<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12562" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/12562?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T04:51:11+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43534">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/95c4be4e4b82216ccbe5070bf49c9f46.pdf</src>
      <authentication>c08247bdaf4bd2ffb32bc00d31140ee6</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39409">
                  <text>'Page D-8-The Sunday i'imes-Sen1il1el

Sox~et

August 9. 1987

Pomergt Middleport- Gallipolis. Ohio Point Pleasant, W.Va.

•

zoologist . walks into bar, hlls drink, ·asks ·to defect

SEATTLE (UJ;'I) - A Soviet
zoologist walkec\ into a bar
waving a tiny American !lag
after slipping away from a tour
group, shared a couple of drinks
with patrons and asked them to
help hltn defect, officials said.
The scientist, Identified as
Demltr! Vlnogradov, was among
several scientists taking a bus
. tour of the Washington state
capitol in Olympia Thursday and
remained behind after the group

departed, officials said.
does not, mean asylum .will be
The FBI turned the defecior granted, and lt probably will take
over to the U.S. Immigration and about a week for officials to study .
Naturalization Service Friday the appllcaUon; Corrozza said.
and he was taken to an undis·
Vlnogradov, 30, was a member
closeq locatio n in Seattle, said of the research vessel "BaPamela Carrozza, deputy dis· bevsk," that docked In Aberdeen,
trlct director of the local INS Wash.. after spending several
office.
months studying fish· in the
"We ~re talking to him and his Bering Sea.
application for political asylum
After slipping away 'from his
has been accepted," she said.
· tour group In Oiympla, the
Acceptance of the appllca!ion scientist Walked Into Charlie's

Restaurant and told patrons he patrons bought the Russian a
was a Russian who loved Amer- "Tidal Wave," a concoction of
and wanted to stay, author!· vodka; gin and rum. After
Vlnogradov finished the mixed
ties said.
Robin Thomas, a bartender, drink he downed a shot of
said the scientist was alone when whiskey .
"I was told that he contacted
he walked into the bar waving a
little American flag and wearing local citizens and made it known
a baseball style cap.
to ihem that he was a defector
"He'sald 'AmeriCa's great' and and that they helped hll!l contact
kept talll:lng about how much he · the FBI," said Officer Larry
liked It here," Thomas said . .
pickerso.n of the Lacey Pollee
The bartender said a couple of Department.

Ica

"The FBI brought him here
and talked with him for a while,
and they used the phone before
taking him to Seattle."
·
Officials said the,defector had
been part of a scientific expedition studying fish In the Berinl{
Sea for the past several months
before the research ship pulled
Into Grays Harbor In Aberdeen.
Carrozza said Vlnogradov said
· he has a wife and parents living
In the Soviet Union:

Giants
sweep
Reds
.

Ohio Lottery
Daily Number

802
Pick 4
8719
Super Lotto
34-15-28
31-3-36

Page-3

•

at y

•

Vot.37, No.84

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Monday. August 10. 1987

•

Capyriphtod I 987

Clear tonl«ht. Low In the
upper 50s. Partly clolldy
Tuesday. Hl«h betweea 81
and 8~. Probability of rain
near zero.

1 8ection, 10 Peg• 25 Cento
A Multimedia Inc. N - - ·

Report says nation's economic outlook cloudy
'

WASHINGTON ( UPI) - ThenaUon's economy
Is skating on thin Ice and "cracks are beginning to
appear," the Democrats on the Joint Economic
Committee said in . a midyear economic report
released Monday .
·
Most notably, the country's trade deflcll and lis
continued status as a debtor nation threaten to
undermine Its eeonomlc health, the report said.
" In order for the Untied States to restore Its
creditor status, today's deficit s will have to be
transformed into trade surpluses ," It said .

FINANCING

.,...,.....,...

Reducing the trade deflcll ·ls not enough, the ·
report said, Slnc.e the United States will have to
run a trade surplus simply to ke.e p Its debt to other
nations from growing.
The Democrats also warned that if foreign
countries cut off or reduce additional credit, the
country could suffer a major economic
contraction.
"Either foreign Investors will continue to lend
us money, adding to our future obligations, or tl)e
foreign lending will stop. forcing a severe

adjustment," the report said.
"At midyear, the outlook for Improved growth
remains clouded and cracks are starting to
appear In the Ice." the report said.
·
The Democrats said the Reagan administration
Is doing little to create Increased Internal growth
that will reduce the external debt problem.
They ·called for dedicating budget resources to
Improving the skill of the nation's workforce,
rebuilding the country's physical Infrastructure,
Increasing federal programs that do statistical

Racine c~ncerts prove to
be big. weekend attractions

AS LOW AS

The community of RaCine sure with the pies and cakes being
knows how to do things up right. donated by women of the
Abou I every other weekend, community.
country and bluegrass music Is
There is also a shelterhouse
provided. free of charge no less, . adjacent to the stage so If you
,' at Shrine Park In Racine. As don't feel like bringing along a
word or the concerts has spread, lawn chair to the concerts,
the crowds at the free concerts - there 's plenty of benches on
have. begun to swell until the which to sit.
parking areas are completely
II lied.
Although the village park com·
A stage has been built to
mittee has been in charge of
accomodate musicians and a
Improvements at the park, funds
concret e dance floor will soon be
for Improvements In the concert
poured for the Impromptu perforarea have come stlctly from
mances by area clogging enthusidonations. Donated labor built
asts. Currently, the cloggers are
the stage too.
do ing their thing on a small
Park commission member
wooden stage adjacent to the big Dale Hart says the group wants
stage. And before that, they · lo promote tam ily oriented activdanced on a wagon.
ities and fun "right at home. "
Refreshments, Including
And that's just ~hat the concerts
homemade pies and cakes, also are providing. While mom and
an enjoyable part of the evening,
dad enjoy the music, the children

ANNUAL
.PERCENTAGE
RATE

I

I
FREE CONCERTS - The mu•kaJ voup
"Bend Rlnr Boya," made up of all locllllalent,
has " - performln1 re1111arly at lhe free
conc.-erta al Shrine Park In Racine. Last
Salurd&amp;)' '1 concert alao featured a vlsllla« I""Up,

·.

•

CHEVROLET &amp; OLDS OBILE CARS
OTHER RATES AS lOW AS 3.9% AND 4.8°/o A.P.R •.AVAILABLE AS LENGTH OF CONTRACT INCREASES
..

YOU'VE NEVER SEEN ANYTHING LIKE THIS
BEFORE
.

UNBELIEVABLE SA~INCS TO YOU!
t•
b

WE HAVE A LARGE SELECTION Of NEW CARS AND LATE MODEL PRE-OWNED CARS TO CHOOSE FROM
I

WE WILL NEVER BE. KNOWINGLY UNDERSOLD
•

•

CheVrolet-Oldsmobile
The He111be1i.otthe Ohio V11/eg

,.GALLIPOLIS,
.

l

OHIO~
~

WASHINGTON tUPI) - De- '
tense Secretary Caspar Wein- ·
berger says U.S. warships es·
cortlng Kuwaiti tankers through
the Persian Gulf today are "not
there to provoke anybody" and
ronflrms that Iranian mines
were found 'in the waterway.
Weinberger. appearing on

rational ~ -

Weinberger

CBS's '·' Face the Nation" Sunday , .also proclaimed that U.S.
allies are quietly supporting the
Intensified Navy presence In the
gulf and he blasted Iranian
claims the United States Is to
blame for last week's rioting by
Iranians in the Moslem holy city
of Mecca, Saudi Arabia. More

than 400 people died In the rioting
with Saudi pollee.
"We're not there to provoke
anybody..,:• Weinberger said ol
U.S. escorts of Kuwaiti oil
tankers flying t~e American flag,
and he accused the Iranians of
"typical, hysterical foamlngs of
the mouth.

"

•

. The concert schedule Is skipping the week of the Meigs
County Fair so the next concert
will be on Aug. 29. The regular
every other Saturday .concert
schedule will resume after that
and continue until cold weather
sets ln. Reminders of 'the con·
certs are always announced .In
The Daily Sentinel.

losing their future leaders

WASHINGTON (UP() -The
nation's smaller cities and towns
are having big troubles, losing
young people, seeing farms and
businesses shut down and local
budget s out of balance. the
Nalional t.eagtle of Cities said
·
today.
A new contract lor street polntment of David Woolard to sloner giving real estate tax
At the top of the list of longlighting was signed with the Ohio serve as a deputy marshal during . exemption for the Shrine Park
range
worries for leaders In
Power Co .. when Racine Village · Kirby's absence.
Club property.
cities
with
populations under
Co uncil met In regular session .
The pu·rchase of cement block
Clerk Beegle reported all vil50.000
Is
the
flight
of young people
The new contract becomes and cement lor work on the storm lage funds totaling ! 107,002.57.
to
the
economic
glitter
of the big
effective Oct. 1 and the charge sumps was approved ,
Included In the total : general
cities.
will be $6.90 per mont h.
Street Commissioner Glenn fund. $25.014. n; street mainteAn NLC survey of 395 smaller
Council also approved a motion Rizer's monthly report showed nance a nd repair, $12.103.42;
cities
and towns found thai 26
prohibiting alcoholic beverages the water I ruck driven 967 miles; fir e, $16,338 . 21; water ,
percent
reported a worsening
and drugs at the Shrine Club the tra~h truck, 465 miles; 17 $31,631.46; revenue sharing,
situation
In terms of their ability
Park. The procedure for rcserv· loads of trash hauled to the $2,867 .53: s tate highway,
to
retain
young people, and 55
lng I he shelter house of the park landfill, catch basins on Main St . $3,842.88; cemeteryy, $2,903.33;
for various functIon s was a !so · clea ned, concrrele hauled trom watrer dl'posits, $3,000.97; ceme- · percent cent reported an IncreasIng elderly population.
.
revised. Under the new provi- the high school football field to be tery endowment. $6.500; truck
The outward flight comes
sions, a shelter house reservation used as !Ill at the river blink: cut replacement CD, $2,800.
despite the fact that 41 percent of
.!s not eonflrmed until an appllca· tree on Filth St., coated the roof
lion and the proper user fee Is of the firehouse annex and
· She also reported that $500 has those cities surveyed said their
paid. The event will not be put on cleaning of sidewalks started.
been added to the cemetery ability to attact Indus try and jobs
the calendar until the paperwork
Russell Cummins and Bud
endowment CD fund . The InterIs complete. This will avoid Rose of the Baptist Church met
est from this fund will be used for
confusion and conflict of dates .
with council , to discuss the
cemetery operations. Council
Council also cla rifled the $3 sidewalk near the parsonage.
agreed t'o send a letier of thanks
late charge on lrash·water bills. They will present a plan to
for Cecil Maynard, Sr., and Cecil
On · bills paid by mall, the council at the September meetMaynard, Jr.,for cutting down a
postmark must be I he 15th of the Ing In regard to replacing the
tree for the village.
. ·
month of earlier. Otherwise, the walk. Council authorizer Clerk
Attending the meet lrlg were
late charge will be assessed. ' Jane Beegle to send letters to two
council members, Robert BeeCouncil approved a resolu lion lot owners to rake action on
gle, Frank Cleland, Carroll Tea·
authorizing the president pro cleaning up their lots and to se11d
ford, Richard Wamsley, Larry
tempore to assume the power of a letter to a trash customer who
Wolfe and Scott Wolfe; Clerk
mayor In order to appoint a has not paid the plckuplee. Clerk
Beegle; Fire Chief Robert John·
pollee officer to serve during the Beegle reported that the village
son; Street Commissioner Rizer,
absence of Marshal Joe Kirby has received a journal entry
and Deputy Marshal Charles
and council confirmed the ap- from the State Tax Commls·
Shain.

Iranians not

Don't Miss This Great Opportunltyl

"Sternwheeler Bluepass,'; made up of musicians
and aln1ers from the Ripley, W.Va. area and one
fellow from Racine. The 1roups donate their lime
and talent, much lo the dell&amp;hl of lhe lar«e
audlencetl which attend the popular concerts. '

play on the playground equipment, much of, which was provided by a community development block grant to the village.
Situated along the· river, the
park provides the perfect setting
for open air concerts.
And the people of Racine are
happy to have such a facility In
their ·own backyards. The shelter house and clubhouse facUlties
are always in demand lor reunions and the like.

Sul-vey ~reveils .small'-cities

Racine council signs new street·
light~ng contract with Qhio Power

'

•

1616 ·EASTERN .AVE.

.

studies of the economy and promoting technologl·
cal research and development. .
.
The report stands in stark conttast to .the
Republica n midyear report Issued last week,
which applauded 59 months of economic recovery
and expansion.
"Like 'Old Man River' ·the econop1y just keeps
rolling along," the Republican report said.
· It warned thai Congress might damage the
economy by raising taxes and placing protectionIst barriers against foreign compe~ltlon.

had improved over I he past year.
"There is strong concern about
maintaining the stability , and
character that is so valuable and
so special In smaller communities," saiq Art Ashley, mayor of
Nitro, W.Va., and chairman of
the league's Small Cities Council.
"Losing young people means
losing the next generation of
leadership, and each business
that closes or farm that goes on
the auction block Is likely to
involve hardships tor people well
known to many, If not all in the
community." Ashley said In
remarks prepared for release
with the survey.
The survey also reported that
two out of five of .the 395 smaller
cities surveyed said small busl·
ness closings and farm foreclo·
sures had worsened over the past
year, and 39 ' percent, ci&amp;Ing the

loss of the federal revenue
Bhar!ng program ended by Congress Sept. 30, 1986, said they
expected their total general fund
revenues to decline.
More than a majority (53
percent l said they expected
·expenditures to outpace revenues in 1987, compared to only
34 percent who said that In 1986.
At the same time, city leaders
expressed confidence a bout their
ability to carry on.
In addition to the 41 percent
who said their ability to attract
jobs and business had Increased,
37 percent said overall economic
conditions were better and 33
percent said housing availability
and -affordability were ImprovIng in their communities.
But 30 percent said overall
economic conditions had worsened In the past year and 28
percent reported no change.

•

Mason County Fair Schedule
'IUESDAY, AUGUSf U, 1987
9:1XJ a.m. -1987 FAIR OPENS

6:00p.m.- Market Hog Show
7:00 p.m. - Local Yokel Contest
. Judglng-BuUdl~ Closed
Junior &amp;Open Swine Show
- 9:~ a:m.- Jr. Dairy Goat Show
8:00p.m. -Youth Horse Show'
12:00 noon - Flower Show Opens
9: 00 p.m. - Entertalument, Main Stage,
-1:00 p.m.- Pedal Tractor Pull
Marie Osmond
• Chapel Opens
•
.
·3 :00p.m.- Entertainment, Main Stage, Marie Osmond 11:00 p.m.- Gocxi Nlght-Gates.CJo~

..

ROUSE DESTROYED - All unoccupied
one-story house Ia Middleport wu destroyed by
lire Saturdll)' nt,bt. Middleport firemen were
called to the scene at the col'ller of Cuaier St. and
South Second Ave.
. at 11: p.m. and arrived to.

•o

lind the structure lunY · Involved In Oamee.
Firemen l.vere oa the scene until 3 a.m . .There .
were no llljurles ·and orlpn ol the lire Ia ·UIIder .
laveallaatlo•. The houae was owned by ~tat).
Geillney Be~ln,.
·

�'

.

•

'

'

..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.•

Commentary

Craig predicts Giants ·will ~ West titl~

,.ege-2-The o.lly Sentinel
.Porn61oy-Midclllpll1, Ohio

Monday. Aug~"' 10, 1987

By MIKE TULLY
By notching· their eighth ·
straight home triumph - all
UPI National Bueball Wrller
Roger Craig predicted Sunday agalrist National League division
his San Francisco Giants will win leaders Cincinnati and St. Louis
the National League West. At this - the Giants charged within one·rate, they may dominate it.
game of the first· place Reds In
Receiving their third and· the West.
· " It's only Aug. 9," said Cincin·
fol!rth strong starting performances o! the weekend , the nat! Manager Pete Rose. "We've
Giants swep!'the Reds 3-2 and 5-2, got7'h weeks (actually eight) to
completing· a four-game series go."
sweep.
Downs. 9-6. allowed five hits,
"Pitching Is the answer," the walked three and struck out two
Giants manager said. "Pitching · before leaving In the ninth: Craig
will be the key down the stretch Lefferts finished and notched hls
and we have the best pitching. fifth save despite allowing a
Th·at means we're going to Win sacrifice fly by Bo Dlaz. One of
it. u: . '
_........ the hits off Downs was Barry
Mike Krukow allowf'CI five hits Larkin's eighth homer, a leadoff
over 8 1-3 innings in the opener blast In the fifth.
and Kelly Downs went eight
Guy Hoffman, 8-7, was victimstrong Innings and squeezed Ized by three errors In San
home a run in the nightcap. Mike Francisco's four·run second
LaCoss and Allee Hammaker inning.
pitched complete games earlier
In the series, leaving the bullpen
Krukow raised his record to
!ewer tha~ two Innings of work 3·6. Ted Power, 8-7, took the loss .
during the four -game blitz.
"I think Krukow is getting
"I've never felt any better than better every time out and today
I feel now about this ballclub," was his best game," Craig said.
Craig said. " We've got Candy "! think the whole game showed
(Maldonado) back and we a fe on we are starting to play good
baseball."
a roll and. only one game Ol!t.
That's what you call hummmm·
In other games, Chicago debaby ."
feated New York 6-3, Philadel-

u.s. minorities____

!J_y_Ja_c_k_A_n_de_rs_o_n_an..;..d___:.D_a_le_Van_A
___
tt_a

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court-Street'
Pomeroy, Ohio

.

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lb .............._"T", ........... c::t,.,.
.
.

tllim~

'q!v

ROBERT L. WINGETI' ·
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD.
Assistant Publlshe~/Controller
•

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

AMEMBER o!Th~ Unlt~d Press lnl~rnatlonal . Inland Dally Pr~ss
. ·Assoctalion and the Am~rlcan N•wspaPf'r Publjsh•rs Association.

WASHINGTON- No reasonable person expects Israeli off!·
clals to kowtow to the United
States just because of the billions
of dollars In aid that American
·taxpayers have poured Into their
beleaguered col!ntry. But surely
It's not l!nreasonable to ask that
ari American passport be treated
with respect · In Israel; our
countries have, aftE"rail, been the
closest of allies for the 39 years of
Israel's existence as or state.
!jut the unpleasaril, undeniable
fact Is that Israeli officials have
been looking past some Ameri·

can passports and dlscrlminat·
ing on the basis of race, color and
creed. As longtime champions of
Israel, we make this charge with
sincere reluctance.
. Citing the demands of nation
security, Israeli officials have
regularly detained Americans of
Arab extraction. ,those with
Arable surnames and black
Americans. Some have had personal items confiscated arbitrarIly or been humiliated by strip
searches. Others have had their
American passports held, and
several have been required to

post substantial bonds to assure
their good behavior wh.ile in
Israel.
This is an .intolerable situation
that must not be allowed to
continue.
We first exposed this problem
last November, when we detailed
the sorry treatment meted out by
Israeli Officials to Dr. Omat
Kader, a distinguished American
bUsinessman. He was. rudely
Interrogated for more than three
hours at the Israeli-Jordanlan
border. and had personal property confiscated on ludicrous

LETrERS OP OPTNTQN arc• wf'l com(l. ThP'' should bl' lf:'S!' than 300' words
Jon~ . AIIIE'ttE'rs arE' sub j{'('t to('(l!ling a nd mu~t tW !'l~nf'd "'' ith nam{'. addu·~s and
· tf:'l(1lhon£&gt; numbrr. No unslgnrd IMirr!'i will bf' publishNI. Ll-ttl'rs shou ld\)(' In
$!:Ood tastr. addr£'S!l\n~ i~SU&lt;'~. n(lt (X'rsonalltiE'S.

Public •policy on
AIDS walks thin line
By LEE LEONARD
.
UPI Statehouse Reporter .
•• COLUMBUS -State lawmakers are In a Catch-22 situalion when It
:c;omes to dealing with the growing' problem of acquired Immune
deficiency syndrome.
·
·
. They are faced with Impressing upon a disbelieving and apathetic
public the ,gravity of the situation. But they must do it in a way that
wut not indu~ panic or force AIDS carriers undergroqnd out of tear.
· This was brol!ght bome at the Statehouse last week when Dr.
Leonard Calabrese, an Immunologist at ihe Cleveland Clinic,
delivered some frightening statistics to a Senate-House task force on
AIDS.
.
.
.
- Calabrese said one adult out of every 100 Is carrying the AIDS virus,
incll!ding one out of every 35 men.
He also said a survey In Cleveland shows that three- fourths of the
known carriers are still engaging In unsafe sex practices and are
doing nothing to stop the spread of the disease.
Calabrese said the public must be jolted Into reality about the
dangers of Inappropriate behavior - that AIDS can be passed on
through heterosexual partners and from mother to child.
"This Is a virus that actually threatens the species becal!se It enters
the genetic pool (In hi! man cells)," Calabrese said.
Bl!t Sen. David L. Hobson. R· Springfield, chairman of the task
f9rce, said establishing public policy· Is difficult, ·f irst of all because
politicians and government offlcjals lack credibility.
"People don't see a clear and present danger, " said Hobson. "They
say, 'that's just a bl!nch of legislators and doctors saying stuff."'
Another problem, said Hobson. Is that different constituencies are
pressuring for different solutions. Some people want mandatory
AIDS testing for various grol!ps.
But a stigma Is attached to the disease. VIctims ;1re ostracized and
perhaps denied jobs or health lnsl!rance. They will certainly try to
avoid a test for self-protection, and that defeats thepurposeoftesting.
So lawmakers have the delicate situation of balancing the rights of
the afflicted with the rights of society at large..
.
And they need -to act quickly. despite the apparent lack of public
:pmcern. Because once the alarm goes off, In Hobson's words, "they'll
:~ saying, 'Why didn't you do something? You knew this was
·Coming."' ·
·

.....

:; : Maybe Gov. Richard Celeste isn't so soft on the military after all,
·:!wen thol!gh he's trying to keep the Ohio National Gua,rd out of the
:..ttonduras becal!se It's close to Nlcarague.
~ : The governor announced last week that Morgan County will be the
:;stte of a new Hawk Missile Battalion, where members of the National
.Guard will be trained with high-tech equipment in missile defense.

~~~~v:~~~YH~:J~;:s~~;~y ~~l:s~!'%:~:c~t f~at~e ~:tr~~~e~~~
~arheads will be stored in Ohio,"
,.,

•

f.T he unleashing of
~Claiborne Pell ·

~

Iran would have read all about II fol!ntaln - thl' journalists' E&lt;ql!i·
have been treated to opPrallc the next morning in the New valent of the Girl Who Can't Say
declarations of th&lt;" Democrats' York Times or thl' Washington No.
devotion to the rule of law, and Post.)
Leahy has already publldy
their distaste for deceit and
So whenever the subject Is confessed (after lParnlng that
deception . Now, at last, an raised, they take the positlon1hat the 1ruth had been 'discove-red
opportl!nlty has arisen to find out well. ha. ha , everybody does It . and was about to rome out
just how s•rious ·they are about That Is untrue. but In any case so anyway) that he was the leakPr
condemning w rongdolng, what? Are thesl" supersel)sltlve who slipped a copy of I he Senate
whoever the -miscreant may be.
moralists, who have been postur- lntelli,;tcnce Committee's co nllWill they join me In calling on ·lng on television lor the past dentlal preliminary report on the
the U.S. Senatl" to officially . couple of months as the very Iran / contra tangle to John
censure Se.n. Patrick Lea hy embodiment of public virtue, Dancy of N"BC News last De·
(D,Vt.) fo r leaking confidenllal arguing that misconduct ought to cember. Thecommltteehad just
information to the media? Or is go unpunished merely because voted narrowly to keep thHeport
condemnation for lying and de- lots or people have engaged In It? secret, and the Irony Is that this
ceil, In the Democrats' opinion,
Besides , Sen. Leahy Isn't jl!st sanctimonious old hypocrite ac·
only for the likes of Ollie North? your garden .varlety sinner tually voted with the majority.
The congressional Democrats he's somet hing special. He was.
Leahy's defenders havr a t- ''
and their cronies in the media In the first place. the ranking tempted to mitigate his offense
don't enjoy discussing leaks, for Dem~rat on the the Senate by arguing that there was no
the good reason that Ihis viciol!s Select Committee on Intelllng- classified · Information In the
and frequently Illegal practice Is ence during t_hl.' last Congress, ' report - · a contention th at
at the very heart of their alliance. and in that capacity was one of a suavely jl;l_ldes past the point that
( It was also the reason for
rnl"re handful of members whom the report itself was highly
President Reagan's decision that the president was reql!lred by conlldentla I.
his delicate Iran Initiative had to law to keep Informed on various
Normally a case of misconduct
be carried forward without In- extreme ly delicate matters. In by a U.S. senator ts lnvesllgated
forming Congress : It' he had addition. as leakers go, Sen . and punished, at least in the first
Informed it. our worst enemies In Leahy has been a veritable Instance. by the Senate Itself. But

Sane.voices in the desert
attention to historical grievances
and give more consideration to
present realities. That Is the
spirit In which King Hussein
presses his case for peace In the
Middle East.
I first met the king 30years ago
when I came here as a freshman
rn_ember of Congress. He was
then 22 years old and had already
served for fiv e years as the
Jordanian king. He Is now the
longest -serving monarch In the
world and is married to an
American -born woman , the
former Lisa Halaby.
King Hussein and Ql!een Noor,
as she Is now called~ had a dinner
for our little delegation (which
Included my former Senate colleague. CharleS' Percy of Illl·
no is). He again spoke with
refreshing candor and reasqn.
The king recognizes the right of
Israel to live at peace as an
Independent ·Jewish state within
secl!re borders. He also believes
that the Pillestlnlans are entitled
to a homeland, but he proposes
that this be done In a confederation with Jordan. The proposed
Palestinian entity would em_brace the West Bank and the
Gaza area held by Israel since
the 1967 war.
King Hussein, because of his
long, friendly reiationshp with
the United States and his re··
spected rote In the Mldde East
has gained for both himself and
his country a statue far beyond
what one would expect of a stille
with less than 3 million people.
The American government has
taken much the same position as
Hl!sseln In recent years. Even
some elements within the Palestine Libera lion Organlza !ion support this .formula as the most

'

I

Twins pulling away in.Western Divisiol)

WH~T'S WRONG- Cincinnati Reds manarer Pete &amp;11e (tell)
may be wonderln1 what's happeninlt to his telllll during Sunday's
action at Candlt'!ltick Park in San FranciiMlO. il'he Reds 10111 four
strai1ht to thuurl!ntr Giant~ and ""w their NLW""t Division i&lt;'ad
dwindle to jull&amp; one ~ame. (UPI)

Scoreboard ...
. . ""*'"'

Majors
"'ii

\TH,I.~U.

~ltrdlt,ll ' " Kt&gt;"Wh

.. K1111W t ·ny :s
f ~ r lllll4 J. TDNHIII• I
Nf"W ' '•rk 1, Drt r.il t
.Mit•llto••kH ), fllilt&lt;Aj{O l. 1!01
l ~·tw-llH .. tltd
~••

" I. l't l , HB
11Uttt 1.1 Ill Jl.il 1• 1

AI

II tt

t llli .,.

,,.lt....

I

l'lll..t~r ·P

Kfta~lk&lt;l.

Nf•'~~•"

r\tlaM•
Lot-. '-Crit'"'

I'Wii!Dw-.-w ·

Kug"'

lt lll! U .1oM I
lJ M . .. 1 iJ
tJ •1 IU I
rl Ill , IU A

IILIIIII.....,...I, 'l'•u• I

'111•....... "- fhh-.p I

......... .__u .....n .. . "' •

t ~•u•;••

t 'r-•••+w•l. Chul••• lf

nwna• l.. "''"' \'fir• :t

,.,_

"''.....,.."'I,.u
, '"""'"'
.. ••t
..... ,...

I'll . .... ~ ..

0••••• i Kl ~ Z.:l) »I Nr .. llo• ! laRk,

hr•4 i

fh&gt;-\t'tMd

INTEKSA.TIONAL U : \Gl ' F.
" ' I. Pt1 .
I olhlniiiii .. ( Nl'••\1· 1
Iii Ill .. .
11Ck'.. llllf'1' IN Y·NI. J
WI ·Ill :111
··~ .......... i ll~ )
iiCI )II
T11lt'Oo (J'k't I
38 .»! .a.
fW, .
Ift.. I)
H ~ .Jtf
l'tt'tiii••!Ot iTer )
K • . IJLJ
Rldm10 .. 4,\11 1
It IN .Ill!
MW11t 1ftlh
1t1 ll . 111

,.m.

·*

f llh·11p "' l'hll*lkolphllL 11i1M

._.,.."r

llol. l.o•ilo. lit "-1~r1h, .,leN
1lldll•l61 ~IPMI IUra... .....
I l...·l•""*'l wl 1-l... ,\nal'l,... , nl&amp;lll
,-l ... ·u. Mahl

Rft"-""'

KMivnt~U" 'Ii
Rif·hfntl..t I , t '•lumt..a ••: 1

,\Mr.IIH ,\., 1.1:.\t;t iE

y.,. ..,

"
So·"" \ ' orlll.

lfi IJI
1:1 u
,:i/1 l'! ,)fi

1..1rnk
:tlli'A II IIi.t' t'

II

.w 7' 1'•1

u

ItO!&gt;('"

~J

I. Pt·l. 1: R
. ll~
. ~f

.)Jl

.1'7:1 1:11,

"•"""' i l

........,....

l'l .l l l

:'11 .U .li!S

C'11lllerMil

-

li .'i l .lfl.l

I

l~t iiii!P

:0 1 .\ 1 , 111

:'1 1 ~

C'W)·

,

The Daily Sentinel
(t !!WS 1 ·1 ~ 961 )
A Ul\'l"lon of Mulllnwdla , lnt•.
, P uh tl!&lt; ht'&lt;l ( ' \ '4' 1'\ a ll l'rm14lR . Monda\
lhrnuJ!h F'r kl a,\·. Ill ('nur l Sl ., Pr•
nl l' l'tW. O hi o. IJv thl' Ohln Va llf"\ P ub·
lish!n·~ C•11,Tl l&gt;;;ny M ultl nrN'tln~· - , rrr. ,

Berry's World

Pnml•rm. 01110 ~!'i7fi9 , Pt] . ~2'.21~.o. Sr
r f•nd das 1- po.~lUJ!~ pJ id 111 Po mC'I 'ro~· .
Ohio .

M• ·ml)(&gt;r: Ltn!t&lt;'d Pl'l 'li~ ln lf'I'Mtll lona l.
1nl:tmt D:1I l,v P!'f'!l!l J\':-o;IX' i&lt;llilln a net t hC'
Ohio Nn 1..;o; pap1 'r A!l~)('iall o n . Nallonul
A(h'N1I !:In g _R r pr,. s(•tu a tlw . Ri·a nh am
Nt&gt;"K'ilp;_tpf'r S a l{'s , 7~1 Th l rU .Avf'nut• ,

N!'\l'' ' 'orlo: . Nf'w York 10017.
..sPOSTMASTER: f\1:•00 u ddt'PS~ &lt;·h ; m .c f~
10 Thr Da llv Sc\ntint'l. 111 Court ~L.
Pt1 m1'ro~·. Oh.lo .tr•'lti~,

Sl}BSI'RIPTtON KATES

By ('arrltr or Mol or Roulr
Onf' Wl't&gt;k ........... ,.......... ... ..... ..... $1.2r•
Onl' Monlh ................................ .$5.-l!i

On"

\'('OJf . .. .. ... ....... .............. ·. , S~ . oo

SINGLE COPV
PRICE

Dall~ · .. , ..... .. ... .... ..... ...... ....... 25 CC' Oti!

Subsrrlbf&gt;r:- not &lt;ll'~l r ln g to pay tht',ear·
rlrr m&lt;.tV' rl'mll In ad\•an&lt;'C' &lt;li i'N'I In
Th~ Duliy S(&gt;nllnf'l nn u :!, 6or 12 m~n1h
ba~L~ .

Crrdll will!)(• ~lwn ("&lt;JrriM' ~arh

W('('k ,

No ~Ub.'ll&lt;"l'lpllonr~ b~· mall pNmill£'li In
arras "'heri' Mmr &lt;'arrirr l't'n•lcr Is
&lt;1 \'U IIt~bl f' .

Mall

wfl&amp;t c&amp;h I tell ya/lt's just not
'
(

Sloindll,)'' ,.llof' .. ldt ..

I ohnn'-"'l. Kh•knMIWI :l
S) tillt'M,. l , M111t_. I

ktwhP!Itt' r

:11 1

llllkiMtl

r:.n·••• I. ·" bt"" I
ftlu·lwtott&gt;r I, P ~tW IIII • Ikrt I
Tl..-lltrr l. T•h•• I

l':.w·tUI·fl.lot t. Rot•IM'!Iuor ~
Tldo •loUIII'f 7, T;...... ':
Mon41,f ' ~ Gatn1-:.
TIIWIIIolllo-r Ill l ' nlum .....

WI Ill . I:W. II
II '1D .;itit tCI

!ll.llltnor-·
('lor\ !'I !Wid

~tu • .,....t• . "'•"'

l '•tk _. K lU I - (' .(y, •IJtM
Oi!khUI.al IW'II Ik-, IIIJthl

'flo,...ilQ- ' .. flam ....
lfMIIrf'a.l 1111 """"' \ 'orlr., •I~ hi

'li tl

"'•Ill

\'1•\6'

"-~·· rn•,...l•1·~)al !iluf'r_d...-. ,

Tnru•u

"'"""!It
•liN
llitlum.. ,..,

, a.~

t 11 tl•or-'.~ •

I•W ll

i't~ -1..-.1 ! lt•NII.,.. ~· 3 1 111 1,\lll..t• ... 1\ '.l•·llil..,.l• ft.t) , II :.U • . m .

By George McGovern

'

lh'ttoilit.ll hioiiU . ai.M
To· u .. ~ Mllw .. w , "ll,ll

;:.u, Ill

"*' ,..,••

le; Jl p.... .

Tor•nll., ial

(•l tliW'io f..H . II! U p , t'il

Hl•vM• ..

i~ .

1\lo'lod.IIIJ ' O. H11Ph ..

C11hap t \ot•-' •'r .Ill :u 1'1tii .... I,W:.
t K . tir-611 ), ~ : llp. rn
Nl . I.e•.._ {Ft~ N II t-~ 1 111 Pllt..n..n~t

I IIU\ f'ri(,1' ~~~ . II: l l

II ilt••: .1) p. m ,

:-.~ \'• rli f .\r~Wwra I·I J "' K»•,..,.

)lu•rt"ld t MMrtW.. I-l l IU s - \uf.
!MIIohooll· ll) , 1: • p m.

!'&gt;lilt

lli61t ...

nt y ~ J.~ •. ._.._ '- ' ' '' ": ll • . m.

Hu•"'""

lU

•I

Tf' ~ ll.. ~~ .J.fiUUI t-Ill iU :WII•·••kt( Hipl'ht

M••llq '., f:•m• ....

~~~~

"-4olt

r..K) , M , nl.

:ol.la YriYio'l'&gt;l'll I , I I•• iA_,.ll ~. '!1011
~tt..,;ptp.. • II.St l..o•"' tl ttnNt~~
1. - '-•JCrlb l, ,\lliUIIIII '!
U"'p I,
J

•••1- a i \ ...,.,. ..,

iit

•••

C'hl1 ,.., 4. ~'' " ' rw,k l
11ll""*rch l. M••rr~t~ J
"-•• .~rwad...'111. 11at1•MI I '!. ,,..

. , ........ 71 ) ,

ST~TTON.

1n~uM 111. :: Jt p.m
DwituM !Trrn•ll t-JI ) at f'klt'IIIO li)of.,

I. H.. ~ .. :t.. Ui h•••r

~'WM-&gt;' ' "' llr~~o~lll~

)11-.a

:.rwo ··~ o.nll.,..
•

l4tolldQ' ..
'hret~ e cf'ld1')
••·Il l
(I·.,.,._ 11·1t. l : • p.m.
Of'\rl•• ' ' 'I'll . l ·ll

Suhttcri~Mions

lhsldc Mt:I~H (l,oun'y
13 Wrif' k ~ ...............................~ .. $17.29
26 Wet·k&lt; .. , .... ,..... ,...... .............. S.\4.06
~2 W!'&lt;ks , ..... ...... ,,....... ..... ........ $66.M
Outalde M•IP County
13 Wl'l.'ks ,,, ... , ... ........ ... ... .. .... .. .. $1R.20
26 Works ....... ,.. .. .......... ...... .... . $.\~. 10
~2 Wooks ... ,, ........ ,.... . ,.... .... .... $67.1\11

Ml

MaiM'

SytoU'M""' lll I'IIIW IIII•kll'l

Kld1monll "' Tol1'1111

By BILL WOLLE
UPI Sports Writer
By displaying domjnance at
home essential to capturtn_g a
pennant, the Minnesota Twins
are pulling away from the
competition in the West.
Kent Hrbek, Torn Brunansky,
Tim Lal!dner and Gary Gaetti
belted home rqns Sunday to
power the Twins to a 7-5 victory
over the Oakland Athletics for
asweep ot the four-game series
between the teams who began the
weekend !led.
'
The Twins are 37-16 In the
Metrodome this season al)d, not
colncll)entally , lead the AL West
by 3'h games over the California
Angels. Oakland is lour games
behind.
" I have · no answer," said
Hrbek on Minnesota's home
record. "Maybe It's the fans . I
don't know if the other team can't
see the ball well or wha t. I just
know we like to play here."
Winner Bert Biyle_ven, 11 -9,

scattered seven hits and three mer of the year, ~ two-run shot,
runs over six innings . Jeff gave the Twins a 6-2 lead In the
Reardon pitched two Innings for sixth.
hls 23rd save and needs one save
Gaettl hit his 23rd home run. a
to equal Minnesota's team total .solo blast In the eighth, to give the
from last season . .
Twins a 7-3 lead.
Elsewhere In the AL, Toronto
Steve Ontiveros, 6-6, took the
loss despite pitching a complete dumped Cleveland 5-l, Kansas
·
game.
City bombed Boston 8-3, J:!etroit
"They pitched better, they hit pounded New York -15-4, Baltibetter. they played defense bet· more edged Texas 5-4. Mliwal!ter ," said Oakland Manager kee stopped Chicago 8-4 and
Tony-LaRussa. "It's real bad to California &lt;allied past SE-attle 7come in here and play this bad 5.
In the NL, it w~s Chicago 6,
four days and get beat four times .
We just got outplayed."
New York 3; Pittsburgh 4,
Hrbek hit his 27th home mn, a Montreal 3; Philadelphia 8, St.
three-mn blast, to give Minne- Louis 71n 14-lnnlngs; Los Angeles
sota a 3-1lead in the third.
5, Atlanta 2, and San Diego 4,_
"We're playing hard and right Houston 3. San Francisco swept a
now everything's working," said double- header from Cincinnati
Minnesota outfielder Kirby by scores of 3-2 and 5·2.
Puckett. "We're getting good
Royals H, Red Sox 3
pitching and scoring runs. Ever·
At Boston, Steve Balboni
ythlng' s jl!sl clicking."
capped a four-mn fourth Inning
Brunansky's 21st homer pl!t with a two-run dol!ble and Kevin
Minnesota ahead 4-1 in the Seltzer. belted a solo homer and
fourth . Tim Laudner's 14th ho· drove In two Tl!ns. powering

Vt . tUPil- Rain
was forecast for today In the
Vermont mountains. threatening
the resumption of the Ivan
Lendl-John McEnroe matchup in
the si ngles finals of the $315,000
Volvo International.
McEnroe held a 7-6 17·31, 1-4
advantage over Lend! on Sunday
before play was suspended due to
rain.
·
. '
The match was scheduled to
resume this morning, and the
doubles finals will also be played.
Pla y Is scheduled to start at 10

a. m. EDT . The doubles pairing Is
No. 1 seeds Paul Annarone and
Christo van Rensburg against
second- seeded Ken Flach and
Robert Seguso.
Lend!, the top seed and defendIng champion, began play
ajl;ainst McEnroe, seeded fol!rth,
at 12:40 p.m. EDT. Light sprinkles caused a pair of two-minute
interruptions after three games '
of the second set; play was
sus~nded after Lend! held serve
In the fifth game.
The match was officially post-

Physicals set for midget loop players
-

1111
I

t
t4

t•,

I'!

lt l.,

It'.,
.

By Jim Sol!lsby
Dave Jenkins, President of thl'
newly formed Big Bend Mldgei
Football League, has announced
that equipment fitting, weigh In
and physicals will be adminis tered to all prospective player at
6:30p.m. on Wednesday, August
12th, at thl' Coonhunter's ·Build·
lng at the Meigs County
Falrgrol!nds .
·
A parent or legal guardian
must accompany the player, or
cheerlPader, at this time. A
non-refundable $15.00 membership fee to cover Insurance and
other league expenses will be

due. The parent should be prepared to purchase equipment
n .e. helmet' shoulder pads and
pants) at this meeting. The total
cost for thl'Se items has not been
finalized, as yet.
Additional players and cheerleaders may sign up Wednesday
with the final date for applications set for Septpmber 1st.
Those wishing to contribute to
the program may send their
donation to P .O. Box 129. Pomeroy, Ohio. Further Information
may be obtained by contacting
any coach or league officer. ·

.

poned until today at 5:30 p.m.
Sunday, after tournament referee Sean Sloane halted play at
1: 49 p.m. and the players left the
court at 2:08p.m. When the light
rain showed no sign of ceasing .

tire after the 1988 Olympics, said
break lng her Pan Am mark
shows how much she has Improved In the past fol!r years.
''I missed a few dives .then and
on a few others, maybe I'm a
little better. I'm getting better,
like a fine wine." she said.
Neyer shook her head in
disgust after arching sideways
on her next· to-last dive.
"It was either that or get a
lobotomy," she said. "It was
disappointing. My goal was to
land on my head 10 times and I
did it 9 %. I just didn't have the
same type of top I usually have."

INDIANAPOLIS (UP))
·points. Canada's Debbie Fuller
Kelly McCormick, a 1984 Olym- was third with 491.94 points.
pic silver medalis t, nailed two Neyer, a former world chamoo"'erllul dives in her last turns pion, was locked in a battle with
the 3-meter springboard McCormick for the gold medal
SUo&gt;da,y to break her own Pan l!ntil the ninth rol!nd, when she
American Games record and missed a reverse 2'h somersault
start an anticipated American dive from the tuck position.
gold ru sh at the pool.
McCormick, 27. of Columbus,
McCormick, dal!ghter of 1955 Ohio, took the lead for good by
Pan Am diving champion Pat. scoring 67.50 points on her ninth
McCormick, complied 562,77 dive, a reverse 2~ pike with the
points In 10 dives to eclipse the highest possible degree of dlffi·
standard of 500.73 points she set culty. She clinched thll gold
winning the 19&amp;3 title In medal with a strong backwards
1% pike with 3~ twists.
Caracas. Venez.
,
McCormick, who plans to re' Tm really happy because I
was consistent.· It ali boils down
to If you hit 10 times, yol! will
usl!aily win," said McCormick,
Olympics coming up next year, It
COLUMBUS, Ohio 1UPI)
the first woman to repeat as a
'was
definitely a big plus.
Ohio State's Butch ·Reynolds,
Pan Am diving champion.
"I wanted to train freely and
saying making the 1988 u,s.
"Wow. I guess that's someOlympic team 1s his "ultimate have a schedule that would ru me
thing my mother didn't do," she
said with a laugh. Her mother , goal," announced he will forego just right. That (the OlympiCs) is
his !ina,! year of college ellgtblllty the ultimate goal tor me ... that's
~issed the 1951 springboard title
to concentrat~ on earning the something that I couldn't let go
by just 4 points.
by, because of other
right to compete In Seoul.
obligations."
.
Reynolds,
the
nation's
top·
The United States Is expected
Reynolds,
6-foot-3,
180-pi&gt;uitds
ranked
Ql!arter-mller,
lett
Coto sweep aside virtually all
and
a
native
o!Akron,
has run tl\e
lumbus for Europe Saturday
competition in swimming and
alter making the announcement. fastest 400-meter times In the
diving. U.$. officials have projected winning 26 of a Jiosslble 29
"It was a tough decision," world this year, Including the
gall! medals in swimming and all
Reynolds told the Columbus fastest time ever allow altitude,
gold medals In diving.
· Dispatch. "But you always have a 44.10 clocking at the Jesse
Megan Neyer, 26, Boca Raton,
to weigh t_he pros·and cons when Owens Classic In Ohio Stadium
Fla., finished secqnd wltli 544.32
making a decision. And with the May 3.

Butch Reynolds leaving Ohio Stale

I

McEnroe, believing the match
should have been suspended
sooner, asked chair umpire Rl·
chard Kal!fman, '' Why don 't yol!
jl!st give lilm the set? In the
meantime I've lost a break and
two chances (to break Lendl's
serve),"
When asked by Kaufman to
wait another two minutes, McEnroe responded, "Why? So I can
lose my serve again?"
Sloane said that because
McEnroe was losing the second
set, hls complaints were
expected.

ARE YOU

"

YOU' DON'T NEm

.A CREDIT CARD?

McConnick breaks oWn record

'o

Kansas City. John Davis, 1-Q,.
worked 6 2-3 innings of !our·hil
relief in his first !llaJor-leagu'e
decision. Steve Crawford, 4-3, ·
took the loss.
·
Tigers 15, Yankees t
.
At Detroit, Pat Sheridan's
two-mn double and ,Darrell
Evans' solo home run hlghllgl\ted the Tigers' nine-run fourth
Inning against New York. Loser
Dennis Rasmussen, 8·6, an!!
three Sl!ccessors walked four
batters and threw three wild
pitches in the fourth Inning.
Winner Dan Petry, 7-5, went
·
'
eight innings.
Orioles 5, Rangers 4
,
At Baltimore, pinch hitler Ray
Knight singled to score pinch
runner Alan Wiggins from third
base with two out In the nlntli·
Inning, lifting the Orioles over
Texas. John Habyan, 4-3, pitched'
·one-hlt ball over 3 1-3 Innings.
The loss went to Charlie Hol!gh,
11-8. The Rangers have lost eighJ
of their lastll games.

Rain mars Volvo finals match
.

I

llll•~~~ 1. O~tol.lllft• l

,\tfut.111 t. IMo J\•cM;o.. 7

~ ;oal)i.o• p

n:,. ;., BMI- :s

IMrM U. Nf"W \ •rlk I

"-'

,~~ ..

t'I IIIH•• J
!'.t.... Q . .. Jt4.,..tt"

Tutoot~~• J. r~f'l-d

l~

.... F t-•1·""

S

·"'"~" t , 0•1lJ••ui 't

"'''"'' 111

I l... ti'IIWI I

ft.I.R~

Tn;a'" II,

li Jl .Il l It' I
U !U .lit I'!
.wt II . IM 11' t

ftll•tk-I,N II

:II 5i . IT7 1
H G . .. t I~

Cllh: ~t~•

U : \1•1 t:

"''"
\ .,"
M • lllllto· --

hll(h·ranktnp: members of that
body have known about Leahy's.
leak to Dancy s ine~, Janl!ary.
when ·LA!a by confessed it pri·
vately to Sen. David Boren, the.
Incoming chairman or the lnteili·
1ence Commlllee. Inllea&lt;S · of,
,calling for a thorough Inquiry,'
Boren allowed Leahy to resign
quietly from thl' committee on
the pretext that he was too busy
with other thln~s to serve out the
remainder ol his term as a'
member.
So perhaps the whole mess
ought to Ill' referred to the Jl!sticp
Department , which has the back·
stop obltjl;atlon to make sure that ·
the laws of this country are
enforced _ Lot the Department
launch a comprl'henslve tnvestl-·
gation of Leahy's career as a
i~aker , and l~t the trail IPad
where It will. And If It reveals
that a crlmeorcrlml's have been .
committed , let's prosecute the
gentleman from Vermont and
givl' Ollll' North some hlghclass
company on that rock pile at
LPavenworth. ·

s..· :n ·"" •

Ti' ~ll ..

'' ttw••·• rn,~
l•tf'rtwtloftltl
t.:.·~

practical resolution of the Arab- !Ions 242 and 338. He fully
Israeli conflict.
recognizes the right of Israel to
A former head of s~urlty and live In peace and the practical
lntelllgpnce for the PLO necessity of associating a PalesGeneral Atallah Atallah. who tinian homeland wlih the governaskf'CI to meet with Sen. Percy ' ment of Jordan. I am not able to
and me - claims that many appraise Ataliah's support
Palestinians are tired of the within the PLO. but his views,
violence that has , frequ ently like those of King Hl!sseln.
characterized PLO tactics.
rl"present a measure of-sanity In
Atallah favors the Hussein this region so dominated by folly.
approach. based on U.N. Resolu -

"Hey folks mydayl"

phla outlasted St. Louis 8-7 In 14
Pirates 4, ExpM S
innings, Pittsburgh nipped MontAt Pittsburgh, Darnell Coll!s
real ~3. , Los Angeles downed delivered- an elghth·innlng RB[
Atlanta 5-2· and San Diego edged ·double for his first hit as ll Pirate
Houston 4-3.
and Andy Van Slyke followed
In the 'American · League, It with a pinch-hit, two- run homer,
was : Kansas City 8, Boston 3;
to help defeat Montreal. Mike
Toronto 5, Cleveland 1; Detroit Dunne, 7-4. was the winner. Jim
15, New York 4; Baltimore _5, Gott pitched the ninth for his:
Texas 4; Minnesota 7, Oakland 5;
second save. Jeff Parrett, 3-4,:
·
Milwaukee 8, Chicago 4; and took the loss.
California 7, Seattle 5.
Dodtrel'!l 5, Braves 2
.
At Los Angeles. Shawn HilleCubs I, Mets 3
.
At New York, Jody Davis' RBI gas allowed seven hils over 8 2-3.
single · highlighted a four- run lnl)lngs In his major- league
seventll. leading Chicago, which debl!t and John Shelby contrib-·
turned four dol!ble plays. Scott uted his 17th home run, lifting the:
Sanderson, 5-6, yielded eight hlis Dodgers over Atlanta. Hillegas;
over six ·Innings for the victory. 22, was recalled Friday from:
Lee Smith got one out for hls 28th Albuquerque of the PCL, where:
save. Dwight Gooden fell to9-4 as he posted a 13-5 record. Timthe Mets lost their second Crews notched his first major-!
straight, ,
league save.
·
Phlllles 8, Cardinals 7
Padres 4, Aslros 3
At Philadelphia, Lance ParAt San-Diego, Chris Brown led:
rish !led the score with a home off the fol!rth Inning with a home;
run and Steve Jeilz tripled home run and winning pitcher Eric·
the winner In the 14th, ra llying Show , 6·13, delivered an RBr
the Phillles past St. Louis. Wally single two outs later, helping the
Ritchie, T-o, pitched one-third of Padres complete a three-gan'(e
an inning for the victory. Jack series sweep of Houston. GooSe
Clark of the Cardinals tied an NL Gossage notched his lOth save.
record by drawing a walk ior the Houston starter Bob Knepper,
15th consecutive game.
4·13, went six innings.

'

... 1.-1..

By DICK WEST
;. WASHINGTON (UPI)- Back during the Korean War, I think It
:;Was~ or some such "police action"- certain Individuals and groups
4)) America were forever calling for the "unleashing" of Chiang
Kal-shek.
· I don't recall that Sen. Claiborne Pell, D-R.I., was among those
IJlaking such demands, bu,t I was nevertheless reminded of that
'period by ari article he wrote called " Get Tough With Pakistan."
• I can't say the blanket of security Imposed between Pakistan and
AMMAN, Jordan - VIsiting .
the Senate chamber by Capitol pollee had anything to do with Pell's
here after 12 yeats, I am ·
);enttments.
overwhelmed
by th~ tragedy of
· Let me just observe that It Is fairly easy to "get tough" with another
the
unresolved.
long·smolderlng
country if you don't have to face that country's riflemen or nuclear
Arab·lsraeli
dispute
.. But a
)varrlors.
thoughtful
visitor
who
listens to
· To refresh your memory, ChiangKal-shek, or Shanghai- shek, as he
the
views
of
Jordan'
s King
was called by one of Pelt's predecessors as chairman of Senate
wjll
recognize
that
here '
Hussein
foreign Relations Committee, was the Chinese Nationalis-t leader
is
a
voice
of
sa
nity
that
Is
ali
too
who was "driven" from the Chinese mainland after World War II.
rare
In
the
Middle
East.
••The Nationalist troops were "nel!traltzed" on Formosa, the Island
At the hea rt of the Arab-Israeli
to which they fled from the comml!nlst regime, by U.S.'forces during
are the Palestinian refu•
conflict
the Korean War; hence, the demands that they be l!nleashed.
gees and descendents who, in
: Pe(haps this would not have affected theol!tcome of the fl~htlng In
1948,
fled from their homes In
!{orea, but "unleashing" has always seemed to me to be a,legltimate
what
is now Jsraei. A second
tactic. Or shortcoming.
wave
of
Palestinians wpre also
. I f!iean, the Contras in Nicaragua were practically crying for men
displaced
-by the 1967 war.
and money to use against the Sandanlstas. So the National Security
million
Palestinian refugeE,&gt;s
A
staff p!Spol'~ed by unleashing Lt. Col. Oliver North.
.
live
In
Jordan
- the largest
If Patrick Bl!chanan. a former White House communications
number
fol!nd
In
any Middle
director whO subsequently called for North's pardon, had been
Eastern
country
.
Another
half·
unlea~hed simultaneously, It might have made a difference.
million
Palestinians
reside
here
Anyway, there Is no dol!bt that some pundits are more belligerent
who
are
not
officially
registered
than others.
.
·
as refugees. and another 1
Every Hollywood writer, judging from the titles of two box office
million Palestinians live In the
smashes this summer, Is In a retalitory mood. I refer to "Jaws- The
West
Bank . .occupied by Israel
Revenge"· and "Revenge of the Nerds II."
1967.
since
I'm not suggesting that whales and college undergraduates have
The question Is what can be
anything 1n common, beyond a desire to get even, and both films.
done
to proVitle a homeland for
jUdging !rom their titles, were sequels.
these
displaced Palestinians
• Both, according to some figures I saw, grossed less than "Snow
along
with others living in
'
'
While and the Seven Dwarfs," which was re-released. So maybe
Lebanon
and throughout the
motion picture producers learned something from that.
East.
.
Middle
•J mean. would anyone seriously suggest a remitl.te of the
That question can never be
f;ature-length cartoon under such titles as ''Dirty Salt and the Seven
resolved
by hard-liners In either
!1war!s" or "Snow White and the Seven Nerds?"
Israel
or
the
Arab world- unless
:HollywOod might as well have unleashed Mickey Mouse . .
they succeed In eliminating each
other. The extremists ·on each
sh1e are filled with memories of
· historical claims and gri&lt;'vances
.
that justify their unwillingness to
:
B;v United Press International
compromise with the hated
enemy.
~oday ts Monday, Aug. 10, the 222nd day of 1987 w1th 143 to follow. ,
ll'he moon Is waning, moving away from Its full phase.
The philosopher George San!fhe momlng stars are Mercury , Ven~s and Jupiter.
tayana observed years ago that
:J'he evening stars are Mars and Saturn.
·
those who do not remember
'fhOfle born on this day are under the sign of Leo. They include
history are conde~ned to repeat
Eilmund Jennings Randolph, the first U.S. attorney general, In 1753;
it. But in this case, I think the two
Herbert Hoover, 31st president of the United States, in 1874·
sides would do well to pay less

Today
in history
.

grounds.
After our report was published.
an Israeli embassy official In
Washington said hl' "strongly
disagreed" with and "resented"
our suggestion that Arab·
Americans were being treated
any differently from other A mer·
leans by Israeli border officials.
We were unimpressed by his
claimed 1indignation, and the
mall we received In response to
tfiat column - , as well as
subsequent events in Israel clearly showed that the embassy
spokesman's denial of discriml·
nation was ridiculous .
"Your column regarding Dr.
Kader was very disturbing,"
wrote Waiter Earl Blssex ol
Austin. Texas, "but It un!ortumately cames as no surprise, I
have heard many such stories
from Arab·AmPrlcan ·friends
abol!t entering Israel. "
Bissex added: "I am acquainted with Dr. Kader and
know 'h im to be a vt&gt;ry dignified
and peaceful person . That he
would be treated In sl!ch a way Is
Ol!trageous."
A grocer in Westley. Calif.,
wrote: "As an Arab (Palestl·
nlanl American who has flown
back many times to visit family,
I kpow thl' humiliation and
degradation that Mr. Kader must
-have .gone _through."
_
Judith E ; Tuckt'r, an assistant
professor of history at Georgetown University, called Kader's
ordeal "an experi&lt;'nce similar to
my own." Beca~se she is married to an Arab-American, sill'
and her 1·year-oid daullhter were
singled out In the summer of I~
"to receive honorary Arab trl'at·
mt&gt;nt." she wrote. This is her
description ol that treatmE-nt, by
Israeli border olflc.lal$:
We werP thoroughly strip
searched (Including the diaper)
and every Item we were carrylnp:·
was prodded, X·rayf'CI and/or:
photocopied.

Who's leaking flOW _ _ _ _ _ _ _w_U_lia_m_R_u._sM__,r
For several months now we

The Daily Sentinei-Ptlge-3

.

We ~now ~ou · don't need another biU to pay.
But haven t you ever .
·
'

*'Veeded ident~(Wation to write a check?
*Been stranded out of town without cosh?
*Wanted to order tickets or make ·room
reservation.• over the phone? .
Then · :vou need a Peoples Bank VISA or
1\fASTERCARD~ ·
Just h.avin{{ tluJt "piece of plastic;, can !five :vou
f{reater peace o.f mioo - even if it never leaves
.~our pocket.
·

..

To receive :vour applicqtion, caU Randy

.
9

r.·-~va~n=\.t=et=e=r~o:r:\ot:a:r:k:_G:· =· =a~t=6~7=5-~J~l2:1~.====·
r
. oves:

-F.D.I.C.

........
......
773-5514

PEOPLES
.·BANK ·~

...
=

.,

"Jite letter
lank".

.

Polllt

'

5tlt Ausrw
...HIM, •. Vir.

W. Vir.

. 1 .

•-m~

J

'l

1,.

"

•

�.
'
Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Blue Jays lop Indians, ·take o~er _firSt

''
'•--•

FIELDS GROUND BALL - Toronto's Rance
fields .
ground ball of! bat of Cleveland's Cory Snyder during ninth Inning
play In Municipal Stadium Sunday. The Blue Jays beat the Indians,
5-l. to climb Into first place In the AL East Division. (UPI)
I

I ''

.,

,;--.Jo .

~ - ·- -

. • •....
"

-'

NELSON WINS PGA TOURNEY - Lanny Wadkins (left)
.congratulates Larry Nelson alter Nelson won the 1987 PGA
tourney at Palm Beach Gardens, Fla., Sunday In a sudden death
playoff. (U.PI)

"Up, Up and Away with 4-H , Donohue and Janet Spencer,
Fashion" was the theme of the honorable mention; and Linda
1987 style revue held Thursday Chapman, Cynthia Cotterill, Ginnight on the hlll stage of the Rock ger Findley, Robin Hall, Sherry
Springs Fairgrounds.
Johnson, and Erin Smith.
Following the welcome by
"Topping Your Outfit" - Eli·
Cindy Oliveri, county extension zabeth Downie, grand cham·
11-gen't, Pansy Jordan , 4-H pro- pion; Sara Machlr. reserve; Lisa
gram assistant, Cindy Pitzer, Hoffman, Bobble White, honoraactivities assistant, and Bill ble mention, Jessica Chevalier,
Crane, 4-H committee member, · Jamie Erwin. Heather Hudson.
narrated the revue.
and Elizabeth Lawson.
Ed Collins, Scott Oberholzer,
•• Joyful Jumj)er" . - Debra
Joe Pllrker. and Robin White · Frost , grand champion; Melissa
were escorts ..
Dempsey, reserve champion;
The Junior Fair royalty, Pam Noelle Pickens and Heather
Ash. queen, and Scott Ober· Well. honorable mention; Steholzer, kin g, were Introduced as phanie Hoffman, J anelle Neutwere members of the 1987 fashion zling, Amyu Beth Redovlan, and
board, Melissa Calaway, Beth Michelle Young.
Clark; Donna Clark. Heather
•'Clothes for Middle School'· Finlaw, Renee Kaylor, Michelle Michelle Laughery. grand chamLaughery, Greta Riffle, and pion, Melissa Neutzling, reMichelle Young.
serve. Sherr! Smith and Sherr!
Modeling In the various catego- Wolf, honorable mention, and
Ruby Burke.
ries of clothil'lg were as follows:
"Clothes for High School and
· ~Adventures
In Clothlng"Jennlfer Mora, grand champion; Beyond" - Renee Young, grand
Angle Hale, reserve; Barbara champion; Laurie Shenefield,

Wadkins. who shot 73. Nelson
klns ·said jokingly . , "But the close to the hole. I just ground It
won the championship when hE' check (for $90.000) will help a out...
sa nk a n 8-foot par putt on the first
little bit."
Until Scott Hoch three-putted
playoff hole and Wadkins missed
Wadkins said he knew he had a from 8 feet on the !h)al hole, It
a 6-footer.
fight on his hands when he wound looked like he would make it a
three-way playoff.
"I just hoped I read it the way I up In the playoff with Nelson.
thought It would go," Nelson
"Larry Is quiet and unassumHoell, posting five birdies In a
said "I've played with Lanny 1in · lng, but when he's In the hunt he's six-hole span, vaulted out of the
Ryder Cup action) more than a heck of a compeutlor:· wad- pack\ with a . 3-under 69 that
I've pla yed against him. I knew I klns said. "We're good friends enabled him to tie third-round
had to make that putt and I was and I have all the respect In the co-leader D. A. Welbrlng (76) at
surprised when he missed his .
"It's been awhile," said Nel- world
" I played
todaygame.
on guts and even-par
Mark 288.
McCumber (77}, the
lor hls.gol!
son, who hadn 't won previously determination,'" said. Wadkins, 'other ~bird-round co-leader, and
since the 1984 Walt Dusney World who ha~ two double bogeys. "I Don Pooley (72} tied for fifth at
ClassiC. "This Is a nice way to didn't !eel my game was under 289 and Bobby Wadkins (77) and
come back. I can look forward to · control. Due to the wind and firm Ben Crenshaw (74) were at 290.
the next four or five years."
greens, It was hard to get the ball
Nelson said he told his two
sons, who followed him around
the golf course Sunday, that he
thought 1-under would be good
SAN DIEGO (UP!) - Rat- . Minter to 5-0. The No. 3 seed
enough to win. "When I saw the faella Reggl of Italy rolled to her dropped just one set In four
wind, I thoughtevenparwoulddo fourth career title Sunday, de- matches this week at the San
it ."
feating Australian Anne Minter, 'Diego Tennis and Racquet Club.
' For Wadkins, the 1977 PGA 6-0, 6-4 to capture the $75,000
The victory was Reggl's first
c hampion, lt was' the third VIrginia Slims of San Diego· since last November, when she
second-place finish In the presti- tennis tournament.
·
won the Puerto Rico Open. She
gious event in the past seven
will be seeded 14th In this week's
. Reggl, 21, took just 65 minutes $250,000 VIrginia SUms of Los
years.
. ,
"I'm tired of collecting silver to win the top priZe of $15,000 and Angeles tournament at Manhatmedals Instead of gold," W~d- Improve her ll!etlme r.ecord over . tan Beach, Call!.
'

MONDAY
RACINE - Southern Board of
Education will meet In special
session Monday, 8 p.m .. at the
high schooL
RUTLAND - Bible School
Monda y through Friday. 6: 30 to
8:30p.m ., at Rutland Church of
Chr)st.
EAST MEIGS- Eastern Local
Board of Education will meet in
special session Monday, 7: 30
p.m .. at the high schooL
ROCK SPRINGS - Cross
cou.ntry practice for Meigs High
School will begin 9 a.m. Monda)&lt;.

•

POMEROY - Disabled AmerIcan Veterans will hold their
annual· picnic at the state park on
southbound 33, just south of
Darwin, Monday, 6 p.m.; those
attending are to. take a covered
dish.

Reggi captures Virginia Slims tourney

Reva Mullen. Second row~ Pam Ha&amp;o, Mary
Compston, Trlcht Baer, Kelly Smtty, Kim
Hannln,, and Chrissy Weaver. Third row Coaches Ed Baer, Mike Gerlach and Rich A!lh.

..
.•

CA:RRIER
NEEDED
FOR SPRING AVE
POMEROY.

•',•

•

-

If
INTERESTED' PLEASE CALL
·

THE DAILY SENTINEL OFFICE

992 •21 56

t~~~~;~~~~~~;,~~;~;~~~~~~~~
•·

revue at tile Oblo Stale Fair. Lelt to riJbl,lbey are
Elizabeth Downie. Debra Frost, Pettay Aelker,
and Jennifer Mora.

NEW NliRSE - Pam Riebel, Baum Addition, near
Pomeroy, WBII amon&amp; the 24
paduates who received an
Associate Detrree (R.N.) In
NurtllnJ lrom Rio Grande
Colle&amp;e-Communlly ColleJe
Holzer School of NurslnJ. The
Jlllh commencement was
held at Rio Gran de Collere on
June 14. Riebel iii currently
employed as a paduale nurse
at Camden-Clark Memorial
Hospital, Parkersburg, W.
Va.,ln the orthopedic· surgical
unit. She Is a paduate of
Eastern Htrh School and lslhe
daughter of John aDd Glenna
Riebel.

PINELLAS PARK. Fla . iUPI )
- Sentimental pet owners ca n
now freeze-dry the ir departed
dogs and ca ts - a process that
the founder or Preservation
Specialties Inc. says works so
well it could someday be used on
humans.
Jeffrey Weber, who founded
the company In November, has
freeze-dried 25 pets - mostly
dogs and cats .
"Generally. people have a
negatlve reaction when they first
hear about it. " Weber told The
Tampa Tribune. "But these
same people later bring us their
pets alter they think about It a
while."
Weber said the owners take
their freeze-dried pets home and
~ __J!llt them In the pet's favorite
spot. ./&lt;""

·

''•

!Dining Room Onlyl

Strvlll with wlllpptcrpotetoa, c~ickenlr1¥J, cole
SIIW, hot roll, butter end colfH. Sorry, no substitutes except bever11t with eddltionel price.

FOR JUST .

S3.25

NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE DINNER

CROW'$ FAMilY RESTAURANT

PH. 992·5432

POMIIOY, ON.

••'
•
.,•
•

;

!

•:
:,:•
•:
'•
••
'.

:.

" II the cat 's favorite position
was by the fireplace or on the loot
of the bed, that's where they wind
up, " he said. ·
First the pets get a chemical
bath. They are shaped In a
predetermined position wtth
wires, 'frozen aqd placed ln a
·$30,000 vacuum chamber where
their moisture is removed, •'leav-

Long· Bottom coromunity notes

New o!!lcers were elected at
the recent meeting of the Long
Bottom Community Association
held at the hall.
Elected were Melody Roberts,
president ; Juanita Wells. vice
• • president and new&amp; reporter;
Mae McPeek. secretary; Er.nes- .
• tine Hayman, treas~rer; Alta
•

...-.
,.
COMBINATION DINNER ONlY

10. 1987
~-6

reserve; Barbara Coleman,
Donna Curtis, honorable mention, a'nd Jodi Brown and Angela
Donohue.
"Sports Clothes, Active" Penny Aelker, grand champion;
April Hudson; reserve.
"Sports Clothes-Spectator" Donia Crane, grand; Heather
Francowlak, reserve; Ay Mora
and Ginger Holcomb, honorable
mention, and Lara Hall.
"Lol!!'glng Clothes" - Renee
Kaylor, grand; Beth Clark,
re~erve .

"Clothing Complements" ~
Erin Smith, grand champion;
Melissa Clifford, reserve.
"Dress Up Outfit, Daywear"- ·
Trlsha Spencer, grand cham·
pion, Missy ·Calaway, reserve,
and Tara Clark, Angela Donohue, and Grella Rl!fie, honorable mention.
"Dress Up Outfit, Evening
Wear" -Heather Flnlaw, grand
champion; JoEIE"n Crane, reserve, and Laurie Shenefield,
honorable mention.

Caler.dar

POMEROY -

A combined

Freeze-dried pets method
may be useful in humans

Larry Nelson cops PGA in sudden death
PALM BEACH GARDENS.
Fla . ( UPJI - Larry Nelson, who
had not received the acclaim that
usually ROes with winning major
golf championships. figures people will pay him more attention
now that he has three to his
credit.
Nelson, who turns 40 next
month. added his second PGA
Championship to his 1983 U.S.
Open title Sunday when he beat
Lanny Wadkins on thenrst hole
of a sudden-death playoff.
"I don' 1 know how many have
won three majors In this decade " said Nelson, who won his
firs t ' PGA crown In 1981. "Not
many . But I'rr not concerned
about that. I'm just happy to go
out and do my job, play as well as
I can."
Nelson. who earned $150,000
with his lat.e st victory, started
Sunday's play three strokes off
the lead but caught up by
shooting .e ven-par 72 while the
people who had been In front' of
him were plagued by wind-blown
bogeys.
.
He wound up the regulation 72
boles In 1-under 287, as did

In their respective classes of participation. Others
who will be lOin&amp; to the !!tate fair, not available
when the picture WB8 taken, are Donia Crane,
Renee Kaylor, and Erin Smith.

G..AND CHAMPIONS - Lelt to rl&amp;hl, Trlcla
Spencet', Renee VoUnJ. Michelle Lau&amp;beey, and
Heather Flnlaw will model lhe &amp;lll'ments they
made
at the State Fair. All. were pand
.
, . champloll!ll

STATE Fi\JR WINNERS - These pand
champion~ In their retpecth'e classe~~ were
amoa11 thoH Mleded to partiCipate Ia lbe atyle

MIDDLEPORT DUSTERS - The Middleport
Dusters, with a perfect IS-O mark, won the junior
tournament crown this summer. First row ,left to
right are Healber Davenport, Tara Gerlach,
Nikki Meier, Verna Compston, ,Jeri Hawley, and

Aug~llt
.

.

Phil Niekro traded to Toronto team

The Pryor camp protested the
fight · because some ammonia
tablets were found In Young's
corner. However, Harry Brennan, an administrative assistant
to the State Athletic Commission.
said it would be very hard to
prove anything Illegal had been
used.

Monday,

'

4-H fashions are in style during
revue before ·. Meigs fairgoers

Pryor had to be restraIned
after he and Young's trainer.
Tommy Parks, exchanged angry
glances, causing Pryor to go
after Parks .
But Pryor's fury was quelled
midway through the first round
when Young threw a strong left
followed by a right that Sent
Pryor to the floor. After a count
or eight, Pryor got up and
mocked wobbly knees, but It was
clear he was hurt.
Young almost dropped Pryor
again In the second round and did
bring blood to his nose. Pryor
came out smiling In the third
round and landed his first good
combination of the tight.
Pryor's best round was the
fourth when he landed a good
left-right-left combination and a
subsequent solid right. And,
although both fighters looked
weary from the fifth round on,
Youn~&lt; was dominant .

' '

., ·- :i'l\

The I)aily Sentinel ·

By The Bend

CLEVELAND (UP!) -Jesse ' he'll be just fine.
Lloyd Moseby ended tl)e Blue ·g ame," he added.
Barfield decided to go the other
"We hit the ball hard the entire Jays scoring with a solo shot In
" With Nlekro coming here, I
way.
series. We had our bad streak the seventh ol! reliever Jamie , don't know I! we should get one or
After being robbed of a home earlier, but now we are playing Easterly. The Indians lone tally two catcher gloves," said Willi·
run by Cleveland rlghtflelder with more consistency," added came In the sixth when rookie ams. "Niekro will be a starter.
Cory Snyder In the second Inning Barfield.
second baseman Tommy Hlnzo He Is a good pitcher, an outstandSunday and a two-run double In
Toronto starter John Cerutti hit hls first major league home Ing competitor and he gets people
Saturday's game, Barfield (S.21 scattered seven hits and run.
out. "
drilled a two-run homer Into the struck out four before departing
"When I hit a home run, It's by
Nelkro, who has never been In
leftfleld seats Sunday to spark In the seventh. Reliever Mark accident," said Hlnzo. "I knew I a World Series, hopes he can help
Toronto to a 5- 1 victory over the Eichhorn burled two scoreless hit it hard, but I didn't think II the Blue Jays In their bid for the
Innings and John Henke retired was high enough. I was thinking eastern division crown.
Cleveland Indians.
double or triple . .I didn't know It
The Tornto victory; coupled · the hidlans In the ninth.
" When. I heard I .was being
'.'1 was w.orklng ahead of the was out wunltl I heard the traded, I asked 'Where to? ' .
with a New York Yankees loss to
'
Detroit, vaulted the Blue Jays batters today and I was throwing fireworks."
When they said Toronto, It was a
back Into first place· In the my br~?aklng ball for strikes,"
Toronto manager Jlmy Willi- relief," said Niekro. who !ashl-'
said Cerutti. "I am pleased with ams was pleased 'with Cerruti's oned a 7·11 mark and a 5.89 ERA
American League East.
"I' figured that' I would have a the way I am throwing and the peformance and also happy · to In 22 games with the Indians.
better chance to left than right one goal now Is to win the hear lhe Blue Jays had acquired
"I just hope I can go over there
field," sa1d .Barfield, whose 'pennant."
righthander Phil Nlekro !rom the and pitch the way I can. I haven't
After Cleveland starter and Indians for minor league out- pitched as well as I'd like to, but I
home run landed 440 feei from
loser Ken Schrom 15-81 retired fie lder Darryl Landt'um.
home plate.
have fell I have had a good year,"
"I told Brook Jacoby (the the' first six Toronto hitters In
" We got some smooth pitching said Nlekro.
Indians third baseman} thatl am order, Rance Mulllnlks led off the and timely hitting today," said
Cleveland catcher Chris Bando
going to send Snyder one of my third with a double to left and Williams. "Cerutti has matured ·presented Nlekro with a
Golden Gloves, ' ' added Barfield·. scored on Kelly Gruber's run· a lot and has a llot more catcher's mitt Bando had been
"If they just leave Snyder alone, scoring double down the left field composure."
using all season In catching the
line .to give the Blue Ja ys a 1-0
After giving up . that lead-off 4S.year·old knuckleballer.
lead.
home run. lie retired the next
NIE&gt;kr9 was to have pitched the
Toronto made It 3-0 . in the three batters.
Indians opener In Baltimore
fourth on Barfield's 23rd homer,
"I have used Eichhorn four tonight , but Rich Yett,.recalled
and Willie Upshaw belted his 12th days In a row now and as for me. from .the Tribe's AAA club at
Saturday.
of the season over the right field Hlnke would get a save In this Buffalo, got the call.
Arguello attended the fight barrier leadinl( off the fifth.
Saturday and criticized Pryor's
decision to fight.
"Any boxing commission that
'
lets Pryor tight again ought to be
CLEVELAND (U PI) - Knuc· organization over there."
declared Illegal ," Arguello said.
Nlekro's experience and on the
·'He didn ' t even look like - a kleballer Phil Nlekro switched
extra -large catcher's glove
professional fighter out there. dugouts Sunday and ex~hanged
Nlekro joins a starting rotation . needed to !leld his fluttering
his post-mortem views of 1987 for composed of Dave Stleb, Jim knuckleballs. While Ntekro was
His career Is over."
post-season optimism. .
Clancy. Jimmy Key and John · :belf\g Interviewed, Cleveland
A right hook by Young brought
vete·
The
24-year
major-league
Ce~utti. Jose Nunez will return to catcher Chris Bando approached
blood from Pryor's ears and sent
ran
was
traded
Jrom
the
last·
.
the. bullpen, probably for middle · him and gave him the special
him to thecanvas . Pryor attempplace Cleveland Indians to the relief. The Blue Jays will have to glove.
ted to rise, !ell to one knee and fir st-place ·Toronto Blue Jays.
Toronlo ca tcher Ernie Whit t
gave the. sign of the cross, The Nlekro has won 318 major-league make a roster move today.
"
I
just
hope
I
can
go
over
there
said,
" I hope he brings a glove
referee then stopped the fight 29 games without ever appearing In
and pitch the way They hope I with him. He should really help
seconds into the seventh round.
a World Sefles.
ca n," Niekro said. " Any ball- us. Ali WE' need Is a solid slx
It was Pryor's first Joss In 37
NIE'kro, 7·11 with a 5.89 ERA for
pro fights and boos ted Young's the last-place Indians this year . player would tx&gt; exciTed . I've felt Innings from . Nlekro with our
record to 30-5-2 with 23 knockouts may pitch as soon as Thursday In good ali year. I haven 't pitched bullpen."
as well as I'd like to and my stats
Toronto !lnlsht&gt;d Sunday's play
and boosted his career .
Toronto against Chicago. He are not as good as I'd llke."
with
a half-gam!' lead over New
" It certainly means something ranks 11th on the all-time victory
I
wasn't
surprised
that
som!'York
In the American League
to be the first person to beat list, but the closest he has ever
thing
happened.
I've
pitched
well
East,
with
third-place Detroit l~
Aaron Pryor because he retired come to the World Series was In
against
Toronto
and
I've
pitched
behind.
·
an undefeated champion., " 1969 and 1982, whim Atlanta lost
well
In
Toronto's
park."
Landrum.
21.
was
the
Blue
Young said.
In the National League playoffs.
To land Nlekro. the Blue Jays Jays ' sixth choice In the January
"My ambition Is always to be In traded minor-league outfleldl'r 1984 draft . He played with the
"I knew hewouldbeopen to my a World Series." Nlekro said. " I
right hand because even in the said I wouldn't go to just any Darryl Landrum. India ns St&gt;nior Blul' Jays ' Class A team In the
old days that was his ~eakness. I ballclub. If I pitched six shutouts VIce President Dan O'Brien told Florida State I.Rague this year.
feel this gets my career turned for this club In Cleveland . It Nlekro of th£&gt; trade du ring He battt&gt;d ,204 with eight'homers
around. I feel he still Is a g~ · wouldn't make any difference in Sunday 's game. which Toronto and 36 RBI In 93 games .
"The trade developed over the
fighter, but hew as fighting above the standings. Toronto certainly won 5-1.
"Thl'
first
thing
I
said
Is,
last
~R hours." 1M tans VIce
his weight. He had no strength." has a better chance than we do.
'Where
to?"'
Nll.'kro
sa
ld.
"When
President
Joe Klein said. "No
The only time Pryor Impressed They have a better chance than a
he
told
me.
ti
was
a
relief.
"
other
teams
were Interested."
the crowd was before the fight
lot of clubs. They have a strong
Clubhou·se
reaction
focused
on
when he entered the ring dancing
and strutting In a pre-fight
wa rmup that lncludt&gt;d high leg
·
k.lcks ..

Pryor suffers · first pro loss

SUNRISE. Fla. IUP II - AaPryor, who will stand trial
ron Pryor, whose boxing career beginning Monday on kidnapping
plummeted because of out-of- and other charges stemming
the-ring troubles, suffered the · from a February incident that
first pro loss of his career In the Jed to his arrest, talked heforethe
ring, leav ing his fu ture In the fight or meeting Hector " Macho' ·
sport in doubt.
Ca macho or Sugar Ray Leonard.
-,
Bobby Joe Young knocked ou t He said after thP loss to Young
.. the 31-year-old Pryor, the former those plans may be put on hold.
World Boxing Associa'tton junior"Right now, I'm thinking about
welterweight champion, . in the It," Pryor said when asked If he
seventh round of their 10-round would fight again.
fight Saturday · night at the
Promotor Waller Alvarez said
Sunrise Musical Theatre.
only, "We'll see."
It was Pryor's first fight in 2S
Pryor's downfall began soon
mont_hs. a period in which he after the greatest moments of his
faced trouble wit h the law and career - a pair of hard- fought
became addicted to coCaine. victories over Alexis Arguello In
Pryor took a drug test before the 1982 and 1983. But soon after the
fight and another tes t aftpr the seco nd bout against Arguello,
bout, a lthough the results of the Pryor retired, claiming he was
second test were not imme· tired with the sport. He had
dlately ava ilable.
fought Twice since then before

•,I

Monday, Augtllt 10. 1987

Ballard, activities director.
Continuing to serve as trustees
are Harlan Ballard, Francis
Andrew. and Dorset Larkins. Ms.
Roberts was welcomed back
after recent surgery. Mrs. Bal- ·
lard announced that there wUI be
a cake walk ad games following
the next meeting, Aug. 26.

Roush family gathers for event
The Arthur and Sadie Rou~h
reunion was held Sunday at the
Deer Creek Lake State Park.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Roush, Racine; Mr. and
Mrs. Garen Roush, Piqua; Mr.
and Mrs. Orin Roush, Racine;
Wayne Roush. Parkersburg, W.
Va.; ~r. and Mrs. Dlivld Waters,
H
. ouston, Texas; Mr. and Mrs.
Oris Roush, Langsville. .
•'

Mr. and Mrs. Clifford (Pat)
Roush, Dee Roush and Chad
Wise, Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Gllne
Roush; Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Rivers and Phillip, Andy
Roush and Chrissie McDaniels,
Chillicothe; Mark Roush and ,
David. Rio Grande; and Mr. .and
Mrs. Harold Sugent,
l\11ddlfPOrt. ·
•J

Vacation Bible School lor Pomeroy Trinity Church. Methodist
Church and St. Paul Lutheran
Church , Monday through Friday,
6:30 to 8:30 p.m.. . at St . Paul
Lutheran. Nursery through sixth
grade.
·
POMEROY - Ninth District
Commander or Disabled American Veterans to be at the
Pomeroy Chapter 53 Home, 124
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy. at 1
p.m. Monday to discuss formation of a women's auxiliary; all
Interested women Invited.
RACINE - Racine Board of
Public Affairs will meet 7 p.m.
Monday a t the Shrine Park
building.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - Pomeroy Area
Merchants meeting 8 a.m . Tuesday at Bank One:
-~-

HARRISONVILLE - , Harrisonville Senior Cltlzens'Club free
blood pressure clinic, 10 a.m. to
12 noon Tuesda y at Town Hall .

EAST MEIGS- Eastern Band
Boosters will meet at the high
school 7:30p.m. Tuesday.
PORTLAND
Portland .
P.T.O. will have a meeting
TUesday, 7 p.m., to make plans
for the coming scboql year and
for the Fall Carnival to be held on
Oct. 3.
CHESTER - Chester Town·
ship Trustees will meet Tuesday,
7:30p.m., at the townhall.
MIDDLEPORT- Meigs Local
Junior High football players are
asked to attend an organizational
meeting TUesday, 7 p .m .• In the
junior high gym.
·
CHESTER- Chester Bowhunters will meet Tuesday, 7 p.m., at
the clubhouse lor . e)ection of
·
officers.
PORTLAND - · Portland
P.T.O. will meet Tuesday, ?p.m ..
to make plans for the upeoming
school year ancj !all carnt.)al to
be held Oct . 3.
\

Twins attend Twinsburg festival

lng the pet looking alive, and with
no distortion whatsoever."
''The owner may now keep his
pef with him lor a lifetime,' •
Weber said.
The process takes from several
weeks to slx months, depending ,
on the animal's size.
Weber charges $350 to freezedry a cat In a lying position, $400
In a sitting position. and $450
KAYLA D. MCCARTHY
standing. A German shepherd In
the attack position runs about
$1,800, Weber said.
"I think it's grotesque," said
Greg and Judy McCarthy fo
Ralnl Sequoya of National
Leading
Creek Road, MiddleAnimal Rights Inc. in Tampa.
port,
are
announcing
the birth of
"Next they'll want to do It to
a
daughter.
Kay
Ia
Diane,
June 2
people."
at the Holzer Medical Center.
Weber said he has already
The
Infant weighed seven
"looked Into" freeze -drying
pounds
, 14 ounces and was 20
'
people.
Inches long. She is their first
''Funeral homes are Interested child.
Grandparents are Wayne and
In it. It's probably four or five
Gloria
McCarthy, Letart, W. Va.
years away," he said, adding the
and
Carol
and Dolly Mowery.
biggest drawback to preserving
Br.
a
dbury
.
Rosie
Hodge of Cabin
people Is the price, which he
Va.
Is a great Creek,
W.
estimated at $5,000 to $30,000.

McCarthy birth

grand~other.

Danlelle Marie and Michelle
Leigh, two-.year-old Identical
twlp daughters of Dan and Fonda
Thomas. Tuppers Plains were
among the 1,327 sets of twins
attending las t weekend's lfestl- .
val of Twins held at Twinsburg,
Ohio.
The ·tw ins and their parents
were accompanied to Twinsburg
by th eir grandparents, Don and
Carolyn Thomas.

Mr. Thomas be longs to the
Mother of Twins Club of Meigs
County and represented that
group at the festival where rides.
crafts, and commercial exhibits
were featured. Oldest set oft wins
at the festival was 89 years old
and the youngest was 11 weeks.
They came from numerous countries Including Ireland, Australia. Russia and Italy.

Welcome party held for pastor
An old fashioned "pound"
party was held at the Forest Run
United Methodist Church Tuesday night ·welcoming the new
minister, Kandy Burell.
Homemade Items, vegetables
from the garden, canned foods.
and a bell ' for good luck were
presented to the new pastor.
Games were played and prizes
awarded. Punch and cookies
were served.
Attending were Edison and
Evelyn Hollon. All and· Hilda
Yeauger. Vernal and Betty
Blackwood, Rick and Debbie
Hauber· and daughter, Brltney,
Faye Wiggins, Sandy Hawley,

Mary Belle Warner, .Carrie
Pugh, Connie Warner, Kathleen
Scott, Erma Roush.
Carrie Grueser, Barbara Beegle, Marsha Arnold, Virginia
Davis, Joanette Davis, Grace .
Chaney, Mary Chaney, Mary
Nel}se, Joshua Smith, Leah
Nease, Kelly Nease, Jacob
Nease, Kastle Eldabaja, Mlrlan
Eldabaja. , Jean .Nease, and
Naomi Wyatt .

Reunion planned
The Charles Reed Hysell and
Oscar Hysell family reunion will
be held. at Forest Acres Park
near Rutland on Sept. 20.

On AllfUSt 14th, Tri-State is giving
you the chance to win one of these
beautiful previously owned cars/ One
will be gillen away after the 10th,
11th and 12th races/
All you have to do to win is register
any performance now through (Friday
night) August 14th. Including
matinees. that's~ chances to win/
,You must be p~tier~t to win on the
night of the 14th, but no pu~ase or
wager is necessary. For more mfonna·
tion, call 176-1000. Cross Lanes exit
off~.

nmes:

-

1:30 Matinee, Wed., Sat I
7:30 Evenings, Mon.-Sat
llner'•atlons: 776-5000

I'Ost

�.-...
'-a~

8 The Daily Sentinel

Monday. August 10. 1987 ·

Pdmeroy-!IIJiddleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei- Page.:_7

,..--People ,in the news- Quirks in the news...;...__;....___ _,;,_,_____
By WILLIAM C. TRO'IT
United Press International
wrru LASSIE: Lassie was such a wonderful dog on the
te
n show that .all the actors must have loved her , too,
rig
I hate to disappoint people," says actress June
Loc
, "but the answer Is no. The dog was totally
co
ated on the trainers."
Lockhart. In Boston touring as a spokeswoman for Purina dog
food, said the dogs that played Lassie were never led before
filming and only had eyes for the trainers.
"There would be a trainer on either side of us and the trainer
would hold up a piece of meat to make Lassie look to the right or
look to the left," Lockhart said.
MY NEPHEW SAM: Ac tor Mark Harmon Is getting ~aught
up In a custody battle with his sister. Harmon, star of the movie
"Summer School, " was caring for his nephew, Sam Nelson, 12,
the son of his sister Krts and the late singer Rick Nelson, whlle
Krls was In a Los Angeles rehabilitation center getting -over an
addiction to prescription drugs.
But ·People magazine says that when she came out after a
30-day stay, Harmon's lawyers told her that he had been .
appointed Sam' s temporary guardian. Krls, 42, has since filed
her objections with the court and the matter comes up this week.
Her lawyer, Carl Osborne. says Krls was shocked by Mark's

,

move.
"The first thing you do Is talk to each other, " he·said. "You
don' t run to court and file papers ." In the meantime, Sam Is
living with Harmon and his wife, Pam Dawber of "My Sister
Sam," ·and Harmon Is declining comment .. The Harmons'
father, Tom, the "former football star and sportscaster, says,
" It's just an unfortunate situation."
ELVIS IS A SHE: Elvis Imitators comes In all shapes, sizes
and genders. Delores Walker or Secane, Pa., Is a 44-year-old
grandmother who does her Elvis routine at cbarities, shopping
malls and hospitals and has appeared on television In
Phlladelphia.
"I don't know If you could ever find someone whose desires
and whose love is greater for doing Mr. Presley," Walker said ..
Two decades ago, an automoblle accident injured her foot and
ankle and left her with degenerative arthritis, a painful ailment
that forced. her to use a cane, and wear an orthopedic shoe and
leg brace.
·
She credits Elvis with bringing her back . "l always have had
an attraction to Elvis," she said . "I got through the ordeal (of
arthritis) with the support of God, my famlly and with the help '
of Elvis. !have seen all those guys doing Elvis and they all wear
wigs and makeup. They are all phony. Elvis is In me. Heisin my
spirit."
THE BOWIE EXPERIEN(:E: Toni BasU was In the midst of
making an album but dropped everything when David Bowie
called up and asked her to handle the choreography for his
"Glass Spider" tour.
·
The Bowie show is a true extravangazawith five dancers who
descend from the belly of a spider 100 feet above the stage and
BasU describes much of the choreography as "street dancE' and
ballli't - visions from so many ideas and thoughts pulled
together into a picture." She says the show gives fans a look at
the total Bowie.
·
· "David is multi-talented ,:' Basil says. "If hE' could clonE'
himself he wouldn' t need any of us . He could do it all. This show
gives the audience more of his talents as an actor and
performer. You really see his ide as and visions. It's a peek
Inside his head. "
· ·
The Bowie ,e xperience also will Improve her record when
she's finally able to get back to it , says Basil , who had a double·
platinum hit with "Mickey" in 1983. " Now, I'm inspired with
more ideas," she said. "The album will be better because or
working with Diwid."

Timo the dog
catches ·%50th S!Jspect
TACOMA, Wash. (UP!)
Timo the police dog celebrated
his upcoming sixth birthday by
sniffing out a couple of suspected
robbers, his 250t h a pprehenslon
since joining the city pollee force
nearly five years ago.
Pollee Sgt . . John Ber ger said
Timo and his handler, Officer
Jerry Lerum, were called 0111
early Sunday to assist In tracking
down two men who had.robbed an
all-night grocery on the south
side of town:
In less tllan an hour after the
holdup was reported, two men
were In custody, including on e
who had tried to escape detection
by casually walking down the
street, Berger said.
Berger said officers chased !he
suspects In a car and on foot and
then, believing they were hiding
in some blackberry bushes,

A11111111111: I' ll II! 11'
1

called for Tlmo.
MIAMI (UP!) - Nicaraguan Contras, Lobo d·escrlbes t heir
" Timo tracked them Into the
s inger Alfonso Lobo and his band battle.
bushes and then" located one of
"I'm a freedom fighter, I 'm not
relliased a song called "Freedom
the men on a roof, " Berger said.
afraid of Russian tanks ," the
Fighter," which turned Into an
While that man was being
anthem for Contra supporters lyrics say.
taken Into custody, other officers
during a demonstration counter·
"Call me Lech Wale~a or call
spotted the second suspect casulng a leftist protest in front or the
me Jesus Christ : Now I 'm
ally walking down the street. He
fighting In Managua, fighting for
White House.
was stopped, Berger· said, be·
· Lobo and his band, Wolf and
your freedom and fighting tor
cause he · was shirtless and his
the Pack, who have begun work mlne."
upper body was marked w.lth
James Tyvoll, a Pe ntagon
In Miami on their flrst album,
blackberry J;lush scratches and
released ihe "Freedom Flgh· Qperations research analyst,
h(s pants stalnedd with black·
ters" single to local radio sta· .first heard Lobo .s ing the song at
berry juice.
lions last week .
the Mayflower Hotel lounge in
Both men were held In Pierce
"I wanted to show with music · Washington In 1983 and Invited
County jail pending filing of · that the world wasn't happy with
him to sing It for officers In a
formal charges.
how things turned around In
Pentagon o!flce the next day.
Berger said Timo . has been
Nicaragua, " said Lobo, 35, In a
Dana Rohrabaker , a White
credited with 250 apprehensions
publis hed report Sunday.
House speecbwrlter, said two
since joining the force ' In De·
Lobo, the son of a Nicaraguan
years later, a Citizens tor Reacember 1982. The dog, who turns government official In the de·
gan activist blasted the song over
6 on Friday, also has been
posed Somoza regime, lists In the
a speaker to drown out leftist
credited with saving his song those he considers his tori·
demonstrators In front of the
handler' s life two times.
cal freedom fighters, from Jesus
White House and the song be·
Nicaraguan releases
to Lech Walesa. ·
~arne an a nthem for Contra
Freedom Fighter' tune
Without explicitly naming the
backers.

TO PIJU AN AD UU tt2-21U
IIONDAT tlw"' fiiOAY I Ult1 S P...
I Ul Until NOOH 5ATUIDAY
U051D SUNDAY

_
. - . . __
_____

0'.......
0'""'.... __
'" .., ___ .. _ ..,_,...,,...
.r.:_
,

.,

· : =:""
- .~ ' - - - ~~ - .. ....

,

-·

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

-

::.-.:.::..~·

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

t .......

"'"
IU.a

-·-

1------. -. . . .-_:_··--- - - - --i

_

__
,.,_._
····---

.,.
- ~-31=
,.,.,_""-;:;.

i""
~ · ..., .......
l t&gt;O O tO HttiC . .

... Dfii U O ...

u::: :::::r·

161 Nortlo S.COftd
llid&lt;ltporl, Ohio 45760

;:::::C.

L:::l:... .

J.R.'s

R~PAIRS

TVs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation
Service

so"

442: Cuddly
sculpture doll Is 20 Inches tail,

~:=:to '~:or.

"'---·--:-r.;r.=
" . - '

··--- .

4 socks. Tissue panern
for doll and her ounlt.

•...c:~~. nr•-•-

==='='=-

G :~-

l J:l8f rtn

Rt . 124, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Abo Truamlulo•
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121
6· 17-ttc

LONG'S
CONSTRUCTiON

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992·3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL· SAND
TOP SOIL
10· 8-tlc

ROOFING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaoing
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

MODULAR HOME!
Carter French
Residence
Corner of Fourth

NEW- REPAIR

949-2263
or 949-2168

4-22- 87 -tln

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE

IIY ttm. Pmt t1t1ot, Mnu.

~ - Pllllm *""'*·

U., S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

FREE OFFER
3 Craft lloclcl (value $8.85)
'when you order one ol the
$2.95 books listed below.
II t -Hairpin Croehel
I I ~asy Ripple Crochet
II 7-M ol Needlepoint

Authorized John DMrt,
New HoNand, lush Hog
Farm Equipment

Otoltr

Far111 E~lllpM ..t
Parte &amp; Se,.lee

and Clothes

1·3·'86 tic

CRAFTS
PATTERNS
•

7 ·1 ·'17-1 mo.

.

'

school representatives and a
newspaper res taurant critic.
Elsewhere In mosily cloudy,
warm and humid weather condl·
tlons at the fair Saturda y, J .A.
Underwood of Urbana won a blue
ribbon for her butternuts .
One expert said Underwood 's
entries had "nice meat - clean,
white - and good taste ."
Judges don't. actually have to
taste a nut to rate Its flavor · they

...

NY II

and Palmer,
Middleport

I

'·
.

..

.

Card of Thanks

CARD OF THANKS
The family of Maudie
Ethel Wood would like to ex·
press sincere apprecillion
to our many friends and relatives lor all the compassion
manifested toward us fol·
lowing the recent dellh of
our wile and mother.
Much appreciation is extended to the members ol
the Pomeroy Emergency
Squad, Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Dr. Villanueva,
Dr. Lentz. and Ewinc fu ·
nera.l Home. Great appreci ·
at ion to the lion Church of
Christ and !&gt;astor Robetl
Purtell.
· Husband ·Ernest Wood,
Children, Ernestine. ·Earie,
Edith, Earl. and
Grandchildren.
Happy Ads

'

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

Source: Nallonll Center lor Heallh Slallatlcs/

AmtriCIII Lung Aaoclotlon

.ILACII
'
MIA OILIPIIC

Deaplie hlllllth warnings, sOme 54,000,000 Americans still smoke. The
American Lung AasC)Ciatlon ntln,.t.. that this Is reaponslble lor 350,000
premature deaths In the United Statas each ytar. .

._).hrdy,=~Lordy~

•

'

CALL (614) 992-2104
(304f675-l244 .

WINDOWS
CERTAINTEED VINYl
THERMO · BOSS
8-4· 1 mo. pd.

UGIIS &lt;IUI- rOMUOY, OH.
\HUll., I ·M- Il US
10

Hu1rt fu•d f,o"'•l

~'"

• •Ill' 11

AC twin•• ¥nih ltfttrl,

CAlL 992 ·6771

7-6-"17 ·1 mo.

'I•"

'~

n ''"·'

~~.~ ~" qtl1''~
'

..,.

"'

Wt know whtrt lht bttl it.
Wo ol14 know lht ploco for

Found: Bl•c:k and white Terrier
on Union Ave. Call 614-992 2P24 .

done within one

year.
15 Yrs. Experience lit
Schooh, H011111,
Churches.

11

Help Wonted

WANTED
JEWELRY STORE
MANAGER
full time. Prefer ex perience in buying and
retail selling but nol
necenary. Send re·
sume to:
The Daily .Sentinel
P. 0. Box 729·1
Pomero , Ohio 45769

9

Wanted To Buy
WANTED TO BUY

BABY ITEMS

Strollers, Beds, Ores·
sing Tables, Play Pens,
Walkers. Clothin&amp; (new·
born·4T), High Chairs,
Car Seals .
Must be in good
condition.

', '

Cheryl Routh
It 40f

'
(

'

.

butcheriwt and pr!J(Ining.
W. .a1m.y or yM ••'I pay
fill IUTCHERIIG

W/THIS COUrON
Good lhr.u August I

Good llw..... A.. 10, 1917

CALL ANYTIME
44_6-831 8

,..,,•h '"·\ nrl urr&lt; P-•' ""~~
of""" "'UrYI ~IV&lt;~&lt;M.l~
I pt• LH 'I'lnltl ;&gt;~•

LOST - SmaH Blue Tigar Male
Cat, waarlng white flfa collar. If
fQund , ple:ase c:all 304· nJ.
9173 or 773-5869 . last seen
\licinity of Center Street in
Maton.
LOST - 2 pet Beqle dogs.
Ordnance School, black and
white, brown. 304-675-1264.

RADIATOR
SERVICE

YOUNG'S

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

PAT HILL FORD
992·2196

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-ttc

ANTIQUES
·auy OR SELL

CARPENTER
SERVICE
-

Addont and remodeling
Roofing and gutter work
Concreta work '
Plumbing aind eleetrical
work
j Free Estimatesl-

or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohia

4·15-' 86-lc

992-2526

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985·3561

All Make•

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ra!"ges
•Refrjgera1ors
•Dryers •Freezers

7

.......Ganrpolis..... .....
&amp; Vicinity
Inside house tale. Aug. 1 0 until
told out, 10:00 AM . Plantz Sub.
Bedroom suit. Living Room tuft.
dining room suit, dinette sec, 26
ln. color TV.. stareo, lamps.
labl ... 880 grill. ftowltl', dish...
pans, gl•uwaro, all kindt of
clothu •nd mise. Ca\1614-o\46·
7721 .

Friendly Home Parties hat open.
ing for m•nagen and dulers in
your area. largest line In party
plan. frae kit , brand ne'N christ·
mat catalog. toy: gift. and home
decor catalog. Over BOO items.
Top eommitaion and hotte&amp;s
giftl . Call for free catalog
1·800· 227 ·1610 or call collect
0- 518-462· 0091 .

Yard Sele. Sm•ll applianc ...
cur1ain1, dithM. rugs. furniture,
hammock. mens • womens
clothing. Many mile. ilemt.
Tun.-Wed . Aug. 11 ·12 . 2Edg•
mont Dr.

a::

9

12

~ Licensed Clinical Audiologist

We pav cash for lat~mDdel clean
used CMI.
Jim Mink Chev .·Oidslnc.
Bill Gene Johnson
614-446· 3672

(614) 4-46-7619 or (614) 992·6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
8-13 Hn

NEW liSTING- RUTLAND- 3 bed rooms. I!? story ho!"e
Enclosed Ir on! porch. ·equ opped kotchen, stora ge bu oldm!,
and part ba sement. $21.000.

.

NEW liSTING - II? story home in Rultand. 3 bedrooms.
,
bu1 idon g, front srtting porch , all on a nice lot.

Executive SecretaJY. Send resuma to Box T ·360, care of the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune. 825
Third Ave ., Gallipolis. OH
45631 .

Army, Navy, Air Force. MilrinM
- Your Prior Servlee il wor1h
MONEY in the Army Nation~!
Guard. 304-675-3960 or 1800· 642-3619.

~

NEW LISTING- Ranch type home in the country restin gon
over 2 acres ol ground. fu ll baseme nt, 3 bedrooms. Only 12
years old, Wants $29,500.

Medical Coordinator, RN tor
group homa. Project for Santor
Citizen,. Coordinating all medi·
·cal services within conteJtt of •n ·
in1ermediate care faCility meet·
ing medicade atandardl . Know I•
edga S. tkillt of nursing profl!ll·
Sion, administrative· superviaory
training. Knowledge ot petiant
assessment tyatem pf'ef.-red;
Salary commensurate with &amp;Jt:
purience. Calt Ohio Job Services
in Gallipolis for application a
intltN'iew.
·

Rick Peer•on Auctioneer li·
cen1ed in Ohio and WeSt Virgi·
nie. E11a1e, anlique. farm, liqui·
detion s•les. 304-773-&amp;78&amp;.

c LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

NEW liSnNG - Here is a cute littl e one ll oor plan, 3 bed·
room home looki ng lor a new owner, nt ce kit chen and bath,
shed. equop ped kitch en and oth er clean features. $16,500.

Full-time bab•itter in my hom&amp;
for ftVenings . References required, Call614-•46- 9723 after
6pm .

Nurse Aide, all thifts. 9 :00 and
5 :00 pm. 102 Court St .. Pom•
roy. 614-992 -2657. P.M. and
Anociltet Home Health Care
Agency .

Computerized Hearing Aid Selection

NEW LISTING - Ntce garage aparl,;,ent on Middleport. 3
bedroo ms, lull basemen!. arr con drtooned , all on a level lot
close to sho ppon g. $2 1.900.

Man to work Dn dairy farm;
Pfefer e11pir. with milking cowl!
Call 61 4· 494· 2790.

Aug. 10· 14. From GJIIipoti• 10
mllM out Rl . 141 . 10 :00 am to
6 :00pm.

8

~ Swim Molds - Interpreting Services

NEW LIST! NG - SYRACUSE - Brock and Ir ame ranch type
ho me wo th basement. I car gar age. 3 bedrooms on level
la rRe lot. Large fen ced rear play ar ea Hom e is rn excellent
condttoon on a &amp;_ood locatoon Call lor · ~ ~o o n tment . $39.500.

Exper.· Part· time baby tit1er tot
2 ~hildri!ln . Rio Grande:-Gallipolil
area. Call Rita Burton. 614 -6826704.

Government Jobs. $16 .040 ·
S59.230 · year. Now hiring. Call
1-806-187 -8000 h:t. R-9805
for current hderal titt. ·

_ _

NEW LISTING - SVRAr.USE - II you loke spacoou s roo ms
and want the neatnes s of ta slelul decrr make an appoont·
menl to see thos lonel y 4-5 bedroom home with 2 bath s,
kotchen wtlh cozy breakt ast nook. formal dming room . ut ility
roo m, lull base men t. Large neat acre lot, 2 cao ga rage. Many
olher leatu res1 $62.900.

Full-Time AN , 3· 11 thift and
infreqent 1 1· 7 relief. hcet!
salarv and benefits. Apply ~
Scenic Hilla Nurting CenttH". C•U
614-446· 7150.

3 family gar«tge nle, canning
je,., mite:. item•. tchoot clolhetall sizes . Wed. • Thurs. 8 -4.
1 1 32 Second A\18.

IN. tttS·II 1.., , fl ,/17

_

Updata of applicant filet· Expen
me•t cuUer for tocal super:
market. Sent retumeto : Box cia.
101. G•lllpolia Dally Tribune
825 3rd. Ave . Gallipolis, Ohio
45631 .

-~--'---

Yard Sale

PARTS and SERVICE

81n q&lt;l UUI('n

IIIV~ID

DriviH't wanted for Domino·· , ·
Pizza . 18 yrs. o-f sga. dri\ler '4
license. insurance and depeoda;;
ble~ehicle. C•ll614·"6 ·4040.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

t ....

[,•1'1&lt;1

'UILI(

Bar maid for Happy Cornar. Call
after 4 :00pm.-614-448-2625.
Before 4 :00pm .• aPptv in petsoo
·at 1he Happv Corner.

Full-time oflic:e &amp; warehousa
perton needed to start immediately. Call 614-446-4109 lor
eppointment.

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-~215

(CUT OUT FOR FUTURE US()

1124 Eost Main St.
. P-roy
HO..S: Tuo.·Wtd .•fri.
1Ja.m.to7p.m.
Slrnday: 1 p.111.·7 p.m.
ly Cheftct or AptMinl-1

Real Estate General

.

Fiound; Medium sized black dog.
Call 614-992-6833

7· 6-1 mo.

1 IRO.

RUSS MOORE

,' Mo, 1 l n• rl 1 II! II

'

BlJrCHER SHOP

Riverine Antiques

BINGO

Lost and Found

Receive 50% Off
SECOND tuning if

MARCUM
CONTRACTING
CHISTII, OHIO
•ROOFING •SIDING
.WINDOW REPLACEMENT
•REMODELING •
ROOM AOD!TIONS
•GARAGES • POLE
BUILOINOS

REFERENCES
...... Oay or IYonl...

9115-4141
GilDA&amp; .C01111CTOIS
1-IS-17 I roo. pd.

J&amp;L
INSULATION
HEATING &amp;

Buying deity gold. silver coins,
rings. jewelry. sterling ware. old
coins, large cunency. Top prl·
ces. Ed Burkett Barbet' Shop,
2nd. Ava. Middleport, Oh . 614992-3476.
Wanted to buy, st•nding timber.
Call AI Tromm al 614· 742·
2328 ,

COOLING
•FURNACES
•AIR CONDITIONERS
•HEAT PUMPS
"FRIE ESTIMAfES"

ACCENT

FENCE COMPANY.

Let IJe Fe... 'f o• 111

QUILTS

Antiqua· Pra 1940's. Call Mere.
61•·992·2101 (dilys) or 1· 692 ·
2461 evenings.

Employmenl

PH. 992-2772

Services

8-4·1 mo. d.

DABBLE
SHOP

FREE ESTIMATES

N. 2nd AYE.

R ESI[)ENTIAL/ COMMEACIAL

MIDDLEI'OIT, ON.

PH. 742·2027

Wanted To Buy

TOP CASH paid for '83 mod ..
and newer used cars. Smith
Buick-Pontiac, 1911 Eastern
Ave .. Gallipolis. Call 614-446·
2282.

11

PLASnC ClAn
and

CERAMIC BISQUE

lf2 PIICE

Month

711 S. 3RD ST.
MIDDlEPORT, OHIO
PHONE (6141 992-7494

'

'

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.
wams

FOR THE BEST IN
REPLACEMENTS

Solid black eat. 304-675-6240.

Lo1t : Ucente plate off of truck
Farm t•g. F240AF . If any
Information, plaase eall 614·
379-2133 .

"Fifes"

·~

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLEI.GI·ST
"WE HA~E HEARINI
AIOS"
.

9"2-2772

Kittent. Kittens. Cute and Play·
fuj. 304· 882 -2614.

ANY fiME

CRAFTS

5

LOCATED: MAIN ST.• RUTLAND. OHIO
OPEN: 8·6 MON.·SAT.: 8·8 FRI.
PH. 742·3088
Moster Card end Vlt' Welcome
.

INSQLATION

Gentle, affectionate h!)ute cat.
Hat shott. sp.-yed. Call 614·
992 ·6714 . •

PIANO TUNING

ONIO

J&amp;L

Wanted: Thr" pert-time Com·
munhy Service Wark• poaitkmt
na;labla whh an ·interm.tietlf
New W•tkina o..ter f•etling C:WI fadUty for cleveiopment ..tV
houMhold tpieH) ""'~ 0.111• ditebted adutta In I !dwelt; 1) 26
Co. and now looking for recruits. hour.. week: 12 :30· 8 :30 a.m.,
If inter•ted, ull Jim or Vivian 3 da¥1 a week; pklt 2 hour
weeldy •~If mMting. 2) 34-;
Ben10n, 11•· 258· 6076 .
hour.. week: 12 :30-8:30a.·m., 4
dav• a week: plus 2 hOurweekty
ttaft m~lng. 3} 1 8· hours·
4
Giveaway
week : 10a.m .·l p.m., s.t.,
Sun.; plus 2 hour -...kly stiff,
meeting. All positions: High
Beagle puppl• to give •wey to school degr... valid Ohio dfiv·
good home. C•ll 51•·379· er' • license tnd good driving
2552 . No cells afl:ar 9:00PM .
r-.:ord rtquired: ability to work
well u a team member, excel·
Cement. ttation.ary pUba. 0•11 lent lnterpertonal communlc•·
014-440-1496.
t)on aldll1, crelltive •nd tetf·
motiveted , ability to Work wilh
Mele ~hi1e- gr•v Si•mesa· type minimal tuparv!aton. punctual,
c.t. ell re•dy netnered M'ld and gooi:J orgenb:ation skill•
decl.wed. Must thly indoort. required: experleen• working
Good home only. Cell61•· 2•6· with ptoloundty or aeverefy
6231 •• 245, 5497.
retarda&lt;l indNidu•l• and e•p•
rience In the •pplic:1Uon of
4 Church pews •nd old theater normalization principles pre·
• ..... Call614-441-4526 .
ltrred. Sal.-y: f4.25 per hour .
Vacation and tiel! benatlts. Se_n d
Ktnent- to ctM'Ing horne. 9 to rnume, Indicating which poti·
choOse from . All colort .nd tion(t) applying for. to Robin
sizes. 7 wka.-2 mos. C•ll 614· Eby, Buckeye Communi1y Servt.
266 ,1793
c•. P . O . Bo~t 104. Jac:tltonOhio
46640. Dndline for •pplieents;
Clothes to give away. All 1i1... 8· 1 3· 87. Equal opportunity am Cell 114-949- 2706 .
ployer.

6

992-37111 .

7-21-1 1110. d.

\ )()

wethers, tlrytn, r•gn. llishwelhtrs, mH:raWD'IIft. gao.
.... rtltpoooh, .............. .
ton.

7·30-17·1 mo.

614-992-3293

HOUIIIIOlD &amp;rN&amp;NUS. All

trio

PH. 992-2772

CALL

!liVING &amp;U ,.&amp;JOIIIUIIOI ~F
. . . .l GU&amp;UIIFIID I TUI,
•&amp;Ill .... l&amp;IOl
Stt11kint ref•igerators. tr ..r .

ESTIMATES

7/ 23/2 mo. d.

m.Pilot llloot, Addiwa,

P A T T E R N S

-

*AUGIIMENTS *RONT-END WOIK
*IATTIIIES *TilE IIPAII

s1210

1-614-143-5425

Must see to appreciate .

MIKE'S

Oftly

FRU

CA(l

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

• 1

LOWEST PRICES ON PASSENGER CARS
AND LIGHT IRUCIC/IIRES
.

APPLIANCE
REPAIR ~(RVICE
Service Call

POLE STYLE or
CONVENTIONAL

2S Yean
FREE ESTIMATES

a.. llllrtlwn ew. Woodlitlt,

can tell just by looking at II. And
In judging, the shell means
nothing, unless · two nuts are
rated equal for meat, In which
case the one with the softer shell
Is judged better.
Cullen Pfendler of Massllion
took home a top prize for
Abundance chestnuts, and Rus s ell D. Yoder or Smithville won a
blue for Melrllng chestnuts.

-

Mon . thru Fr i. or by
Appointment
C&amp;ll f614) 992 · 7204
Whotesa1e Sa hehiil
1-10--l lfiO. pd.

CUSTOM BUILT
GARAGES

Complet~

The Daily Sentinel

"8En1M8 YOU THERE SAFELY"

'

I

Each pallem $3.25 plus
75¢ postage/handling.
tN.Y. resideru dj 51iesl.ll&lt; )
Send lo:
IIMdlr IIIII

RUTLAND TIRE SALES
'

f

.

~

'

431-Crochet a striped
drawslring top tor a child.
Use 2 yarns ;n combo
{double knift ing and bou·
cte). DirectiOns lor Girls.·
Sizes 6· t 2 onciUded.

which OhIo college establshed
the first college music
department.
Gov. Richard F . teleste volun teered to take what some con llder the "hard" test and scored
a.ri impressive . 80 percent .
Another fairgoer , Wilmington
City Schools secretary Elsie
Fields or Martinsville, answered
two of the test ' s five questions
correctly.
"The purpose Is to make people
more familiar with Ohio history," said department staffer
Dave Campbell o! Columbus.
" And to have fun."

Ky. woman wins state fair chili cook-off
smelled better than today,' ' the
governor said In congratulating
a ll 32 cook-off entrants.
Contestants, who paid a $50
entry fee, hadtocookamtnlmum
of one gallon of chill. Their
creations were judged for flavor,
texture, aroma, consistency, co·
lor and overall acceptability.
The judges Included a newspaper food editor, a cookbook
author, a newspaper food writer,
a restaurant manager, cooking

Collectors Items.
Costume Jewelry ,
Action Toys, Musical
Toys &amp; Trinket Boxes
Open 10 A .M. to 4 P .M .

THIU JUlY

h ..... , . . . _
CAU fOI fill 'ISIIMAR

992 -6116 .. 367-7220

Fairgoers can test their know I·
' 'I'm In the band ," s he ex·
edge of people. places and events
plalned. But she drew a blank on
In Ohio history while seated at an
contemporar y singe r Nanc y
o ld classroom desk that came · Wilson.
from the ltrstconsolldated schooi
Regardl ess ol score, anyone
district In the United States , In
ta king all or a ny of the quizzes
Trumbull County.
gets a cenlflcate s igned by Stat e
"This desk Is more comforta- Superintendent ol Public ln struc·
ble !han the ones we have now, "
tlon Franklin B . Walter and State
giggled 16-year-o)d Trlna Ber·
Board of Education President
nard of Millersburg, Holmes
Patricia Smith.
County, as she sat down to take a
This reporter aced three of the
quiz on famous Ohioans.
tests but failed the fourth - on
educational fl.rsls -mise rably .
Trina scored 60 percent, cor- That test contained questions on
rectly Identifying Hanby as com- which Ohio city had the nation ' s
poser of the Christmas song " Up
first schoolboy safety patrol and
on the House Top."

ANN'S
Gift Shop &amp; Toy Store

40"1. OFF ON WINDOWS

Sunday, which won lop awanb In the annual Golden Nunet Sand
Caslle t'Ontesl on the beach. ( UPI) ·

Trivia awaits you at Little Red Schoolhouse

Koch to recuperate
at home after stroke

TAYLOR BUILDERS

OPEN FOR BUSINESS
324 E. Main Sl.
Pomer oy
s, hirid City .Hall

I

Vinyl 6 Alum. Siding
Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of All Types
Wor~ed in Hame Area

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

FILL DIRT

Aeldtrtlel

The Daily Sentinel
R-ot"-'*" ilhd., Wnfli \.

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

n~::U:.•-

Roger Hysell
Garage

3·11 ·11•

99"f:6Jsa

"At lta~onallle Prictt"

''::C:-

FOR SALE

... Sunday (ails

Each panern S3.25 plus
75e postage/handling .
(NY re!ld!!tl dj 5lies lao I
Stndto:

"~r ..... (~141

ft--....,•-·

11 --~

Howord L Writesel

PH. 949·2860
or 949-21101

Pay Your Cable 6
Phone Billa Hero
IUSINEIS '"ONE

CUSTOM .UILT
HOMES &amp; GAUGES

.UIDINCI PHON!
IM41 992-7154

*VINYl SIDING
*AlUMINUM SIDING
*BlOWN IN
INSUlATION

flew H011111 luilt
" f reo Eotlm.tea"

has yarn ha ir, wears size

.

We Cerry Fllhing Suppli•

Business Services

REASONAIIE • IEUAIU
8·20-'86 tfn

'

SALES &amp; SERVICE

?:::r:::r=-.....
!---··

'

BISSELL
BUILDERS

PLUMIING &amp; HEAnNG

·-·-··--·-

, Cfan ified pap• cove' th•
fo l/owins· felephoru! euhrn•e•·:·

~\:~'·f.'I~'1'J~~::.o"
~tO

....~e!""'""l:.

IW

••••
H1 .

.. _

~

__ . . _____•___ _

I..- oa.,.
-

;:on!::

I Gill

~-c..

a
....
..._.

IUM

___ _.._
___
....,_ ..._
........
:t
,.

·-·__-_
----··-

W
·.,""
'""·

614-843-5248

By DAVID HARDING
that would cause it to be rejected
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
Immediatel y al the processing
Dozens of farm' animals are plant.
· judged attheOhio State Fair, but
Using a protractor device,
none more extensively than Marsh then measures breast
angle.
poultry.
.
By DAVID HARDING
Each bird Is visually exam·
." J 'm looking for breas t
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI I
!ned, weighed, measured and length," he explained, "how far
You know which city Is the
assigned a score. Scoring is on a It carries back."
capital of Ohio. And you probably
negative basis, zero to 10, lower
Then Marsh scores the bird for
also know who John Glenn and
scores rated better and higher feathering.
Roy Rogers are. But d·o you know
scores rated poorer.
' 'Feathers are taken off meIn which Ohio city the nation' s
Glyde Marsh, retired Ohio chanically," he said. "See these
·f irst non -commercial educa·
State University professor of pin feathers here? They'll be
Ilona! television station was
poultry science and veterinary difficult to remove.
located? Or who Benjamin
"Five," he shouts to the tablE'
pathology, began judging meatHanby and Jacob Parrott were•
c lass chickens this weekend with of scorekeepers behind him.
Ohio Department of Educatlo·n
' 'The birds next are scored for
a pe rsonal interview of each
staffers are administering four
pigment, the color o! their skin,
youngster showing birds.
multiple-choice trivia quizzes In
"How much did you pay for legs and beak.
the old,!ashloned setting of t he
"The color on the outside will
these chickens?" "How did they
department's "Little Red School·
ar rive? Air express? In a card- be reflected on the Inside, and the · house" exhibit at this year' s Ohio
..board box?" "What did you feed American ·housewife wants yel·
State Fair.
low fat," Marsh said.
·the birds?"
The amount of fat Is judged by
"You want to make sure that
the kids who entered the birds feeling the blrd's pelvis.
The final char·a cterlstlc taken
actually are the ones who raised
them from chicks," said Marsh, Into account Is general market
turning to begin his actual quality.
By DAVID HARDING
judging of the poultry.
"We're looking at muscle hardCOLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) -A
He starts by . firmly grasping ness here," explained Marsh.·
Kentuckian, competing for her
the chicken, which Is hung upside "You want It not too hard and not
first time In a cooking competidown by the legs, and feeling for too soft. And confirmation must
tion. won the chili cook· off on
bruises , broken· wings, anything be even."
Youth Conservation Day at the
Ohio State Fair Saturday.
Lisa Edmonds of Indepe nd·
ence, Ky., received a trophy
from Gov. Richard F. Celeste
and · $2,500 cash award for ·her
"Hillbilly Chili."
" The fairgrounds have never
showed no evidence of the earlier
slurring as he made brief re·
marks and ' thanked doctors at
both hospitals. There also was no
sign of a drooping on the left side
of his face that doctors sa ld was
evident following the strnk&lt;&gt;
Koch, who stands slightly over
6 feet and weighs more than 200
pounds, said he planned to lose
weight, as recommended by his
doctors, who said he had a brain
as healthy as that of a younger
man despile the stroke.
·. ,
''What you see before you Is a
28-year-old brain in a 62-year· old
body," the mayor said. "It's my
intention to bring that body ol62·
years down to the age of the
brain. I Intend to lose someweight."
Koch, who Is In his third term
as mayor, said he would return to
work this w~k but vowed to
follow hi' doctors' orders.
"I Intend to do the rjght thing,"
he said. "I'm going to listen to the
doctors. I have a wonderful job as
mayor. I Intend to keep It ~or a
long tirne."

• -•

..

- C . , IW

I~

· By WILLIAM K. RASHBAUM
NEW YORK I UP!) - Mayor
Edward Koch, leaving a Man hal ·
tan hospital alter suffering a
small stroke, remarked that he
had " a 28-year·old brain In a
62-year-old body" and intended
to rejuvenate his physique by
losing weight.
The mayor appeared more
subdued than usual as he left the
Neurological Institute of
Columbia· Presbyterian Medical
Center In upper Manhattan Sun·
day to recuperate at h'ome In
Gracie Mansion. '
Koch was stricken with a
sudden occurrence ot slurred
speech, nausea and dizziness
Thursday morning in his limousine and was raced- at his own
request .- to Lenox HJII Hospital
for tests .
He was taken to Columbia·
Presbyterian Medical Center
early Friday after suffering a
second bout Qf the symptoms,
doctors said. · ·
On Sunday, the mayor's
speech, though slightly hailing,

... ..... ..
MIATEl

• ·tt - D f If. . -

Electronic Organs
Mobile service

BUILDING CASTLES IN THE SAND- P118sersby on the beach
at Allantlc City, N.J ., look on as Rlch.ard Pulcan of Neward,
Delaware, makes a last ,minute ·adjustment to his sand castle

Help Wa,n ted

3 Announc:ernents

-•• ·os""~

Poultry judging ·extensive
for kids and the animals

11

of

JuiJ. _

7-2-L ooo.

Help Wanted

Meet nice people and maka new
friends. Sell A\lon , free · Stan
up fee. Call e 1 4· 441· 2166 .
JOB PLACEMENT: High tchool
gr•dt, let us help you ditcover
the job that fhs you best. We
place pM)pte in OY., 70 c•...fletdt. Jobs are full time perman..t position• wil:h solid benefkt.
Applicenlsbetween 17-30yeatt
old will H contider.t. No Fea
lnvol\led. C•ll taU " " 1 · 800282· 1384, Mon~ay - Thunday,
9am-2pm .
Full time baby1itter. 'day end
evening hours, some weekends.
AgM 7 and 6 . Mature lady with
no other ties. 304 · 115 · 5B3~ .

S ituations
Wanted

Dodrill's Private Home Care. Will
c•e for the elderty in my home.
Call614·388·8193 •nvtime.
Win pro\lide child care in my
home. Lots of lova . 16 ye•rs
uperienca. Reference provided.
614•992, 7632.
Will do hDUse end office deaning. C•ll614-843-5194 •nd ••k
for Jenny.
·

1 8 Wanted to Do
Jim 's odd jobt painting. dfi\1&amp;wey resealing; carp.nter work &amp;
roof repelr, trees &amp; hedges
experienced . Call 614-3792416.
.
Auention School T~techers •nd
ete. Mature, Christian baby·
sitter. location : 2nd. Ave. Call
614-446-2750
Will Be by sit in my home. Ex per.
and Refer. Call614· 446· 6147.
Mother of 2 · Would like to do
baby silting in her home. Call
6t4-446-056S.
Can do light hauling and roo fing.
Reaeonable rates Marion
Snider. 614-949-2629.
Grover's lawn Mower Repair.
We' ll pick up and d&amp;liver . Good,
Uled moweu for sale. Call
IJ 4 -742- 2393 Of 614-742·
30S1.
LAWN MOWER REPAIR SERVICE. Alab lawn cutting. 304·
675-1563.

Financial
21

Business
0 pportunily

Need axp..-lenced liVe-in house·

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULAnON

NEEDED
CREDIT ~ANAGER
With retail sales experi·
ence . Hand:e all credit
sales approvals and col·
lections, and also sales
in retail store. Salary·
depends on experience.
Send resume . to Daily
Sentinel, P.O. Box 7291 ,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
L - - - - - - . . . 1.;

Daa't make the wrue ull.
Call "Cleland Realtt.''
HENRY E ciELAND, JR . ... .......... ........... 992·6191
JEAN TRUSSELL .... " ...... , .... :....... ......... .. 949-2660
DOTTIE TURNER .....'............................... 992-5692

TRACY RIFFLE ........... ..... ........... ............ 949-3080
0FFICE ........................... ,.......... ...:....... 992 •22 59

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING
elnauletlon
•Storm Doors

•Storm Wlndowa
•Replacement Windows

•Now Roovnu
"FIIEE ESTIMATU"

JAMES
PH.

kMper for upst.lte New York

EAGLE IIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
. CENTEI

eree. Plaue call 304-171· eoto
or 175-88&amp;0 for ,interview,

PAm • SIIVICI

AVON - All erau. Cell M..-ityn
w ..... 304-812·2045 .

Repeira on All Mokea
Tr~naaxte Rep•lra
lecattd Halfway ..._
lt.~

.... .....

HRS: 1 2:00·8:00
Mondly·S•turdey
CLOSED SUNDAY

Ph. 949-2969

Mondi'!' · SM:urd.,, }Oth· 1~th.

A .N. applleatlonl now R*ng
•ccepted for tull time polkion•
Ple. .nt Valley Nursing Cere
Cllftter, eppty plfiOnnel " office
P I - VIII"¥ Hosp, 304·175· .
4340, AA·EOE .
,
Pert· di'IM cook potttlan. Even·
ingt Ontyl Inquire et Vlllege
Pizza Inn, 300• Jtcktof' A...
Point Pl. .ant.

t NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH.

lNG CO . recommends thll you
'do business wilh people · you

know. •nd NOT to send money
through the mail until you h.va
lnvastigatfJd the offMing.
Rastamatrt ' Butiness for sale.
Eastern Aw. Call 614 -448:'
3017 .. 446-97e2.
Rental property for sale. G•llipolil, 4 units. t10. 000. ann11al
income, serious Inquiries only.'
Coli 014-258· 1829.
Staa b• tor ••le. Inquire at 100
W. Main, Pomeroy, Ohio.
l

r

�r

t

.

Paga 8 -The Daily s,ntinel

LAFF-A-OAY

for"'"_, ond

lloablld.

We

49

114-IIJ-2157 or 814-9922321. 1:00 .... . ,go pm.

.

'

.

f'or leeae

remodtled kltch.,,
b.. ft . bedroom and lhllngroom.
AV.ileble middle of AU9u1t.
Second floor, corner S•cond and
Pine. Parkh'l •'•• pravld.d .
S225.·per momh, or 1210. with
kitchen appliances furn.,htd.
Call 614·446· 2326 or 4-41· .

lo\'.ty new 3 BR home buitt this

sprklg. 2 Clr garage.

nl~

area.

&amp;:oo- c•••e,•-44&amp;-1244.
·

44

Hou11 plu1 71 acr•· 1 mi. no. of ·
No. Gallie H.S . Rural water, lots
1 . 84 . acres . nice · flatland .
,of ~s. No· reasonable offer
Conven. location. Call614·446-

zefuood. Cell 814-448-8980.

7127.

'For Sale HouM: 3 BAS. 86 ,000
down . . Take over pavmenb.
f .H.A . loan, 9 .&amp;. inttr•t rete.
Kyger Creek tchools. George
Creek. Kelty Dr. Phone 814·

For Sale: 18 acr• of uncteared
land. good to psoil. Centerville.
For lnfor. Cell 614-882-6993.
Reduced: 37,789 acrn, surveyed . $22,000. Cell614-4462071 .
.

448-7757.

&lt;3 BA .. brick. 2 betM, 4011.60
'metal garage. Nice loc:ation:Crawn City. Call &amp;14-256 -

11,7 acres river front property in
Syracun, 14x70 mobile home.
1Ox30 enclosed porch, new
2411132 garage. Calf Glenn Cundiff 614-992-3905

,1113.

tn Crown Cit'!': 3 BR . home. All

·newly remodeled. Owner naads.
'to transfer. Mid. 40's. Call

814-256-1652.

:ch ..ter. 2 bed~oom , bath, full
..,_em.,t. large enic with stain
~could

mNe 2 rooms). Older

-v-eoe. outbuilding. 60x3251ot.

:&amp;14- 7·2-2928 . • ,9,500.

'3 bedroom. 1 'V2 bath. corner ~t.
CkJH to sc:hoo .. and town. Call
114· 192· 3666 evenings .
-lc6 room
two bathl. new 1
Toof. NUHSh windows. glfage.
248 N. Fourth Ave., Middleport.
'Make oHer. 614- 247-4672 or

hou•.

room with b8th on private drNe.
~orth 4th in Middleport. Nice
lot. Witt sen on land contract to
qwatiflld buyer. Call Bill Childl
• 114-982-6312.
Reduced for
f,jlt ..... S18,000.
5 bldroom. b8th. fulty c;arpvted,
new deck. 1 ac;re ground.

t'4-992-8554.

.

Several types of lots for sale. 10
miles south of Point Pleasant on
At. 2. Call 304-576-2026 .

Modern 1 BR apartment. C•ll
614-446·0390.

--------~-­

Rental s
41

Houses for Rent

Nicely furnished small house.,
Adults only . References re·
quired. Off street parking. Ph.
614-446·0338.
H11f of a double. 128 State St. 6
rooms, beth. carpet. $200 e
month. Sec. Dep. end Ref.
required.

you can own a
hbme1 Owner will help finance
ihls 1 'h story home. 8- mile.
north of Pt. Pl. lJi acre, gardl80'
spot, 3 bedrooms. eat-in kit- 4 BR . hou .. for rent. 3 mi. ao. ol
ch.n. woodburn•. Low 30's. .Gallipolis. $300 8 month plus
dep. Ret. required. Cell 6143.04-875-4008.
.U6-1615. After 6 :00PM .. call
ThrH bedroom brick ho,ne, 448·1244.
large IMng room, dec:k, free
wat4M'·teptic. 8 %'% loan euump- 4 BR . hou1e on 1 acrB. Excel
tion. Five minutes to Point loc;etion. Ref. Call A-1 Reel
Pluunt. After 5 p.m., 304· Estate Broker.

875-5306.

ARBUCKLE - Nice 3 bedroom.
clininQ. laundry. family rooms.
1 1h bnhl. % acre, city water.

031.000.00. 304-588-9148m

GOVERNMENT HOMES from
e1 .00 IU Repair) FOI'eclosures.
Repo~, Tax DelinQuent Properties. Now selling v.our area.
Call1 -31 &amp;-736 -7375. ext. 2PWV-H tor cunentlist. 24 Hours.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY

MOBILE HOME ' SALES, 4 MI.

::'J;~-E ;:.~~~~:74 RT 35.
1984 Shultl . 3 BFI. with expend.
Microwave. 116,000 or belt
offer. Cell614-.t48-6726.
1957 Vind.te 8 ft .x 48 ft.
81200. Cell 614· 992-7672 .
141170 Caravan traitor. 1 acre
land. gerage, privacy fence.
located v. mile our Peach Fork
Rd .. Pomeroy. 814· 992-2473
or 614-992-7512 .

Furnished Cottage, 3 rooms and
bath. one or two adults. Ref. and
Dep. Water furnished . No pets.
Call614-446- 2543 .
Authenti c Log home- 2 BR .,
trees. rural-water, just oH Rt . 35.
S250 e month. Virginia L. Smith
Real Estate Call 614-388-8826.
3 bedroom hou~e. Mulberry Hts.
large verd. Deposit . Reference.
8225 month. 614-992 -7890.
2 bedroom,.W· D hook-up, base-

ment.- Clean. Quiet location,
edults-senion preferred. 1 or 2
children. No pets. Ref(lfence.
S165.· t195 . month plus dep·
01it . Available immediately .

218-835-3952 .

3 bedroom house in Pomeroy.
Gsrage. new kitt::hen. Deposit
required. Call 614-992-6556.
3 bedroom house for renl in
Syracuse. Also 3 bedroom on
Uncoln Heightl. Pomeroy . Cell
814-992-7589 after 5:00.
3 bed room house in Henderson.
W. Va. 8276.00 month, call

614-446-9862.

3 bedroom, Adults.

304-875-4384.

1977 N81hua. 14x70. 3 bed•
room, Ph bath, gas dryer, gal
tumece. Good condition. Call

814-817-1538.

141170 Windsor with 14x30
additton, 3 bedrooms, pond,
appro• 3 acres, Gallipolis Ferry,

304·175-6930.

N~

pets.

Muat aecrifice 1917 1 4x70
Crown Victorian 3 br, dining
room, very gd. cond. ~ 2 acres.
Drilled well or city water. Call
304-171-2264 or •fter 3 pm
work 937-2319. 114,000.
PAIC!O RIGHT - 1971 Schultz
mobile hOfTie 12x80. 2 bed·
rooms on rented lot . block 1nd
und.-,.nnlng included. Partially
fum-

2048.

f4200.00. 304-882-

Mobil·• home and 'V2 1crelot ne.,.
MelOn. Will aell mobile alone.

304-773-5381 .

33

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent .
14x70 Mobile Home for rent.
1 'h baths. 3 BR ., total elec. 3 mi.
down At. 218 . Cell 614·256 ·

9360.

1••70 Memory 1980, 2 BRS ., 1
beth. Queil Crk. No.6. Cell

814-245-9829.

2 br mobile home w;th 1 1 -3 lot.
Calletter 6 p.m . 304-676-6483.

.

2 bedroom, 1Ab60. furnished,
washer and dryer. central air.
Call 614· 992·7479 .
3 bedroom mobile home for rent
in Syracuse. Call61 4-992· '7689
after 6 :00.
Mobile Home For Rent - 2
bedrooms. furnis hed, 304-676·

8512.

141170 mobile home, pertillty
furnished, central air, clote to
schools, hospitel and stores.
Phone 304· 675-6789 afler 4
p.m.

44

Apartment
for Rent

3 room furnithed uarage apt.
412 1st 51. New Htven. 304·

882-2223.

20 ecrt f.,m with 3 BA . .houtt,
Hennen Tr1101 Ro.t. 01..-ood.
W. Ve. for mcM'I informetion cell

Marshal students town houn
eptt. 5 minutes drNe from
c.-nput. large enowgh for 3
at:Udents. Deposit Required.
Aef.-an~"· Furnill)ed or unfur·
nlshed. c.n 304-8915-3450.

-773-1118 .. 773-1181
oft• 1:00.

34

Business
Buildings

Y-... . ..

Commerci.e bU.I tdlngt for l. . e.
DowntOWn pt. Pl...ent. Stores.
oftkMM. A·One Ae_, Estate,

Corol
171-1104.

Cell 304·
I.

~otor1 for 81le

1331.

Furnished.downttelrs. 3 rms.
end beth. Clean. No pets. Adults
only. Deposit end Ref. Required.
Call614-446 -1519.
Nicety furnished. 2 BR . eper1·
ment. Nice location . Adulttonlv.
Cell 614-446-2404.
Apartments: New paint. nice.
good loc1tion. C1ll 304-6715·
5104 or 675-7738.
Nice. 2 Sr . "pt .. Stove, refrig.
. Furnished. Water paid. Near
Drive-In Theatre: Call 614-446-

7025.

u-

ar -

1 bedroom unfumi1hed apt. in
Middleport . t110. per month
plu• utilitin. Cell 614· 992·
5646 days end 614-949-2211
evenings;
APARTMENTS . mobile homes.
houses. P1. Pleuantend Gellipolia. 814-448 -8221 .
2 bedroom furnised apt, ref and
deposit. New Haven, W . Va ..
304- 882· 3267 or 304-773 6024.
In Middleport, Ohio. 2 room
furnished apt, 304-882-2688.

46 Furnished Rooms
Rooms for rent, dey. · week .
month. Gellla Hotel. Cell 814448· 9680. Rent at low as e 120
mon1h.

pa;o. Sh..e bath. Single meta.
919 second. Galltpollo. Coli
446-441&amp; after 7pm.

Mil. C.U

3 rooms and beth, gH heat.
ground floar, washer end dryar
hook up, no children, lmmedlme
occupancy. No pet.. phone
304-8715-4480 eXt 53 or 50.

8 fl . Spum ~luminum Setllile
Dish wtth receiver and tracket.
Coat S2500. new. Alking S760.
Mutt sell immediMety. Cell

81 4·H2·1379.

County AppliMt::.. Inc. Good
uMd eppliences and TV eets.
Open BAM to IPM . Mon thru

wh..,
f 1700. 1973 Chryel•

boot 1-0.

Set. 614-441-1199. 827 3rd.
Ave ~

Apt. •189. per month ·plul
utiliti ... Ref. &amp; smell depo11t
required. 304-773-9594.

·

Copp.none General Electric
stove. 125 . 1172 Cemaro .
Runs. As is, •2150 . 1878 Ford~
ton plek-up. .S:
drive,
1 70 Votvo eng!,_ Cuddy catHn
with portable pony. 12800.
Tent. 14x10.
811 at Jim
Persingert residenc;e, Mile Hill
Rd., Racine.

Gallipolis, OH .

••o.

Valley Furniture. new &amp; uaed.
large section of qualitv furni·
tunt . 1218 Eutern Ave .,
Gallipolis . .

W•h••·
dryers.
reno•• · Skaggs

ralrig•atorL
Appllenc11,
Upper River Rd. Nlide Stone
Cr•t Motel . 814-441-7398.

114-192-2214.

Iundy II Su andCaM, Iik•niW.
Ctlllfter 4 :30, 304-875· 5410.

58

1978 Ford Pfnto at 312 Lli
Grenda. •eoo . Cell 114·446·

Fruit
8o V egete bles

Canning tometoea. you pick.
13 .00 bulhel. Marahel Adem1,
Letart Fellt. 614·247- 2011.
Canning tomato•• 14. 00
picked. t3.00 pick your own.
Cell Wayne Rowe 61.t· 2t 7 ·

2277"' 114-247-2155.

Quelity Fruit• ~ Vegetabl•
retail and whol11.. e. 8 • S
Produce .Croat from Pi1a. Hut.
GeUipolls. Ohio.

Sot• and chlirs priced from
8395 to e995. Tablet ee.o and
up to t1 25 . Hld••·bedt e390
to t596. Rec:liner• e221 to
1375. t..mps S.28 to 1125.
Dinft'IH e1 09 and up to e495.
Wood table w · l ch1irs 12815 to
1795. Delk noo up tQ t375.
HutchM .e 400 end up. Bunk
beds complate . w-mettrn"'
8296 and uptdS396. Bebybedl
81 .1 0. Menr••" 01 bo• ..,..lnga
full or twin eea. · firm S78. and
888 . OuNn sets 1225, King
e3BO. 4 dr.werch•t 119. Gun
c-abinets 6 gun. Gu Of •ec:~r i c
renga S3715. Baby m.ttr.....
e35 &amp; S4B . Bed fremM S20,
t30 &amp; King fTeme SIO. Good
selection of bedroom tuitH,
metal cabinets. heldbo.,d• 130
end up to til.

I~

F'REED.

•

40 used tr~Ofs to~ ftom
&amp; eemplete line of new • ulld
equ~•t. Largllt ·uleetkln in

TONv·s GUN

Utliilv bldf: 27'e3l ' ol' . 1a-.a·

hat

~EPAIAS .

1971 GMC Tendtftl Dump
Truck. 671 GM di~H~eneine, 10
speed tran1., elr ·
PS.

br*•·

17500.00. 304·458-1031 .

90 Dey• ume es c•h with
approved credit. 3 MIIM out
Bulaville Rd. Open 9em to 6pm
Mon. thru Sat. Ph. 614-.t48·

Building Metert•
B'o~ . brick . ..,.., pipes, wh'tdowL lintels. etc. Claude Win.
ter1. Rio Orend-. o ; Cell 81424&amp; -612:1 .

PARSON'S FURNITURE

Concrete bloc;kliiU ab:es yerd or
deUvery. Mason tsnd . .GallipOiil
Btock Co .. 123'11:. Pine St .,
Gellipolis, Ohto Cell 114· 448·

2783.

R. .dy mix cOncrete 1nd •"
concreteauppti•. C.N u1 Yen.,
IJOOk Cement Md Suppll•.

304-n3-1234.

56

Pets for Sale

Groom end Supply Shop· Pet
Groomln9 . All br.. di . .. AII
•tviM . JuheWebb Ph. 114-4-410231 .
Dregonwynd Cattery tcenn•.
CF A Him•leven, P~ian end
Slam.... klnen•. AK.C Chow
p;uppi". New kittens: Slam••
snd Himelayent. Call I 1 4-4413844 after 7PM .
AKC· TinyToyPoodlePupplw. 2
red males, .S150 eech. AKC Tiny
Toy Aduh Feme&amp;• • yrs. old.
•cr..m, S160. C1ll e14-441·

·8821.

Englith Setter puppi•. I wka.
old. E~teet blood line lAymen
Hemlodl), 2 temel•. 2 mal•.
vood g· "'"" dogo. Coli 814-

Yort&lt;. 10:30)

114-441-ZOR. E-. ;

258-9354.

876~ 7274 .

Beegle pup•

&amp;14-446-0373.

for

ule.

Call

62 CB,TV, Radio
Equipment

57

Good used color T.V, for ule,
floor model and Portable. Cell
614· 446-1 149. .

Musical
Instruments

·lc;Eiectric lowery organ A-1
ahape. 1700 fkm. 114-992-

Xera!' Model 2300 Copier. Approximately 5 veers old. Very
good condition. Price upon
request. 304-876 -6990. 1 -4
p .m.
.
Sears Creftmen 1 O"redi .. uw.
new. 1300. 2V. hp metal t•ble.
~ontgomerv Ward 16 cu .ft.
freuer 2 year• old. S176.:
Wringer wash• whh new tub.
very good cond. 1100. 304·

195-3683.

1580 B Cast 8•ckhoe Loeder.
.9, 500.00 . 304· 458·1031 .

Conn Trombone (student
model! . Uke nnw conditkJn.
1225. Also foldlnu music ttand.

CoH 814-742 -2951 .

, Wurliar double hybaerd cwgan
and bench. Good condition.
'1Asklng e300. Will negotlete.

814-742-2103.

Beautiful Kimball plano. Rtaao. n•b4• priced. Call evenings 304-

875-1879.

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

own•. 3 apeed, A.C . tiiO.

114·H2·1321.

Beu ..chalna, and sprodletl to fit
elmo•t any uw . SIDER&amp;
EQUIPMENT CO., H9nd•son.
W . Va.l04-875· 7421 .
11' fifth whMI cattle tnMier. 14;
disk. 24' ••In CCNWI"for, creep
...... 304-175-1117.
New Holland 717 ForoeHtrv••
ter. New Holland 7 ' H1ybine.
Gehl IS Grind•· mbt•. AI ...

ctllent condition.
4215,

304· 273·

7 HP Troy-luitt tiler. exceU.nt
condition. 1800. 304 ·171·

2824.

.

62 Wanted to Buy

v .w. llllebblt
1110. 1173 l'ltl• Ch•olt•

1180 Oleul
f

1M2 Ford hp.. Pl. PB, air,
AM·FM. IUn roof. luth• Mills.
12000 ceeh. C•ll 114· 311·
97615 after 5 p.m .

2985.

1817 ChryMr Newport. good
condit ion . 3220 F,.nklln
A'llfllnUe. Potnt ftteeMnt , W. Va.
1971 Chew .... 2 doat. 1400.

1873 302 Fa&lt;d ....... 11.000
mile~ ,

2738.

nl5o.oo :

304 -171 ·

1 17&amp; Cutlets Supreme V· l .
automatic. Runt good. ftO .ruat.

304-171-7371.

Durt~c Bo••· Bred

;utt lik.J th~
boefs we tnttd It the Ohki'
THtstioil that gained o~ 2.4
lbt: per diiV. Roger Bentley,
Sabina. OH. 113·18•· 2318.
.
.
·lc•For Sele: 8 month old Pol fed
Hereford luN and 3 year old
Polled Hereford lui. Cefi ·&amp;U982-7418.

64

1878 end 1171 Gremlin. n...O.
WoriL bot:h for t410. 304-'1 7144-41. Call Hlw'"" 6 end 1 .
1•78 "Pont'-c Cet .. lne. uoo
bett oH•. 304-171· 2124 .

Dr

1113 Chewfl• Metibu, auto .•
PI : eir cond .. i cyL .4 door.
12.100. after 5 phont:JO.t· l71-

72

Trucks for Sale

step butnl*, new be«erv. body-

good cond, Cllll14-"6-1720

•tt• •~ oopm.

,.
Cleen oer straw. S1 .10 per bate.
Call 114-949-3059 efler 5:00
p.m.
Mixed hey S1 . bale on wagon.
Hey for bedding 60c. 304-&amp;71-

5179.

Mlxtd hay, Alfalfa - clover greu. ,...on•bl• price. 304-

&amp;78-2028:

new parts. and extret.

f2800. Coli 114·441·4482.

Autol for Sale

t30011uy Direct! LOCII gowrnm•t u'-8. 81EZED • R~JitO
veltlt:l•. C.IINOWI 1·111·411·
36315 ext. J2214 tar directory.
24 Hours . •

73

UIO. Cell 114-441-1171 .

1974 Ford v ... 7•12 utMtty
body. 37.000 actual mtl... v.,.,
gooctcond. can J04.171· 7124.

1911 ST 4 wiiW dtlve. 32.000
mM.O, n.700. 304·181-3082. ·

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Perk,
Route 33, North of Pomtfoy.
·Rental trailers. Cell 814-992·

13211. Coli 114-211:8122.

7479.

800dth-.COIII,4-371-2112
_,time.

1-....:...-----------------

1983 200 ato Red. Aebutlt
~ain. aproaltata.

•"-•1. endttr•. ExVe· fac:tory

anytime,

SPACES FOR RENT - Troll•
lots. At . 1, Locuat Aoed, back of
K &amp; K. 304-875-1076.

- - - - ' - - - - - - - -3 81kemot~letr811.,. t210.
Cell 114 441- 73

·

·

·

"My caviar bett81' still be In
refrigerator, )'Oung manlll"

Mlat .. ,

1

C: ..... Rd. COli 114- ,

•••-on•.

1

..
homeripe.W. Cal Gerye1 ... )11.
1642.
'

- - - -.J

._ON ' I Tele" lslon Service.
Hou .. cailt Oft fii:CA , o...,.;:
GE . lpul1'i"' tn -Zenith. c;i·•:
304-171·2S.I ar 114•441- •

2464.

• ·,

Cll

AIIC IIDIICIIi

MY GRANDFATHER
UFO LASTNIGHT.

(R) !;I

1lll AiMftcln Maatarl

I

BARNEY'
ALL 'r'ORE CRONIES
ARE PLAVIN' CARDS
OVER Frr SNUFFY'S

:

Electrical

8o Refrigeration

'.'

'

SHE'S

RUN OVER

TtiAR AN'

JOIN 'EM

QUICt&lt; !!

FLIPPED

• · HER
GI'Z.'ZARD !!

Anklenti.t or comm.m .. wk·
New servtc. or repHa.
llcenttd electriden. · Ettlmett
""· Altl_..r EIOCI"col· 304,
17!1· 1"781.
'

tng.

:;

OHierd W-et Service: P004t.
Cilttrns, W.. l1. DeiNery "ny,

'

,,

w.... aono~... s-...lnfl •
pOalt, clstem1, welll. Ph. 114~ ...:

J• J

1977 Cam~. n:lly ..,,., •uto.,
po.. pb. 11100. C.ll 1114-2&amp;&amp;-

1171 400 tt.wk Hondl. Nne

2711.

:.410. 304-171-4441. '
Coli - - I 1111d 8.
. 1871 Rogel. low mM•. pllnl. 1181 Chwone. low mil•. , 874 Hondo 10 Trol Blko.
1194 Pontloc:. T-1000. 1111 ' ..oellont -lon. low miiMto
· ChwetiO. 1914 Ao110n1. C.ll · 1300.; Ko-kl 100 Dlrlllka
.
114-441,8880.
·noo. Co11304-17&amp;·ZI24.

•

now John't ~

..,.,.._304-576-2241 .

e.i

e (l) UIA Tanigllt
1t:00 (I) HlrdDIJ.JIII1d
MaCau' at

PEANUTS

• (J) (I) • (JJ •

SORR't', MANA6ER, 8VT
ONE CAN'T EXPECT TO

Upholstery

GINiwl

Olflllore. Piplllll Maatera
from Olhu, Hawaii (T)
C!JIIgnOfl
·Ill Mao..,•• Current
riPOrtl on wor1c1 economics

A • M Cu.ton\ CouchN end
Aeupholnery, St. At. 7, Crown

n.w Upho.-ed.

1

'

-------

..,...~:..,.......,.~37~:1::

43

Lair

47 Join

in

DOWN

I Converse
2 Sabra's
dance

3 Salamander
4 Part of
a min.

5 Do business
6 Ship's diary 1-::-r+-+--+-7-- Gardner
DAILY CRYPTOQUOO'ES-Here's how·towork It:

818

AXYDLBAAXl:R
lsLONGFELLOW
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 fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code lettegrare different.
CRYPTOQUOTE
•
8·8

zv ·

KR

Q X J

B Z

I X I R

D V

KR

GRAC

9

X

RJADMJCRI

Z J C R G

NBDMGE

KB XC

X NY
B R

W D D Y N

•

I R X E N
·R 'Q R I N D J
.
Yeeterdq'e CrJptoqaote: GOD TELLS ME HOW ·THE
end flnenolll ,_. with Lou .
Dobbl. (0:30)
. '. MUSIC SHOULD SOUND;- QUT YOU (ONE OF HIS
e(l) a.- Connulan
· TRUMPET PLAYERS) STAND IN THE WAY.-- TOSCA·j

1

.I'

Mowrey't Upholeterlng MrVIng
trl county ere• 22 ,..,., The beet
In fumhure upholat~ Cal
304·6715·4114 for.'tre• -~
81tlm.....
..

3&amp; Importune 41 Rage

and all

(J) P101&amp;11lqnellurllng

CATCH TIIEM ALL, CAN
Clly. Oh. 114-218-1470 Eve
114·441·34H. 0 - d.i,. 1,;
4:30, SM. 1:30 to 1:30. Old •

·=

opponent
39 A Gabor
40 Came
UtJon

45 Suit fabric
·46 Head

I

IIJNewa

~s hour

of song
33 'tantalize
35 Dessert
wine

44 Each

Till stortaa and per1011a1
I
reltectlona of two Amer1ctns
whO playacl kly rolalln
planning and executing 1t1a
bomb lttid&lt;l II Hlroihlma
and NIQIIIkl. Q

'

25 Wapiti
27 Giggling,

38 Dem.'s

42 Worship

1IJl Ramembaling the 11omb .

.,'

29

30 Cole

35 Wee seal
38 Send back

e

work,

w..... Service. John Wettenori

87

1971 Honde CA ZIO. •oeftent\

'•

Wetteraon'• Water H•ullng ,
reaaoneblt retes, immediMi ., •
2,000 gellon deltvery. clltwns, •t
pOOle, well, etc. c•l 304-e7• '
2119.
•

new

tn 1881. Runs extnleood.

.

'

Jr. Owner. 1,0()0 or 2.000

·AN' FINO OUT
WHO ELOPED
OFF WITtl

Ring'10g"
22 Slipper
23 R:usslan
ctty

"love"
24 Extract
colt' ·
28
· 8u
c
28 Original

(surf.)

ln1ervlews wfth top
newsmakera and celebrities.
t:30 ()) VaiiiJblll Pro Beach
Volleyball from Pacific
PaNaadee, Callfomla.m
till •112111eolgnlng Woman
Stxull hara11ment ~
the order of the day for Mary
Jo. (R)
10:00 (!) Alive from OH Center
Tills Incisive black comady
shows the underside of the
American dream.
8
G2l eag.., and Lacey
Slmuela Ia In the dar!&lt; about
tha big award he l.s about to
receive. (R) Q .
1IJl News
Ill Evening Newa A wrap up
ol 1oday'e news and a look
ahead to 1omorrow·s news
stories. (t :00)

10:05 (lJ MIIOr LNgue BeaabaH
t0:30 (lJ Varlouo
1JJ Pro llodybolnl
ChllmpWnehlp From Oahu,
Hawaii (T)
C!J A Pleol o1 cae Trace
the lila and ctraar of arilet
Wayne Tllilbaud, Who hU
bten catlad 11M! WI~
Whllman of the dellclte111n.
Vis~ with him at home and at

tm1. COH 114·441-7404-No '

FOtmerly Ken'e

w;:

34 Dweller in

em SoiP

'
Hauling'

R Weter Service. Home '
clttents. wells, pools fiHtd. '
Formerty Jem• _lop w......

·

32 Ennoble

=~t:.,g~lin depth

•

CAATER•I PLUMIINO
AND HEATING

241-8211.

+Q4
•u
tK953

· •a

~evenged
21 Bells-

· 31 Gaunt

Cltaplln'a early lffof1l as an
lndependlnt filmmaker 1re

Plumbing
8o Heating

0.11-. Ohio
44&amp;-4477
.

Movie Q

Faaturacl are 1110¥111 Chaplin
made tor fun. D
·
Ill
a:ll Nawilirrt Joanne
convlncel Dick he·e In 1 rut;
theyJI~ the roed on a wlllm.

IT TURNEDQJT"TT BE
A LIJ\1\A 13EAN STI.JCI&lt; ON
HIS EY5GLA6SE6.

THOLJC::iHT HE SAW A

OUVERI TrH Trim"""" top- :
pmg. trimm~ prurMno deed ,
wood. •torm dem•e. telle 1
down•. FrH Entm.._ :ICM-

Phone 114· 44e· 3111 or 114-

~

e

luMclng end ramadiNn.. room •
aclditlons, rooflng,. layout. ..,...
lftt, licNnt. Mthloon•. eon- 1
cr.... el.ctrtc.l• ..,.. • . pklmltJng. 304·171-371 3.
:

Sundll¥ cellt.

EAST

~y

17 Relevant
. ,
21 Senortta
s

e (J) MOVII!: 'Why Me?'

(I) Anterl~an Mate11

lt.,N ,;. . end Ltwn ~
lewn o•e. l.,dtc•lt• "'""remo'tll. 304·171· 1142 or
871-2to3.
'
••~

C01. Fourth end Pine

~':.:"

()) 8urfar M-..azlne (T)

.

Gener1l

. WEST
+A932

3

............ 1;1

MoatwellaoompiiCIICIMMedalf. • ~
Pump .... end ...v1oe. 104· .•

84

Sifting
the evidence

.

e

etump

=~-.u...
---~
---.---~ 1~
---.-..
--. ·~

82

~-Otl'-

e

hofino. c"'"""" ond _

811·3102

James Jacoby

~~IMdwelt'

TrM and 1tvmp remcrnl. ....... '
4'I'MIIch. ....... ......... ....... '
tink tencee. •hrube . Don·•
Lendn-epel . Cell 114·441 ·

11• Honde XAIOOA. euoo.

oondlllon. 0800. 304·171·

218·8143.

· o.no.
ond0....
........
tnd
d~Mwry.
VM!Wfft
:•

r,.. rnmn.n..

....1'1

2-.,,

IW!EPEit 8ftd . . . . . rnaalilsw •

Coli 304-17&amp;-1370.

COli 11'·441-8711.
or

-.

1171 Honde XA· 210. Good
cand . e&amp;oo. can 114~ 2&amp;6 1124.

"10.00. Phone 304·1"71·
1431 .

. 1141

,.oo......

A •

1871 Non. greet oond. t1000.

1179 Plymouth Horllon. eooc1
cond.,eaoel. 1Mm44age. etOOO.

1-114-237-0411 . .., .......... :
w...

htty

BRIDGE

e

RD,aralaaement 1

exheuet end tir•. ee10 or beet
oH•. Cal l14-378-27.t2.

1878 Mu ...ng. 4 cyL. 110041 . Coli 304-171-IHI.
.tth- 1171 DodjjoCh•'I•SE. ----------------110041•h- C011f14-37 ·2112 1111 H - XA 31011, bought

Speee for email trailers. Alf
hook~ ups . C1ble. Also .ttl clancy
rooms, air .-.d cable. M..on,
w .v •. Cell 304-773-61151 .

'

UnCIOidl60ftal ......,.. ...,.,._ '
Loclf Nt. . .me tuo:.W:.t '
Fr" eltiMIC". Cell ...... ..

::---

'.

e

t ...

half

Svmbol - BINk ,- Quilt - Wallie - ALIAS
A ~elghbor confldea, "I wlah my klda would study harder.
· I don texpectgenlua., but I'm tired olgolng to PTA meetings
under an AUAS.".
·
·

.

+

••

IAIEM!NT
WAT£R"'OOflNG

Bfi

1112 Plymouth Aall..., 8to11on· ' 1110.
wegon - en• own•. e1991.
tll2 In': pal a. V·l. euto..
PS .• PI.. velour Interior. AC.

THE -NEW MOTT'o'

A$jc PI~E=C:TIONS''~

74. Motorcycles

1111 K•weukl Cell 11111-441-

814-441-3644. .

IT~

"THE. ~uctc .$TOP.&gt;
Hf~~' Bu~ ONLY ~

'
:
,
,

Hom1
Improvements

Vans 8o 4 W.O .

•gine. New

1176 Volklweoon Fl•bbtt. 4epd. deptndtblt work c:er.

N-.

hoyl1. c.ll 114-441-2757.

1111 HDnde CA121, low hrs .•

71

32' trefl•. Mlf·conta6ned. ....._
room.
meny utra ewnlne. KroHI ~~'•k. Itt, ,.....,._
WV. No liMn• catte ........ Uke

1975 3150 Ch..,. 1 ton dump.
1970 100 Ford 11 ,t, dump. 1
Merio{' dump, lx 1I teleecope

lr dll~[lort.tllllll
l.l-&amp;"7:':::"::-..---;:::-;--

-----

7272.

0fll8

.

responte

2• fl. camper whh e.nctem ~
wheelt, fuM Nth. Good ..... ,
.tlon. Sleeps Uc . Cell 114-"2· •

-~

- ·y lsfiiiiiY'S KIAII-i(IS.AIIS.IS

::C:ninl

I

1980 Oodjje pjck·up, 318, '3
apd ..

GCC Certificate• . 304· 175-

2443.

11113011. flfthwh"'lc_.
FOfd, pjcll·up. COli 114-HZ.

Clee .. ar,

I I

I 8A764
7:GI(lJ
and Son
+9 7 5
+AQ84S
7:30 e (J) til Newlywed Oarne ; By James Jaeoby
()) NI'L lluplntoni Men
SOUTII
Played the Game: Big Paddy
fi""tb'i
to South's one+J 10
UpiCOmb (R)
heart
bid was pushy. Bal·
.AKQJU
.(I)
Judte
.
tQ 10
111 WIIMI
of Fortunt 1;1
llllced
bution plus a king and a
+KJ2 ·
111 Crouflra (0:30)
jack Ia a little lipl Sure eoougb, the
ea Ol Jeopardy! ...
resp- got a jump to three hearts
Vulnerable: Neither
lB MljGr IMgue Bai:b.H
from opener, and that contract was
Dealer: East
7:31&lt;D llot~aa,...
far from life. Now place yourself iD
Nora Eul
L'OO (lJ lllltWI Countdown For · , the South poeltion, try not to look at · Weal
Paso
Paula
the East. 'l'fell banda, and follow along
I+ Puo
• (2) ill) ALF Willie II
the def-.
' Paa
Paso P111
quickly reaching hla breaklnp '
East won the opening lead with tlM1 Puo
point with ALF. (R) .
· 11e1.11D taceanG returued a club. Declarer
IJJ Trlllthlon Bud Ught
the king. ruffed the club jack ilf
Opening lead: 7
u.s.T.S. TriathlOn from
and led a low diamond. Easl
Baltlmora, Maryland ffi
low; Welt won South's queei L-------~-------------.1.
Cll
(J) Old Doge Two
his ace and now played a low
·
.
. .
former ~
policemen
raluu
to
"--Iarer p...
'-yed 1ow from d urn .
t
t
.
"""'
.
.
.
.
.
.
IICCIIPt - 1 ng pu 0111 o
my. ·East won the queen and retur
opened the b1dding. Second, if Welt
!E':'t!!~ Joumayo Greer
:a spade to Welt's ace. Welt no held the spade queen, be would be reaxplorea the northlaltem
smartly led a diamond, and East' . Iuciani to lead away from It, liDce deregion of Brazil In a paddle
ldng took the ~tiDg trick.
clarer would have to eventually ltld
steamer. D
TWo thlnp sboald hive guided de- :the spade suit hlmlelf. Another
all
G2l rc.to 6 Allie Chip
c;larer to 1 fletter deciJion when Well 'viewing the problem Ia that
Ia urged by Jalmey 10 aak 1
"lld 1 apade. Flnl, East had alreacly :might underlead the spade ace, boplq
new girl In town ou1 for a
111ow11 up with the club lice and aurely that declarer would ~ but
~':.-~
William
had tbe diamond king. (West might '. would be leery about leading away
Shawcro11 travela along the J have ltid the dlam011d king If be held from the queen 1iDce that might be the
Mel&lt;~ from Ho Chi MTnh
1both the ace and the king.) If East allo .'only way lor declarer to make a trick
CltY. I;J
held the spade ace. be might well have .holding J-x of spades.
11J l&gt;t~nenewo Wrap upa ol
the day·a world news and In
depth feature reports. (1 :00)
• (!) MOVII: TIMo ltlr
Chli- (RI(1 :49)
1.
by TttOt..AS JOSEPH
1:81 ()) MOVII!: Unlollchllliea
AC1t."'SS
8 Catn'
1:30 (J) llll Valerie Vllleril
1 Thorax
tp
rllluclantly agrees 1o direct a
Airway
9
Before
community play. (R)
8
till e1121 My III.W Sam
10 Be Imminent 11 B•zel opera
J .P. movM In with Sam and
11 Shelter
16 Go wrong
Patti when he llpilla with his
Betel
palm
17 Solemn
wife. (R) Q
12
13 Astonished 18 Soap pl_ant
t:OO (I) 7DD Club
14 Make lace 19 Explodmg
C2l 1111 MOVIE: 'Once
Upon a Tlone In~
.
Palt 2' N8C Monday Night II
15
20

Camper whh or withDut 1114
.

PRINt NUMBEReD LUHRS IN

· THESE SQUARES

,

-...ord

'

-uP

$

you de\leloP. from st•p No. 3 below.

6 UNSCRAM8lE ABOVE lEITERS I I I

e Cll Star Trek

171-3117.

CARS. JEEPI. TRUCKS und•

Hay 8o Grain .

8o C1mpera

81

··

tno

Complete
ehuekle quoted
by filling in the missing words

~--T~O~G~eT~A~N~SW~eR~-----.1--L-- ~-L~.~~-~

lla.n-

rtm01tal. CeH J04-171-1U1 ,

GMC 1981 plc&gt;-up. I ely., 3
tod .. low mil..&amp; AM-FM . - .
liveatock

•=

10

Is I 15 I
I~..-..1..I-.L.-..1..
__J.-.J..--'

e

79 Motors Homu

2794.

e

wOrld II divided Into two

' -A-B_A_N_N_Y_..., ~1e w11o ~e !hi Instruction

.

McCarm'ck
C2l PM Mlpzlne
()) lpoltaCentlr (l)

The

1--_ -r.l.:..;;..l.:..:..l~l"--' ~ :::,r::n;~~'::

Cl)l!ntaltllnmant TOnlg!lt
(JJ Peopla'o Court
C!J 1lll MicHal~ Leh,.,
NewiHOur It :00)
IIINewa
,
Ill Moneytlna Current
report&amp; on world economics
and financial ,_. with Lou
Dobbl. (0:30)

.....

2583.
Now buying shell corn Of e•
corn. Call for letHtquot... Alv.Ctty F1rm Supply, 114· 44•·

,r

X(

G0 M E A I .

"I

, IB.Iell_.

..."

"*".

Used Equ'Pmeru : 1 row N .1. 323
Picker. 8 ft . 1. H. Wheel
disc. 7 ft. Dairy llacle. O.J .' s
Tr•dini Po1t 114-192-7301 .

1878 Oh:h. Cutl•s Sup. E~~:etl.
cond. AC ., PS., Pl., n.., tir...
euto., 2 dr. C.lll14-44e·1G22.

OffiCe Sp~ee tor Rent. Excellent
tor Attorneys. Accountsnl, etc.
Close to Court HouH. Cel
Wiseman Reel Estete Agency.

-------------·k1177 Ford Meverlck . One

~ corn

Bach St~adivarlus Trumpet. top
of line: 3 YIIW1 old. Excellent
·condition , e700 . 304-812134•1 e:nydme.

rf;;:::::::::::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.i:::::~======:J

1913 Ch.-r.ne In ilkcttlent
condilktn. 4 door, luggage c:ar·
ri•· · atend•d 4 apeed. 48,0oo
~··· t2.t00. 132 luttefnut
Ave .. Pon~.roy , Ohio,

Oldemo"''

2571 .

54 Misc. Merchandise

1111 Ford EICOf'l. Low miiMUa
•ceR...t condftion, 2 dOor.
S3~ CMh. 814· 311·17!11
1ft• I p.m.

,

1:31()) LHft It To a.7:110 (J) - a n d

wMh 21 ::

Auto P1rt1
8o Acceaaorlea

Pornerov, Ohio.

tract! door &amp; 3' walk door. 19M Pontiee Le Mans. Z door ~
e4444 erected - Iron Horta · hltd top, hiOh perf0f1Mnctbulh
Bidet. 114-332-1741.
engirle. 4 apeed. Oood condl·
Uon. 12400. Call 114· 74Z·
12 HP Melley Ferguson Di81M 2373 efler 4 :00p.m.
triK'tor wtth pk)wl, diK, corn
plant.- end bush hog. t2t&amp;O. 1112
Toronedo. di•
Cell 814-218-1122.
•I lfllgine (todtld upJ. Wll
aca.p1eny rNHnllble Dff•· C.M
John Deere 41 El Combine. 2 814-H2-2171 - - 1:00
row corn hiNd· 10ft,, 12 tt, grain ..., and 1 :00pm.
tebla Good eond. 12&amp;00. Call
114-24&amp;·1&amp;83.
1tn Ford 4 Ooor, LTD, AC,
euto, PI , Pl . II. 700 ft'MI ...
New ldH Hey Toot1 with 2.9 1800. PtloM 11•· 112-7312.
flnence. N.w: 1 only. 7ft. N. l.
Mower Condhioner. ti&amp;OO. 1 '79 f0fd .,elrmont73,000 cwla6·
only 7 fl . N . I . Disc Mowat. n .. mil•. Goad cond, 304· 17\12600. D.J .' s Trading Poat. 8. 5 &amp;310 .
Mon•let 814-192·7!01 .

379-2 21.

AKC Boston T•rier. Call 614-

41.000 miiN, 132 lutl..... t

nmu

the antertalnmenl world 11
anchored IIVI fr.om N-

.~

1971 Chwy MoiiiN. 301 "'V·
runs good. lad¥ rough. Call
814-448-n84 oft• 6pm.
1913 Ch..,ette. St~d. 4
speed. in good condiUon .

IT

1lll vor,.e o1111a Mimi .
IIJ llhowlllz Today News of

Everwuda molor. t1100. Can M ·
seen et 435 Haedley St .,

78

I il I 11l

eccu~~~wa

a11

I

MUTLACI
~

IJl=,A:=.·~

·,

Mkkllaport.

·=

1:05 ()) Down Ill l!arih Stereo. ,
1:30. (J) 1IJ) N&amp;e;: Nlghtlr Newa I
00 John Fox'• OutdMr
A-IR)

I COULD !0-~e THAT
VOIJR ACC.OI.\PI.1CE

7402.

814-211-6411.
1-a t1J ,OOO. 1174 wredled
MH..,. Fer. . aon. New Holland. Carven. conwerdble I 1100.
lulh Hot lal• &amp; &amp;.-vice. Over 114-941-2711.

S.E. Ohio.

304-17&amp;-4U1 "

N~w

CAOSI. SONS

U.S . 31 W•t Jedleon, Ohio.

Canoe for ule. 5 HP 8rigpand
Str•tton hbrb:ontelah.ft motor.
Call 614 ·91S-.t161.
.
rltblueing. now taking cwd•
orden ,fDr custom M1uNr1. c•t

0322.

I .11111 Sitppllt·,
(, I Iv 1':, ill '. k
61 Farm Equipment

For S•le: Portable hot tub spa,
Metl ftve comfonably. MotoMesNge plua 3 jell. Ceramic
tile. uterlor redwood skirt.
FeeturH underweMr light with
dimm...-. Ce11114·141-2011.

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

Autos for Sale

:1983 00\1111 Colt. 4~ . lh"!!.
11 718. Coli I 14·441·471J.

Reward ' you,... t whh e ~ . .
heaoll'y duty zig-uag singer •.wk1g
m•chlne . Sugguted lilt
1239.99. Your price this week
onty e159.99 . The Febrle Shop.

GOOO USEO APPLIANCES

46 Space for Rent

Now thru Julv 31. flrlt 3
months, lot rent frH whh 1 vear
le•se. F1mlty Pride Mobile Home
P.-k. Ollllpolle ferry wh•• we
ceter to femlll ... Specious lots;·
huge playground • plonlc eree.
304· 1!175-3073 (If no entwer
leeve M81S8ge on mechlnet.

®Ciood

ft . CUIIOfft ,....,,..,.,, 100HII' .

71

1111

(JJ

e Cll Buck Rqgeta

114-441-H44. E-lngt 114- :•
. 441·3711.
-:
STERN WHEELER· n ·. In· .;
oil•. C.H 1,4-441· 7111.

;I

ill Dr. Who The Pirate PlaiVII
1lll a.cm City

Outbolf4;f MotOf- Llll• MW 1N.t ~
Martntr . .tO H:P .. .. eatrlc:: 11ert 1 •
long oholt· lhl.fl bo• IIOMion :
pentl. He• hMI tllfV ...,.... un. •,
111 offll' of 11111.00. D•y· •

cludol trot'•·

Cll •

w~m

.

171'&gt; 11. flbtrQI- -

wood I pc. llvinu room
IUita. S399 .96; New lkling
Furnished Apartment :' 4. rms .. room
suites from .8179. 95 to
bath. Centr•ltv loctttd. one ' or e700.;' Chett of ••Wers. 4
two adults. Ref. 1nd Sec. Dep . drawer
, S48·.• 6 drew.r, el59.96;
req 'ed. Cell 614-448•04-4• .
End tebl• from 119.95 set.
Used Furniture: bcldroom tultll.
Furnished Efficiency Apertment. full
sized bedl. twin bedl end
3 rms., b1th, carpet throughout. rock .
. _ Rediner• from a99.96
PfNate· quiet . Single working and up
person only . Call 814· 448·
THE WORKING
4007, 448· 2802.
MAN 'S FRIEND
Nice, 2 BR . ept. Stove. retrig.,
9x12 · lis tow •• e50·
.water furnished. 4 1h mi. hom CARPET·
loti to pic:ll from. Alao cut
~ellipolis , S210 e mo. No pets.
carpet, 18.00 a yd. and up.
Call 614·448-8038.
Financing avail. Swivel rock••·
Furni1hed Apt. Adults only . Alt e100 . Mollohan Furniture,
utilitin paid. Get ready for Upper River Rd. Call 614-448·
74
winter. Csll614-448-9523 .
: :::"-4_. - - - -- - -Gibson
copper tone refrlg ..
513 Third Ave. 1 BR. 1180 per eMcel. running
. . SZOO.
mo. Deposit required. Cell614· White eleCtric G.E.c;ond
stove. 3 yrs.
448 -4346 atte; 15pm .
old. t200. Solid Cherry twin
becU100 . Full Me Mel with
Gracious living. 1 end 2 bed· mettrns
and bo• springs, t75.
room apartments 11 VIIIIIIJe
Manor and Riverside Apert· Verlous Cl.!rtlint and drapes.
e6-110 "• pr. Cell 114-388ments in Middleport. From 8478.
1215 . inclwding utilities. Cell
814-992-7787. EOH.
Amana 1ir condition•. Brand
new. 18,000 BTU . Call 114·
For rent: Efficiency cottage. Mt. 448-0891
.
Vernon Ave . Pt. Pleaunt . Hud
approved. 814-992 :&amp;868.
Whirlpool elec:tric dryer. Ave·
Efficienc:y apartment. Private cado. Like new . t126. Gueren·
entrence. Single working adult teed. 614-387-0322.
only . Reference 1nd deposit
required. 614-992-69•2 efter Appliances for 11111. 1320. 3043 room epl . for rent. Partly
furnished. 614· 982 ·15908.

......

- - - -GOftd.,
- ··
141t. .....

SWAIN
&amp; FURNITURE 82
Olive St. , GeiHpolis.
"'EW- 8 pc_. wqqdgroup- e39~ .
Uvlng room suttet· S199- SI99.
Bunk beds with btddlng- eitt.
Full sil:e maattreu • foundet:ton
stutlng - 199 . Aecllnera
sterting· •99.
USED· Beds, drasers. bedroom
suites, e199 -e299 . De•k•.
wringer we1her, a complete line
of uMd. furniture.
NEW- WHt•n boots· eJO.
Workboott $18 • up. (StHI 6
soft toe). Call814-4415· 3159 .

:O

R..rrange lall.ro of
'
f011r oc:ramblad word• be. law to '"'"' '""' olmplo wordo.

.

• (J)

------'-...,.,- ·.

AUCTION

"IlLII

1:00 ()) lllg Vlllly Ambueh

son motor end t,.iler. e1100J .'
Coli 114-441-1521 ar 441-

C1ll 114·2&amp;&amp;-9317.

tMTNILY

18oatl 1nd

loot Club. COli 114-441·"'12. '
----,..--,..--~~~--· I
11 ft. fl......... 40 HP . John- '

Wooden f•ce post. e1 . 60 each.

Partially furnished trailer, 304676-2424.

114-211-1774.

-

furnished efficiency , 701
Fourth Ave . •t1110 utllttl• pd .
Call 61'4 · 446-4418 1fler Bpm.

Furnished room. S76. UtllhiM

Farms for Sale

· 135 acr•-•pprox . 20 1crH of
bOttom land, with 2400 lb.
tobacco base, large barn plus 3
outbuildings. Mobile home
hOOk-up. Nice home site. Call

Brookside Apartments: 446 1932 or 446·4639. One Bed·
room, epertment with large
country khchen , new 1pplien·
ces, utility room, water, sewer
end trash services provided.
Quiet area.

5,00,

On Morning Star Rd., Racine.
Phone 614 - 364 ~ 4084 .
1983 Freedom. 14x17. 3 bedroom. furni1hed . Call 614· 992·
7479.

Upstairs unfurnished apartment .
Utllhiea p1id . Carpeted. Roc;hild-:
ren or pets. Call 814· 448· 1637

1% ec lot on Jerrys Run Rd.
·Apple Grove, with rural water.
304· 576· 2383.

2 BR .• unfurnished house with
garage. Accept one child. Ref.
and Dep. Cell 614-441-9&amp;81.

Why Nflt when

Furnished Efficienc:y 1145. Utili·
ties paid. there beth. 607
Second Ave.. Gsllipolls Ph.
446-4416 1f1er ?PM .

Furnished apartment, t21 0 .
utilities p1id. 1 bdr. 920 Fourth,
Gallipolis. Call 446· 4416 after
Bpm.

7453.

MouN for ..,. by owner. small~

1 and 2 bedroom apartments tor
rent. Basic rent for 1 bdr,.
$183.00; 2 bdr.• 1219.00. Also
required a 8200.00 sec:urity
deposit:. CONTACT: Jeckaon
Emtn Dept. Ph 44&amp;· 3997
Equal Housing Opportunity.

Furnished apt. nut door to
Library . One prof"1tonel Adult
only . Parking . Ph. 448·0338 .

6 room house end b .. h. 1 1h acre,
114 - ~92-

Apartment
"for Rent

94 ec;reaon Grimm Ad., P.ortland
mail route. Minerals with free
gas. Good building sit... hunters
paradise. $400 per acra. Phone
614· 843·5185 .

614-247-2532.
t24.QOO. Call

J

51 Household Goods

t-;:~;::::;;::;=====r-----------.,
35 l ots &amp; Acreage

.

31 HP. Evinrude fftO'IOf, Priotto ~·

"You did say it's his best
friend ....?"

4 lA .• fp .• tuN buMtent. 3 mi.
to. of O.Htpoltt;. 34.900. Cell
Deyt-114-441 - 1615 . After

114-446-2957,

!

tr. . . . . . . .

114·441-8038.

402
Fourth
4 'h
belh~.
Now Ave.
ueed14asrooms.
4 apenm ... s. PricH for quick·sale. Cell

I

1111 24 ft. POntOOft ~lbNI. :
70 HP Evenrude MDI•. tnller. ""'
Lot•Ext,.a. lee .. GtlltDolll .. ,

Meteh!ng kenmore waah• and
dryer. herven gald, In good
cond. 1221. Smell chest type
freeMr, Norge. good cond,
e130. 1973 Dodge Dan, I alent
eng .. body good shape, t625
firm . Calll1oi-441· 2370:-

McrchJ ml1 sr.

Cltl, • city tchoolt. 6 mil• from
GaiU.,OM. Wtll consider mobile
home u trad•in. t47.500. Call

,_ " - xutol. ..-""'· •a•.
ao. .... rM
m"'M
. 104-171·1111.

Television
Viewing
.

·'I

non -errow •2111 Unlighted
t2491 Fr" lettenl See locally.
Call tOdayl Factory: 1 {800)
423· 0113 ; 1nydme.
·

, 2-bedroom cottage, 2103 Jettenon ·Ave. CleM. new carpet,
e210 piH' month with one veer
Ieese. 304· 676· 4100. 9 am. to
5 p.m.

1

.--------------------- .1•

HALF PRICE! F(llSHING AR ·
ROW liONS 12981 lighted,

compl~ety

BORN LOSER

M01orcyd•

711

EVANS ENT£APRIIE8. Jodi•
eon, Oh. 811-218-1830.

FOA LEASE: Ap1rtment with

liomes for Sale

{

cutv.-tL m. .l autvem. RON

4426.

31

""LMry Wright

74

fttattic clltem ...t• IPP'OIIed,
plutlc MPtlc t•nb. plaltlc

2321 "'441-442&amp;.

I

3430.

KIT 'N' CAlLYLa

COtlohM•o U1ed Tiro Shop. o1.000 - · -12.13. 14.11.
11. ,I.I. I mil• out At. 211.
Calll14-211-1211 .

FOR LEASE ; one· bedroom
apartmMt owrtooklft9 city park.
•111 . ptr month. Ca11114~ 440·

1

AUction. . Col. Oscar E. Cliclc,
K - ' 7114'81. 304-895-

114 Mlac. MerchandiH

3 or 4 ledroom hous• In Kyg•
Creek School Dlllrlct. "•'•""·
cH I'll ..114-441-H2, .

We ,,..,.._ Hom. He.tth C•r•

provWel4 hour. 7d.-,. Wehewe
..,.,.. .... lc•. For Inform•
tion. All P .M. •d Associate ..

Monday, Augult 10. 1881

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
47 W1nted to Rent

10, 1987

;.

.

n:30e CJl s~e~~ o1 Clnon
IJJ lpoiUtCenltr (L)

il

ll

NINI

·

.

.

"

·· • !-

,

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Mondly, Aug&amp;• 10, 1987

EM Scfuad has 15 calls unday

Daily stock prices
John Frick
john Paul (Percy) Frick. 78,
33330 State Route '33, Pomeroy,
~led Sunday at the Holzer Medi·
cal Center following a lengthy
Illness.
Mr. Frick was born Oct. 15,
· 1908, a son of the late John Carl
and Allee Brown Frick. He had
been employed as a steelworker
and as custodian at the Salisbury
School before his retirement. He
was a member of the Enterprise
United Methodist Church and the
International Molders iutd Allied
Workers Union.
Surviving are his wife, Ruby
Frick; three daughters and sonsIn-law, Linda and Bill Pullins,
Paula and Carl Hall, Pomeroy;
~err! and Charles Ball. Jacksonville, Fla.; a son, Robert E.
Frick, Columbus; a daughter-inlaw. Ruth Brown, Hartsville, S:
C.; a sister, Emma Burkhard.
Louisville, Ky., 13 grandchildren
~nd two great-grandchildren.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded in death by a son, ·
William Brown, ·and a slste~.
Agnes Weeks.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Wednesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Melvin J.
Franklin ofrtciating. Burial will
be In Beech Grove Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Tuesday

Meiss ColiiltY" Emerseacy
Medical Serylces reports 15 calls
over the weekend; seven on
Saturday and eight on Sunday.
On Saturday at 12:33 a.m.,
Racine transported Franklin
Lemley to · Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Pomeroy at.2: 37 a.m.
to Mulberry Ave. lor Jolui Bolin
to Veterans Memorll!l Hospital;
Tuppers Plains at 9:15 a.m. to
ReedsvUlelorLydiaShulertoSt.
Joseph's Hospital; Pomeroy at
10:09 a.m. to Owl Hollow Road
lor Nancy Deem to St. Joseph's
Hospital; Rutland at 7: 04 p.m . to
an auto accident on Beech Grove
Road but no transport was made;
Pomeroy at 10:51 p.m. to'Butternut Ave. for Charles Klein to
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Middleport at 11:10 p.m. to a tire
at an
structure on the

I

Finnicum otflclatillt: Burial will
follow In Graham Cemetery.
· Frleqds may call at the funeral
home from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9
p.m. Tuesday.

Edwards VanMeter, two sons,
Steven · R. VanMeter and Leonard L. VanMeter, . both of
Middleport; a daughter and
son-In-law. Brenda and John
Shuler, Westerville; a granddaughter, Anastasia Shuler, and
a grandson, John Bradford
Shuler, both of Westerville; two
sisters, Norma Jean Reed, Flor,
Ida, and Donna Fraley, Troy, and
a number of aunts, uncles. nieces
and nephews.

Leonanl VanMeter
Leonard Earl VanMeter, 60,
104 Locust St., Pomeroy, died'
Sunday. evening at New Madrid,
Mo.
,Mr. VanMeter waS' bOrn March
31, 1927, a son of the late Leonard
and Lillian VaJ!Meter. He has
worked as a marine engineer for
39 years with the Mississippi
Valley Barge Lines. He had also
served with the United States
Navy. He was a member of the
Middleport Church of Christ.
surviving are his wife, Colleen

oflO: 30 a.m.)
Provided. by
Bryce aod Mark Snilth
of Blunt EIIIB lc Loewl
(As

Firm
Price
Am Electric Power ................ 27
AT&amp;T .................... :............... 34
Ashland Oil ........................... 68
.Bob Evans Farms .... ,.. ....... 24'n
Charming Shoppes .... ............. 34
Federal Mogul. ... ...... .. :....... 47"4
Goodyear T&amp;R .................... 74'n
1-leck's Inc. ...... ... .. .. ............. 4'n
Limited l.nc ... .- ................... 48'1.
Multimedia Inc ........ :.......... 70'ft
Rax Restaurants ..................... 5
R,obblns &amp; Myers ................. 9'n
Shoiley's Inc ..... : ....... .......... 31',4
Wendy's Inti....... ........ .... .... 10%
· Worthington Ind.. .... .. .......... 23"4

. Services .will be held ai 1 p.fll.
Thursday at the Rawlings-Coats·
Blower Funeral Home with Mr.
AI Hartson officiating. Burial
will be In Riverview Cemetf;!ry.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 1 to 9 p.m .
Weclnesday.

South Seco.nd Ave.
SUnday at 4: !16 a.m., Middleport to Mill St. lor Tina Hendrix
to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Tuppers Plain&amp; at 10:09 a.m. to
Allred lor James Kelly to
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospi·
tal; Pomeroy at 10:32 a.m. to
Tuppers Plains for Nicole Forshey to·Veterans Memorial Hos·
pita! ; Middleport at 10:35 a.m. to
an auto fire on Route 554,
C.heshlre: Racine at 12:26 p.m.
transported Larry Wolfe to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Porhe- .
·roy at 2: 14 p.m. to Hidden Lakes
for Kimberly Frederick to Holzer
Medical Center; Racine at 2: 52
p.m. to Trouble Creek Road for
Mary Kerns to Holzer Medical
Center; Middleport at 11:42 p.m.
to Page St. for VIrginia Duck·
worth to Veterans Memorial

WHY PAY

ssoo

_.,. __

1987 ESCORT

1 ....... 11 I 4 ...... -

Rebates
CONVRSION VANS

$6595.

GilLY

··11" 1n stock

$933&amp;marH "

John McDaniel
John William McDaniel, 88,
Clifton, died Sunday In Pleasant
Valley Nursing Care Centl'r.
Born May 17, 18991n Mason, he
was the son of the late Franklin
and Julia Groves McDaniel.
He was a carpenter and a meat
cutter.
· Surviving are Iits wife, Laur11
M. McDaniel; two daughters,
Juanita Chapman, Clifton, and
Anne Davis, Middleport; one
son, Gene ·McDaniel, Middleport; 10 grandchildren and 20
Jlreat-grandchlldren and several
nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by a
son. Gerald Lee McDaniel, a
daughter, Betty Jane ·Roush ,,
l)rother, Robert McDaniel, and·a
&amp;lster, Verna Birchfield.
: tuneral will be at 1 p.m.
Wedne&amp;day at Foglesong Fun. er,l Home with the Rev. Jack

8 .5°/o

~~ OJIII,IXJ• C..O..er Trakl'tn . . . . fcr~C......,CIIII_.._.,hr fflllbf!IAI U ' &gt;. -P'It WiU$1M11

Cd T..e"-1 -[aM

.

.

F~ 150 4X2

APR

72 ...... , ....

- · ln. ILT. lif. till cni1t

$ . .

$15,142.

liAS

.,.__

-

·

••u
.

SlOOO.
WIIIACI

'

RANGER· 4X4

&amp;cyt.. 5 . - -

Up To

12,553.

tira

·.

11011

512,153

· Oli S1lnt ·
JEEP COMMANCHE

Wl•.?l»·
$9 900

MODElS

•

'

408
Mostly sunny. Hlglui between 80 aad 85. Partly
cloudy tonight, Wednesday.

Pick 4

9742

Page-4

•

..

at y

Vol.37

••

enttne
11 1987

Middleport Village Council Monday night took
steps to localize the n ew. state law dealing with
vicious dogs.
Council gave a fir st reading to an ordinance
which Incorporates all of the provisions of the new
Ohio law plus requires that a ll vicious dogs be
registered with Middleport Police at a cost of $5
per dog.
Mayor Fred Hoffman pointed out that the new
ordinance provides :
"A 'viciou s dog' means a dog that has killed or
caused serious injury to any person; or a dog that
has caused any ot her Injury to a person or has
killed another dog; or a dog that belongs to a breed
commonly known as a pll bull
"Keeping or harboring of such a breed or dog
should be prima-facie evidence of the ownershl:p.

Betty Moore
. Betty Jo Moore, 51, Jacksonville, Fla. , died Friday In the
University Hospital In
Jacksonville.
She was born March 7, 1937 In
Mason to the late Howard and
Margaret Reltmlre Abbott Sr.
· Surviving are h~r husband,
. George w. Moore; two daughters; Barbara D. and CryS'tal
Gayle Moore. Jacksonville, two
daughters and sons-In-Jaw, Beat,rlce E. and Charles Williamson,
Georgia Kay and Bill 'Heinold, all
from Jacksonville; one son and
daughter-In-law, John S. and
· Tillie Moore, Letart; one
brother, Howard Abbott Jr.,
Wheeling; her mother-in-law,
Goldie Reltmlre, Minersville,
Ohio; and two grandchildren..
· The funeral wUi be Tuesday at
11 a.m. a I Foglesong Funeral
Home with the Rev. Eugene
· &lt;!onger officiating. Burial will
follow In Broad Run Cemetery.
Friends may call Monday from
6 to 9 p.m. at the funeral home.

Daily Number

1 Section. 10 Peg•
. A Multimedia Inc.

Middleport council localizes state dog law

Noah Haskins
. Noah P. Haskins, 85, a former
resident of Middleport for 56
years, died Saturdayat Our Lady
otMercy Hospital in Cincinnati.
Mr. Haskins had resided at 247
Palmer St., In Middleport for
many years but had made his
home in Cincinnati for the past
year.
. He was born In Lawrence
County on Jan. 5,1902, a son of the
late Henry and Lillie Haner
Haskins. He was a retired
employee of the Ohio Department or Transportation In Meigs
county and formerly had worked
as a well iender for the Ohio Fuel
Co. He was a memberortheFirst
t;laptlst Church and at one lime
serv!:(l for several years as
pastiilvof the ·Mt. Alto Freewill
Baptist Church at Cheshire.
Surviving are a son, Charles
Haskins, Spencerville: his wife,
Cora Hasklris, Cincinnati; two
stepsons, Jack Moore, Cincln· •
nat!, and Leland Moore, Canton;
~ stepdaughter, Lena Hamilton,
Medway; two grandsons, ..• nlne
slepgranchlldren, nine ;greai
stepgrandchildren, and a
number of nieces and nephews.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded In death by his first
wife. Blanche Matthews ·Haskins; two brothers, Stanley and
Elmer Haskins, and four sisters.
Kathleen Haskins, Bertha GUI,
Belva Sloan, and Beulah Koster.
Services will be held at 2 p.m.
Tuesday at the First Baptist
Church In Cheshire with the Rev.
C. J . Lemley officiating. Burial
will be In Grand Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Ewing
Funeral Home from 2 to 4and 7to
9 p.m. tOday. The body will lie In
state al the church one hour
preceding the Tuesday service.

Ohio Lottery

Giants
win fifth
straight

llo.

n..

SlS 547.
Y...!Fivlr.mt

._

11011
1500

H 3,456.

llo. 1GI

$12,9$6,

1987 FORD
ESCORT S.W.

1915 DODGE
ARIS~K

! 62«!1. 4 Ibn siJiion -

-

...... 4__tyl,ll. PS.-

· lldill

tra~

r·~dqUI.E I'IICE

...rs. ,..

' 974.

$6995.
1

UNCOLN
TOWN CAR

CAlAIS

a--- ·-.....
~

*· 70431.
2 cloOr\ ~Oft
4 cyl., af con:L auto. Dis..

Otll*)Uon-_ V~. air mnd ..

.... roo(-

11-. crui5e mnlnll. NIIIIM

StDcU 75111. 21bn tllliDii ...... 4

--- .

drile, 6 cyl, li: cood. IIIIa ms..
PS. PI, Mimi ttllialtlho-. IICIII

-

""""' IMIIM '
ocli•t!a
white nih. • . . . . . . . IDfllll tM

W.E I'IICE

58650.

tn.. .....Wit1ia
IUI'IIG

516,365.

AEROSTAR XLT

CIER4 S
Stocl I I ~- 2 ibn !ldlri 4 i.Yl. or
mnd . auto. ttn. PS. P9. till - ·
cruise c:ontrot. ¥1/FM rldlo. rldilf tros.

·SN.EPIICI

liAID
SffilAL FACT~
PURCHISE

sl~~~~~!!~R!Y!!!.

aulo. triM. PS, P8. PlW!( wiftcJDIIJt ~

1111. •.... bell • • . """
alllft'GI. .W!FM
1111t. .dialttes.

'* .,t!G

.,.,.. .....""Ill!
Ul! I'IIICI,

.'

.I

Yoor

Choice

S9282.

AND T-IIRDS

$1
·

995.~

1982 CHEV CAVAUER
Sbi M 77491. 4 dOJl

• ·l....nlri -

~- 4.cyl., .... y~

""''woll.

Ul

,ill

-~'

1985
REGAL
,.
~ ! 73104,2 dDcn h•d lOCI 6 cyl.

• Cant,

II -

*"' '"" """' --

PS. P9.
IJUilt Cllllllel. IM/FIIt rldlo.

lldiilh.--

UUPIICE ·

"The owner or keeper of a pit bull or other
vicious dog must comply with the following
.
regulations :
" While the dog .ls on the premises of the owner
or keeper. li must be securely confined at all times
tn a loc ked pen which has a top.
" While the dog is off the premises of the owner
or keeper, It must be kept on a chain link leash thai
Is not more than six feet In length. The leas h must
be controlled by a person of suitable age to handle
the dog. In addition, the dog must be muzzled at all
ti mes when on leash.
·'The owner or keeper of a vicious dog or pit bull
·must have a $50,000 liability Insurance policy.
" VIolation of any or these provisions of the
ordina nce Is a misdemeanor of the first degree

which carries a maximum fine of$1,000 an d a six
month jail term."
An addition to the law which Is localized so tbal
ooffenders cari be tried In the court of Mayor
Hoffman-rather than county court provides for the
$5 registration fee lor each vicious dog. The
ordinance must have two more readings bef~re it
goes Into effect.
On hand to confer with village officials last
night on an easement on land near the
community's sewage lagoon was Clifford Wart ·
man, an employee of Conrail.
Wartman said that Conrail would like to run a
train carrying coal .lnto the Hobson yards. The
coal would be a low surphur coal and another coal
· containing a higher surphur content. The two

,.

26 Cenu

'

coals would be mixetl and when mixed would
provide a coal mixture of an acceptable surphur
content. Wartman said. It would be loaded byway
of an overhead conveyor Into barges and taken
upriver. Conrail wouid need a right of way _on
village property near the sewage lagoon to make
the project workable. Wartman pointed out. He
said that the coal loading would be a cleah
operation In that it would be enclosed and would
be put into barges through a process which would
keep dust at a minimum.
Wartman Indicated that the operation might
employ a maximum of 15 people, would increase
the railroad crew since another train would bf'
coming in and Indicated that , perhaps ; another
yard prew would have to be employed.
Continued on page 10

Eastern school board hires
regular, substitute personnel
One temporary teacher and Linda Fitch, Margaret Hawmany substitute employees were thorne, VIolet Lambert, JoAnn
hired Monday night when East- Newsome. Connie Osborne,
ern Local Board 'ot Education Sharon Pooler, Jeanette Rad·
met in regular session.
· ford, · Frona Riffle. Elizabeth
Employed by the board as an Ritchie, Carolyn Smith, Cathy
elementary reading teacher. for Spencer. Catherine Wood.
Substitute kindergarten aides
one year only. was Linda Schultz .
Schultz will fill tM temporary will be Irma Bay, June Bearhs,
vacancy created by the one year Sandy Bowen. Darlene Buckley.
leave of absence granted for Dorothy Calaway, JoAnn Cala·
maternity reasons to Vickie way, Nola Cline, Beverly CunLayne.
ningham, Debra Fin law. Linda
Employed as substitute Fitch. Margaret Hawthorne. Jill
teachers for the coming year Holter. Susan Karr. VIolet Lamwere John W. Barcus. Charles G. bert, JoAnn Newsome, Connie
Bush, Larry Gibbs, Brent Mar- Osborne, .S haron Pooler,
shall, Kathleen S. Parker, Ro· Jeanette Radford, Carlotta
to right In front, Keith Blaek. operations director bert Shaver. Carolyn Tripp. Reed. Frona Riffle. Elizabeth
PHASE 1 - Groundbreaklnl ceremonies took
place Monday nl1ht for a shelterbou"" beln1 hutlt
at the school; Jame11 Diehl, past rotary president;
Elizabeth Brown, Fern Grimm, Ritchie, Cathy Spencer, Lila
on the playrround or Carleton Schoo~Melp
Douglas Little, president of the Melp Association Lucille Haggerty, Jennifer Ma- VanMeter, Catl)erlne Wood.
I I ' " - ' COMtructlon of the shellerhou!le Is
for Retarded Citizens; ll9ft Ath, rotary preslden~;
chlr, Michele Mowrey, Patricia
. Employed as substitute custobetn1 hlldecl 117 the Mlddlepert-J&gt;orneroy Rotary
Lee We4emeyer, school superintendent; and Lee
Parker. Dorotha Petrel. Artis A. dlans were Kathy Barringer,
Oub. 'nle •hellerhou~e Ia the flr!lt pb1111e of a
McComas, rotary tre1111urer. In the. backjp'ound Salyer. Gayle A. Salyer, David Irma Bay, Sandy Bowen, Patricrouadll Improvement prop-am at the Syracuse
are rotary and M,A.R:C. member8.
Weber. Nancy Wachter , Cat he- cia Buchanan, Kenneth Buckley,
flU! lilly. Prl'flent for the .JI'oundbreaklngwerc, left
rlne Simpson, Lloyd Turpin , Nola Cilhe, Robert Couch, James
Rose Jenkins, Donna Clark, Cowdery, David Dalley. Mark
Mary Bush, Michael Edwards. Dillard, Rosemary Fluhearty,
David Chadwell, Kimberly Ba · Jerry Holley , Carrol Kimes,
ley and Angle Baker.
Violet Lambert. Robert Lute.
also raised new fears that.TE'hran pollution. We are trying to stop
MANAMA , Bahrain tU PI) Employed as substitute bus Tracy Myers. JoAnn Newsome,
Tensions ha \'£• risen another would make good It s threatts of it. ..
drivers were Gary Dill, Arch Connie Osborne, James Osborne.
The Incident took place about 8 Rose, Cindy Rector, Bruce My- Sharon Pooler, Terry Pooler,
notch In tht&gt; Pers ian Gul( re~lon. rl'talla lory strikes a~alnst Ku where a suspl'C!ed Ira nia n min e waiti oil facilities . Kuwait backs miles off !he United Arab Emi- ers. Elnora Bernard, JoAnn Becky Runnion. Cathy Sargent,
blew a hoi~ In an American · Iraq In the nearly 7-year-old gulf rates port or Fujalrah at 2:42 Calaway and JoAnn Newsome.
Charles Sargent, Carolyn Smith,
p.m., the Insurers Lloyds of
ow ned oil lanker out side lh &lt;" war .
The following substitute cooks Shirley Wells, William Wells .
Monday's mine explosio n, the London said. and about 80 miles were employed, Irma Bay, June Michael West,' Mike Whitlatch,
Strait of Hormuz and the threat
or more und&lt;&gt;rwat er ex plosives fir st outside the gulf, wldc.&gt;ned thE' south of the Strait of Hormuz In Bearhs. Sandy Bowen. Darlene Mike Whitlock. David Woolard.
halted a convoy or U.S. -escor tt'd danger zo ne for U.S. military the Gulf or Oman .' The ship was Buckley, Dorothy Calaway,
Hired as substitute malnte·
forcl's Invo lved In the troubled said to be anchored off the port JoAnn Calaway, Nola Cline, nance personnel were Kenneth
tankers bound for Kuw ait .
In Washington. Reagan admln · region. while the Iraqi raids were Monday evening. ·
Co nnie Dunfee, Linda Edwards.•. _tBuckley, Robert Couch, James
The Caribbean, bound lor Debra Flnlaw, Linda Fitch, Cowdery ,' David Dalley, Carrol
lstratlon sources Mond ay said likely to set back U.N. effor ts to
Navy fighters fired at leas! two obtain a durabll' Cl'ase- flr e In the Rotterdam , Netherlands, with a Rosemary Fluhearly, Sharon Kimes, William Welis, Mike
crew of Italians, had just taken Hartman, Donna Jacks, Eliza- Whitlatch, Mike Whitlock and
missiles at I ranlan jets closing on Iran-Iraq conflict.
The mine ripped a 12-foot · wide on crude oil at Iran's makeshift beth Lyons, Beverly Marcinko, David Woolard.
a U.S. patrol alrplan(' over the
Stra·lt of Hormuz Sa turday . hole 3 feet below the water line In floating oil terminal of Larak Geneva Maxson. Tracy Myers,
Substitute secretarys emThere was no Indi cation th e the No. 3 port tank or the Island In the Strait of Hormuz.
JoAnn Newsome, Connie Os- played by the board included
The Texaco-owned Caribbean, borne, Sharon Pooler, Jeanette Irma Bay. Sandy Bowen, DarIranian je ts were hit In the firs t 125.8.~7 - t on supertanker Texaco
Ca
ribbean
,
loaded
with
200,000
sailing
under a Panamanian Radford, Frona Riffle, Elizabeth lene Buckley, Dorothy Calaway,
host II~ action taken by American
tons
of
Ira
nian
crude
oil.
which
flag.
was
under charter to a Ritchie, Carolyn Smith, Patricia JoAnn Calaway, Nola Cline,
forces In the gulf since the Na vy
began
leaking.
Norwegian
trading company Thomas, Lila VanMeter and Beverly Cunningham, Debra
be~an escorti ng U.S.· flagged
"We'vf'
been
hit,
"
tanker
Ca
pt.
called seateam, an oil company Wanda Wolf.
Kuwallltankers July 22.
·
Flnlaw. Linda Fitch. Margaret
Iraqi air atta cks Monda y on Luigi Parch! radioed In a distress statement said Monday .
Employed as substitute library Hawthorne, J.ill Holler, Susan
tConUnued on page 10)
several Iranian oil Installations signal. "There Is widespread
aides were June Bearhs, Darlene Karr, JoAnn Newsome, Jeanette
Buckley, Nola Cline, Beverly Radford. Carlotta Reed, ElizaCunnlngham, Debra Flnlaw, beth Ritchie. Cathy Spencer, Lila

Tensions escalate in Persian Gulf

Bob Evans Farms declares
stock-split during bo;;~rd meet

A 5-for-4 stock split on all Bob
Evans Farms. Inc .. Issued and
outstanding stock was declared
today by the Bob Eva ns Farms
board of directors . The record
date for the stock spill will be
August 28. with stockholders
receiving one new share for each
four shares or common stock
owned. The new sl)ar!'s will he
mailed ,September 11 .
Cash will be paid In lieu of
fractional shares on the basis of
the price of the company's
common stock at the close of
business August 10. adjusted for
the stock split.
Also released In conjunction
with . the stock split were finan cial results (unaudited) lor the
first quarter ended July 24 , Net
sales were $91.682,000, an In·
crease or 26 percent over
$73,035.000 In 1986. Net Income
was $6,235,000, of $.21 per share,
compared with $4,899,000, of $.17
per share a year ago. Net Income
per share ligures have been
adjusted thrQugh the5-ror·4stock
split declared August 10. Adjusted weighted .average number
of . common shares outstanding
· were 29,198,820, compared with
28,034,279 lor the corrfSpohdlng

quarter of I~Mti.
menu beginning In September.
The Increase In net sales Is
The sausage division's biscuit ·
attributable to the acquisition of sandwich Items were expanded
Owens Country Sausage, Inc ., Into Atlanta during .the . first
and more restaurants In opera· quarter. Meanwhile Bob Evans
lion more than a yea r ago. The Farms' subsidiary, Owens €ounIncrease In net Income Is aue to a try Sausage, Is test-marketing
lower effe ctive federal tax rate tWo new, fully -cooked convenas a result of the Tax Reform Act Ience Items similar to the biscuit
of '1986. as well as Improved sandwiches - one featuring
margins In our sausage division sausage, egg, cheese and bisbecause of lower live hog costs cuits; the other, smoked sausage
from a year ago.
and biscuits .
Work is continuing on,packagDuring the first quarter. Bob
Evans Farms opened five new Ing Bob Evans Farms-produced
restaurants- two In Florida, one Brown and Serve sausage and
each In Illinois, Indiana and eye appeal Items, such as links
Ohio. The total number of restau- and . patties, under the Owens
rants in operation at quarter's label. Bob Evans Farms hopes to
end Is 180, compared wtth 153 a have these Items ready for
test-marketing In selected Owyear ago.
ens
markets by fall.
In keeping with the planned
A strong advertising program
expansion of 26 restaurants for
this fiscal year, seven Bob Evans will support the sausae division's
Farms restaurants are sche- marketing strategy as Hal Riney
duled to open during the second &amp;. Partners takes over the advertising account for Bob Evans
quarter.
Menu reglonallzatlon Is con tin - Farms. The new agency replaces
ulng and · more seasonal Items Lowe-Marschalk of Cleveland.
Bob Evans Farms owns and
are being Introduced In Bob
operates
185 restaurants In a
Evans Farms restaurants. The
12•state
area.
Bob Evans Farms
new advertising campaign,
"Just A Few Smiles From · Sausage Is sold in al.l or part of 19
Home," will focus attention on states and the District of
the restaurants' enhanced dinner Columbia.

MAICING A POINT- Dan Evans, chalrmaa of
the board aod chief executive .offtcen of Bob
Evans Farms. m!'kes a point dur"'g the aanual
stockholders' meetblg at the (arm shelterhouse

VanMeter .
Employed as substitute mechanics were Kenneth Buckley,
James Cowdery, Carrol Kimes,
William Wells, Mike Whltla&lt;;)&lt;
and David Woolard.
The board accepted the res-Ignation of Jan Eichinger, thlr.d
grade teacher at Chester Elementary, arid voted to relnsiate
the position of assistant girls'
volleyhall coach, to be assigned
to the junior high schoollevelfor
the coming year.
Because of· a deficit In the
cafeteria operations last year of
$12,150, the board voted to
Increase lunch · prices by $.10.
Elementary lunches will now
cost $1.10 and secondary lunches
will cost $1.20. Ala carte prices
· were also increased an average
of 15 percent;
Eastern Local Kindergarten
meeting
There will be meetings Aug. 14
for all parents who will have
children atlendlng kindergarten
this fall in the Eastern Local
Schools.
Parents who have children
attending kindergarten at Chesler Elementary will meet at the
Chester School at 12noon on Aug.
14. Parents who have children
attending at Tupper Plains Elementary will meet at 2 p.m. at the
Tuppers Plains school.
All parents are encouraged to
attend these Important meetings. Information about kindergarten requirements and transportation arrangements will be
available .
In other business, the board
awarded contracts for the yearto
Broughton Foods Company for
milk and dairy products and to
Storck Baking Company for
bakery prOducts. .
The board also approved a
resolution granting Columbus
and Sou lhern Ohio Electric Company the right and eassement to
relocate a telephone pole to
(Continued on page 10)

Monday. The compaay declared a 5-for-4 stocli
spl!t al!d explained the exapansloa of · th~
restaurant and sausa1e divisions. (Trlbu~Je
photo)

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="181">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2771">
                <text>08. August</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="39411">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="39410">
              <text>August 10, 1987</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="295">
      <name>abbott</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3906">
      <name>frick</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="96">
      <name>haskins</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="181">
      <name>mcdaniel</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="471">
      <name>moore</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="451">
      <name>vanmeter</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
