJo~ cd hl't splr ih.
slve return, when he rE&gt;achro 1M
" I do fet:! at homr hen •. I rra II\'
semifinals at the Volvo Interna· love to play hr re . Drivin~ up f ~d~ ~·
llonal in Vennont.
!he stadium and I had a lll'Ca t
"When I saw his result s a1 feelin g. You know. I lover 1&gt;:• ~lace ··
Stratton, I thought 'God, he may
Other men's Sl'f'ds lu sha ro
wind up winning the Open,' but he' s McEnroe's fate ~&lt;'l're No. 12 Thirn:v
gotten progressively worse.
TulasnP. who lost to han:J..s&lt;•rvtng
"I don't know If It's because he's David Pa te of Las Vegas .1-li. 1~.1. !i-1.
gotten tlred or the pressure starts 5-7, 6-4, and No. l4 Tim Ma \'ot ll',"
getting to you. The ftrst WE&gt;ek you Wimb!E'don semifinalis t, wh••
are 1oooe and bave oothlng to squandered triple-mal ch ~oint in
loose."
the third sN liebreaker ond r,·c nru Ivan Lend!, the men's defending ally lost lo C'alifomian .lona th"n
champion, beat Glenn Layen- O! nter t; 7 !2 71, H. 7-b t9·7I.f&gt; 1. !i-:1.
decker of Portola Valley, Calif. 6-3, In a 3-hour, qc&gt;mi nute battle.
6-2, !HI, then said McEnroe's
Among the women, two low '"'lis
surprisingly rapid departure mea nt also fell , No. lfl Katlw lllnaldi
little to him.
succumbing to Michelle TotT&lt;'S t&gt;l.
" It doesn't affect me at all. 64 and No. 16 O! rling Rassell was
Eventually I eould havt&gt; played eliminated by Ca lifornian t\1\ ('id
McEnroe In the q.~arters illt it's a Moulton 6-4, 4-6, 6-U.
long way there lor me and lor him .
Navrat!lova noted thai t'a ri)··
For hlnn It provro too long."
ruund upsets of th~ w orn~n·s
Wednesday's featured matches highest seeds a rt' rare.
Include No. 3 Boris Bec~er playing
"It's not like 1wc'n' 1 ~Ia) !ng
Glenn Mlchlbata of Canada, No. 2 Annacone in the first rou nd. whprc
Ouis Evert Uoyd meeting fellow you're In trouble if you·rl' not
American Barbara Gerken and No. particularly sharp. With tht'
3 Steffl Graf taking on Susan women, it 's rot thai much of .1
Mascarln.
threa t In the first rounds, i&gt;&gt;ca usPof
Women's defending champion their !weaker) SPrves."
Han a Mandlikova hild ltttle trouble
Other wlnhet·s Tuescla)' omo nr:
In her llrst-round match with Marte the men Included 1'\o. o Y.mnl•·k
Calleja r1 Frana&gt;, wlnnlng 1&gt;2. 6-2. Noah , No. 8 Henri Leronto•

,

UPI Sports Writer
!\lEW YORK (UP!) - John
McEnroe was detoured from a
cmneback In the first round of the
U.!5. Open while women's top seE'd
Mar;tina Navratllova put forth a
winning effort and pensive thoughts
oo l he demise of the lour-tlnne
merl's champion ..
P aul Annacone ellmlnatro
McEnroe 1-6, 6-1, 6-3, 6-3 Tuesday as
the lelt-hander showed tbeeffectsol
his:6 ~ · month layoff, committing
30 tmforced errors.
·:1 was just frustrated with
m isSing those easy balls," said
McEnl-oe, seeded No. 9and playing
In anly his fourth tournament since
Jal)uary. " I've gotten Into the habit
of jtist missing those easy soots."
Arutacone, ranked No. !I, said his
opJ»nent's play was well hetow the
levi!) of his championship years
"but you've got to give him some
lim~. He's a great player."
'toen the somewhat abashed
victor admitted: :·r felt kind of
awJoWard heating hlnn because he's
suclj a great champion."
McEnroe lamented tbat he
lacked mental toughness, which
has · "always teen an lnnportant
porto! my game.
"This year. I'm not Into the
matches as much as 1 was before I
stopped playing."
NavratUova, seeking her third
Open crown, deleatro Andrea
Houkova G-4, 6-2 and observed, "U I

.. Thdey is t t.&gt; best news I'll have
' i"" ' the opening of training
eamp " hP said. "He's progressed
''&lt;'r\ wPI L The doctor was pleased
v:ilh rvrr:vthing about the foot."
Davls said, howi'Ver, that Byars
·.muld he closely watched during
workouts.

"It will be a contnollE'd·type
si tuatio n to condition his body to the
Y,a rnc· ol football," Davis sa id.
He also said the Eagles would

I

Dallas cuts Thurman
and King fromloster ·!~
By United Press Intemallonal

pro&lt;N'&lt;i. siowlv wltl] Byars, who
IJrokr a bone in his loot before the
19K1 &gt;caso n and played only
spa ringlv for the Buckeyes.
·w r non' t want to throw him in
lhl'rr." Davis said. "He ha sn't
l"k&lt;'n a pounding in almost a year.
Wr heve to condition the body to
take lhr lrauma of football. He' ll
dnll wit h the running backs and
il&lt;' ll run against the first -string
drfrnsr to get the II'E'l &lt;1 heing hll."

Mdgs volleyball
team wins opener
Bl;(HTE L - Meigs· volleyball
I(·' "" OIX'ned 1hf&gt; r!f'w season with a

lo \ ; 15, 1&gt;·7 wln over TVC-Ioe
1'\d.so n v ill r~ York here Tuesday.
Leading the Marauderettes to
thl'ir opening win was Jennl Couch
wi1h nin(' points and two aces;
. IHmi Swa rtz, eight points and thnE'e
an ·s: Shelly Stobart, seven points,
1"" "'·rs, and five assis ts; Shannon
ll inrlv, In kills and 18 good first
P'""''· and .Julie Mlller had seven
kill s
Co.wh Molly f'E&gt;es ler's Meigs
~iris srwed H6 per cent, had 271dlls,

cent~r.

That dream was wiped out after
Koken ended up at the oottom a a
pUe In a drill that left him with an
Injured lett ankle. The Incident
occutred on the first day of practice
in thf team's first hitting drill.
"Some guys were moving one
fay, some guys were moving
lJnot!Jer way and they just collided
and ~got stuck on the bottom," he

1lle good [t&gt;Piings hi!\ t • nnt I ~ ·r ·n
llrnited to Koken . rhP ~~riJI~~mnre

S8ys. Like many of his tc·,,mnJtllt .:..,
he said h(' ha..... not icr·d rnnr"
rnrhusiasm in this VP&lt;l r'&lt;i pr("-.( n.'-'Jn

ca mp.
"In tenS!' is a goo&lt;.! wore!. " h•· ''" trl.
"We've he&lt;&gt;n going at It tntl!v han !
and t&gt;verythlng. Till' fir-s t ,,;,pit • of

da).'S, everythJng was kind (~f Jnf· ~ . . . ,.

junorganlzPdl . Hut we ('tlnlf' rt).
gether toward t tv: md so. &lt;.~ sa 1r •om ,
offense and n.~ rPn s(', \n·· f'f ' doing
OK."

Kokrn sa id the 1f'clm b

1111 ru.:rv

this year after tnl'Sing " IJ!11:1
invttalb n followin g last sra&gt;;On's
7-3-l record.
"I'm excited I ca n't walt . tho•
same as everybody," Koken said.

For Your Labor Dav Weekend

recalled.

Thls year has been different - so
far. :

· FRESH FROM SUGARCREEK

nd ll acPS.
!n rhe r'eserve game. NelsonvllleYnrk won 1 &gt;~ 13, 15-10. Kelly Dou-

St!ioto Downs
cQLUMBUS,

Ohio (UP!)

-

Oveiromer, driven by Mark
Gral}er. won Ids fourth race
Tue!ICIBY In ttve SlartJ In the Ohio
S1rei Stakes for thrEe- year-old
trotlen.
OYI!tcomer had the lead by the
half·Oille pole and was never
threatened, ~ a length and
1111'5quarten win fNf!t Just Plaln
CUr!tiD 2: 002· 5. OdaJ Ia Actlon was ,

.

•
thJrd::

.

·,:s••t ••• Cll!if•n -

Sharp Cheddar ...... 3.10 lb.
Mozzartlla ............. 2.75 lb.
Amish Potato Chips ... 1.89
Trail Bologna......... 3.00 lb.

Oar Prleu Are Lower

PO•ROY

I ·-------

992·6910
Iii~ Autpt

Food Stamps

We

.
•

Reserv~

The Right To
. limit Quantities

STORE HOURS
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-lQ PM

·:
·•
.
,.
·

::
•
.•
.,
··
~

298 SECOND ST. ·

;

POMEROY, OH ..

.

.

'

GOOD'
SUNDAr
AUGUST .4
THRU}
SATURit.AY
'
AUGUSl130

PRIC:ES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, AUG. 30, 1986
'

·,•

'

·:

•
.•
·"

.•
;
'

GRADE A

',

Whole Fryers ••• ;~••• 69·&lt;

•
'•
'
,

Kenney, a starter at lett ~ ard
since 1981, was among elgb I ~ayers
waived hy the Philadelphia Eagles.
He left training camp last month
alter he was demoted by new coach
Buddy Ryan but returned alter a
lew days.
King, a first-round draft pick
from Stanford In 1978, was let go by

.••...
.
Ul =
~

Quarters •••••••• 49&lt;
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
S1 99
Round Steak .........
L~g

LB.

•

BUCKET

Now Selling Pizza
4 P.M.-9 P.M.

.•

CALl IN ORDERS
843-5140

•..

UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT

$ :49
Chuck Roast •••••••• 1.
USDA CHOICE 80NELESS .
. $11
59
Ro.ast .....L:.... ,·.
oz.
6. 9.(
Wl·eners •••••••••••••••••
KAHN'S SLICED
Bologna ••••••••••••••• $139
U.S.D.A. CHOI~E BO~ELESS .
.

~·

RUTLAND

DEPARTMENT STORE

.

"

I

.... ..

Phone 142 2100
p HIL: l S U f l Cf IVl I HI!U SA f AIJ(l •i lJ i 11 t1!
ECKRICH

.,

,.,,.,,

''

&gt;

Q

.o

I•

• ,.
"'
1"1

0

A

$199

I

~
~
('")

0

~

c:

"::

·~ ·

0

•

z

I

•

~

Ul

~·

0A

PIIG.

&gt;
~

..
=

~

&gt;

I.,.

~
~
('")

•

0

~
"'CC

0

.. .

z

12 OZ. PIG.

'

c:

LB.

12

BAR B QUE LOAF ••••••••••• H~. S2.97
SUPEIM)R
BULK
WIENERS
..............
w
...
S1.43
AGAR
BOILED HAM ••~.~~~(~!!~:!~!~..~ S2.09
HOMEMADE
HAM SA ••••••••••••••••••••••~••• 97&lt;

Cube Steaks ••••~••••

&gt;
~

~

II

DAIRY BAR

J

-

CHICKEN

r----------'"1
PORTLAND

rPIP~ .'W -

Limit
20
Coupons

,

-~
•

'•

~las

i&lt;•d Meigs with 10 points.
Metgs hosts Belpre Thursday In

i1 •·:'

I"KilnL'

opener.

The

reserve

gamj' .-.rarts at 5: 55 p.m .

KRAFT 12 Dl. 16 SLICE
AI!RtCAN PIOCESS

CHEESE ..................... S1.87
1 oz. swm lOS£
MARGARINE
PAniES .." .................... 69&lt;
HILLEIDAL£

•' ,

.

3ll.

NEW ONIONS .....JM.... 79'
10 Ll. NEW IICHIGAI

POTATOES ...........AM S1.19

¥

lll. RAllO

COOKING
APPLES ................M-9 Sl.Q9

.·

I ~~~~~~~~~~~!j
f-

'.

••
"

V~LLEY '~ BELL •
' 0 · ·.,

,.•
•

~

I

•&lt;
·~

·

·.
.•.•'·

'

i ••

'

\ ·,,

~

~·

~

~

~

~

~

•,

...

•

•
•

1~:.9 .

GAUON

' '

'

~

AN ·cAMP · -'

..

.

.~

'

\

o

CAST~EBiRRY

')

.

·,.a,~y·,··,
...,

'

.,·'·

..

I

.

•

;

·.

'

'

•

1~

. '·

'

'

'
•'

,pAl(

I '•

; . . . }/ ,.

,.

:, INSTANT TEA

~ ~: oz. : S2 3?:',
•

Uonit I 'Par CullOnly AI Powell's S..-cbt

so. 1916

a.. · •~mr bpirH - .. .

$UG~ ·

"•

1

5 ~~
· lAG.

.,1_
\

*~· 1 · 39
· . "-·

.!1
,J

'

•

•

.

•

~
"'CC

0

•,

z

,.

-,

••

•The total value of the dou ble coupon may not exceed

. ,.

•Any manufacturer's coupon greater than 51¢ will be
redeemed at face value
only.

11i1i

••• 1001: AID OR ·

..mo.'Js+a-.a.m.

.

-~99C

'·

MAC. &amp;CHEES,E'.

'•

··"·

'·

'

'

., ;.

•Only one manulacturer's
coupon par item.

•Thia offer 'e xclude• ciga·
rettell, or any other ltema
prohibited by law.

.

$., .'

,,•

'

•Thi1 offer does not apply to
Powell'• Super Valu Coupon•. tree coupons, or ally
competitor's coupona.
·

1 car..:..•• llil-75+1

:·

'

•The total value of the double manufacturer's coupon
cannot exceed the purcha1111
price of the Item. M11ney
will not be refunded.

••

'

0

81.00

. . DAiRY ·l~NE

·
~9tdog .Sa,uce·~~...·s , .
,.'

'

::o!~~

.

$) ·&gt; Ice Cream .....:.~... S1 09

.: ·

·Rork~~ &amp; Beans~~~~. 3··~/

.......
,,JGAL

•

•

c
.,.a

('")

0

· •

"·

.•

MUSHROO'MSOUP ........A.WJ~ ••97( '
15 OZ. STOIIELY
."
PEAR HALVES ..................~~••• a9c •••
15 OZ. SHOWBOAT
PORK &amp; BEANS ••••••••••••• ~.s~w..79c '
•
I OZ. ·MAXWEU HOUSE DECAFFEINATED
••
'INSTANT COFFEE ••••••••••• ltt. S6.99 -··.•
22 oz.
COFFEEMATE ••••••••••••••••••ltt. S2.79 ••..•
1B OZ. JIFF CREAMY
••
PEANUT BUnER ............ttl. S1.97 ,,,'"z
18 OZ •.SMUCIIERS
BLACKBERRY JAM •••••••••• ttl. s1.99 •
3 OZ. ARMOUR
,,
...
POnED ·MEAT•••••••••••••1.W1i•••• 69( .•
••
7 OZ. CHEF-.BOY ·AlDIE SPAGIInl
.&amp;
. MEATBALLS .............1.W1i S1.17·
32 OZ. ~ISH DETERGENT
PALMOLIVE
••••••••••Ail'.WMtU~. S1.69
'

$. ;
'

2.Yo:. Milk............... .. ,. . .
KRAFT.
$139
·Q···r···-a
,·~ n~,.-g
··o·e Ju····c·e
·

,,

••'

. .

~
~

0

,,•'·

5I
.,.

&gt;

.,
.,

10J/• OZ. CAMPIEU'S CREAM OF

&gt;
!:'"'

~

9 OZ. FOX

CHEESE PIZZA .......................99(
16 OZ. riiS. PAll'S
ONION RINGS ................... S1. 99

~

...
...
.
...
=
· Ban~nas ...•••••. ~•• 4/S 1. •
.•

.,

~

·Ohio Vall,y_. · Foods
S14 EAST MAIN

·:

~

Our Amish Cheese &amp; Trail Bologna
laby Swin ............ 2.9h.
L111ghorn ............... 2.75Ht.
Pepper ;.................. 2.40..
Fanner's ................ 3.00 •·

.
.:
"•
;;
,;

J

West Virginia sophomore expects
to start at center for Mountaineers
"I feel really healthy. My an kle
came back really well In the spring
and I had to get my siDulder
operated (in the winter) on and that
came back pretty well," Koken
said. "It (the ankle ! bothers me
cnce In a while but It came back as
weU as can he expectro.
"Last year, that was somet hlng
really big for me," he said of his
lnll'l'!.ded starting role. "Everybody
knows what happenro . I'm pretty
excited about this year."
Koken ended up playing in
several games last year and started
at season's end lilt the lhrlll of
starting 1!1 the q~e~~er eluded him.
"I just hope things keep going as
weU as they have been lor myself
and for the team," he said.

the New rk Giants. A slartel' br
most of hiS career !rom 19'19 until
foreann s)li'~ry forced him to inlss
the 19&amp;1 ~son, King ret:urred last
yearasa!backupandwastrylllgto
make the 1ctub In that capacity this
season. '
Bnmnet, a six-year veteran
obtained jast year In a trade with
Green Bay, was dropped by the St.
Louis dardtnals after falling lllto
disfavor! with C&lt;iach Gene Stallings.
StalllJigs askE'd his quarterbacks
to Uve In St. Louis In the d!-season
and work out with the wide
receivers, but Brunner balked.
Stallings placro him m waivers lor
a tlnne.
·
In another development, Landry
said Herschel Walker would play at
least ooe quarter In the team's final
exhibition game Saturday night
against the HoustOI) Oilers.
Walker, woo was signed ~leidy
by the Cowboys after the United
States Football League suspended
q&gt;eratlons, has yet to play a !bwn In
the NFL.
"Mentally, Herschel wlll be
ready,'' said Landry. "He picks up
our stuff real last.
"He Is always In shape. But he Is
not 1n the klndolphyslcalshapeyou
need to be 1n to get hltv You have to
get hit a lot before you get l5ed to It
and that Is what he needs right
now."
Since Walker stgned with the
club, Tony Dorsett - the learn's
other star running back - has
exrressro general displeasure and
has said he would welcome a trade.
Landry said he was not conremed
about Dorsett's continual grwn.
bllngs about his salary as bng as
those
did not affect his

Dennis Thurman, a former star
defensive back, and lullbackl&lt;!1nny
King, wbo had been the blocking
back lor Mareus Allen the last five
· years, were among the more than
100 player'S l'eleasE'd Tuesday as
NFL clubs pared the!rrosterstp the
50-player limit.
Thurman was released by the
.
Dallas Cowboys alter eight seasons
during which he developed a
reputation as one of the NFL's hest
cornerbacks. Last year he was
relegated to playing only In passing
· situations.
"We were only going to keep
seven defensive backs," Cowboys
head coach Tom Landry said, "and
we need depth at cornerback and
safety. Dennis oouldn 't provide that
since he was Umlted to one role.
"It Is a very hard thlngtodo. You
have to become callous after a
while and try not to let your
emotions show. It Is lhe hardest
thing to do In this business."
King was let go bY the Los
Angeles Raiders after an eightyear carE&gt;er - seven with the
Raiders - during which he served
prtmarlly as Allen's blocking back..
He played In alll7 games last year,
rushing lor 67 yards on 16 caiTies.
King holds the team record with an
89-yard run against San Diego In
19!rl and was walvro just 23 yards
shy ol2,500.
I
The Raiders also waived 11~nt
return specialist Fulton Wail!er,
who set an NFL single season Punt
yardage recond In 19!6 wlth ' 692
yards. He also led the Raiders with
a 22.2 yard average on 21 klo:'koff
returns.
Injured much of the p~son,
Walker apparently lost his job to ;"'=Navy rookie Napoleon McCal(um.
Offensive guard Stt&gt;ve Kenney,
offensive tackle Gordon Kln~and
quarterback Scott· Brunner ere
other familiar names given ' their

MEDIUM EGGS.....~.... 69'

: By COLIN McNICKLE
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (UP!)
- ft has not taken much of a
preseason to satisfy Kevin Koken, a
West VIrginia University sophomore expected to start at center lor
the MountainE&gt;ers.
Last year, The 6-loot-3, 250poutiler from Youngstown, Ohio,
was : a freshman coming ott a
redshlrt season and was pencUE'd In
as !he Mountaineers' sta rting

Afiguat 27, 1988

•Offer Ia only good for product , on hand. No Rain·

checb.

'

·•Thera il I limit of 20 .COU·
poila
you may redeem.
f
.

,

1 1 ·l~d·C~~.f

....

~~

'·' ' ( 1 !'\SSpilGJ;"'
,.

,

n

\ , ...

:n
,,.,

'

�Mtge-0-1 he

iJaiiy Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Wednesday. August 27. 1986:

By The Bend

·far~e~'s bat comes alive agllin; Reds post··5 4 victory
By qJLLlJZZI
•
UP£~ Wrller
· The Clnclnii9ti •. R.edl!' 1r1p to
Plttsburlb Will well tb:rl!!lfbecause
It ~ up Dave Parker.
Parker, who spen,t bls t1rst u
.major league seasons In Pittsburgh, Thesday nlgll,tdrove 1n tour
J:UDS. Including qne With a sacrifice
OylntilenlpththatllftedtbeRI!dsto
a 54 VtctoJY wer the Pirate&amp;
"He needed Something to gli!t
going and I think coming here
(Pit~) was It," Reds Manager Pete Rose said. "I don't care
what he says. When he comes here,
he wants to do well. You can see it.
He goes after balls even 1n batting
practice."
Rose hopes Parker can sustain
his hitting long enough for Ctnclnnail to make a run at the Hruston

Astros In the NL W~t. The Reds'
victory Tuesday moved them to
.within seven gam!'&amp; of the first·
place Astros.
Parker's ~ fly ott Pat
Clements jn the ninth Inning
snapped a 4-4 Ill! and handed the
Reds their seventh victory In eight
games fl&amp;alnst the Pirates this

season.___
"I do get ' fired up ln view of
everythlng that ha$ happened here
and the cheap shot they are taking
at me with the salaly," Parker
said.
The Pirates have a suit JlEildlng
against Parker which would void
their obligation . to pay Parker
mllllons of . dollars In detelTEd
salary. Pirates l1lll!lfl&amp;l!ment contends Parker violated b1s contract
when he admltledtodrugusewhlle
playing for the te811).

"I Just throw sometblJig ~k to
remind illem'thatthey had a great
player here and I'm with another
club now," Parker saki. "I think I
reOect that. Beyond that, It's 1J1st
another day at the ctflce."
Parker's two-run. fifth-Inning
l»mer plt the Reds ahead 3-2.
Parker hit the first pitch from Mike
Bielecki to center-field In the fifth
Inning to snap a 1-1 tte. Daniels led
r1f the Inning with a double to
left-center and scored oo Parker'~
first home run s1nce Aug.15 and his .
second since July 26.
In other games, Olleago downed
Houston :;.a, New York routed San
Diego 11-6, St. Louis bombed
Atlanta 7-1, Phlladelphta defeated
Los Angeles 6- 4 and San Franclsco
edged Montreall-0 m12 Innings.
Cubs 5, Aslro8 S
'
At Houston, Terry Frapeona and

Ron Cey homered to lead Chlca11,0. game was delayed 'by rain thrtie
Starter~ Lynch, 4-3, workl!d .the times for a total 011 hour and 54
tlrst siX lnnlngs. Ex-Astro Ennk minutes. A four- minute delay
DIPII!o hurted the seventh and occulTEd 1n the Sl'Yenth buttlle raln
~th. strlldng rut tour. Lee Smith stopped before
was put on
pltchl!d the ninth tor his 25th save. .the field . ·
,
Dsnny Darwin, making bls first NL
PhlJiles 6, DOdgen 4
start, ten to 0-1.
At Los An~les, Von Hayes
1\Jela U, Padre! I
singled ln one run and Glenn Wilson
At San Diego, Ray Knight and added a three-run homer durtng a
11m TeWel each had bur hits and four-run eighth Inning to lead
three RBI to pace New York's Philadelphia. Kevin Gross, 9-10,
seaBOII·hlgh 21-hlt attack. Sid Fer- was the winner despite allowing 11
nandez, 154, pitched seven Innings hlts In seven Innings. Steve BedroIPr the victory. Dave Dravecky. stan pitched the Dnal two Innings.
9-U, started tor the Padres and Ed Vande Berg, 1-5, took the loss.
departed In the second with a stiff
left forearm.
Canllaals 7, Brave~ I
At St. I.o,u!s. Greg Mathews, 10-4,
and Pat Perry combined on a
three-hitter against Atlanta. The

uftarp

Glaul8 1, Expos 0
:.
At San Francisco, p!pch hitter;.
Harry Spilman's bases .. baded:
single In the bottom of the 12th; •
dlnnln
e'eagt MsooonredtrealSco
. W~l g:r~:
,
with a single against loser Bert·· ..
Roberge. 0-3. Garrelts laked a bunt
and swung away. grounding II':··
single past third baseman Tim,
Wallach . After Olill Davis was
walked tntentlonally, Bob Bren!Y
oounced back to R.oiPrge, wll:l
threw borne for the first. outf,
Spilman singled to rtght to win ~ ·
game.
·

Katie's Korner

;J,.

By UTit CROW
Sentinel
4r • nt
Kevin Ke!Jy, you In! a 111ce
person and
do good.
Now I
you are wondl!r·
lng, who Is Kevin
Kelly? Well,
Kevin ls city edllor fo'r the Gallipolis Tribune. Kevin Is thee IIIII! we
call when we are ready to send
news copy on the roi!!Jlller to
Gallipolis.
· Kevin ls always kllld and COIISkl)!rate and when he recelvl!ll rur
news copy he lmmedlatly calls to
leu us everything Is ok.
: Since we do not work In the same
office the only conimlllllcatlon ~
have with him Is by phalli!. He 1s
~ 'Johnny on the spot" so IIi speak.
Not only ls he efficient In his job
but always wtderstandlng, kind and
considerate.
We wanted you to know we '
appreciate what you do and how
you go about it. Junior Wllson 1s the
same type person but we have told

c.«r

'•

.

I

By MIKE TUU..Y
land Indians attei- nine innings with games. Brett, who went3-for-4, bas advanced Ill Rlck Cerone's second
UP! Nailonal Baaeball Writer
the score tied 6-6.
•
15 homers. Richard Dotson, 8-l.'l, sacrtftcE&gt;d the game and scored on
The security force handled the
J\a&amp;elll2. Y111Joees o
took the loss~
Molitor's single ctl KeltbA1herton,
crowd and Dennis "011 Can" Boyd
At New Yark Mike Witt fired a
TJaen 8, .\'s 7
5-9. Mark Clear, 5-4, pitched two
handled the Texas Rangers.
four-hitter .for
seventh siratght
At Detro~. Alan Trammell r;::hl:tless::::ln:nln::::gs.
Pitching with extra security victory and third shutout d the doubled horne Lou Whitaker from
officers present, Boyd dominated season and Jack.Howell and Dick first with two out to cap a six-run
the Rangers with a season- high 10 Schofield contributed second-Inning sixth that rallled the Tigers past
strikeouts Tuesday night. He al- RBI!or California. After the game, Oakland. Mark Thurmond, 3-1, was
i
lowed only four hlts 1n pitching the Calltornla rookie Wally Joyner the winner. WUJte Hernandez. who
Boston Red Sox to an 8-1 victory.
escaped InJury when a knife thrown was wannlng up w~n ~troll
The right-hander helped the from the stands grazed bls ann.
trailed 7-2, pitched thrre Innings for
For Registration Stop in
American League East-leading
Royalll6, While Sox I
his 21st save. Dave Von Ohlen. 0-1,
Red Sox break a three-game losing
At Oltcago, George Brett hit a took the loss.
9:00 hi 4:00 MCII. thtv Fri.
streak and tumbled the Rangers pair or solo oomers and Steve
o.-ers 6, Twins 5
.'
or Call 992-7321
four games behind the Western Balboni added a two-run shot to
At Milwaukee, Paul Molitor's
OWNER/ADMINISTRATOR
• 81vlslon-leadlng California Angels. back the seven-bit pitching of single with one rut In the bottom d
"Oil Can picked us up when we Charlie Le.!brandt, 11-10. The bss Ire lOth scored Jim Gantner and
MRS. SHIRIN NUGGUD
· -neededtobeplckedup," &amp;stonMa was the White Sox's flftb straight lifted the Brewers over Minnesota.
. MASTfiS DEGREIIN
For Information (all Shirley Quickel 99.2-77.56,
: it age r John McNamara said. "He and seventh In trelr last eight Ganlner opened with a single,
: )lad an outstanding eurveball,
which Is the one pitch he has lacked
In the past."
: ; Boyd, who was facing Texas
: Gtcher Don Slaugh! for the first
. : .time since hitting Slaugh! In tPe
· -face with a fastball three rnonihs
: ago, was the recipient It extra
: l;ecurtty during the game.
· • Stadium officials said no threat
l!ad been received against Boyd,
- but special precautionary measu~s were taken. Two Arlington
S,tadlum securtty otflcers stood on
top of the Boston dugout between
innings and a city pollee officer sat
1n the dugout during the entire
. contest.
· Boyd, 13-9, gave up a solo homer
to Toby Harrah In the first and
llmtted Texas to four baserunners
. e\
the rest of the way.
&amp;ston's 12-hit attack was led by
Wade Boggs' two doubles, Dwight
Evans' two-run homer 1n the llfth,
and Don Baylor's solo shot ln the
seventh.
Rookie Mike Loynd, 2-1, gave up
seven runs over 4 1-3 Innings In
suffering the defeat.
That's entirely possible, you know. Already.
In other games, Calltornla
you in getting the finest medical care available in
blanked New York 2-0, Kansas City \
over 45 doctors are participating in Advacare,
the region.
beat Chicago 6-1, Dl!trolt edged
the health maintenance organization that
Oakland 8-7. Milwaukee shaded
To take advantage of the AdvaCare advanMinnesota 6-5 In 10 innings and
your employer can offer to provide just about
tages. call your doctor- ask if he or she is partiSeattle defeated Baltimore 5-2.
every
medical
and
surgical
benefit
you'll
ever
Rain ended a game between the
cipating. Then talk to your employer or Advacare
Toronto Blue Jays and the aeveneed-for a single monthly premium. And

=====:ti

his

RE-OPEMINO SOONII
GINGERBREAD HOUSE
PRESCHOOL

SYRACU.SE and
MIDDLEPORT

In ·Ballet,

Tap .&amp; Jazz

him this before .

Kevin you do good - keep it up.
I'm not bere every day, only when
needed, like vacations and sucb,
however, I do appreciate the way
you handle your job and so does
everyone else.

BEGINNERS
thru ADVANCE

Like to wlsh Erma Cleland •
Chester the best that lite bas to lifer
· siP deserves tt.
Erma Is handing In her apron at
Crow's Family Restaurant after 28
years of service.
She wlli be missed but we want
her to enjoy every minute d
everyday · all those years of hard
work were appreciated and your
presence will be greatly missed.
Good luck and God bless.

our

Like to Inform everyone that
Harold and Genevieve Richard,
Long Bottom are NOT leaving 10011
old Meigs Coonty.
They recently held an auctbn at
their home and people got the
Impression that they were selling
out Elltlrely. Tlils Willi not exactly
the case - they merely had an
auction.

sees IS

Majors

-

NATIONAL l.&amp;Wl~E
lly Unk• rn.. We-r·+cw•
NY
Philo
Montlt"al
Sl. 1.41

doctors know the advantage of seeing a good
doctor occasionally.
·
What does that mean to you? That
Advacare has some important advantages to

'C
va . are'"
The health ca,. plan
that helps keep you healthy.

W L 1\1. GB

61 6l .a 21y,
~ 64 .f92 Zl
M 12: .ca ll

,..,..,.

C!&gt;l

51 74 .01 ll\1.1

WMI

7155.563 fifl 62 .D 7
64 62 .Mil

Wtuls An!OOny, Middleport, Is
very happy about a blrtllday card
he received and wen.be sllluld be as
11 was from President Rlluald
Reagan, signed by the President
himself wlth gold seal and all.
Wtuls will celebrate his 82
btrtlxlay on AUgust ~Willis also tells us that h~ toUIId a ·
ladles pocketbook recetltly 11!1 be
was driving on Gravel Hlll, Mlddleport, on bls way ll Valley Lun\ber.
He took ~ Jllfse to ~ dtlce at
Valley Lumber and the IM'1ll!r wu
located and pocketbook rel\1111ed.
As Wlllls stattd "we are Ill
honest poople and stllllaokllll tor a

at 446-5283. Advacare
• •
headquarters is at Holzer
~ ~
clinic. 385 Ja.ckson PikeAd • •
Gallipolis. Ohio.
. . .

!iA 42 .titi7 6162..D:!I

Slrol/4,

' Ohio Health MilllCNIU ~UI III)l.
Holzer Qniu8k.le Ot:si olcertral

.rn

Your honesty 1s otrtafllly I!Ol'lh
. l!illlng and oh yes, do have a llk:e
; . birthday.

7
n~

59 9J .465 U'h
~··ltsc*a
ClnrlnnM1 5, P1ttsb.irgh 4
St. Lruls 7, Atlanta 1
Ctllc.., 5, Ho.lston 3
New York 11, San Diego 6
Philadelphia 6, Los Anaek'&amp; ~
San FTancllco 1. Mo~al 0, 12 lnntlgs
We I Ia(a a.nw.
Moo:nlll (Younna D-91 11 San Fran·
dlaliDow,. !Hl.l!li p.m.

PllllldripNa IRuffln 6-3! at Loa
tlli p.tn.

: . .' Also In the birthday departllltllt
: : 1s Leola Gtlmore, Be.ch Grove

: · 'Road, Rutlaud. She wt11 celebrate
. . ·her blrtlday today. .
: : She ~ undel'lftllt ~ry
. · .and Is I'I!CUJll'I11tlnf at her lmle.

· . · . Beit wishes.

An ~

tUt.B;~p. m

Ch!c.,o tMoyer

~3 t

at Houston 1~n

p.m.
New York !Gooden J3..4t at San vrao

8-8). 8: l5

1Whlt.lon Hi), Jl:Oip.m .
...........,.•• G~~~~e~
No Gamel ScheWled

....

AMI!IUfAN I.KAGUE
lblon
Toro'*'
NY
D!ttoll

BirR"
(."'vlnd

Mlwlil!e

"''"
KC
......
..,,
Tex»

Oolllond
MJM

w·

L Pu. GB
74 52 !/!1 -

6'1
61
If!
64
64
411

~
~

..531 ~
.532 1

60 .511
~

-·-

.D

1
8\ol,

61 .ru 9Y.!
61 .D 10

70~.!16

-

86m!lk'
!II &amp;I .8 I~
56 'Kl •.w 1f
~ 71 .137 15

sa n .czs u

purchasal a season ticket to the
MeiCI Ca!Dty Fair. This year was
tllt ftrltYMrbe missed buying that

tldlet Kenny lor years took
plcturell of all lOOse who Jllrchased
animals at the 4-H Junior Livestock
Sale. .
tor the past few years he bas had
an assistant, Larry Baker, as
KeaDy was just not able to stand the
lllraiD of standing for hours taking

Cookout held for Senior club

pcturel.
4Jso, this was the first year In 27

Friendly Neighbors Scipio Senior
Citizens Club held a cookout
recently at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Carr.
Those attending were Jimmie
Dillon, Violet DiUon, Doris Fox,
Sarah Rollins, the Rev. Jay C.
SlUes, Cecil and Clot lne Blackwood ,
T.K. Workman, Mildred L. Work-

that his daughter, Jennifer was
unable to attend the talr as she was
a patient at Holzer Medical Center.
Hope next year everything ls
much better.
I have bad a slight case of

laryngitis and since I am pinch
hitting this week for Bob and
Olarlene the gang at the office have
certainly went out of their way to
help out.
Nancy Yoacharn jumped In and
covered a meeting tba t I should
have taken care of and Barbara
Riggs, mother hen tha t she is, saw
that I took my medicine. Oh yes,
David Harris was kind enough to
run an errand for me.
You guys are nice - yoo betcha 1

KPIUCIIy 6, Chk:qo I
Detroit 8, Ollklllnd 7
Mllwlulft 6. Mtil'l!IO!a S, lllnn.lne!
Seatdr 5, e.Jdmn 2
~6, Clrwludll, 1¢. rain
Wet • s'aG.,..
TIX'tl,_ lKr.r' U-9 aDd C«unn (7.J) at
~ lSIIrndell 0.1 81\d Roamn I·Zl. 2,
. 5! \li p.m.
BaA:In tHurst S4tatTexai(Cc:nN7-llJ .
t.ll p.m.
KaDIU City (Jik'b:ln M l t1 ~
lBPiitter 7-llll. 8 pm.
Millnelc4a (HeM f.lll II Mitwawift
tN~ IM),IU5 pm.
Baltlmore (Bai:l.~ 14-7) at Seattle
(Swlll.SJ, ·J):J5 p.m.
.........,.aGIIftMII
Mlnlletotl at MUwaullf'le
'lbroukl at Clewland. nljhl
Tew . , ChJcl&amp;o, nJchl
Blhlmcn II Oakland, 2, 1111111
New Ycft It Setttle, _,.jtd
Dl'lml I t Calb'nla, nlaht

man. Nellie Borg an, Millie Grueser
and guest Meron, Nettle E. SlUes,
Louise Myers. Exa Mae Christian.
Louie M. Christian. Lee Lefebre.
Rachel Lefebre. Leah Williams.
Ernest Carr. Sadie Carr. Selah
Wyatt. 'thris and John Hannon.
Orville Phillips and Mildred
Phillips.

owned by Julla Corporation and bas
a new branch campus In Lancaster,
In addition to branch campuses In
Gallipolis, Portsmouth and Well·
ston. The Lancaster branch opened
last year and has been growing
rapidly.
JuUa Corporation also owns
Lorain Business College which has
campuses ln Lorain, Sandusky and
Marion. The Marion branch was
opened In Aprtl of of this year.
Southeastern Business College is
accredited by the Association of
Independent Colleges and Schools.
It Is approved for veterans training
and administers several assistance
programs to help students woo
auallly, finan ce their educational

The Olive Thwnship Volunteer
Fire Department, Reedsville. will
hold a chicken barbecue Saturday,
Aug. 30.
In addition to tt.&gt; barbecue
entertainment will be provided,
·games throughout the day will be
r1!ered, as well as an extended

menu.
Ollcken dinner will sell tor $4,

programs. These programs Include
the Pel! Grant. SEOG, Na tio n~
Direct Student Loan, Guaranteed
Student Loan, Ohio National Guartl
Scholarship and the Ohio Instruetlonal Grant.
Soutreastern Business College
offers contemporary, up-to-date
skills and training to meet today's
needs in busi ness, industry a~d
government .
Students at Southeastern B u~­
ness College won 19 awards and tied
lor third in the Office Educa tlon
Association State Competitive Con·
test held th is year. Group advisor
for the contest was Joyce Warner, a
secretarial instructor at the schO!jl.

MARCUM CONTRACTING

Chicken barbecue announced

PHONE 614-985-4141
CHESTER, OHIO
HOME BUILDING

which wlll Include a beverage and
dessert with hot dog; and sloppy
joes to be served throughout the
day.
A horseshoe pitch will be held at
noon. Persons who wish to par tlci·
pate must register at 11 a.m. Cash
prizes will be awarded. From 7 to 10
p.m. music will be provided by the
Blue Knob Express Band.

•oRTHo®
Hornet &amp;Wasp
Killer
Has reach of 20' aboveground. Controls yellow

jackets. ants and many other insects. 15oz. ., 103M

'

WRiiinER ®

•Interior &amp; E11terior
•Remodeling
•Kitchens
•Roofing

•Siding
•General Carpentry
•Repair Work

REFERENCES - FREE ESTIMATES

Ideal lor shutters, louver doors and wicker furnitu re. No
brush marks, covers evenly. Sprays most liquids includ·
ing l ertilizer and inaeclicides.

SPECIAL PRICE

180

$54~5

G~

PRICE

'139

•50065

lf•" I 10'
SPECIAL
PRICE

Everything Is &amp;O for the Ilea
market, yard lll!d craft sale tD be

held on the stdeWalb mRacine m
SeptemiPr 6, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
You are Invited to Join In the tlln
and bring yoor tables aad let up
your wares. Tilt event Is belnl
sponsored~ the Racine Merchants
; As90Ciatlon.
'1
If you are In~ In partlelpat·
· ~ 1ng JU!t call ~21«1 ~ 949-l!lm.
Also a reminder not to l:&gt;reet the
third annual Racine Fall Festival to
be held on October 4.

$#!159
~

150067

SERV/!}TJIR®
4 cu. ft. rolled-edge seamless tray has 300-lb. load
capacity. Wide proffle 13" x 4 ~ pn&amp;umatic tire and

steel wheel. 15W

SPECIAL PRICE

$~~99
~·~•
~~ ~

•

~I

Carbide Blade
Genuine tungsten carbide teeth. So economical
it's cheaperto replace than resharpen. 126890

Caulk
Lifetime mfr. warranty

against cracking, peeling

}:;:f':¥i.~311"1"
Cos! after mfr.

FJRE'E

or separating as long as
rebate
you own your home. Clear
or white. t 0.3 oz. 10806,56 •50074.5

Reforme~

SPECIAL $1ft
PRICE
Less mfr. mail-In
rebate 50~
Cos latter mfr.
rebate $f49

Neutralizes rust and
inhibits it from returning.
Eliminates need to sand
metal. One-step, no mess.
no waste. 4 oz. 18520-099 1150076

3M

Press-In·
Place"' Caulk
100% butyl adhesive

forms a permanent seal .
Won 't crack, shrink or dry

out. s;.." x 22' roll. 12150

SPECIAL $~99
PRICE
~
Less mfr. mail-In
rebate $2.00
Cost after mtr.
rebate
150077

99C

Cl!,!Jt~

1-Qt. Septic Tank Treatment
Prevents clogging, resists soapS And detergents.

Single treatment guaranteed lor one lull year. IK·37

SPECIAL PRICE

$4~!9

· · Kenny Grover, long time plllto: : :grap~r for the Melp Olwlty Fait
•: ·Board, has certalnly had hls &amp;hare
•

7~ ", 18-Tooth

Rust

For hot or cold water. Corrosion resistant vinyl. Copper

SI'ECIAL

TAArnerlcon'~

II RUST·OLEUM ~

CPVC Tubing
pipe sizes. 150005,7
!-;" I 10'

WA.Vennont

lllld llllfn/ ~SPECIAL $150
Lifetime&lt;!! W PRice

Handi-Dutr.. Airless
Spray Gun

6· Ft. Aluminum
. Stepladder

Lightweight, durable stepladdMwlth pall shell. .
Features side spreader bar and double angle bractng
on bottom shell. 1356
$~699

~

SPECIAL PRICE

1

t50079

Maste:c

I

Padlock

"' , ·"' 1£11

catiJJrnla 2, Nf!'W York 0
EloltGn 8. Tt&gt;XU 1

For the first time, Southeastern
Business College 1s otferlng after·
noon classes from'l to 4:30p.m.
Momingclasses are9 a.m. to U:30
p.m. and evening classes are 6 to
9: 30 p.m. The scheduUng is de·
signed to allow people with full time
jobs to be able to attend college
either fuU or parttlme.
Southeastern Business College is

Wheelbarrow

--

j~leh&amp;- 9 1 ,

C\ndMIIItBrownlng ll ·IOlat P ltttbJ.rth
tWlnn~J . 7:~ p.m.
Atlanta tMaN er U·ll) at Sl . Louis l'l'lldor

Fall quarter classes will start
Sept. 20 at Southeastern Business
, College. The college has Associate
Degree programs In accounting,
business administration, executive
secretarial and micro-computer
technology. The college also otters
diploma programs In junior accounting, medical office secretary
and secretarial.

of health problems.
For the past 27 years Grover has

~-yang."

61 65 .t&amp;l 10

59 66

.

Rowena Vaughan not only stops
and smells the roses but she Is
passing them out- with kind words
lhatls. Than)&lt;s.

ere

Scoreboard

Wednesday, August 27, 19S,Ii

Southeastern Business College set for year

Doing a good job

THE DANCE
COMPANY
Is Offeri" .
Classis
fn·
.,

The Daily Sentinel. .
Page- 7

.

Boyd fans season high ·10· in Bosox .win

\

i:Meeting set

Standard deadlatch. Turn button Interior, key exterior.

&gt;by neighbors
· : · The Scipio Senior Citizens
: : ~ ~ClUb will inlet·
•: 111t the Scti*l Fllthaual! 'Ibundlly, .
:- ~. 28, at 7 p.m.
·
. : - . Penons to lQ1t lllldWicllt!s
; . · 'lbe cllib wiD 1110 4 ' rn
:. Prnsaul'f day 011 !leptemtler 3, fnlm
· 1Q a.m untn noon with members of
. the Rutland Emergency Squad m
· , 'charae.

4·pin tumbler mechanism . Exclusive dual steel lock-

Full lip strike. 1400T·3

ing levers lock each shackle leg. 2 brass keys. no

SPECIAL PRICE

SPECIAL PRICE

Hardware Lumber

$3~r

lndlv~ual dealers may limn quanlllies. Individual dealers may not stock

KING BUILDERS SUPPLY
405 North Second Avenue

1tioot

·We can help.

MIDDLEPORT

�Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

WIN A 3M · UTE
SHOPPING SPR.EE!

Nicholson reunion held

FROM ·FOODLAND

SEE STORE FOR ENTRY BLANKS
ONE SHOPP.ING SPREE TO BE GIYEN 'AWAY
EACH NIGHT ON WYAH TV 23

"T.V. AS IT USED TO BE •••• "
MONDAY, SEPT. 1 THRU FRIDAY, SEPT. 5, 1986
KRAFT

I
I

~~~:

II

Your Low-Prieed~
Independently Owned
Customer Serviee
Supermarket

I
I
I

\

I
\

1

Coupon and t10.00 .or More Addltk&gt;nal Purchaoe
Excluding Ctgarettea. Tobacco. Beer and WWle.
Coupon Good thru Sat, August 30, 1986

I

.

BUNCH

69&lt;

Cauliflower

Sweet
Southern
Peaches

99S.

:·

49S.

MASON - Mason Chapter 117,
Order of the Eastern Star, Mason,
W.Va., wUl meet Wednesday, 7:30
p.m. for a multiple Initiation
ceremony. Potluck following the
meeting. All area memhers urgro
to attend.

oscu rum
CHEESE HOTDOGS
or IEEF FIAIIIS

FLANDERS

Beef Patties

I··· pltg.

$4 99

:o~·

KRAFT

i

FOREST RUN - Wild\\Uod
Garden Club will meet 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the Foresl Run
Church.

$179

16 OL pkg.

THURSDAY
PAGEVll.LE- SclptoTownshlp
Trustees wm meet 7 p.m. Thursday
at Pageville.

:·$199

POMEROY - Free clothing day
Will be held at the Salvation Army,
Pomeroy. on Thursday, from 10
a.m. to noon. All area residents In
need of clothing are welcome to
come.

SIZE
SUNIEAM

16 ot. Ill.

20 lb. bog

$54,_9_ _ _ _ _ _~99&lt; _ _ _ _~

WHilE IIIEAD
20 Ol. loaf

TENDERBEST BONE-IN

Regular or Decaffeinated

MIDDLEPORT- There wUl be
a revival at MID:ileport Independ·
ent Holiness Chureh through Aug.
3~ with Rev. Wayne States. Se!VI·
. ~es at 7:30 p.m. nightly. Special
. singing to be featured. Everyone
;welcome.

ROUND
BEEF
ROAST

S16t.

Maxwell House

USDA Choice

Instant Coffee

Sirloin Steaks

THURSDAY
RliTLAND - Rutland TOI\'IIShlp
Trustees will meet In regular
session Thursday, 6:30p.m., at the
Rutland fire station.
FRIDAY
LONG BO'ITOM- There will be
a square dance at the Long Bottom
Community Building, Friday, l»·
ginning at 8 p.m.
SATURDAY
BAHSAN - The Ladies Auxlll·
lary of the Bashan Fire Depart.
men! will sponsor an ice cream
social on Saturday, August ll at the
fire station beginning at 5: 30.p.m.
The menu includes Ice cream, cake,
pie, sandwiches, pop and coffee.
Entertainment will also be
~vlded.

ATHENS- The Guthrie reunion
will be held Aug. 30 at the Athens
County fairgrounds. Basket dinner
at noon. Bring lable service,
beverages and lawn chairs.

Labor Day travelers are invlled
slop for free refreshments at the
Meigs REACT Team's annual
Labor Day Weekend Safety Break
on Friday thtough Monday. The
safely brea k, located at the !llulh·
hound roadside park on U.S. 3.3 six
miles north of Pomeroy, will &lt;tJen 4
p.m. on Friday and remain open,
around the clock, until 8 p.m.
Monday.
Conducted as a public se!VIce,
the local safety break is pare of a
national program sponsored by

Fish dinner

ID

HARRISONVILLE - Scipio
Township Volunteer Fire Dept. is
sponsoring a Caplain D's fish
dinner at the fire house In Harrison·
ville on Sunday,Sept. 7. Serving will
begin at 11 a.m. and continue
thtough 4 p.m. Prlrt' for adull
dinners will be $l. Childref s
dinners will be $2.
Then on Sunday, Sept. 14, the fire
department Is sponsoring a garden
tractor 111ll slartlng at 1 p.m.
Pu Ding classes wUI be !llO. 1000 and
1100 pounds and a non-refundable
entry fee of $3 will te char~d.
Trophies for the pull are being
sponsored by Rutland Furniture
Co.
Flea market
RACINE -Flea markl&gt;t. Sept. 6,
sponsored by Ue Racine Mer·
chant's Association, will set up
between 9a.m. and5p.m. Yards ale
and craft Items will be fealured and
anyone wishing to sel up a table
srould contacl 949-2104 or 949-2800

First Sergeant James W. Hayman retired on Aug. I after 25
years. 3 ~mnths In the U.S. Army.
Hayman served with the Fourth
Infantry Division, Second Infantry
Division, Second Armor Division,
lOth Special Forces Group, Eighth
Infantry Division, and Tradoc as a
drlll sergeant. He was a senk&gt;r
Instructor at tiM&gt; drlll sergeants
school and was flrsl sergeant of a
lralnlng troop.
Hayman served overseas in
Korea, had three tours of duty In
West Germany, Alaska, England,
Okinawa , and 1\\U combal tours In
VIetnam. His decoratbns Include
mertlorlous servlrt' medal. first
oak leaf cluster, anny commenda·
tion medal, second oak leaf duster,

for rrore infonnation.

!Wvlval

SUNDAY
RACINE -Racine Fire Dept. Is
sponsoring a chicken barbeque this
Sunday with serving starting at 11
a.m. Dinners $!.50 eac h. Hall
chickens $2.75. The ladles auxiliary
wUI be serving romemade Ice
cream.

•'·
: Jane J. West. daughter of Evelyn
•'B. Thomas, MID:IIeport, was
· awarded a data processing man1agement certificate !rom the In·
:,mstltute for Certification of Compu·
'.ter Professionals (ICCPi for
lsuccesslully completing the 1986
examination.
'
West, a compuler programmer·
analyst, fo!11lel'ly employed by
;Computer Sciences Corporation In
::Morrestown, New Jersey, was one

'

of til! 949 successful candidates rut
of 2289 who took this year's
examination.
West holds a master's degree In
business administration from St.
Jos&lt;ph's University In PhUadel·
phi a, P a. She Is a 1973 graduate of
Meigs High School and now resides
In Springboro, Ohio, with her
husband, Richard E. West,
Esquire.

. : KE CREAM
• HaH Galon

HYSELL RUN - Hysell Run
Holiness Church, off Ohio 1:/A on
County Rd. 15, wUI re In revival
Wednesday, Sept. 3, through Sept.
7. Se!VIces will begin nightly at 7:30
p.m. with Rev. George William
from Point Rock as speaker.
Special singers wUI re featured
nightly and ,Pastor Mike Thompson
welcomes the public.

rtbbons, NKCO profeslonal &lt;level·
opment ribbon, armed forces expeditionary medal, navy unit citation,
VIetnam service medal with four
campaign stars, . drill sergeant
ldentiflcallon badge, and the VIet·
nam cross of gaUentcy.
The retiree, his wife, Jean and
lhelr son, James, reside at 33.BJ
Hayman Road, Long Bottom. Mr.
and Mrs. Hayman's son, James,
will be attending Rio Grande
Community College this fail. Hay·
man also plans to attend college this
!aU altlllugh his plans are not
complete at this time.

I·

j:

,·

ALL WOMEN'S

CONVERSE,
FOOT JOY,
ADIDAS

!

_

$389 LB.

PORK &amp;
BEANS

GlADE "A"

'

PICK-0-CHICK

.···$1

•

MEN'S, WOMEN'S &amp; CHILDREN'S

1n4d

1

729
4" SEWER &amp;
DRAIN PIPE
1o·n.
IIlii 01
POl

a.,.i
IMIT llllllH

'"''"
....
GIOUIIOif
IIUnlltl
....,........

799

299

~~.~..

..,, lotffiol
,., Special ~

MOBILE H!lri
SIIRTIMG.

s9(

369hotl

....

44&lt;

'-"lllllll AMI ~ Wid

1'4'' COIIUGIHD

...

NOW

$19 99

ltillt Yonlf
and Sa11...

.;v PIESSUIE IlEATED POSTS
t1§l!f,i!f::'
.. .,
:;;::,;:;.,•· ~

In Grey &amp; Whitt
and Pink &amp; Whitt

Instant Tea

•

: OJ

•i

SIZE

m 4.09

- · 111A11D

omoo1

8'

YU
41

1!'
I

GIIYINI!IO
ltG.tllll

METAL ROOFING
&amp;SIDING

10' 1r 15' 16'
6.49 749 8.49 9.99

14'

16' II' lO' ll' 14'
X 17.07 20.45 ll.l! lUI lUO

16"•1'.- -l.U
!6"•10' ...- 7.16

26"111' ....._1.11

Custom 1utlengths
11111 on mat11ial,
IOntlruction ~~~~~.
and labor 10111.

Glllllll I
'111111D lllll

JAR

CHILDREN'S

IHIIGI

ll.l''1l' ·-UO
17.1"•11' - 11.00
17.1"111' - 11.19

2•.c•99(

59(

Pkgs.

'

•USDA Pood lUI- 8lldv AootpUitl •Not R......... ble l'or TYPIIflrophlcol Erroro

'

.

. .

'

.

.

·

····· · · ·· · ~

··· · ·

· ·· · ·

·

NOW

S1999
•

CAN

.. ..

..

.•

&amp;

IUMil

NURSE MATES

1• ra.n.

110 111. n.

U" lit COYIUGI

l6" liT CO'ftll&amp;l

20°/o OFF

S4695

PIESSUIE TIUTID OUTDOOR LUMIU

HARTLEY
SHOES

.

O'DELL Jhla7/a/uteLUMBER CO.
·'!iS ~:!!a

~·

"

.

-

ALL WOMEN'S

SOFT SPOTS

Reg. $25

HEINZ INSTANT

.

20°/o OFF ,

GAIVIIIIZED

In Grey &amp; White

Baby Food

WORK SHOES
&amp; BOOTS

GIAllO 113

JAZZ OXFORDS
Hamburger or
Hot ,Dog Buns

AU MEN'S

IIIOIIti II

"""'
S4195

LUIIEI ." 11.64 11.01 2UO ll.OI lUl 41.11 51 .04

30Z.

FOODLAND

..

IS lOW II

Reg. 525.00
NESTEA

~

ll"dll"

IICHtll,lol
for MM.

CHILDREN'S SADDLE SHOES

$129

'

1n

WOOD

OFF

'

20°/o OFF

SH£AnNG

Ullf''\

... .

TENNIS SHOES

1111:1 SHINGLES

•s111111111

30°/o

$2 69

ADIDAS, CONVERSE,
FOOT JOY

~ ROOfiNG

I
I'"
I $4995

•

LEATHER HIGH TOP &amp; COURT SHOES

3~

AU MEN'S

20°/o OFF

WOODIN T111T
.....
.......!IAT

·I

VAN

SEWING NOTIONS
QUILTING SUPPLIES
HANDMADE CRAFTS
POUND GOODS

defense medal, overseas service

4.99

T-Bone Steaks

EASTERN HILL ···
FABRIC
SHOP
.
::
5 miles north of Ct.ster, Ohio ·

army achlevemenl medal, six
awards ol the good conduct medal,
an army service rtbbon, national

·IMADOW GOlD

SHASTA
COLA

oo ·

OPIII MM.·frl. 7•30·5:00

SGt. 7:30·3 ....
PHONE 992-5500

1

'

REACI' International and the
:
,!
American Trucking Association.
.
Locally. Ill! safety brmk has the
"'
support rJ. til! Ohio State Patrol and
•
the MEigs County Sheriff's Dept.
OPEN MON.-FRI. 10 A.M.· S P.M. •
Donations from a number of L..-_.....;._.....;;..
SAT. 10-2 _ __. •.:•
sources are making it possible for
the Meigs REACT Team 1D again 1 - - - - - - - - - - ' ' - sponsor t~ safety break program
which IIJpefuily will make this
weekend 's IDUday driving safer.
Guy HyseU, on behalf of Meigs
REACT, extends thanks for IIIJse
clonatlons.

l:ll
-

JAR
.aJPEI Pl!MIUM

for~.

Hayman retires after
25 years in service

:Certificate awarded to West

99

8 oz.

reunions, as well as an ttem

Safety break planned

Community calendar/ area happenings

WEDNESDAY
LONG BOTTOM - The Long
Bottom Community Association
w1ll hold a monthly meeting
Wednesday, 7:30p.m., in the Long
Bottom Community Building.

Wieners

· :., SINGLES
.'

.~
. ----------~.---------------------

OSCAR MAYER

"BEST"

Tender
Green
Broccoli

· · : . ATI'END REUNION - Members of lbe Nklholson family attended tbe annual reunion recently in Meigs County.

1-LB. PKG.-ALL MEAT

~----------------'

Snow White

cholson, secretary-treasurer.

~

first!

FREE!

I

bmlt 1 With

,.
Nicholson: Norman and AU"'P'f ;:
Will: Waid Nicholson; Danny ·:
Clare: Bill and carolyn 'Nicholson, :.
with Miranda and B.J .; Duane, ::
Brenda and David Will; Son!JY ·:
Nicholson: Dean and Dottle Will: :·
Van ce and Donn a Higgins; Laura ::
Rupert, Tom and Mona Hudgens; ·
and Pal Wood. .
·
..
The new president, Mike Nlcho} ·.
son, asked all present Co brln!( ;
pictures of families and paot ·

Shop the
Want Ads

BUY ONE,
GET ONE

32 oz.
JAR

The descendents of Philip W.
Nicholson and Corinna Cornell
Nicholson recently held their 52nd
reunion with 31 people in
attendance.
Famlly association president.
Bill Nicholson, led lhe group In
prayer before dinner.
New officers elected during a
shor1 business meeting were Mike
Nicholson, president; Bill Nichol·
son, vice-presidenl; carolyn '&lt;i·

while eh•phanl auctb n, lo the 1987;
reunion which wUI again be held
attendanet', Laura Ruperl , the Ill&gt; flrsl Sunday in August a t Forel!' ;
oldest, and Tom and Meyna Acres Park, Rutland.
Nicholson Hudgens of Englewood, . . - - - - - - - - - - - - -··
Colo. for traveling the farthest. The
door prlzl&gt; went to Allegra Will.
Enlertalnment was provided by
Vance and Denna Higgins.
Otl&gt;!rs attending were Dale and
Dorothy Nicholson; Norm and 1---------~· '
Vivien Hamilton; Mike and Bonnie
: ::
Nicholson, with Ryan, Brldgel and
Mattlv&gt;w; Ethel Nicholson: Neva
:.;

I

Miracle Whip

"

~ ~~

Prizes were awarded to Malth&lt;&gt;w
Nicholson for being Ibe youngesl in

I 00111 \\II "I 1'1 B I til 1'0 \
Speciols
•Money Saver Items
•Everyday low Prices
•USDA Choice Meats
•Tender Fresh Produce
•We Welcome Federal
Food Stamps and WIG
•We Sell Money Orders

·-..,

--- .
-·...... lh

1.1'"•

MAn VAN VRANIEN

--

VISA

OWNER
210

E~

Main. POtt•oy

992-5272
MON.-SAT. 9-5
FRIDAY 9·8

�Page 10-The Daily Sentinel
The Little Miss America Pageant
Is now accepting applications lor
the "Ohio State Little Miss AmerIca" pageant which wW be held
Saturday, Oct. 4, at the Holiday
Inn-French Quarters In Penysburg, with thedeadllneforentry set

Little Miss
accepting
applications

Oct. 1.

Waclnasday, August 27, 1984-

Pomaroy-Mjddlaport. Ohio

'

AU girls between the ages r1 three
months through 1.8 }"ars, there are
seven age divisions, are elglble to

participate. Wlrinersdtlis ~ant
wW receive J;l'l1.eS as wen as
savings bonds and tmlr full national entry tee psld to attend tm
national pageant which wW be held
In • Opryland Hotel, Nashvllle,
Tenn .. July of 1987.
Girls Interested mparticipating
may contact Marsha Jolmson, P .0.
Box 9457 Olattanooga, Tenn., 37412
or call (615) '899-1221 or Ilona
Rousch (419) 599-2121.

Copeland
•

•

reop1ent

By ID'AN W. MErlJ..ER
LOS ANGELES (UP!) -Ted

Knlgllt, the sllver-balred comic
actor who won ·two Emmys for his
role as the pompous, bumbling TV
news anchonnan Ted Baxter m
"The Mary Tyler Moore Show,"
has died of cancer. He was 62.
Publlctst Henry Bollinger said
Knight died at his home Tuesday
afternoon of compllcatlons from
cancer d the urtnary tract that was
diagnosed about a year ago. His
Wife, Dorothy. and three children
were with him.
Knight played more than Dl
television roles In his career, but he
belli known lor his portrayal rt
Te4 Baxter on ''The Mary Tyler
MOOre Show."
:As tbe egotlsUcal newscaster on
!hit show, set In a Mlnneapolls TV
ni!Wsroom, Knight provided a
cOO!lc l:lll l:lr an aU-star ensemble
thin lnclllded Moore, Ed Asner,
~ White, Olrls Leachman,
Valerie Harper and Gavin
MacLeod.
"I really loved Ted Baxter and
Ted Knight altogether," said Grant
Tinker, who p-oduced tbe sbowthat
ran on em from 1971 to 1977. "I
loved them both. They gave so
many or us so many great laughs. "
MacLeod, who played newswr1ter Murray Slaughter on the show,
called Knight "one of tbe most
creative people I ever met."
"We were planning to do a !iay

COPYRIGHT 1986 - THE KROGER CO . ITEMS AND
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, AUG . 24, THROUGH SATURDAY, AUG. 30, 1986.WAJMERO'I ANDGAI.lii'OUS,Oil STt\ftES
WE RESERVE Tm RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES . NONE
SOLO TO DEALERS .

w"'

''
U.S. GOV'T INSPECTED,
THE MORE BEEF GROUND BEEF,
3-LB. OR 5-LB. FLAVORSEAL PACK

Meat Information

1-800-632-6900

Extra Lean
Ground Beef

Call This Number Toll Free With
Questions And Talk To Our Tramed
Meat Ex&lt;Jert:s!

Pound

Chicken of
the Sea Tunas.s-oz
"AS ADVERTISED ON TV"

I

I

Whole Boneless
Top §ir,J.q.!~RLOiN s~~-K

88
SLICED FREE
INTO TOP
SIR LOIN STEAKS

c

Post

Raisin Bran .... ,............................

.

'.

•

1s-oz.

LIMIT ONE PLEASE

'

"AS ADVERTISED ON TV"

Lay's
6 5-..... ... .. : .............. . .... 7-oz.

"Troopers

I

I

1~0Z.CANS,MTN.DEW,

-

Sandy -Mac
Boiled Ham . .

Pepsi Free or $
Pepsi Cola ......
12-Pak

Round White
Potatoes ......... .

Pudding
Po

Bag

traffic deaths n Ohio."
The commander said a driver's
chances of surviving a crash are ll
times greater at 55 mph than at 70
mph. The driver has only a 00-50
chanre of surviving a crash at 70,
Henderson said.
Henderson reminded motorists
that the patrol can be reached In
Meigs Coonty at 992-2397 and In
Galla County at &lt;140-2433 If they
need help or want to report a
drunken driver. The patrol monitors CB channel9. The patrol's call
letters are KNN ll83.

'eigs fair poll results listed

lb.

CHOCOLATE/VANILLA, CHOCOLATE OR
VARIETY PACK, FROZEN JELL-0

10-lb.

A majority of Meigs countlans
polli!d at the Meigs County Fair
be~e the county Is not receiving
Its fair share ct tax dollars and that
the state Isn't providing enough
r~-ources
for highway
ImprOvements.
·
Sq.te representative candidate
Gjqiy Hunter revealed that 76
paocent rt thosepoDed fell that way.
1!Je outmme of the poll Isn't
ait;rJslng, Hunter said, "given the
diMIIal record d highway construe-

~

88

tlon In Meigs County."
The poll overwhelmingly supported the passag~ of legislation
raising the drinking age to 21· for aU
alcoholic beverages. Meigs residents felt that jobs, highways and
economic development were tbe
most lJ'esslng concerns for the
area. Hunter thanked all who
participated In the p&gt;ll and enocuraged anyooe who wants to exlJ'ess
an q&gt;lnlon to do sobywrttlnghlmat
22 S. May Ave., Athens 45701.

•

The Daily Sentinel

............. ......... 12-Ct.

c

California
Lettuce .......................................... Head

ALL WEEK

Double
Coupons
Manufacturer's

"AS ADVERTISED ON TV"

.L'eggs %
Price Sale

RAI&gt;IATOR

SER~CE
We can repair and re-core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-lfc

Ted Knight
Hartford, Conn.
Alter a tlrnelnNew York, Knight
moved to Los Angeles In 1957 and
was ooe ct Hollywood's rosiest
~tors, appearing In such TV series
as "Gunsmoke" and "Get Smart."
He also provided voices for
hundrals of commercials and
cartoon shows.
In 198), Knight co-starred In the
movie "Caddyshack."
Besides his wlle of 36 years,
Knight Is !l.lrvlved by !DDS, Ted Jr.,
32, and Eric, 22, and a daughter,
Elyse, 26.
Private services were planned
lor Friday. ThefamUy asked that In
lieu d fiowers donations he made to
the Prlce-Pottenger Foundation to
!lnanre fUms on chlldren and
natural llfestyles.

lor effective competition In the
shuttle service.
"Effective competition requires
hourly service, especially at peak
hours, and Pan American woold not
have enough slots at LaGuardia to
~rate hourly service," the department said.
The department said Texas Air
and Pan Am had OO!nlttedthatPan
Am's shuttle service woold have
gaps, Including some at peak hours.
In Houston. Texas Air said It Is
studying both the government's
decision "and a number of ~lions
available" to the rompany "and we
are stUI confident that tm merger
with Eastern wUI be completed

PWS. OHi11 luppin I
furniture, Wttliling

ond Groduation
Statioowy, Magoork
Signs, RuWI« Stamps.
lusintss ferms,

(opy S.nius, Etc.
255 Mill St. Middleport
104 Mulberry a.,., Pem~roy

992-3345

Public Notice

WITH $10.00 PURCHASE
vour IIIOIIUioclullfld produc1a "como off"
coupono 111 WOI1h - I I Kroger wl!h •10.00"'-. ..
p u -. LlmMod to monuflctulld produclo COl"""" · • ·
"" to lnd Including liOC Off. Coupono ......

PUILIC NOTICE
Tho County l'f Mllgo hoo

Thil -

lllonliOCorocod

ioodllfocovlluoollly. L l m l - lor product
Limit ono 00"- coupon. Nil
- · wino or clg...,. coupono w11 bo
Not .,.
on froo ..._,,, Kroger'""~'"" or ro111 1oMcou-. Tho omount rwlundod ......,lliOIIII 1M 111101 of
tho 11om. You muot
pn&gt;duct In,._ -lllod on
tho coupon. Thlo ollw """'"" 0111y 10 menuflcllu!M

pu.-.

pu-

""*·

.,
•

producto"contoofl''c:ou_ro. _ _ .....,_ To.,,.
product ovalobllty lor ol our cult,_, Ollly ono • por """""!no lomlty, wll bo doublod on ony bfond 1ttm ' '
during - h liON vtoh.
'

........... .I IHD..Iion II I

"'llcy 0111- In

confor-

The statement continued, "We
are amazed at this order, which
strains credibility. It Is perplexing
that tbe DOT woold ap(rOVe, over
tbe objections of the Department d
Justice, tbe Pan Am-United transaction (In which United purchased
Pan Am's Pacific routes) and the
Northwest-Republic merger and
tum down the Texas Air- Eastern
rner!J!r, which the Justice Department said would be lJ'a&lt;:ompetltfve
and pro-ronsumer."
Texas Air also said the t~ro
parties to tbe transaction - Texas
Air and Pan Am - have assured
the DOT that Pan Am would
operate a competitive service with
a minimum of 12 round trips per
day In each d the two marlets."

Ohio weather
Cloudy tonight with scattered
showers and a low In the upper OOs.
Partly cloudy Thursday with a
high In the uPPfli"'Os.
The proba blllty of lJ'ecipltatlon Is
50 percent tonight and near zero
Thursday.
Winds wt11 be from the northwest
at 10 to 15 mlles an hour today and
from tbe north around 10 miles an
hour tonight.
Ohio Extended Forecu&amp;
Friday throup Sunday
Fair Friday through Sunday.
Highs wW be In the mid Ws to mid
'i'lls. Lows wtn be In the mid 40s to
mid !'ils.

PHONE
992-2156
Ollrile Dtutl' S.ntrMI Clnsdlt• Dt,t.

IV-

low· and moclorotHic»mo
_.._ A copy of tho Pt., II

PH. 949-2101
or 949·2160

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPliANCE

No Sunday Calls

CHESTEI-915 -3307

"""- lnloirmollon, ......

FJ'O:,::odv..;:

4/ l / lfn

)111 / tflt

~~WiMAN'S

875-419~

We~
Stock · ·
MobUe Home Parts

rw

·Get
Ftll ohHd
tl '" or Didlfllltl
Min

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

TVs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation
Service

VINYl &amp; AWMINUM
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling

Electronic Organs
Mobile service

Roofing of all Types
Worked in home 81811

TV ·1114-843·5248
APPL.-614-949-2145

" Free Estimates"

20yaaro

,,
~-~

k

• ..• . , , ..... . .

,t

··

-

1"~

...

..- 1&lt;

, ~

..... .. . ...

,.._.,work. 304-075-1523.

Appro• . 3 pickup lb.:t• 1tr1p ·
lumber . mus1 tlke 111. 304-175·
3421.
3ki«ens. black. 304-882-3401 .
UtMI coudl 1nd chelr. 1301
Main St.. Point Pl....nt. W. V1.

304-87&amp;-6811 .

6 Lost and Found
In Rodney young dog, red S.
bl.-::k marking. F...,.... C•ll

614 -246-5071
LOST Angu1 kelfer 8150 lbt. Cell

614-367·7576 .

7- 16 -16 2 mo.

Wanted To Buy

We pey cull tor lete model cleen
used can.
Jim Mink Chev.·Oids Inc.
Bill Gen•Johnson

•ROOFING &amp;
GUTTERING
New 8o Repoir

•SIDING SOFFIETT
•REMODELING OF
ALL TYPES
•TREE TRIMMING
•CONCRETE WORK
26 Veers Experience

HART'S
CONSTIUTION
992-7111

l!t5/l mo.

IWI OUT fOR FUIURI U!El

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

992-3410

985-3561
~II Mebe

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

•Washer~

•DIIhW&amp;Ihera

•Rangel

•Retrigarators

•Dryers •F reezers
PARTS

ond SE'RVICE

10-8-tfc

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

0

z

a:

- Addon1 tnd remodeling
- Roofk1g tnd guner work

Co~uterized H111ri~t

Air Selection
Swim Molds - Interpreting Setvices

L3 LISA M. KOCH. M.S.
z

- Conerett wortc

-

W&lt;&gt;Ck

(Fr" Estimete1J

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

P-roy, Ohio

Now localiDtt:
168 North Sound
Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We

Ca~

Fithing Supplin

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Billa Here
'"''- IUSIIISS '"ONE
16141 992-6SSD
JESIIINU l'tlOHI
161.) 992 -

WAfiiTEOTOBUYusedwood•

coel heeters. SWAIN 'S FURNI TURE. 3rd . • Ol;ve St. Glllipolis. Call 614-441-3158.
Old Ori ..tal rugs w•nted . Any
aile or condition . Cel toll fr•
1-800-433-1847.
Buying dtily gold. titvtf coin•.
ring•. jawelry, lterling Wll"l, old
colnt, llrge currency. Top pri·
c•. Ed. Burllttt Berber Shop.. ~

1967, 68, 69 John1on 35 . . :
boel motor for perta. 304-175¥ r
2073 .
., ~

.

-~~-----------;#•'
EIIIIJIII V 1111:111
SI:IVIt.t:;

11

_____
Help Wanted

'

~ '

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Secood Avenue. Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
8-13 tfn

4-15-'86-lc

PlUMBING &amp; HEADNG

2282 .

__:._

::t Licensed Clinical Audiologist

- Plumbing 1nd tl.ctrical

TOP CASH peid for '83 model
1nd newer usld c•r~. SrNth
Buidi -Pontiac. 1911 E111em
Ave .. Glllipolis . Csll 614·441-

2nd. Ave. Middlt~PQrt, Oh. 114.._...
892 · 3470.
~ ·.

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS

NEW HOURS

Wented: Full -tim. llve-tn hou ...:

1

men911"l®mlnp .,--deveninga.- 1
dl)1nM lmurs off, M-F) for"' i'ltttmtdltte ctre fecility: tor
dwalopment•lty dilllb~ ldultt
in Bidwell. High achool degr•.

currant drNer'alic.nse and fOOd .....
drtving r.cord """'lrtd; exp•
rience in WOfklng with pertons '.
with m.-tlf r•ardetion end '
deveklpmentt1 dillbilhi• pr• ~
f•.t . A ona-y11r conwnit..,.nt r
to poeitlon rtquked .
ery •·
ranp : 110.400· 14.510 .,.,,. ·

s..

BLUE STREAK
CAB CO.

107 Sycamore
Pomeroy, Oh.

PH. 992·7075

1:00 A.M. to 1:00 A.M. Mondalrhrv Saturday
TAXI TOKENS ON SA £AT
SENIOR CITIZENS
SWISHER-LOHSE
C&amp;K MARKET
HARTLEY SHOE STORE
VILLAGE PHARMACY
FRUTH PH,,RI~At;v

1

bcehnt vtcet~Jn and ineuranoe
bentfha. Sill l»id holideyund 5
paid penonel dey•vt~r . WMkendt off. Person hired will be
provid.t wtth • mh1irNim oliO
IDu,. of form~ I trelning rti1Wd
to the Job wftdt il paid bp tha
lliJtncy. s ... d "''""' to RoiNn
Eby, BuckeyeCommunity&amp;ervict~. p.o. lOA 104. Jecbon, Oh

·
•

•
:
•
·
•

~

r
:

•Mo. o..dlint for epplic.ntt: 4~
9·1 · 8e . EQuti Opport.unlty
Employer.

Milke Chriltna money, Mil
Avon. MMe ~5 percent. CeN

814-448-3358.

Howard L Wriftlll

ROOFING

NNd 1 IIJDOd jo b7 See Oidt It"" ;

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

NEW -IEPAII
Gutters
Downapouta
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

·.

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

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS

RAYMOND E. PROFFm (MAC) !
RACINE, 01110
Ollico 949-2438

ACCENT

PENa co•ANY

c•
742-2017

PH. 991·6931
Aller 5

4-16-' li tin

Joclr~e~~

Ave.

SUI&amp; Ar.Al lOURS
.....wlll.-liM-L 1·5,.
r... 6:30-8: FrL I -2 pm
Salu'*y 10·1 I:SO ..,
lAIGI AJRFAI &amp;

SIIIOIIY IY APPf.

PH. 304-675-2441

lmargen&lt;y~ Y•JY· jl)

3 Announcement.
SWEEPER tnd ttwlnt miChkle
r1p'*, ,.rta. •d .. pp._. Pidl
up tnd ..,_...,, Davit Vaewm
Cltlner . ont heH milt up
0~~ Crwk Ad. Call 114OteOI'et. . ellt• for ~y OOCI·
lion . Wllddi'tgt tapeclafty. Wll
. .tv... fDr
114-112·

'""'fee.

1501.

Automotive ptrtl •U.tanl in
GM deelenhlp. Mutt
ri.,f», AIJpty i't
al Smith
Nelton MOtors, 1800 E. M~n St.,
Pbmeroy. Ohio .

,_,lOfthllv•••P•

All llllll lit: 1: 11 11•11 1s

441·0214.

"Frtt Estimotes"
lnstalati.. lwallablt

NMd •tre money1 FRIENDLY •
HOME TOY PARTIES hlllmmedit.. open mgt for meneg. . end
dlmonttretort k'l lh•
lt'1
....,. fun tnd proflteblt. We
hive ovw 700 Pelting top end
gifts featuring the nav enl1n1ted
tiNdng dol Crtcktt which will be :·
edvwtfl_. 11"1 nationel T.V. No"' ..
etth klv•tment. no coltec:tlng,
ro delivering and no 1ervic:.
m_,.. Ahou IWidludtlireto
melle monf¥', hevtfun end ..... ..
h:»ur1 of lipere time. No up•
rienot nec:IIMry. Ctll 1·100227-1110.

•r•.

•Industrial

2-17-16-tln

BISSELL
BUILDERS

NEWCREDnCAAOII NOONE
REFU8EDI Vlu· MatttrCird
Info coli 1-llllol 1-51 •·

•81·31146 .., C-llaO 24 lwo.

Eloy A - Wo•ld 1714.00
pet 100. Ouerentted payment.
No • ' •· Oehill··l•d m.mpld
IRVtlope: Eltn· 715 3418 Enltr·
prlee. Ft. Pilfct, Fl. 33402 .

AVON. 3 open territor!•. caM
304-P&amp;-1029 .
HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES-_ ~
Serw pert-time in the Army Nttianel GuMdl end ttlend

ooll'lelull time. We provktt up
to 118.000 i'l tduc1donel ••·
, ... , •• PWS, provkltgoodplfY'
..d good ....., . 304-1753150 .. 1-1110·142-3111 .

Roger Hysell
Garage
lt. 124, ,_,.,Ohio
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

.ND AliA CALL

AI• Trtl..lule•

llplty OHict
F.- Noun

or 992-7121

PH. 992·5682

.......GiiBTjiolil''"'''' ..
&amp; Vicinity

-·Iillf•• ""•·
r-..o.------tls
6-17-ttc

BOGGS

U. S. IT. 50 EAST

IUSS IUC111C
1101'01 . , .

Alhlalll 111M •••·

GUYSVI.lf, OHIO

--··· --p·on;·e-rc;-y--· ------··
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Yerd .... Thu,., 21. Fri. 21. 8"11 v.,d s••• •uu. a. 21. n .
RL 3111D- .. Tuee.. W.t., Thun. 10:00em-1
,.,. bohlnd C.ldwoll'o
Lilt hou" top R011 Htll,
31). . . . .. ......

.......

~.....,

TN,.

.... &lt;f!I!!!!....IDYO-

Wid., Thu,., tnd Fri ..

27, 28 . 21 .

H • 28.

Tw
..- -H r o
..,......
---l n. 1824lh

Avo.

Rd.

Aug~ll:

1~mltHw-NURun

o" Rt. 124. MlftY tltml.

""""" Zlth ond 301h. . . ..

211t1 ond 3rd. Joon C..rg. 4al

lboth 11.. Mkldlopon. 1,00-l
8ometNng ~ Wtf'\'Oftel

---·-··

A.,..., 27.

za.

28.

c-.

dllhN. houllhold 11.,., end

...........
""'
............
R_,.ol_l_,
............. ""' , _ , ,o.

,.,.

, _ 1.........

.......

.:992-21"""'-'_.__,."'_.,..

Ylfdi ... Mono,wo...,.•glrlo

ll'&amp;lch rnDre. :.111 RodiiPrinll

Rd., ck»H to Hllllt\CANCIPIIII'.

11:11-Avo.

.,..., -

·.

licen11 snd hevt phyticel uem. "'"
Stlery •5 .011 ptr hour. Canllet:
Mr. David Altliff. Prinlcel. Guid11g Hend School, P.O . lox 14,
CheltiWt. Oh 45020 or call
814· 317-0102 .

•Commercial

949-2263
or 949-2168

hrm Mllrktt 1 mi. SpringV•II~ 4~
Center.
-:
PIDaition Av1il8ble . Sub bu1
drivM· must hokl ~~ driver

•Residential

SAUS I SBYICE

Pll.

K1nmore bonle g .. lt0\11, ov.,

9

CALL COLLECT:
Ph. (614) 843-5425

8-20-'86 tfn

fu---

..--·., ..........

:

EUGENE LONG

J.R.'s REPAIRS

.......ld. ........... d
IIUE,Uji oiled for

. _ llllilolll ..... ( ....
' ........ Olllt.lt. 114

·
:
,
.·

4 boxes of y1rd Nil lhingt.
304 -676-5247

Wlnl•- Havo 1,.,11

'11.00·.

tUtt.ns to Qive tiWty. 4 montht
old. Melli and .,....._, Catl
11 4 -98&amp; -3884 or IN at flrwt
trailer on Silv~r Rkfge uphiH,
from hstem High School.

614-448-3072

305

for publlcvlowlng In
the office oftM Conwn' , n·

.. tho c.......,
wMh F-11 .,d . . · - pottoy llld guldollnll- Cou!lhou11 on 8 - SIMI
, . . policy 11"-olgnod to ml- In tho Vlloge of ""moooy. For

"'llll!nl llodl Qnnt '(CDIGI
illo.-loollv.._ h lllllo do-

.. o..,

"Free Estimates"

Paul E. Shockey, DYM
PT. I'I.IASANl OffiCI

-

lot,.......,.

Wfo Hm ~ Fill Thot
Shp Teo .. lelu

New Homes Built

311/Hn

TOWN &amp; COUIIIIY
VODINAIIAN
CUNIC

Public Notice

lllilllaa -- - - whir-- contoot MltY Hobolott..- 01
.......... llld pravldl
bonellW to )114)1t2-211111.
""""'" tmrotunt•tly .. d 181 27, 1tc
..,_.lftttw' dltp ll:aed •• 1
- • of Commulllty o..ot

•ZENITH
•SYLVMIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSOII REFRIGERATOR
•SATELUIE SALES &amp; SERVICE

,.,.~~y

While Quantities Lastl
.. ... ....

,, AH y,, ,,,.,., NHII

AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

BISSEU
SIDING CO.

Ill Ca•l Sl.. POIMroJ. f*io 4~7it

Public Notice

% Q_ff Suggested
·Manufacturer's ·Retail!
~

THE QUAUTY
PIINT SHOP

2 mo. otd puppy 111 OoMnnan • ·
·

WE ARE YOUR SALES

'VINYl SIDIIG
'AWIIINUM SIDING
1 1LOWN IN
INSULAnON

l-3.....-•. c.,.-14
-441--Ge2A _.
11:1 lAb. Call eu-3118 -8144 .

c,~lckly. "

Sooth Central Ohio

VIRGINIA BAKED HAM ... LB. $3.99

U.S. NO. 1

wtn he especially

watch!\Jl tlr pel'!IJIIS who are
IIJ1VIng In excess of the speed limit
occtrlvlngwhlle under the Influence
rt alcohol or drugs," Henderson
said. ''These two very unsafe
driVIng acts are the leading cause of

AVAILABLE ONLY IN STORES
WITH DELl DEPARTMENTS

reorganization.
Approval of the buyout would
have given the combined forces or
Eastern, Continental and New Yort&lt;
Air the No. 1 position among U.S.
airlines.
The department said In a statement that Texas Air and Eastern
may rue a new application "H the
applicants have cured tbe competitive problem," adding It woold
consider a new proposal
expeditiously.
Texas Air, aware d concerns
about the popular slw ttle routes,
had agreed tosellsomeofltsslotsat
Washington's National Airport and
New York's LaGuradla Airport to
Pan American World Airways. But
the government said Pan Am stUI
would not have the facilities needed

Patrol to be out in force
AU avallable troopers wtn be
working wer Labor Day weekend
In Meigs and Gallla rountles to help
motorists and keep the hoUday
traffic death toll low, according to
Lt. Dan Henderson, commander of
tbe patrol's Gallla-Melgs post.

c

Potato Chips

.. . LB . $2.99

, WASHINGTON (UP!) -Texas
Air .Corp. says It Is confident Its $675
mllJion bid to ooy Eastern Alrllnes
wU1 go through, despite the Transpol'latlon Department's decision to
thwart pUrchase of the financially
ti'OIIbted carrier.
The departinent ruled Tuesday
agllnst acquisition, on grounds It
WOUld eliminate effective airline
Clllllpelltlon In the oosy BostonYort&lt; and Washington-New
Yort&lt; shuttle routes and leave the
lucrative routes, now served only
by Eastern and New Yort&lt; Air, a
Texas Air subsidiary, held by one
corporation.
In addition to owning New Yort&lt;
Air, Texas Air Corp., a holding
company, successluUy pUlled Contloental Airline through bankruptcy

New

LIMIT 2 PLEASE

Y." Trim Means 10-30% Less
Fat And Fewer Calories

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE, GRAIN FED BEEF,
"UNTRIMMED WHOLESALE CUT" 11-13-LB. AVG.

Business Services

Agency nixes airline's acquisition

AS ADVERTISED ON TV"
IN OIL OR WATER, CHUNK LIGHT

" Trim On All Beef

together," MacLeod said. "He had
been told that he was very sick. oot
that other people had recovered
and he planned m doing justthat."
Alter "The Mary Tyler Moore
Show" went r1! the air, Knight
appeared In the short-lived series
"The Ted Knight Show," tben In
"Too Close for Comfort," later
renamed "The Ted Knight Show,"
playing a conservative cartoonist
whose two grown daughters move
back to their family borne In San
Francisco.
The show, which ran three years
on ABC, has been In ftrst-run
syndication lor four seasons, and
Botttnger said new episodes already fUmed would air throogh the
spring.
Knight complained that tbe
Baxter role ted to typecasting.·
"During the past couple of years I
had r1fers to star In seven situation
comedies," be said In 198J. "The
parts were all clones of tbe Baxter
lllf!oon .
"Even so, I'll be Indebted to
Baxter br the rest of my life. Alter
seven years In the part, I am ooe d
the most recognized actors In the
lllslness."
Knight was born Tadeus Wladyslaw Konopka on Dec. 7, 1923, In
Terryville, Conn. After serving In
tbe Army, he began his career In
stage !l'oductlons and worked as a
disc jockey, singer, ventrlloqulst,
puppeteer and pan tomlmlst In

11

The

Ohio

Caricer claims film,
TV actor Ted Knight

As a Copeland Scholar, s~.
receives a $1,00l freshman ye;p'
stipend and works with a faculty
mentor m Special p-ojects. She alSo '
attends C~leand Colloquia whe~
top executives from the lllslness
world dlscu.ss current business
Issues with students.
The daughter d Ms. Barbara
Dugan of Racine, she was a
member d the natbnal B&gt;nor.
Society. Pep Club, Drama Oub and
Job's Daughters. ·

Dixie K. Dugan of Racine has
been accepted as ~ Copeland
Scholar at . the Ohio University
College of Business Admllilstratlon.
A19116 graduateofSouthem Local
High SchoOl, she,bas been horored
lor achievement In grammar,
algebra, compUter science, trigonometry aild chemistry. Dugan,
treasw-er r1 Upward Bound student
council, received an honor award
lor 1~ Ohio Tests of Scholastic
Achievement In algebra.

Dugan.chosen·

27,1988

llnl ..... .. ......

Wll• ..............
=-.,~ ot milo.

'lllu__, •

y"" .... 'llluro., II Mit C -

Rd. !• Dl'lllt olothlnt. 1:30.

l'tllo 0.0111 Rd....... Zl, H ,

31). Rolrlg....,r, - - ·
mlcnwn•
ovtn. to...of IMG .

"""'.... - Allooo•
lllh _, lllh:
N?W
Wlihoo
Hll R• .• R......d. Ohio. 10:00-

4:00.

�..

Page 12-The Daily Santilli
11

Htlp Wentlil

LAFF-A-DAY

3000 , _ _ jollo 1111.
UI,040- .... ZIO y-. Now
Nttng. Colllllll-·7-1000 Ext.
R-•01.

44

APARTMEI!TI. mobllo he.,.,
hou. .. Pt. P-ondOitilpc,llo. 114-441-8221.

. . IEMILERI W~NTEO: hm
up • 110 I * Qy tlllmbllng
llljlloy c-o. M-Ilo MIPO·

APARTMENT FOR RENT - Now

4. 4!&lt;1•'.4 ond s, lllfto wood
pMellng woodCirlln end prlntl

rot• moy ... high• d-dlr111

1 . 4alxl4 bt.ndta wit., bo..,l
..- r ...od T phlol t8 .85 oo.
e. Wood lftorrnol pon bow
plctu ..
t241.

on lnoome. Houttno . will bt
IVIIIIblt to etch eppllclnt •
terdl. . of their rece, color,
retlgion, . - Of nltuflll •lgln.
lnt••ttd eppllcentt ehould cell
3~- 773-&amp;011 or contect D~t-o~
nlae Str•b or Wtlrll' JuiiiCI II
the mekt office, 111e lrl01
Road, Reynoldaburg, Ohio

I

I

.,.,. .,.. -. ... 304-175-HII
oltw4:30.

I

Mnce. rtfertnOM,

WHIId~a.

i

OPENINGS AVAILABLE. oo111ng
Merrl Mile' I guerentMd lint af
1Dyl, gHis. ho rnl diCOf .......
o,otc. NO dolhlorint, cc~
ar hve~tment . Your houra cal
304-175-1711 or 1-1110-8921072.

2 bedroom ept. QelliDolil Ferry.

}

304-175-2048 or 811-5713.

t

In Mlcldlepon. Ohio, 2 bed room
furnished tpt. 1· 304 -882 ·

'"We're

L.P.N.o -od f&lt;!r port lime

private duty In Point Pl.,....t
erN, clll HCI Nurainv _lervlce,

e·.U

1----------..,.----------1
31

Homes for Sala

41

HDUIIS for Rent

P\llln i14-44e-0474.

12

I room houu, beth. 1Yt lcrt.
For quk:k 111e. 124,000. CeH

Situation•
Wanted

Speciel nJflinll tlrt tor eld.ty
In p-lvatt ho,... Call 114·882-

3595 .

614-99~- 7453 .

441 _4416 ofter BPM.

FDt' ule Of' ,.,,, hou• on VIne
St.. Racine. 2 bedrooms, living

Far ule Dr rwn 3 bdr. 1 beth.
ldtctt., appl. Including gerege.
Located 1 I Pontmouth Rd .•
Ooiii!Jollo. Soc. clop. &amp; rol.
rtqunct. Rent with option to
buy poulblo. Coli 614-441·

room, kitchen, beth, Ylfd ,
orden . Call 514-982-27&amp;6 t1t
14-115-4231.

I

Wlll•r•for elderly In my hom..
Trlllnld. txp.,itnced. CIR 11 4·

3-4 bedroom houN n. . IChool
lftd hoeptul. Priced to Mil.
U3.000. Coli 614-982-1050.

We hwt 'I.C.,cy for aktwty

ThrM bedroom home an 115
ICNI. FlripiiCI, fully Clf1)ttld,
n.w kltc:hen with eppiiMcet
Included. Lart• pond ·•nd yard
wlth chlktNII't wooden play
center. Mutt ...1. Meke offer.

112·81183.

gentlemen. Room .nd boerd.
1110 lleephg room. Call 11 4·

882-11122 .
18

8U-9411-2503.

Wanted to Do

N. Port. Drlvo. -

bodrvom,lull
bMiment. centrel •r cond,
•••• hoot. - o d
WUI dD Wt~·•lng . FrM -~ INIW. Low ,.._, Phon. t.fore • - •· ......., okll,., geed
3:00 p.m. or att.r 7 :00 p. m. loeetlon. ckl• to hoepitall. benk.
dnlg end grocery at~. 304814-882·35211.
675-1199.
Will .., b..,yoittng 1n my home,
dor ohlft. M'"'doy IIIN Fridoy 3 bedroom hou• In Point
,.....m own• will finenc. with
~v . 304-171-5415 .

...

lmall down payment, 304·812·

3329.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
8ueina11
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE 0 ..0 VALLEY PUILIIHINO CO. - - d o d\ot ycu
do buoln- with ,..,,. ycu
llnow. •
NOT to Nnd mon.,
ttwou.,.
the "** untl you haw
lnYOitlgotlll tho ollwlng.

Need axtr• rro""7 Fri.. dty
tu,.. tov e-rtitl ... lmmedlete
opening~ tor mtnll.,. end
dlmoftltraiON lol thll . . .. lt'1
...,., fun .nd proftlllllle. We
hl¥e ow. lOO •cttlng toye end
glfta 1o00111na lho onlrnoMd
-~ doi "Crlcllet" whldlwlll
be Mvert•• an nriDMI1V. No
08lh lnvttt"*'t· no cohctJng.
ro dlltvtttng end no _...ice

cii-. Aiyou-lud..,..to
mike m:~nty . h...,efun Md • few
houri of ••e time. No up•
rienOI ntetllllf'Y. Cell 1· 100·

227-1110.

1111 Oollbtook 14•70. 12•7
u:penda. nM c:erpet. 3 bdr., 2
bath. 111 fumect. woodbumw,
lir condition•. electric ltOVII &amp;
undtfpinnlng,
duced to •12 , 700 . wn

,.,,._.tor,

r•

•••.ooo. CoH 114-379-2187.

"*·

10.eo Morlotl 2
Mldr111
t1 ,100. For more lnformltion
ooiii14-2118·H45 .
118114•12 Ftlrmant Encore. 2

bd•. ueoo. Coli 114-182·
8419.

12164 187.) Cameron trail•.
new c•rpel. new llghu • ceiling
ftn, porcfl,. underpinning ,
bloc:kl, ..,... e4.100.

Coli 614-251-9303.

a

Cottege. 2 roomt tnd beth,
tumlthtcl, utllttiel pekt, e&amp;&amp;.OO
wttk. 304·1715·3100 or 875·

1 2JI&amp;O lldge of town dlpotit. no
- · •140 mo .. ponloily lurpolio. Coli 114-4417350 .. 614-441-7124.

,.hod.

1 4•70 Bey¥1• 2 bdr•• unfur·

nWt.d, -.ryRIC8. •cec.~ 2 mil•
from Gelllpollt, private lot.
Adultt onty, no pttt, •zeo mo.

Coil 814-441-2300.

Pl.,,, lubdN-ialon. 2 bdr.. lergt

lot el71pwmo. tiOOMc. dop.
Coli 114-448-4514.
Mob.. horne for rent, Upp•

RIYor Rd. Col 114-441·0487 or
614-441·0108 .

w..,._ •

Rlllteurtnt end tevtm for tale,
down town ••• or ~ .... Cell

11111 1'00 PM, 304-671-7512

OWN YOUR OWN Joon ·
lporttwtlr, ladlt1 Applrtl.
ChUdNn-Mittmltv. l•rge&amp;lzat,
Ptdle, Oenc.wur, Acc•~ariel
• Iridal lhop. Jordllche. Chic,

Loo, Ltvl. IIOd, OlUnD, o-o.
Colvn Kloln. SorQ!o Volonto.
hen Picone. Liz: Cillbom'Membert Only. Ouollnt,

lloollhlu CNW 1.000 othwo.
tl4.300., UI .IIOO In-tory,

••In"
••· etc.

fhrturea, g,..,d openCan ~., 11 drta. Mr.

Nlce2 bldroommobil•homefor
r.,t, N. . Aldne. Cell 114-

Prw _.lmo.... CoM 114-892IIIOicr 814-742 -3147.

192·5151.

7211.

roqulrod. 114-448-8148.

.Homes for Sale

2-3 Wr. hou ... ttotm wlndowa.

· · o.- School dlmlct.
Ut.OOO. Co11814-441 ·2021 or

F erma for Sale

33

34

Bu1in11a
Buildings

182-3311.

-- ..

_,

dlot. Flohng pond. born, ONtbuiNdinQ. MoOuh-1 Rttfty Co.,

\402 4th Aw.. Huntington.
21701 .. 304-128-eo33.
Quollty he. .. ....,. remodolod
choice loc.tion on Cotlege Rd.
lydOUtt. new complete lhchtn
end llundry, 1ir condltlontd.
,.,.. lot. 114-992-5324.

&amp;

36 Lots

Acreage

Rodnoy-HtrTioburg Rd. El ...~c.
rurelwettr. CeU e14· 241-14157.

Atilton building tota with public
wet•. mobl• homtl Plfmltted,

304-171-2336 or 304-5762217.

R t ulll .. bW

'*'*· Two

·fDr

1M priM of one. 2 bJdroamt.

-.,din... room.-...
with raom. AM Mly
...,-.
",... . . . . T.V. Aloo

,.....,

.... I

1
lltJ1aam. ...,... ........ lllltGMft
both. _....., tnd
0

......

h.

1\1• II !.If:,

.,

0000 USEO APPLIANCES
drven. refrig•etors ,

W•h••·
reng... Shoo• Appllencet ,

Upp• A"'- Rd. belldt Stone

c- Motol. 114-448-7398.

t395 to U91. Tobl• •so ond
*371. Lempo 128 ., t125
Dlnett• •109 end up to 1488.
Wood toblo w-1 choiro t285 to
HIS. DNk t100 up to t375.
Mutch• 1400 and up . Bunk
btda co~'-11 w · menr~~ . .
•215 ..d up to e395 ' hby• 110. •1715 . Menr. .Morbox
aprlngt full or twin •e3, firm
e73, end ea3 . Queen ..u t225 .
King t310. 4 drMer chel1 t85.
DrtaHrl •as. Gun c•ineta B.
10, • 12
Gil or electric
range 137 . Blby mettr11111

rn.

••s.

t31 &amp;
Bod from• uo.
130 6 King frtme 1&amp;0. Good

ttlectkm ot btdi'Oom tutlM,
mltll cabinet~, hMdboerdl e30
and up to tel.
Utlld Furniture: WMher.
drysr, electric range, wood
llblt. 2 ........,., bedl,
dfllltr, • rtclln• . 3 mMw out
Bulavllle Rd . Open 9AM to
IPM, Mon. thN Sat.

cllnngroom. ..,

k~·

Nlol 3 btdroomt tg. y.-d. 314

completely

Antiquee

PM.

lmltat6on recoon ooat. MW
•300. wom only fM dmet tel

t110. llzt 1-10. 304-17&amp;-

1780 lifter e p .m.

H•M•n roya whh 111 acct110·
rl•. My. . thaMow wall

w•••
pump. 304-171-1714.
Btll collection eeo.oo . a,..,,
porcllltn, c.,amtc. Over eo
boilo. 304-875-HU
Metll offlc. dtab 3' xl5' with

od)uotoblo owlvol cll*o ond
filing cablneu. '1215 . 00 t1IO.OO . 304-372-2101 or
372-8822.

OLD ORIENTAL RUGS
WANTED. Any tileoroondltlon.
Coif toll- 1-100-433-7147.

-lc

1 bdr. tum. or Ynfum. t110 ptr

ton. Oh. 114-2116-•30.

EVANI ENTII.,RIIES, Jtck·

114· 2118·6451 '
M1111y FlrgUeon, New Hollend,

Bulh Hog Sel• • Service. Over
40 uted trec10re to chooH from
I COft1»11te lint of mrw • ultd
equipment. LergNI •lectton In

S.E. Ohio.

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER . SR 36 W. OtUipolio,
Ohio. Ctll 814·448·97n, tvl.

814-317-7451
114·251-1111 .

•

New HoUII'Id 487 hlyblne. lnttr·
nllkmtl UBO grind., mixer.
New Holllftd 717 foregehervn·
I«, All good cond, 304· 273·
4211.

FARM EOUIPMENT: Now Hoi·
l.,d Fortge Equip..,.nt Sele. 1
No. B·thrM better forage bok
with rendlm exle 12 ton wagtn
...100; Ont No . I boJI with 10
ton wegtn ... 500; Ont Model
712 Chopp• whh mettl·elwt •
2 row t.Nd e14.900; 0neModel
30 forege bkJwtr 1 ,opo RPM
•2 .100:; One uaed No. 8 box. 2
bNttr with 10 ton running g11r

U ,IOO; Onouood Modo1707. 3
.. titdl d'lopp•wlth both heedt
•1 .100: One uttd Sup• 17·17
chopper •1 . 800; FrM fln.,cing
ll'ttl 3· 1·87 CJI' 5 .9 percent for
24 months; 8.1 percent tor 38 Of'
48 months or dlcounll for cuh.
K..tWt Swvloe Cent•, St. Rr.
87 L-. VN 304-88 5-3174.

'*

Tobecoo llldlt,

t15 .00
Morgan WoodiiWn

tlundNd,

pip•.

241-1121 .

Polt Buildings by Quellty
Bulkllft. Workthopt, carportt,
enirnel thehlll't. fl'll•· Fr11
eatlmttll . Phone 114-111·

7121 '
Peta for Sale

puppl•. Coli 114· 441· 3144
lft.,;7PM.

114·441-0141 .

3 month old mall AKC RICill·
terMI Toy Poodle. Whtte. H.t

ohot. t121 . Coiii14·141·20G
olttr 3,30 p.m.
AKC lc-. ftmelo. 304-1752111.
67

pold, no child·

Mualcel
lnltrumenta

Motorcycle. Cell 114· 317·

0211 .

- - -- --lc1971 Cut._ Supreme. &amp;0,000

Now buying lh.tl com or ••
oom. Cellforlet•••otes. AlVII'

City Form Supply. 114-4412811.

63

Llvalltock

3 club ulv .. Chlanln• ·
llmmentl._ He..tord, tun 81rnmtnrel llmmental · lenre
Gertnult· Herwfard. GertNdl•
Horolord. Col 814-371-2501.

114-31S-8333.

Compltto whh ooddlo. ••eo.
C.. I14-357·021B.

hby catv• Hollt..n • Angus
crou. No Sundty Dlllt, 114-

lolled .,,. 325 llo. CoM 814248-8311 onvtlmt.
Arabltr'l. w.tdt CroH Mere. 3

yro. - Zin
.. ,.~on...
114-742·
ovonlnp.

·-·

old, oloo. CoH Ooylo Prfco,
PortlioufII 114-843-1253.

W.,....
One rog-od you,.
- . , Dct &amp; 3
304youth.

1711-7717.

11n Plymouth Voltri. 318
tnglne, AC. M•e good work
car. 1500. or bttr oft•. Call
114-742-2478 .

g~ntle

riding mere.

t110.00. 304-171·3741.
dOO.OO. 4

v- o l d , _

Oldln. t300 .00.
104-171·12133.
'

ridlnl -

M

rent 1tat11 1211. a month thlt

homo

It&gt;-.

HueqvameNWI; chlinMWa 18 "

e11.,eo. lor oU pl. 44 .00.
Choln ohorpM!Ing. Npolr wort..
'""" MMIOf Apl. Mldol_.. Opon 1-1 M..... lot. Cloood
114-NZ· 7717. E-' Houolng Wod . • Sun.
lnchcclot .. utiNtl01- Dopoo~
_.,.. of •zoo. Contact VII~nlty .

flu:c•:or 2 bdr, N..,.... llun,

U71 mo. tiOO ......... yord.

Stelnwey • Son oon10le pleno,

,_. on• . Coli 614·441·0848

"'"'p.m.

Hey

l

'84 Ceveli• WII80n. 4 cyl. I
IPMd. elr and rid 'a, front wheel
•15.&amp;00 or Hit ofttr. No
Wtdt. 304-875-4140 lnd IHVe
oo mechlnt.

*"'•·

,..Alii,

19eo Bulock Skylort. 4 door,
e1400. NNd rranaml116on , .
polr. Coil304-875-1293.
'1914 T·Bird convertible. tx&lt;:.
cond. 13,200. 2108 LinCOln

Ave. 304-117&amp;-2414.
19M Eacort Pony. ex;. cond.
...000 .. bOll offer. 304-1758700 .
'84 Pontlec FltlfV, AM·FM c•
- · AC, good cond, 23,000

miiH. Alltr 4,30 etll 304-87521181 '

' 82 Pontiac lc:w~n~YIHe. 4 door.
Vlnyltcp, V-1, Air, Auto, PI, PI,
AM·FM ltttto, tilt, reerwfndow
defoggw, velour ~ttrior . body
uc cond. high miiMge. 304·

· 2-3781.

171-leOicr 170-1718.

New oountry dr11m honw. lultl
for you. ,, 1 .. .1. 4 bdr., 211olh.
... ... ... dol ludoy, Col

68

l

., ...... 7311 .

Fruit
V-uetablee

1188.

1&amp;14• J tu•ut

Til-- I · ootlilnellalloo
AC.OC
UO. ....

Ont bedroom unfumlthed, Tot.e

c -w 2 0 0 - . - • t t . n •
- - uiOII
c..
114-371-2701.

...h

"2·2748.

IXttl
llpl. -lind ..,.....
oollocllonftoe. a.o.edlnl'o,...
roy. 114-882-2094.

-

_

Trucks for Sale

1918 luv t1 , 318 . John ' t Auto
SoiN. ..lovllfo Rd, Oolfi!Jollo.

i'llll.lfll II

Autoa

for Bell

a.-. 4 cyl .. 2 -

_.,...

·I

c ...lng

Ntch• now ovol- CoU lof
prto11 and varlet~• · lob' l
momtna MW for ..... . MtrUI. • -· w. Yo. 104Coiiii4-441·M07.

Wtrm

: n3·1721. o,.. 7 - ...

-·· ', ~-

.

1.--.

81

Home
lmprovemantl

Spt:fcH!

CURIOSITY!

t. • piMttr reptl,., Low rltll. · •

E-grttrW. lhodt • fru~

.

Uncloc-.

: ·,
,·

t_; -. :

mutdi. _•

trM • rtump Nmov.l,

oend • grovof, dollvonil.'. •
Don' t
Don
Prop. 114-441-1141. .
-- •

w....,· EEK &amp; MEEK

RON'S Televlalon lervl•!i!· •
Houoo 011 RCA, Q.......
oE. s~edll1\ 1n zenith. caw
304-5 1-~31 .. 814-"i'2414.
.
Fotty Trot Trimming. ......

- o l. Coll304-175-1331 .

·

invites him to her upcom-

RINOLEI' I IERVICI, up•
rltnood ........... o f -...

....n.

c:ident convinces him that
he'll never earn his cheriohed drivers· license . (RJ.
• (!) Colleoe F001ball: A~
ebama ve. Ohio Stete (3
hro.l
(I) MecNei~Lehrer Newohour
9
lUI MOVIE: 'Under
1MA1ln_.
illl Na11onel GIOgrephlc
Spoclll: CrMIUNI of the
Mengrove (CC) Tho tidal
forett of Siarau is home to
an amazing array of creatures. (60 mi n. ) (AI In
Stereo.
ljJ Nc"h Amtrlcen Pro
Kickoff
8:05 (I) Wild, Wild World of Animill
8:30 C1J G (I) Mr. Sunahlne
(CC) Po ul become• doprated when hit ex-wife

e

P-,-..~ ;:

~Ec-..--r-:a:-lnt_;orf_oar_otu_c_..,-_

i!!Jl wedding. (R).
IBI Mlior LMgue BIMball:
Chicago Cuba at Houlton
(3 hra.)
8 :35 (J) Mejor LMgue aa.,ball:
Atlonll 11 St. Loull (2 hro.,
30 min.)
.
9:00 • (J) ()I Olmme a Break
When Ka1ie devolopo prob-

polntor, .....,.. .......

Ina hot ... - - 1 304111-2011 .. 1711-7361.
ltaru TrN ond Lewn lorvlco.
londocoplnt. :104-578-2010.
Ror.ry or ceble tool drlllng. ; ,
MoetWIItoompleted111111d.y. ... ~
Pump ond . -... 304- .. '

lems in her persontl and

-

M~RTY MEEKLE AND Wr:I; . :N. .:.T.:. .: H.:. .: R. .:.O_P_ _~-, ,--- --

Aohby COMI. c..,..try, _ ., - g . room oddlllon. poln1lllg. ·

roofing .......... oldlrig. IllOGic-

WHATS1HAT

work. 1toe Mllmoto. 304-115·
1445 .. 175-5112 .

117&amp; Dcdgo 0 · 100 pk*A!p,

82

body good, Nnt good, englnt
318 to bltflf. automltlc trene .•

BEFORE I BURST WITH

. . .

Collll4·211-1112.

(3)8omF,..

ence in himself when an ac-

Unconditkwtlll lf..imt gu•• .. ·
ree. Loc:el rlftf'encet fum..,_.: .
F,.. .Umet11. Cell collecd: ·
1-114-237-0411. doy or night.:
Roger• 8etement

Wotarprooflng.

7:311
8:00

I)]J MocNoi~Lehrer Newehour
811)}1 Divorce Cou"
ilJl WKRP In Cincinnati
IBl WhMI of Fo"une
(J)G...., Acrao
• (J) CIJ New Nowlywod
Gemo
(!) NFL Films
e(!)Taxl
II (J) I)D WhMiof Fo"une
(I) U.JI. Pompelll
81 (l2l Entertainment Tonight Jameson Parker discutatl !'lis soon-to-be·
relened
feature
film.
" Americtn Justice".
(lJ Allee
()I Jeopardy
(J) Slnford end Son
•
(J) 1I1l Highway to
HHvln Jonathan and
Mark help an aging novelist reditcover his writing
talent through the reliving
of o boautiful 1eenaged
romenco. (8D min.) (R).
(!) Superboull Arguello vs.
Moncini. (80 min .)
(I) D (J) PerfectS1rangere
(CC) Bolki looeo confid-

WELL, l THINK '101.1'11
BETTER TELL ME •.•

IAIEMENT
WATERPROOFING'

114-218-13211.

BIRD
COING":!

c:!ATHe'RINGSTI.lFFTO
BUIL.DANE5T,

ISN'T IT A LITTL.E
L..ATEINTH!: YEAR
IDBENE5nNEf?

professional lives. Noll
worries that she may be
conoidering ouicide. (R) In
Steroo .
(3) 700 Club
(!) Bowling: Bud_l_
Hall of Fame Tournement
From S1. Loulo, MO.
(I) e C1J M...Oyvor (CCI
MacGyver infilllllll a Ru•·
sian mental institut ion to
free a political priaoner.
(60 min.) (R).
(I) Nadonel GIOgrephlc
Spoclel: Creo1uret of the
Mengrove (CC) The tidal
forest of Siarau it home to
an amazing array of cret·
turoo. (80 min.l (RI In

- ----.,

MAY BE THE 1.-AND!-OQO
HIKEDTHERENTON

H160l-DONE .

I THINK .

Plumbing
H . .tlng

&amp;

.1 .8110. Collll&lt;t-441-4422 ..
614-441·8100.
11n Toyou Pick-up ond 1 ft.
1ruck · Coli 114-892·
H17 olttr 7:00 p.m.

1141 Ford pklc-up tru&lt;*. 'Alan.
152.000 mil•. Qood aondltlan.
Ctllf14·742-2778.

1978 Fcrd plcllup XLT. •c
cond. 1172 D..tvo plciup. now
tlr•. polnl ond bot~e&lt;y. Golf
Clrt. CeU envtlme .U tor Leonord Knllo. 304-17S-1111:

CARTER'I PWMIINO
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourlll 01\d Plno .
Odlpollo, Ohio
•
Phone 114-441-- 1 or 114- ·
448-44n

Stereo.

BARNEY

poclo flllod.
114·211-1141 : :
or 814-441-1171 cr 114-4411- •. 1
7811 .
I

I)]J Merk Au-1 Comedy
Speoill Polltlctl lltirlt1
Merk Rutllll porlorm1 b•
fore a live audience.
9:30 • (J) IIJ You Again? Henry's fra•whnling brother
Randy ovorjoyo Mo11 whon
he arrives for a visit. (A) In
Stereo.
(!) Bodybuilding: I 1111 Mr.
Olympia Cornpl1illon Coverlgo from lruooelo, 81l·
G!._um . 12 hrl.)
(J]) Embargo: An EnlerpriM
lpoclel !CCI The etttc11 of
o trede tmbergo botwoon
1he United Sllltt end Niceragua are enmined.

Ken' •

10:00

83

EXCIVItlng
'•

Dw-. V-1
klw

1183 Ch., 1 · 10

enGine. Auto ~.

mlfoogo. Phono 304-171-ltiS
oltw 1:00PM.
86
73

••n

Vena

&amp;

4

CJ 5JMPoof1tcp. hpd ..

e cvl..

Genertl Hauling

W.O.

ntW .............. c~~.

t1 ,1DO. Coli 114-441-1173

..e.

i

J1m11 Boy• Wlttr ltrvlce. Allo

c•

w..,_ ·'
.

12 Dodga ••4 cuttomilecl Yin
21 .000 mil•. Cl 114-441 1112ofttr e.

12 Chevy ConvMelon ven .
ohwp. prlcod to
•1.881.
Coli 814·241· 1131 cr 114·
248-1811.

•II.

1181 Chwy - - VMI,
dull lh'. euto, .t1r10, TV, IDw

Wltll' lervlot.

··
- 114-317·0123
tnd wttorfloio
· CoM
.,.;~
114-387· n41 or 104•111: ;·
1247.
' ...

- · pool,
• - · All\'llmo bu1 -.
Sundoy,
114-448·7404.
!

..
•

=-,. ... .

·J

87

..
'•

.

,;

"

74

\

Mewrey't UPhlllttllfnt_. . . _ . ~

"'-""-~
' 'lllolltil i
.

--------~~ ~~~yaATI. ~UAN -----------

0 lour
Rearrange letter• of
JCromblod w&lt;&gt;rdo

the

be-

low lo Corm four llrnplo -do.

·

.

~'•
.

--r-s..,.u-'-P-;.I;...o::,..-.jl •.

r-_II
3

II"_ 1}

I1•

KL E F C
"Why Am I So Miulf'llblt7"
s ~~ 1 1
asked a acrewl on the aubwly
_ I_ _ _ . . ~· wall . Undernaalh, som1on1

I
0
7-r-19-'Rrl
R
;
.
;
.
l
r
.
~
.
.
;
E
i
r
•1rll ~-c:~:~te
~

. . - - -- --

.

•

8

_

•

-

.

., wrote, "You Are Going Through'

.

.

lhe chuckle quoted

b y filling in the missin g worda
yolJ de-welop fro m !ilep No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED
\ETTERS IN SQUARES

YlSTEIDAY'S SCIAM-Lm ANSWEIS
Vl«::d - Slppy - Qualm - Kf16/181' - PLACES
Granny reed how a man had spent 41H his lottery money on
expenalve tripe. "That just p~ theory," she said,
fool IU1d his money are lnvtted P
ES."

"a

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

Bid first;
play later

NORTH

1-!7-11

+K 9 7

. A KI7 5
• 3 • .•
• Q872

By James Jacoby
The winners of the Epson World
Pairs Championship were Franc is
Frainais and Jann Bouteille, playing
near Paris, France, on June 14 of this
year. Their winning score on 24 deals
was 7U percent. This was not unusually high, since, with more than 70,000
players participating. one would e xpect greater extremes.
The diagramed deal rewards biddinK acc.u rac y first , and a nose for the
queen of spades second. North's twodiamond response was a Jacoby trans·
fer bid, showlnK at leas t five hearts
The subsequent three-club bid showed
a second suit and committed the partnership to game. North. who was worried about his singleton diamond in notrump, wisely selected hear ts as a
final contract.
With a spade lead , declarer eas ily
made 11 tricks for a score of 78 out of
100. If spades are not led. and declarer
subsequently loses a tr ick to the spade
queen, he will score only 52 perce nt.
But those whose bidding methods
leave them in three no-trump do the
worst. If they get
spade lead and
make nine tricks, they get 40 percent.
But with a diamond lead they a re set.

a

EAST

WEST

u

+Q 8 2

5' 4 3
• 10 6
t K 10 7 4

. Q4 2
tQ8 652

+9 5 4

+A 3
SOUTH
+ A J 10
• J 83
t AJ 9
+ K J 10 6

Vulner a ble : Both
Dealer : E a s t

weso .

North

East

Soulh

Pass

I

2.

Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

NT

39
Pass

Pass

• Jaco by tr ansfer btd

O pe ning lead: • 6

L - - - - - - - - - ----'
.
.
and mmus 100 IS wo rth onl y 23:
percent .
What's th e m o ra l' Get to the r ighl
contrac t first. a nd wor r y a bout yom '
score later .
" I tOONEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN

6Cw•~trl
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS 40 Adolesce nt
1 Likewise 41 Russian
II Bay State
s ymbol
(abbr.)
DOWN

9 Friar's

I Tart: biting
2 Wawr plant
3 Add an
induceme nt
4 Palm leaf
II Ocean ic
6 Lessen
Yesterday's Anawer
7 Soalc
8 "Little
19 Great t.alc e 27 Valued fur
girls"
22 Medoc, e.g. 29 Quit
ingredlenl8 24 Telegraph 30 Certain
11 Trend
211 Japanese
Israeli
14 Break bread assembly 34 Equal
18 English
26 The atrical 36 Tint
composer
perfo nner 37 Punch

hood
10 Circa
12 Willo w
genus

13 Shabby
Ill Proper

!&amp;Islet
17 Black
cuckoo
18 English
writer
20 White
Ho use
name
Zl Irish
river
22 Pottery
23 Never (Ger .)

14 Gain
211 Fnllt

6-+-++-

27 'The Windmills or

Your -"

28 "I" In
Berlin

2!1 Fondle
Sl "Summe r"

.

.•

In Caen

.I

32 Before
33 Baby food

311 AstalreRogers
tum
37 Agree

381nclte
391s raeli
port •

DAILY CR\'PICMIVOTII:S-Itllle._liowlo work il:

..,,

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW
One letter sllnda for another. In this sample Ais used
lor the three L'a, X for the two O's, e tc. Sing le letlers.
8ptl$lt ophes, !be len,tlt and fonnaUon of the words are all
hinla. Each day the cOOl! letters are diffe rent.

,

CIYPTOQUOTE
8-27

'
LB SC E G F

LRF

I X L R
XN

T

LRFM

H C NRXWV

G S L

IXL R

s Q

C N C T GG M
LRF X B

H I'S H I.JI'

H C GG
FWP S M

'

..

:
.,

..

IF XV R L

WilEN WE 60 TO COLLEGE,
MARCIE, I'M NOT 601H6
TO ROOM Willi '(OU ..

..... Wild . . .,_ (CC) Fllmmakaro Tony end Liz Bomford document the ectlvltlll of 8ri1aln'e two 1111
opocllo. the common and
1h1 grey. (80 min.) (R).

9

In "'"'Cil
104·
111 · 4 14 for troo
..........
I'
•"

WOit

([) Burvivll lpoclll: Wild

PEANUTS
'' HOPE IS A 600D .
6REAI®ST, 6l!T IT
iS A MD SIJI'PER"

c....

HIIW•

gO'V ond Pelo(o lono·IOII
brothar riiPPIIIrl, oervlng
ae bodyguerd for • flmllt
Cen1rol American luder.
(80 min.) (A).

·,.,

UpholltlfY

(J) Arlhur

Howl (CCI Chrl111ne d•
cldoo to loeve the St Gre-

2.000 . - - . ,. - . . -,
304-171- ~

'71
· - · '84 or 171·1141
z • •
304-875-IIJJ
collllori:OO.

1114 H•lll Twin- 100. Col
114-441-8341.

· (j) •

·,

r•IOnllbll rat•. ilnrMdlltl

(J) IBl 11. EIMwllere
Morrloon io humiliated
when a riot breaks out in

ton In which helt performIng volunteer wor\, and a
norvouo Ehrlich r•n• 1 full
gynocologlt:ll •••m on
Mro. Crllg. (80 min .) (R).

..·

Wettenon 'a Weter HeUIIng ,

a

the maximum tecurlly pri-

---------'~
DMiard'o Wotw Dollvel'f. Olot· . ·:

1110 JMP CJI, Coli J04-17f'
2731 or 871-2741.
·

Motorcyclle
I
-----.....,, with '"'"

· - .-y . . . - .
••.aoo,
Coli e14-MI-1140t •
114· ..1-0111 .

MY INAUGUAATION

ALLEY OOP

good oond .• bw mllttge. mutt
1M •a apprecitrte •4.1500 . C.l

1184 Chivy c ..... -

-

l'Vf A~S:APY
f1Nf$HeP W~liiNG

~

1IU Dodtle ,111 ltlf YM,
loodod. 24.000 · ... 700.
'
:104-171-1831.
•

'I'd.. AII-PM low
..,...•• .Coli 114-441-0117

Yellow FrM . ltDnt

....d . 304-87&amp;-3341 .. 1715115.

. . . ftocflng • Polnlfnt ...P.
&lt;OOflng. ...... polnlfnt ..
out. Frot E..lmou. ~Rot..
---304-175-7111 .

1114 R.,gw XL 4 cyf., 4 'I'd ..

441-(141 .

'

14

.. ,_,udo. -

.,00.

i I ,Ill

71

1872 Jeyoo 20 ft, cemp• wtth
extru. 111171 llu•. Both •c~

885-3602

rnMMaa. uc. oond. Cell &amp;14-

Oreln

OH, GOOP! ...

THf= OrTIM15M
PAfetY WANi&gt; TO
NOMINA,-e: )t)U
fO~
~~51&amp;&gt;~Nf.
. .- .

1972 Flamingo trell• g~~od
..._ U .OOO. CoH 614-3589011

.

992-3703

Elr Com for •1•. 304· &amp;71- 1185 OMC lu..,ry - - n
van. Plulfl i1ttrlor. Like naw.
llllevMin...
Loodod . Only, 1000 mtloo.
ne.eoo. CoM ll&lt;t-111-..11.

Wtnt tc buy pi-In SIDod oond,
coil oflw 4:00. 304-f75-AII .

- ·

79 Motora Homes
&amp; Campara

1984 ChiVY Cl'lllltr. Auto. PS.
PB, rw:\lo, nM rfr•. Cel e1 4 ·

._ ............... _
W1111t - - .......,. leo ....

Good

=:;: ;:===::

owntr. Dot Ntutallng. ni500.
Call 514-882-2810.

1110 Dcdoo D-10 with-·
tl .889. 1979 Dotoun n .111.

\4 llmmentel bull calf, 7 montht

AKC. B..- pupo. Thr•loft. 3
.-tho old. Prlco. en. CoH
114·H7-3118.

AM -F M eight track. Good oondi-

llon.·Aioo 1974 Horloy8pcrt-

72

311· •24.

Bleck Do*"""· ftmtlt, 4
months til thota. t100. Cell

7:05
7:30

1978 l2B . 310 four opood.

111180 Pontlec Chend Prix
n.IOO.DO or beet offtr, 304-

13 Ylll' old black mert, hall
qu..,., half Tenn. . . w......
Dregonwynd Clttery Ktnnt4.
CFA Hlmlil'lln, P•aian and
Siem.. klttent. AKC Chow

ord 4 111ood. U 200. 114-8923348 aft• 15 p.m.
·

Trectore, JD 420 crew.., with
end loed• N ,200.00. IH Cub
whh culltvttor 1nd mower
11 .100.00. Olenrklge Ferm,

9 l!'rlngw H - holftn. Co•·

66

- Ch
.~
.., fii'IOOn-.-,. 88 m..,..,new
....
,,
or
tradtfor 18 plclcup trucl
-

1978 Muttang, 4 cyl, uc cond,
12,200.00. 304-171-5531 .

ConCI'IUI blodls slltlr.tl ylf'd or

dollv01y. Mooon ..,d. Oolllpollo
llodc Co.. 123'\o\ Plno 11..
Oolllpollo, Ohio Col 614·441·
27U .

oond. AM.FMeutometlc. wlre
wheel1, oruitt oontrol, elr,
t3,1eO. Col 114 _448 . 8911 .

Form. Rt 31. 304·675-2275 or
171·1201.

62 Wented to Buy
Building Meterielt
Block. brick. ..,.,
win·
- · llntolt, otc. Cloudo Wntert, Rio Grande, 0 . C•M 114·

814-379- ~220.
MOUNTAINEER AUTO IODv
PARTS O"AND
"
OPENING
$ALEI 1311 Fifth St. N""
HovM!, WMt Vlrghlo. Phcino
304-112-372t. FuU lneof1rullc
end
·M
c:ar P1" 1 "'•-••· Olt
prlc. art cut to deelert cott
'through Soptombw 1111. Doll¥-

mUtt. Good conditkln. Locel

66 Building Supplie1

Sitm.. ldthNII lor ult. Cetl
114-148-2118 .
CeUth., 't Ue_. Tire Shop. Ovw

CROSS &amp; SONS
U .&amp;. 3!1 Wnl, Jedt10n , Ohio.

(!) Hogen' a Hor. .,

(J) Jeoperdy

(I) Nightly Buelnen Aepo"

Trtntmileiont, ell typll, over, ..~ :
fron
4 L--' ........
•
•
• I. roor. w~ -No, prlcel -,
itlrt .,00, wtll deltver. C.M

nM tirtl, new batltrY. good
Interior. NMC1110m1 bodywork.

1 180 Pontile Phtanil VI nend·

304-1'15·5504.

Coli 814-892-21107 .

culvtrtt. IMIII outv.rtt. AON

,I t J I

nlco. m . nolghbcf, 1 - flant
,..... • yord .... fol
tUS P O l -· Col

814-211-1110.

SURPLUS RENTAL , denim.

Cocker Spenltt puppill; Pel1
Hlmtleytn Pllftilf'l femele kit·
ttn; Mtnllture 8chniUier pupt.

pOll. Colll14·441·1637.

c••,•---,.:;:;~::=====
............. f ........

"*·
remodtled.

304-871-8483 cr171-14eo.

Pllltio clltem ltd epproved.
plottlc
tenu, pl•lc

polio, Coll-lt&gt;m 114·112-

Avolfoblt now 2

Gunt for 1111, d11a. 001t pklt10

pet. FFL hok111. 304·891·3031

w-•

Child. . low lkiPOIJ. VInton,
Ohio. Coli 114-311-111114. Au2011 oH Echo
gull
1 bedroom ept, for rent. l•lc IIIIWI. 10" off !cho trlmmert.

diM!, bockyord, rofrlg. • rongo.
U10 pluo wtllttltt • _,rhy
clopooK. Collll4-441·01eo.

74'-71.
1n111.. K...,...

Ltrvt chttt type treezer •lmond

Unfum . 1 bdr. ept., c.rpetM•
utlltill peld, no children. no

e

.300. 304-675-211eo .

' - --..

•

•

®N-

1157 Chwy Novo. 4 door. owto.
roily whttlo. I oyl. CoM 114912-11119 1:00 p.m.

Farm Equipment

onor".

88 Codlloc Ci lllo. Runo good.

71 Montt Cerlo, t·top. C1ll
814· 441·8844 .
I

Tobacco rtlcka for Ale. Ctll

Ooiii!Jollo.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE

61

Auto p·1 rtl
&amp; Accall0r1'11 '

l ·wy-;~..,~·~llob
:::;lo:.

Supplres
&amp; Lr vesluck

r,mJI

4 ft. brullh hog telr cond. C1il

FuU tit 1984 World Book
Encyclaptdltl. ttill in boJitl.

76

4o4. Coll614-446-4452 .

Uted 1,000 gel drinking Wit•
ttorage link and 1,000 gel

2349.

71 OkiiDolto 88 71.000 mila.
loldtd,burgencty.Cell14· 2•15·
"131
··
"
or 114•245 " '"'uu.

mH•. ........

11ft. ShlltltriVIItraiiM. 1970
Ponliac Catellne . Cell 114- 258·
11541 . cen be '"" at Eurekl,
Kenny "a Cti'TYOUt.

:tt:

•'
.-;

tf~11;.:aoo::;.oo:;.30:::;4;-17:::;:11-:1:0:::!_.j- :;

1171 Oklo.,_ II Royolocpl.
45,000 oc1Uol

69 For Sale or Trade

114-446· 3&amp;82 . Up front tree·
tort with werrenry over 75 uHd
•ector~ , 1000 tools.

plaatlc IIPllc t1nk. 304· 1571·

Autoa for Sale

Mollo offw. Ctl 114-441-0094.

ohopt. 1200. Coli 114-9492151.

lov'• 24 " bicycle. :1 ..,... old,
no. 304-571-15203.

441·4411 oft« 8PM.

utll~loo

Werm Moming wood bumltf'.
HP fan and thtrmortet. Good

- · Frl&amp;tt. lwn . 12:00-1 :00

utld .
Large MCtion of quellty tumi·
turt. 1218 Eutern Ave.,

1,000tlroo, - 1 2 , 13. 14. 11,
18. 11.5. I mil• ONt ftt . 211 .
Coli 114-218-6211 .

Fumlthtd .tfidency 1110 mo.
utM~I• pold. 7Y1 Noll Avo. Coli

Aokng

Valli¥ Furniture, ntw' •

dopoolt . CoM 814-446-3817.

Dupl• for 141 l...,.d
Avo.. Oolllpollt. 3 bdr. llvln·
groom,

d-11. Coli 114-441-4825.

Bleck INth• ber lit. 2 tllthlr

Stt. 614-448-1119. -827 3•d.
Avo. Oolflpollo, OH.

Pk*ent UHd Furniture. Good
queltt.., ustd fumlture. Open 8 to
I or call for tppOintment.

2 bdr. 2 bllhl. kitch1n fur·
nilhod, 1 1 Court Sl. U21 POl
mo. plus utlllti•. raftrtnce •

o•..,.

a ........

28 . Preftnilhlld 4•111A matanlre
Pllll bowd te.ee ond t9.18 ••·
Ptnn Wlllhoutt. Wentton, Oh
114-314-3145.

.,,.,. camouflage clothing, mil·
htry ICCIDOri•, ell tint, rentll
utMI clothing In atodc. 8..-n
lorMrvllle. Ellt ot Revent·

63

B • S Product~ clottd for
VICMion, will f'loopen llbor

27 . 111:9 Indoor or out door ozlte
cerpet till rubber btck 4 ctntt to

evenings.

County Applienoe, Inc:. Good
UHd appliana. end TV aeta.
Open' 8AM to 8PM . Mon thru

71

814·246·55014 .

ttovt1hHt: •tell lfii.H or 2 for
.100.

bor ....,. lnchcdtd.

lnvodo Cuddy col&gt;ln, · tq:;.

lull convoo. tondom
i'rolltr, good cond. ·

""· no pete, month IItie, 110

HDUIII for Rant

I

-·-·lrgothotl.- - . . . loltndmtlftl•
ftoellldlni- 141,000. Ctl
114-:J71-11H.

otov•. Coli 114·441-3159 .

Fum. • roan • beth clllft. No

monlp,

eroomhoult. 1.2ecr• . Ooubl•

cw-Lccotod'"'R-HIII.
lntln .,._ UO.OOO. CoM
114-178-2113.

Olive St., Oelllpolia. New &amp; ultd
wood-coli arov11. 8 pc: wood LR
tulte t398, bunk bldt t199,
entron reclin. . f98, new •
uMd bedroom tuhll, r1ng11,
wringer wuh. ., • lho11. New
ltvlngroom euitet t199· tl99.
lamps, elMJ buying call • wood

Fruit

21 . 5 pc:. high gloolbcllll hlbklbo
with thelvll 129.815 .

t100 .. Good condition. C1H

Bolo &amp; choir. good cond~lon .
Coll814-211-1331 .

Reg.nev Inc. 'PI""""' 2 bdr.,
utllhl• ,.nty pekt. nice. Cel
304-871·11 04 or 304-1717926.

glou ll&gt;c32•76 U9.18 M .
22 . Octogon tlffony lood glou
wh- M9.91 n. (241-.

814-992-8598 .

City. Coil 114-211·1120.

dop. rtqulrod. Coli 814-4450444.

Acre remlcltcl bulkllna lou.

41

Goods

Unfumllhed tpt ., 4 roomt •
btth . Centrlly locetlld. On• or
two .ctullll, Nfertnc. &amp; Me .

ly

...__'"""'"'

61 Household

Coli 114-256· 11 90.

For l•tt: IO•to ft. oommerclll
zon.t building. Irick conttructlon. L.... - .. Scuth
Ftfth Ave. Mkldleport. Phone

19. 7 pc. wood proflnlohod vhyf

wrep door trim t1 .00 M .
20. Solid oak Md breia rowl ber
... 4 pc., ni .H ...
21 . Tomp- lh.....l ,...

1300 R-tr. neoo. firm.
CtU814-992-1181 OYMihp.

Kan-•·

- · odwlbo only. Rot. • dop.
requlrod. c• 114·441-18t9.

15 lite a 10 lite tlt.lll.

12 fett Perec:llpte Dlth. Tredt•
Ill Motor Drtve. Ciauld De•ll

to• 2 bcb. e212 . Aloo •200 ooc. lite modtl, works good, t140.
dJP. r.q . ClaM to Foodltnd and Colll14·215-174'1.
Spring ven., Piau. Jeckton
Ellett Apertments, 114·441· Ch~ ut our on our living room
3117 . Equel Houalng .. ~• . U49 • up.
lulhtlne. New Olbton ~~~.., .
OPI&gt;ortunltv.
011. Mollohan Furniture Rt. 7
Ctll 114-448·
Furn . 111--a• ,.t .. 1 bdr., 123!1, nonh.
utMhl• pold, 28\o\ Noll Avo .. 7444.
Oolllpollt. Coil 441·4418 ott«
10 cu.ft. lrltltr upright 110.
Bpm.
2 bdr. unfumithtd _., ln Crown

Fira dll'ftllllld building, 108
M1ln lt .. Point Pl....,.t, 304·

4 m ... ouuW• c:ttv llmittl 32
ecn~.. •re· ""''" room. 1 ttorv

Apartment
for Rent

1 and 2 bdr, aptt. tor rent . Buic
rent tor 1 bdr. •178 . laic rent

3 bdr. home 1108 AdriM Ave.
ue.ooo. Coli 814-441-3711.

t14,000. CoM 114-448-2817.

tvlnlngs.

114-448-0322.

WoodiA...cy.

end MW cerpel. I mil• lOUth of
Oellpolt. 'ram Rt. 21 I tllce
Krln• Rd to ftnl houte on rklht

44

8810.

114-892-1111 doyo. 114·892·
51 13. 814-882-2021 wenlngo.

own•. smeM 2 btctroom
hou-. rvrlfwet«, bath. llltctric

Two 2-bldroom mobile ho~n~~.
2 mil• aut A.ddl10n·lulnlle
Road. G11 heat.. no l*:t. 1200.
plus utillti•. ttcurlty depolh

1179 Holty Perk with •ptndo.
h•t purf1). ••c cond, 304·175·

749 Third Ave. 1800 eq. ft .
Commercl1i or werehou11.
Perking on aidt. A.djecent to
third • Pint 8t. Cell 1114-448·
2382 tor tpC)Ointmtnt.

31

7141.

304-871-2331
- - - - - - - - -'13 ' Doubl.wkle, 24~~:48 , acre
ltnd. woodllkllng, flrepleoe. cell·
lng tan. out building. n••
Hennen School , 304· 743 ·

Bteuttful home in Flttwoodl

w... wolto _.lcod ond driMod .

1 OxiO. 2 bedroom mobh horne
on Union Ave. in Pomaroy.
1200. per month plus d.,alit.

MOilLE HOMEI MOVED: In·
aured. rNIOnllble rwtw. C1H

ar• ot Pomerov . 17 ICNI &amp;
oprln8 foci pond ovolloblo. CoM
I 14-441-2311 .

Profe11ionei
Service•

r.

up to •125 . Hkf•l· btdl 1390
to •5115. Rtclinen •2215 to

'*
udltloo. Coli 614-441-8204.

In Chnhlre. Call 114-317 ·

K-on 13051171· 3139.

23

Trailer IPtce for rent. Letert,
od locetlon, edulh only,
40.00 month, 304-876·2902

2 bdr. c:omplerlty fumiture,
lerge lot. ·~oo
month plut

Good condition . tiOOO. Will
taketrlde. CtH 814· 949-2801 .

3 bedroom trailer, 304·875·
2811 .

COUNTRY MOilLE Homt Pork.
Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
llrgelota. Call 114-182-7479.

1

~~ ft

~

211. Coli end wood ftreptece

Sot• end chlira priced tom

3 bedroom mobllt home tor rent

.a&lt;t-212-4488 .

Rt. 7. CoU 114-448-4285 .

,· ~ • . ·~·

l 04-1121·8200.

t;.;::=~==~====-r---------11ip.
OMC~C.doepV. rocli04tove.. portl· pottl. dtlplhtift
68

8:35
7:00

v•il•.

e 111111 t.,..:A. tN.

23. lnlulttld stHI doon bltnkt
IICOndl 121.00 N .
24 . 2x4~ aouldCII ctlllng tie
embo.... fire rtted 12.21 ...

2 bdr. trail•.
dryer, 1
child acc.M. w.t• • tr•h
pold. Colll14-441-4013.

14•70. 3 bedrDDm, 2 bath.

lllf'Oitlc, ct'IMd,.,, shop. Can
open 115 drft. Mr. Skin.,

4411 .

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 62

CoiiiU-982-3789 ovonlngo .

d~notW..r·

Fumlahtcl room e1 15. Utlllti•
pd. 919 2nd Gelllpolia. Shere
beth. Single mele. Ctll 446·

ohowor. · - · lrlm Ulbo,
ro thore rMIIo , llndlm
uc ccnd, ne.ooe.oo.
l;:oll Andy 304- 123··~ or

o .r

Rod r••·rrlot Toyloro Berry
'"'
·
Pttch · c-•
""-1192
or
• 514· u

•uo

l'llh
thlp

•

a..

eiUI

;so

e119.85 to el71.85 .
17 17 19wh!W ld
· •top 138.91.
•go vonltyond
merbll
18. Wood f,.,dt door~ MCOndt

304-112 ·

2 bdr., fum ., new cerpl'l:, AC,In

11 , ltHI prlhung inadlltd

Control Hotel Cell 814-4480751 .

month.

8:05
8:30

'
, 180 crulHr 21 fr Ortn I..UU.
hp ONC, otow, Nf. ·

clocro ond loml 1\0 hr. Ike n.
tll9.85.
12. Sew• end dr.tn pipe 4x10
PVC pr..orotod t2.89 " ·
13. I' picnic toblo 2 bench•

C3JGrllnA(!J Mode Sponelaok
(!) Iter Trek
&lt;IJ IIMcllno Rainbow (CC)
illl Uvlng With Anlm111
(!J One Dey 111 Time
(J) Father Knowe
t
• (J) ()I NBC Newe
(3) The Riflemen
(!) llell of 1111 Den. .
C1J • (I) ABC Newe
&lt;IJ Doctor WhG
®
CBS Nowe
illl Bady Electric
(!J.Welcome B1ck. Kotter
(J) Gomer Pyle, UBMC
• (J) PM Mege1ln1
(3) Men from U.N.C.LE
(!) Spor11Centlr
Cll Enterlllnmon1 Tonight
ET goat on location in Israel wi1h Fred Dryer for 1he
making of hi a · upcoming
film, " Death Before Oilh-

a

'4800. Phono 114-992-flll.l 7.

prohu,. docro Hl.le .

sca~(llA- "£~s~~ ....

TIAT IIAILT
PIIZLII

•w(I)•(J)9m i)}J
()I fHwl

••

t

...

13

Sentinel-

EYENIN@

·~ 971 olght"" foci Ron,.lciot .~
f Hit. Open bow w~~ - ·
40 HP. 1.0 .. ntw -~ell· new·
, w• untt. trailer lndu--

&amp; Vegetables

Roonw for rtflt, dey. week.
month. 011111 Hotel. Cell 814·
448·9680. Rent 11 low • •

8/27/88

\

2 pc. flbwgl•• tubon
1how1r comblnldon HCOndt

1 aoe. c.u btfor• 12 end eft• e.

Ooiii!Jolll. Coiii14·44B-1409.

with '.o1gl. . lneuleted 1310.
I . Double oomrhtrci-' entrenoe
door aer ' t brona -'umlnum
U9B.95 HI, oln1loo USI.OO

For rent liMPing Room• end
Hght hoult keeping roomt . Perk

Hou• W. Leon. phone 304-4158·

dopoo~ .

•350.
'
1 . Double tide light door Mta

~- 11Jond

A~

Boeta and
\76
" Motora for Salt!

trenc:e door 111'1 with ~ gl-

IS. '"'"" 211•111
troll« undwpn HCCndo e3.88

MerciJarHirse

3 bedroom hoult In Point
Pleutnt t200.00 month.

wfn-· •.•

"''* ,_

IT IS, '()II CA!oi'T IIAV61116

1911 Ytmoho 411 oo VZ dirt
..... 1475.00. 304-171·2073.

Furnished Rooms

46

/fDOII'T~ W110S1: BIRTIIQ\'1'

:

1p.m.

7 . Doubte ltttl. .,.. ._._. en-

mid• from 2~~:4KI rlldwood
ltlinlld •29.915.
14. 14 T pluo 8 profln- bNco

Television
Viewin·g

, 11.7 1 modol Kow-1. toll ;
........ 304-171· 3831 ofttr • :

u .as ond e7.i11-d 14.18.

oolltlocrrenclomlonglllbundl•
,7&amp;eq.tt.

5109.

1872 Atl ..ric 1 biD 111dng
03,800. Coll614-31&amp;-1802.

IPP""· •ec•eorv.

•

Avallllblt Sept. 1. 2 bedroom,
unfurnished house. Electric
hilt. Vlnt 8t. Racine. Cel
814·941· 2t411or eppointmtnt
If int.,lttld.

210 .,.,• . •14.300"' us.eoo
Inventory, trelning. fixtures,
•end openi1g . Can combi1e
wtth Ollllf 1000 bt.ndt of

dopooit. 304-875-7141 .

llrgelot Addieon Ad . • 1melllot

Pov own utll~l• . 1-514·912·
2381 doyo.

2V.. IC,.
mobllt home foto
ult. Rurll wet• • will Rlt
MPiflllt • po~tlblt lend con-

troct. Col 614-311-8111 .

Unfumt.hed, 2 bedroom apt fOf
rtnt, 2015 Popler St. •15o.oo

Apertmenta end houtet In
Pomeroy •••· D11p01it requlrMI .

Own your own 110.19 oneprloe
d•~n•
ltore. A retail
price unbell.,..eble for queHty
ttDa normaly prked from •11
to MO . Ov• 110 brand nam•

•ho•

locotlon, 304-875-2441 .

0254.

42 Mobile Homea
for Rent

NEW AND UIED MOilLE
HOMES KE88EL'I QUAUTV
MOilLE HOME IALEI. 4 MI .
WElT, OALUPOU8, RT 35 .
PHONE B14-44&amp;-7274.

2sn.

46 Space for Rent

e100 .00
3329 .

il'l.ii'CI,If

21

Fumilhed houu 2 bdr.. 1185,
131 ,.., 4 th Aw.Oelllpolill. C.. l

I

ooconlfo~· ··

10. 8 or 8 panaiiiNIIneullted

One bedroom ept, Con'*'lent

\

playing Sa.ndinistas
and Contras. We freedom
fighters need lots of fmancial
'd"
3.1.

South Chor!Hton, 304-711·
3891, 1:00 AM to 1'00 PM.
Modlcol • -· op~~~lnl lmmodltloly, upwlonot proforrod.
8•d NIUftW to 801 C·21, Point
1'1-Roglttor, 200MolnSt ..
PI:. Ptt., w.v..
-::Ph:-W-mti-C-:Itt
-need-:-od:-:fo-r-fc-N-,th
Phtrmecv Stor•. Oolllpollo,
Midd,_.., Wolloton. Coli Don

43051 or cell 114-813-4514.

G

mtn•
MCOndl.

mhtd. ·Two bMiroom IP':t It
1111.00 I* month. Rentel

l
lobylkt• lor 3 yo. cld. EIIP•

2. 4111 14 me.nlte undlrtaye2.tt ... 4•4 11 .oo ••·

3 . 4•Sa'4 Ioven plywood tUI

11- Apll Ll-

,1110 Suzuld-orcyclo 15110 4 ;
cyl ...100. Aohloy - - · ,
, ''300. Coli 114-318-1211.
•
-19_1_1_ 11
__
-_
- ...
-,-::
IUl
:-":1':'~1::-.-N-04
"';. :
' gotid, GoGel ol\ope, .1 .300.00. :·
'.
• 304·112-3755.

The

Ohio

27, 1986

BORN LOSER

Motorcycles . · ~-

' 74

Second'• Clo110UM- Suptua.
1. 4d tnd """7.· 11111• ......
ccto ,._nlbo•ldlng orpM!ollng
oocond'ott.le- l .lepo.

· etcliJt(llti applicltlonl for rent ..

.,.......,., n

lied. lend eurnped aeltIMidrMIH envelope: Hewb
Undlng. P.O 8011 13493. Orlondo FL 32851.

CARLYLE ~J Llrry Wright

KIT 'N'

64 M lac. M lfchandi..

Apertment
for Rant

~esday,

Wadnesda , August 2T. HtQ6

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

•

lUI D.C. Cop A

joume1111-tumed-pollce detoctiw 1e1m1 1hl1 •
women from hle pllt 11 lnvolvld In the ••••••lnltlon
of 1 Lttln Amarlcen Amblllldor. (80 mln.l ·

CHI Newt

.,
Auotion: An Ameri-

�,.

,

~'*~~a·~!14:.:.~n.~~D~~~s~a~~~tin~-~--------------------~~~·4P~.~~m~MW~oy~~~~h~~~i~ap~~~~~·JOh~~~~~----------------------w~ed!n~a~da~y~.~A~ug~wrt~~27Z·~1~9~8f~·:

,_r---Local Briefs:-----.
. . ..

Meet the team set Thursday

Meet the team will be held at Meigs Stadium in Pomeroy,
Thul'lday at 7 p.m. Freshmen, reserves, varsity and cheerleaders
wUl be introduced.

PUCO accepts local firms GCR
The Public UWltles Commission of Ohio has accepted a revised
gas cost recovery (GCRi flllng by Syracuse Home Utilities
Company.
.
The revision Is the result of computatlonalerroisdet.cted by the
commission and wiU reduce the average monthly gas rates of tbe
company's customers by 12 cents.
In other action the commission approved a reduction in natural
gas costs for the National Gas and ou Corporation. This decrease
wUl save the company's customers approximately $3.10 per month.
National Gas and OU serves 16,799 customers in easl central Ohio.
Syracuse serves 350 customers In Meigs County.

Deferulants forfeit bonds
In the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night
ftve defendants forfeited bonds and six others were fined.
Forfeiting bonds were Brian J. Dingey, New Haven,$BJ, DWI and
$50, weaving course; David A. Hobbs, Dex~r. $450, DWI; Jeanine
MIUer, Bidwell, $40, speed; Scott Wroblewlskl Gallipolis $j()
squealing tires, $100, contempt of oourt: Richard F).uey, Mldd~rt:
$50, disorderly lllallner.
Fined were Ronald E. Coats, Pomeroy, $425 and costs, three days
confinement, DWl; Carl E. Stewart, Cheshire, $425 and costs, 30
days confinement, OW!, $100 and costs, drtvlng under suspension;
Anna Bareswilt, Middleport, $100 and costs, five days confinement,
make restitution, destruction of property; Sheni Butcher,
Middleport, $100 and costs, five days confinement, destruction of
property; Keith Musser, Middleport, 150 and rosts, disorderly
manner, $100 and costs, five days confinement, assault; Patty
Boyles, Middleport, $50 and costs, disorderly manll'r.

Pomeroy Mayor's Court cases
Twelve defendants forfeited bond and six others were fined In the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler Tuesday night.
Forfeiting bonds were WUUam J. Cremeans, Middleport, left of
center, $43, financial responslbUity, $!1J; Walter A. Ellis, Pomeroy,
squealing !Ires, $63; Diana Alshlre, Syracuse, disorderly manll'r,
$63; Marjorte Keebaugh, Reedsville, speed , $46; Jean Delph,
Pomeroy, operating a vehicle under suspension, $63; Beulah M.
Shuler, Langsville, speed, $50; Reta Pullen. New Haven, speed, $!6;
Dana E. Haines, Minersvllle, speed, $50
Peggy M. Carper, Pomeroy, Improper backing, $43; Clarence
Burlingame, Bidwell, speed, $51; Russell Cullums, Pomeroyfallure
to yield, $43; Timothy L. Lyons, Letart. W.Va., speed, $43.
Fined were Tom Peterangelo, Fairborn, open flask, $88andoosts;
Michael McQuinn, Kettering, apen flask, $88 and oosts; Johnle
Evans, Racine, no drivers license. $63 and rosts, expired plates, $63
and costs; David Lee Vance, Pomeroy, menanc!hg threats, $63and
costs; Ronnie Powell, Middleport, OW!, $375 and oosts; Russ
Ebeling, Marietta, speed, $46 and costs.

Area deaths
Cyril D. Arnold
CyrU D. Amold, 79, Rt. 1, Stewart,

teacher, having taught 28 years at
Kanawha County, W.Va., scbools.
She attended Flatwoods United
Methodist Church.
She was born Sepf. 19, 1900, In
Kentucky the daughter of the late
Turner and Anna Evans Branham.
She was preceded in death by her

died Tuesday momtng at his home
following an extended Uiness.
Mr. Arnold was born Sept. 18,
1900, in CoolvUle, Son of the late
Frank and SteUs Frost Arnold.
He was a graduate of Coolvllle
High Scbool and attended Franklin 15, 19&amp;'!. She was also preceded In
University in Columoos. He was a death by two brothers, two sisters
farmer and had retired trorn MUk and one grandson.
She Is survived by one son, Ernest
Marketing Associates. He was the
Max
Cale, Jr., Pomeroy; one
last surviving member of Frost
Universalist Church and a 44-year stf!Hiaughter, Mrs. Lloyd (Aud·
member and past master of reyl McLaughlin, Homestead,
Savannah Lo~e 466 F&amp;AM, Fla.; and several nieces and
nepheWs.
Guysvllle.
Ser:vlces will be held Thursday at
He Is survived by his wife, Bertha
3
p.m.
at Ewing Funeral Home with
L. Arnold.
the
Rev.
Melvin Franklin official·
Services wUl be held Thursday at
1 p.m. at the White Funeral Home lng. Burtal wUI be in Chester
In Coolvllle with the Rev. H.L. 'Cemetery. Friends may call at the
McDaniel !tflclating. Burial wUl be 1\uleral home today from 7-9 and
In CoolvU~ Cemetery. Masonic until time of services on Thursday.
services wlll be held at the fUneral
rome this evening at 7. Frtends Ruth Ann Douglas
may call today from 2-4 and 7·9 p.m.
The Rev. Florence Smith wlll
Dovie B. Cale
officiate at funeral services for Mrs.
Ruth Ann Douglas Thursday at 1
Dovle B. Cale, m, 37lY74 Sinner p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home.
Road, Pomeroy, died Monday
Survivors of Mrs. Douglas In·
afternoon at Veterans Memortal elude seven grandchildren, 18 great
Hospital.
grandchildren and one great, great
Mrs. Cale was a retired school · grandson.

Hymn sing set for Monday
A Labor Day hymn sing will he
held Monday evening at the
Syracuse ball park.
The event will begin at4 p.m. a nd
feature singing by Sunrise; Dan
Hayman and The Faith Trio;
Sheklna, Kathy and Jan; and Mark
Matson, who wlll also double as

announcer.
It is a lso rumored that ·tlle
Infamous Haddie May Is again eO
the loose and may he making :~
su11&gt;rise appea ranee sometln)e
during the course of the evening;
It's suggested that anyone plannl~
to attend the sing Iring a Ia~

CHEVROLET
-OLDSMOBILE-CADIUAC
''fO-aY . .DIIS Of.DS.·CAD.·CHEY."
COMPUTERIZED ENGINE ANALYSIS

your hi&amp;ft tech auto the edge with our new Allen Eneine Antlyzer.
State of the art diaenostic center that's way ahead of any of the competition. The newest in the field of General Motors. Trouble shootin&amp; di·
acnostie equipment witll computer and data log caJIIbilities.
IIGUI.AR 526.00
•TU

Speelal Price

51995
• TAX (WITII

Good thru Sept. 1

(O~NI

AIR CONDITIONING

(fiiON I 01 ADDII
•Performance Toot System ·
SliGHTlY HIG"EII
•Add Rotrigoront II Necesurv
•Inspect Syatem for Leaks
•Check Drive Bait Condition &amp; Tension
•Test (wi1h thermometer) Degree of Coldno11

GREAT DRIVING COMFORT BEGINS HERE

REGUlAR S44.SO

•ujpulal Prlee

52595
• TAl (WITH

Good thru Sept. 1

(O~NI

LUBE, OIL AND FILTER

Lubricate auspanaion, drain oil and replace filter using Mr .
Ooodwrench Oil and AC Delco Fiher.
In this spKialwe insist on usine quality Mr. Goodwret1cll Oil &amp;A/C Filtersnot 111 off brand or chelp filler and oil. This is an oonest to (llodnoss special
on qu11ity GM Plrts &amp; GM Service. no substi1ute tor quolity. Limit 5 qts. Oil.

IIGIIAI '26.95

• uSpeclal Prlee

51995

Good thru Sept. 1 • TAX (WITH COUPON!

26 POINT
SAFETY INSPECTION
SAFETY SERVICE INSPECTION
REGUlAR SJ9.9S
.TAX

-"

SPECIAL

$995

+ TAX
Good thru Sopt . 1

IWIIH COUPON!

Daily Number
761

SuperLotto
25-16-1-27-38-24

rhair.

husband,ErnestM.Ca~.onNov. ~~--------------~lili~~~----------------~

Squads respond to 7 calls
Meigs County Emergency Medl·
cal Services reports seven calls
Tuesday.
Tuppers Plains at 2: 11 a.m. to
Scout Camp Road for Nellie Perry
to Veterans Memortal Hospital;
Pomeroy at 11:48 a.m. to East
Second Street for Randy Smith to
Veterans Memortal Hospital; Ru·
tland atll:58 a.m. to Brick Street
for Fred Cales who was dead on
arrival; Middleport at8: 32 p.m. to
North Third for Shirley McClellan
to Veterans Memorial Hospital;

Veterans

Memorial

Admissions - Nellie Perry,
Chester; George Pierce, Pomeroy.
Discharges - Rebecca Tlllls,
Wendi Kloes.

Pomeroy at 9: 24 p.m. to Nye
Avenue for Bessie Landaker to
Veterans Memorial Hospital:
Pomeroy at10:02 p.m. transported
Shenie Butcher to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 11:33
p.m. to VIllage Grren Apartments
for Brandy Fortune who was
treated rot not transported.

REMEMBER
WITH TuFLOWERS
"t&gt;nd a JH&gt;aulifulh
'"'"l,lifnt'tl funt"ral ·

CHAROE
CHECKING

ACCOUNTS
FOR

SENIOR

CITIZENS!*
I
I'
NO GIMMICKS! NO MINIMUM BALANCE!
'Must be 62 yea~ of age or older
~----,

PEOPLES
MEMBER F.D.I.C.

' /! ..

at y
Vot.36, No.81

New Haven. W. Va.

2212 Jackson Avenue
Point Pleasant. W. Va.

882-2135

675-1121

temperatures In the low 'lOs. The .
probabiUcy of preclplia*lon Is
near zero through Fri:lay. Winds ·
wiU he Ught and variable
tonight.

enttne
3 Sections. 28 Pages . 26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc _ Newspaper

1986

SCS opposes usage of reclamation·material
By NANCY YOA•CHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
The Meigs County Commissioners reported Wednesda:v they have
been Informed the local SoU and
Water Conservation SE&gt;rvlce, and
Its members, have passed a
resolution and forwarded It to the
approprtale people In Columros,
stating their opposition to the use of
Bypro in Meigs County reclamation
projects.
It has recently come to publlc
attention that Bypro, a paper
sludge used expertmenta.Uy since
198&gt; In 16 strtp mine reclamation
projects In eight countle:s In the
state, Including Meigs, contains

small amounts of dioxin , which can
cause a wide range of disorders In
animals and Is a potential carcinogen In humans.
However, tbe amount of dioxin
and Its toxicity in the Bypro from
Mead's Chillicothe plant, are stlll
matters of confusion. The Bypro
used In Meigs County came from
the Chllllcothe plant.
Olrhmissloner R!ch·aro Jo!l's
said It Is his understanding Bypro
has been used In all Meigs Olunty
reclamation projects by the Ohio
Department of Na):ural Resources,
and in some reseeding along the
road of the II'W county landfUl.
A formal hearing before Ohio

Environmental ProJection Agency
officials on til' Byprodloxln O!sue Is
expected In Ia~ Septemher &lt;r
Octoher.
A bid of $11,843.22 from the Shelly
Co., of ThornvWe, was accepted
Wednesday by the commissioners,
to PIVe a portion of New Uma Road
to the Rutland rorporatk&gt;n Umlts.
The Rutland prolect Is'being funded
by a $17,1XXl Community Development Block Grant through the Ohio
Department of Development, and
Includes a 1300 by 20 foot section of
the street.
Bids for new equipment for
Rutland Fire Department, to he
paid for by $11,~ of CDBG funds,

were also read dunngWednesday's
meeting. Submitting bids were the
Sutphen Olrp., of Amlin, $14,005.81:
Finley Fire Equipment, McCon·
nelsvUle, $140,49.85; Warren Fire
Equipment, Wal'l'l!l, $12,517.60:
Franklin Fire Equipment, Ma·
rletta, $9,354.40; Dlls Mountaineer
As!l&gt;Ciation, Ravenswood, W.Va.,
$12,6!18. The bids were tabled for
examination by the fire department
members. A recommendation
from the department Is expected by
Sept. 3.
Gordon GUmore, county soli
survey team memher, reported
that 103,00) acres of Meigs Olunty
have been surveyed thus far. "This

(&gt;Jts us right on schedule." GUmorr
said, "to complete Meigs County's
soU survey by December 1989.'.
Gilmore reported th~ ·survey tmm
is mapping "west of U.S. 33" at the
present lime.
Meigs County' Sheriff Howard
Frank was given autlnrtzallon by
the board to !&gt;Jrchase a used
vehicle for use as a sheriff's cruiser.
at a cost up to $2,001
The sheriff reported that lat e
Tuesday evening, a cruiser being
drtven by a deputy on Ohio 338 at
Great Bend caught fire and was
destroyed. Cause of the fire, which
began In the area of a rear wheel, Is
unknown.

Rinehart fires up
Hunter supporters

Banlclng On Mason County's Future
5th Street

Clear toolght, wkh a low In the
mid 408. SuiUly Friday, with high

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, August 28,

Copyrighted 1986

BANK

HrrunJlf-'RWnt, ju~tl nil
or vi"it

POMEROY
FLOWER
SHOP
u "' ......,..., ......t. l.......-

•

Second Street
Mason, W. Va.
773-5514

Reported drowning false alarm
GALLIPOLJS - Point Pleasant Volunteer Fire Department
divers were called out on stand by to assist the Gallla County
Sherttrs Department In the search of a reported drowning In the
Ohio River Tuesday that turned out to be a false alarm, according to
a spokesman for the sheriff's department.
The spokesman said an unoccupied raft, ortglnally believed to be
the result of two boys drowning, was reported floating down river
along Addison around 7:30p.m. After searching the river banks tJr
J0.45 minutes, the spokesman said, a man llshlng verlflect rome had
drowned from the raft.
Fire department boats found the raft, after searching for almost
2'h hours, around 11 p.m., according to Fire Chief Jim Wood. The
divers were called rot not used.
The sherl!fs spokesman said officials believe the Incident was mly
a prank.

Ohio Lottery

1986 football
tabloid inside
today's edition

POPUlAR FIGURE -

As

one II the Olllo RepubllcaJ•
Party's Jt&amp;mg lllan, with hln
!ilralglalorward, down home,

rank and llle alfllude, Dana.
"Buck" Rlnehari, m~ II

Cohunbu.o and a fonner 1'1'81dent
uf Meigs County, ronol81mil,v
11
WOWS 'em" from the podkim.lt
was 110 different al Wedne!lday
nlghl's fund,ral8lng dblller althe
Royal Oak Re.on Club on behalf
of Gtll'IY Hunter, RepubDcan
candidate for !Nih District !ilale
representative.

By NANCY YOACHAM
Senlb!l Staff Wrller
"Meigs County has a chance to
lead the way. You should be five to
one behind Garry Hunter when the

Senators
open tax
hearings

votes (for the slate representative's
race) areoounted (lnNovemher)."
This was part of an approxl·
mately haU hour message from
Dana "Buck" 'Rinehart, mayor of
Columbus, to more than rot;) Meigs
County Republicans who gathered
Wednesday night at the Royal Oak
Resort Qub for a $20-a·plate
fund· raising dinner for Garry Hun·
ter of Athens, Republlcan candl·
date lor 94th District slate
representative.
Rinehart, knoWn for his "you can
do It -go get 'em" speeches and his
"back to the prop~" sty~ of
polltlcklng,ls a popular figure in the
state Republican party, as well as
In Meigs County. This was the
second tlme the Ollumbus leader
bas spoken In Meigs County, the
first tlme being on behal! &lt;1 .
Jennifer Sheets, the Republican
candidate for state representative
in the 1984 election.
Said Rinehart of Hunter, "This
guy Isn't lazy. He told me earller
tonlght that he's goingdoortodoor,
farm to farm and rosiness to
rosiness (In his campaign). !like
the sound cl. that. That's the kind of
commitment he's bringing to this
race."
Rinehart cited Hunter's achievements as a practicing aHorney and
his accomplishments as Athens
Qty law director, an elected
position he presently ooids. He
highlighted a recent case Hunter
"just wrapped up" in which
"Athens was paying too much ilr
ltabUty Insurance." According to
Rinehart, Hunter " went to bat on
what he was told would be a losing

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Ohio's tax commts,sloner says the
pending federal tax reform bUt wDI
not produce any extra money for
the slate of Ohio before next July.
Nevertheless, state Senate Re·
publicans continued their push
Wednesday to passacon-espondlng
slate tax cut before the end of the
year, throwing the spotlight on tax
reduction durtng the election
campaign.

YOUNG REPUBLI(;ANS - CalillnW. Ma.f«
Dana ''Book" RIDellart, sealed, Glll'l')' HUDler, at tile
podium, candklate for Milt Dlolricl o1ate repr!luma·
Uve, and Mark Colllrul, behind IUnehari, 111111 cl Slate
effort. He was told he rouldn't win.
Well," Rinehart remarked tongueIn-cheek, "that's music to a chal·
Ienger's ear. You think I a:on'l win?
Just watch me! And Hunter
brought over W,OOJ back to
AUens."

Rinehart said Hunter has ·· finan·
cia! lntergrtty, fiscal responslbUty
and the abUlty to deal hard,"
adding, "that's the kind rl person
we need in the statEhouse."
He advised Meigs Republicans to
"he unswerving" In their support It
Hunter. "If you make an Invest-

Sea. Oaldey Collins, are but a sampUng uf the young
Jlepubllcans In Ohio. The tllree are pictured at
Wedo •ay nllht's fund-raising dinner at the Royal
Oak Reoort Club, on behalf uf Rumer.

ment, see It through. It wouldn't be
fair If you and I make an
Investment In Garry Hunter's
candidacy and then walk away
from that investment In the last
eight weeks (of the campaign)."
Applause rangout when Rinehart
commented that he trough! Meigs
was the ooly county In the state with
"100 percent Republicans" In the
county courtmuse. "You have
excellent oounry officials here
because you see to lt. You can have
the same type of npresentatk&gt;n in
the 94th district - If you see to lt.''

Rinehart advised Meigs Republl·
cans to "elect people you &lt;:an be
proud of...people with energy,
enthusiasm, dedlcatiln to hard
work and concern for the
community."
He noted June unemployment
figures of 7.3 percent nationwide.
8.6 percent In Athens County, 12
percent In Gallla County and 12.9
percent In Meigs County.
•·Almost 13 percent unemployment In Meigs County," he said.
••That's why young propleleave the
(Continued on Page 8)

Reagan sends message of deterrence to Gadhafi
By NORMAN D. SANDLER
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - As
President Reagan whiles away a
three-week swruner vacation, the
quiet that. accompanies the dog
days of August has been broken by
a drumbeat of While House warnIngs to Libyan ~ader Moammar
Gadhafl.
.
Gadhafl. who Reagan branded as
a "mad dog'' and "flaky," Is the
target of pressure and publlc
threats designed to deter or punish
fUture Libyan Involvement 1n
terrorism.
Despite confusion between the
western White House and Washing·
ton about the goals and origins of
that effort, spokesman Larry
Speakes Insists there Is no split
within the administration over
pollcy toward Libya.
The Unl~ States, he said, "wUI
do what we can to prevent"

to Its oontention that Ubya Is
geared for a possible resumption ct
Its Involvement In terrorism and
denied the warnings to Gadhafl,
delivered as the earner uss
Forrestal remained in the Medlter·
ranean well outside of Libyan
waters, were intended to bait him.
' "Our goal Is tl prevent Gadhafl
!rom doing anything," Speakes
said, "not to pwoke him Into doing

Libyan-backed acts of terrortsm
and wUI "be prepared to take the
necessary steps, either before or
after these are committed, in order
that they don't happen again."
Questions about administration
intentions emerged Wednesday
with a Washington Post report
claiming details of the latest
campaign against Gadhafl were
leaked as part of a war It nerves to
provoke him Into an Irrational
reactkm that could embolden his
opponents.

anything.''

A senior administration dtlclal
US. Intelligence agencies
have "hard evidence that tbe
Libyan government bas been in·
volved in planning and at~ptlng
to execute terrortst acta" stnce
American warplanes bombed Trl·
poll AprU 14.
The &lt;rlglnal report on these plots
In The Wall Street Journal was
rifered by the administration as
justification lor new rroves against
insls~

The New Yorl&lt; Times then
reported that administration rift·
clals In Washlng1on were ron·
cerned that speculatiln about
Libyan lntenllons and possible U.S.
reprisals - raised Monday In The
WaU Street Journal - was out of
hand.
The White House, bowever, stuck

Libya and was described by the
!tflclat as "unautrorlzed rot highly
autrorttatlve.' ·
"This 1!1 a realistic assessment of
the current situstlon regardng
Gadhafl and the !l'O"pects for him
committing future terrorist acts,"
Speakes said.
Another official said !&gt;Jbllc dis·
closure of the k!telllgence reports
and deliberations under way within
the administration "probably was
uoetul" In reinforcing the message
to Gadhaft.
1n signing a bill Wednesday that
autlnrlzes some $2.4 biUion to
protect American diplomats
abroad from terrorism, Reagan
reafllnned his determination "to
confront this crlmlnal behavior in
every way: diplomatically, economically, legally and, when neces·
sary, miUtarUy,''
The threst of additional mlUtary

reprtsals against Libya is only one
facet ot what admlnLs trallon off!.
clals descrthed as a three-part
program to put pressure on
Gadhafl.
The CIA Is seeking to rromote
and exploit political dissent within
Libya, while U.N. Ambassador
Verron Walters, a veteran diplo·
matlc troublesooater, Is heading to
Europe In the next few days In an
attempt to bulld support for untfled
Western action to tighten the
ecoromlc screws on Libya.
The White House and State
Department were vague about
whether the forus of the Walters
mission might be wider than the
Issue of ecoromlc sanctions. Offi.
clals said only that his discussions
would "Include an exchange ct
Information about Libya" and
a wide range of

Ohio Democrats welcome Kucinich back to fold
Austin had called Kuclnlch
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP!) Gerald J. Austin, the campaign "crazy" for running and made
director for Gov. Richard F. snide referellces to the former
Celeste, summed It up:·''In polltlcs, Clevelail4 mayor's !&gt;Jbllclzed et·
there are 110 ~tfl'lends and torts at !Pirltui1 growth.
ButW...tn-lay KuctaJch "enthu·
ro permanent eQemles."
With that, the Ohio Democratic s~~· li!llll9rlled Celeste for
hlerarciiY wdcomed back Into the rt ~lectltln IIIII Wi1 he wUl work for
.fold Dennis J . KuclaJch. the former ~ Da)iOCiatic.cindldates this tall.
'tndepmdent candidate for gover·
'1 wattI hll active involvement In
nor W008e pret!ellce oo Ill! ballo1 . the c:ampaJgn;" ' said Austlo. "I
unW Wedneaday had threatened to ct:iit't kiiow tlta:t we've ever worked
band the race to Republican togelhet ~· rot we're aotng to
nominee James A. Rhodes.
worlt: IIJB!!ther for the next two
Kucintch had' all rot called the months."
Celeste administration crooked,
Kuclnlch claimed to have cut nO
saytq ''then! Is a 'For Sale' sign oo deal with state or naltlnal DemDcrats In withdrawing ll'om the
the Statebouse."

contest.
"There was ro quid JX'O quo
discussed · at any tlme ., the
meeting," KuclnlcW said of Thes·
day's two-hour meeting with J:lem&gt;.
Cl'litlc National Olalnnan Psul
Kirk and Ohio Democratic Olalr·
man James M. Ruvolo which led to

It Secretary of

Sta~

ShelTOd

Brown, Kuclnl.ch was peppf!'UI
with qliestlons about the apJllll'ellt
Inconsistency of · emlraclng an
administration he had caultlcally
denounced as coiTUpt and wasteful
"I' enthuslastlcail¥ endoJ'Ie him
(Celeste)," said Kuclnlcll ·when
JI'O(Ided by reporters. "He's more '
his wltblrawal. ·
"I citlll'f: 11\Y ~ oourse," said the In tune with the times. He's awakj!,
39-year old politlcai maverick wro he's alive.
"I never questioned the pnonal
served a stormy'.two-)'l!ar tmn as
lnaytl'· r1 •CleO/eland In the late tntegn!y r1 Dick Celeote," 1!lld
I9'IOs. "My Ufe Is deterrnlned by my Kutiltlcll, adciiDi he plana tl work
within the Democ:ratr party to
own cb;lloe. ~r
comet
the soortoomlnp he &amp;
·Meetili with rfllOI'Iei'S lblrtly
crlbed
eerller
tn the campaign,
before fiUIIg hlllelta' r1l'l!lllll&amp;ltln ·
troni the campaign wtth the cillce particularly on ethics.
"' .

'

......
••

:,

'

.... . .... . .... . ... ..
;

,.;

Frank reported there was Insurance oothe cruiser but none oo the
contents of the vehicle. He said
about $4,000 of equipment was lost
in the fire.
The sheriff also reported that
approxtmately $1,:!XI worth of
medical bllls for prisoners are due,
and he has only $8ll In his account
to pay the bUts. No decision was
made on where the addllk&gt;nal funds
should come from, however, Frank
noted ··u Lo; the law that the rounty
must provide medical services to
prisoners."
And finally, bids from Coch
Asphalt OJ., North Bend, and
!Continued on Page 8)

~.~./

Joanne Limbach, the commlsslo!l'r, was the leadoff witness In
the Senate Ways and Means
Committee, which started hearings
on the Republlcan-wrttten bUt
cutting the state personal Income
tax rates by 11 percent to blunt an
anticipated windfall.
Limbach and her as!l&gt;Ciates from
the Ohio Department of Taxation
explained that because of seven
proposed changes In exemptions.
deductions and exclusions !rom the
federal Income tax. taxpayers will
owe about S3al mWlon to $:fiO
million more In state personal
lnoome taxes.
Corporate taxpayers wUl have tc
pay hetween $ll miUlon and $00
million more In state taxes when
the changes go Into effect, said
Limbach. The Senate Republican
till also would trim the corporate
tax rate to counteract the federal
action.
··we probably would not see any
addltilnal money untB flscall988."
said Umbach. Fiscal l9tll In Ohio
starts July 1, 1987.
Corgress Is expected to finalize
the tax reform bUt in mid·
September, and Senate Republl·
cans want to have their plan In
place by Jan. 1 When the new
federal law wiU take effect.
"This Is an excellent first step Ill
the process," said Limbach, ac·
knowiedglng that Gov. Richard F .
Celeste favors rorrecttve legislation to prevent. an unvoted tax
windfall.
However, Limbach cautioned the
senators to walt for the federal
product before fashioning a bill at
the ~te level.
"There Is a great deal of
uncertainty," she said, joking that
she plans to ask next year for an
approprtatlon.for "a crystal ball, a
ouija . board and a deck of tarot
cards" to help predict the fUture.
Sen. Rlchan:l H. Finan, R·
Cincinnati, placed the tax cut bill In
a subcommittee chaired by himself
and said the next hearing wUl he
Sept. 5. Other members &lt;1 t~
suboommtttee are Sens. David L:
Hobson, R-Sprtng!leld; Paul E.:
Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus; Richard c:,
Pfeiffer Jr., D·Columi&gt;Js; and
Robert Nettle, 0-Barberton.
Finan said the key question IS
whetber the Senate wants merely to
roll back the ratei; or to linker with
other · sections of the tax code;
Celeste bas proposed expanding thetax credit for elderly real estate:
owners and adding a credit for day
·
care.
Mark Reai ct the ChUdren's
Defense Fund testified that the day
care tax credit for famUies earning
$00,00) a )'l!ar or less would reduce
the expense &lt;1 caring i:lr chlldren,
the retarded and disabled, and
Alzhebner's disease victims.
The House already bas pmed
that proposal, which Is awaiting .
Senate tloor action.
·
.· .

..

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="180">
    <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="2770">
                <text>08. August</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="40540">
            <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="40539">
              <text>August 27, 1986</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="257">
      <name>arnold</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="722">
      <name>branham</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6400">
      <name>cale</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1510">
      <name>douglas</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
