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                  <text>Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.Monday, August 29, 1988

Emmys: Yuppies and nostalgia.---_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
One of the most popular
choices was Larry Drake, who
plays retarded office worker
Benny Stulwltz on NBC's "L.A.
Law .'' Drake drew enthusiastic
applause when it was announced
he won lor supporting actor·
drama, and he said after the
show:

of others you know, people might nominated in the category.
"We're really a group," she
take umbrage if it doesn' t correlate with their truth," Herskovitz said. "I've never worked with a
more giving, professional, adept
said.
"It cuts a little quicker to the and adroit group. There's not a
bone than most television arche- dud In the crowd."
Allotl)er "Golden Girl," threetypes we've known," said Patri·
cia Wet!Jg, who appears on the time nominee Estelle Getty, who
ABC show and won in the plays Arthur's mother on the
s upporting actress-drama show, piCked up her first Emmy,
for outstanding actress in a
category.
Edward Zwick, the other co- comedy series.
Three of this year's Emmy
executive producer of "thirty·
something," said lftherewerean winners have enough statues to
"award for the most annoying start collections. Tyne Daly of
show on television, we'd win that "Cagney &amp; Lacey," who was this
year's outstanding actress in a
one too.''
There was a trace of unsure- drama series but did not attend
ness, too, In Ailey Mills of ABC's the ceremony, also won in 1983,
gently nostalgic "The Wonder 1984 and 1985. Her co-star on the
Years," named best comedy show, Sharon Gless, had won In
series, who said, "I smeUa 'good' 1986 and 1987.
Michael J. Fox of "Family
much more than I smell a hit."
Ties"
won his third consecutive
Richard Kiley.. named best
actor in a drama series for the Emmv as outstanding actor In a
canceled "A Year In The Life," comedy series.
Fox Interjected a little political
•aid
backst&lt;lge after the Emmy
By JOHN M. LEIGHTY
show,· 'I think It's a myopic thing humor into the proceedings when
United Press laternationl'l
. to take a show .that Is a low-key he told the audience that the
an(! only give it one year." coming season would be the last
. SINATRA'S KIND · OF show
But if he was bitter toward for "Family Ties" and the
ROAST: . Frank Sinatra has NBC for cancel!ng the show, he ' producers were baffled about
agreed to serve as honorary was happy a bout his Emmy.
where to go with his character
chairman of a banquet and. roast
the young, conservative, totally
in tribute to Chicago Cubs
" I'm basically a stage actor,"
Inexperienced Alex Keaton.
announcer Harry Caray. The he sajd. "I lost five pounds a
Keaton suggested they run
testimonial Is scheduled Nov . 19 night doing 'Man of LaMancha,'
Alex for vice president, adding,
at Bally's Casino Resort In Las and winning a Tony was vindlca·
"Actually I'd like to thank Dan
Vegas. More than 2,000 people !ion. ('A Year in the Life') was Quayle for showing that Alex
are expected, lncludi ng such fun that I really don't think Keaton really can exist."
members of the Cubs plus other I've earned It, but I'm
The other big winner was John
entertainment and sports fig- delighted."
Larroquette of "Night Court,"
ures. The $100-a·plate dinner will
The winner for best actress in a
who won as outstanding support·
benefit Caray's favorite charity, comedy series, .Bea Arthur of lng actor for the fourth consecuthe Maryville City . of Youth NBC's "The Golden Girls," was
tive year and said after the show:
Academy, !be largest residential• quick to praise her fellow actors, "It's a bit of a shock this year,
child care agency ·in Illinois.
Including Betty White and Rue because you think, -'Enough
"Few people realize an am bi- McClanahan, who also were already, send the guy home.'"
tlonl had In my youth was to be a
sports reporter," Sinatra said of
·his Involvement. . "Lis telling to
Harry do his rendition of 'Take
Me Out to the Ballga'!le' during
the seventh Inning stretch of
Cubs games, I .assume Harry's
childhood dream was to be a
singer. Besides Chicago being
my kind of town, Harry Caray Is
my kind of people.' '
RAISIN CULTURE: Cincin·
nat! vice mayor Peter Strauss
rolled out the red carpet some·
what reluctantly last week to
officially gree!'four, uh, dancing
raisins. He rated the welcoming
of the "California Raisins" - a
rendition of the award-W!nnlng
television advertisement for the
frui\ - as better !han "walking
behind horses in a parade."
Regardless pf his \tlews on the
cultural event. thousands of
people turned out to tap their feet
and cheer as the raisins formed
thelt conga line and boogied to
the lflumplrig b'ea't Of "I lieard It
Through the Grapevine," an old
Creederice Clearwater tune.
ANIMAL LOVERS: A child·
less couple hr. their 70s who last
year gave $1.75 million to the
Children's Zoo of. the .San Diego
Zoo have deeded their $3 million
home on Coronado, Calif., to the
facility. Paul and lone Harter's
latest gift makt:s them the most
generous donors In the zoo's
12-year history.
The couple will continue to live
In their beachfront condominium
GOLDEN GIRLS, AGAIN - Rue McClanahan, left, and Betty .
for the rest of their lives. The zoo
While, right, welcome Estelle Getty to a very unique club ofEmmy
wlli use the proceeds from the
Award winners at a party for the cast and crew ol "The Golden
eventual sale of the condo to·help
Girls" shortly after Getty was given her first Emmy at the 40th
pay for a center for research on
annual Emmy Awards Sunday. While and McClanahan have won
endangered species:
Emmys In previous years. ( UPI)
MAN:Y JEWELED EVENT:
The San Francisco Opera hosts a
star-studded opening night with
Placido Domingo as Vasco da
Gama In "L'Alrlcaine," by Gia·
como Meyerbeer. Shirley VerRIVERBOAT CRUISE
rett stars · as Selika in the
production Sept. 9 at tHe War
plus TALL STACKS .
Memorial Opera House.
Prior to the opening, the Opera
Guild wlll hold a fundralsl ng
event with celebrities decked out
In precious genis from eight
major jewelry houses. Five
hundred ·guests are expected at ·
the "Opera Ball '88" extrava·
ganza, considered the highlight
of the San Francisco social
season. Among the personalities
displaying the international je·
welry wlll be Mrs. Samuel H.
TALL STACKS are coming to Ci~cinnati to celeArmacost, Ambassador Shirley
brate the "Queen City's" 200th Birthday celebration!
Temple Black, Mrs. Gordon
Getty, and Mrs. WllllamHearst
PASADENA. Calif. iUPI) Even though "thirtysomething,"
the sometimes Irritating yuppie
show, was named outstanding
drama series at the 40th Annual
Primetlme Emmy Awards, the
show's producers were a little
defensive.
"We've had an enormously
warm reaction .all year," said
co·e}(ecu tlv.e PI'OQucer Marsha 11
Herskovitz after the show
nabbed the t.oii awa!JI Sunday,
"but there are still an awful lot of
people who can't stanjilt.
" When you pre~ume to tell the
truth about your 111e and the lives

"I got a letter from a disabled
kid in Chicago who says he
wanted to be Benny. Now he has
something to shoot lor. But you
have to be a person before you
are a role model. I'm never
entirely comfortable with that
idea."
In the three-network Emmy

Inmate makes
'clean getaway' .

the beautiful West Virginia Belle.

CHICAGO (UPI) - Author!·
ties widened their search lor a
suspected murderer who gavE!
new meaning to the term "clean
escape" when he broke out of
Cook Coun!Y Jail wielding a gun
fashioned from a bar of soap.
In 1an escape similar to a
famous bteakout by gangster
John D!lllnger 54 years ago,
Victor Thomas, 27, tricked a
guard into thinking he was
armed, stole !he guard's u nl·
form, and walked out of the jail
Friday.
In 1934 Dillinger used a wooden
gun colored with shoe polish to
make his legendary break from a
jallln Crown Point, Ind.
Thomas, also known as Vln·
cent Bruce, is a suspect In three
slayings In Calltornla and was
being held at the county jail on
two ChlCBI{O·IIl'e,a arll)ed robbery
charges.
·

UT US RU YDIIR IIEXT I'IIESCRIPTIDII

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TYLENOL

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II1ITI.E
IIF/11

LADY'S CHOICE

Economic indicators down 0.8 percent in July
for both consumer and capital
goods, the department's Bureau
of Economic Analysis said.
Also subtracting from economic performance were lower
stock prices and a smaller money
supply as well as vendors getting
deliveries faster from suppliers, ·
a signal the suppliers' business Is
not booming, the bureau said.
Only one of the nine Indicators
available for the July report,
higher prices for raw materials,
made a positive contribution to
the index, and the average work

week was unchanged from June
to July, the bureau said.
"Most of this Is a rebound from
the unusually strong June," ·sa!d
David Wyss, chief economist lor
Data Resources Inc. of Lexington, Mass.
Wyss noted the June jump was
pushed off by unusually brisk
orders for aircraft and business
m::estment equipment.
If we a.verage out the two
months, were probably showing
continued dece,nt growth, but I
still think there s some slowdown

partment said Inflation In 'the
second quarter of the year had
shot to a six-year high.
Also last week, the Labor
Department said consumer pr!ces had Increased 0.5 percent In
July, a 5.2 percent annual rate . .
EarUer Indications of Inflation
In the economy led the Federal
Reserve Board Aug. 9 to raise Its
benchmark discount Interest
rate to 6.5 percent fron\ 6
percent. Many analysts expect
another Increase If the economy
shakes off the restraint and
continues to expand.

be finaitcial success Monday

u Ill. lllE

ONE A DAY
WITHIN
l'flll. IIF 11111 011

hearts IIi "the right place" that
Pomeroy Pizza Hut's first
made the "Fund Sports for
annual "Fund Sports for LeukeLeukemia" night a real success
mia" night proved to be a
overall.
The event Is expected to
financial success and a lot of !uri .
l&gt;ecome
an
annuallundralser for
too. The event was held Monday
leukemia.
night with six teams competing
The winning team In Monday
for a first place trophy.
night's competition represented
Members of the six partlclpat·
jng teams showed they hal) "the the Pomeroy EMS squad and was
made up of Rick Biaettnar, Julie
right stuir • as they displayed
Sisson, Dave Harris and Bryan
their talents In events such as
Zirkle.
doggie box-fokllng, table buss·
Other teams included Paula
ing, the tray of drinks obstacle
Counts,
Ed Baer, Rhonda Riebel
course, sllverware rolling, pizza
Chris
Richmond, the Pizza
and
eating and an old-fashioned tugHut
I
team;
Diane Bowles,
of-war.
Rodney Wood, Haz!lee Riebel
Although "the right stuff" was
and P.J. Harris, Pizza Hut II;
necessary for excellence in the
Karen Cundl1f, David Cundiff,
Individual gam,., it was having
Debbie Cundl1f and Larry Cun-

POLAROID
COLOR RLM

NATURALS
PENCILS
1'1111. l1f ID

MIIUIVfiJIIIIS

WTIH
MINEIIAU
1'1111. (If "
1'111111
CHOICE

occurring from the rapid growth
of the nrst half,'' Wyss said.
The bureau's Index of co inc!dent lndlcators, designed to
measure the economy's present
performance, Increased 0.6 per·
cent in July, while the Index of
lagging Indicators, which confirms the previous reports, Increased 1 percent In July.
The report foilows a series of
government releases last week
that showed consumer prices
creep~g up. In its report on the
nations gross national product
last week, the Commerce De-

Pizza Hut event proves to

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A Muftimedi• Inc. New.-per

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AIIJ7.i'BIII'III1

-

1 Section. 10 Pogoo '' 26 Cents

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Tuesday, August 30, 1988

ROLL-ON
ORSOUD

•

Oear tonight, low In 11011.
Wednesday, sunny, highs In
mid-70s

entine

at

WASHINGTON ( UPI l sharpest drop since November,
Higher unemplovment a nd lower when the index plunged 1 perstock p~!ces helped send the cent, the department said.
government's index of leading
The Index is watched closelyy
economic Indicators down 0.8 by analysts and financial
percent In July the sharpest markets for signals of where the
drop in nine mo'nths, th&lt;e Com· economy will be heading three to
merce Deparment said today.
six months down the road.
Analvsts had looked for a Julv
Seven of the 11 factors coldecline of about 0.5 percent afte'r lected incompll!ng the index took
an unusually strong 1.4 percent away from economic perforadvance in June and a revised 0.7 mance In July, including IJ'lOre
perc&lt;ent decline In May.
· unemployment claims, slower
, The 0.8 percent decllnetook.the applications lor building permits
ind&lt;ex to 192.1 and was the and fewer manuiacturers orders

==

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•RITE AID

I'ARSOIIS'
AIIIIOIIA
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011 LfMI1If

dill, representing Adolph's Dairy
Valley; Brent Zirkle, Keith Ha·
gen, Tom Werry and Bracy Korn,
the Pomeroy Fire Department
team; Amy Murphy, Tracy
Murphy, D.A. Harrts and Jay
Blackwood, a team from Eastern
High School.
Sizable donations for the event
came from Dan's, Middleport
Trophies and King Builders In
Middleport, and from Sugar Run
M!lls and J' s Exxon In Pomeroy.
Ail other items needed for the
games were furnished by Pizza
Hut, Pomeroy.
Volunteers for the event Included Beth Lavendar, Mike
Bowles and Melissa Clay.

·Meigs Boardraccepts two
•

269

REAL -FRESII

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I'JIIJ.
IIFIII

BUFFET

CAT FOOD
"""' CIIDICf

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• Ill. CAlli
Rill

THE WINNERS - The best team In Mo!Hiay's
"Fund Sports for Leukemia" night, sponsored by
Pomeroy Pizza Hut, represented the Pomeroy
EMS squad. A trophy was presented to the
first-place team. From left to right are Tracie

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•,

Two resignations were ac·
cepted when the Meigs Local
Board of Education met in
special session at the Central
Olf!ce·. In Middleport Monday
evening.
The board accepted the resignation of Tom Probst as a
teacher at the junior high school
and as a junior high football
coach, The resignation of Patrtcla McCarty as assistant to
Treasurer Jane Fry was accepted and Karen Sloan was
named to the position.
The board voted to Increase the
admission fee to junior high

U. S. Forest Service calls
for help to battle wildfires
By ROGER BENNETT
United Press International
The l) .S. Forest Service called
today for recruits to h~lp battle
fires in valuable Oregon forests,
while officials said Y&lt;ellowstone
National Park will remain open
through Labor Day despite a
half-dozen fires that have savaged a fifth of the nation's old&lt;est
park.
.
About 140 n&lt;ew fires broke out

Monday, most touched off by
lightning, but the army of about
20,000 firefighters bat tllng blazes
in nine Western states scrambled
quickly to contain most of them
before they could spread.
"Our top priority is to get on
top of the smaller fires to get
them controlled as quickly as
possible so they don't develop
into tlie kind of problems we have
now:•: sa.Jd Mike Ferris at the

Driver cited following mishap
The Gal Ua· Meigs Post, State Highway P atroi cited orre driver
in an accident at 10:15 a.m., Monday, In Meigs County, on SR.
338, 0.5 miles east of mile post 19. Troopers said Hubert D.
Stanley, 79, Ravenswood, W.Va., slowed In traffic. His car was
hit from behind by a pickup truck driven by Clifford Ray
Gibson, 70, Evans, W.Va. No one was Injured. The patrol cited
Gibson for failure to stop within !he assured clear distance.
The patrol Investigated another Meigs County accident at
1i: 35 a.m. Monday on SR. 124, 0.2 miles west of mile post 14, in
Rutland Township. Troopers said a car driven by Cathy J.
Price, 34, Rutland, went off the road, striking a tree. Damage
was minor. No one was Injured. There was no citation.

Bridge will be closed
A bridge on Orange Township Road 2'79 h~s been closed to
traffic, effectively immediately. according to Dave Spencer of
the Meigs County Highway Garage. The bridge Is located 500
feet south of State Route 681, Spencer said. Although closing of
the bridge may cause some lnc;onvenlence for area residents
living on the road, the road Is accessible from another direction.
The bridge will be replaced as soon as possible, said Spencer,
but as yet, replaceml!nt has not been scheduled.
Although Meigs County Engineer Ph !lip Roberts Inspects all
bridges in the county at least one time a year, some
questionable bridges are Inspected by Roberts more often,
Spencer added. Roberts looked at the Orange Township bridge
Monday and determined it must be closed to lralfic now,
Spencer reported.

Trustees to meet Sept. 6
Chester Township Trustees will meet Tuesday, Sept. 6, 7:30
p.m., at the town hall, not tonight.
Continued on page 10

Ohio

teacher resignations Monday

Colley, of Pizza Hut; Dave Harris, Rick
Bl~ettnar, Julie Sisson and Bryan Zirkle, learn
members, and Hazllee Riebel, also of Pizza Hut.
In front Is Jessica Blaettnar, a fan olthe Pomeroy
EMS squad team.

Local news briefs_.....,

HEIRS

tfDJ

Daily Number

Vol.39. No.80
cowrightod 1988

WEST VIRGINIA BELLE

Join the celebration and cruise the Ohio River aboard

Ohio Lottery

RITE AID
PHARMACIS'IS RU ·OVER

People .in
the news

Ill.

competition, It was neck-and·
neck between NBC and ABC for
televised awards, with NBC
winding up with 11, ABC with 10
and CBS with five. Fox Broad·
castlng, which aired the show lor
the second year of a three-year
contract, didn't win any
statuettes.

school
grid season
underway

~I

school athletic events, effective
this school year. The new prices
are $2 for adults and $1 lor
stvdents.
Donna Grueser was employed
as an aide at the junior high
school and Sandra Butcher was
hired as a reader guide. Dale
Harrison was named assistant
girts' reserve volleyball coach.
Named to the substitute
teachers' list were Michael
Miller, Carla Halley, Rick Ed·
wards, Margaret Amberger,
Rose Ann Jenkins and Larry
Coon. David Lewis was em·
played as a substitute custodian.

Boise Interagency Fire Center,
the nation's command center for
forest fires.
A 1,200-acre timber fire
sparked by dry lightning over
northern California
while
another Umber blaze charred
2.300 acres neat Burney In Shasta
WAS,HINGTON (UP!) - In.· · calling It "way too low."
County, officials said.
vestigators today believe a mid·
The recently discovered thefts
In Portola, about 1,000 people level federal manager who
w!ll not add to the charges
were moved to the far end of town slngle-handedly pulled off the
against Burns llecause the sta·
while firefighters battled flames largest embezzlement case In
tute of limitations Is five years
that shot more than 100feet In the government history probably
and he stands Immune from
air under wind gusts to 40 mph.
took more money than firs!
prosecution lor crimes· commitNo injures were reported and thought.
ted before 1983, the olllclals said.
only one structure, a garage, was
And because records were
Burns came under suspicion
destroyed and the residents were routinely destroyed, the full
this year aner a routine securtty
allowed to return home after a extent of the embezzlement may
check by the Inspector general's
few hours.
never be known.
office. His lavish life style,
Near Burney, more than 500
Sources close to the Investigafirefighters battled a fast· tion of William Burns, a fiaanclal
moving Umber blaze that forced manager for the Agency for
closure of a five-mile stretch of International Development, s~ld
State Highway 89 after starting Monday he Is cooperating with
two miles east of the town of 3,500 Investigators from the Justice
people, the state Division of Department and the AID lnspec·
Forestry reported.
tor general.
DETROIT (UP!) - General
"Burney Is not considered
Burns, 48, pleaded guilty Aug. Motors Corp., In Its drive to cut
threatened becau!ll! the fire has llln U.S. District Court to three costs and become more competibeen burning away from the felony counts and admitted the tive In Its partsmaking business,
town," Richard Just of the theft of $1.2 million durtng a announced Monday the consoli·
forestry department said.
six-year period.
dation of Its AC Spark Plug and
Ferris said there were 140
But the sources said lnvestlga· . Rochester Products Divisions
major fires burning over 885,834 tors have discovered Burns's · Into a new engJn..e component unit
acres In Call1ornla, Idaho, Man· embezzlement of government called AC Rochester.
tana, Nevada. Oregon, Utah, funds began tn the lallofl980, not
The merger, effective Sept. 1,
Washington and Wyoming, not In 1982 as laid out In his gullty lets the giant carmaker ellml·
Including 30 fires covering more plea. One source said the earlier nate costly admintstrat!ve dupli·
than 2 mill!on acres In Alaska.
amount Is "well into the triple cation In Its components operaSo far In this drought year, digits (hundreds of thousands of tions, while allowing It to more
there have been 66, 9!/5 fires · doUars), but we can only specu- effectively compete for new
reported In the United States that late on the exact amount because outside business and keep Its
have burned 3.4 million acres the records have been destroyed existing contracts with GM, said
an area larger than the state of before 1980.' •
Ken Cameron, a spokesman for
Connecticut. Last year, only
The source added, "One of the AC Spark Plug .
46,700 fires covering 1.2 m!IUon problems Is that Burns, himself,
The new company will employ
acres were reported.
didn't keep good records and be · about 28,000 workers at 33 loca·
In Oregon, the Forest Service doesn't know exactly bow much tlons worldwide. It will be
began advertising for replace- he took."
headquartered In Flint, Mich.,
ment (!reflghlers today to belp
Another iource, close to Bums, Where AC Spark Plug has been
relieve crews that have been
said the new fJeure was about bued atnce 190:1.
baltllllf{ a halt d02en major $15;000, taken between 1980 and
Rochester Products, head·
blt;res !hat bave blackened more 1982, but one of the omciala who quartered in Rochesll!r, N.Y.,
than 50,000 acres In Oregon In the spoke on the condition of ano- was formed In 1939.ln 198l,lt was
Continued on page 10
nymity scoffed at that number, meJ'Ied with the Diesel Equip- ·

The board approved the budget
lor the Salem Center School
Principal and agreed to make
application to the Ohio Department of Education to borrow the
spending reserve of the distrlci.
Shannon Fleming was accepted
as a tultiion student. An executive session concluded lhe
meeting.
Attending were Iqtertm Supt.
James Carpenter, Treasurer
Jane Fry, and board members,
Robert Snowden, Robert Barton,
Larry Rupe, Richard Vaughan
and Jeff Werry.

Embezzlement case may be largest
including a $400,000 house and
five cars, was clearly inconsistent with his $35,000 annual
salary.
It was discovered that Burns,
who had the authority to approve
and to issue checks, had been
taking an average $20,000 a
month from a fund he supervised, which was meant to cover
moving and travel expenses for
AID employees.

GM merges AC and
Rochester divisions

I

v

men! Division. Last week, GM
announced the tentative sale of
Rochester Product's diesel fuel
Injection operations to Penske
Transportation Inc. of Red Bank,
N.J., for an undisclosed amount.
The consolidation w!ll result in
the reduction through attrition,
transfer and early retirement of
less than 100 salaried workers
within the next 12 months,
Cameron said.
"We do not anticipate a large
loss of employees, and there will
be little or no Impact on the
hourly production workforce,"
he said. All manufacturing
plants of the two divisions will
remain Intact. "Ail they are
getdng Is a new structure at the
top," Cameron said.
The d.lvl•lon will be organized
along product lines with six core
business units - AlrFuel, Ex·
haust, Expertec diagnostic sys·
terns, Fuel Handling and Cruise
Control systems, Ignition and
Filtration, and Valve Train.
Continued on page 10

,,

�f

•

Comment
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio.
DEVOTED TO THE lNTERESTS OF THE MEIG8-MASON AREA

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.......... d .....

ROBERT L. WINGt:TT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The United Press International , Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than XX) wor.da
long. AU letters are subject toedHing and must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letft!rs will be i;)Ubllshed. Letters should be In

good taste, addressing Issues. not pe[sonalitles.

Why the press.
is pressing Quayle
By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
. UPI Senior Edlior
NEW ORLEANS - GOP presidential candidate George Bush
described the attention focused on Dan Quayle after he selected the
Indiana senator as his running mate as a media "feeding frenzy."
To the public, which saw reporters.clamoring to grUl Quayle on his
19-year-old military record and his connection with an 8-year-old
Washington sex scandal, it may indeed have seemed the press was
becoming over-s timulated by the prospect of finding old dirt under
the GOP rug.
But there are ~orne reasons for what happened 'when Bush tapped
Quayle to run for vice president. The public can judge for itself if they
were sufficient.
First, the circumstances that Bush himself arranged guaranteed
there would be a burst of publicity about the vice presidential
candidate.
The press had many months to dig into the backgrounds of both
presidential candidates, and anything fishy almost surely comes out
before the convention. The sa me would be true of well-known figures
such as Sen. Bob Dole and Rep. Jack Kemp who had undergone
intense scrutiny when they ran for president and were known
quantities when they went on Bush's list of potential running mates.
But not much attention had been paid to Quayle. When he got the
nomination, a few reporters vaguely recalled the 1979 Paula
Parkinson episode. Quick checks indicated that Quayle had exile(! the
scene .when he got the picture at the Florida golfing resort where the
hanky-panky was going on, and many reporters put it aside.
Someone, perhaps a reporter In the same age group during the
Vietnam War, spotted the biography item about Quayle' s National
Guard service and sta.rted checking further.
Then came Quayle's first news conference. He simply shut off ail
inquiry into the Parkinson matter and gave vague answers to
questions ·about his military record. Reporters' curiosity in both
cases were whetted rather than satisfied bv the candidate's
responses.
Why? Simply because there is a history of skeletons in the closets of
vice presidential candidates going ail the way back to Richard
Nixon's slush fund in 1960.
·
Tom Eagleton's psychiatric treatments, Spiro Agnew's taxes ancj
payoffs and Geraldine Ferraro's family finances ail added warning
lights. Reporters and editors do not want to be caught napping when
such a story breaks.
One more question might be fairly asked here. Why all the attention
to Quayle's background and so little to Lloyd Bentsen's ill-starred
effort to raise campaign funds by, in effect, charging lobbyists
thousands of dollars to have breakfast with him?
Two answers. First, the "breakfast club" episode was widely
recounted when Michael Dukakis selected Bentsen and, in fact, still is
being_recalled by Republican campaign orators.
Second, as with Quayle and Parkinson, reporters who checked !tout
initially came to at least the tentative conclusion that there was
nothing further to report on the story after Bentsen canceled the
money-raising scheme and returned the funds .
But it should surprise no one to learn that there surelv are soine
reporters, and certainly a lot of Republican researchers. "tooklng for
more paydirt in the Bentseri background., Still others are continuing
to examine the lives and times of George Bush and Michael Dukakls.
If they turn up anything startling, you'll hear about it.

Dor.fT STAY oUT
IN THe: WATE'R Too LoNG'
YoU'LL GET BURNED'

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel~
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. ··.
Tuesc:tav. August 30, 1988

Agrarian refontt in Mexico critical ·
WASHINGTON - Issues of
unrest south of the border are
bound to crop up time and again
in this presidential campaign.
George Bush, the entrepreneur,
once did business with Mexican
olimen and feels a close affinity
with that country. So does
Michael Dukakls, who uses his
fluent Spanish to punctuate his
interest in Hispanic issues.
But Hispanic issues, particu·
Iarly In the border states, go
much deeper than promising
cabinet posis, speaking the Ianguage or courting Latin rrelnds.
The greatest threat to Mexican
stability is also a threat to the
border states. That threat Is a
revolt by the masses of under·
privileged pea.sants In Mexico.
j At worst, the violence could spill
· over Into the United States. At the
very least, unreal among the

NOW "'ERE'S OUR Slimr6Y,
6EOR6E. VIlE WN'T LET
UfON \'UKAKIS.

.

I

raging rural guerrUia activity,
To enhance that security • the
The Mexican government bas Mexican _government throws in
convinced the peasants, In most some social service programs- '
cases, that the bureaucracy Is on health clinics, schools, agrlcultu- .
their side.
ral extension services. They are.
Critics of the agrarian reform all riddled with corruption and
program say it wlil never give Inefficiency, the CIA reports. But
the peasants a decent livelihood, they have done enough good to
and that breaking up the land Into convince. peasants that Mexico ·
smaller ownerships will de· City carl!s. Alld more Important, .
crease the nation's agricultural . they have created a IIE'twork of
outpul, and profits. But prodllc· · jobs to hand out to the locals as a ..
tlvlty and profits don't seem to be way of ensuring loyalty.
.
the point, according to the CIA.
The downside Is that when •
•'We believe that the granting of co-opting local leaders and redisInalienable land titles to pea- tributing land d~n't work, thesants provides Important psycho- Mexican government falls back ·
logical and political ·props for to Its old standby - repreSsion . .
maintaining stability," the re·. ln the pa,st, ,tl!e government ha, .,
port says. "Social science studies not been shy about arbitrary ·
suggest that the primary goal of , arrests and even torture of .
the peasant .is security ... not peasants suspecw.;l of aiding any.· .
profits."
guerrilla ·Insurgency. It works,
according to the CIA assessment . .
"Rather than radicalize the
peasantry, this repression seems '
to have heightened the popular ,
perception that confronting the
LEAMONH\M
authorities entails a very high
HARP,6EOK6'E!
risk."
,
The adminstratlon of outgoing ·
president Miguel de Ia Madrid ,
has emphasized reform pro- .
grams In southern Mexico 'because, according to the CIA, that ,
area is ripe for subversive.!
activity and has frequently complained about neglect from Mex·' ·
leo City. -·~ '
IJ!dlans 'In the south appear to
have been given more access to
goverriment services than pea~EMAN~ AN ~N$WER!
sants in other parts of Mexico,
VOES HE ?IAN TO fAY
the CIA reports, "because ofthe
1
special
concern over the welfare
rOR 1\-\E ~~ l1E'FICIT ?.~
of Indians and the p6tentlal for
insurgent recruitment in the
southern border ... "
The CIA repO)"t Includes a
warning that, In spite of the
reform programs, "peasant discontent may be mounting In
some areas; · at- a minimum, It
seems better organized than In
the past."
·

I

iACK ~IM lttTO A. CO~Ett!
fORCE 111M TO BE ~PECIFIC/

?

By Jack Anderson and Dale Van Attq

underclass In Mexico Increases
the now of Illegal aliens into this
country.
That makes Mexican efforts at
agrarian reform crucial to u.S.
interests. If the Mexican govern·
mentIs not successful in redlstrl·
buting the wealth or Its land from
large landowners to peasants,
guerrlila forces In the rural areas
will use the resultant hard
feelings to rally the unhappy
peasants.
We have seen a classified
Central Intelligence Agency report on the progress of Mexican
agrarian reform that Is surpris·
lngly optimistic.
CIA operatives in southern
Mexico report that the reform
policies, In spite of the corruption
that pervades the Mexican bureaucracy, are doing a fair job of
promoting stability and discou·

HOW

)

The House needS refoml__. :_Co~n_g,g.- =C. :. la_re:. . .:nc. :. . :e:. . .: .M.:. : .;t:.:.:.·ue=-r
· The members ofthe U.S. House
of Representatives like to think
of their Institution as the "house
of the people." Since its
members are elected every two
years, House memtiers believe
that they are more accountable
to the voters and more reflective
of the shifting philosophical
sentiments of the voters than
their Senate counterparts, who
stand for reelection every six
years. In my opinion however,
the House has increasingly lost
touch with the people it represents. This is because the House
has become a much more complex institution, one that Increasingly operates by it own set of
rules and for the political benefit
of the ruling majority .
Most of the work that Congress
does is suppose to occur In
committees, where members
can hammer .out legislation away
from the spotl!ght and TV coverage of the House Door. The
committees are also charged ·
'.with overseeing federal agencies
to ensure that previously enacted
laws are being enforced and

applied as Intended by Congress. continuing resolution appropria· is considered, the House must
Thus, the committee system 1.$ a tlon, which funded the entire first pass a "rule" which specl·
key part of the legislative pro- federal government, contained fles how the debate of a b!ll will
cess. , Unfortunately however, $44 billion in funding for 45 major be conducted. Rules can either be
there is growing evidence that In laws which were not authorized. "open", which only set time
the case of the House of Repre- However, when..included as a limits on the debate, or they can
sentatives "more has meant part' of a larger · package, they be "closed" which prevent cer- . ,
less." Though the supporting · can be passed Into law because of tain amendments or procedures ·
staff of the House committees tbe instrument by which contro- from being considered. Closed
has grown appreciably over the VI!rsiallegisiatlon can be pushed rules are appropriate in some
years, the output of these com- through the House.
Instances. They are not appropmittees has conversely fallen.
Additionally, the decline in the riate for thl' consideration of an
While the volume of bills re- work of the committees has also omnibus bill because controverported from the various commit· served to diminish the Influence sial provisions cannot be singled
tees numbered 683 in 1975, that of Individual members on the out and removed. ln the mid-70s,
number fell to 426 in 1987. In floor of the House. -Given the size closed rules were used 12% of the . :
addition, committee hearings, and complexity of much of the time. In this 100th Congress, they
the vehicle by which most legislation presented by the have been used about 44% of the
legislation is formalized, fell by committees, it .Is much more time. 1t has become legislation
41% between 197'7 and 1986.
difficult and time consuming for · by flat.
According to House rules, no the full House to debate these
Increasingly the House of
federal activity can have funds bills. To minimize,the difficulties Representatives Is not living up
appropriated for It unless Con- In this regard, and to avoid the to Its legislative and oversight
gress has first passed authorlz· possibility of. unwanted changes respo)lslbllities . Though Its
lng legislation. It Is the responsi- being made to their legislation, budgets are bigger, and its staffs
bility of the committees to craft · the leadership has the ability to larger, House output Is on the
this authorizing legislation. How- control the debate by dictl!tlng decline. The time is right to
ever, since the committees are the conditions under which the reform the legislative process
doing less and less work, pro- legislation Is brought.to the floor. and to once again make the
grams are not being authorized This Is accomplished through the House truly accountable to the
as they should. Last year' s Rules Committees. Before a b!ll peoi?Ie it represents.

. . .: :.

Today in history
By United Press International
Today is Tuesday. Aug. 30. the 243td day of 1988 with 123 to follow ,
The moon Is waning, moving toward its last quarter .
The morning stars are Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Virgo. They include
,author Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley ("Frankenstein") in 1797,
British nuclear physicist Ernest Rutherford in 1871, Louisiana Gov.
Huey Long in 1893, journalist-author John Gunther and civil rights
leader Roy Wilkins in 1901. actor Fred MacMurray in 1908 (age 80),
actresses Shirley Booth in 1907 (age 81) and Joan Blondell in 1909,
baseball slugger Ted Williams in 1918 (age 70), country music singer
Kitty Wells in 1919 (age 69). French Olympic champion skier
Jean-Claude Kllly in 1943 (age 45), and actor Timothy Bottoms ln1951
(age 37) .
On this date in history:
ln 1780, Gen. Benedict Arnold betrayed the United States when he
promised secretly to surrender the fort at West Point to the British
army. He fled to England and died in poverty.
ln 1862, the Union Army commanded by Maj. Gen. John Pope was
defeated by Confederate troops in the second Battle of Bull Run.
ln 1941, in World War l1 German forces began the 900-day siege of
Leningrad. When !tended, the Russian city lay ,In ruins and hundreds
of thoUllands had died.
.
ln 1983, Guion muford became the first black astronaut in space.
IN 1986, Nicholas Dantloff, American correspondent for U.S. News
and World Report, was arrested In Moscow and charged with spying.

R b
ert

l
a ters

NBC-afflllated stations during
Those developments should
TF/
the games themselveS' will ena· have little impact upon the
0
w
ble office-seekers to reach vast ·presidential campaign because
audiences - but at prohibitive the participants In that race · littil' effect on local races In
prices. Moreover, viewers may receive- vast amounts of "free which the candidates utilize llttle
resent the Intrusion of politics media" coverage on radio and . "paid media" but rely instead
upon the Olympics.
television news broadcasts and
upon direct mall, door-to-door
campaigning and their reputaBuying time on the other In newspapers and magazines.
tions In the community.
networks' affiliates or, on indeThere also should ,be relatively
pendent stat Ions during the
games will be far less expensive
- but will reach a very small
audience.
Waiting untn October to mount
•
,.
a media campaign Is another
'.
option, but postponing television
'
advertising until the final month
of campaign is a very risky
strategy, especially for candl·
'
dates already tralllng in their
races.
(Baseball's World Series beg·
Ins on Oct. 1~. but It is a
distraction with which politi·
clans already are famUiar .)
Members or the Writers Guild
or America are back at work, but
their lengthy strike has forced
the networks to postpone the
•
begining of the new television
season, which traditionally opens shortly after Labor Day.
Prime-time schedules during
most of September and October
will be filled with reruns of last
year's programs. Most of the new
' ,,. If'''
episodes will not air untU well
Into November - after election
day.
• 41&amp;'\ 'So
That almost certainly will
reduce the size of the early
e ,.DJNIA, IMI.
autumn television audience, and
I' &lt;
'
politicians' commercials proba·
"C'monl You saw , . nil that dope. A,..,
•
bly will be seen by fewer voters
· me and Hlld , . to th11t same 'jail' wflere
regardless of when they buy time
John ZBCCBro Jr. tr. " •
during the campaign season.
''

Berry's World

I

(&lt;

By RICHARD ROTTKOV
UPJ Sports Writer
Steve Searcy received a quick
Indoctrination to the major
leagues Monday night, and the
Qoston Red Sox and New York
Yankees were the benefactors
for his first major-league lesson.
The 24-year-old Searcy, making his major-league debut, was
touched for two home runs that
powered the Chicago White Sox
to a 3-2 victory over the Detroit
Tigers.
The loss by the Tigers kept the
Red Sox within one game of ,
Detroit in the American League
East, while the Yankees remained 5 games behind. Boston
lost to Oakland and the Yankees
fell to Seattle Tuesday night.
"I just wanted to try and keep
the team In the game as long as I
could, said Searcy, a left-bander
w)lo was 13·7 with a 2.59 ERA
with Detroit's AAI'o affiliate, the
Toledo Mud Hens. •'The (White
Sox) home runs were solo shots.
It could have been worse."
· Detroit Manager Sparky Anderson said he wasn't gOing to
concern himself with the fact
that the Tigers dropped their
third straight game and the sixth
in their last seven outings.
"I'm never concerned about
anything," said Anderson. "Oct.
2 means two things: go to the
playoffs or you go home. I'm too
old to be concerned about it."
The big hits off Searcy came off
the bats of Carlton Fisk and
Kenny · Williams, whose solo

••

.

q .. :.~

.

homers made a winner or Bill
Long, 6-9. Long held the Tigers to
one run on seven hits in 7 1-3
innings. BobbY Thigpen pitched 1
2-3 for his 28th save.
Searcy allowed five hits while
striking put five and walking
three in 7 2-3 innings.
The Tigers took a 1-0 lead in the
fourth on a run-scoring single by
Chet Lemon.
The White Sox tied the score In
the bottom of the inning on Fisk's
14th homer of the season, a shot
to left. Ah two-out RBI single by
Donnie Hill gave Chicago a 2-1
lead In the fifth.
Williams sent the White Sox
ahead 3-1 in the seventh with his
sixth homer of the season. ·
The Tigers drew to 3-2 In the
ninth. With one out, Lemon
walked, went to third on Pat
Sheridan's single and scored on
Dwayne Murphy's single. After
Mike Heath bounced Into a
forceout, Thigpen struck out
Gary Pettis to end the game with
runners on first and third.
In other American League
games, Oakland cUpped Boston
3-1, Seattle topped New York 9-6,
Toronto downed Milwaukee 6-1,
Minnesota edged Texas 3-2, Kansas City toppled Cleveland 6-3,
Minnesota edged Texas 3·2 and
California defeated Baltimore
4-2.
Athletics 3, Red Sox l
nd, Calif., Mark McGwlre
slammed a two-run homer and
Bob Welch and Dennis Eckersley

Scoreboard ...
Majors
By V•led Prna .. &amp;er•llo.a
NATIONAL L&amp;&amp;GUE
.
Eul
W L Pet.
Nl"W York
"17 II ..Ill
Plttlbu l'lh
71 .. J41
Montrul
II 114 .Sill
Chlcq:o
1$ •• .IN
81. Lollis
I&amp; "11 .tl8
Phlladelplia
IS n .08
Anple.

w...

16 IJt
Hou.-on
'JO II
SIUI J'r&amp;lldKo
It II
ctnci•Mfl
II 14
San Dlep
t4 M
A$lan&amp;a
4S Hi
Me .....,•. Renl11
1..)8

IIIIHIIo-WahH ..... MI&amp;et.Perdle,
ll•bden To., r.rJ•k aad ,.._
Kal8Pr, r•MI• bd ltt11'17 Pol'lf!r,

GB
-

1%
II

11%

11'~

14

.581 .134

1%:

.11'1 1\1
.118 10

.ttt ta

.Jt4 31 ~

... ~ An~M I. Molltrt!all

New \'ork I. San IMep I
Phlladftpllla3, S• Frand~eo e
rtthiMIIIh I, Q.cln ... ll

SC. Louis S, .tJlanla I!
Chleaao t, a.u~&amp;on 1, 11 Inn
1'11M111f11'• Gamet
PIUabw11h ,,.._ 7·8) It Cl•dnaau
(.JaeluleniiH),1:SI p.m.
Lo1 Anael~ (Her.twlter IN!) at
Mollirul diola- $-1),1:Sip.m.
San Dlep (ltMm.-a 1!-7) at New
York (Ojeda I-"), 1:SI p.m.
San A'. .dKO (Robiii.IOR ,5-4) ill
P•IIMielphla !Palmer 1-t), 7:35 p.m.

'

St . ..... (MMbew8 2--H at A$lu&amp;a
CJimenes 1-S), 7: •• p.m.
O.learo (8tblral• 8-8) at Hquton
(Knepper 11-4 or •'-ulu .. r 1-S), ii:IS p.m. •
Wedlleedq•a Games
San Dtepat New York
O.lcaao ai Houlton
Ph tabu 1111 at Clltd••l. nl,ti
Loa All pi• at Molllrelll. 11l&amp;hl
San P'l'andiKO at Phlladelpllla. nl~
81.

,.,

A.Uan&amp;a, nlpt
AMERICAN LB.4.GUE
Eul

~ubi a1

...

W L Ptt._ GB
1451.MI-

73 s7 .sa 1

. Bostm

New York

II II .1:1
67 IT .111

Milwaukee

ii%

t

. . . .... t%
a &amp;S .tal 11 y.

Toronlo

Cle\leland
BaiUmo~

w...

Oalllan~

-15 Ill .348 2t

12 511 .121 -

Mlnn!IID&amp;a

73 51 .HZ

Ibn. . Cliy
california

•

Teua
Ollt:aiJO

H

II .Ql 12

17 "

.loll 1-llfc

5t iCI .U7 21%

S1 74 .-131 'H%

Sealile

5S7t.m•

MOII:IQ"'I

ft.Mulls

Olllcqe.,, Delrvll ~
Toronlo li, Mllwau kee I
K1111 . . CH r I, 0e¥tl&amp;ll d'
Ml•w•ota I, Texu !
CaiU.rala 4. a.11n.~ 2
Oak ..nd I, Bolton 1
Sea&amp;Ue t. New Y•rU

dcfe..ln I..._. De• Prater ...
6efftlllh'e b.ek Boa Pitta; plllt:ed taclde
To.,- • ..,.., r-1• bd lo WrlJhl,
dtlet~lln

ead llbiMI Bldlle and llnebackm 0.. M•I'TQ on ....red rooerw.
Cllleqo - Wai'Ved wldlt' recehen
Keldl Orlepud Bolk'Mape, •eten.. 'Ve
back Rerlle Phlllpa, p•IHr Mollie
Robbl-, II• bider Jq Non-ell. tackle
Sam Clap.... ddellllw &amp;ackle olohn
MIIIMIIIWiddefeaatw- e.. Ralph Janis;
placed llnehcbr Otll WU.On, run .. •&amp;
back EriC lllarr, deft'MI\'e ll•nian 8e•
SmD, del•tlvt bllt'k ~ffliiO 4tnch
ud &amp;acl&amp;le P•lllalr on laj•ftd rnerw.
Cincinnati - Wat•·ed runnlna b.ck8
l.arl')' KIDIIflbrew, DaD Btce ... 0...
Wrlrht. tl&amp;ht e.a olohn Goocle, wide
receiver• Orea Meet.n and Robert
TMm1110a. taelde IIHb We.ter, pard
DoUI A.ro1110a. llnebdll' 'Om ..... aad
lree •fel:y a.llert ladcaoa; p•ced
ll•b~kH Rlr:h Remer, cellkr P•l
Jeta... &amp;alth' Olrll a... er••• .., ~
eeh'er Carl Parlier udMeegc~rtls
Maxey oa IIIJured ruerw.
Clevelaad- Tnded censer Ml•llaab
lo New l!a&amp;t... lor a drall c:bolee;
walnd *leallve llaemen Da\'e P1111noll
IIIII A.J ''llllbba" Baker, reeel\'er A.J lkt!ll,

ll.eltatller •Orea Gro .... pa.-er Draa

SII')'Jit•ald, q...-lerbac:k stflle Slayden
ud U'r h' end Tra.\'11 'fllc•er: ,~eed
klclcer liH~aepr, laeklt'hnr ..•ud
rlllliiiBI back Georp Swarn on lnju~d
l't'llel'~.

w1•

Dallal - Plar:ed
,receiver Mlh
Renrro ••laJured .-.erw; waived wide
reeelveu Gonloa Bul8 and Coraell

BuJbap, parda Ole~~ Tlle1110r and
Verllee 8mllb, &amp;IC!kie 81ne Cllowlld,
ttalll elld .,....·rooper, llnebader Ilea
Hummel, deteuhe laekle ,... K....-.,

delealllve Nllt ~H•SciMIIIer aMI Rollert
sm•lll.l•lbaclcOeraldWllle udeoreerback Ckari• Whitt.
Deli.WI' - Traded aooe iaeklr Ted
Orepry ID Ntw Orlt_. for defealln
u•siii..-. .. IJIII; walved...--cbtM:b
Gelfll' La~~aud w..-... Martftall, defen~twe Hd Wall Bow~. naB-pard
Larrr Le.. IIMbclr.en Mare -liord
... nm Luc•. wide reeetw:r Rick
M•lle aMI teraerbael stne •u•n;
placed rrelllnr Sine Walao•,
llaeiNwk~efeal\'e end ste.e Bryu,
cet~eropard Mike Freeman, ruard
Winford Hood and llnehcker Randy
Thornton on InjUred t'e!U!rve..
Deti'GII - Waiwd wtde- reeelnr Lew
Baran, rullllln1 back Gary Elle1"80n,
fulbiiCk ToiQ' Paip: 1111d del•llw hck
Chr.,.Sh.ldl; place4deaftl~ell.eman
S&amp;eve laaek. nDIIIt'lackle Gary RaiN a11d
q..,RI'Itat:k Dan 10' McCain on IIIJ•red
reeer~.

-.;r - Walwd • ...-whack
Mloa. wl* re«&lt;\'1'1'• Fra~~We
Nulaa• Ilea Marrerwn, pard Gren
Harrla. n•l•r baci; Ket-1• Willhite,
OI'Hn

M~

deleMIIn b.eU Chr• Muelte aMI

Erl. Campbell, taekle Wew Gr..., U1hl

TuHciQ'I Oamtl
Detro6i (IUnrl-1) at Chleqo IBitdlfl'

end Robert Slalllqs, n011e taclllel Rollin

11: 30 p.m.
Toronto 1Mu1almaa 5-1) M Mllwaabe

RonShnpldMudDarrell Reed.

Pa1aer ud lob Nel1111o aadllaebacker"
HHiiotl- Wai\Wd .f vlbacllra Vlllen-

(HiperaiHI),II:Sip.m.

tlne, Dooe ..eklft Cll.,.,_ Marti• and

Cle1.'C!IMd (CUdlottl II-&amp;) a1 l.an•1
Clty(Power 5-5),8: ss,.m.
Mln~sou (Smlthl-0) aa Tnu (Wtlli1\), 11:35 p.m.
New Volt: (De•wn 1-1) Ill Sultle
1Cam~ell.f.8), IO:IIS p.m.
BaiUmo~ (Schmlal 6-3) AU CaUfornllll (Pet I')' 1-5), 10:3S p.m.

fl'ed NordJMID. t11ti e•d Jess Parkll,
•lttMa Crala: llrdaona,
BrOWII
Md Zelle Gadi•R. and deleallve end
Jethro Franklin; placed wide receiver
Ha)' woad .lellftt, lulbaelt
W lillie e.
col'lll!rbacll A.udrer McMUllan, liMhack• Mark Du•alll!k and&amp;ac•le Da\' ld

Boston ({'lei1Mflll IIJ.-1) •t OaJ!lud

Wallel' Muri'Q' ltfld Aat1$D kenney,

(Stewarlll-11), II:SI p.m.
We-....,'"Gamt'l
Tomnlo • Mllwauke~

Bolllon at Oaldud

Detrollal Clllc-.o, 11lpt

OevehM .. Kat~•"CitJ,niPI
Mlnwaota a1 Te•••· •IJhl
New Vorl at Se,aUe, •I PI

B&amp;ltlmore AI Callonlla, ... ...._

Transactions

So•..R,,-

VIMDe.

.

ladl..,alll - Waived wl* retelvera

UlllmUI Reale IWD ud &amp;len Knlrlll.
IIJill eiMI O.ut Martll, NllaiBihc... Mel
carwr IIMI CltiCII. Ban ... Dote lacllkSallJ, U.eb.cll. . Mike Kno.x
.-d l . .e Gmsanddeldllllve hck ollm
Perqmaa; ,..ced deletllh'r ••k olohn

...,..-e

Bq .. ruddefeulve e... GlenC.III111on

l._.ured lftftwe,
lA Raider• - Waived a,.. end Gene
Brul• defellllve ll•mea Bob llllezllllw.W Md David c.ldwell, alety
Ku•IICarter,eotWI'tladla••eCock·
rell 111• Ron Fellowa, llaebacker llacy
HarW)' allll ••rterttacl RIIJty •Ill";
plaud MhtiJ D!rrld. er•• p, r••l•&amp;
baeD Cllrllll _.eLemore ancl Rerate
W.-e, ofteallve ll•man Chrll Riehm
•• llneHtker Brie Snel..:m on InJured
merw.
MIIPII- Waived defen•he e ... Doua
BrUera; placed •ta:r Glenn Blackwood
o•"• ,..,_..,, ••llleto,erfonn Ill;
platedB~Iler

teamed on a six-hitter to lead
Oakland. Welch, 15·7, walked one
and struck out seven over 8 2-3
Innings, while Eckersley got his
36th saves. Mike Boddlcker,
10-15, suffered the loss.
Mar biers 8, Yaukees 6
At Seattle, Darnell Coles
cracked a three-run homer and
Mark Langston and two relievers
combined on a six-hitter for
Seattle. New York has lost five
straight aqd Yankee pitchers
have surrendered 41 runs on 69
hits over the past four games.
Langston, 10·10, was the winner,
while Scott Nielsen, 2-1, lost.
Blue Jays 6, Brewers 1 ·
At Milwaukee, George Bell
slammed a three-run homer and
Jim Clancy scattered seven hits
to pace Toronto. Clancy, 8-13,
struck out five and walked none
for his fourth complete game.
Tom Filer, 5·8, gave up six runs
all seven hits in absorbing his .
eighth loss in nine decisions.
Twins 3, Ranrers 2
At Arlington, Texas. Brian
Harper started a string of five
two-out singles in the second
Inning that produced all of
Minnesota's runs. Fred Toliver,
6-3, gave up seven hits and both
Texas runs in six innings, and
Jeff Reardon got his 33rd save.
Jeff Russell, 10-6, went the
distance in a losing effort.
Anrell 4, Orioles 2
At Anaheim, Calif., Tony Ar·
mas hit his eighth August home
run and 13th for the season for
California's fifth straight tri·
umph. Armas homered in the
seventh Inning off Jeff Ballard,
7·11, to stake Mike Witt, 11-12,
and the Angels to a 3·1lead.

'

. . . . . . . . . . lfle . . . . . .W.

1~).

TV woes skew campaign Quale .flap?
WASHINGTON (NEA) -The
seemingly indestructible bond
between television and politics,
the product of . a symbiotic
relationship that dates back for
decades, lsabouttobetestedbya
pair of extraordinary events.
The unusual timing of this
year's Summer Olympic Games
to be held in the autumn- and
five-monthlong strike of
scriptwriters will
produce a unique fall television
schedule. That, In turn, could
d"ramaticaliy affect political contests throughout the country.
The traditional campaign season spans two months, from
Labor Day In early September to
ElectionDaylnearlyNovember.
Politicians concentrate their ap·
peals for support during that
period, with television commer·
clals by far the favored medium
to reach the voters. In major
statewide races, fully half of the
fall campaign budgets are earmarked for television production
and time-buying expenses.
But the Summer Olympic
Games, certain to liistrict the
electorate from politics, this
year have been pushed so far
back that they will occupy more
than two weeks In the middle of
the campaign season, from Sept.
17 to Oct. 2.
Thus, a politician who makes a
major purchase of tele'vlslon
time at the beginning of the
autumn campaign, In the first
half of September, risks having
the Olympics obliterate whatever impressions the commerclals made upon the voters.
Buying commercial time on

Detroit drops 3-2 decision ·

Larl")' Kolle on Ia.. ~ II

Taylor is
suspended
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
the Houstan Aslros-Cubs game Monday. Jackson,
JACKSO!'I SCORES - Chicago Cubs' Darrln
(UPI) - The suspension of .
pinch
running for Vant'e Law, scored the winning
Jackson scores the winning run in the llth inning,
linebacker Lawrence Taylor left
run in exira Innings on a single by .Mitch Webster.
and almost collides with umpll"' Doug Harvey, In
his New York Giants' teammates
.,
(UPI)
tight-lipped and grim one week
before their season opener
ag-a inst the Washington
Redsklns.
However, there was some good
"Up here, In each at bat you're was too close."
news in the Giants camp when It
By JOEL SHERMAN
Martinez was lifted for a pinch
going
to get at least one strike
was reported Monday night that
UPJ Sports Writer ,_
hitter
after Alfredo Griffin's
that
is
hittabie,"
said
Jefferies,
a
New York came to contract
The New York Mets and Los
homer
gave Los Angeles a 2-1
switch
hitter.
"The
pitchers
have
terms with holdout Pro Bowl Angeles Dodgers have enlisted
lead
in
the
eighth. He walked one
better
control.
things
are
falli'1lt
linebacker Carl Banks.
20•year-oid phenoms to protect
and
struck
out five. Jay Howell
in
for
me,
I'm
trying
to
help
keep
Taylor was suspended Monday
their division leads.
pitched
two
innings for his 17th
the
pressure
off
me
and
help
the
And, neither Gregg Jefferies
for 30 days by NFL commls·
save.
sloner Pete Rozelle for drug
nor Ramon Martinez are team win. 1 got a little taste last
"I think I threw 15 curvebaiis
year so I wasn't quite as nervous.
abuse. The Giants seemed
disappointing.
'!nd that is the big pitch 1
tonight
Jefferies, brought up Saturday Whatever happens, happens."
stunned at the thought of facing
have
been
working on," Martinez
the Super 'Bowl champion Reds·
night to boost the Mets' lagging
Martinez was brought up in
offense, went 2 for 5 In his first early August when one-time said.
klns and their next three oppoElsewhere in the NL, Pitts·
nents without their best defen·
start Sunday. Monday, at New Dodger phenom Fernando ValenYork, he doubled, tripled and zuela hurt his arm and went on burgh routed .Cincinnati 8-1,
slve player - a seven-time
All-Pro and the NFL's top player, homered to provide all the the disabled list. Though he did Philadelphia blanked San Franin their 1986 Super bowl title
offense necessary as David Cone not gain a victory in his first cisco 3-0, St. Louis edged Atlanta
season.
pitched a one-hitter In the Mets' three starts, Martinez flashed his 3-2 and Chicago nipped Houston
"Obviously it's a blow to our 6-0 triumph over the San Dlego skill. He entered Monday Mth a · 2-1 in 11 innings.
In the American League, it
2.37 ERA.
tea in," Giants Coach Bill Par1-adres.
was:
Chicago 3, Detroit 2;
"I know 1 have been pitching
cells said. "Quite frankly, I'm a
At Montreal, Martinez allowed
Milwaukee
6, Toronto 1; Kansas
seven hits over seven innings to well since they brought me .up
little surprised."
City
6,
Cleveland
3; Minnesota 3,
"1 had every reason to believe
notch his first major league win, here," said Martinez, a right·
Texas
2;
California
4, Baltimore
things were In good shape," l'lfting. the Dodgers over the haniler. " I did well in my other
2;
Oakland
3,
Boston
1; and .
three starts but they didn't score
Parcells said. "J thought he had a
Montreal Expos 2-1.
Seattle
9,
New
York
6.
very good preseason. I'm not
The Mets and Dodgers both any runs for me. Even this win
angry. Jfeellikeacoach trying to have 6. 1-2-game leads and 30
get his team ready to play the games left. New York tops the
Washington Redsklns."
National League East and Los
Angeles the NL West.
Rozelle announced the suspen·
The Mets have built their lead
slon in a Monday morning
statement:
because of pitching. Cone, 14-3,
"Lawrence Taylor of the New provided the excellence Monday,
York Giants has been notified yielding just a fourth-i nning
that he has been placed on that double by Tony Gwynn. He
club's non-football Ulness list for walked two and struck out eight
a period of 30 days effective as his ERA sank to an NL best
today.
2.25. The Mets have 19 shutouts
"The action was taken after and 14 complete games this year.
Taylor violated provisions of the
What they've lacked Is consistReg. Sale
NFL's substance-abuse policy. ent offense. Jetterles, considered
He has been instructed to remain among the best hlttlng prospects
•1 Fruitwood Curio, doors-mirror back ....""299 177
out of the Giants' training facUlty in baseball, Is supposed to help.
He went 3 for 6 in a brief
until Sept. 28."
•Brown Ceramic Table lamp, brass base ..... 149 44
Taylor, 29. is considered a September stint with New York
•Small Pecan Bunching Table ........................ 299 · 75
two-time offender under the last year.
•Solid Brass Hall TrH .................................... 189 40
league's drug policy. He under- r;:;:=~=========::::;j
went rehabilitation after the 1985 ~
I
•Sideboard French Prov. Buffet 70" ........ 1299 599
season and came back to win
The Daily Sentinel
MVP honors the next vear. If he
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(USPS 145-INO)
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A Dlv.,lon of Multimedia. Inc.
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Published every afternoon, Monday
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Dodgers slip past Montreal

~ ~~~~~~~:sE Cles1sn~e

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The Public Utlllll8s Commission of Ohio has set
for public hearinG Case
No. 811-101-EL-EFC, to
review tht fuel procuremen! practices and
POlicies of the Olio Power
Company, the operation
of l1i Electric Fuel Com·
ponent and related mat·
tars. This hearing Is
schttlulld to ~ begiil II

1:~ .!.!11· on •mlltr
6 18111 at CitY Council
Q'llfllbelll.218t!Mihl
AVIIIIHI, ~t.W. . Clnton,
Ohio 44702.
Allln1et estld paltlea wiH
be given M OIIIIOriUIIItY
10 be'-"'· ~ lnfoi.
mat1on may be obtained
by llOrll8ctlnll the Commission.

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�Poma'Oy-Middlaport. Ohio

Tuesday. August 30, 1988

Wildcats defeat Flyers 16-6
in grid opener Monday night
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Staff Wrl&amp;er
IRONTON - Senior fullback
Brad Cremeens scored two
touchdowns, rushed for 115 yards
and otherwise paced Hannan
Trace to a 16-6 victory over
Ironton St. Joe Monday night.
"IBrad) Cremeens wasn't 100
percent for the game, but he
su~ked it up and did a good job,"
said Wildcat head coach Don
Sallnders. Cremeens suffered a
sprained left ankle In Friday
night's SVAC preview scrim·
mage against Eastern, but was
among the starters for this
contest against the Wildcats'
perennial nonleague rival.
" We got the lea'd early," Coach
Saunders said, pointing to ·Cremeens' conclusion of an eight·
play drive that consumed barely
more than the game's first four
minutes. After spreading the
rushing out between Cremeens,
Todd Saunders and Larry Jarrell
from the wishbone, junior quar·
terback Shad Johnson called on
Woods led all t'U8hers with I« yards rushing on 31
WILDCATS CLOSE IN - Hannan Trace
Cremeens.
carries and was a one-man offense for the Flyers,
defenders Dean Flanery (52) and Shad Johnson
On a second-and-five play on
( iO) close In !)n Ironton St. Joe tailback Scott
the Wlldcals limited him to a tint-quarter
the St. Joe 32-yard line, Cre·
touchdown that was the sum or lhe Flyers' polllls.
Woods (44) before bringing him down In the third
meens ran to the left side and to a
quarter of Monday night's campaign opener at
The Wildcats won 16-6. (OVP photo by G. Spencer
hole cleared by senior tackle
Osborne)
Ironton'S Tank Memorial Stadium. Though
Dean Flanery and senior guard
Terry Martin. through the St. Joe
linebackers and Into the clear
tQWard the end zone. Jarrell
passed to senior tight end Jack
Swain for the two-point conver.
slon to give the Wildcats an 8-0
lead.
The Flyers' first offensive
series showed the Wlldl.'ats some·
STEWART - Junior fullback th e 8: 50 ma r k in the th ird
Kyger Creek had 22 first downs
thing few teams In this area
John Sipple scored a touchdown quarter.
and ran a total of 63 plays. Sipple
rarely see - the single wing.
from four yards out with 22
The Lancer s' scor ing pass rushed 18 times and picked up 91
"We don't have a true quarter·
seconds left in the game topropel broke a 6·6 tie created early In the of the Bobcats' 159 yards. John·
back, so we had to gu with what
Kyger Creek to a 13-12 win over third quarte r, when Bobcat quar· son was 8 of 13 for 65 yards,
we've got. If we ran an I·
Federal Hocking In Monday terback Chad Johnson tossed an including his touchdown pass and
formation, we'd be less produc·
night' s season opener for both eight-yard touchdown pass to an Interception. Federal Hocking
tlve· than we were tonight," said
teams.
wingback Brian Vinson. The had 15 first downs and ran 38 . Flyers' head coach Larry Getts.
Sl pple' s scoring run , whic h set scoring began with a 40-yard run plays. Shufford had six carries
Regardless, senior tailback Scott
up the game- winning extra -point by Randy Sc hufford with 2:46 to and rushed for 48 yards . Burch·
Woods, who called the signals for
attempt by sophomore J oey go In the first half.
well was 8 of 18 for 109 yards,
the Ironton squad, gained 141
Edwa rds, was the perfect re·
The Lancers did ·n ot convert Including his scoring toss and an
yards on the ground and 51 yards
s ponse to a Lancer touchdown either of their ex tra· polnl at· Interception.
In the air. Those passing yards,
pass from quarterback Shane tempts , a nd the Bobcat s missed
The Bobcats will host non·
however, came at the price of
Burchwell to Sequoia Lem on at the ir fi rst suc h attempt.
league rival Vl'ahama Saturday.
three Interceptions - one each

Kyger Creek edges Lancers
13-12 in 1988 football opener

Bengals release prominent holdouts
CINCINNATI (U P!) - The
Cincinnati Bengals got fed up
Monday with two prom inent
holdouts - r unmng back Larry
Kinnebrew and free safety Ro-,
ber t Ja ckson- and kicked them
off the team.
Kinnebrew. a s ix-year veter an
who led the club in rushing last
year , and Jackson. a starter and

elght·year veteran, a r e now free
to negotiate with any other NFL
club.
The Benga ls a lso cut eight
other players and placed another
five on the inju red reserve list to
reach the regular season roster
limit of 47.
Cut were r unning backs Dan
Rice and Da na Wright , ti ght end

John Goode wide receivers Greg
Meehan and Robert Thompson
tackle Herb Wester, guard Doug
Aronson and linebacker Tim
Inglis.
Placed on injured reserve were
linebacker Rich Romer. center
Paul Jetton, safety Chris Barber,
wide receiver Carl Parker and
nose tackle Curtis Maxey.
Although neither Kinnebrew
nor Jackson had reported to
training c amp, both had been
MADISON, Wis. (UPI) trying to negotiate new contracts
our second year of r unn ing th e
Quarterback Tonv Lowerv savs veer under coach Morton. Our
with the club.
the Wisconsin Badgers are ex· progress has been much better
" I don' t think they went about
c ited a bout coac h Do n Morton 's than las t year and we look for th e
it in a very Intelligent fashion, "
plan to pass the ballmore durlng at mosphere to be very hi gh said Bengals assistant general
the 1988 season, which starts Saturday," Lowe ry said.
manager Mike Brown, the
Saturda y with a contes t against
,
The Broncos, und er second· . team 's negotiator.
the Wes ter n Michiga n Br oncos in year head coach . AI Mold e,
"They'r e so late now that we
Madison .
don't think they can come In and
finished fi fth last year with a 4-4
Lowery, the 1987 UPI Big Ten record In the Mid -America n help us," added Brown. "They
Freshma n of the Yea r. sa id Co nference . The Badgers, al so
may be able to help elsewhere,
Monday the team Is optim is tic und er a second-year coac h. but we're not going to stop the
and he is ready to battle the ended th e 1987 season with a 1·7 show , bring them on board and
Broncos with Mor ton's veer Big Ten ma r k. The Badgers and
make room by releasing players
offense.
who have been here throughout
Broncos have pla yed twice and
''The 'whole team is verv Wisconsin has won bo th contes ts.
training camp, who have worked
comfor ta ble. Offensively, this 1:,
"Wes ter n Mich iga n likes to hard a nd have satisfied us by
throw the ball,'' Mor ton said. doing good jobs ."
Asked if the Bengals were
"That is an excelle nt football
· tea m , with a lot of e nthusi asm
sending a message to players
that long holdouts won't be
and excitement , .. This Is go ing to
toler a ted In the future, Brown
be a good opening game fo r
said, "It's not designed to be a
Wisconsi n a nd our fan s."
message to anybody other than
Some fans complained the 1987
MIDDLETOWN, Conn. (UPl)
-Scot t Klingenbeck tossed a 7·0 Badgers relied on the opt.! on too these two players. That doesn 't
mean we would treat other
shu tout as Cincinna ti de fea ted often. ·
players this way In the future.
"Every coaching sta ff goes
· defending champion Boyer tow
Pa., Sunday to win th e 191
through a certa in evolution: In
" It's not meant to be a
prece&lt;!ent. It's not meant to send
America n Legion World Series.
the past , we wa nted to look at the
a signal. Jt 's just meant to
The victory by Ci nc innati drop- back pass fonnatlon - and
Budde Pos t507was the six th time this is a great passing forma· Indicate what we thought was our
bes I course of action In the cases
: the Ohio city has capJured the lion," Morton said.
of
these two players. These two
Morton
said
he
Is
confi
dent
the·
· title In the 63-vear historv of th e
just
waited too long, as far as
' nationa l Legl~n competl i lon.
use of the drop·back formatio n
we' re concerned."
Klingenbeck, who pi tc hed 32 will make the Badgers tougher
Last week the Bengals re·
Innings in 11 days and came back for the Broncos defense.
leased veteran starting center
Badgers inside li nebac ker
with two days rest, gave up e ight
. hits, struck out eight and walked Andy Hartlieb wil l not play In the Dave Rlmlngton, another hoi·
dout, after club officials said he
, three. He received th e ga me's game due to a broken thumb
,
uffered
earlier
in
ca
mp.
had failed a physical examlna·
most va lua ble player award .
tlon
. The next day , howeve~.
· E very member of the Clncln·
Rlmlngton
passed a Philadelphia
nat! team hit safely, shari ng 12
exam
and signed with
Eagles'
hits that included a two-run
the
Eagles.
: homer In the sixth Inning by , WEST LAF AYETTE, Ind
Bengals' quarterback Boomer
IUPI) - Carol Mertler, asso: Jamie Blr kofer that gave the
Eslason
said the release of
cia te at hletic dir ector fo r
· winners a 6·0 lead.
women's s ports at Pu rdue Unl· Rlmlngton, who helped Eslason
: Other run-scori ng hits were
lead a players' strike last year,
versit y, has resigned to take a
• delivered by Mi ke Kessler. who
position as director of therapeu- ''may have been vindictivereceived the Player of the Yea r
ness." But Brown Insisted Mon·
: award; Jim Richmond , Ro n tic activity ser vices at Richland
Hos pital In her hom etown of day that wasn't the case.
: Murphy, Scott Hughes a nd Pete
' 'Rimlngton failed a physical ,"
Mansfield, Ohio.
• Rose 11, the son of major league
said
Brown. "Our doctors
Athletic Director George King
; star Pete Rose.
thought
he shouldn't continue to ·
Boyertown squandred several said her la s t dav at Purdue will
play
football.
He cbose to play
' scoring opportunities, stranding be Sept. 30, and she Is ex pected to
(with
Philadelphia).
but we
; runner s at third base In the assumed her new duti es at the
weren't
going
to
perm
It
him to
• second. fourth, eight and ninth hospital Oct. 3.
play
here
under
those
conditions.
: Innings and had the bases loaded
Mertier came to Purdue from
We thought It was too much of a
; In the eighth. Jeff Seymour and Ashland College In 1975 to serve
risk lor him as well as for us."
· Chris Mackey each had two hits as assistan t athletic director and
o v ersee development of
: lor the Bears.
· The game wa s played before Purdue's var sity athletic pro·
: 3, 759 fans, the largest crowd to gra m for women. She was
: watch an American Legion promoted to her Qur rent position
In 1982.
.
• Game. at Palmer Field .
: Cincinnati was 56-12 overall
Plans are under way to find a
: and 5·0 series competition, col- replacement for Mertier, bu 1
. tecting 65 hits and scoring 47 runs King said there would be no
In post se a~on play.
announce m~?nt untU September.

Badgers plan to pass more in 1988

Budde Post cops
national crown

Resigns position

"

~

By The Bend

-- ..-·

·T he Daily Sentinel
-

.-·· - ·

Beat of the Bend

MARTIN PURSUES FLYER - Hannan Trace defensive
lineman Terry Martin, left, tries to bring down Ironton St. Joe's
Scott Woods, but Woo,ds just gels the ball awa)' before Marlin
knocks him down In the third q.,..-ter of Monday night's season
opener In Ironton. Woods was 3 of 8 for 57 )'ards against a Wildcat
defeniM! that picked off three of his passes In the Wlldeals' 16-6 win
over lhe Flyel'8. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

Mike reports that you can get
In to.uch with the Hisle-Hysell
Genealogy Group bY writing the ·
group In care of Debra Hysell
Sanders, Route 1, Box 209-A,
Hampton, S. C., 29924 .

Flip Werry, Chester, was the
winner of the Times-Sentinel
Mystery Farm Contest of Aug.
21. Flip was one of eight persons
correctly Identifying the Chester
Buckley Farm at Reedsville and was selected winner of the $5
cash prize via the lottery route.

Middleport's Toad Brlckles, a
mosi enthusiastic and knowled·
gable person about horseshoe
pitching, accompanied Jim Knls·
ley of Bremen to Winston-Salem,
N. C., over the weekend where
Jim not only took part but
emerged as winner Saturday of
the 1988 · Levi Garrett Classic
Horseshow Tournament.
"Toad Is a great guy to have
along and helped me win this
evening with all of his support,"
Knisley notes.

Mike Roberts, Akron. formerly
of Pomeroy, keeps In touch with
the county as he moves along.
· Mikes writes that the HisleHysell Genealogy Group Is a
trememndous source of lnforma·
lion for those Interested In the
family genealogy. The malden
name of Mike's wife, Sharon, was
Hysell so they have taken quite
an Interest In the genealogy,
group. Mike says that virtually
all of the local Hysells - and
there are many In Meigs County
- descend from a line going to
the early 1700's In VIrginia. A
number have ancestory going

Woods marched the Flyers sidelines by the pursuing St. Joe
down from their 28 to the HT defensive front and linebackers:
3-yard line, where he powered but he turned back, slipped
over the middle and across the through and chugged away to·
goal line with 1:06 to go In the ward the open field and down the
first quarter, putting the hosts left sideline for a 61-yard touch·
behind by an 8-6 count. The down run . Todd Saunders fol·
lowed that with a two-point
two-point conversion run was
stopped by a staunch Wildcat conversion run that set the final
defense. who as Coach Saunders at 16·6.
The Wildcats gave St. Joe two
said, " stayed In their lanes and
didn 't chase St. Joe on their more chances to get back Into the
sweeps, where they could cut game, when Johnson threw an
Interception with 30 seconds to go
back Inside. "
The game was mostly a land In the third quarter, and when
war, as Johnson let the wishbone Johnson fumbled In themldstof a
do most of the offensive work heavy pass rush with 4:30 left in
~
IJohnson didn't attempt a pass the game. But the Wildcat
until the 9: 16 mark In the third defense turned the Flyers away
quarter, and his only completion after bot~ turl)overs, giving
In three tries was ,a 20-yard pass J ohnson two chances to breathe
to Swain In the fourth quarter) sighs of relief.
The Wildcats will host Hunting·
and the offensive · line open up
ton
Vinson Saturday night.
Saunders,
who
holes
for
Todd
KANsAS CITY, Mo. (UP!) Cleveland second baseman Julio picked up 39 yard~ on traps and
Franco attempted to tum a straight-ahead rusl)lng, and Jar·
double play with a runaway rell , who rushed for 13 yards
George Brett headed In his mainly on sweeps. as well as
Cremeens. Woods , who ran the
direction.
Flyers' operation In much the
Brett barrelled Into second,
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) same
way from the single wing,
delaying Franco's relay throw to
The Ohio State football team has
first base on a ball hit by Pat was responsible for the game' s selected outside linebacker Ml·
Tabler, and Kevin Seltzer scored first pass attempt - a fourth· chael McCray, nose guard Mike
from third with the go-ahead run and-eight try for the end .zone Sullivan, center Jeff Ulenhake
Monday night In the Kansas City from the Wildcats' 17 late In the and tailback VInce Workman as
Royals' 6·3 comeback victory second quarter - which fell co-captains of the 1988 Buckeye
short.
over the Indians. '
Woods ' first pass . attempt squad.
"All the credit goes to George
The choices, all seniors, were
because he went In there and took ended a drive started by Jarrell's made by a vote of the team
the guy out," Tabler said. ·rumble on the Flyer 45 . which members.
"(Franco) didn' t get a lot on the linebacker Joe Isaac recovered.
McCray , a 6-foot -3, 230·
throw because of that, and I was "We had them down , but we don't pounder from Dayton, and Sulli·
have that killer Instinct, " Getts
able to beat It out."
said
of his team. "We didn't van , a 6-foot. 241-pounder from
Otherwise, Tabler, one ·of the .
Timberlake, Ohio, will co·
Royals' slowest runners. would convert a few of our breaks, and caplaln the defense. Both are
have been out and the lnnihg our safeties didn 't forece well two-year starters .
would have ended on the double enough on the sweeps they r an
The 5-foot-11 , 195·pound Work·
play with the score tied 3-3. As It when he (Cremeens) broke man, of Dublin, and Uhlenhake , a
was, the Royals overcame a 3·0 loose," he added.
And break loose he would. 6-foot-4, 270-pounder from Ne·
deficit to win their fourth consec·
Cremeens, who came out of the wark. will serve as the offensive
utlve game.
co-c aptains . .
''That was a great comeback, " locker room to start the second
Workman retu rned to tailback
Royals manager John Wathan half limping slightly, w9uld get a this spring after being moved to
said. "We have a little magic chance to redeem himself for his flanker p1!dway through the 1987
going now . A key was Brett going shanked punt on the Hannan season. Uhlenhake, who has
hard Into second. We've seen that Trace 23 with 8: 47 to go In round sta rted 33 of 36 possible games at
three and a fumble on the
for a long tin\e now ."
Ohio State , will be starting his
Wildcats'
26 at the 7:01 mark.
Brett said he wasn't as sure of
second
season at center. He
Bevan received a gift pigskin
whether he made contact with
played
guar
d Is first two seasons.
from Woods In the end zone 14
Franco as he was of the result.
seconds after Cremeens' rpls·
"I hit something and all of a guided punt, putting the Wild ca ts
sudden I was laying ,on the at their own 15. Alle r several
ground and heard the crowd plays, Cremeens fumbled on a
roar , " he said. "With Tabby 's
run to the left side, and Bloom·
(Tabler's) speed, I figured I'd
field was there to recover at the
better break It up."
Wildcat 38. Once again, St. Joe
Danny Tartabull's 20th homer, could not put the ball In the end
a two-run shot, capped the zone.
four-run Kansas City rally and
At the 3: 45 mark, Cremeens
made a winner of Bret Saberha· took a pltchout from Johnson to
gen, 13-13. Saberhagen gave up the left side. He was Initially
three first-inning runs but hemmed In at the Hannan Trace
blanked the Indians the rest of
the way to break a personal
. we· can add this valuable
three-game losing streak.
"When you get a guy like
~fute to YG!Jr Homeowners
Saberhagen on the ropes early
,
J~Qiicy, !Or only S4 a'yel!r.
1tr1
FOR BEGINNERS I , · ,
on, you'd better get him the hell
With 'this Guarantee, yo\J'II be
ALL AQESI
.,..
out," Cleveland manager Doc
assured that reaanlless of
COUPLES, SINGLES, TEENS
Edwards said. "We didn't finish
your policy limit at time ol
him off."
loss, Y!IU'II be paid lite full
BAllROOM DANCE CUSSES .
'
.
,
eu~Urif ~ost of repairing or
Saberhagen lasted eight In·
THURS., SEPT. 1-7-9 p.m.
n!ngs, allowing 11 hits, walking
replacing your home. Call us
Milldltpart Am.
Bldg.
two and struck out four. Steve
today.
Mildd
Casto
•
lnltructor
Farr pitched the ninth lnninl for
LEARN: 8 - Donee, Fox Trot.
his 16th save.
.. • . OGAN
"~
SWing. Wlhl, Pollio, Rumbe, C....
"Saberhagen really showed
RNER~'
Chi. Coulllfy • ·-"""·
me something," Wathan old.
fnlllr&amp;_ ..... , _
fOI-MATION 011 BIIOWWIT UUo
. "After the first Inning he could
GRAUl FIIIDIAN-614·167.o662
have easllycashediUn. He really
214 EAST MAIN
IOIIUIOU-614·t92·6121
battled back."
"
POMEROY
CHAlliS EDWAIIIS-614·992·5210
Loser Scott Balles, 8-12, reJOAN IAIU-304-675·3106
992·1887
lieved Cleveland starter Rich
IIIII CAST0-304·675-3111
Yeti, who had a no-hitter until
Jamie Quirk's two-outRBlllngle
F11l &amp;.,1 llflt ErH11!
In the fifth. Bailes surrendered
Milt N•• P•,lll
two runs In one· third of an Inning.

~~u~~r~an,JarrellandTodd

RoyalS
de.ea(
Jn d•laDS
·

back to Charlemagne.

The Meigs County Chapter of
Public Em·
ployee Ret trees,
Inc. , was organ·
!zed recen Uy at
the Meigs Senior
Citizens Center
In Po:me1rov.
. It' s a bratnd'
new group for ~tl~'.~&gt;,~
the officers a·re
Brown, president; Henry Wells,
vice-president; Ada Bissell,
treasurer, and Louise Heines,
secretary:
There were 27 retirees on hand
for the Initial meeting. By the
way, ·the ,group will meet every
other month, on the first Thursday, with the location to be
announced.
The next meeting, however,
will be at the Senior Citizens
Center and will be held Oct. 6 at
10:30 a.m.

.

I know you will want to
remember Richard IRick)
Sellers, 1988 graduate of South·
ern High School, who really
needs encouragement at this
point In his young life.
.
Rick, son of Jonl Sellers,
Racine, and grandson of Marie
Boyd, Syracuse, and Yvonne
Sellers, Pomeroy. faces major
surgery at Riverside Methodist
Hospital Wednesday.
Your card would be so appreciated at this time and the
address Is Riverside Methodist
Hospital, Room 569, 335 Olen·
tangy River Road, Columbus,
Ohio 43214.

Youth to enter contest
Renee , Barnett, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Waldnlg of
Racine, has been selected for
competition In the 1989 Amerl·
can's Mode&lt;n Miss National
Competition.
She will enjoy four days on a
luxury cruise ship bound for the
Bahamas. The national competi·
tlon will be held on board ship In
April 1989 where over $25,000 In
cash, prizes, and scholarships
will be awarded.
Modern Miss awards over a
mllllon In cash, prizes and
scholarships throughout the
country annually. Winners In
competition are judged on personal Interview, their ability to
communicate, poise, personal·
ity. and good grooming. There Is
no score for physical beauty
since the focus Is on Inner
qualities and learning, according
to the Modern Miss news release.
Only one girl In each of the
three age dlvlsons will win a
national title, but other schOlar·
ships will be given. There will be

Bucks name 1988
football co-captains

first, second, third and fourth
runners-up, talent winner, Miss
Congeniality, citizenship, acedemlcs winner, state costume
winner and volunteer service
winner.
The contest will take place on
the S. S. Emerald Seas.

Boosters are having a work night
for fathers, to finish work at the
football field, on Thursday at 6
p.m.

CHESTER - Chester Town·
ship Trustees will meet Tuesday,
, 7:30p.m., at the town hall.Thurs·
• ·day calendar
• ROCK SPRINGS - SaliSbury
::Township Trustees will meet
· :Thursday, 7 p.m .• at the township
:. hall, Rock Springs. The public Is
. invited.
io-

Eastern star
MIDDLEPORT -Evangeline
Chapter 172, Order of Eastern
Star, Middleport, will hold a
regular meeting on Thursday at
7:30p.m. Fifty-year pins will be
presented and 110-year members
will be honored. Potluck afier the
meeting and each member at·
tending should bring a covered
dish. Special entertainment Is
planned for after the meeting.

RUTLAND - Rutland Town·
ship Trustees will meet In regu·
lar session Thursday. 6: 30 p.m.
at the Rutland Fire Station. The
public Is Invited.

to ••••

c

Work meettnc
RACINE - Southern Athletic

A proeram on "Decorating for
the Holiday a: Past, Present and
Futurf" will be featured at the
open meetlnl of the Chester
Garden Club and the Shade
Valley Council of Floral Arts
scheduled for Sept. 14 at 7:30
p.m. at the Chester ·United
Methodist Chu.,ch.
Present1n1 the proeram at th~
meet1111 which Ia open not only to
all carden cl\111 memberl In the

1-

town square and $20 toward
starting the first school.
The town records describe the
Wilcox twins as so identical, only
their oldest nrends could tell
them apart. They Jllllrrled sis·
ters, held all their property In
common, were stricken with the
same aliment, died on the sa me
day, and are burled In the same
grave In the Twinsburg Locust
Grove Cemetery .
The recent festival Included a
parade, games. food, craft
booths, two full days of live
entertainment, fireworks, bal·
loon launches, and more.
The Little Tykes Co. of Hudosn
sponsored a ''Twlndy Indy" race
Involving their sports coupe. The
obstacle course was approxi·
mately 30 yards In distance. and
Cody Faulk had the winning time
of 9.8 seconds for the four year
old male catagory. His time
record was the fastest of any of
the approximately 150 four, five
and six year olds who entered the
race.
Cody rcelved as his prize a
spQrts coupe car along with one
for his twin brother easy.

NEW HAVEN, W.Va . -The
Goodnlte reunion for family and
friends will be held Saturday,
starting 12 noon, at the Zion
Lutheran Church, Broad Run,
near New Haven, W.Va. A
covered dish picnic will be
served at 1 p.m. For Information,
call 992-39110.

area, but anyone In the commun.lty, will be Pat Caraon doing
Christmases of the put, Bobble
Karr of the present, and Janet
Holslnpr of the future.
For roll call everyone attend·
lng Is asked to take bulb for an
exchange. It lhould be wrapped
In plasdc wrap and labeled.
Refreshments will be IM!rved
and door prizes awarded.

a

,,

Mandy Slavin, Becky Elliot, and
Iva Cremeans, all of the Ru.Uand
area.
Sunny Folmer, Pomeroy; Rl·
chard and Glenna Fetty, Langs·
ville; Richard, Karen and Rl·
chard Gilkey, Jr., Middleport;
Paula and Ryan Hall, Lancaster;
Sondra· and Michael Robinson,
Leoma · and Martin Wuollet,
Chicago, Ill.; T. T., Dee•.Thomas
and Tyler Simmons, Reedsville.

Many attend baby shower
Teresa Cremeans and Sue
Grueser entertained recently
with a layette shower for their
daughter and daughter-in-law,
respectively . Patty Cremeans,
Middleport.
The gift and refreshment ta·
bles were decorarted In a Teddv
Bear theme with pink and blue
diapers given as favors;
Cake, mints, nuts, chips and
sandwiches were served along
with punch and coffee. Games
were played with prizes going to
Shirley Smith and Debbie Engle.
The door prize was won by Iva
Cremeans.
·
Attending the shower and
presenting gifts to Mrs. Weaver
were Mary Clark, Mary MeAn·
gus, Glenna Fetty, Sheila Napper
and Kristin, Tammy Lyons, and
Jessica, Paula Hall, Sherry
Miller, Shirley Simmons, Judy
McDonald and Angle, Kathy
Jeffers, Karen Gilkey, Debbie
Whitlatch, Chris Varian and
Courtney, Tracy Patterson and
Tiffany.

Ingels reunion held

Reunion

Open meeting planned

a.g.

Nation-wide twins
attend 13th annual event

The reunion of the descendents
of James and Bertha Cremeans
was held recently at Forked Run
Park, Long Bottom.
Attending were Phyllis and
Darlene Spangler, Danny, Bar·
bara, Darrln and Derek Cremeans, Maude Smith, Theodore
Cremeans, Shirley Simmons.
Danny, Judy, Angle and Danny
McDonald, Jr .. Gary Cremeans,
Ted Cremeans, Philip Smith,
Doris and Robby Richmond,

TUESDAY
POMEROY - The Meigs At·
hletic Boosters will meet Tues·
day, 7:30p.m . , at the high school.

. SYRACUSE - Sutton Town·
: sh lp Trustees will meet Thurs·
· day, 7: 30p.m., at the Syracuse
· Municipal Building.

COUNTY SINGERS
Jan and Kathy, well-known gospel
singing team, have recenlly recorded with Sweet Spirit Recording
studio near Portsmouth. Their release Is entitled ''I Want Us to be
Together In Heaven." Jan Lavender and Kathy McDaniel are both
Meigs County residents.

Cremeans reunion held

Community calendar

---

·~

Danlel!e and Michelle Thomas,
twin daughters of Dan and Fonda
Thomas, Tuppers Plains, and
their uncle, Greg Thomas of
Kent; and Cacy and Cody Faulk
and their mother, Linda Faulk,
and grandmother, Ann Rupe,
Pomeroy , attended the 13th An·
nual Twins Days Festival In
Twinsburg, Ohio recently.
The event , held annually in the
only city In the world named to
honor twins, hosted 1,804 sets of
twins llncludlng triplets, quadru·
plets, and quintuplets) from
I took the Uberty of taking a across the United States . and
week's vacation foUowing the around the world: This year's
Meigs County Fair. 1'111 not the event was the largest known
best traveler In the world and It gathering of twins In the world
takes me only a few f!liles to and Is listed In the Gulness Book
realize a couple ofthlngs- one- . of World Records as such.
be It ever so humble, there's no
Twinsburg which Is located
place like home - and number between Cleveland and Akron,
two, there's a heck of a lot of bad was named In honor of Moses and
fOOd out there. Missed ya! Do Aaron Wilcox, early settlers,
keep smiling.
and. of course, twins, from
Kelllngworth, Conn.The town's
name was changed from Mills·
ville to Twlnsburg,in 1817 at the
request of the twins. In exchange
for this honor, they donated six
acres of land that became the

RENEE BARNETT

Tuesday, August 30, 1988
Page-6

Grange elects new officers

.Public retired employees
·organize seniors chapter
By Bob HoeOich

· ·

Mrs. Goldie Ingels hosted a
reunion of her family recently.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Laudermllt, Racine; Mrs.
Patricia Laudermllt, Mason, W.
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Donald
W11llams, Marietta; Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Youlli, Point Plea·
sant, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Ingels, Mason, W. Va.;
Mr. and Mra. Floyd Burney,
Pomeroy.
Grandchildren and great·
arandcblldretl attendltli were
James, Joan, Corry, Mike,
Leana, Rick and Lynn, all of
Grandview; Jeff, Tammy. Da·
nlel, Mathew and Heather, Syra·
CUlM!; Mitch, Waneta, Chris,
Herbie and Ray, Ract~~e: Lori,
Barb Norm and Nancy, Mason;
Chris, Amy, Nikki of Marietta,
David Farr, Eric Ingels and
Kelly and· Keldt .

Iva Cremeans, Angl e
Spangler, Betsy Weaver and
Chrissy, Debbie Engle, Loretta
Tiemeyer, Angle Barton, Phyllis
Blake, Jane Williams, Mabel
Wickline, Paula Butcher, Zelma
Kaylor, Ethel Grueser, Marie
Davis , Krls Schnlppel, Maxine
Dugan. Pat Carson, Annie Yates.
Peggy Cremeans, and Angle
flass.
Others presenting gifts were
Barb Grueser, Ron Bareswilt,
Mavis and Todd Young Cathy
Davis, John Rodeback, Twila
Childs, Clnda Harrts, Nora Rice,
Judy, Pam and Cindy Crooks,
Delores and Harry Surface,
Rhonda Lyons, Debbie Mea·
dows, Merrl Amsbary, VIcki
Peckham, Tammy Blake, Faye
and Nancy Wallace, Syndl Jones,
Nella Seyler, Joey Barton, Tom
Vaughan, Lila Mitch. Mildred
Hudson, Isabelle Powell, Belly
Smith, Wilda Brinker, Sharon

New · officer s were elected at the coming year. Ail officers and
the recent meeting of Star lntersted m embers are asked to
attend.
Grange 778 held at the hall.
Youth c hairman Opal Dyer
Elected were Patty Oyer,
master; Larry Monlgomery, reported that the Star Grange
overseer; Ruby Lambert, lee· Youth received firs t place on
turer; Ray Midkiff, steward; their booth at the Ohio State Fair.
Rick Macomber, assistant ste- She also announced that the
ward; Maxine Dyer, lady assist· s ubordinate grange r eceived a
ant steward; Ben Rife, chaplin; seventh place, and Star Junior
Wald Nicholson, treasurer; Opal Grange received' a third place.
Ruby Lambert, lecturer , pres·
Dyer, secretary; Alan Halliday,
ented
a program on the theme
gatekeeper; Becky Rife, Ceres;
"Just
Th is and That. " Ann
Bernice Midkiff, Pomona; Ann
read " August"; lj.lck
HalUday
HaiUday, Flora, and John Col·
Mccomber
had jokes . . Maxine
well, executive committee.
Plans were made for having a ·Dyer , talked a bout the county
hayride and wlen~r roast on Sept. fair. and there were ·games.
17. Officers' conference will be Catherine Colwell gave house·
held Saturday following the regu· . hold hints, Ben Rife read "Let's
lar meeting. There wlll also be.a Have a Little Fun" and there
meeting to plan for activities of wete riddles.

Methodist Women meet
A report on a mission school
was presented by Nellle Parker
at the recent meeting of the
Alfred United Methodist Women
held at the church.
At the meeting the books of
Ruth and Esther were studied
along with the problems of South
Africa. It was noted that Ruth
and Esther were women In allen
cultures who .dared to do what
was right In the face of oppres·
slon, and that South Africa Is a
place of present-day oppression
where families are torn apart.
Sanctions agalns t South Africa
are being recommended by the
association, it was reported.
Cftar!otte Van Meter presented
a letter from Jack and Lois
Rogers, Hammond, Ind. there In
mission service for children In
the Inner city envlron!)lent.
Florence Ann Spencer had the
pryaer calendar and chose laity
worker, Sarah Carr, Buchanan,

W.Va. The society signed a
birthday card for her. Mrs.
Spencer also displayed calend·
ars and other materials to the
society for possible sale.
Mrs. Parker explained the
Festival of Sharing to be held on
Clark County Fairgrounds on
Sept. 24. Foods donated will be
kept In the districts. Kits and
monev are to go to the
fairgrounds.
·
The 10 members attending
answered rollcall by reportll)g13
sick calls. Others present were
Martha Poole. Osle Mae Follrod,
Nina Robinson, Clara Folirod,
Sara Caldwell, and Gertrude
Robinson .
· Thelma Henderson served coo·
kles and cheese curls during the
social hour. Next meeting will be
at thE- church on Sept. 20 with
Gertrude Robinson to lead the
pledge service.

Fall flowers set for show
"Antique Artistry" will be the
theme of the fall flower show to
be staged Sept. 10 and 11 at the
Rutland Civic Center by the
Rutland Garden Club, the Ru·
tland Friendly Gardeners, and
the Rutland Friends and Flowers
Club.
The show will feature 35
classes Including 12 In artistic
arrangement which are open
only to members of the three
sponsoring clubs, Invitation
classes, junior artistic, junior
hortiouclture, senior hortlculu·
ture and educational, ali of which
are open for exhibit to the public.
Ribbons will be awarded In
four places In each class during
the oral judging which will take
place at noon on Sept.lO, Entries
are to be In place before 11 a .m .
on the opening day of the show .
Special awards will Include
best of show, a first, second and
third; a junior best of show, and
horticulture sweepstakes In both
the senior and junior divisions.
Janet Bolin Is chairman of the
show . Her committees consist of
Judy Snowden, Joan Stewar t,

Marriage announced
Sarah Jane Taylor, Chilli·
cothe. and William R. Anderson.
Sr. were married on Aug. 21 at
the Church of Christ In Chilli·
co the by the Rev. Ken Springer.
They will reside In Chillicothe.

Diane Ash, and Pauline Atkins,
schedule; Marie Birchfield, Mar·
garet Weber, Brenda Bolin,
Joann Fetty , Lorrl Barnes, Mar·
jorle Davis, and Ruth Dugan,
staging; Dorothy Woodard, Mar·
garet Parsons. registration; Ju.
dlth H111 and Camllle Bolin,
'educational; Stella 1\tklns and
Ruby Diehl, ribbons and special
awards.
Diane Ash and Lilly Kennedy ,
judge's clerks; Pearl Canaday.
Octa Ward, and Anna Turner,
hospitality; Krista! Bolin,
Joanne Fetty, show signs; Suzy
Carpenter, Ruth Dugan, photogarpher; Margaret Edwards,
Kim Willford, Gina Tillis, and
Eva Robson, placement; Shirley
Miller, Binda Diehl, and Marcia
Denison, door prizes; Donna
Knapp, Janet Bolin, publicity;
Neva Nicholson, Dorothy WoodArd, Pauline Atkins, alld Lilly
Kennedy, show book, and Judy
Snowden, Pearl Canaday, and
Brenda Bolin . e ntry and
classification.

Weight loss
Judy Eblin, Brenda Roush ,
Kay Morris, Audrey Clark and
Brenda Roush were the top
losers at recent meetings of Five
Points Sllnderella clas ses .
Runners-up at this month's meet·
lngs were Dixie Say re, Bertha
Kinzel and Joan Vaughan. Jo
Ann Newsome Is tlle lecturer.

~~yt.Du~~::Od~re~~teW;~~~:
John, Tammy
Cremeans.

and

Brittany

Roberts announce
visiting relatives
Sherman Roberts who has
been visiting here with his
mother, DorothY Roberts, has
returned to his home In Choctaui,
Okla . While here be attended the
Melp County Fair.
Other visitors of Mrs. Roberts
and other family members were
Mr. and Mrs. Vletor Roberts and
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Walton of
Blrchtree, Mo. , Mr. and Mu.
Fred Fillinger, Dayton; Darrell
Roberts, Henderson, W. Va.;
CatheriDe Burton and son,
Middleport
T. Sgt. Greg France of Scott
Air Force Baae, Dlllloll, and Lee
Korn of Dayton alao visited here
recently with relatives and
friends and attended the Melp
County Fair.

,.

�.
Paga 6-The Daily Sentinel

•

rethink Its own policy, White
HOuse spokesman MarUn Fitzwater said air shows constitute a
''long tradition" In the United
States and told reporters U.S.
·officials are "inost reluctant to
pass judgment" on the safety of
such events based solely on the
tragedy In West Germany.
A spokeswoman at a U.S.
Army hospital at Landstuhl near
Ramsteln said of 32 Americans
admitted for, treatment, 14 remained hospitalized. An undisclosed number of Injured Americans were taken to West German
hospitals.
The annual show at Ramsteln
was held over the objections of
the opposition Social Democratic
and Greens parties and the
Lutheran Church In RhlnetandPalatinate, where the air base Is
located. Duringtheshow,pickets
outside the field carried signs
reading, "Air Shows Frighten
Us. Stop Them."
One group of four planes and
another set of five aircraft were .
swooping down to form a . giant
heart of smoke In the Italian
colors or red, white and green,
when a single jet flying through
the forma lion co lllded wl th two
others, hit the ground In a huge
fireball and plowed through a
crowd.
In Rome, a former member of
the Italian aerobatics team said
a mistake In altitude apparently
caused the crash - the worst air
show disaster involving
spectators.
· Bruno Vlanelli, ~ho now is a
pilot for Canada Air, said It was
clear from television tapes that
''either the soloist was too low or
the group was too high" as result
of "a sudden turbulence, illness
or so many other things."

German

Air Show

J

Collision
8elpallllllll

to Dlluhr:

1. Landing . . . app&amp;IWS
to be-at
INs pad.

I. flighl palll c:nanges:
It' 1'1 10.IIIIWI

glining lltitude .

:1. Fill iqiKI occurs.
4. s.Did ~occurs.
5. !lc*l jll in llames;
a&gt;n1inu1S GUIDI
COI*ol i'IO aowd.

.'

COLLISION COURSE - This rraphlc sports events leading lo ·
the all'llltow tragedy Sunday thai killed at least n people In what .Is
termed the worst ever alrshow disaster involving spectators. (UP!
rraphlc)
.

coast Monday, shortly after It was scheduled to
port. The carrier had been on duty In the
Mediterranean for six months, carrying a crew of
5,500. (UPI)

pies" of how Dukakls social and
economic programs work, he
argued, and such programs
Illustrate national Issues overshadowed by the recent scrutiny
of Bush's running mate, Sen. Dan
Quayle of Indiana.
Without naming Quayle, Dukakis said It has been difficult "to
get through the Intense scrutiny
that has taken place during the
pl)st three weeks."
"It's perhaps not as newsworthy as accusing your opponent of something," the governor
said Of his Intention to discuss
policy issues. :'But I think as a
candidate I have a responsibility
to do !hat.''
In a speech that was moved
from the lawn at the Basketball
Hall of Fame to a downtown hotel
because ofr11inMonday, Dukakls
reiterated his broad economic
themes and said he wants "to
restore America 's economic
might In the world.''
.
"It's time to build a spirit of
American p'atrlot!sm that says ·
we're not going to let any country
out-learn, out-teach, out-work,
out-Invest, out-produce, out-sell
or out-compete the United States
of America," he declared.
One of Dukakls's stops Monday

his White House rival, Massachu- .
set ts Gov . Michael Dukakis.
Last week, Baker said Bush
probably would not be ready to
debate before Sept. 20, essentially rejecting a Sept. 14 debate
in Annapolis, Md., set earlier by
the national chairmen or the
Democratic and Republican
parties.
Asked Monday a bout his readi ness to debate, Bush said, "I just
don't. feel under any great rush ,
frankly . I don 't feel I have to
meet somebody else's agenda .
I'll meet them halfway, but I'm
not about to be stampeded.
"I say, 'Please explain your
views on defense.' And they say,
'How about the debates?' Totally
irrevelant," he complained.
In his speech to a bout 200
workers In St. Louis, Bush
prom lsed to take a hard line on
defense if elected and to modernize the U.S. nuclear arsenal.
Pointing to Dukak!s's opposition
to both the MX and the competing
Mldgetman mlsslle, he chided,
"Sometimes he gives me the
Impression he Is against every
new weapons system since the
slingshot."
On the questions surrounding
Quayle, the41-year-old conservative he selected as a running
mate, Bush acknowledged the
focus given to Issues such as
whetlier Quayle used family
connections to join the National
Guard In 1969 In order to avoid
\.

"He did take a tremendous
pounding for several days. I
think everybody In the country
knows that," Bush saldln a nod to
the intense scrutiny. However, ·
he maintained, "The country has
responded whether they thought
It was fair or not with those (poll)
figures.
"I think he will be an a sse~."
Bush continued. Asked whether
Quayle could be considered an
asset now, the vice president
hedged: "I'm not sure you can
say that - because you had this
tremendous pounding. .. . But I
think Quayle has eiTierged where
he will be an asset to this ticket."
At a briefing for reporters In
Washington Monday, Janet
Brown, executive director of the
Commission on Presidential Debates, said ·the Annapolis debate
had not yet been canceled and
officials were "willing to be
flexible."
The commission, set up by the
Democratic and Republican par- ·
ties l~!st year to pre-empt the
League or women Voters debates
familiar in recent campaigns,
has scheduled another debate
Sept. 25 at Wake Forest Unlver·
s!ty in North Carolina.
Brown said she had talked with
Baker and Brountas in recent
days and planned to speak with
them after today's meeting.

-M-·-·

------ ----

992 •6857
to our rummage sale, I was told,
"It's too much trouble.''
LOUISVILLE, KY.: I worked
In a good shoe states In this city
and saw them slash shoes left and
right and toss them out. When I
asked why they weren't given to
the poor I was told, "Foot
disease." &lt;The answer was an
Insult tp my lntelllgence.)
DearReaders: Theonlyplauslble explanation for slashing
merchandise came from Columbus, Neb. A woman wrote:
"Retailers must protect themselves against people who get
merchandise through charitable
organizations and take it back to
the store for credit. Most folks
are decent but there are a lot of
crooks out there."
Well, readers, If this Is 'true
there's got to be a better way.
We Invite the stores named to
· respond. We'll print their
statements.

HUDNALL
PLUMBING &amp; HEA nNG

We Appreciate Your Business!
To Prove This We Have A

,.5,...

'Aol!&gt; _ _00511
_ _sa.A1
_ _ _n

__

l'llll!:lll

•.C::...ow_..,.,.,....,._
........
...,,
....... '

··------

.;::;:
..-::::.-:=-..- -..... -.
..,._.,,..-.....
._.,_.....,_JOOo"'

IOII'fl

....

111110...

. .. .

~

lkCIOi'·

folloMrlf

=-=·

Ea.·

SECOND TIME
AROUND SHOP

FOR A QUALIFYING DEPOSIT OR INVESTMENT

PEOPLES.

•

.

-

BANK,-~m ~:~:~:.j

"The Better Bank'f"····

l
.. oti

J&amp;L

INSULAnON

Mastic &amp; Certainteed
Vinyl Siding

Ewninp by Appointment

2 miles tow11d Albany on
SA681.

Roofinc

992-5083

Seamless Gutter

1· 12 1 mo.

Replacenfent Windows

Blown Insulation
Storm Doo11 &amp;

Miss Robin Gibson, Columbus,
spent two weeks with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire, recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ball of
Columbus spent the weekend
with ~rs. Frances Young.
.
Mrs. Lola Clark visited Friday
evening with Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey, Albany.
Miss Meredith Felts of Illinois,
spent two weeks with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. VIrgil
King. .
Mr. aild Mrs. Don Updegraff
and granddaughter, Amy, o! Birmingham, Ala., visited two weeks
with Mr. and Mrs, Bob Alkire.

Windows

EXCAVATING

FILL DIRT
10-8-tlc

SMALL

REPAIR

==-=·

Brigga&amp; &amp;'"'"
Stranon

614-742-2617

Tecunu;eh

Weed Eater
HomoUto

lotw•n 9 a.m.·6 p.m.

or loanMts-

.;··==-..

uelwlnp•...

1
lt

=::·::

•

Ml~l~~~:~ Ohio

CUSTOM BUILT

TRI-STATE
DRYWALL CO.

HOMES &amp; GARAGES

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949·2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALlS

Business .
lmpn IIIOVIIS &amp; SUDIS to
VIIS TAPE
lot ..........,'"'" oldMoviol
&amp; Stl . . ovor to ocoy VIIS.

CAU AMY CMTER
or IOI'S ELECTRONICS
446·7390

1112/'ll·tfc

SER~ICE

DEAD OR AUVE

can repair and re·
con radtators and
h111ter cons. We can
also acid boll and rad
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.
PAT HILL FORD

We

Public Notice

•Waehers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezara
•Refrigarators
"Must It RI(IGil..lt"

lEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
We Service ~n.. ~!~-•.t•.•

Garage

ADDENDUM TO PART I,
ITEM E !51
SOUTHERN OHIO COAL
COMPANY - MEIGS
MINE NO.1
LEGAL NOTICE
Southwn Ohio Coal Company, Melgo Mine No. 1, P.
0. lo• 480. At'-t. Ohio
4&amp;701, hll IUbmHI..t on
oppllcetlon to rwloe o Cool
Mining and lledM!Iation
P11mlt Numblfod R-03548, to the Ohio Deport...ot NotU181 IIMour-. OMolon of Rodemotion. Tho
propaoed cool mining ond
rodol!llltion -otion wit
bo In Melgo County, Solem
Townohlp, S.otioll' 13 and
Froctlon 33,, Th~ DfGPOIId
underground mining eroo
will oncompoio 303 ' ecroo
ond lo loceted on the Wllk. .
vMio 7"11 Minute u.s.G.8
g.......,gle mop, opprox~
lllltely 2. 3 mil• Woot at IaIoiii Center, Ohio. Tho oppt~
cation pro- to ••pond
tho oNM for 111o room ond
plllor m•hod of undor-

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
·•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

11. 124, Pomtror Ohio

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR
~lao Tr••••llalon
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New H-oluNt

ufree Estimates"

PH. 949-2891
or Res. 949-2860

6-17-lfc

NO SUNDAY CAUS
3-11-lfn

.
8•

BOGGS

CARTER'S

County Court HouM,
cond Street, Pa.-ay, Ohio
4&amp;788 for publle' vlowlng.

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

Writ1en comments and/ or
requeat1 for an lnformet
con-ce may bo oent

to the Dlvtolon of Rod•
motion, Faum.ln SqUIIre,
luldlng 1-3. Cotumbuo,
Ohio 43224 within thirty
i30J doyo of tho l•t doto of
publlc:o11on at 1111o notice.
181 30; !81 8, 13, 20, 4tc

992-6282
319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

Public Notice

SALES &amp; SERVICE

"LET GEORGE

U. S. RT. SO EAST

DO IT"

GUYSVILLE, OHIO
614-662-3121

HAULING

Authorized John
Dee1e. New Holland.
luoh Hog Farm
Equipment Deater

SAND-GRAVEL
LIMESTONE
FILL DIRT
985-4487

F••• E••lt•"t

,.,.. &amp; ··~··..

8-t-1 mo. pd:
'

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

Re=·
CALL 992-6756

County _Rocorcl•· Melgo

"DO("

.

2282.
Complete houltholdl of furniture &amp; ant&amp;qun. Alto wood &amp;
coal t.et.a. Swain's Furniture
•
Auctkm. Third &amp; Olive,

-.

.

8/18/88

Announce men Is
4

Giveaway

Moahonic

AVON-Need 5 ladl• to Sell
Avon. Coli 8t&lt;l-448-33&amp;8.
ndrypolltioniiVIil•

Mile or Ftmlle to ltve· in &amp; c:.-e
for 11rnl-malelnv.Ud. Clll 81..,

379-2770 aftor 5 PM.
Hair Styllttt. Acr011 The Str"' .
atyUng allon II Mlklng one
edcltlonal styht who It IDoldng
for mo,. thll"' ).!It 1noth• job.
Call Terri It 8f4-441-9510 for
details.

'"""'

•re•.

E111ploymenl
Serv1ces

AVON, all ere1111 Shlrlev
304-178-1429.

Help Wanted

Call (102i838·8815 .. ~ '1203.

s.....

"HIRING"II Government

EARN EXTRA MONEY during

the Summer. Get out of the
hou•. b1oome • O.lly Sentinll
~P•

Jobo-

vour ••· t115.000. eea.ooo.

c••· Rou.. open in

Midcleport. Clll Scott at The

NOW HIRING
jobo, oldllod .. d
unskilled in your .,... For
OJr.....W lilt of jobl &amp; applic.tion
call (102)998-01182 .. t . 2508.

ao-...-

2155.
NUCLEAR POWER TRAINEES
Up to t6,000 c•h bonus
available on complll!on of our
trllining ~m. Pottion~evall·
able for high ~&lt;:hool diploml
gratl.ttet with ttrong math/•

cience background, age 17-24,

who will reloCBtelll ournpense.

Call 1-800.282-t384. Mon.Thurl., 9 AM-2 PM.

Pan-time Registered X·r•v
Technld.n. V.-ied hours- No
weekendl, cail. or holidl';'t.
Apply 10 the Medical Plaza 203
Jock..., Plko, Golllpollo b•
,_8:30-&amp;PM.
Ambitious Mlf starters needed
to demonttme Houe of Uoyd
tov• • a.ncl•. Work own houra.
Free • 300 ktt. No inwttrMnt
81~

12

Situations
Wanted

Someone to lve·in wtth elderly
lady ptrt·dme In Pl. PleiiNtlt.
Call 11&lt;1-448-4782 oftor 8 PM.

Hwe room In my home for
ildderly lady or man. Country

•tmosphere, clo• to town. 20
Vtl· •perlence .nd pl..ty of
TLC. Call lt"'ytime. 814-949·
30t4.

13

lnsurll'lat

----------------- . ''
vour mobile home
lnsuranc:e: Miller Insurance, ·
304-882·214&amp;. Alto: auto,
home. life, health.

Call us for

Bobl'oltt• n10dod' 5 Y'· old. 3
PM-8 PM. Prefer someone
w.tchH*-'· Addison area. C.ll
814-387-7289 bolo!O 2 PM.

16

Hiring High School Students
Only for Ref•.-tce Aida position
at losard Memorill Llbr.,.. 12
houfl weakly/13.36 hourtv·

RE-TRAIN NOW!
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COUEGE. 1!129 Jacbon Pike.
Ohio lnatructlonel Grant DeMf.
line Aug. I 9. Call 448·4387.

Pref• Oallia COunty residents.
Call 814-446-7323 for

ln~aw.

~og.

Schools
Instruction

·••.--'

No. 88-t 1-t0558.

Family pllflning 1gency needs a 18 Wanted to Do
treined lnctvKllal to provide
mediCIIInd officetuppon III"Yi'
'
c• in Gallla. I.Jwvrence 111d 'fwd ewe, brual) wttlng. light ....
h&amp;~llng.eometreetrlmmingMd ....
Mei91 counti•. P.-t·tfme position Nqulr• excall~t verbal remo.,.l. Bill Sleek 81~992· ""~
..,
communi'*ion tldlls; accun~cy 2 269 IYtninp.
whh ft~tet; knowledge of Md
IM1tltlvfty to reprEd.!ctlve h..tlh Beby'ah:ter •v•itable, flalble .,.
needl of clients; relllble trlnt· hours. part or ful time, fenced
yerd. behind Ord.,ce School,
portation; fl.:lble hOUI'I to In· 304-878-2784.
elude ·evening, waekctav and
Saturdlf morning .:hedul111.
Send lllltter of Interest, rMurne. Will do hou• &lt;=ieMing or In
end two amploym..,t ref.-.nCfll home health c.e, ref•t1'1&lt;=81
to PIMn«&lt; P•entttood of Sou· IVailabl&amp; 304-77~5892.
theast Ohio. 396 Richland
Avenue, Ath~ms. Ohio 411701. BlbVslttlng tn mv home in Point
b'l Soptemboo' 7, t 988. PPSEO Pleaunt eree. Full or part time.
It an Equal Opportunity Cen furnilhed refM'IftOIJI. 304878-377-t
Employol.

-

Kittent to give away to good
home. Yellow &amp; White. 12 wkt.
old. Call81&lt;1-379-2436 .

.

PIIPJIY to givewoy to good home.
Cal181 4-388-9098.
GMt away to good home in
country- I mo. old. '12 Olow- 'I•
Shep.,.,d- 1A Healer Mtle. Good
wlth chUdron. Call 814· 4484327.

',

Sentinel Office It 614-992-

••

-----"Gallipolis _________ _
&amp; Vicinity

8 kittent- Y2 Slam1111 to give Sept. 1 ,2,3. School clott••·
Mrt. Call 614-446-4287.
muc:h to ChoOM from. wash
baln W/Cabinet 1: Ill, crlft ..
2 Dog•· 1 part O.chshu nd W.yne Phillips. CecH Klngfemlle-8 mot. old. 1 mlxld Blchwll Aodner Rd .. first off At.
breed m~~le-8 mos. old. Call 654. Watch for signs.
81 "-44&amp;-2&amp; t 1.
I::---:::-:--:::---::---::1 yr. old bird dog. Call614-2581386.

Sept. ht end 2nd. 9:00·6:00
pm. Large sire dreu•. towal1,
rugs (one is 12 ft.z1 2 ft.), mlac.
John Kedc'a, Mulberry Heights.
Pomeroy.

...

~
...,

•

Friday and Saturdwv. Sept. Znd
•d 3od. Bulah Max ... 42235 Rt
7, Tuppers Plaint, 9"1\' hou•

.crou from Mllthocht Church.

3rd hou• belowLoct.lvick'sMkt.
Aluminum l•ddtr, coflH table. . •
end tabl1111. lludent d•k end
chair. dlaha. miM:.

Big 5 family , September 1atend
2nd . 10:00·5 :00, Children's
cloth., odds and endl , furni·
ture. AI. 7. na~t to State
HlghwtV Gtrlge.

9 month oldmaleBeegletovood
homo. Call8t4-992-2802.

Sep\. 1st. 2nd. 9:00-4 :00.

·~

mile pall &amp; Points qn Rt. 7
North.

3 ktnena to.good home, 2 femele
and t milo, 304-878-4840.

Sept. 2nd end 3rd. Rutland St.,
Mlddhrport. Baby bed, ba-

llnette, clothel {Infanta to 14),
women's large sizes, Wilker.
books end more. Rlin eenceta.
Sopt. 2nd. 3od, 4th. Cr""' Rd.
tbehind Fairgrounds) Pomlfoy,
10:00.4:00. Adutrandehildrent

clot._. Wateh for •uns.
Sept. 1tt, 2nd, 3rd It the
Herrilon Smhh r81idence ()n
An• Grove Ad. Toys, llnMtt,
1nt~ c•h regltter, mise:.

986-4141
GENERAL CONTRACTORS

VAUGHN

Aif Concltioning. hilt pump •
servk:e m.-.. Teking IPPMC•
tions. Gillie Rtfrlantion Co.
152 Third A101., Galilpollo.

- : - - - - - - - -Government Jobl. t11.040·
W•t Ia buy: Used l.!rnitun1 and *159,230 ¥'•· Now hiring. Your
•ntlques. Wil! bur entire hou• •••· 805-887·8000 Ellt. R·
hold turnilhlng. Merlin Wade- 9801!1 for 111r~ Fed. .lllst
"'"~'"'· 814-245-5152. '
Local phytldtr~Gfficelookingfor
Junk Clu wfth or wfthout 1111 honett, retiMie perton wilh
motors. Clll Lerry Uvety·814trlnsportlltlon to clean
388-9303.
II :~~;·,~PI-•
to The Dolly
P.O. So• 7298, Po ...
FurnttuiW and epplitr~Ditl bv the rOlf,
piece or entire hou•hold. Fair
Pl'iceo being pold. Call814-448- Need ,ladv totlkec:. . of invalid
3158.
lady two dl\'s • week. Cell
8t&lt;l-992-7851 .
Wanted to Buy· Go Cart. Cell
814-.46-9824 evenings.
AVON· All
C.ll Marilyn
Wo- 304-882·2845.
Buying daily gold, 11tver coins.
rings. jewelry. •ertmgwtlre, old
,SEMINAR
c:olnt, llfge amency. Top prl- Interior Decoretlng Consutt.,t
eet. Ed Burkett llrber Shop, wtth Ctrttllctlt• end Interior
2nd. Ave. Middleport. Oh. 814- Decorating Sewing Buslntu.
982-3471.
ABierwtlons. 304-623-5872.

PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

References

v-•.

Moond ~-1 EJ«:ell.nt bwlafits.
1 -800· 999· 5150 US / WV
Wane.

814-448-3159.

CHESTER, OHIO
•HOME: BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS - BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS

SYIACUSf. OHIO

NIASE Cert

.

MARCUM CONTRACTI

Moat FONign ond
Domeotlc Vehldeo
A/C llfVIce
An M~or • Minor

• The eppl(oatlon lo on tilut
the ofll- of the Molgo

Complete Drywall
Service
FREE ESTiMATES
Reasonable Rates
56 STATE ST.
GALLIPOUS, OH.
446·3487

Roger Hysell

WANTlD

Eastern

448-8897.

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

BISSELL
BUILDERS

.

"'

1911

A .... Galllpolio. Call 814-448-

aeso 8ooldng Patti•. Cell

Jecoblen

2·1tr.''IS.ttn

P•• COtler 1M

1elepla0n~~

Authoriud Service

-FlEE m•ansFor '"'Y of th•uwvkll 1all

tit .•
.....

.....

Buldt·Pontiac,

11

TOP SOIL

clll. Twminll peyl You bur
,_-mtts firrt
~ replae

detr~

TOP CASH paid for '83 model

1115/Hn

TRIPLE P

ow'*' I opem:or, ,.... owner.
wrelcomel Long / short . had
mowmWIII. A~~qulred 23 yrs.
old. 2vn. OTR•parl,noe. Hwe
good MYR. p - OOT pl!yoi-.

Jim Mink Che¥.-01 dllnc:.
1111 Gene John1on
8t4-448-3872

Call 992-2772

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL· SAND

•

..•

Ulld e."l.

Free Eatlmata

JUNK CAtS 01 !lUCKS

ground mining.

r

8-8-81-Hn

Hours 10-4

'

..

992-2269

Gently used
consiJnment
clothmg for
children.

Harrisonville
happenings

PERLOAD
DELIVERED

BILL SLACK

"At Reasonable Prices"

Public Notice

West Virginia University or
Ohio State University Blanket

FIREWOOD

and newer used c... Smhh

$35

1/28 / 1.,

Wanted To Buy

We PlY c:•h tor late model

OAK. LOCUST,
CHERRY

16141 9'12-6550
IESIOENCE PHONE
(6141 992-7154

9

992-6215 or992-7314
Pomeroy,
lin

IUSINESS rHOME

-o;

"'"' ond .....,
bow t!Opo;
g•lnda-o: h.,d toalo; colo• TV:
clothes; outbo•d motor. pots

montlon.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

- --

• .• "-

Claufli"

~

;::::::,.,"'f.:.!:.':':..-."':'l:a:t".:.::

'

(FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Wo Cany Fiohing Suppll
Pay Your Phone
and
Cable Bitts Hare
-.

IIATII

,.,....,.

...

-~.~;. ~ £0::,'"J::..C::,::;-o...:~;

FREE·

'

North Stcond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

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

_
_
__
,._ ·-__. _,__ -·--NOON SA'RJINY

~..::...-=·

•

..,d posn.; glau Md dlshwere:
Troy bult tl'llctor: gl .....wre:
more itmes to numerous to

WAN! 10 IUY WIECIED 01

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

•

-Roofing end guner work
-Conaete work
•
- Plumbing 1nd eled:ric*
work

•Wrecker Service

. _ .. _ _ _ _ _ , ......... i C -

CLEVELAND (UFI) - The
Perry nuclear power plant was In
Its 64th day of continuous opera·
t ion Tuesday, setting a record for
the $~.6 billion nor the as t Ohio
facility. ·
The Cleveland Electric Illuminating Co., Perry's operator,
''
said the nuclear plant has generated power without interruption
since June 27. · The previous
Perry record was 61 days, ·
occurring between Feb. 27 ahd
•
April 27.
~ring May and most of June,
''
the nuclear plant operated only
about half of the time, due In part
to a series of operator errors.

·-•
kn~vea;
UIOd and nM

168

,

Perry plant
sets record

CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Addono and 1omodllin•

•Junk Vard Business

a.rt;~

AM
PM Sept. 2
thtu&amp;.
AntlqueoondcoH-bloo:ahotguno, rill• olotola;; oheolh •nd

•

Help Wanted

OWNER/0 PER ATOR
OewNne Flltbed Dlv. '-ing •'

INvENTORY SALE

of

2 UncoIn Terrac1
P-eroy, Ohio

&lt;:

I A.M.

11

Public Sale
&amp; Auc:tion

Maron Fur Agency, 104 8•own

Dump Trucl&lt;

....u .........., .....

8

n;~-szsa .

•Dozer • Backhoe Work
•Will Do HauHng With

10 !WI All II Clll "'·JISI

--·- ... _. __ ....

St..
30&lt;1- M11on, W. V1. phone
'i:;i:;~:;;;:;:L5Sf~~i1~=:;~:::::::::==;1
YOUNG'S
All offerlnga
hf
9:00
to ma.y
5 ,00be seen from

;··~

was at an · ab~nd(med North :-:
Adams Industrial complex, the
proposed site of the world •s • ''
largest museum of contempor,; ••~
ary art, and he also met with
familles In Pittsfield who recently purchased affordable
housing under the Massachusetts
Homeownership Opportunity
Program.

- . ---- .. --··-- --•

Business
Se rvl•ces

Landers

Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Frank. Sarah and Matthew, were Sunday
evening visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Holley, Caivinlee and Jason.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr of
Ruiland were Sunday visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Thoma
and Iva Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Smith, Rock
Springs Rd., were Tuesday evenIng visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith.

992-2196

combat In VIetnam. The senator
denies any undue influence.

--

Ann

PALMER. ARK.: When I
worked In Alaska, I(Jnney stores
up there slashed not only shoes
they couldn't sell but ladles'
purses as well. I tried to get the
store to stop this but was told to
mlild my own business.
SIERRA VISTA, ARIZ.: That
wasteful system of "merchandise disposal" described by the
woman ln Connecticut goes on
here, too. It's obscene.
NO CITY, PLEASE: You want
to talk senseless waste? The food
thrown out by the military Is
enough to make a grown man
cry. When I offered some sensJ:
ble suggestions on how to get that
food to the homeless I was told to
keep my trap shut or I'd be In bl~
trouble.
FROM WEST PALM BEACH,
FLA.: Just because shoes are
mismatched is no reason to cut
them up and throw them out.
Single shoes are useful to people
who have major foot SUfiery.
Any foot doctor knows how to get
In touch with groups .that coordinate distribution or single shoes.
I'm an 11 left and a 13 right.
NEWARK, N.J.: Apparently
slashing shoes that don't sell is a
common practice. Last winter I
was walking behind amaH and
picked up dozens of pairs of shoes
that had smallcutsln them. No, It
wasn't Thorn MeAn. It was ShoeTown.
MODESTO, CALIF.: Some
bookstores here tear off covers of
perfectly good books, and they
are tossed In the trash. When I
asked about donating the books

. By ANN LANDERS
Dear Readera: Remember the
letter from the woman in Bristol,
Conn., who complained that her
husband, a private sanitation
contractor, regularly picks up
useful Items that stores have
discarded to make room for new
merchandise? She said almost
every month he brought home a
big box of shoes from the Thorn
MeAn stores. Each shoe had
beensllt up the side so It couldn't
be resold.
l,.contacted Thorn MeAn about
this rash policy and was told that
they slash and throw away shoes
only when a single shoe from the
pair Is missing or the pair Is
mismatched. I was assured that
there would be no more slashing
and that shoes would be given to
charities.
That letter sent shock waves
areund the country. Apparently
there Is a great deal of this sort of
thing going on. Read on:
FREMONT, NEB.: I used to
work for Wal-Mart and It made
me sick the way they threw out
clothing that had the slightest
defect. They cut shirts and pants
and sweaters down the middle
and put them in the trash. I asked
why they didn't give these items
to lhe needy. The answer was,
"Because they would come to
expect it." I then asked why they
didn't give the gannets to us
employees. They said, "Anyone
taking merchandise from the
store will be tired.'' I hope that
woman's letter helps put an end
to this nuttines ..

Middlepon,

Bush maintains Quayle will
be an asset to GOP
ticket
.,.
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Vice
President George Bush, heading
out this morning on the first In a
series of one-day campaign trips,
said he's confident running mate
Dan Quayle will be an asset to the
GOP White House ticket - In
time.
. ·
Before Ira vellng today to
Rocky Mount, N.C., and Fort
Campbell, Ky., Bush asserted
: "the country has responded" In
publiC opinion polls to the question of whether Quayle has been
treated fairly by news reporters
investigating his military record
and personal history.
The vice president said he was
"very pleased" about a recent
survey by his campaign pollster.
Robert Teeter, showing the controversy over the Indiana senator has not hurt the GOP
presidential ticket nationwide.
Reporters asked about Quayle
Monday as Bush toured Engineered Air Systems, a defense
contractor near St. Louis. Bush
returned to the nation's capital
late Monday for the first time
since his nomination In New
Orleans two weeks ago; he now
Intends to make daily campaign
trips all week, returning each
night.
Todjly in Washington, Bush
campaign chairman James
Baker arranged to meet with his
Democratic counterpart, Paul
Brountas, to negQtiate details of
any dellates between Bush and

'

-

Ohio

Mrs. Gladys TUckerman was
Sunday afternoon visitor of Mrs.
Dorothy Reeves.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl McElroy,
Columbus, were Saturday visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Paul McElroy and Mr. and Mrs. Bill McElroy, Jeff, Joey and Jessica.
Mr: and Mrs. Leslie Frank, Sarah Beth and Matthew of Texas
Road were Sunday visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Haning
and Ronald.

'

.

--·--"c--·......--0 .....

Wolfe Pen community happenings

.

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (UP!)
- Gov. Michael Dukakls, ,responding to concerns that he
should be out on the presidential
campaign trail, argues he Is not
spending too much time at home
and "can address national Issues
from Massachusetts."
Upholding a pledge to run both
the national campaign and state
government, the Democrat is
stumping around his state. To. day he arranged to discuss job
training and employment at the
Massachusetts Career Development Institute In Springfield
followed by a speech to farmers
and environmentalists in
Whately.
Some Democratic Party officials, however, ate worrying that
their man is losing ground to his
Republican rival, Vice President
George Bush, who was going to
campaign In North CaroUna and
Kentucky today.
"I can address national issues
from Massachusetts," Dukakls
said Monday by way of response.
He noted polniedly, "! am a
sitting governor. I do have a
responsibility to this state."
Campaigning at nome provides an opportunity to show the
country "living, breathing exam-

·------

Discarding merchandise

Dukakis argues campaigning
at horne OK; be'.~ govemo~

INSPECTS DAMAGE- An unldentllled Navy
officer peers out friHD the damage caused after
the USS Eisenhower crashed Into a Spanish coal
freighter. The nuclear powered aircraft carrier
ran Into the Urdu Hz off the southeastern Virginia

-~

30, 1988

History's deadliest airshow death toll at 4 7
by Defense Minister Rupert
Scholz, who said that In agreement with U.S. and other Western air force officials, air shows
were also banrwd until an investigation is held to determine it they
should be outlawed permanently.
Chancellor Helmut Kohl said
he approved ofthedeclslon by his
defense minister, which Included
the cancellation of a West German Air Force air show scheduled for Sept. 25.
The defense minister said a
panel of eJ$perts led by a West
German general was investigatIng the incident, but later told
reporters "it was not known )'!!! If
ptlot error or a technic~ failure
caused the coUision.
In Washington, Air Force spokeswoman Capt. Susan Sired. nansky said an Independent U.S.
Air Force lnvestlgaUon wlll be
conducted.
U.S. Ambassador Burt and
Italian Ambassador Vanni d'Archirafi visited Ramstein, head. quarters of the U.S. Air force In
J Europe and site of an annual air
show.
.
"We owe It to those who lost
their lives yesterday to ensure as
best we can that such a disaster
never occurs again in the future," Burt said In a statement.
"The United States will be
cooperating closely with the
Federal Republic of Germany in
the days ahead to decide on what
steps that we can take toward
this goal." ·
The White House extended
condolences Monday to the relatives of victims, but said the U.S.
government would be reluctant
to bar such air shows in the
United States.
When asked whether the West
German announcement might
cause the U.S. government to

----

Tu•day, August 30, 1988

· Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

RAMSTEIN AIR BASE , West of the dea.d still have not been
Germany (UP!) - Authorities identified.
The Identification of the dead
said today four more people had
died from Sunday's collision of was extremely difficult, he said,
three Italian. jet flghters, bring- because some had been burned
Ing the death toll to 47 and beyond recognition and others
making it history's worst air beheaded when the jet fell like a
show disaster .
fire bomb into part of a crowd of
Authorities also said a memor- 300,000 spectators at the U.S. Air
Ial ceremony for the people killed Force's Ramstein Air Base near
in the crash at an air show at the Kaiserslautern.
U.S. Ramsteln Air Base will be
The jet had collided with two
delayeCI because they ail have not others in a 10-plane Italian
been Identified.
aerobatics team. Ail three pilots
Four more people died Tues- were killed.
day, raising the death toll to 47, a
West German Defense Minisspokesman for the Interior Min- ter Rupert Scholz, who Mondav
Istry of the state of Rhineland - . issued a permanent ban on
Palatinate said.
a~robatics and a temorary ban
More than 400 people were on air shows, said all NATO
injured in the disaster. The military flights over West Gerministry official said 344 of the many wlll be halted Saturday out
injured are In 21 hospitals, many of respect for the dead.
In very serious condition and
U.S. Ambassador Richard
some close to death.
Burt pledged to work with the
The worst previous air show West German government to
disaster occurred Sept. 11. 1982, decide what steps can be taken to
when a U.S. Army CH-47Chlnook prevent disasters like the Ramhelicopter crashed at a show In stelll air show crash.
Several West German groups
Manheim, West Germany, killing ail 46 people aboard. The had objected to the Sunday air
aircraft, carrying U.S., British, show and there have been perFrench and German skydivers , sistent complaints from citizens
crashed and burned on a high- In recent years about aviation
way. No one on the ground was activity around military bases.
A team of two doctors, one
killed.
Paris's Le Bourget airport was nurse and one technician from
the scene of a spectacular air the Brooke Medical Center In San
show crash in June 1973. A Soviet Antonio, Texas, arrived late
supersonic passenger jet, the Monday at the U.S. Army hospiTU-144, crashed, killing 13 people tal at Landstuhl, . near
Including six crewmen and seven Kalserslau tern.
A hospital spokesman said
residents of Goussalnvllle, a
or four of the 12 American
three
Paris suburb where flaming
debris destroyed a dozen homes. patients at the hospital probably
Officials had planned to hold a would be evacuated to the United
memorial ceremony Thursdav States.
The Bonn government anbut Hanns Schreiner, a spokesnounced Monday It was banning
man for the state government,
aerobatic displays.
said It will be held Saturday In the
The announcement was made
town of Ramstein because many

~-

blcvcle.

1-22-1 mo.

September 1at:, 2nd, 3rd, Frutt
j... tmlll IPplitnCI, dishes.
clothing, etc. Firat houlli Pllt
Owrch In ChMttr.

Cortlftad U-ld 8hop

5-25-tfn

1.

• j

'..

',.
t.

~
I
•
1'
'
•

,

Equal Housing

Lender

MEMBER FDIC

.'

FARM FOI SALE
m ·ACRES, 2 IAIIS

lowlri L Wtlhnl

IOOfiNG

NEW- IIPAIR

,2 STORY FUME DWBUNG

'('

y

. Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Gutters
Down1110uts
Gutter Clelning
Painting

IN IVIUND TOWISIIP
ON S.l. 1J4
Coa•t•t

949-2161

l·li-LIIO.

,,

,_Mel

cu•
Fndov. , _ _ ,.,.,d 2nd.
814-992-&amp;aoe.
Sept. 1n ond 2nd. 341 Rutland
Sl .. ~lddl..,oot. Ohio. Rein or

.......

FREE ESTIMATES

Paul lloes or lruce leed At

•

v

------'Pomero;;-----------

September 1. 2. 3. 01-ware,_
Including Depreulon and
Gl••· Lola of mile:.
Na• th• M.lp .,d Ollila ttne, , ..
'"· 7.
Leontrd Bias •5dtnop, BY•·
Rt. t 24. Thuroday and

.

lopt. 2nd . .,d 31&lt;1. At l,..o
lox.,3t8Mooll.,icSt.,Po.,.
lOY· t-4. l'urnlluro, goof, olalotNng. miiiC.,

Sept. t, ... d- ...... llooldo
..... - · · In
1;3().
3:30. Tuppet'w.re, clothtt,

m-.

sv-•.

'·

•

'

�--. .,._._ ......

Paa•

18 w.nted to Do

51

c..,._,. :a: 11!11111._. E.rperi•a.4 '-o...et, ,._.,able.

--I\

'-·· -· ........
-

II¥ tile hour or lOb.

I '0 SELL. l't 10
"111£ PEioiTA6D~

I

Call

·~~~2611.

Jl

Full •

Moton for Sale

.
2 ·

II•• - -

llpooot au- . . - •·
•2110. Cell 11~31189821 .

( I
I (I

f'J (i

~-

O.lcl, wriltget ......... •
compltu line of ueed llmll:u,..
NEW· w....n ~toea- • • ·

(
(J

-ot•
til • up. 111... •
soft tooJ, Cllll1.&amp;.441-3118.

'f 1flin

,, 1----

County~..._ Inc.

~~F!E~~f

1----

•c.

Ulld 1P

11~2111-1711.

I• ;,.a.Crook
O.VL
IIIII¥ Or. A
o-rp'o

76

Good

for Rent

1989 BuddY mobile home
121tl50, recenttv redli..-.t.ad.

New completely furni1hed
apwtment a. mobile home in
city. Adu na ontr. P•Jdng. Call

Farms for Sale

61 .. 441-0338.

.

8EAUnFUL APARlMENTS AT
BUDOET PRICES 1\T JACK·
SON ESTATES, 538 Jookson

k~MMJ~,

40 art'• Raccoon Rd.· Mobile

Pike from .l183• mo. Walk to
thop •nd movies. e14-448-

1r

homo. U8.000. Clll 30.&amp;.522·
7279.

2:-:-11_88_
. E_._D_
·",..·-:--:--:---::-

~
•
No901flllllo.
121· 2301

lnll oqu..-_

au

w-h

to trMn.

Wilting

34

catl 81 ~

Greenhou• tusin. . .nd gift
1hop tor ula C.ll 814-992·

8513 or 81.,992-71509.

31

Homae for Sale

Up . . in unturrQhld . .. Car-

11 Court St.-2 SR., 2 Ntha,
klttchen furnilhed, wlw c•llft·
No poto. Olf at- psriOng.
t325amo. plu1 utllh:l•. Oep. &amp;
101. Coli 81~448-492e.

FurrUhed- 3 rooms &amp; beth.
CINn. No Pill. Ref. 6 depoett

8t Acreage

Lots

1

p - utl-la ps;d No c:hlhhn.
No,.. .. Clll 81.&amp;.448-1837.

BusinBuildings

35

required. Utilities furrMshed.

Adults only. Call 114--448-

Mat.,.n Aw.. Point pt....m.

_.,.,., - · r .............
ranges . Skagga A'pliancea ,
Up,- R.._ Rd. boolds 8tono

V1lve grinding nuchln•

11~441-7318.

61~441-8373.

11h acre ground with g.-.ga
concrete floor. Ne• Syracuse.

eo-1 Hoi- Hill. oddltionol lot. 3 8R .. Cl . Call
'11 .. 4Q.0338.

Aahlon, l•ge buldlng Iota.
mobMe hornM permltltd. public
w.tlf, also riwer lots. ctyde
Bowen. Jr. 304-574-2338.

3 IR .. Ulltty. a•ge. ldtdlan
wllh
bc ... .m: op-

le.,llful rWer lot1oneacreplua,
public Wltlf, Clyde Bowen. Jr.

81~441-1351.

Furn6shtd apt. t160. Utilities
D&amp;ld. Sh.e b•h. Single mala
!t19 Sacand Ave .. tWIIpoUe:.
Cell 440-4411 after 7 Pl'tll.

1b81h. 1 c•v.av•withopen•.
City lmlto. NIOI noi..bofhood.
St... lidtng. New tumace. CA.
t33.900. Call 81.&amp;.4-41-4983
dOll'. 44a.2BOO ov.,lngo.
3

or

4

-oom.

3 b•llo. lving
room. T.V. room. clnlng room.
kitehll'l. He• pump. 40
edfDintng Bob E'MIII Farm. h•
b•n. l•go gnoa 2 opringo.

•cr•

•eo.ooo. eoll814-24&amp;-l831 .
Mo4.1._ hame on •ve tot In
Marcr#•e.

Pool.

cityWiter. JerichoRoad Owner
fln.-.dng. Good terms. 30 ...
372-8405 or 372-2578.
25

ac:r•

Broed

._ge

.....

30~882- 3394.

AC. new

2 BR .• hou•. ~.11 Creek Rd.
over looking Golf Cours1.
81~441-8373.

a rick .n d
~Mch houM. "
•crea in Brtdbury behind
WMPO. Large 2
g.-.g&amp; 3
bedroama. living room. ctntnll
tdr·h•81. woodbunw. VI!WtersofNner. new, remodeled l•ge
ldtchtn with Jen Ail Renge.
pbege 6paDI. dishwasher,
utlity room. llndtciPed nioefy.

c•

s... by ....,......... only. Call
81~!192-5751 .

181.500.

Home in oounlry with t.nd for

.... Cell 814-992-5848.

105prldteacr•wl e.ay•c:cess
Gallipolis Fttrry. nM home llso
z lotswkhwella. t?O,OOO. Call
30~175-4131 .

:J bedr()Of'rll home on 41ota. Gre•
Rood. Hlllvi-. 304-875-4018.

3 bedroom honw. 1'/:1 bltl'ls.
c:•peted. centml •·helt, loc•ed In Point Pl....,.t, can
3~875-2702

.. 304-578-

2147.
Hou•~Chup ,

7roomt. 1

b•h. onhalt.OI. 304-675-3114

after 6:00pm.

32

Mobile Homss
for Sale

MUst Sell! 10x&amp;5, Z BR ..Mobile

Homo. Clll 81.,!98·992811tw
I I'M.
1980 loy'"- 14•70. 3 8R ..
1'h lbath. l•ve living room with

tw..,lac•

Good cond. Call 814··

44a.ll21311tor 5 PM.

2 8ft hou• tl'llil•. 2 loCI In the
VIHIO• af ..,nton, Ohio. t8500.
Clll 81.&amp;.386-8318.
llorrlnglon 12&gt;&lt;111. 1"1 botht, 3

Bll. Oood oond. $81100 or best
· -· Coli 814-446-1528.
1918 Mobile Homo. 1 :z.ao. 2
lA.. I•• living room. dtn
,.rnodolod lnoldo llo out. o3500.
C11181o&amp;.:Z58-1888oltor 5 PM.
~· 1 z.10 with tlo out. 2

M«aom. tm.l llectrlc. und.,..
pining. 1 Z,12 potCh. Oood
oondltlon- Cllll1._742·2914.
_
... , ..,..,.. dwlth1Z.86
tnH•. 1 2 •24 addition, c• port,
elr. woodlbur,.., lltilltt chh.
I - front - h. CIIII1~7422Z38- 5:30p.m.

1 ••

1174 Cast.. ,.ble HDme,
1211111. t2000. Cl" 81~9921108.

1111 Hondo

cax.

1977 . _

A...n. ~-~~&amp;30~17&amp;

5018.

Rent ols
41

Homes for Rent
-------------------

Nicetv furnlahld ·small house.
Adutls only. Ret. required. No

,..•. Clll

61~446-0338.

New tv .. mocWed 2 IR. l'lln ct.
na• 81Mell Schoot. t:tOO p.mo. Clll 81~388-9783.
3 BR ., utility, mached g ...ga.

v••

llirge ll:ltchBn, .. 1 ...... 1
le•e. Firat mo. tent • depoth.

304-875-5104.

Furnished apartment. 8226 •

Clll 814-448-1358.

Hou• for Mnt. 2 bedroom. Nice.
ct-.. mltul'lll ga 814-992·

Ave..

Cal

2 BR . g•age 8pt . unfurnished.
applll'lcea ...y. In town. 8200a
rno. t100 deposit. C.ll 614-

4411-8087.

01'111daus living. 1 and 2 bedroom epertmenta at Vill-ae
Milnor end Rtverside "Ap.,-t.
ments in Middleport. From
$182. Call 814-992-7787.
EOH.
bedroom Apts. for

rent.

Carpeted. Nice setting. l.au ndry
facliliBI av.illlbte. Cell 814-

992-3711 . EDH.

Beech Street. Middleport,: Ohio,
3 l.,ge rooms and b .. h. nice 2 bedroom furnished aplrtrnent,
location Jeff•son Awe. , am..tts utilitiel psld, Mf•enees. Phone
onty, Mferences and dapostt ~0~882-2588 .
required, 304-875-3062.
Now accepting appllertions tor
2 bedroom 1panmenta. futlv
e•peted, app..nta, w.ter and
42 Mobile HCJ!Ties
tr••h pickups provided. Meinte·
for Rent
n ..ce tr.. tivlng close to shopping, b .. lct and achoolt. For
mote Information cell 304-8822 &amp; 3BR. AllutllltiaPiid•cept 3718. E.O.H.
eleetridty. Con\llmlenl SocM;on.
Call 814-441-8558 or 441- Downtown modern 1 bedroom
apt . furNahed. air cond. Car·
4008.

81~248-5883

Nice 3 8R. portiolly furnished
lg. ,-rd. Klnoug._ 61~44117473.

p . . d. Clllaltor 4:00. 30~87113788.

Beech Street. Mlddlepon. Ohio.
1 room effld.ncy IPI. utlitiM
paid. referenc• ,.quired. 1-

304-882-2568.

2 SA 's. Adult• only. No pet1.

322 Third Avo.. Osllipollo. Call
1114-448-3748 or 2511-1903.

14•70. 3 bedraoms. completety
funWahed. Ydther tnd dryer. No

..... Clll &amp;1~949-2251

2 bedrooms. Nice Ylrd on river.

MobleHomaa fof,... . Evelyn'•
MobMt Home Pwk. Kan.,OI,

Ohio. CIN

o.,..

..........

71!1-;...,

1 •

"'1f

{

&lt;ft

0400. Coli 814-448-

.... MW.

lluHclng ,...orillo
81od&lt;. liriok. - • plpoo. wlndowo.
etc. Cl•do Win,_. Rio G.., do. 0 . Cell 11~
248-11121 .

H-.

Concrete blocks· all ..._ ,...d
t11deiMiry. Muon .-nd. Gel liDOIll Block Co.• 123'h Pine tl:.,
Oslllpollo. Dhlo. Coli 81.&amp;.44112783.

WESTERN REO' CEDAR

30" elec.

ran~h...,..t

-···95.

bottom oven-whit• t1110. G .E.
Ytlllrl-1
.95. Rofrlg. ·horvOit
toldd.....
!roottr. . eaa. Refrlg.-'Nhfte frost

lroe-$911. RolrJa. 2 door·whho075. Hot - .. IMIIOF-30 gol ..
085. Skoggo Appll•-· UPo«
Rivet Rd .. 81.&amp;.441-7!98.
Couch end two rock• ntclln.30~878-

11cuftdeeptrHrt, n...,... used.
call •tter 15:00 PM. 304-175-

5711 .

b

.

tluHn size
bed completefy padded t1110.00, exc
cond. 304-875-3087.

52

CB,TV, Radio
Equipment

26" color c:onaoleteletiillons for
aale. 8100 a. up. Call 814-448-

2713.

53

Antique~~

·auy or Sell. Riverine Antiquet.

1124 E. Main StrHI , Pomeroy.
Moura: M,T,W 10e.m. to lp.m ..
Sunday 1 IO lp.m. 814-992·
2628.

• Ch arinel Ruatlc
and Beveled Lap Shllng
• Oedc

Mtrl•l•·
G-dQuollty

87().98111 .

Pete for Sale

Broom and Buppl-i Shop-Pol
Grooming. All brttdi ... AII
llyl•. lomo Pet Food Ooolor.
JulloW.bb Ph. 81~441-0231 .

Drogonwynd Cltlory Kanno!.

1 Bro"""'"g Ught 12 guage.

Coli 814·441-31149.

Large hou• plents. t1U •ble

81~4-48-01101.

30~112- 2148.

Att,.c:thle offiCI aultt. Very
prMrtt. located In downtown

Oolllpollt. U50 p• month. Cell
81 .. 441-3432.

7471.
Spldoua mobile horne lou tor
rent. Fernly Pride Mohlle Home
P•k. Ollllpollo Forry. w. Yo.

Apartment

---Oryor

2 BR. •••· e cla.ta. kftch~
...... fu .... -

c ·.

·~

d.....
""'"' ·
f17l
w
- Wanted. Hou• or tnll« In
country. l.Md contl'llct or rent
·
-·
lno.
Al&gt;la
Clll
30~
8711-8104. or 8711-8318 or Able to and wll do repelra.
1711-7738
11 .. 992·3871.

by .Bnce Beattie

•

I

1:06 Cll Allee

Pert., P.-11. Pwt• Vlntan Auto

1:30 II ()) 1111 NBC Nlghi!J Nowa

I'Oultl Fumequlprntnt

For Sai•Fer*ta. Different Co-

Livestock

61~248-85711.

tor....

..........

•lr. ,... d•

8 - old Aust..U., Sh..,hord
puppl•. ASCA double tegil·
tefed. Blue merle and bleck

tri-oolorod. Cllr 814-742-2385

anytime.

·

Sl.n. . tOttens. Cell814-9492290 eveninp.

AKC BntMt Hound pups. II
wka. old. Mother end Father CM
be ..... Call 814-817·1718.
AKC Aeailtered Schnauzer pu~
pi•. 3 femtiM. Flrit lhot1 end
wor.nod. 8 -eltl old. 1150.

Coll81~682-4781.

Sl.-n•• khttn1. 8
wellb, Sell or Ul.: Point. Call
614·912-7201 •nd lie"e
mes11ge. ·

For .ta Polled "-....., "-d
!lull. &lt;llntlo. good oh-ion. 4
,... old Phone 11~192-7451.
2 rtclng hortet. .,...,.., phone
30~4111-11187. .

64

Hay

&amp;

Grain

Oround 1hell corn ti.IO per
100. Premium llffatfehar. •NW.
MDrpn• I WoociMn Farm, At.

35. Pllnv.

30~9!7- 2018.

·

Pure bred

AKC regis*ed puppl-. I'MI-

teoo 1300 .00. Shih · 1ur
t200. 00. Cocker Spaniel

0200.00. Phone 304-8752193.

57

DHolib-Sood oorn. Tailing -1v
~-· to •aura • auppty of your

... _
hrbrldo. Sold IUIIPII'
COukf bo short oo lo&lt;* In 111 llrlv
ouPIJI¥. Honry Er_, Kov. 30._

1711-150IIItw 8 om.

Tronopurtoliun

Musical
Instruments

6 piece drum tet-dlgttal del,
.umpler, 3 diltution" peel••·
guitars., Fretle~~ bMI puller.
amps, PA IY*""· power htedl
light avtam. ~It Saii-Movlnti

71

111111 Hogan'• HerGee
D)ln-P-.'18
IIJI Jlflerlonl

REO HOT b•plnol Drug d....

ChOIPI Clll81 .. 448-3125.

.,.. can. bat~~. ,a.n• .-po'd.
SurDiut. Your •rea. lu'"s

Trumpet, lllce new. 8300. Call

S-45&amp;2.

81~742-2128.

58

Autos 1'0&lt; Solo: For 1 . . . . d...
Oft 1

new or ulld

c..

truck or

..,, -Konnv ...... Jim"''••
Ch.. ralet-Oidomobllo. 81444a.3872 or 77:J-11134.
1971 Vol.._.," t20o.oo.
30..875-2198.
.
1910 Sp~lt. Air Cond. sun roof.
30..178-3195.
'18 Pontolo T.....-, 4 door. 8
cyl Mo. nM

*-·

&amp;

[:&amp;·

•r.pl•.

lhow room

for Sale

I :;;,.,....----,,.,-----81

Pick up badl. Ford ChiiJirolet.
long or lhOrt, no rult. 304-875-

1·11~237·0481.

oo-

Painting: tntertor

a.

1978 Dido. 1981

T~- - Bolh

NIW good. 3-1831Chevya. Cllll

Rolllry Of olllble tool drlllng.

Mostwellscompltted..mtd-w'.
PUmp ul• and MrYI'* 304-

Point, was hera,

81~381-8178.

1917Chevy Clv..l•. -..to.• AC.

re•

RON'S APPLIANCE SERVICE .
hou,. 0111 oorvld"ll OE. Hoi

1881 Ooclao Ari• 4 dr. Soclon,
Pl. I'll. JINI-FM-Cno.. high

mll_•~•l•·

Well m1lntalnH .

• 1400 080. Clll .... 4419700.

.. '-•

=:.~

Cor. Fourth end lltne

Oslllpollo. Dhlo
Phoow 11._448-3888 or .,._
441-4477 .

A•ldtntlll or commercial wir·
lng, New --.rice or ,..,....,.
U c:en...:l electrtolan. Estimate
tr• Ridenour Elec:triclll, 304--

' 71 Ch_, 4•4 pi'*"P· 3'" lilt.

bHruMCI, high ml•, muM . .
Ia . . -

...

871-2570.

'to\

..

K• •••tl

I.,-;...:..;.:......_ __

lit. IICVI!o _ _ _...os
•d - - _...,, lor
...._ Kaa *l •auM, •d
, _.. 111..171-41111.

1---------

1179 Un-To- Cor. Mlko 19H 1114111 Hoodl lor Mlo
f1.000. Alllolondt711. 111.&amp;.1711-118:1.
1181 lui'* lllyllrlr. 4 door.
1-:-:=~-:-==--:-=
.,.,.,, AC. orullo.
1HIIIondiV41-.4.1100
Oood ...... · - Clll 11.. ..... ... ...... f'1.too.OO.
441-0177.
1-2·20111.

*· ,._*

IDlln 1M Heal ol thf
Night Escaped conviC1 and
his glrtfrlend take Althea and
a boy hostage. (R) Q
(I)

II Ill MOonlighting A

pregnant single woman
shlraa Davtd's confusion
about parenthood. (Rl D
(I) C!l 81ruggiN far Poland
Examine tho Polish church
and Ita role before and
during WWII. Q

91 •1121 'BloOd • Orchkll,
Part 2' CBS Tuelldfly Movie

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
'

,

8

· rr--~--------~~

HERE cove:&gt; 'rQ..JR
DA-D, WINTHROP.

EVER NOriCE H0N MOST
OAb61..00K PR&amp;TTY

WAITAMINL\n=...

~TB/tS:f

DAD.

'

MUCHA LIKE~

L.lrry King Llvel
1:30 (J) Pro Beach Volleyball
Men's from Milwaukee , WI
(T)
CID New Country

10:00 ()) Straight Tilt
(2) 1111 Summer
SflowCMe Revis~ people

e

who were previously topiCS
of NBC News Specials.
(I)

WHAT ARE YOU

CHOMPIN' ON,
JUGHAID?

II Ill c - Agalnal

Chlklren: Failure of F ABC News lnvesllgetas
the current.status of foster
care. what II Is like for the
kids and how the g
ovemment may Intervene to
help ease lhe problem. (NRI
(I) New•
(J) lrlllh R.M.
·•
Di E-11111 N -

c..

BARNEY
PEANUT

BRITTLE

HAVE A CHUNK,
UNCLE SNUFFY

II

Il! Riptide

CID Crook and ChiiH

10:20()) MOVIE:

v.. Cruz (1:34)

875-1788.

85

General Hauling

Dlltrd W•er S-.vice: Pools,.
Clltlt'nt, •Willa. Delivery Anv·
tlmo. Clll , JI1~441-740~No

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

_

J 11o J W•4&lt;'S•vloe Swimming
pollia. ................ Ph. 81~
2411-8288.
R llo R Wotor Slnlloo. Poolo.
cistern•. wells . lmm8CIJate-

1,000or 2.000g-'dolhlory.
Clll 30~8711-1:170.
PIUI Aupe, Jr.

w....

Servtce.

lboll. clotorn• wello. Clll 81._
448-3171.
W•• clolhlory . 1000 pllono. ·
At•oneble prlcee. lmmedl•
dol ...ry. Clll 11 .. 992·11278.
Wetteraon'a W•ttr H•u ling,
f'tltl,oMblt rat•. lmmedlale

2.000 gollon doiMiry, clo.,no.
poclo.woR.ota..ool~87112911.

Dump •""" do!Mry ond buoh
M l - f l , ....,,.~871131110

87

Upholatary

w-

Siding National
Waterski Championships
lrom Wast Palm Beach, FL
(T)
(I)E111811den
(J)

BRIDGE

181111 JefffriOIII
II Ill

(2) (I)

1111 Newt

I!J)

1-SO·II

.K5
+AQ10863

•as

EAST
.QJ 8
.QJ 3
+J 742
• t042

WEST
+6 52
.974 2

+s

You haven't seen our old friend Wil·
ly Nllly in action for a while, so here
he is, mangling a three-no:-trump contract. Willy bid well enough, responding one heart and then jumping to
game in no-trump after North rebid
diamonds. When a club was led an ~
Willy won the jack. he was already
counting overtricks as he played king
and a diamond. Alas, West showed out
on the second round. Willy tried to
duck a spade to West, but East split his
honors. If Willy were now looking at
all the ca.r ds, he might play a club to
, West. Should West then cash out all his
club tricks, East would be in a position
of extreme discomfort in trying to
' guard his stoppers in the other sui Is.
1Instead Willy simply gave up a spade
trick. East returned a club and the detense took five tricks.
The carelul declarer doesn't go atter overtricks until the contract is
safe. A,t the negligible loss of an unimportant diamond trick, South can
guarantee the game by simply playing
to either of dummy's major-suit kings
and then playing a diamond to the nine
in his hand. Even if that loses to the

+AQH3

SOUTH
· ·A 10 9 7
• A 10 8 6
+K9
+KJ7
Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North

West

Norlb

Easl

South

3NT

Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

I+
2+

Pass
Pass

Opening lead:

.

t•

+6

~.---. ------~--'·
· Jack, the kmg of clubs cannot be attacked and three no-trump will be
' made with at least one overtrick. On
the actua l hand, the nine would wir
and 11 tricks would be made.

James Jacoby's books "Jacoby or
Bridge• and •Jacooy on Card Gam~1written with his father, the late 1!15·
wald Jacoby) are now available a
iJookstores. Both are published b
Pharos Books.
" ·,

® 1111, NEWSI\\PER ENTERPRISE ASSN.

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS' JOSEPH
ACROSS

4

Filipino
island
5 Chewy candy
- Oates
6 Drooping
10 Embank7 Actor Lowe
ment
8 Yoko11 By oneself 9 Tennis
12 All and
term
sundry
10 Guided
13 Automaton 16 Radiation
14 Lair
unit
Yesterday's Answer
15 Snare
17 Follow
17 Bears
18 Father
34 Contract 38 Golf
or Tigers 19 Compulsion
type
gadget
18 Calif.'s
20 Whirl
35 Gertrude 39 Grain
Big21 Quarry
40 Sunshine
21 Silly
22 Rara 36 "In the
State
24 "Streetcar 23 Outburst
beginning
(abbr.)
Named
25 Unscathed
was the
41 Countdown
"
27 Divulge
"
word
26 Help
30 Lab animal 37 Nervous 43
28 Extensive
,.,.......,..;.,.,,.:...,.,....,.,.....,

1 Yule
5 Joyce

29 Arthur
or Glenn
31 Sense
32 Compass
point
33 "The - of
a Tub"
' 35 Eat (Into)
36 Not dried
39 Repeatedly
42 Dwelling
44 Vigilant
45 Suit fabric
46 Ballroom
dance
4 7 Whirlpool

DOWN

1 Snow

2
3

.11:11

(I) P.O.V. This ftlm abOut pat
cemeteries covers 111ues of
love ancllmmortallly. Q

NORTH

By James Jacoby

CID VldeoCountry
11:00 ()) Rfftlklgfan S - Staele
Thraads
•

a lack of sp_irit

+K43

Taking out
insurance

·

10:30 ()) Cllfbrlly Cfleh

f1 .700.00. 304-

1187 lloort GT '"Load....
t780C). Cell 11._441-3350 ar 1978 GL1000. tSBO.OO. Ill~
311..171-.111.
171-7981.
alter. CIIII1~J7•2••·

Electrical
Refrigeration

.

II())

.'

t11 .000 ....1 UO.OOO. flrml
Clll 81~192·24119.

;'::t

CIL

OJ£R t'~ ..

30,~878-7121 .

84

74 Matorcyde8
1987 F&lt;&gt;&lt;d Ron . . XLT. Tallo
psymonto. Clll 81 .. 882· 1815 Vomlho 700 -lum,
11501.
ohlltdr.... o.,~opplorod.low
7
61 37
1172 "'o"" C.lo. LDob aooct.
t1 00. Cell
., g.
Ntedlwork. ForSIIeDr'fr•de. I - - - - - - - - - CIII81.,448-8919.
1178 Ooldwlng. ful - - 1981 Ootlgo Ch ..... 31,000 ~4.44'":7 1"01,. mr-. Coli
mHa. Goaa oollll.. Pll. PB. AC.
CIIIII1._2118-MII7.
1173 FLCII. Oood oond.
t11100. CoM 11.&amp;.388-8481
1912 lui... RogeL o o - a .
lolldod. ...._ ooNI. t3100. 111111uzuld LT. 230 01. Quod
1178 Ponl LTO II. 111100. Coli Ru-. t1700. Cell 11~37981.&amp;.441-13118.
2797111•1 ""·
Oawmi'Mit Sel:led Vehlel• 1111
210 L"''D. On~
from t100. Fords. U. du. 1100 ml&amp; Drtginel owner. Will
lor •aoo. Cell .,....2.
·~ Clufdl. 111 .,...17· 3178.
SIJIIIII!x~ -10181.
--------1H1 YI!Nh1 1100 o.-clol.
1177 Doclg1 Coli. •to. - . . 11r• 1nd blnlry. Oood
loolll Md IUIW vory_10od. 40 oondltlon. t1378. Coli 11~
MPO. Clll . , . _ . _ _
741-:1012.
1181 Ptrd -

VJO!'v\~

30~171-2398.

11841,4 tortDodgeA•mCu.t~
Von. PS. P8. Ill. AC. AM-f ....
T.V.. Pwr. dOor tocb. pwr.
wtndowa. One owner.,... tirft.

low mtleege. Book prtct

lor years without a serious dispute suggesls
only found in SHEEP!

attracted to Joey.

'1:00()) 700 Club

Ak. . TreeTrlrnming.,dStump
Aemowtl. FrM "tlrMtM. Cell

&amp;

II Ill Wlto'a111e lou?

IIIIHbell

'PA"-JIQ()t'

dryers •n d

defratt.

a....,

IJ~ ~E.IO&lt; SlklGl£

81~448-1834.

81 .. 441-9237.

...,.,,

CAU£'0 ..

Fetty TrH Trimming. ttump

82

1111 M8lfock

- ~rl. who Is
~~

Exterior.

CARTER'S PLUMIINO
AND HE'ATINO

atttrl PM.

81~441-1119

-.

... Clll 81~441-

19110 Font F 250, 4•4. V-8. 4
opd.. "II. Pl. Oood oond. Call

A"'·FNI. Coli

EEK_&amp; .MEEK
Mt' M0\1-IER ram 11-11~

- · Clll30..87!1-1331 .

......

(2)

1111:11 CB8 lulltiMr
PII,_H Two bumbling ·
photographer• ncretly shOot
a royal wedding. (NAI
Dl PrlmeNewt
IB hmey Miller
C1D Nael,.,fflf Now
8:30 (I) II W l'ul Houoe Jesse
and Joey light over Jesse•s

Concrete Septic T•lm · 1000

1987 Chevy Cu11om Van .
Loodod. Auto.. tr~lold bod. 4
ollll*ln
TV. extlnded

v... '-'

•

Aaman~n and his
ooH·taug_ht math akle. Q

!loorgoo C,.... Rd. Call 81~
441-0284.
.

8911-3102

1911 Ford Bronco, V-1, Mlto.
tn1n1. 74,000 mil•. t3950.

8:00 ()) Ctuy Uke a Fox Eye In
the Sky

I!J)

Clll 81.,441-1132 or 44110212.

win- roof. Clll 81~4413428 dart or waning.

IIJIIIIIn1011

CID VldeoCountry
7:3&amp; (]) M.... Leap IIIIHbell

clerk S.

AogeraBaaernent

RON'S Teltvltlon Ser¥1ce.
Hou• ellis on RCA, Ou•ar.
OE . llpocloling in Zan-h. Clll
304-578-2398 or 614-4482454.

hubl. ntw 19bull 302 tnglne,
PS. Pl. 4opd .. toolbo•. Nnnlnq
b o - bod lin•. Sh~r~~lf5800.

y-*' LNgue

IIIINNII
101 Croeallra

~~(~o2. Prolllelndian

dill' or nlghl.

1988 S1 0 4•4 oi'*"P. V-8.
ANI-F"' rldlo. 42.000 mH•.
Wll nldng •e. 700.00 now
•e.2oo.oo. 30~17&amp;-4840.

1183Fo•dF 1804WO. look out

111111

Samantha Ianda a dale wl1h
a coli~ man, bul falls to tell

••· Loc.. ,.,...,... . fu"*hed.
Froo o t t i - . Cllt

8288.

4 W.O.

II Ill Judge

91 1111:11 1111 Jeopardy! Q

(I)

8ASENIENT
WATERPROOF! NO
Unooncltlonof 1111111- _.,.. .

... 1344

8t
1----------

7:05 ()) Andy OriHtth
7:30 II (II Hollywood Squeraa
(J) lurter Magazine
(I) Enlllrlllllllllent Tonight

Handsome dance lnstruclor
Is accused of murdering his
benefaelor. (R)
(J) Clanlc Summer

Home
Improvements

1500gol. and Jet Aorotion
cyl. - - Chevy .gol..
lyll8m. ~ctory tnllned , . .
truck. Alao 1181 Oldl: 4 door ohop. RON EVANS ENTERc • . 814-988-3138.
PRISES. Jl&lt;*oon. Ohio. 1-80().
11!7-9128.
1912 Datsun KlniCab. 11.000
mM-. etuo. Pl. P .... window RON EVANS ENTERPRISESd - . nlos truck. 30~875- Soptlo ..,k pumpintt t90 p•
17118.lold. Clll 1-800-1137-91128.

1974 Dodgo Win-

MANUAL
NOW THeY'I/6 CSONE
ANr&gt; INVfNifP
r..,.t_~ ,;; I
•

Serv11:~s

e

Vans

~ff'AI~

30~1171-41111 .

lon. Good aand. t1000. Call

Covill•. bllok
lntOIIor. 11.000
mila. f41110 1988 Ponlioo
Conwrtlble Bon..,.., 8h.-p.
Ru111 good. io.... good. U7110.
Coli 1'1~2111-IUl

;,J

low mRoogo.

SV't£EPER end aewlng mechint
replir, p.,a. and auppll•. Pick
up •d ....,.,.,, Owls VaCl.lum
Clalf"ler. one h•lf mile up

73

®Berney Mlllor
II! Proleltlollal Tennla
CID Crook and Chaoo

..c cond. • • corwenlenott. '

1987 Dodge Omnl 4 dr .. elr,

1917

U.S. No. 1 lltgs yellow tone cennlng peech now IY•II•
ble. lobi Merket, Muon. WV.
Frwh from the Shentldoah Vlf.

GIVEN THEM A

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

. . . .lor. -

Coli 814-448-4138tlt• 3 P,..

1988 "'•ll•it RV. Chwy .......

Clllll1~248-1887.

18.800 mil•. Cell 81.&amp;.3888240.

lhlfteke Mushrooms: for Sale.

tM'(Bl WE

1978 Mon C•to. v.e •no.
good cond. high mileage.
•1 .00000. 30~1711-73711 ••·
•• 5:00.

1911

Dl Moneyllne

1983 Jlyco · 24'11 ft.
awNng.fuHbelhon..-.tedrlvw
lot. lhllly .............. , - .
Oslllpollo Forry. 81~441-8890
""" 8:00.
19nUfeProml• 2311. CI101A
motor home. Oen ... or. air, "'
........ ...... 8 . 17500. Clll
81 ..!79-2430.

oondltton. 30~191-3441 .

TNckl

.om3

Clll81~448-ltll8

w-praoflng.

72

~ •11:11 01 W..... of

-.7o17. t45orbootoff•.

Guido. 1111105-117-1000. ....

AM ~FM

Fruit
Vegetables

4 good Ooocl¥e• RV tlr10.

NnaHour (1 :00)
II Ill People'• Court

-cloy• only.

by f1llmg in the missing words

you develop from step No. 3 below.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Inc.

V

Complete the chuckle quoted

Poncho - Stoke - Yours - Covert - SHEEP
Grandpa says lhal the concept ol two people ll.ving together

II (2) PM Magazine
- . .. Coli 11~441-8208

I0

. . UNSCRAMBLE FORI
V ANSWER

8 You Cln lie 1 Iter
1:36 ()) Carol lumett
7:00 ()) Remlngtan Steele S1eele.

1984 Tour ,.• .., 18 ft.. fully

l

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

A
V

C!l Nightly lullnen Rlpolt
I!Jl 1111:11 CU Newa
·

(J) BportaCinler (L)
(I) CWrent Allolr
(I) C!l M8cNell/ L8hrer

' "'e·

1

hir-ri.:....TI6,=.;1::...;1_:_'1...,.-j
1-J..-..1.-.J.-.J.I.....J.I.....J

(I) II Ill AIC NIWI Q
(I) llocly Ellctrlc

Matora Homes
8t Campara

ooMIIned. IIIIPI I . air.

t

I
I

~ I n - 1M PGA Tour

·

ch.._

Auto' a For Sale

79

Ii

FILFC . ... "I'm an animal behavior therapist,
1
1&amp; 1
not a dog psychiatrist," the man
.
.
.
.
.
growled. " Thank goodness .'" sighed
. - - - - - - - - - , t h e lady, "I jusl trained my dog. to
H I L UL p
stay- the - COUCH ."

BFei!Ungo

118301-oBI. Motor.,d
- - ·· 304-77~_111111 .
, . . . . 3811 - ... 380_~.!:.,
c.... ~. MY o11-. ......,.
• • ' • Ch..,, 1 mil! ellt on
Rt. 2411. 81~8811-4418.

ENCOU

3 1,::...:;1;....=.._.;;.....:1·~I:
~------,

5

-~~~~~

'Ill~-. IUIO.IIr. 40.000
mil•. f3,400.00. 30~8787944.

USED NEW HDLLANO.

c......... c...,.. ...•.,....

COUNTRY "'OBILE 110""' P•lc.

Aouw 33. North of AlrT*oy.
Aent~l trail•&amp; CaH 814--192-

,Eq...,.,.,.

OS. 4

1978 - Coil 30~8711-8428.
win- f11100.

tlonol Hoy ..... No. 45. 3 12 ln.. plo-. t.21100. 81 ~
~·7-811!11111• 8:00pm.

. F

~.y,.

-mlrr--.

"'FSOTreator. 18ft.h.,wegon.
I ft. "'F llnllh Hog. ln101np-

phone 30~818-31130.

fl-d dump. f1 100. Colli I.&amp;.
387-7519.

46 Space for Rent

... ..,.

For Sal• AKC Regll•8d Old
Engllohlhoep Oog puppl•. Cell

De••

...

1887 - r y
tpeed. PS. PI,
Ioiii•· AM-FM,
30...78-11331.

One A~2 choppsr 2 row
448-3844 oltor 7P,..
h - twoNHII-717ohop,..1
heed; two NH 711 ChOPI*
Mlntture Dutch Aebbfta. 4 mos. · row
1.
row
one wtth tlectrlc
old. Bleck mete PtkJngn.. 10 oontrolo.htld;
NH 3 point 707
moo. old 1100. Cell81.,742- ~ 1Ono
row heed: one NH .
3188.
model 25 ono Klotlrl
Coi&gt;IY IoNgo
AkC Cocker Spaniel pupa;. ~rot• box; Kolfers S.vl.. Cinter. St.
llondo • bull . ...... llo llO•.
Rt. 17, Leon, W.Ve. Phone
wom.d. Yet. ~- 1150 30.. 991-3874.
Ooch. Coli 11.&amp;.318-88110.

John
foG ald._, good
cond. 18500. Ramey knuckl•
bono losder. f41100. 1188

45

Hotol·l1~441-9510.

1178Thu-d. Ooodoh.,.o.
Clllll14-148-22110 -lngo.

1 21111 OIH dlaol IIOctor, 4

CFA Persian .,d Sfem. . ktt·
ltnl. AKC Chaw puppi ... New
Hlrnal.,an ldtten1. Call 814-

1 Bronwing IUtomatlc Sweet 18

SNAFU!t

*·

148110. , ..... - ...........
• ho..a, •eH Ow''* w•l
llnMoo. Cllll1._2118-8522.

304-173-5923.

Kubo• dl... tn~utor. uverlll
plec• of equipment. 3 beehfvel
ful of hofMVI. Mu81 .... Moving

Rooms for rent-week 01 month.
Starting .. t120 a mo. O.llla

1813 Mo.,.. C.lo wflh T·Topo.
cruile. tit, euto. .., VI
on.-.,.. Clllll1~988-4308.

p i - • ...... hog. f3950.
Owner wll fi'*ICI. Call 11._
288-IIIZZ
wh .......... I. . -

56

- ·b............

480 dl•ellnt•Mtlonll tNctor.
wldo front. Pll. 3 ot .. wilh hoy
~ndttlon« biller. Plows. corn

guitar l.,ont, be54 Misc. Merchandise . lndividJ..
ginners, •rlous ouhlrilt, lrul- · ll*lllc. 61~441-0887.
Jeff W•maley lnttruator, 1 '!-4-Wheelch••·ntw or used. 3 448-8077. Umltld Oponingo.
wi'IHied electric scoot••· C.ll
Rogera Mobllty collect, 1· 814- lt61dv trumpet, Mme •• new,

a

m-•
•
..,.,oe

gold-

9'"""· '95. 30"g•..,ge•op•

chsln. E"" cond. Clll
1238 after 4:30.

Mor-

Oo-n..- Solzod Yllhlol•
from 1100. Fo•dl.
John o... 1010 hctor. One Corwtlft, Chwyo. luroluo.
owner. Creem Puff with plowt. Buvoro J~Uido. 1·805-887-SOOO
Ellt. S9105.
· mowing
bol•.
1-2119&amp;.
aw ... w11
ca11
11~211-81122.
1178 Chry~• Loboran. 4 door.
,_point.
930 CliO ...... ... nlos. l.oldld t1200. Coli 81 .. 982IOOIIourt. t39110. 1ntornolfonol 7214 Of 11~982· 3224.
2400 rouNI bol•. 132110. Long
3 pt. b•ckhoe .atachment, 1988 OTO CO.-tlllfa Folr
•1100. aw ... wlltn~nca. can condition. Z OataunTrucka. Cell
~14-2811-81122.
81 ..1148-2548.

lo,.. Clll 81.,9S2-3229.

On.e bedroom turmhed apt,
conv. location, 304-876-2441 .

for Rent

· - .... . . . ll.ctrlc:

King abe wet• bed, nmiWiftl- whh pullt vlberetor.

lomp. honclbld. gloouholf.lod~. llo mloo. Cell 814-4418398.

30..8711-3073.

44

f
•••· futl oil stove.
•4100-0D. Plio"" 311~878-

Building Supplies

Furnilhod room-919 Second out of Sllto. Clll 814-24530~77:J-11721 or 77;,.
00 Conning
Nice 2 BA. mobile t,ome. upper Avo .. GoiUpollo. $125 a mo. 9212.
P"••llo
11111 010
Rt. 7. fur'*hed. ' t200 • mo. 'Utilhi• .-ld Sinalemalo. Sh . . I =========::..L;plu::m;
..
;-;;;";
;;;;";
~A~..,~ot~
.
Wiler psld Csll814-245-5818. b .. h. Call44.. 4411efter7PM. 1-

Tr•H• tor rn Z br 1 2x10
acceptfng JPpllcttlon, wMI •cHUD . OOooolt • Nf.

'ft'el• .e-deweAIICI. new

jcouch • ch.wt. t175. Clll
81 ~448-2030 .

Modem 1 8R . ""'· Clll 81~
441-0!90.

304-882-3394.

Coli

Mon.-Sot .. SUNOAY- 12·5 PM.

81~448-3168.

895. 30" elec. r8ngtoiV8Cedo

Aw .. Pomeroy. Uving room, .,.. month. depOih JeQuhd. C.ll
two be•ooms. khchtfl, dining 114-992-5724 after 0:00 or
room. lovely sunporch, b.rh. 992-5119.
Carpet. driPN. 11:0¥1 andrefrigeretor provided. Full b_.ment New 1 bedr~ turl'lhlhed ·or
wilhWIIsher-dryer hookup. Ideal unfurnished al*"tments. One in
for working couple sony, no Pomeroy, one in !Wddleport.
children or peta. t225. ptus Cell 81~992-5304.
utiliti•. Security depOift. Phon~~ I - - - - - - - - - 81 ... 992-!5292 •fl.- &amp;:00,
Unfurnished apartments in Middleport wtth refrfgerator and
Newly dec:onted 6 room houM. stove. t135. to 8150. per
Unfurmhed. Deposit required. month. Call 614-992-7511 .
No in1lde pets. Call 814-992·
APARTMENTS, moble homes,
3090.
houtH. Pt. Pl. . .ntlndGallipo3 bedroom horne. fun basement. 111. 114-448-8221.

In Eurek&amp; 2 BR . Adultaanty. No
pm. •zoo • mo. DepOIIit
required. Aef•ences preferred.

evall.-e with 1ppraved crtelt.
Rt. 141· Centenery- 14 mile on
Unooln Pike. Op., 9 AIVI·I PNI.

8888.

New-lv redeeorated apertments
Att,.Ciive home on Mulberry .,.lllible. Utilltlat paid. $2211.

1802.

rlfrlgeretora, l'llngtl. AU furnt.
ture Ia et low COlt ..,1.- becau•
we hwe no hidden coat. llv•·

For S•le-Livi'!9 room auite

5858.

Fur nil heel 2 BR . Ca. cabte. wtlter
IIIIWIIge paid Foster's Moble
Home Park. Call 81 4-448·

dlnnotlo - · 1119.88.
PICKENS USEO FURNlTURE

3 room IC)ertrnent. t100 1 mo.
Clll 304-875-5104.

2

55

1.9114 Monto C.lo. low mlloogo.
Tolle.owr psymlniL Call 30~
8711-4110"' 1711-113110.

LAFOAT

·

D1 llllowllz Today
IRI Qood Tlmea
II! Cll'lllona !xpren

Celll1~2118-8704.

1415 E..tern Aye.
CETIDE. INC .. Atheno-8144 drM"er ch-. •48. I drawer .
69~3578
chem. tlot. 91. I pc. wooden

wav• excepted plua flnlnclng il

Foruth

1978 Ford Thu-d. win- moon 1001. AC, dual
••'"'~ Yorygood ...nct. U400.

applic•ncea. Cell 114·441·
7572. Houri 9-5.

Apartments end hou.... c,n

II] •cr•. &amp; mil• from Point

Dreulaelly rtduced 1184
· - - - 1411811. ......... 2
, _ . . . .78-7113.
- - · · - -.. 2

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

Vallav Furniture

I

(I)OWITVD
C!l Or. Who The War Games,
Part 10

s - . . Clll 81~381-9012.
Op0f1.., d...

30~51-11114.

New Md used turntture and

.... -.&amp; ........ doep"-..

1 BR. 1pt., n8W' c•pet. n~nge·
/ halt tr• refrlger1tor fur·
niahld. Wlt•·glrblge paid.
DepOiit required. Cell &amp;14-4464345.

............... UtHM._ lnctudod
Clll 81~!192-8949 or 81~
992-9903.

14olll .. oiOCOrio E11t111. l'rl,.
- - 30.,8711-1111 lor

0322.

Furnished apt. New . NeerHMC.
1 BR . U95. Utllijleo psld Cell
44&amp;-4418 afler 7 PM.

Acrage wllh nice buifdng sites,
5 mil• off Rt. 87. 30.&amp;.451-

1174 ~-lon 14•111 totol
olootrlc:. uftdorponnlng. Furnll._ot....,,..hod.Rudy11&gt;
mo... ti.500.00. 30~57112313.
_ _ .. d ... cL 30~878- 7189.

\'

Bulwllle Ad. Op . . a.m to lpm
Mon. thru SM. Ph. 114-44tr

VIR1'1 Furniture
Naw 1ofa • chelrl-one to flt
t¥erV budgel, be*oom autta.
ch ... '41¥1rdrobel, boolalhttvel.
wood dinette Mtl, hutchll,

OllllpoUs.
441-441hltor 7 PM.

1875.

OUt

30~871-14110 .

mo. 1 BR . Utllkl• pold 920

tot In

81~245-9020.

*•

New

AC.

c•pot. Cell 814-258-8752 or

$18.000 Cell

Run Road.

Hwen. Owner fln1ndng avail•·

nM
c•pot. Coli 61~251-8752 .,.
·11~245-9020.

MoW._ hame on
,.._,c•¥ille. Pool

•m• • cah wllh
...,.._., croclt. 3 .....
90 Dey •

Complate hou•hold furnfahinga. '12 mile out ..a.rrtcho.

30~578-2338.

lDta, one •ae. Level wooded.

2 · 4 BA ., LA. DA, tm . . ldtch-.

m...

Fall&gt;er'a Name

*·

..

Wtgonletr . . . .., Peacock•.

J . 8 FURNrrURE

05000. Clll 814-992-8313.

pOftUnlty. Priosd IO ..... Call

m.--

low lo farm four ,;mple ward1.

II()) &lt;IJ II CIJ Ill IIIIJ

814-448-11168. Rebuilding

11,700.00. 30.o&amp;.le2-3471 .

Hutch• UOO and up. luiW
btdt compl... w·matt,....
f29111nduptot318. IIIIWbedl
•110. Matt,....orlboa IP"ingt
ful or twin ••· firm t78. •d

188. au- '2110 • up.
Klngf3110. 4_m,..fll9.
Gun c•blnttt I ~&amp;~n . latJv
f38 • Ull. . .d
,..,.. 120. t:lll • ~~ fnlmo
150. OoodMiootioftof-OO&lt;n
lull•.
O;tbtn•. hMdbear~ t30 •d up to tl&amp;.

8

1:00()) 1110 V.U., Boots wl1h my

Used Trensmilllonl. Ail i1te(..
..., .......od. 30 dlll'll_...
tM. Wt lbuy .......1 I
cell

io 111911. Rodn.. 1225 to
1!75. Lim.- tze to t1211.
Ointtt. • 109 and up to ' " ' '·
Wood tllble w-e chairs UIS to
1798. O..k 1100 up to f3711.

1519.
.2- 1 acre Iota. At. 180. Call

.,.pa.,._.

TUES., AUG. 30

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

fo ur scrambled words be·

111111 Htlppy DeJ•

Jr. 8mlll, 30._878-4!18. 3221

lotio" of the

OR•a"ongo

EVENING

&amp; Accenories

0000 USEO APPLIANCES

LAYNE'S FURNITURE .

fo.r Sale

U,IIOO.OO. 30~8!7-2132 or
937-2280 •"• 5 :00 P....

-T-IIIIIn. Jlok• .,d

VIeWIDg

•

Auto Parts

end TV • •·

9

______;_,: ldHed br ClAY A. POLLAN

(!) 8portaLook

priced

-

o

0

IIIINIWI

Sol•
end
chlira
13911 to
8191.
T•W• t50from
end
t~;=;:;::=rr,::=;~=~~:'l[";;:=;:::::==.=::::1
32 Mobile Homes
44 Apartment
up., 1128. HI--bods 0380

odtMoll~

.

firm. 30~77~5887.

814-~7517.

Good glrll clothing. alaN 10 10

Updated lyrics.

can .,~441-0104.

. . d NOT to _.d morwv
~=he,mll unll vau hMI

~~JEee

1188 ..., . . . 11'!o "· 1211 h)l.
1-0. ...., good ...... fll.90000

8-Mo lor Silo. t500. Clll

The Daily Sentinei- P

tm"~'(

30~178-81891f.111.500.00.
. 5:00P"'-1nY
_ _ __

S11. 81 ~448-1899, 127 :!rd.
A110. Oelllpollo, OH.

er•• Motal.

•-.: •••• in "" home. Excet-

33

YELL, I tal'T ~ ..
txlll'T
$M(

m;...ICOW'T'

out drfvt, 1. . lhln 20 hrs on
bo•t. lot• of tllltrlt.

Open 8 Nl lo IPM. Mon thru

.,...lmor. CremNnl

I NOI'ICEI
THE OliO VALLEY PUei.ISHINO CO. _..._do lh•...,
do bu- wilh _.,. ....

~'I

1888 V.I.P. 22'&gt;1 ft . Cud~
....... 4114 - - ......

mitt,.. • toundltlon

•

~~~==~======~==========~~~~~=--r--~==~~~~~~==~~
:100
Television
T::~:t:~' S@~JJlA-&lt;Z'E!fS" ::::
'tXIR
m weu.!
&amp;OLL'(, !: CQI.I'T
1&lt;'1@.1 ICWo'l WAAT

12 It olumn n• bod boot.
...... 1100.00, 304·8711231 .

USEG--. dr ...... .,.._,

0... • .....hoi Work-8150
C::::.. . . _. R•IIGftllble .....

21

BORNL

Pomeroy-Middi&amp;port, Ohio

ltllrting- . . ..

- - w11• 4 VI• old et homo
wll •....., _.,.,on 8e• Run
R•. Colll1._211.. 1191.

~-

Tuesday, August 30. 1988

Boeta end

7!5

ttertiRG· • II . AeciJf'tr •

I

W•odtodo-•a-lnt.
.,......._ • - -- COlt
11.&amp;.2Q.M!Z.

M. 1

Goodl

JUT 'N'CAJtLVL[elly Wry Wrtpt

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNrrURE 82
Ollw St.. Ollllo&gt;ollo.
NEW· 8 po. wood •oup- 1399.
llvln1 r_, · lllt-11199
Bunk- with b - t t 1241.

)

• Jail .,.,., ..~ ,e.~
. -.... light . . . . . . . . . .d
rnak:IILalft-. c• c.-e. "Odd
Jollo''. Cllll1~~21170.

Ex_....
Can• Clll

Ho111lhold

If- 1. \IAI&gt; II IIIIMMEII,

11o&amp;.~H58
_...,.lh...,V.u.
O.M.

54 Mile. Merchencl~&amp;

LAFF·A·DAY

"'• ......... ........,011.

Tu11day, August 30, 1988

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

8-lhe Daily Sentinel

__

field
Hot spot
Rhyme
adverb

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES -

Here's how to work it:

8130

C!lllgnOff

•1111 '-IIJ.._,_

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

Connection

0 IIIIOt a 111 PreHnle
ill Yau Can 1111 a Slllr

11:iall(ll GlllelloiCiraon
~=lnllr(L)
P.l.
-~Q
Oama

Ill
111111
iiJ 8portll

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

onlglll

• 0 CB8 llpofte lpeclel

u.s. Open Tennis hlghllghta

==·

• Amlt1aan Magazine

12:00 (J) Plpar ChaN

.w=z-

(]) lllllde ... I'GA Tow (13)

i'-a'•r:l

a,.. .......

liD 'Diz!IUIICII' CB8 Leta
Chrtlllna'a rom. lover

·~LCJ:~&gt;

ICObloot

.,.. ...... Now
12:20 Ill MOVIIIl Atlenlo IIIII Old
[ice (NRJ (1 :18)

CRYPTOQUOTE

8·30
Q B G E

AQQGC

0

X Q B ' N

I B

N U I HZ
DQB'N .

XI T X
VUTBWI

OH · BX C .

XITX

0 I B

A Q

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FTNNIZCQB
Yett.enla)''• C17Ptoqt1ote: GOOD IJSTENERS GEN·
MQUB

ERALLY MAKE MORE SALES TIIAN GOOD TALKERS.HOLWICK

�..
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Local news briefs...-. ___, Tropical stontt Chris leaves United States

Tuesday, August 30, 1988

Dig I 10-The Daily Sentinel

Continued from page 1

Parents still raising money
Parents In Eastern Local School District are still working to
raise money fl:lr this school year's extracurricular activities In
the diStrict.
.
The next Installment of funds needed Is $8,300 by Sept. 30, and
Athletic Boosters President Jill Holter reports that workers still
have a way 'to go to reach the goal by the deadline.
The concession stand at the Meigs County Fair ls usually a big
money mailer for Eastern, but this year's concession only
.raised $2,600, Holter reported. II had 'b een expected that about
$4,000 would have been made at the fair.
To raise. the additional funds needed, parents are planning
other money raisers In the next few weeks, beginning with a
soup and sandwich supper before this Friday night's Eastern Hannan, W.Va. football game. Serving will start at 6 p.m. In
· cafeteria and everyone Is welcome.

EMS has two Monday calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports two calls
Monday morning; Syracuse at 8:19a.m. to transported Wendy
Triplett and Mike Sharp from an auto accfdent on Rout£&gt; 124 to
Plea$ant Valley Hospital; Racine at 8:28a.m. transported Amy
Patterson from the same accident to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

REACT team plans safety break
The Meigs County R.E.A.C.T. (Radio Emergency Associated
Citizens Team) will be having the annual Labor Day Weekend
Safety Break at the south bound roadside park on Route 33. The
safety break will begin at 6 p.m. Friday, Sept. 2, and continue
·
around the clock until 6 p.m. Monday, Sept. 5.
Free coffee, 11Qp, doughnuts, cookies, etc. , will be served
throughout the entire weekend . Purpose of the break ls to give
weary travelers an opportunity to stop and refresh themselves
before continuing on to their destinations.
· The safety break has the approval of both the State of Ohio and
the Meigs County Sher!ff'.s Department.

Juvenile charged after wreck
A juvenlle was charged by Meigs Sheriff's Deputy Brian
Bissell with failure to yield the right of way In connection with a
two-car accident which occurred Monday ' morning at an
Intersection of Route 124 in Syracuse.
The second car was driven by WendyTr!plett,18, Syracuse. A
passenger ln Triplett's vehicle was Mike Sharp, 18, Racine.
The three Involved In the accident were transported by Meigs
EMS units to area hospitals where they were treated and
released.
Both vehicles were moderately damaged and had to be towed
according to the deputy's report.

GM merges...

::U. S. rDor·es t
1

side companies make parts for it.
"It ls very important In such
consolidations to make sure that
one part of the business Is not
favored by management while
another is neglected," cautioned
Industry analyst Thonmas
O'Grady, head of Integrated
Automotive Resources Inc. , In
Wayne, Pa.
"You will see continued consol·
!dation in GM." predicted Mi·
chael Luckey, who heads hls own
consulting firm in Cresskill, N.J.
"That Is certainly one of IGM
President) Stempel's blg
themes. to keep as much produc·
tlon ln house as poosslble.
"The big outsourcing play that
we all thought would happen
really has yet to materialize,
although GM has lost quite a bit
of money In recent years ln its
components operations ,''
Luckey said.

~

continued
from page
1_ _
••• _
__
:........:.._

: pest week.
Forest Service spokeswoman
Jean Claybo said the agency was
. looking for temporary flreflgh·
• ters who could work for the next
7month, especially on two major
: !!res burning ln southern Oreg·
• on's timber country.
: National Park Service officials
: said Monday that fire-ravaged
Yellowstone will st~y open
through Labor Day, the tradl. tiona I end of the summer tourls t
• season, even though many roads
: are closed and llttle lodging is
; available.
A half-dozen major wlldflres
continued to rage over more than

450,000 acres of America's oldest
and best known national park,
but no developed areas were
threatened, Park Service spokes·
woman Marsha Karle said.
"We had a real quiet weekend," Karle said.
Cool, calm. weather helped the
8,400 firefighters - Including
2,500 Army troops from Fort
Lewis, Wash. - battling fires
that are spread throughout the
2.2-inUlion acre park and are
expected to bum until the snow
flies next month.

Area deaths
SeGu Burke
Funeral services for Scott
: Allan Burke, 13, 42230 Alfred
· Road, Coolville, who uled Sunday
: at St. Joseph Hospital In Parkers: burg, W. Va., w!ll be held at 1
, p.m. Thursday at the White
: Funeral Home in Coolville.
· Scott was born in Athens, a son
: of Robert and Gay Ann Douglas
: Burke. Besides hls parents, he ls
··survived by a sister, Lori, and a
. brother, Randall, both at home;
: paternal grandparents, Robert
· and VIrginia Burke, Tuppers
• Plains; maternal grandparents,
: Gerald and Eleanor Douglas,
· Route 2, Coolville; maternal
: ~feat-grandmother, Bertha B.
: Tuttle, Tuppers Plains; mater·
· nal ~feat-grandparents, R. E.
: and Martha Douglas, Route 2,
• Coolville.
• He was preceded In death by
: mate! nal great-grandparents,
• Mildred Douglas and Veri Tuttle,
· and paternal great·
: pndparents, Mr. and Mrs.
· Olarlel Burke and Mr. and Mrs.
: Sanford Swift, and an aunt,
Vlr8lnlit Jean Burke.
Scott was a member of the
Hemlock Grove Christian
Church. He was a 4· H c tub

Meigs County COUrt
A foreclosure action has been
filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Bank Ohe, Pome·
roy, against Mark Warner and .
Cindy Warner, Pomeroy, et a!.
Actions dismissed by the court
Include James W. Holland Jr.
and Diana L. Holland against
World Class Resorts, Inc., doing
business as Roval Oak Resort
Club, et al; and ·Martin W. Bush
against Nadia N. Bush.

To end marriages

Continued from page 1

"Instead of sell!ng separate
parts, we will be able to offer
complete subsystems," Ca·
meron said, noting this strategy
will allow the new unit to
Increase Its outside business.
Cameron said the GM units
currently sell to Asian and
European carmakers, and w!ll
bld for business from other large
· carmakers - Including Ford
· Motor Co. and Chrysler C0 rp.
"We will go for every piece of
: business we can-get," he ·said.
Industry analysts said GM's
announcement shows the No. 1
carmaker Is Intent on saving .
money by reducing Its management structure, which will have
been slashed 25 percent by next
year.
But It shows GM wants to keep
: many partsmaklng operations
. within the corporation Instead of
· "outSourcing" - or having out·

By MICHAEL MOLINSKI
United Press International
The weather system that was
once tropical storm Chris left the
United States early today after
blazing a trail of flooded streets,
, fallen trees, wrecked homes and
death from Puerto Rico to New
England.
The departure of the low
pressure center, however, was
not expected to mean clear skies,
as clo11dS and light showers were
expected to continue for most of
the East Coast untll Wednesday,
with some thunderstorms forecast for the .Carolinas.
"But it will be fairly pleasant
for most of the country, especially the central part of the
nation," National Weather Ser·
vice spokesman Brian Smith
said.
Scattered thunderstorms were
also forecast over portions of
Arizona, New Mexico and Texas
,
today.
Flash flood watches that were
in effect for New England and
· Southern California were can·
celed Monday night.
Smlth said the remnants of
Chris were over Maine about 1
a.m. EDT, heading northeast to
the Atlantic Ocean where the
storm was expected to die .
The storm clashed with a cold
front on the East Coast Monday
and the two systems dumped up
to 6 inches of rain along their
paths.

A divorce action has been filed
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Charles E. Blake,
Pomeroy, against Karen L.
Blake, Havelock, N.C.
A dissolution has been granted
Janet L. Kuhn and George W.
Kuhn. Janet Kuhn was restored
by the court to her former name,
Williams.

Tbe nuclear aircraft carrle.r
USS Eisenhower collided with a
Span Ish freighter ln choppy seas
and heavy rains off the coast of
Virginia as the storm passed
Monday morning. There were no
Injuries, and damage to the two
vessels was minimal.
The storm bullt 50 mph winds
off the South Carolina coast early
Sunday, I hen turned inland at
Charleston and spawned at least
a dozen tornadoes. Including one
near Manning, S.C., that des·
troyed a home, killed a 78-yearold woman and Injured her
12-year-old granddaughter.
The storm dumped heavy rains
on most of the East Coast then
ran Into a cold front moving south
from Canada that already had
drenched parts of Pennsylvania,
New York and VVermont with 3
to 6 Inches of rain.
Storms left 3,800 homes with·
out power Monday night in
Washington and its suburbs, and
flooded creeks In southern Delaware, northeast Pennsylvania
and New Jersey. Power lines
were snapped ln Essex County,
N.J.
Winds were clocked at 55 mph
In Baltimore and 48 mph at
Wilmington, Del.
Eleven of the tornadoes hit In
North Carolina Sunday night and
early Monday, ramming an
empty 18-wheel tractor-traller
rig in to a building near States·
ville and demolishing a produce
stand near Goldsboro, but caus·
lng no Injuries.
·
"I seen'lt hit the ground about
3:30p.m.," said Steve Vann, 21.
"The wind got to whipping up
pretty good. clouds moving ln a

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Monday Admissions - Harry
Shain, Pomeroy; Eloise Stiles,
Middleport; Lois Paulev,
Pomeroy.
·
Monday Discharges - Esther
DeMoss, Dorothy Bradley, Cecil
Smith, Carlos Lynch, Virginia
Lightner.
·

Marriage licences
Marriage licenses have been
issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Bryan Lee Reeves, 19,
Chester. and Susan Marie King,
19, Pomeroy; Spencer R. Bucha·
nan, 58, Reedsville, and Edith F.
Botts, 67, Reedsville.

-----Announcements----Boosters to meet
The Meigs Athletic Boosters
w!ll meet Tuesday, 7:30p.m., at
the high school.
Trustees to meet
Salisbury Township Trustees
wlll meet Thursday, 7p.m.,at the
township hall, RockSprings. Toe
public is invited.
Sutton Township Trustees will
meet Thursday, 7:30p.m., at the
Syracuse Municipal Bulldlng.
Rutland Township Trustees
will meet in regular session
Thursday, 6:30 p.m. at the
Rutland Fire Station. The pubi!c
ls Invited.
Work meeting
Southern Athletic Boosters are
having a work night for fathers ,
to finish work at the football field,
on Thursday at 6 p.m.
Eastern Star
Evangeline Chapter 172, Order
of Eastern :;&gt;tar, Middleport. wlll
hold a regular meeting on Thurs·
day at 7:30p.m. Fifty-year pins
will be presented and 50-year
members will be honored. P.o·
tluck after the meeting and each
member attending should bring a
covered dish. Special entertainment Is planned for after the

member. and attended Eastern
Junior High School where he was
a member of both the junior high
football and basketball teams.
He belonged to the Eas t£&gt;rn Pony
Leauge and was a member of the
All Star Pony League Team.
Officiating at services Thurs·
day · wlll be the Rev. David
Prlntes. Burial will be In Meigs
Memory Gardens. Friends may
call at the funeral home after 10
a.m. Wednesday.

meeting:
Reunion Saturday
The Goodn!te reunion for famlly and friends w!ll be held
Saturday, startlng12 noon, at the
Zion Lutheran Church. Broad
Run, near New Haven, W.Va. A
covered dish picnic w!ll be
served at I p.m. For information,
call 992·3980.
Revival services
Revival services at the Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene will
be held Aug. 31 - Sept. I with
David Canfield, evangelist, and
Jim and Cathy Sisson, ofGalllpolis, singing. Services will start 7
p.m. each evening except Sun·
day, when services will be held
10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Grange
Star Grange 778 and Star
Junior Grange 878 will meet In
regular session Saturday, 8 p.m.,
at the grange hall located on
County Road 1 in Salem Town·
ship. Harrlsonvllle Grange will
visit.
Club to meel
The. Wildwood Garden Club
wlll meet at 7:30p.m. Wednesday
night at the Forest Run United
Methodist Church. The annual
!lower show of the club wlll be
held.

tornado·llke motion, then It quit
raining. All of a sudden, It came
out of .nowhere. It sounded llke
someone throwing a match on
gasoline - whoosh."
NWS forecasters said the tor·
nadoes touched down and d!sap·
peared so quickly they were
unable to spot them on radar and
could not Issue warnings to the
publiC.
Mary Lemon, 78, was killed
and her granddaughter, Clllssle
Pearson, 12, was seriOusly Injured late Sunday when a tornado
wrecked Lemon's moblle home
near Manning, S.C., 65 miles
northwest of Charleston.

Fierce thundershowers pelted
Southern Calllornla mountain
tesorts and deserts Monday,
flooding roads and triggering the
derailment of a freight train
loaded with lumber and can111'4
peaches. authorities said.
Although no serious Injuries
were reported, a section of the
east-west Santa Fe Railroad
tracll that runs through the
desert town of Phelan was
expected to remain blocked off
for as long as two days because of
the derailment, s3!d Dana DeAn·
tonto, a California Department of
Forestry firefighter.
'

South Central Ohio
Tonight: Clear, with a low In
the lower 50s. Winds light and
variable.
·
Wednesday: Sunny, with highs
between 75 and 80.

0706

...

•

•

e
Vot.39, No. It
1988

at y

..•
•

By NANCY YOACBAM
Senllnel Staff Writer
.. Tuppers Plains residents have
:: two Choices, according to Jon
:: Jacobs of the Meigs County
-:: Health Department - take the
steps necessary to construct a
public sewage disposal system to
eliminate serious problems In the
community - or do nothing and
watt for the Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency to force the
•' community to construct a publlc
:;, system.
About 40 Tuppers Plains res!·
• dents gathered In a public
• hearing last night at the Ru.tland

Fire Station to discuss the
sewage disposal issue. The meetIng was called by Jacobs.
As explained by Jacobs, the
problems In Tuppers Plains are
serious enough that EPA has
Imposed a building ban on the
community. The problems exist
because of soil conditions In
Tuppers Plains which prevent
drainage and untU the problems
are corrected, there will be no
growth In ' Tuppers Plains, he
said.
According to Jacobs, the. only
way to lift the building ban to
allow for development In

Am Electric Power ...... : ....... 27
AT&amp;T ................................. 24%
Ashland Oil ......................... 36
Bob Evans .......................... 15¥.,
Charm Ina Shoppes ............... 12
City Holding Co ., ................. 31
Federal Mogul.. .................. 43%
Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 60\4
Heck's ....................... , .... ....... l
Key Centurion .................... 16'/,
Lands' End ......................... 26%
Ll mlted Inc ........................ 20\4
Multimedia Inc ................... 70¥.,
Rax Restaurants .................... 4
Robbins &amp; Myers ............ .. ... 12
Shoney's Inc ........................ 6}',
Wendy's Inti .................. ...... 6'h
Worthington Ind ................. 21\4

,...

..

"!:'

. ii

AN OP'DON - A deslp for a pinder·pump sewage system Is
explained by Chuck Maan, or Englneerinr .A8socla&amp;es, Wooster, as
a po881hle solution to sewage dlspoaal problems In Tuppers Plains.
Mann attended lui night's pul!llc meeting at the Tuppers Plains
firehouse •

§Eastern board
§extends teachers
gcontract one year
~

~ EasrernLocal Board o!Educa·
· ~ tlon agreed to extend the current

·:-contract with the Eastern Local
:.: Education Association for one
&gt; additional year, when the board
;: met Monday night In regular
.,.. session. The extension Is to run
.. from Sept. 1, 1988 through Aug.
·:· 31, 1989.
The following other business
•: ·matters were also conducted by
~·· the board during Monday night's
.;:session.
; -Employed Ms. Pam Dou&gt; th!tt, on supplemental contract,
/ as athletic director for the high
::.school for the 1988-89 school
.,. year. '
;: :...Employed Larry Coon, Ml·
t chael Miller, Carla Halley, Ricky
Edwards, Margaret Amberger
..: and Grace Weber as substitute
:; teachers, to be used on an as
-· needed only basts, for the 1988-89
year.

FOR ALL YOUR
ADVERTISING NEEDS
OR SUBSCRIPTION
INFORMATION •••·•
•

:t

-Employed as substitute clas·
slfled employees, Edna House·
holder as secretary, kindergarten· and llbrary aide; Nola
Young as cook, library and
kindergarten . aide; and Lila
VanMeter as secretary, kinder·
garten aide and cook.
-Employed Glen Easrerllng
as a substitute bus driver, on a
probationary contract, to be used
on an as needed basis only, for
the 1988-89 year.
-Employed Mr. George Gaga I
as Sophomore Class Advisor for
the !988-89 year.
-Employed Tammy Ranay
Capehart as Junior High cheer·
leader advisor for the 1988-89
year.
-Accepted the resignation of
substitute teacher Judy Crooks.
-Approved leave without pay
for Mary Bowers, from Aug. 2.2.
Continued on page 3

Local news
EMS has 3 runs Tuesday

992-2.156

~ Three emergency runs were made Tuesday by local units the
Meigs County Emergency Medlcai Services reported.
. At 11:28 a.m. Rut..nd to Leading Creek Road for Robert
Carson who was taken to Holzer Medical Center; at 12:13 p.m.
Middleport to Meigs Mine No. Two lor Jeff Maynard, taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital; at 8: 32 .p.m. Racine to Station Two for
Craig Randolph, taken to Holzer Medical Center.

The
Daily Sentinel

Two fined in Pomeroy court
Two defendants were fined and five others forfeited bonds in
the court of Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler Tuesday night.
Fined were John M. DeMoss. Pomeroy, $63 and costs, no
(Continued on Pll«e.3)
lj

ae

3 Sections, 'Pareo .
A MuiUmedlalnc. New..,aper

Tuppers Plains, and to eliminate
the sewage disposal problems
overall, Is to construct a public
disposal system. If Tuppers
Plains does not construct a public
sysrem by 1992, the deadline
established by EPA forcommun·
lUes throughout the State to
comply with EPA sewage disposal standards, then EPA will
likely take matrers Into their own
hands and force construction of a
sysrem, whether residents feel
they can afford It or not.
Jacobs did not know for sure If
Tuppers Plains would be on
EPA's list ln 1992, bu the assured

residents at last night's meeting
that eventually, EPA would get
to Tuppers Plains.
Many Tuppers Plains res!·
dents have already undergone
great personal expense to cor·
reel problems on their own
properties. Jacobs said residents
could contln.ue handllng problems on an Individual basis If
they desire, bUt this "will notllft
the . ban" to allow for
development.
And even though some res!·
dents have already corrected
their sewage problems, once a
public system ls Installed, "eve-

ryone ln the banned area" ls
required by State law to hook on
to the system, Jacobs explained.
Chuck Mann, of the firm
Engineering Associates, Woos·
ter, was at the meeting as an
"unpaid consultant" to explain a
design for a grinder-pump sew·
age collection syst£&gt;m and wast£&gt;
water treatment plant, which
could be the solution to Toppers
Plains' problems. Mann's firm
recently engineered such a sys·
tem for Madisonburg In Wayne
County. Although Madisonburg
Is larger than Tuppers Plains,
Mann said the two communities

are very similar.
.
Mann quoted the total cost of
the Madisonburg system, with
nearly 800 commercial and residential hookups, at $3,184,000.
About 65 percent of the total cost
In Madisonburg was paid for with
money from the Unsewered Area
Grant Fund through EPA.
However, the possibility of
Tuppers Plains obtaining Unsewered Area Grant Funds to help
construct a system would be
"next to nil," according to Mann,
because that particular grant
program Is being eliminated and
Continued on page 3

Winds
hamper
firemen

(As of 18:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

(WHILE IT STILL IS NEWS •• )

enttne

•
sewage system meetr.ng

Dally stock prices

'

•

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Wednesday, August 3-1, 1988

Copyrlghtod

Stocks

WE DELIVER
NEWS!!

Clear lonlghl, low In mid 58s.
Thursday, sunny, hlglw in mid
80s.

~

Extended Forecast
Thursday through Saturday
Fair through the periOd, with
high temperatures between 75
and 80 and overnight lows in the
50s to near 60.

'

•

;.. Insert

------Weather-----

CALL

r ;

Pick 4

...•
the tire ratings would show the
public that lnconslsrencles exist
not only between tire companies
but among them as well."
Earlier this month, the Wa·
shlngton safety center urged
Secretary of Transportation
James Burnley to widely public·
lze the tire ratings In Interests of
consumer awareness. The CAS
won a court decision ln 1984
ordering the government to resume Its treadwear · rating
program.
The listings show, for Instance,
that the Amerl Classic radial
made by General Tire Corp. has
a tread life of up to 70,000 mlles,
while Its XP 2000Z G mOdel has
an expectancy of only 10,000
miles. Among Goodyear br~nd
tires, the Vector.radial achieved
a tread life of 56,000 miles, while
the Eagle GTS and Eagle VRS
tires were found to have a
treadwear rating equal to only
20,000 mlles.

Daily Number

601

Consu!ller group wants guide
DETROIT (UPI) - An Independent consumer group has
published a comprehensive tire
buying guide which the Depart·
ment of Transportation prepared
but has declined to widely
publicize, the group said.
The consumer guide, which
compares treadwear ratings for
p1 different models of radial
tires made by 17 companies,
shows a wide range In how long
new tires can be expected to last,
the Center for Auto Safety said.
''DOT has done Its best to keep
the lid on treadwear ratings,"
Clarence Dillow Ill, executive
director of the CAS, said, noting
that the agency has quietly
announced only once In the last
three years that such a buyer's
g11!de was available on request.
"DOT;s tread wear ratings con·
taln some real winners and losers
that co11sumers want to know
about when buying tires," Dltlow
said. "Widespread publication of

Ohio Lottery

1988 football
"'"..., .inside today

By ROGER BENNE'M'
United Press International
Erratic winds raised havoc as
thousands of firefighters battled
more than 60 blazes throughout
the West, and a fast-moving
grassfire raced Into a foresred
San Francisco suburb, gutting
five e~penslve houses and damaging two others.
,With Infernos raging over
more than 915,000 acres of
forestland In eight Western
states Tuesday, the worst dam·
age was In the posh Bay Area
suburb of Orinda, where Muses
worth $200,000 to $1 mUllan dot
the pine and oak studded
hillsides.
The fire was out within three
hours, and nobody was Injured,
but the damage was quick and
extensive.
"We have no damage figures
yet, but the (destroyed) homes
are on one-half acre to multiple
acreage parcels and are in the
$300,000 price range," said
Orinda Fire Capt. Greg Holmes.
Firefighters and equipment
from the California Division of
Forestry helped local fire departments keep the flames contained
to less than 15 acres, and officials
said the blaze appeared to have
been human-caused - perhaps
by fireworks.
In fire-ravaged Yellowstone
National Park, shifting winds
blew the 90,000-acre North Fork
fire over the Madison River on
Tuesday, threatening the town of
West Yellowstone 3 ~ miles
away, closing a busy road for
nearly two hours and sending
flames roaring toward Old Faith·
fullnnnearthefamousgeyser.
The flareup did not lmmedlately threaten the attraction,
but sent firefighters scurrying to
dig lines an!f "corner It In," fire
spokesman Bill Pldantck said.
Before It was beaten back, the
flareup blocked the path to Old
Faithful and forced visitors to
either walt It out or go hundreds
of miles out of their way to enter
or leave the park.
"Under these windy condl·
lions, there's a posslblllty It could
run towards Old Faithful and
present a threat later on,"
Pldanlck said.
Smoke continued to b!Uow on
the plateau above Old Faithful,
the most famous feature of the
natlon'soldestnatlonalperk,and
shrouded the area In a thick,
brown pall.
Nearly half a mllllon acres of
the park have been bit by fire this
summer.
Erratic winds also hit the Dry
Fork fire In Montana. The blaze
was one of the smaller of that
state's fires on Tuesday morn·
lng, Just 1,!500 acres, but "the
next thing we knew It had gone to
11,000," said Mike Ferry of the
Botae Interagency Fire Center.
"Wind pushed It Into some
standing dead and downed lodgepole pine and It just took off tram
there."
The Wolf Lake fire again
threatened Canyon VIllage, fore· ·
lng cr~s to spray foam on
buildings In case the flames Jump
Continued on page 3

ANSWERS GIVEN- Jon Jai'Obs of the Meigs
County Health Deparbnent did his best to answer
questions posed to him by Tuppers Plains

resldenla at a public meellnr last ntrht at the
Tuppers Plains
station.

fir

Child safety programs are
being emphasized nationwide
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel Stoff Writer
The well-being of children !sa
primary concern of the Meigs
County Health Department
which Is joining In a five year
effort of the National Safety
Council to cr,ange the way people
think and act about childhood
safety, according to · Norma
Torres, R. N., nursing
supervisor.
The emphasis Is to expand
chlld safety efforts around the
county, she said, through an
educational program.
Torres cited a recent national
survey commissioned by Child·
ren's Hospital National Medical
Center In Washington, D. c., In
which It was found that parents
do not understand the threat that
preventable Injuries pose for
their children.
It was noted that when parents
were asked to cite the risks that
concerned them most about their
children, 43 percent mentioned

Statistics show that nearly half
drugs, and 37 percent kidnapping, with only 21 percent men- of all deaths up to 14yearsofage
tlon!ng auto accidents, one per· are caused by unintentional
cent drowning, and one percent injuries. For every child who dies
of cancer, four die from Injuries .
fires or burns.
Yet, Torres said, referring to The leading causes of death In the
figures from the National InstJ· unintentional Injury group, are
ture on Drug Abuse for 1986, there · motor vehicles, fires and burns,
were only 57 deaths related to drowning, firearms, choking and
drug abuse Involving children poisoning, and falls.
For toddlers and pre·
underl8,whlletheFBihadonly
schoolers,
poisoning is a major
67 cases In which chUdren under
age 18 were kidnapped by area of concern to county health
officials.
strangers.
As Torres noted, young child·
Accidents remain the leading
cause of death, with more child· ren wlll eat and drink almost
ren dying from preventable anything - medicines, houseInjuries each year than from all hold · substances, Insect sprays,
kerosene, lighter fluid furniture
childhood diseases combined.
Nationally last year, nearly8,000 poUsh, paint, solvents, even
children 14 and under were k!lled leaves and flowers on
and 50,000 were permanently houseplants.
She suggests keeping housedisabled ln accidents, according
hold
products and medicines out
to figures presented by Mrs.
of
reach
and out of the slgbt of
Torres. This year one child In
curious
children,
preferably In a
four will suffer a preventable
Injury serious enough to require locked cabinet or closet. Since
medical attention.
Continued on page 3

M u lt f,na
• t wna
• l d rug ·crackdown ha f,•led
WASHINGTON (UPI)- Tons
of Illegal drugs and more than
1,200 suspected dealers are in
custody following a 30-natlon
landmark narcoilcs crackdown
covering most of the United
States, Europe and South and
Central America, officials say.
At a news conference that
colndded with Oil!! ln Bogota,
Colombia, Attorney General Rl·
chard Thornburgh detalled Tuesday a massive anti-drug operalion from Aug. 1·28 that Involved
border ralda, Interdiction of air
earners and boats and destruc·
tlon of mariJuana crops, cocaine
laboratories and secret airstrips.
The operation was coordinated
by the International Drug En·
forcement Conference, a coau:

tlon of Wesrern Hemisphere
nations dedicated to regional
efforts to combat drug
trafficking.
Thornburgh said the operation
was the first of Its kind to Involve .
·joint law enforcement efforts and
sharing of Intelligence among
nations.
In the past, he said, "Each of
the nations of the Americas has
been pursuing the war on drugs
In a more or less unUareral or
bilateral fashion.
"There has been, to be sure,
sharing of data and ISolated
cases of close cooperation, but
never before has there been sue h
syaremallc and comprehensive
cooperation."
The operation "sent a message

. '.

to drug traffickers ln the Western
Hemisphere that henceforth thev
will increasingly face the combined fury of the law enforcement agencies at all the nations
whose people they victimize,"
the ettorney general declared .
The project resulted In the
seizure of 11 tons of cocaine, the
destruction of 244 tons of marl·
Juana, 118,000 cocaine plants and
13 cocaine laboratories, more
than 1,200 arrests, the demoUtlon
of seven clandestine atrsrrtps
and the seizure of $3.8 mllllon ln
Illegal drug profits, he reported.
At a news conference In Bo'John Lawn, director of the
Enforcement Admlnllitra·
of !DEC,
on page 3
1

•
•

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      <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>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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              <text>August 30, 1988</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
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    <tag tagId="606">
      <name>burke</name>
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</item>
