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Pega 10-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Monday. August 24.

1~

Temper~tures drop, residents get firSt taste of autumn

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

Reds'

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

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

slump
•
continues

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

C

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

·

.

•O' S

Ohl

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

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

- -------·-·

• aJ

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

Fifteen
•e on
dl

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

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

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

t~~or l?~~lze

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

qu t •

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

MX ·t• b •t• t

benefits

of

the

cut

on

Ohio Lottery
Daily Number
152
Pick 4
3596

to

Page 4

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

•

at y

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

en tine
1 Section, 10 Pages
A Multimedia Inc.

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

25 Cents

(

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

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Suite Priced From $599. &amp; Up.
Receive At No Extra Charge - A20
Piece Set For Four of World Famous
"Rogers 24 Karat Gold "Electro
Plated" Tableware Valued At
$}59.95_

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

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ADDEO BOMUSf!

Middleport council has first
reading of water rate hike

·

Rec~ners Priced

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

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

Each

$469.
Maytag Dryers
$389.

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

Buy The Best---Buy Moytag

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

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

Bend
bridge
reopens
•

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

Truck driver killed in Mason wreck

Maytag Auto. Washers
I

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

'-

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

'

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

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

$399.
$349.

Many Styles &amp; Colon!

MASON FURNITURE ·co.

Mason, W. Va.

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

r
•

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

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

are

.II

I&gt;

.,

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
, 111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
PEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

·ROBERT L. WINGETf
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controlier

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of Th f' Un it rd Pr l"'~:-" l n1f'rnat ion a l. ln l;.tncl D.1i i.Y Prf'ss
Assori:Hion and lh C' AmNIC';l n Nrw!'i'p apf'r Publi !&gt;i hf' rl' A ssne i alion.
L.FTIFRS OF oPfr-:JOI"'

:II'£' WI '\('O ml '.

Thf'' ' ;ihou\cl bl' 1£'~~ I hun .1UO wrwd~

lon e. A l ll!'ll NI' arf' !' UhiN·Il o l'd l ti ti):! d nd mu~l b!'"i~ n r'fl v.ltl1 n:1mr . a ddrP~s ot nd
u•lf'phonl' numhf'l'. Nr. u n ~igfli'&lt;l k11f'r:O: will b1 • pub li!&lt;hf'd l.!'ltf'r~ " h oulri b f' in
c roro1 l t;l!'l l' . :tddl'f'Sl-&gt; in.c i""ul"'~ . nnl pc•rsrmal itif's.

A tanker loaded
with Rolaids?
By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Suppose you were down to your last $640
million. Would you give one million of it to a political party, as
California's Joan Kroc did earlier this month?
Percentagl'wise, that wou ld be like giving away $1 of your las t $640.
I doubt many of us are !hat dedicated. We might even have trou ble
parting with a dime of our last $64, a penny of our last $6.40.
Yet Mrs. Kroc donated $1 million to the Democartic Party, the
large~ ! gift In history. The widow of a last food chain founder Is
reported to have Inherited about $640 million from her husband.
I don't care If mos t of the mon ey did come from burgers . that's still
a lot of cabbage .
The question ariSes as to whose history I'm referring to . I would
assume the donation was the largest in the party's 139-year hi s tory.
Mrs. Kroc's history, too. Although I ca n't speak for her, $1 million
probably is the largest sum of money she ever gave away all at once.
Certai nly she never give me $1 million. At least in a lump sum. I
never ev,en go t a discount on one of those burgers.
The next question Is; What are the Democrats goin g to do wilh all
that cash?
.
The party's presidential candidates are being called The Seven
Drawls. I hope Mrs. Kroc doesn ' t think of herself as Snow Whit e.
One or the original dwarfs was named Sneezy, although a cool
million is nothing to s neeze at. Eve n Dopey could have figured that
out.
. .
Ma ybe the candidates, of whom. at last count. ther ewere more than
there were campaign Issues. should be renamed , like a Persian Gul f
tanker.
One of the tankers now plying the Pl'rsian Gulf is are-flagged vessel
called the "Gas Prince."
Let us pause here and ask with Robert Or ben, a for mer Whit e House
speediwriter: "Who comes up with the wimpy names for s hips?"
Wirripy or not, the renaming was done apparently to confuse the
Iranians. I mean, you can't tell from its name wh ether the Gas Prince
i5 loaded with Kuwaiti oil or Turns.
•
.. Or maybe, as Or ben also points out, " it's time we warned Iran •that
we have put on active alert onl' of the most fearless, most aggressive,
best· armed strike forCI's in the West ern Hemisphere - California
driver s.''
·
·
HI' seems to feel that anyone who can make it home in one piece on
an L.A. freeway can safely negot iate the Strait of Hormuz. And 1
agree. But I felt that way even before thPy started shoot ing at eac h
other.
• The drivers, tha t is; not Ira n and Iraq.
: The last time I drove on a freeway In Los Angl'les, I ecount ered a 70
mph traffic jam.
.
· The traffi c jam, I might ad ded. was moving that fas t. I , of course,
was going slower.
Any~ay, Orben tells us that what we really need in the Persian Gu lf
are a few pit bulldogs that can swim . Maybe so, but tha t is a bit like
~ayl ng that what we really need on the L.A. freeways Is the Bridgeton .
• Everyone knows that it also takes a gun rack a nd an acceler ator.
: Or perhaps a few minesweepers also would help .

Pag&amp;-2-The Daly Senti':"'l
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohto

Elway paces Broncos victory

Tuesday, August 25; 1987

.DENVER (UPI ) - John Ellway ran lor one touchdown and
passed for another, and the
Denver Broncos survived a four·
touchdown second half Monday
night to defea t the Miami Dol·
h. 31 28 In a preseason game
P Elway,
ms · who completed 11 of 19·
passes for 164 yards during his
first-half appeardnce, ran for an
8 rd
d t ssed an8 yard
·ya score pass
an
touchdown
to tight end
Clarence Kay.
Gene Lang ran 76 yards for a
touchdown on the Broncos' first
dh If and
h
· possession o f t e secon a •
backup quarterback Gary Ku·
biak added a 37-yar!ltouchdown
· pass to Mark Jackson In the
· fourth q~ arte r as the Broncos

John Glenn and the CIA ___

B..:.._yJ_ack_A_nd_ers_on

WASHINGTON - Sen. John
Glenn , D-Ohio, has been a quiet
and r elatively uncontroverslal
member of the Senate since his
arrival In 1975. But now, at66a nd
in his thir d term, the much·
decorated Mar ine combat veteran and first American to orbit
the Earth Is plunging into several
potentially hot issues.
Glenn is chai rm an of th e
Governmental AHairs Commit ·
tee, a post once held by the la te
Sen . Joseph McCarthy, R·Wis . It
may now lack th.e gla mour of
some hig her- profile chairmanships, but Glenn correctly notes
that the · com m!t tl'e has the
" broadest jurisdiction" of any in
Co ngress.
Under the sloga n. "Money
.traced. less waste," Glenn has
put forth a · number of specillc
proposals Intended to make fed-

era! agencies accountable to
Congress. Most llkl'ly to ignite
controversy Is his plan to give the
General Accounting Office Co ngress's auditing arm - the
right to l!fOk at the books of the
Centr al Int elli gence Agency. The
CIA Is the only federal agency
that b~rs GAO lnvl'stlgators
from auditing its operations.
The country nl'eds "a strong,
independent , but account able
CIA," Glenn told our reporter
Gary Clouser. Though the spy
agency .has Its own Ins pector
general, Glenn said the Iran / co n·
tra scandal is "proof tha t we
cannot be cont e nt with Internal
reviews alone."

Th e CIA won't com'ment on
Glenn 's pending legislation to
a uthorizl' specific GAO over·
sight, ,but sources. say the agency

Dwarf days of
The m ov ie cla ssic "Snow
Whit e" has been rc- r eleased. A
sequel, "Snow Whit e in.Poli tics. "
is now under co nsid(• r ation . 11

goes somet hing lik e thi s:
OncC' upon a time. in a· land

cal led America . th e re were
many m Pn running for pn•s ident
in
party called Democratic.
People ca ll ed these cand idates
"The Seven Dwarfs." Alt houg h
they were bright and art icula te
men, all across th e na tion ca lled

a

America il was as ked: Who are

they? Why do they all say the
same th in!(? Why ar&lt;' they so
boring? Why do they say things
that ·make it harder for Democrat s to ge t elected In the fall of
1988?
The re did not seem to be good
answers to the people 's qu estions, and so ther e ".'as rest i ve-

IF WE DoN'1' FrND HrM
'A NEW HART ~~
HE'S A GoNER.

Ohio

•

ness in th e la nd .
It wa s said th at th ese seven
ma le poli tical dwarfs wou ld soon
bl' joined by a fe m a le .named
Schroeder, who would add spar·
kle to the rae!'. But ex pert
opinion wa s div ided about the
ro le Sc hroeder would play: Was

is afraid the proposal would
jeopardize the CIA 's abilit y to
conduct covert operations.
Glenn does not dispute the need
for covert activities. But he
pointed out thllt th e CIA 's s uccessful efforts have been those
conducted In support'of "estab·
'llshed public policy a nd w!thou I
expos ure In either the ta rget
country or domesl!cally." Problems arise , he said, when th e
covert operal!on Is incons1s tent
.wllh publi c policy . He,noted th at
his plan· Includes safeguards to
ensure that pa rti cul arly sensl·
tlve activities are not
jeopardized.
Another touchy agl'ncy Glenn
Is conc er ned about is the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission. He believes the relal!onshlp between
the commission and the nucl ear
power Industry Is "too cozy." 11

was Glenn who urged the reslg·
na tion . of NRC commiss ioner
Thomas Roberts after a sensitive
memo was leaked to a Lo uis ia na
utility, tipping 11 of! th at a n
i nv estigat i o n was under
cons ideratio n.
The nu clear co mmission is one
of four age ncies that Glenn wants
to requi re to have Inspectors
gener al. The others are the
Treas ury, the Office of Personnel
Management and th e Federal
Emergency Manage.m e nt
Agency .
.
'The sena tor has also proposed
crealion or a Treasury undersc·
cretary for fina ncial management . to deal with federal agen:
cles' senior officials and "end the
current policy of ad hoc, agency·
by-agency lmprov!'m ents" In
flnan.c ial mana gement, The government, he not ed. Is sJ)endlng
"close to $2 billion In a series of
lln a nclal management projects
without proper coordin a tion ."
While determined to go after
weaknesses in feder al age ncies'
top m a nagem e nt. G le nn Is
eq ua lly determined to defend
career civil serva nt s. whom· he
ca lls the "I nstitutional m emo ry"
of the government. He deplored
the Reagan adml _nl s tr ation's
treatment of such e mployees as
adversaries a nd ta rgets for " bureaucrat bashin g," He noted
with concern a recent s tudy he
requested that showed a declin e
In the num ber of career em·
ployees and a n Increase In
political appointees.
Glen n, who ran unsuccessfull y
for the Democratic presidential
nomi nation In 1984. still has a
touch of White House fever. He
hasn' t ru led out a late e ntry into
th e 1988 ra ce. But hi' won't run
unlt'ss he can get his $2 .1 m illi on
1984 debt " betler under co ntrol."
Gll'n n bellew~s he has better
namt' recognition than the other
DPmocrat&lt; alld ha s "~ntris t "
views that the party seems
Increasingly wlllln~ to accept.

°

• •

I

f'UMBLE- Miami wide receiver Murk Duper,
ri ght. rumbl es ball after lleln~~: hil h.v Denver's

'

~Tod~y ·in

history

By United Press International
Today is Tuesda y. Aug. 25. the 237th day of 1987 with 128 to follow.
The moon Is waxing, moving toward lis firs t quarter.
Th e morning s tar Is Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
tliose born on !·his da te ,are under the sign of Virgo. They In clude
Czar Ivan IV of Ru ssia , called " Iva n the Terrible," In 1530; Alla n
Pinkerton, founder of the priva te de tective agency, in 1819: a uthor
Bret Harte In 1836; dancer-actress Ruby Keeler In 1910 (age 77 );
. car toonist Walt Kelly ("Pogo") In 1913; actors Van Johnson in 1916
(agl' 711 and Ml'l Ferrer in 1917 (age 70) . composer- conductor
Leonard Bernstein In i918 (agl' 69); f9rmer Alabama Gov . George
Wallace in 1919 (age 68). a nd actor Sea n Connery In 1930 (age 57.1
On thi s date In history:
In 1718, the city of New Orll'ans was founded .
In 1944, American troops liberated Paris from the Nazis in World
War 'rr.
In 1967, a sniper assassinated American Nazi leader George
Lincoln Rockwell In Arlington, Va .
In 1985, 13-year-old Samantha Smith wa s killed with her father and
six other people in a plane crash in Maine. Her 1983 l~tter to Soviet
President Yurt Andropov about her fear of nuclear war had earned
her a visit to Russia .
·'

redistribute It to nl'wly fr eed
slaves was abandoned months
after It was la un ched In 1865.
" Whil e the plan ta tion syste m
was s haken by the Civil War, 'I t
was not destroyed," notes th e
Civil Rights Co mmiss ion report.
"Sh arecropping repl aced slav ery as the prevailing relationship
between white land own ers"and
blac k farrr)l'r s without la nd ...
Sharecropping, while a more
subtll' form of domlnan cl' than
slavery, yield ed similar patterns
of control and s ubservienc e."
. Bla~ks were perennially indebted to whit!' farmers a nd
merc hant s a nd were often of·
fered only the least arable land .
Also, they were rarely able to
rotatl' crops to rejuvenate their
soli beca use white lenders would
extend them finan cing only for
cotton, a safe cash crop.
Neverthel ess, improved economic conditions early In this
century allowed many blacks to
buy their own land- a trend that
pea ked In 1920 when th ere were
915,000 black farmers In the
South and another 10,000 elsewhere In the country.
But the subsequent ascendancy of t)le boll weevil, whose
larvae consume cotton, and the
collapse o! the cotton market
spurred many blacks to abandon
their land and begin a decades long migration to lhe Indus trial·
!zed North.
Racism was another major
component of the blacks' plight.
Oft he 3,658lynchlngs recorded In
this cou ntry between 1882 and
1937, the vast majority oc~urred
In the rural South.
Contemporary ra cis m , has

Majors
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31 ,000 In the South a nd 2,000
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percent of th e pea k totals earli er
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IF 1 CAN JUST DESTROY
Tt'\E PRESIDENT, MA.YBE

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postponement
WESTLAKE. Ohio iUP II
The head of the Na tional Associa ·
tion of Collegia te Directors of
1\thlet ic.s has asked NF L Co m·
mi ssionCI' Pete Rozell e to post ·
pone Frida y's sched uled supple ·
ment a l draft beca use it "attacks
the integrit y of our ed ucation a l
miss ion."
Carl Miller,' NACDI\'s president a nd at hle tic d irector a t th e
Universi ty of the Pacific, said
Monda y in a le tt er to Rozelle that
the two groups mu st mec1t to
discu ss the ramifi cat ions of the
s uppl e m ental draft. Rozelle ha s
sc heduled the draft to allow NFL
tea ms to select formerOhloStat e
wide receiver Crls Cart er and
form er Pittsburgh running bac k
Charles Gladman, who los t their
NCAA eligibility for accl'pt!ng
money from agents.

Meet tonight
The Meigs High School Athletic Boosters will meet In regu-,
Jar sess ion this evening (Tues·
day) at 7:00P.M . at the football
stadium . In case of rain, the
meeting will be at the high
sc hool. All football parents, both
junior and senior high , and all
coaches are asked to attend. On
· Thursday at 7:00P.M., Meet the
Team Nigh~ will be observed at
the Maraurlrr Field.

"

Jx•gl ns ne xt month.
" I know what 1 have to do."
F lutic said. ''I'm not discollr ·
aged . What will happen is what
will happen ."
~· rt
pa s~ in

has

to 1hrow a

!12 va rds .
:. I saw my rc-c(\ivrrs well and 1

. t.l

u....

bac ks when lhe r egu l ar srason

touc hdow n
tw o rxh ibi tion
ga mes. In Saturday's oO· H rout
of Pittsburgh. Flut le was .1ofq for

'lldt ·'&gt;l,tl •·t
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.u ..

By United Pre.s Inte rnational
CHI CAGO 1UP II - Doug
F'tutie. once the toa st of Bos ton
ro!le~te a nd the USFL. find s
himself on the brink of uncmplo y·
ment in the NF L.
Flu tie. a o-foot -9 JqR4 Hei sman
Troph y winner. has gone fr om
the Sl lii' IN in the Chicago Bears '
!&gt;layo ff ~a rn e las t Ja nu ar,v to
probably the No. 4 man on a team
that plans to carry thrC'e q'ua rt'rr -

Flu tie

Transa••tion,;

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CINCINNATI iUPI) - Bengals coach Sam Wyche. dis·
pleased with the pia)' of backup
quarlerbacks Doug Gaynor and
Tom Erhardt. said the club will
consider finding a promising
quarterback via the waiver wire.
"We're two different offenses
right now, " Wyche sa id In The
wake of a 2:!-9 loss to DelroiT
Saturday. "We're fine when
Boomer 1Esiason I Is In there , but
we have a long way to go r ight
now with the ot her two guys ."
In Sa turda y's game. Eslason
directed a 16-play, 83-ya rd tou c h·
dow n dr ive a nd and eig ht· pl ay
drive to the Lions· 14 ya rd line .
Gay nor. the second yea r pro
fro m Long BE'ac h State , played
five se r ies; only twice did he
prod uce as man y as two fi rs t
downs in a series. Ehrhardt. a
roo kie tr ee age nt from Rhode
Island. moved the offe nse to onl y
two fi rs t downs in four ser ies.
" We' re keeping our eye on the
si tuati on," ass is tant general

manager Mike Brown said. "Ob·
vlously It looks like a poss lbl~
J?Wblem for us. I don' t look for us
to make any moves r lgl\1 away.
We still think the players we have
deserve more chances."
The problem with going the
waiver wire route, Wyche said, is
It's !lnllkely any qua rterbacks
better than Gaynor or Ehrhardt
will be available.
"I've looked at the computer
pr intouts to find the players on
the bubble, and a guy we would
want is just not going to be there
as I see It," Wyche said.
" Doug Flutle I of . Chicago I
wouldn ' t !It our style at all, and
even though some people have
mentioned (former Bengali
Turk Schonert, I see him staying
·
with the Falcons."
Compared to his backups,
Eslason appea rs to be in midseaso n form. "Like I said last
week, I'm ready to go now." said
Eslason, who completed seven of
12 passes for 69 yards.

.
.
The · Bengals waived three
players them selves Mond a~ to
reduce their roster to 63 players.

Junkin passes test
KIRTLAND. Ohio IUPI I Mike Junkin got his first taste of
llfl' In the National Footbal
League Saturday night , and the .
Cleveland Browns go t their first.
competitive look at Their rookie ·
linebacker.
The results were less than
mutually sa Ti sfactory.
" Mike Junkin did a pretty good
job when he knew what he was
doing," said Cleveland coach '
Marty Schottenhelmer." I was
~;e nerall y pleased with his effort,
say, 75 percent of the time. He
made no major mistakes."
Junkin, Cleveland's top draft
pick whose holdout ca used him to
miss much of the early pre paration in camp, summed up his
ganne as "frustrating."

Flutie may be cut by Chicago Bears

l h~l'ttll

'\11u...: \I. u·~ \j . l t--:
I nllood l 'r,.... ~ lnlo •rnll"•n •ll

ft~

th ei r poli tics. th eir demeanor.
Don 't. You'r line. Yo u ' r~ the
diffe re nt Democrat ; these days
th at· s good, es· •cc l~ll y In a sevenor el~ ht - pcrson liPid . TherP may
be a time to trim sa l!s. but th at
time Isn't now .
~I Skip the Iowa ca ucu ses;
thev 'rf:' al mos t un ·Ameri ca n.
Who ever hea rd or an Ameri ca n
elec tion that does n' t have a
secret ballot and where it tak es
hours to vote~ Skip the New
Hampshire primary: Concede it
to Gov . Mic hae l Du kakls as the
goo d · n elg h bo r · from Massachu setts ca ndidate. Then
try to say tha t a good showi ng
therr wil l only mea n yo u're a
co nservative -regi on favorite
son. Remember. In 1984, 68
percent of all De mocrats who
voted In prlmal'les calll'd them selves e ither "moderate" or
"consE'rva 1lve. •·'
How does this political fai ry
tale end ? Will he or won't he ? I
don 't know , but If he d ~s. the
movie ma y soon be re-l!tled
"Sam White a nd the Seve n or
Eight Dwarfs."

taken more subtle form s. A 1983
USDA report s howed th at bl acks
held only 0.08 percent of all seats
on th e departrfl\m~s Agricultural
Stabili za tion a nd Conservation
Service county co mmitt ees.
By 1982 (th&lt;&gt; most rece nt year
for which sta tistics are .ava ilabl e) th e number of bla c k·
operated farm s had s hrunk to

safety, Tony Lilly during Monday's pre-season
game In Denve r. ( UPI)

Scoreboard ...

Decline of the black farmer__R_o_be_rt_~_alt_ers

HARD CASH, Miss. (NEA ) In the earl y 1930s, th e number of
black far mers In Miss iss ippi
peakl'd at more than 180,000. By
the ear ly 198Us, that figure had
been slashed by mor e tha n 97
percent a nd fewer th an 5,000
remained.
Thai patle rn has been ev id en t
throughout th e Sou th, where
most of the farms owned by
blacks have bel'n located, a nd
elsewhere in the nation . Althou gh
blacks ran a bout 14 pe rcent of the
cou ntry's farms du r ing much of
the first half of th is cent ury, they
now operate onl y 2 pe r cent.
Although the numbe r of farm
opera t or s of all races ha s
plunged, th e decline among
blacks ha s been especiall y precip itous - and the re are indica·
lions that It could continue until
there a re very few black farmers·
left.
· "Many black farm families
would be bettl'r off If they l!'ft
agriculture," a U.S. Department
of Agriculture report Issued last
year bluntly suggested.
"The adversity facing blacks
In their efforts to acquire and
. retain their own land Is rooted In
the racial attitudes of the South,
noted a 1982 report is.sued by the
U.S. Civil Rights Commission.
"The freedom gained by 4 million
slaves after the Civil War did not
transfer economic independence
to most blacks ."
Decades of slavl'ry had precluded blacks from saving or
inheriting money, thus denying
them the opportunity to buy their
own land .' A federal government
plan to confiscate land from
backers of the Confederacy and

Strock completed 15 or 29
passes for 177 yards, but he was
also Intercepted twice for the
Dolphins, 0·2 ..Jaworski was 13 of
17 for 163 yards In a little more
than a quarter.
Elway di rected the Broncos'
firs t-team offense to 17 second·
quart er points. · Leading 7-0,
Elway tossed a 53-yard pass to
rookie 'Ricky Nattie!, Denver's
first-round draft choice. That set
up Rich Karll s' 22-yard field
goal.
Two plays aft er the klcko1f,
Mark Haynes in tercl'pted a
Strock pass a nd retu rned It to
Miami's 8-yard llnl', setting up
the Elway-to·Kay scoring toss
three plays later.

.Ber.gals. look _for ·. backup. QB,

August~~---B_e--:-nWa_tt_en_be--=rg

she Snow White. or wa s she the in th at pl aced called AmNica . In
Evil Wit ch? No matte r : ThC' August, when th e Inst itu tio n
public kn ew not who s he wa s
called Congress wen t in to recess.
ei th rr, for what she proclai med
he IIC'"w off to Europe wi th Is wile
wa s wha t the Dwarfs pro- to attend a meet ing on U.S ./So·
cla im ed, only m ore so. a nd- so
vic( rela tions a nd to think seIt wa s thought- she might make
-r iously about whe th er or not To
It even morP difficul t for the
run for preside nt. It was Imporpart y called De mocratic to get
ta nt th at th e potential prince
elected .
decide, lor he had told the scr ibes
In thi s restive lund, co uncils of th at he would have a n a nswer on
wi se -persons met In rooms th a r or abo ut a day ca ll ed Labor .
of yore we re d&lt;'scribed as fill ed
At c ritica l moment s In polit ical
with smoke. In ot her places, fairy tales s uc h as this, potenti al
portly felines with 'many doll ars princes, such as Sen. Sam Nunn ,
hudd led a nd shook their heads In D-Ga . ,, are usually In need of
dismay. Com ments and qu es· advice. It Is us ually tendered by a
lions issued forth : The wise- Good Fairy . In August, however,
persons a nd multi· bucked felines ,Good Fairies arc aw ay il,t Ihe
said , " Hey, somet hin g Is missing beach, and it may be necessa ry
from th is poli tica l fairy la ic for columnists to ste p ln . So here
where Is Prince Charm ing? Why is advice for Sam Nu nn :
are th e Dwarf s a nd the
It Go for it. You 'll probably
Dwarfett e all liberals? Where is n £~vPr have a belt f'r shot. How
the candid ate who ca n car ry the often ca n a man of po li tical
South 1 Wh ere Is the ca nd lda a te stature get the opportu nit y to run
who can bring the Democratic in a fi eld ca ll ed dwarfi sh?
Party back to the middle of the
2) Be yourself. When ca nd l·
road?"
dates an nounce lor th e pres id·
And. so. as the tale is told , there ency, adv iser s tell them to
was s uch a man a t that time a nd cha nge their s peaking mannl'r,

·

built a 31 -14 lead. ·
Miami quarterback Ron Ja·
worskl, signed six days ago after
Dan Marino dislocated a linger
on his throwing hand , hit James
Pruitt with · two touchdown
passes In the final six minutes,
Including one ,w(th 34 seconds
remaining.
But Denver's Steve Sewell
r· ecovered an onslde kick. ena·
bUng the Broncos to run nut the
clock· and Improve their preseason record to 2·1.
Don Streck, s tarting In place of
Marino, also thrl'w a pair of
second-half touchdowns. ·strock
hit Mark 'Clayton with a 5-yard
scoring pass and later connected
on a 30-yarder with Mark Duper.

did a good job, " Flut ic said.
"Unfon unatcl y, I didn 't make a
big play."
Fiutir's stork has gonl' down
principally because Mike Tome·
~a k 's ~tock has risen. Tomczak
ha s moved up the ladde r a nd may
lx•rome the club's No.1 quarter·
bac k who;n th(' B('ars opens tiw
season aga ins t the Super Bow l
l' ha mpion New Yor k Gia nts.
The key to Flu tie's futur e ma y
rest with Ji m McMa hon. McMa ·
hon. recovering from shou lder
su rger;·. has yet to play In the
rx hih itlon season and may get

his fir st action Monday agai nst
the Cardinals.
If McMahon is hea lthy, Chi·
cago proba bl y wou ld k('('p him..
Tomcza k a nd the c lub's firs t·
ro und draft choice. ,Jim Harbaugh of Mi chi gan.
WEST CHESTER. P~. t UP ! I
- Paul McFadden assured himself of a jo b with the Philadelphia
E agl es for at leas t one more
wee k when he kicked two fi e ld
goa ls in a 19-1:l over tim e victory
aga ins t th e New E ngla nd
Patriot s.
" Well. he' ll be around for
a nother week." Eagles Coac h
Buddy Ryan sa id a fter McFad·

r

~::::,
s;:; o .

den co nnected from 33 and 22
ya rd s. the las t coming with three
second s left In the game to force
o,·ertime Sunday night before the
Eagles won on a 4· ·ya rd touc h·
down run by Junior Tautal a tasi.
1\ week ear li er. McFadde n ha~
put his job in jeopardy by mlssi ng
th t·ee field goa ls. In cl udin g a
46-ya rder that would have tied
the score as ti me expi red . fn t he
Eagles' 13- 10 loss to the New
Yor k Jets .
After that game, Rya n had said
he would begin loo king for
a not he r kicker If McFadden . who
made 20 of 31 field goals last year
a nd missed 9 or 13 fro m 40 yards
or longer. did not begi n to
perform consisten tly .

WASHI NGTON tUPII - The
h&lt;'ad of the NFL players union
Monday ca nceled a sc heduled
s peech on the leag ue's labor ta lks
becau~e he refused to cross a
picket line ex pected to be set by
striking NBC work&lt;'rs. the union
sai d.
Ge n&lt;.~

with the tea m for the firs t time
since training camp opened.
Pinney was activated from the
physically unable to perform lis t,
on which he had been si nce J uly
27 recovering from offseason
knee surgery.
HAMMOND, La . (UPII- The
New Orleans Saints waived four
players Monday, including 12th·
ro und draft choice Tyrone
Sorrells.
Besides Sorrells, a g uard from
Georgia Tech. the Saints r'eleased nose t ac kle Terr y
Summers of East Ce ntral Okla·
homa, defen siv e bac k Derrick
Taylor of North Carolina Stat e
and running back VinCI'nt Ale x·
ander of Southern Mlssisippi.
Mora sa id !funning back
Rueben Mayes s uffered a
sprained a nkl e Sa tu rday in a
16-13 loss to Houston. Mayes will
be held out of practice for several
da ys.
Sta rti ng qua rterbac k Dave

Wilson, who sat out against the
Oilers with a back muscle pull,
was able to throw during early
practice Monday, Mora said.

531 .IACtC.SON

Wf.ST

• Phone 448·4524
BAAGAIN MATINEES S.OTURDAY &amp;
SUNDAY • ALL SEATS $2 . 75
* A~lSS~ON E~ERY TUESDAY $2 .00

*
~OUST 21 thru 2:_]

~FRIDAY

t hru THURSDAY :

Upshuw, exec ut ivc dir('c-

tor of the NFL Players Assoc la·
tion. said he would not a ppear
Tuesdav at th e Na tional Press
Club ~ca use NBC technicians
.:1nd ca mf'ram en

W()re

planning

to picket !he Pvent. NFL PA
s pokeswoman Dec Rauch said.
"Gene said he would not cross
tha t picket line," Rau ch said.
U pshaw was to assess dev elop·

ments in th e negotiation s between the unio n a nd the league
for a new collec tive barga ining
agrcemenI. The ( 'U rrent fi ve·
year co ntract expires Aug. 31.

SAWDUST DAY

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LATROBE. Pa. (UPI I - Th&lt;'
Pittsburgh Steelers ,re duced
their roster to 69 players by
placing second-yea r wide receiver Warren Seitz a nd lour
rookies on waivers .
In additlbn to Seltz, who wa s a
JOt h· round draft pick In 1986, the
Stee lers also waived running
bac ks Corey Gilmore and Mike
Cla r k, guard Dennis Borcky and
punt er Mike Crow. __
Tackle Ray Pinney practiced

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26.1987
I

Twins slap 5-4 loss on Tigers;
Blue Jays, Yankees cop wins
By COlLINS YEARWOOD
UPI Sports Writer
The Mlnn!'sola Twins, who had
lost all six games on thel r r!'Cent
road trip, r!'turned to the Metro dome Monday night for their
usual home·cooked victory.
Kent Hrbek si ngled home
St!'ve LOmbardozzi from thh·d
base with one out In the ninth
l,n nlng to give.the Twins, who win
70 percent of their games at
home , a .5-4 triumph over the
Detr6it ·Ti g!'r s.
1'1iEi Twins ' are, 43-18 . at th!'
Mil~ome lhis season.
"1'!1eY have to keep doing that
If we .w anna be In this on October
4," Minnesota Manager Tom
Kelly said.
"Yo~' re gonna' win so ma.ny
games a nd you're gonna ' lose so
many," Detroit Man ager Sparky
Anderson said. "I don't think it
has nothing to do with home or
road. ••
Lombardozz l led off with a
single, and Willie Hernandez
rell!'ved Eric King , 6-9. Ra ndy
Bush sacrifiCed and Lombar-

.

BONDS HOMERS - Pittsburgh's Mike Diaz
(left) aad Rafael Belllard (right) greet Barry
Bonds at, home pl_a te after Bonds hit a three-run

dozzl mov!'d • to third on AI
Newman's single to lelt.
"It's a big night tor us to put a n
end to the skid and not 11'1 II go
any further," Lombardozzl said.
" I was just trying to get some·
thing going. He's (King) been
tough on m e In the past." ·
The loss ended Detroit's twogame winning strea k and left the
Tigers In a virtu al lie with
Toronto for the AL East .lead.
"We sure had our chances to
blow them ou t three or 'four
Innings In a row," Detroit's
Darrell Evans said . "We didn 't
get the big hils a nd that's the
thing about playing at home, you
get that la st time at the plate a nd
the other team doesn 't get a
chance. You ca n't le.t good teams
do that."
Jeff Reardon. 6-6, worked one
Inning In rellel of Bert BlyleVen
and earned the victory. Blyleve n
allowed four r uns on seven hit s In
eight Innings.
.
E lsewhere, Chi cago defeated
Boston 6-3, Texas beat Kansas
City 4-2. Oakland belled Balli-

· PITTSBURGH (UPIJ - Nick
Esasky tied his career-high of
four hlts. Paul O'Neill picked up
his 11th and 12th RBI in a
plnch-hlttlng role, the most sine!'
1972 when Hal McRae knocked in
12 off the bench for the Cincinnati
Reds.
But there was no celebrating in
the Cincinnati clubhouse Monday
night as the Reds lost their fourth
straight to fall thr!'e games
behind the NL western divisionleading San Francisco Giants.
Bobby Bonilla hit a three-run
homer and Doug Drabek scattered seven hits over seven
lnrilrigs to lead the Pirates loa 5-4
vldory over the Reds. •
Jllrabek, tHO, struck out five to
move his r!'Cord to 5-2 in eight
starts since the All-Star break.
Jim Gott recorded his fourth
save despite allowing the two-run
dol!ble to O'Neill · In the ninth .
Both runs were unearned.
•!It was another one of those
gal)les where you come up short
again, " said Cincinnati manager
Pete Rose. "We outhll the
oppilsttlon again, but it 's not
outhittlng them, It 's outscoring
them."
II was the Pirates first win over
thC:Reds In Pittsburgh sin ce Aug.

22, 1985. The Reds ha d won nine • with a n RBI single, m aki ng it :&gt;-2.
str aight in Pittsburgh .
Pedrlque and Belllard both had
"We bounced ba ck toni ght tw o hits .
against a team In contention,"
"That' second baseman 1Belsaid Pirates man ager Jim Ley- liard 1starts in Johnny Ra y's spot
land. " TherE' are a lo t of tough and he scores two runs and get-s
outs In Ihat lineup."
two hit s hi s fi rst two times up, "
Playing agai nst a beller team sa id Rose. "He hurt us."
is what keeps som e of the last The Red's rallied for two runs in
pl ace Pirates going .
the topofthenlnth. With o ne out,
"We have sever al ga m es to go
Bo Diaz reached on third baseand we want to finish s trong,"
man Bonilla's throw ing error.
said Bonilla . "You come to the
Esasky followed with hi s fourth
park and feel you can try to stop
hit of the night , hath runners
somebody. We do that. and that 's · advanced on a Infield out and
not hing but confidence for us
scored on O'Neil l' s doubl e, mak next year,"
ing it 5-4. Gott str uck out Da niels
Bonilla's 12th hom e run of the to e nd 'the game.
season. on a 1-2 pit ch with t"'o out
" We're not playi ng well as a
gave Ihe Pirates a 3-0 lead In the team," said O'NeilL "You win as
third .
a l!'am , you lose as a tea m . No
The Red s moved to within 3-21n one's happy in here."
the fif th inning. Esasky opened
It was the second lime thi s
with a doubl e a nd scored on Kal season Esasky has had four hit s
Daniels two-out hom e run on a 2-2 . in a game. He had lour agai nst
pitch into the r ight-cent er field the Cardina ls on June I.
seats. It was his 20t h homer of the
" I felt good swlnginll the ba t
year.
tonight. " said Esasky 1 "You
Pittsburgh regained its three- want to do well to he lp your tea m
run lead in th e bottom of the fifth . come up a winner. We ca me up
Rafael Belliard s ingled, ad - short. We didn ' t win and thai 's
va nced on a sacrifice by Drabek wha t coun ts ."
and scored on Barry Bonds'
Tom Browning, 5-11, ha s i0st
double. AI Pedrique followed five st r aight decis ions.

Houston in the Na fional League
West. Joe Price fini s h!'d . Bruce
Ruffi n. 10-10, took the loss.
"It feels good," Reuschel said.
"I' m excited abou t our chancE's. I
hope I can help out dow n the
stretch."
" It was all over th e media thai
,he'll win the penn a nt for us." Sa n
F rancisco Manager Roger Craig
said. "We'll win it anyway a nd I
didn't want the bu rden on hi s
shoulders. But I told him he' d
better w in tonight anyway."
Chris Speie r homered in thE'
fourth inning to score Robby
Thompsod, who had s ingled with
two out , and give th e Giants a 5· 1
lead. It was Speier's ninth home
run of the season.
The Giant s took a J.o lead off
Ruffin In the firs t inning. With
one out , Spel!'r walked , went to
third on a single by Bob Brenly

Wings post 3-1 win over Tides

a nd scored on a wild pitch. Chili
Davis si ngled home Brenly and
scored on Mike Aldrete's dou bl e .
ThE' P hlilies scored a r un In the
fir st. Juan Sam uel tripled and
scored on a sacrifi ce fly by Milt
Thompson.
In other games, Pittsburgh
defeated Cincinnati ~- 4, New
York shaded Los Angeles 1·0 and
Houston tr ipped St. Louis ~- 2.
Mets I, Dodge rs 0
AI New York , Rick Aguilera
combined with two rellev!'rs on a
lour-hitt er and Keith He rnandez
drove in the only run to pull the
Mets "'ithin 3'h games ,pf first
place In the Eas t. Aguil e ra, 5-2,
allowed fou r hil s and th rew 97
pitches over 7 2-3 Innings In hi s
fir st appearance since May 20.
Astros 5, Cardinals 2
At St. Louts . Bob Kne pper
scattered seven hils in his first
comple tE' ga me of the season to
give Houston Its lOth vict orY In 11
games.

earned hi s 14th save, a llowing
one hit over I 2-3 nnlngs.
J ohn Mitchell , 3-2, gave up
s!'ven hits and three runs over 6
1·3 innings. He s truck out threE'
and wal ked two.
Rochester moved a head 1-0 in
the second whe n Traber 'led off
with a double. Kelvin Torve
singled to advance Traber to
third a nd Rodl)ey Cra ig hit a
sacrifice fl y.

"8EnUf8 ~OU THERE SAFEL 'I"
*lUGIUIENTS *FIONl-END WORK
*lliTIIRS *niE IEPlll

•
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· OPEN: 8·8 MON.-SAT.; 8-8 FRI .
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18th

Melissa F'osler lost the · most
Wt't'kly W&lt;'lght In th&lt;" IP.l'n c lass.
while Kay Halllcld was the lop
loser with Roberta Dil l, runner up, In the ad ul t class, at Sll nder·
ell a Monda ,\' nig ht.
The week before, Belly Dill
was th&lt;' top los&lt;'r a t lh&lt;" Monda y
night class while Kay Hatllrld
lost thl' ' most weight In Ihi'

'2995 '3495
'3995

'

4-c:vliftd•

1-cvlinder

New offi cers w~ r·c ~!cried at
lhr r·ecenl meeting of the Rock
Spri ngs Gra nge held at the hall .
EI!'C ied were Wlllam Radford,
maste-r: Linda Broderick, ovrr·
s!'Cr: Pat Holt er, lectur&lt;•r: Roy
Holt er. steward: Roy Gru&lt;•se r.
assi s tant steward: Opa l
Grueser, lady assistan t steward:
Beuna Grueser, chap lain : James
fr'y, treasurer: francis Goc·
glel n, secretary: Barbara Fry,
ceres; Helen Blackston, Pomona : Na ncy Morris , flora : Ha ·
rold Blackston. gate kreper : Roy
Grucser, execut ve commitll'!':
Opal Grueser, legis la tive: Bar·
bar Fry, CWA : James Fry, youth
chai rma n: Linda Broderick. junIor chairman : Louise Radford,

1 -c-yind•

o Pnce includes 11»f)Or'i
ChamPion spar!&lt; plugs
• Inspect emission
components o Set
t1ming • Ide adjustment
(Engines equipped with greater
than 2·bbl carb and standard
ignition slightly higher.)

August~

28th at Tri-State Greyhound Park. After the 12th race that
night, one lucky patron will win a $7.500 Bassfinders Boat
from Economy Marine in Charleston.
Register anytime during our performances Augvst 20th
through the 27th, and before 8:00p.m. Friday, August 28th.
No ptJrChase or wager is necessaty, bur you must be present
to win. The winner is responsible for all taxes. You must be
T8 years of age to register.
So come join us for the excitement of greyhound racing, as
Tri-State presents a "Bass Fisherman 's Delight" Fnday,
August 28th.
Post Times:

Information:
Reservations:

COOPER

Chrysler, Plymouth,
Dodge ·
399 So. Third
M iddlepo'r t
Mon.-Fri. 8 -5
8-12 SIJit.-AppJ . Only

7:30 e11enings
Mon. thru. Sat.
1:30 matinee
Wed . Sat. &amp; Hol1days
116-1000
176-5000

-

Om a Starkey wIll o bserve her
93rd birthday a t he r home on
Thursda y a nd loves to ~el mail.
She's co nfln!'d to her home. The
address Is Route 4. Pome·roy.
Ohio 4~769 .
·
If you have had trouble reach ·

lng our office via telephone the
past lew rfays, le t me advise you
that In all probabilit y this is
b!'C:t use we are havi ng a new
telephone system Installed . Keep
try ing and keep smllln):.

m~ting

TuC'sday morning class. Jr ssyca
Hatfield lost the most. weight In
the kid ' s c lass. At the Mason
c las.s Wednesda'y Lois An n Rcit mlre a nd Mona Legg tied for the
most weight lost a nd Co nn ie
T hompson was runner -up. Beth
Thompson lost the most weight in
the kid's class.

R~~es~nd

·-h

·-~
ROLL OVER - You never know what you
might see at the Meigs Counly Fair Pet Show,.
Keith Hunt and Eric PoW'ell put on quit e an a ct for

lhe c rowd during the category for most unusual
pet. That's Eric on the ground.

s tr ull lng, polo, and corps prin cess and ninth In c heerleadin g.
She holds six na tional and wor ld
!Liles with the Rangerettes and
has held the West Virginia Sta te
Cha mpion ships for eight years.
She now holds the 19H6 Ohio State
Beginner solo c ha mp'ioh n the
foll owing ca tegories: Oh io State
Queen, basic and fancy strut,
parade m a jorette, baton a nd flag
twlrlln!(.
She also competed in the Mi ss
Majorette or Ohio cont es t last
sprin g a t Ak ron University
where she won second run ner -up.
April is a n eig hth grader a t Meigs

Annual picnic conducted
by StonewOOd residents
The· an nu al cookout at Stone woods Apartments was he ld
recentl y with the food a nd
b&lt;&gt;ve rages being provided by the
residents, · owners and
•
managem ent.
Kathryn Metzger had the
pr·ayer. Allendlng werC' Minnie
a nd Paul Johnso n, reside nt ma nagers, Louisa .Johnston. Dorothy
Russe ll, Eileen Snyder . Jva Ste wart. Helena How ell, Calvi n a nd
Mabel Lane, M. L. Ba ht', Inez
Pooler, Mae Weber, Freda Car·
sey, Lee Reed. Zelia Ta ylor,
Shirley fraziH, Evelyn Mai ns,
Virginia Eastep, Marvin and L.
Fife . .John a nd Kdthryn M!'tzger.

Es ther Kissell , Cofflt·d and Ali ce
P la ntz .

Junior High Sc hool and is ac tive
in t he band, science club, and
captai n or the cheerleadin g
squad. She Is a member of the
Ridge Critters 4-H Club.
Heather Is a s ixth grader at
Sali sbury E lementary where she
is In band and a c hee rlea der and
a membf'r of Ridge Critters 4- H
Club. This is Hea ther's !irst year
with the Rangerettes. She competed in pompon and parade
corps.
The second c hamp ionships the
girls attended were in Boiling
Springs, N. C'. at GardnN-Webb
College. T he Rangertt es won
fi rst in dance wir ls, fir st in
paradr corps, a nd first in pom pon teams. They also won the
over-a ll most out sta ndin g corps.
Thi s even t lasted t hree days and
was for corps event s only.
Mrs. J udy Riggs of Reedsville
is the director of the Rangerettes
and aso insti'ucts April in individ ·
ual event s.

,,'

•

.. 1

Visiting

Twirlers compete, win events
Apri l and Hea the r Hudson,
daughters of Mr. a nd Mrs.
Bryan t Hud so n. Albany, recently
r!'turned from two na tio nal, twirling competit ions . The gir ls
attended a week long contest held
at Notre Da m e University In
Soui h Bend, (net. where they
performed wit h the Riggs Ran ·
gerctlcs Baton Corps.
T he gro up won severa l second,
third a nd fourth places in several
ca tegories , comp!'llng agai nst
about 70 corps from around the
U. S. and Ca naday .
April performf'd In four indi·
vidual eve nts plac ing fourth In

Knapp :~

Mrs. Charles'
attended the Peterson fa mil y
reunion held at the home of Mrs.
Peterson on New Lima Road
Sunday.
,.
',.

Chris Gorby, eigh t, has been: :
here visiting his grandparents ,·
Carl and Pauline Gorby, Langsville. for the past two weeks. He
enjoy!'d a pizza pa rt y hosted by a
nl'ighbor, Je r-ry and Linda Jacks,
and fam ily and a pre-birthday
'
~
cel!'bratlon with cake, 1ce cream, · ·,
koolaid, and favors. He also .• ·
visit!'d the count y fair before
flying home-Wednesday.
•

Eastern school
menu announced. '

The me nu for lunch!'s at , .,
schools of the East!'rn Local , ·
District are a nnounced and : ::
'

' j

mclude:

. !1 ,

Tuesday: hamburg!'r, baked , , ;
beans, p~ars, milk.
: .. I
Wednesday: pi zza, lettu ce , ·
salad, applesauce, milk.
.1
Thursday: bologna. cheese,·:.
sa ndwich , green beans, peac hes, ,,'
milk.
·, 1
Friday: fi sh sandwich, fren ch
'
fries, fr uited je llo , milk .

An·nouncement was m ade of

the flower jud gi ng with Ze li a
Ta ylor taking first, theMetzgers,
second , a nd Lanes. thi rd , and
Helena Howell, fourth .

..'

Retmion planned
The Johnson fa mil y reunion
will be he ld Sept. 6 at the Shrine
Park In Racine. All Johnson
descenda nt s a re Invited to come
and e njoy the potl uck dinner a nd
fellows hip.

( H'l' \ l f II { ' ' "
l,f~UI""I ''"II '

J\'

I

membershp chairma n: Bunny
Kuhl, comm unity · a nd deaf
chairman .
The c harter wa draped for
Gar la nd Ca ld well. Obligat io n of
first and second degrees were
given by William Radford, m astf'r, 10 Mr. and. Mrs. Charles
Aldr ldg&lt;&gt;.
Sympat hy ca rds were signed
for Genev ieve Burde ll e a nd
Barbara F ry. Get-well card was
sen t to Grace Wh a ley a nd one to
Mr. and Mrs. Char les Blakeslee
a n anniversary card.
Refr es hme nts were by Bar·
bara Fry. Grandda ughters of
Roy and Pat Holt er presetnf'd an
acrobatic dance.

"'

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16141667-3110

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1986 G.M.C. S15 SIERRA

''

Long bed, auto. 0.0 . Trans., A/ C, AM-FM stereo,
1 0,000 miles.

l ' ::

85 CHEV. S10 V·6, auto. trans., air, cruise, tilt whee(, Tahoe Pkg.,

Parker reunion conduaed

I

COOLVILLE, OHIO

"TRUCK SALE"

, , I o

....'.

bed rails, extra sharp.

It is possilolo that the11 oxtra lfrtSIIS con coUH sign!·
ficanl problems within tho family. Whon this is tho ·~~S~~;:;::;;;;:~~:.::=
coli, couOStling olton is adviHble, Youl clergyman or ;;;
mental health prof11sional can assist with this.
Usually, though, the Ius of a loved .,. is a burden
shored by tho family os woll ~s by the _lntlivldual; tho
grief family momben oxpertonct bnngs them to·
a-thor stronger as a family than ever before.
We invito your comments and quostions, which will be
5TH STREET
, aMwertd rn private or pollltdy, through th11 column.

Maatar Card and Via Welcom.

ma ny of you have remembered
the plants - and It's good that
you did .

992 -36061Zl

Cross Lanes, VN Exit 1-64

OHIO

rer·ro twice a week . I 'm sure

l

Rock Springs Grang~
holds regular meeting

Engine Tune-Up

a Bass Fisherman's Delight Friday night,

A lip from Carper's Nurserywhat wil h the drought not only
plants but trees should be wa -

:~:

-~

~

It will be

Mr. and Mrs . Mau r ice Reed of
R!'!'dsvll le will mar k their 40th ·
wedding a nni versary wiih a
family gathering on Sat urday.
They were marr ied In Pomeroy by J us tice of the Peace Percy
Peoples a nd are pare nts of three
c hildre n. Rosemary Young, Ra ·
ci ne, and Tom and Bria n Reed,
bot h or RPedsvU I!'. T hey have one
gra ndchild , Laur!'n Young,
I'm sure Mr. and Mrs . Reed
1Would love hearing from you on
th&lt;' occasion.

•

Mrs. Richard Wynn and Mat:• :
thew, Minn. were recent visitors~ '
of Mrs. J . R. Murphy a nd family. : :
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russ!'U,•:
Mr. and Mrs. · Steve Haggy,: .
Stephanie a nd Brad, Mr. and :
Mrs. Donald Russeil and Mr. and ·,:
Mrs. Robert Venoy, and Robin.~·
were in Medina Saturday fort ha',:
wedding of Candl Summerfield :
and Brian Reeder .
:0
Charley Smith were recent : :
vis itors of Mr. and Mrs. Harley &lt;
Smith, Kana uga.
:'
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reeves, ;
Bra ndi and Robbie of Chester •
were Tuesda y evening visitors oi ' ~
Mrs. Dorothy Reeves and Bryan ·~

staged at 7:30p.m. Saturday a l
the Shrine Park in Raci ne by the
Racine VIllage Park Board.
Three ba nd s will be featured
this week and they are the Bend
River Boys, the Ci rcle D
Wranglers, both local, and the
Sternwheeler Blue Grass Group
of Ripley, W.Va.
Meantime, OQ Monday a 20.by
20 foot slab was pour!'d at the
park to prov ide a good location
for squarE' dancing a nd clogging
-so apparently things are goin g
to conilnue a t the park .
Don't forget to take your lawn
chair along Saturd ay so you' 11 be
comfortabl e and refreshmrnts
w ill agai n be available a t the
par k.
·
·

Slinderella conducts

. Bass
F1she11nan's
Delight
. '·
;.

l

~ugurt

(6141 992-5141
MtDD~EPORT ,

•

' stand corrected .
There wil l be tax meas ure to be
vo ted upOn In th e No.vember
elec tion In 1he Eastern Local
· Sc hool District. The levy Is lor
tlve mills ra th er than .5 ul one
mill.
Anoth&lt;'r of those W&lt;'li received
free public pro~ram s will be

Crown remai ned un ·
deleatf'd In the sel'h'S at S&lt;·ioto
Downs Monda y night, pos ting a
6 % length victory In the $19,100
final prellmlnar)• leg of th e
series.

IKATH AND THE FAMilY
h's obvious that grief ovtr the oloath ol a land •.nt
·allo&lt;ts tho individual tletply. lu~ who~ doos this gr11f
and the ponon's death do to hts lan~dy as a whole?
1ho loss of a member 1tav11 tho family to transition. .
fht lMitqutncll are many: •conomil Uots of a wag•oarnor, far nampltl, social Ia child may lost a play·
malo), praclicol (an oxtra room in tho house 1Aiso, griof shows itself in tlillerent ways in ooch of us,
·and this may cause stroll in the family. Amother '!"'Y
snap at hor children; a ·younsttr may becomt woth- .
drawn at tho dinner table. Those rtactions oro all complotoly normal,
_;_, _...,.

RUTLAND TIRE SALES
LOWEST PRICES ON PASSENGER CARS
AND LIGHT TRUCK TIRES

lhc Ia~ durin~ Monday nl~hl 's gamt• ln Oakland .
( UPI)

Krl s t~ns

Trl·State Presents on

'

•

•

And do k!'ep In mind tha t the
ml x('d scram bl e golf tournament
planned for Aug. 27 for the
benefit of the Meigs Unit of the
American Canc!'r Society has
been put on the back burner until
further notice.
Women of the Tuesda. L!'agu e
are still playing a t the Jaymar
Course a nd winners lor the past
two weeks are D!'bbl Sayre, low
gross, and Elizabet h Lohse, low
net and pull s for Aug. 11 , and ·
Norma CustN ,Iow putt a nd low
gross : Julie Hyse ll, low net , at
Aug. 18 play.

----Scioto Downs results- - -

'

•

8)' United Press lntemalional
Joe Kucharski and two rellev·
ers comblll,ed on a six- hiller and
Jim Traber belted a solo homer
Mdnday night to lead the Roches·
ter Red WIngs to a 3-1 v lc tory
over the Tidewater Tides In an
International League game In
Norfolk, Va.
Kucharski, 4-5, pitched 5 1-3
inl(!ngs, giving up four hits and
one run. He walked one and
strilck out four . Mike Kinnunen

By BOB HOEFLICH
Se ntinel Staff Writer
Tony Riffle, Syracuse, severely Injured
· last week in an
accident at the
co n s t r u.c tlo,n
site of t he new
mall In Lancaster, I know ,
would app r e clate·hearlng from you.
Tony, the son of Mr. and Mrs.
James Rtlfle.. Syracuse, recelv!'d
third degr!'e bu r ns over 50
perc!' nt of his bOdy a nd remai ns
In lCU. He will be hospit alized
for some tinie to come and a lot of
surgery will be forthcoming as
soon as he Is stabilized .
By the way, Tony Is able to see,
In case you had heard otherwlsr.
Your prayers a nd your greet·
ings are rea ll~· needed at this
&lt;'!. time. You can send something to
Tony at thi s address: Anthony
(Tony) Riffle, ICU Burn Unit, 7
East Doan · Hall , Ohio State
Uni versity Hospita ls. 410 W. lOth
Ave .. Colu mbus. Ohio 4.3210.

---~-

COLUMBUS, Qhl6 (UP!) Krlstens Crown ha s ~s t ab ll s h!'d
herse lf as the favorite to win Hie
fina le of the Ohio Si res Slakes
se ries for 2-yea r-old trolling
fillies.

Wolfe Pen
happenings

A kind word or two ...

•

Giants increase d-ivision lead

~

&amp;ai of the bend

-----

OUT AT HOME -Oakland's Carney J.ansford
Is oul at hom e as Orioles' Terry Kenned ,v makt•s

Tuesday. August 25, 1987

Page-5

homer off Reds pitch!'r Tom"
In third
inning of Monday's game. The PiratE'S won, !H.
(UPI)

'

By MIKE TULLY
UPI NallonaJ. Baseball Writer
IJ.ick Reuschel Is helping a
pe11nant contende r without
speaking any ill of the last- place
club he l!'ft behind.
Reuschel , In his first start
since being acquired . for the
stretch run, allowed five hit s
over seven Innings Monday night
to ~:lve the San Francisco Giants
a &amp; I victory over the Phlladel·
phla Phlllies.
.
"'It's exciting to be In a pennant
race," Reusch!'! said . "But I wa s
ex~lted to be where I was. I was
aln;rost out of the game three
years ago, so l'mjust happy to be
pitching anywhere."
fleuschel, who last week was
pltehlng for last -place Plttsbur,gh, raised his record to9-6. He
stJ'¥ck out a season-high l'ighl
and walked none, keeping t h!'
GiMts a half-gam e ahead of

By The ·Bend

more 7-3, Toronto decked Sea !lie
7-3 and' New York nipped California 3-2 In 11 Innings.
While Sox 6, Red Sox 3
At· Boston, Greg Walker hit a
two-r un homer li nd Ca rl.ton Fisk
added a solo s hot to lead Chicago.
Rangers 4, Royals 2
AI Kansas C ll y, Mo., Bobby
Wilt and Mitch Williams combined on a th ree -hitter, and Scott
Fletcher drove In two ru ns to
spark the Range rs .
Athletics ' · Orioles 3
At Oakland, Call!.. Terry
Steinbach's two-run single lgnlled a five-run sixt h Inning thai
rallied the Athletfcs.
Blue Jays 7, Mariners 3
At Seall le, Ernie Whitt and
To ny Fer na ndez homered and
John Cerulli ear ned his lOth
vic tory to pull the Bl.ue Jays
Within one perce nta ge po\nt of
Ihe Tigers In the AL East.
Yankees 3, Angel s Z, II Innings
AI Ana heim, CaUL Mike Pa gliarulo doubled hOme Cla ude ll
Washington wllh two oul in lhe
lith inning, l!fllng New York .

Slump continues as Pirates
•
In
row
hand Reds fourth loss

The Daily Sentinel

'',.

· The 52 nd a nnua l Parker reun Ion was h!'ld at the Tuppers
Plains Elementary schoo l on
Aug. !j.
Willis Parker asked the bl!'sslng before the meaL NelleParke r
presi ded with Introductions and
!dent lllcatlon s of family
branches being given by each one
attending . The famil y members
are de scendants of three broth·
ers. Hiram, Thomas. and Aden
iA donijah) who came down the
Ohio River from Pennsylvania In ·
the 1850's to settle lp this area.
Keith Ashley dis played the lam·
lly trees . Officers elected werE'
franklin Parker, president; Willis Park!'r, vice president: Howard Parker , secretarytreasurer: Keih Ashley,
historian; Joe Poole, photographer, and Martha Poole,
gifts. ·
Cards were signed for VIrginia
Parker, Lottie Parker, Hal and
Betty , Parker, and Harold
Parker.
Mrs. Poole distributed gilts to
Nellie Parker, tl!e oldest woman
th!'re, 73; Bob Ashley, oldest

man, 67; Ml sha Parker . dau ghter of Jerold and Diane Parker,
the younges t glrll, five wee ks;
Chris Parker, son of Margaret
and Leland Parker, young!'st
boy, five years; Mar~ and
Debbie Parker, Philippi, W.Va ..
who traveled' the farthe st 160
mill's; Jerold and Diana Parker,
new!'st married: and Margar('t
and Leland Parker, largest
family,
P•esent were Mr. and Mrs.
Franklin Parker, Willlls Parker,
Jerold, Diane and Mlsha Parker,
April and Joshua Snodgrass,
Parkersburg; Gall Mills, Eliza·
beth, ·W. V~.: Mark and Debbie
Parker, ' Philippi, W. Va.; ~r.
and Mrs. Robert Ashley, Mr. and
Mrs. Keith Ashley, Rachel, Whit·
ney, and Emily, Mr. and Mrs.
Leland Parker, Patty, Joe, Mike,
Chuck and Chris, Tim Cook, Joe,
Martha and Will Poole, )Iomer
Parker, Phyllis Newland, Marlene Kuhn, and Nellle Parker, all•
of Meigs County.
Reunion In 1988 wll be held at
the same place on the second
Sunday In A:bgust. ·

••,

86 FORD RANGER _4 cyl., S speed, 0.0. trans., stereo casselle,

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wire covers. l(ack with burgundy interior.

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85 CHEV. S1 0 4 cyl., 4 speed, AM/FM stereo, strip kit.
86 FORD RANGER 4 cyl., S speed, 0.0. trans., wide covers, blue

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· 85 FORD RANGER 4X4
sharp.

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85 DODGE D100 318 V-8, auto. trans, P.S. &amp; P.B.. long bed. Ni&lt;e.

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85 DODGE 4X4 318 V-8 4 speed tra~s., P.S. &amp; P.B. Prospector

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83 IZUZU 4X4 PICKUP Air 'cond.,
85 GRAND AM V-6
85 CHEVEnE Air Cand.
85 PONTIAC 100 4 speed
84 PLY. RELIANT SE 4 Dr.
IS RENAULT 4 Dr.

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85 FORD TEMPO 4 Dr.
84 DODGE DAYTONA Turbo
14 CAVAUER WAGON
13 FORD L.T.II. 4 Dr.
13 FORD NIUSTANG

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•

�Paga 6- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

· Airma n a nd Mrs. Scott Kimes
a re a nnounci ng the birth of their
first child , a daught er. Ashllegh
Meghan, born at Cha nute Air
. F tlrce Base , Illinois, J.uly 10. She
weighed seven pounds , 13 ounces
and was 20 Inches lng.
- Paternal grandpa rents are Mr.
and Mrs. William Kim es. Ra cine. Maternal gr a ndparents a.re
Rollle Stewart of P omeroy, a nd
Mrs. Linda White, Mine rsv ille.
Airman and Mrs. Kimes are now
stationed a t Little Rock Air
Force Base, Arkansa s.
ASHLIEGH KIMES

Thoene.. birth
Dale a nd Na ncy Thoene are
a nnounc ing the' bir th of a daug hter, Whitney Sue, on Aug. 7, a t
P leasant Va lley Hospital.
The infa nt weighed seven
pounds, 13 ounces, a nd was 20
inches long. The couple ' have a
son , Wesley, five. Maternal
grandpa re nt s a re Anna Mae
Greenlee, Pomeroy, a nd the la te
E dgar Greenlee. P aternal gr an!}
pa rents are Mr. ~;~ nd Mrs. La wrence Thoene, Wy not , Neb.

"
WWTNEY THOENE

Norton birth

'Quirks

•

lll

By KATE CALLEN
.United Press Inte rnational
FAWN ON TV: Barbara Walters, whose last coup was the
fi rst TV Interview with Gary Hart's party pal. Donna Rice, now
turns her sights on Ollie North 's paper-shredding secretary,
Fawn Hall. The two will chat about whoHallls and whe r e s he's
going as part of Walters' Aec special Sept. 15.
, "She's been Ia I king to Fawn and her lawyer for the last couple
~f months, " said ABC News spokeswoman Maurie Perl. "It was
a question of whe n to do it. Fawn felt comfortable enou gh to talk
about things." Walters will also have a return visit with Bette
Mldler and Debra Wlnl!'er.
As for Hall, the questions will concentrat e on "who Is this
woman tha t captured everyone's eye during the Ira n-Cont ra
hearings ," said P e rl.
HEROES GROUNDED: Dirty Harry and Indiana Jones
never le t anything stop them, but real- life ac tors Clint
Eastwood and Harrison Ford got their wings clipped .Saturday
when their privat e jet broke down during a Paris· to-Califor nia
fligh t.
•"'
Eastwood, his lea ding lady, Sondra Locke, and Harri son w ere
stuck In Bangor, Maine, lor a few hours while mechanics from .
California worked on the plane. When repairs were finished. I he
mayor of Carmel. CaUl., and his entourage got bac k on board
and continued their !light. airport officials said.
GOODBYE VALERIE: When Lori mar-Teleplctures dumped
Valerie Harper from her NBC TV show "Valerie" because of
enormou s s al ary demands, everyone wondered what would
happen to the· show's name. TV critics suggested a few:
" Where's Valerie," "Who' s Va le rie," " Sor ry ValeriE'" a nd even
" No Vale rie. "
Lorlm a r maintained It would nol change th e na m e unt il
Monda y .when It announced the show would now be ca lled
" Vale rie 's Family ." Sandy Duncan has replaced Harper , who
walked ofl the show In August demanding w hat Lori m ar sa id
would m a ke he r the highest paid perform er on prime-tim e
·
television.
Ha r per now s ays she does n't know why s he was repl aced a nd
Is cons idering a la wsuit .

KYLE S. NORTON

Sara h, Mr. and Mrs . Vic Genhei·
m er . ali local.
Mr. and Mrs . Ger al d Gi lkey
and Am ber , Ath e ns ; Mrs. Donn a
Swa khouse a nd' Mrs. Gaye Sm a llev . Mu stogee. Okla. ; Mr. a nd
M'rs. Bill Spa un'. Juli a a nd
Sha nnon. Pomeroy; Mrs Tin a
Justice. Colt a nd K'v te , Ches hi re;
Mrs . A ni ta
S t a nl ey,
Ravensv..•ood .

The Dea n famil y dur ing the ir
time here visited . Mr. and m s .
Pau l Casto. Mrs. Ka th ryn Ha ll.
Mrs. Haze l Arnold a nd Wa le r ,
Rowla nd Dais. local; Mrs. Ardis
Waggoner and Mrs. Flore nce
Well , a nd Mr. a nd Mrs. P a ul
Paynt er. Alba ny. On Sund ay
they atlendcd se rvices a t Ca ·
rl eton Chu rc h a nd where they
vis ited ma ny fr iends .

ARCADI A, Fla. !UP! I - The
presence of three brothers who
tested positive for AIDS antibodies cut att enda nce nea rly In ha lf
on their first da y bac k In
elem entary school, but offi cia ls
were opt imi stic the s tudents
would return to cl a sses.
The Ray brothers - Richa rd ,
10, Robert 9, and Randy, 8 wer e taken Monday to Memoria l
- E le ment ary Sc hoo l by their
• parents ,. Clifford and Louise, a nd
whe n classes ended, the boys ra n
with their 6-year·old s is ter Ca nd y
to the fam ily pickup, hopped In
the back a nd shout ed goodbye to
reporters a nd photogra phers
T he ir at te ndence m a rked the
end of a yearlong· co urt ba ttl e
be tween the ir parents and De Soto Coun ty school offic ials, who
tri ed to prevent the boys fro m
attending classes. A fede ra l
judge ruled Aug. 5 that the
brothers could go to regul ar

classes.
But some parent s, fea ring
the ir childre n may contr ac t

'
the press leaves." school SuperInte ndent La r ry Browning sa id .
"Som e of the m don' t wa nt to
subject their children to the
pressures of the press being
there and th a t 's a very legitimate
concern."
B rowning ca lled the att enda nce ligures " slight ly n'&lt;i uced "
a nd sa id he hopro th ey would
pick up la te r I his week . .
The brothe r s were barred fro m
regula r clas ses last fa ll when
sc hool officials lea rn ed they
tes tro pos it ive for AIDS a ntlbo·
dies. Doctors said the boys we re
In fec ted by blood· based medica tion taken for hem ophili a . a
he redi tary conditi on In whic h
norm a l blood · clottin g fac tors
a re absent.
None of the boys has s how n
sy mptoms of AID S a nd thNr
s ister and parent s i&lt;'sl!&gt;d ncga .
tlvt:' to the AIDS a ntibodies
He m ophil iacs. howev&lt;:&gt;r . ar&lt;? in
the AIDS h l~h - r i s k ca tegory
a long wit h homos(', ua ls a nd .

'

- unti l he looked ,up a redwood
tree a nd guess · w hat he saw
star ing back a t him ?
" I'd rat he r see one in a zoo,"
Torresda l sa id o f the s hocking
ex peripnce Sund a y.
The 150-pound bea r was 40 feet
up the tree a nd Mar ion County
she ri ff' s deputies decided to
leave him alone , hopin g he would
re turn to the wilds . Torresd al
sa id the bear left Sunday nig ht.
" He left at a bou t dusk," he
sa id . " He ca me down out of the
tree. wa lked through the back· " There were two - by - four~ and
yard
, thPn went bac k up the tree
big chunks of concr-ete tile," he
s)!id . " It just happened !hat and over the fence. He proba bly
nobody was wa lkin g by a t !he headed back to th e woods."
Torrcsda l said the bear m ay
time or !hey would have bee n
ha ve grown hungry In the wood s,
seriousl y injured ."
The ca use of Monda y 's explo· . gone searching fo r food a nd be e n
s ion was overpress ur iza tion in a altrac ted to hi s yard by a pple a nd
commercia l pres sure cooker be- pear trPes
J im Gla dson o f the Oregon
ing used to cook rhubarb for pic;,
Department
of F ish a nd Wildlife
he sa id. T he expl os ion bl ew out a
Se
rvice
sai
d
bl ac k bears are !he
~t2 - by 15- foot sec tion of the wa ll
only
kind
of
bears foupd in
and an equa lly big porti on of.the
Oregon.
roof.
" The' bl ac k bear is a n indi ge n·
' · None of the ea tery 's 2.'i to :to
cust ome rs were Injured , bur two ous spec ies in Oregon," Gladson
employees sufle red minor injur· sai d. "They 're mos t commo nly
ies. Both were treated at a found in the Coast Ra nge."
Age ncy spo kes m a n Ken Du r·
hospital a nd released , hP sai d .
" 1 wa s working next to the bin said black bea rs will ea t both
meat a nd pl ants .
steam kett le wh en it blew, a nd a
wall ca m e down on m e, .. sa id
Sus pect says passing
assis ta nt kitchen m a nager Greg_ _
AIDS note to hank
Lecl a. who estim a ted da mage to
tellers wa.• a ploy
the rest a ur an t, whic h spec ializes
NEW YORK !UPI ) - A m a n
In pies, at about $:10,000 .
who a ppare ntly robbed ba nks by
Homeowner finds hear
passing a note saying he h ad
In backyard tree
AIDS has told poll ee he used the
SALEM, Ore. iUPll -Blac k phony threat "to ins till fear" in
bears are indigenous to Oregon, his victim s, a uthorities said.
but Jerry To ~ resd a l never exCyril Hodge , 39, of Brookly n
·pected to find one in hi s bac kya rd was nabbed shortly after noon

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

'

D r Jim Var nes Of ihio s ta le
drom e, ca ll ed for a school DPpa rlmr&gt;nt of Hralt h a nd Re ha bOycott to protes t t he fedet·a l bilit a llvr Se r vices ass un.'&lt;l par·
cou rt ord&lt;&gt;r . Only 337 child re n c nt s last week that " unl ess
were at school Monday - 5:1 3 lhPre's blood -to-blood con! a r t or
perce nt of th e projected attend - ' sexua l ac liv itv. there's no r is k"
a nee on openin g dav .
of st udents coimactl n!f AIDS.
'.'T hat could be the resu lt of a
T he aflitudc of s om e of the
stle nt boyco tt or simply because parents who d roppro thei r c hild·
some pare nts wan t to wait un ti l rr n off at the elemPntary sc hool

M onda y as he was leaving a

Without res1·rvution
Citiba nk bra nch o n Madi son
PORTLA ND. Ore . cUPI J
Avenue, poli ce said .
For more than a wrek. thr staff of
He had just robbed the ba nk of a downtown hotel h as bee n
about $.JOO. bu l " the m a nager a nd loo king fo r ~om eo n e whn m ay be
a ss istant ma nager g r a bbed him mlss lnl( a parrot wit h ex pensive
and stopped him from leavi ng, " ta s tes .
said Officer Peter O' Donn e ll. a
The bird fl ew int o t he River·
pollee spokes man.
Place Ale xi s hotel some time
Police sa id Hodge was a l· before Aug. 15 and na tur a lly
legedly res ponsi bl e for 26 robber . se lect ed the $.'i00-a -ni ght Gra nde
ies In Ma nh a tt an In w hich he used Suil e . He was take n home by a
a note saying he wa s suffering hot e l ba rt ender, who gave him
from lhe deadly acquired im· the name Charlie . sa id hotel
mune defi c ie ncy sy ndrome a nd spokeswom a n Celind a Knott.
he didn 't ca re what ha ppened to
Thc hote l has pla ced newshim .
pa per adve rtiseme nts seekin g
But on Monday, he admitted the owner, but no one ha s ste pped
the not e wa s merely a ploy. sa id forward to cl aim the bi rd. Knott
Sgt. Mau r ice How a rd, a police sa id Monda y.
spokesma n.
" We 've go tt en a lot of ca lls
"He . said he · doesn't nave from people who lost th eir
AIDS," Howa rd sa id. " He said he , pa r rots," s he sa id . "You'd be
said It In orde r to ins till fear in th~&gt; s ur prised at how m a ny are
teller s."
mi ss in g. We gol one call from a
Hodge was res pons ible for s ix wom an whose parrot !lew from
othe r robberi es in which he used her car as she was driv ing from
a toy gun to t hrea ten ba nk tell e rs.
La ke Oswego to St. Johns . But
police said. He ne tted an esti - none of them describe one in the
mated $26.000 In the 32 robbe r ies s ame colors a s ours."
th a t ha ve occ urre d s in ce
She descr ibed Charlie as " pr ln ·
Fe brua ry.
cipa lly green. He's right In th e
In the robbery Mond ay, he scheme of our hot el. He m a tches
used a simui atro gun. police
the green m a rble perfectly ."
said .
The bird was discovered In the
The suspec t serve d fi ve yea rs
luxury suil e by a s tartl ed maid
of a 15-year pr ison sentence in
aft er it alighted on he r a pmn
1973 for a robbery In which a ba nk
strings as s he was c lea ning the
guard was s hot, police said.
s uit e, Knott sa id .

Weleorne Back
West ~irglnla Cuitorners!
We are here to serve you in all your
hair care and body toning needs.

Come In FDI FHe Bodg Tonini

"WE

THE ADDED TOUCH

CALL (614) 992-2104 1
(304) 675-1244 ..
t

t urh&lt;'~ nf"'c

Demon~tt~tlon
2 71 2nd

992~5766
'

Middleport

occurr f'd

w hpn on&lt;'

centered around Regina··s long·
tim e dominance In the so-called
s tlc k·vac ma rket pioneered by
the Rahway, N. J . company.
" The origi nal Idea of Electrlkbroom w as a s lim a ppea ra n ce
with a cloth bag," Regina patent
attorn ey Ma rtin L uKacher said
outs ide · the courtroom. "We
si&gt;ent 50 yea rs a nd all th.at
advertising to pro mote thai
a ppearance."
,
While adm iltlng the patents
governing the Elec trikbroom expired decades ago, LuK ac her
said Hoover acted like " locus ts"
swarming down on Regin a's
success whe n the larger Nor th
Canton, Ohio, fi rm introduced
the Quik ·Broom II vac uum In
July.
The dust had b arely settled
from LuKache r 's early morrnln"

Business Services

J&amp;L

INSULATION
992-2772

REPLACEMENTS
WINDOWS

I~

:
, ro Ncr u " utt "'·21 s•

Til
•.• _.,.II A.••
_ .. ,..._Ill

. MONIU tlw11 flalof I A.M. t• S P.M.

• A.a U.til NOON ur•u

....... .. .. .. ...
. ......
.
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-·--,..........
_........ -_-·. .........
..- . .......
_____
-....- -·..-··..... ---·
··-------..... . _........
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. __
·- - ··
1

UOSID SUJeU

~

.c.,. . ,. _ _ ... ...
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1114..

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IOoiiT.t.
I D.t.•l

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011•

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' :::·:;.::..":!.:':::.=:.;:.
-·~·~
...
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. . .........
......
.......
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CliiU i/ied P•lf! l Wilt' " t h•
JolloM nr eeleph ont u dl•np• ...

!:"~.

::Oc!..-:r.

COO • OU OIIOIH

,_..,

"' 0'1UIIU O~ . . O

•- • oa""

=-~ =
.,.,.
_
=:::,,..
"'

··--_-_-

·.........-·__-·-~

.

___
"-=·":5::!. _ , ...
~-

....--·..... . -·1
·-~---

,,'): ,,
"~

CERTAINTEED VINYL
THERMO . BOSS
8-4-1 mo. pd.

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

.. _-·
_,_...
......_ ..·--·::=t.::T-•
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.. .. _
,

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,_

..____
u.....-_
... _ _
.......
:t::c.:-:.~

::::~:r:::---

lctl-

LONG'S
CONSTRUCTION

•• -f- -

u _ _ .,_

.. ..., _
n
,.--•-·
_
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I:---·-.
n
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Vinyl &amp; Alum . Siding
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of All Types

CJ

z
iX
c(

I
1

25 Years
FREE' ESTIMAUS
CAlL

1-614-843-5425

telrvison cr ew in the tC'ac her

" rm SUJ'f' t hC"rf"' a rr so me parC'nt s
who a l'&lt;' upset about ha 1•lng th e
cHay ' bo ys in class .

Public Not ice

Public Notice

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY

tors of the ettate of Doris
Ann Morgan. deceased, late
Of Ro ute 2. Bo11 207, Albany. Meigs County , Ohio .

On August 11 , 1987, in
the Melg1 County Probat e
Court. Case No. 25 ,59'1 .
Ahhee Morgan and Oannv
Morgan, Rout a 2 . 8011 207 ,

Albany, Ohio. 45710 were

46710 .
Robert E. Buck .
Probate Judge
l e n a K Nene lroad. Cl e rk

!8} 18 . 26; 19) 1. Jtc

Co · Adm in istra -

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIOUCIARV
On Augu s t 7 , 1987.

in
the Meigs County Probate

Court. Cose No. 26,687.
Douglas W. Little. 211 -213

Eut Second Street Box
686, Pomeroy, Ohio45769,
was appointed Eucutor of
th e estate of Banie G.
Webster. deceas ed, late of
50024 TR 1053, P. 0 . 8o•
186 , TUppers Plains. Oh io

45783

Lact Pull Of Seaton

TRUCK &amp;
TRACTOR PULL

........

At Teays Valley Tractor Pull Track
SI\ADIUM., K.s.tlASS RIIGS ·

AUGUST 28 and AUGUST 29

4-11

NEW SUPER STOCK AND
MODIFIED GARDEN TRACTOR UASSES

•

Friday - 8:00 P.M.

TRACK 1:
6800 lb. Mod. 4 WO - 6800 lb. Mod T•octort
6800 lb. Open 2 WD
TRACK 2:
1 100 lb. Super Stock Garden Trac t ors
1100 lb. Open Garden Tractora
. (both classes pre - te lec ted b¥ TVTPA I

J2209
842

-TIIIIAD

Saturday -

7:00 P.M.

TRACT1 :
5800 lb. Open 2 WD - 6200 tb Mod. 4 WH

7200 lb . Mod . Trac tors

OCKET THE SAVINGS
DURING OUR
RETIREMENT

TRACK 2:
1100 lb. Super Stock Garden Trac tor a
1100 lb, Open Garden Tractors
(bo t h clasNS pre· selac tad by TVTPAI

4/W YAMAHA ATV GIVEAWAY
SAT., AUG. 29
ADMISSION $6.00 ADULTS
82 .00 CHILDREN 6 to 10 Years
No glas:.. containers due to danger ot broken glass .
No coolers on ~eacher seats,

IPONSOIID·IY: TEAYS VAllEY IUCTOI PUllERS l i iN INC
FOR MORE INFORMATION PHONE :
1-614· 820 ·8270 or 1 -614-820-8165
JDoy of Pu111 ·614 -820-2694}

TIACI LOCAliD 1 MIL£ SOUTH OF STOCIDAU,
OFF IT. 335 011 ADAMS LAlli 16 mi. north of
Minford)
11

If you want an opportt.tnlty thll com• urety in 1 penon' sllte·
time. th.n you owe it to youraelf to investiglle.
1 If you art CAREER MINDED .
2. N..t •pp. .anca/ HIOHlV MOTIVA,TEO .
3. AggtHIN• with outgoing penonallty.
4. Pref• ov• 22jor rHponllbtel .
5. High school graduate minlmt.tm. wittt four Y••rs full-time
workin~ (ulas) ••Pet;lence
.
I . Mt.tst M out of town 5 NIGHTS PER WEEK . 40 hour work
w•elt.
Due to a~~:p•n•ion , Natlonaj Corooration has immediate oo•n·
ings tor matt.tr•. profalllontlul•·oritnted wom.. and man
Comp.a:itN• Salary pklt commi11ion, E~~:ptnM allowance for
your c•r •nd mot•l. with corporate benefits CHANCE FOR
ADVANCEMENT .
R..au. jewalrt . co•matlct, telephone seln or mark.. ing·

/ teachint btckqround helpful, 1nd homemaken now free to
travel. GREAT CAREER RE -ENTRY OPPORTUNITY!

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

(8) 18. 25; (91 1, ltc

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On August 6, 1987.

In
the Meigs County Probate
C ourt, Cue No . 26584 , Sarah Estalla Caldwell, 41144
Ke ebaugh- Foil rod Road . Pomarov. Oh io , 45769 w ..
appo1nted E:~. &amp;eutrix of the
estate of Garland R. Cald·
well. aka Garland Caldwell,
de ceased, late of 41 144
Keebaugh - Follrod Road , Pt;&gt;m e ro y, Ohio , 45769 ,
Ct.arlet H. Krti ght,
Ac t10g Probate Judge
l e na K . Neuelroad. Clerk

181 18 , 26; 191 1. Jtc

Public Notice
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT OF
ACCOUNTS
PROBATE COURT
MEIGS COUIIITV , OHIO
Accounts and vou c hers of
the following named fiduci ·
aries have been filed in the
Probate Court. Me igs Coun·
ty. Ohio , for approval and
settlement:
Estate No 24862 - F irst
Ac count of Raymond Cole .
Guardian of the Estate of
COnley E. Cole, an lncom ·
petent Person.
Estate No 26391 - Final
and Distributive Account of
Richard E . Gaul and Gay ann
Clay. Co-Executors of the
Eetate of Evelyn A. Gaul ,
Deceased.

Help Wanted

ATTENTION : WOMEN AND MEN
SALES MANAGEMENT TRAINEES
fl 8 ,000.00 TO 123,000.00 1st YEAR AVERAGE

OFF

Robe rt E. Bu ck.
Probate Judge

For Ptt'IOnallnterview call John r. . Hall 't office TOLL FREE II
1 ·800·1523· 1614 or 1·800· 782 · &amp;903, Mondtl';' through
Thufldtl';'. between 8 ;00 a.m.· 7:0(\ p m ONlYI Outllda of
Ohio ull 1 · 800· 543· 6940. Pleue call on or batoraThufldiY'.
Augutl 27th.

H&amp;R BLOCK
INCOME TAX COURSE
JOR INTERVIEWS AVAILABLE
FOR REST STliDENTS
Thousands are earning good money In the
growing field of Income lax preparation. Now
H6R Block will teach you to prepare income
lax returns In a speclal13-week tuition course.
Curriculum Includes practice problems taught
by experienced H&amp;R Block Instructors. A variety of class schedules are available to lit your
busy lllellyle.
,_
Enrollment Is· open to people qf all ages, re,
gardleu of their previous training.
For complete details, call:

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

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIOUCIARV
On Augu st 10, 1987" m

th e M ei~ s C ou nty Pro6ate
Court. C a s e No 25588, Ed·
die Hupp , Aoule 1 . l o ng
Bottom, O h io 45743. wos
appoint ed Administra tor of
the estate of Arnold J Hupp,
deceased. late of Box 93 .
Smith ' Ridg e Road. long
Bottom . Ohio 45743.
Robert E Buck ,
Probate Judge
lena K. Nes selroad. Clerk

PUILIC

I~V~IO

•

YOUNG'S

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSYILLE, OHIO

CARPENTER
SERVICE
-

Add ons and remodelin g
Roo fin g an d gutt er w ork
Concrete work
Plumbing and electrical
work
(Free Estimates)

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

Pomeroy, Ohio
4-15-' 86-lc

Authorizllfl John DHre,
New Holland, lush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

Flr111 Equl~lle"t

11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
!ondrry: I p.m.- 7 p.m.
ly Chance Dr Appointmant

Part• &amp; Service

RUSS MOORE
992-2526

ACCENT

(CUT OUT fOR fUTURE USE I

1-3-'86 tic

FENCE COMPANY

Let Ue Faaoe You I•
FREE ESTIMATES
REIIDENTlAL / COMMEACIAL

PH. 742-2027

APPLIANCE

SERVICE

985-3561
All M1k11

•Washers •DiahWaahers

5/ 1/ tln

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Trans11lulon
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
6--17-tfc

J&amp;L BLOWN
CUSTOM BUILT
GARAGES

•FURNACES
•AIR CONDITIONERS
•HEAT PUMPS

POLE STYLE or
CONVENTIONAL

"fREE I!TIMATES"

FREE ESTIMATES

PH." 992-2772

PH. 992-2772'

8-4-1 mo. d.

7-30-87·1 mo

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BlOWN IN
INSUlATION

MARCUM
CONTRACnNG
CHUTE!, OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS - BATHS
•ROOFING •GENERAL
REMODELING &amp;

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
"'Free Estimates"

PH. 949-2860
or 949-2801

985-4141

No Sunday Calls
3-11-lfn
Howard

7-21-1 mo.

d.

PARTS

NEW AND USED

WIDE

SELECTION
ALL MAKES AND
MODELS
CALL 742-2315
8-13-1 mo.- pd.

OPEN FOR BUSINESS
8e~i nd

Pomeroy

City Hall

ANN'S
Gift Shop &amp; Toy Store
Collectors Items,
Costume Jewelry,
Action Toys, Mustcal
Toys &amp; Trinket Boxes

Open 10 A .M . to 4 P.M .

•Dryen •Freezer•

Call 1814[ 992-7.204
Wholuala • Ret•il

1·10-lmo

ROOFING

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
. Dow11spouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

4-22-87-lfn

A
L
PlUMBING &amp; HEATING

v.w.

324 E. Main St.

L. Wriftsel

949-2263
or 949·2168

CALL

Mon. thru Fri . or by
Appointment

PARTS and S

441 lee&lt;h lt.

Middleport, Oh. 45760

c
•M•
s
Manufae1ure and

Sal es of
Recording and Conlrol In·
strumenu tor Home and
Comm ercial use Mon itors
to display Furnace and Air .
Cond . Hours or Min of oper·
l!lling time. Valt.table Data
that allows Dl!lily Goals to btt
sat Co mpletely eliminates
the end of the month Bill surpnse.
( f. Scott, Mclr .; I . Cremeans f~eld
Sol11 Mgr., Plu1 Astocioles
lnformoflon and Brochurf!

16141 992 -!711o• 992- 5t 50
Middleport· Athflnt· Portunouth

8 - 1, . 1 1110 pel

Annou nee 111 en Is
4

Giveaway
·
.•

Free kittens-male &amp; female 2
months old Call61 4-446-9329
after 5 .
Female bla ~k Labrador dog and
puppies. Call 614-446-4H9
after 5 ·00 PM ,

Half Shepherd, half Huekey.
male. whifa. 9 months. Had all
shots. 304-458· 1821 .
5 kluens , 4 bla~:k - wh•te. 1
gray .whlte, liner trained. 304675-7242 .
.
8 cuta puppies, part pit bull.
304-676· 7754 .

6

Lost and Found

LOST· l ong haired Calico Cat .
In vicinity ol Mary Griffin and
George' s Ck . REWARD . Call
814-367-n34 .
FOUND . Bunch of kay'• on
Entem Ave . Can p1ck up at
1541 Eastarn Ave .. evening•
aftet 8:00, acro•s lrom RAX.
Lo1t : Black and white party
poodle. lost on 681 . Call
614 -985· 4443 or 614· 949·
3606.
lost - C~ow · Chow . Cinnamon
color . Vicinity · Thompson Groc.
&amp; Sand Hill Rd. 304 -676 ·1078.

7

Yard Sale

New Homes Built

REPAI~S

REFERENCES
Phone Day or henin

•Ranu••

•Refrigerators

COIISIMII MONITOR IYiltMI

4-16-86-lfn

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

pd.

Now location:
161 North Sttond
~iddler•rt, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Wa Ctrry Fish109 Supplies

Pay Your
Phone Bills Hare
IUIINISS PHON!
(6141992-6550
RIIIDINCI PHON£
16141 992-7754

I IZB I!In

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
VINYL &amp;
AlUMINUM SIDING
•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement Windows
•New Roofing

"fRE£ ESTIMATES"

JAMES KEESEE
PH.
72

" Hir ingl GoV"ernmant jo bt· your
area. *15. 000· t68.000. Ca ll
602. 838-8886 Ew.t. 606" .
REPS NEEDED lor businns
accounts. Full-time, SBO,OOD·
SBO.OOO. Part-tim•. $12.000·
na.ooo. No selling. repea1
busineu. Set your own hours.
Training provided . C1ll 1 · 61 2·
938 ·6870. M ·F, Bam -5 pm
fCe nt111r standard timel
AVON· 'Sell Avon for Chrittma•
Make40 per cllflt Ca\1614-446·
3368,
McDonald 's of Gallipolis is
'looking for a few good workers
willing to work early shifl• and
weekends . Stop in and pick up
an apphCMIOft
-

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALlS

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

8-24-87-1 mo .

KEN'S

8 · 1·1 mo

"At Reasonable Pri&lt;es"

INSULATION

614-992-3293

Pomeroy
HOURS: Tuo.-Wod.•fri.

Ph. 949-2969

BUY - SELL - TRADE

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

J&amp;l
INSULATION

39S04 Bradburz Rd.
Midlll_e)IOrt. Oh. S 760

1124 East Main St.

CLOSED SUNDAY

BISSELL
BUiLDERS

Roger Hysell
Garage

KAREN FACEMYER

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SELl
Rivarina Antiques

Transaxle Repairs

locatod Halfway latwolft
It, 7 and Iathan
HRS : 12:00-6 :00
Monday-Saturday

10-8-tlc

992-2196

HOME!
Carter French
Residence
Corner of Fourth
and Palmer,
Middleport
Must see to appreciate.

Ind. o.,orating Consultant

PARTS • SEIVICE
Repairs on All Makes

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

Uc IGCI S. D1 h, !ln / 11

(8118 , 25 : (911 . 3tc

A c:rtallte dcc:orat111g 'II XjWri~IIC..: .
Now Booking Home
Partie$

EAGLE RIDGE
SMAU ENGINE
CENTER

FILL DIRT

Public NotiC!I

Business

BOGGS

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

PAT HILL FORD

MODULAR

Services

UJ Licensed Clinical Audiologist
I
~

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

FOR SAlE

H&amp;R BLOCK
618 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO 45769
614-992-3795
••

and D istributive Account of
Dorothy F. Shee ts, Executrix ot the Estate of Charles
G. Sheet! , Jr .. Deceased.
Estate No. 25469 - Final
and Distributive Account of
Joseph D . Sayre, Sr., E~te ­
cvtor of the Estate ot Elizabeth A. Sayre, Deceased .
Estate No. 25164 - Final
and Distributive Account of
John L. Mora. Administrator
of the Estate of Elmer Garald
Young. Sr .. Deceassed .
Estate No. 25323 _.__ Final
and D istributive Account of
Edith E. Lambe rt , E~~:ecut r hc
of the Estate ·of Dre xel Lambert aka Drexel lambert .
Deceased.
'
Es t a t e No. 25135 - Final
and D istributive Account of
J . B . O 'Brie n , Executor of
the Estate of Audrey Waddle
Andars on . Deceased .
E11ate No. 25037 - Final
and Distributive Account of
Fred W . Crow. Ill. Eaecutor
of the Ettate of Elizabeth V.
Roush, De ceas ed.
Unle u
e ll. ceptlon s are
filed thereto. u id ac count s
will be for hearing before
said Court on lhe 25th day
of S e ptember. 1987. a t
whi c h time said ac counts
will be conside red and con tinued from day to day unt il
finally disposed ot
Any perso n
inte res te d
may f1\e written exce ptions
to s e1d accountt or to matte rs perta ining to the ex.ec u tion of the trust. no less than
five days prior to t he date set
for hearing.
Robert E. Buck , Judge
Common Pleas Court
Probate D1vialon
Me1gs County. Ohio
181 25 , 1 tc

S
LISA M. KOCH, M..

RADIATOR
SERVICE

Public Notice

Hearing Aid Selection

Computerized

8-13 tfn

pare nt co nfro nt!&gt;&lt;! a nd jostled a
pa rking lot.
" Today went bea uti fu lly,"
Brow n in~ said a fl cr c lasses.

St:t VII.!~:.

sWtm
- M0 ld5 • lnterpreting Services

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

Worked in Kome Area

., _-...,.._
11 ·~· ·-

I lllj!ltt';IPI'Ill

~========iTi=========t:========9~
&lt;.--u=:oa=::=:.-~
-•
11 Help Wanted

engi neer , Charles Degraff, told
the judge the Quik Broomllls not
J.R.'s REPAIRS
a carbon copy of the Regi na
TVs, Antennas
product.
The newHoover vac uumshave
Satellite Salas
a more powerfu l motor and have
1 11 •
been re-toolro for more efficie nt ·
nsta atlon
oper a tion, DeGraff testified .
Service
Forc ing Hoover to s top making
Electronic Organs
the p roduct , he said , would Idle
Mobile service
assembly lines In Ohio and
6,14-843-5248
Mexico.
" We would have to completely
REASONABLE _ REliABlE
di sassemble everyt hing a nd 8-20-'86 tin
reassemble ever ything a nd fill
the pi peline (wllh p arts to be
assembled in Mexico)," DeG raff
told t he judge. ·
The suit, flied In Roches ter
July 29, asks Telesca to grant' a
prelim inary injuncti on prohibiting the 79-yea r-old Hoover from
marketing Qulk Broom II.
FOR THE BESt IN

I

i.

The

Ohio

· By DAVID ARMON
ROCHE STE R, N.Y. (UP I)
A federal judge rese r vro decis ion whe ther to bar The Hoover
Co ., 'the na tion 's largest vacuum
cleaner maker, fro m sell ing · a
new val'uum tha t riva l Regina
c laims looks like one of its
machines.
Regina Company Inc., asked
U.S. District j udge Mic hael
Te lesca Monday to prohibit
Hoover from selling its new Quik
Broom IT , cla iming the product
looks "confusingly s imilar " to
tbe Regina Electr ikbroom .
A rulin g is expec ted Tuesday,
court offi cials sa id.
Telesca, who said the arr ay of
vacuum cleaner s In his Roches te r court room looked like a
"sidewa lk sale ," heard hi ghly
technical te stimony Monday tha t

appointed

acquired imfilune d_efic lenC'y sy n·

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
HEARING AIDS"

Monda y var ie d fi'Dm suppor t fo r
the Ra ys to rca r for th e hea 11h or
the ir own chil dren.
DeSoto S~er l ff J oe VMna dor·t·
said the fa m ily had-complai ned
of leiephoned thr·eats, but th ere
were no incldt:'nt s ln\'OI\'I ng fi1e
c hildre n Monday. ThP only dl&gt;-

25, 19Q7

Regina ·tries to sweep broom under rug

r.:m·

inlra\'enous d r ug users.

the news------~---

By United Press ln't ernational
Flylnl!' rhubarb
. MEDFORD, Ore. iUPI ! - In
the kitchen of the Wild Pl um
:restaurant a pressure cooker
exploded with such force tha t it
blew out pa r t of the roof a nd wa ll ,
splattering rhubarb pie fillin g
everywhere.
"It scatt ered pieces of !hat
·wall for probably 100 fC'c t into the
parking lot ," fire de pa rtme nt
Battalion Chie f Ra lph Quincy
said.

HA~E

KELLYE SN UBBED?: T ime Is run ning out for lame-du ck
Miss Am erica Keliye Ca sh. She hands over her crown Sept. 19.
which only giv es her four weeks to meet one of her favorit e men,
President Reagan .
Looking back on her reign , Cas h told reporters Sunda y at the
Opryia nd Hotel, "The biggest disappoi ntment. especially a s a
Reaga n ent hus iast, is that 1 am one of the firs t Miss Ameri ca s to
never mee t the preside nt ."
· .
.
Cash also Is a fa n of Lt. CoL Oliver Nort h a nd tlilnks Bnt ls h
Prime Min ister Margaret Thatche r "does a wonderful job. But
she's not tryin g to do everything th at a man does ."
should
she, in Cash's opi nion : Mi ss America says she does n t endorse
the Equ al Rights Ame nd ment because, as a wom a n, she ha s
mi sgi vings about "o ur physical rndurance and how our
emotions cha nge eve ry month. "
BO SAYS NO: Rock legend Bo Dlddley ended a con cert In
Portland , Ma in e Sunda y with an anti-drug m essage. "So me o!
you m ay not li ke what I'm gonna sa y," Diddl ey told his
a udience.
" I don't give a da mn whether you like It or not ... If som ~o n e
says they got some good (stuff) for you, tell ·em, that If its so
good they s hould use It them selves." Didd ley strummed and
stru tted onstage at the Portla nd City Hall Auditorium before a
cheering c rowd of two genera tions of fa ns.
For a n e ncore . he put aside his trademark square guit ar and
played the dr ums for pa rt o! the fin a! se t.
DENi'jiS SAYS ' HERE ': Dennis Cunn er , the yachtsma n who
regai ned America's Cup fo r Aml'rica this year alter los ing It to
Australia In 1983, has broken a long silence by endorsing his
home town, San Diego, as th e s iw of the 1990-91 cup de fe nse.
Sa lling ent hus ias ts had e xpected Conner to fa \'or Hawa ii
beca use strong winds there could make fo r a bett er race butt he
Stars a nd Stripes skipper, a member of the Sa n Diego Yac ht
Club, Is backing hi s own ci ty .
" I a m quit e confid e nt in Sa n Diego as the sll e of the next
America 's Cup defense as long as the business co mmunity a nd
local government Is willing to comm it to it ." Conner sa id. Tha t
shouldn' t be a proble m . seei ng as how !he regatta will be worth
a n esllmat!&gt;d $1 billion to the host cit y.

Brothers with AIDS antibodies go to school

Family retUrns to base
Staff Sgt. and Mrs. Ric hard
Dean and children. Kennet h a nd
Michelle, have retu r ned to their
home at Langley Air Force Base,
Virginia, afte r spending hi s leave
at the home of his pa r ents. Mr.
and Mrs. John A. Dea n, Wolf Pen
Road , Pomeroy.
Visiting with the fa mily du r in g
their visit here were Mr a nd
Mrs. Kenneth Markins, Rac in e;
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Paynter .
Albany.; .Mr. and Mrs Robert
Ried, David 'Ried , Wa lter Te r·
rell , all of Pataskala : Mrs.
Richard Smith and J os h. McAr·
thur; Mr. and Mrs. Hoba rt
Smalley~ Jr.. Mrs. J udy Jone s
and Angela , Mrs. Sus ie Thom as.
C)sey and Jordon. Wierton, W.
Y.a.; Mr. a nd Mrs. John Wal te r
Dean. Jerem y, J ames, a nd

Tuelday,

,-----People in the news----~,.--:----,

Kimes birth

· Mr. and Mrs. Steven Nort on,
Pataskla , · formerly of Meigs
County, announce the birth of
their first child, a son, Ky le
Steven, at Doctor' s North, Aug. 2.
The Infant weighed seven ·
pounds, one ounce, and was 21
Inches long. Pa terna l g randpa~­
ents are C. E. and E tt a Ma y
Norton, Chillicothe, form erly of
Minersville. Maternal grandparents are Donna Morga n. McArthur , and Robert Clay, Warre n.
Paternal great·grandpaents are
Della Norton , Pome roy , and
Cathryn Ervin, Middleport. Nor·
ton gradu ated from Southern
High School in 1982.

Tuesday, August 25. 1987

... --"G"
... .. 1'IS.......... -. aII'IPO
&amp;·Vicinity

.

E•per. body man needed in
Vinton area . 5 yrs. or more
ex pet' Tools requ ired. Inquire at
8t4-388-9815 .
Hot.trly Clinic Aida needed parttime in family plsnning office.
based in Che•apeake and Galli·
polis . Must h.ve high achool
diploma or equivalency; goOd
communication skills: accurKY
with f1gures: be dependabla.
organize d . and re•pon•ible.
Training evailable for metu,.
indiVIdual who is aen1itiYe to
raproductWa htalth needs of
client• Looking for som110ne
who is self· motNated and can
grow 10 the position as need
..-ises. Must have reliable trans·
portation; be wllhng to traval.
Send returne, including two
employment references to
Planned Parenthood of SoUtheast Ohio . 396 Ri c hland
Avenue, Athens, Ohio 4570\,
by SeptBfT'bet 9. 1987. PPSEO
is an Equal Opportt.tni,ty
Employer
Woman to stay with widow and
li'ole-in with pay Call 814 -4481414or446-1023
PROGRAM DIRECTOR - Comprehen•ive outpatient substance
abuse program. Ruponsibiliti BS
include program admini•ttatiD[I.
•uparvi•ion, counseling, aad
public relations. Qualificatidfls
should inclt.tda at least two yejlrs
exp~trience in substance abuse
field. some admintstrative e:~.pe­
rience. and in process of certif ~­
cation . Se nd letter and re111me
by September 30. to Perton~
Committee. New Alternatives.
287 Peart Street. Jackaon. Ohio
45640 E.Q .E.
Carpenters to work b-y the hour.
Call 614-446 ·0924.
DEliVE.RY : Must have own car
and in1uran&lt;:e. hi9h school d1·
ploma. E'olening hours Apply ill
penon: Oonalh's -Rt . 35· Spru'lg .
Valley Plaza.
l.P N : part·t•me. Call Ohio Job
Service 61 4 ·446· 1683.

Government Jobs S1 &amp;.040 ·
859,230 · year. Now hiring. CaH
1-805-687-8000 Ext A-9805
tor current tedet'allitt.
,1
Friendly Home Pan in has open..
ings for managers and dealefl in
your area . Larg&amp;St line in party
pl.n, free kit. brand new chrilt·
ma• catalog, toy. gift, and home
decar catalog . Over BOO Item~.
Top commission and hostass
gifts. Call for free catalog.
1 -800-227-1610 or call collect
0 -518· 462 ·0091 .

••

Needed: Dental Hygentist for"' a
people orientltd high quality
dental office. Sand complete
rasuma to Daily Sentinel Bo•
729-K Pomeroy, O~io .
We need • career minded pepple
orianted person to work in shigh
quality d~~r~tal office. The perfect
job for the right person. Please
send complete resume to Dally
Sentinel Box 729· K, Pomeroy .
Ohio
Wanted: Seamstrest to sew for
lady living in Pomeroy . Call
614-992-2021
Small farm in Bradbuf\1 need1
bru•h hogged. Will need own
equipment. Call collect 216372 -1692.
AVON - All ar eas. Call Marilyn
Waner 304· 882 -2646

Friday. Saturdty. 9 ·4 Corner
Firlt &amp; Pine Misc. household
and handyman Items· gas heaten . mantels. grata, trunk, can·
ning jan, noneware jugt, clay
flower pots , carpeting, light
ti•turas, kindling, log splitter.
exhaust tan. ETC , ETC .
Vard Sale-large 3 family . Thur .
and Fri. lower Garfield Ellt

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Peerson Auctioneer licensed in Ohio and We1t Virginia. Estate. antique, 1.-m, liquidation uln. 304· 773-5785.
At.tctioneer Col. Otc•r E. Click.
licanu # 764·88. Call304-8963430.

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late modal cle.,
used cars ..
Jim Mink Chev.- Oids Inc .
Bill Gene Johnson
61 4 -446· 3672
TOP CASH p•id for '83 model
and newer used cars. Smith
Buh:k· Pontiac, 1911 · Eutern
Ave .. G•llipollt. Call 614 ·446·
2282.
Junk Auto't with or without
motors. C•ll 61 4·388-9303 .
Buying daily ~old. tilver coins.
rings, jewelry, llerling ware, old
coins. large currency. Top prtcM. Ed Bui kan Barber Shop,
2nd. Ava . Middleport. Oh 1!114·
992· 3478 .
Wanted to buy. standing timber.
Call AI Tromm tt 6U· 742 ·
2328.
QUILTS
Antiqu•Pre 1940's. Call Marc.
614-992-2101 (dtl';'tl or 1· &amp;922411 eveninga.
to buy : KrtP steel end
Alden S•tv•a• 114-

R.N. applicatio.i• now baing
accepted for lull time position.
Pleasant Valley Nuraing C11re
Center. apply personnel office
Pleasant Valley Hosp. 304-6764340 . AA·EOE .
WANTED - EXPERIENCED
Pilots and Deckhands for fulltime employmanl on Monongahela and upper Ohio River~ .
412 ·483-6567 .
,
AIRLINE JOBS AVAILABlE
NOWI Earn up to $50 ,000 .
Mechanics. fhght attendants.
c ustomer serv1ca, 1 · 315-733·
6062 , e x t . A573 , for
informat,on/ li1t1ng s.
Baby sitter in my hom e, two
children. Monday throu gh Fri·
day . 8 to 5 Rafaren&lt;:es requ~red .

304·676-5896.

AVON • All areas. Call Shirley
Spears . 304· 675- 1429.

12

Situations
Wanted

Older woman wants to move in
with someone who will help care
for her. Refarencltl requ~red .
Call Charlet at 814-448· 7835
or case manager at 614-367·
0161
Wa provide c•e for elderly and
dltabled Nurus aides are certl·
fled, bonded, ln•ul'lld and covered with Work•• Comp Ambulllory or confined. 24 n.,care, overnight end llv•·ln P M
Home Health Agency. 614 · 99~2867, 814·992 -2328 or 611·
'992 -7044

15

Schools
lnstructio'n

I

Income Ta~ CIISHI begin Sep(
7 , 1987. Hare is en opportunity
to become a part of the hstelt
~rowing incoma tu. firm In tt\6
c.,nr·orientlld parsoni
contact DanTu. Inc. Mon . otr
Tun. 10 AM · 4 PM. Phon•
448 ·8171 .
~

.e..

�Paga 8-The Daily Sentinel
18

Wanted to Op

LAFF-A-DAY

For Leese

64 Misc. Merchendiae

FOR LEASfi: ; one -bedroom
apartment ov.,.looking city perk.
t175 . per month. Ctll614· oM6·
2325 or 448-4426.

Plattic cistern 1tate approvM
pta1tic nptic tanks:, plastiC
culverts. met•l cutverts. RON
~VANS ENTERPRISES, Jack·
son, Oh. 814- 286-6930.

49

Cen do light hMolling 1nd roofing.
R•••oneble rates . Merion
Snid•. It 4l-949-2129.

Grover's llwn Mow•r Repair.
W1 'H pick tJP tnd deliwr. ·Good,

'FOR LEA$E : Apartment with
completely remodeled kitchen
beth, bedroom and livlngroom'
Available middle of Augult:
Second floor, cornerSecondend
Pine. Parking area provided.
•221, per montt\, or t250. wrth
kitchen appliancn furnished.
C111ll 614·4-'6-2326 or -'4&amp;,
4-'26.

ule. C1ll
614-742 -2393 ur 114 -7423081 .
uMd

mowers for

FlllrlllCidl

21

Business
Opportunity
INOTICEI

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. recommendt that you
do busineu with people you
know. end NOT 1o send money
~hroul!h the mall until you have
•nvetttgettd the offering.

l._.....:=,_.,;;&gt;\ ' """-

1

\

:,·~

C't•'""~ , .....

.......... t" tro;n;ng prooram.
Franchise available in lhe Pom•
roy area. For more information
write: DanTIX, Inc., PO Box 1

.

51 Household Goods

r

t

·

\ \

.... ""

LOOKING- For a teJVice type
bulln ... with an excellent in·
eom•potentialthatrequir"only
a small inveatment? Thil Is an
opportunity worth lnvetlii.ting
if you ere -.ullng to undtfQo ••

Merchandise

b

1

\"'

\1\

1'11

1

'I&gt; ~
_pa Ill
8 -~~

Y'

.,...._.toe..,....,.._

.t

\

"I don't ·particularly II"ke
fetchi"ng I but I"t's aII I know..,

~;;:;;:;;::;;::;:;::::==1-:::::=::=====~::1

Clo-811 c/ o Gampolio oo;ly

36 Lots S. Acreag~

44

Tribune. 825 3rd. Ave. Galllpolia. Ohio 46131 .

Professional
Services

PRICED RIGHT - One acre
building lots on R1 . 2 at Al!l' hlon.
Public wet., and mobile home~
permitted. 304-676-2336 .

Virginit' 1 Peuonel Cere Home
h•• room for 2 elderly ladia~ . Ctll
114-949-3014 tnytime.

One acre Iota on Mason 80 at
Ashton, public water. mobile
homea permitted. *500 dawn.
•1&amp;0 per month. 304-676-

23

Auctioneer Col. Oacar E. Click.
llc.n1e # 7154-18. 304 -896-

3430.

R~al

Eslale

2336.

LOTS S. ACREAGE - Site
beside Ohio River. site• along
Rt. 2. trailer sites near Rt . 2 and
weterside si1es. Phone 304·
576-2026 .
Two lots on S.nd Hill RoiCI .
Three miles from town , 304675-2848.

31

Homes for Sale

4 SA .. fp ., full

ba~ement.

3 mi.

Renl als

so. of Gellipolia. 34,900. Ctll
Oeys-614 -441-1615 . After
5 :00- Caii&amp;HI-«6 -12,44.
For S .. e by Own..- : 4-6 BR. 3
b.ths. Appro~eimatefy 4000 sq.
ft . 25 attll with tennis court.

t173 .000. Will sell with only 5
ecrn for t156,000. C.ll for
eppointment 614-446-3386 .
Government seized homa from
$1 .00, you repeir. Also proptf·

tin for back texes. For eomplele
det•l• and fMtelosure list call

815-822·2770. En . ·486 .

. Nice stilrttr· retirement or income property. 2 BA ., full
basement, larle lot: 508 Ridge
Aw. Rio Grande, Ohio. Shown
by Appointment. Call 1-6141582 -7-'24.
Government hom" from t1 . (U
Repair). Foreclosures, Repos.
Tb Delinquent Propertiet . Now
Hlllng your ern. Call 1· 316·
736· 7376 Ext. 3P-OH ·H for
current list. 24 hours.
OwniHI reloc.. ing are offering 3
bedroom. 2 Nth home for 11lein
the Rutl..,d, Ohio area. Kitchen
Cooke Delight. plenty ~ cabinets with breMtat b.-, ttove.
di.t1 weaher. dedi, more. Pril;ed
to tel. Cleland Realty, 606 East
Main. Pomlr'O'(. Ohio -'578$.
Phone 614-992 -2259.

Thr• bedi-oom brick home,
lsrge living room, deck. free
water-septic, 1112 percent loan
essumption. five minutes to
Point Pl_ellent. After 5 p.m.,

30.0·675·5308.
2 or 3 b!Jdrooms, doubte lot,
close to schoolt and stores,
S18,000. 304-675 -7833.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

814·245·9234.
1974 totalalec:Jric 14x70. 3 BR .

Sat up for woodburner. New
cerpet. Applicances and 28 ,000
BTU AC. mduded. Has beefl weN
kept . Cal1614-245-'§163.
14x70 3 BfL totalelec., underpinning, blocks. shrubl, sun·
deck. 19.000. C.ll 614-3677267 evenings.
Mercerville. Close to tchool.
Mobile home and lot ready to
move into. Excel . Cand .
t15 , 500. Call614-266· 6476.
1974 Granville 1-':~~70 , 2 or 3
DR .. central air. 8•1 Odeck , appl.
irlcluded. all a••- Call 814-246&amp;134 after&amp;:OO PM .
1977 Victorian Deluxe Mobile
Home. 14 x 67, 2 Br .. 1 bath, aaa
heat. U&amp;OO . Cell 814-446-

2167.
With large livi~g room and
bedroom addltton . located on 3
acres. Call 814-742 ·3149 elter
5 :00pm.
14•70 Windsor with 14x30
addition . .3 bedrooms . pond,
appro11 ~ acres, Gallipolis Ferry,
30-'·676-6930.
1986 Pine Ridge. 1 4x70, mobile
home. 304-676-3096 .
1970 liberty mobile home, 2
bedrooms, 304-675-3763.

Farms for Sale

6 acres with 4 BR . remodeled
hou1e. Fruit lrflel, and outbuild'i ngs in Rio Grande. Call 814-

246· 9695.
20 acre farm with 3 BR. house.
Hennen Trace Road. Glenwood.
W; Va. for more information call
304-773· 6118 or 773-6186
after 5 :00.
·

34

Houses for Rent

Nicety furnished sm•ll house.
Adults only . Ref.,ences required. OH str..t parking. Ph.
614· 446-0338.

4 BR . house for rent 3 mi . so. of
Gallipolis. t 300 a month plus
dep. , Ret. required . Call 61-'·
-'46-1616 . After 5:00PM ., call

441·1244.
4 BR . house on 1 aere. Excel
location. Ret. Call A-1 Real
Estate Broker. Call 304-876-

,5104.
Nicety furnished tmall houN. 3
rooms and bath. Adults.,No pets.
Ref. and Dep. Call 614-446·
2543.

2 BR . trailer, furnished. natural
gas. Adults onty . "!o Pfttl . Call
614-367-7438.

304·576·2383.
I .

'

Nice. 2 Br. Apt.. Stove. refrig.
Furnished. WMer paid. Near
Drive-In Theatre. Call 6.1 4 -446·
7025.
Furnished Apt. Adults only. All
utilftiel paid . Get ready for
winter. Call 614 -446-9623.
2 BR . epta. 6 Closets, kitchen appl. hnnitfled, Washer-Dryer
hook-up , ww carpet. newly
painted, deck. aegency , lne.
Apta. Call 304-67&amp; -7738 or

675·5104 .

Furnished apt .. 2 BA . S195.
WatM paid. 1 1 36 2nd. Ave.
Gallipolis. Call 614- ·U·6· 4416
111f!ttr 9 ~00PM .
2 BR ., with atoye and refrig. 3rd.
Ave. 1260 1 month plus dep.
Call614-245- 9595 .
513ThirdAve .. 1 BR .. t .1 80per
month. Deposit required . Call
614-446-4345 eftet' 5 :00PM .

Furnished 2 room apt . for rent.
Female or temales only. Call
614-4416-1414 Of 446- 1023 .
Gracious living. 1 •nd 2 bed·
room apartments at Village
Manor 111nd Riv111rside Apan·
menta in Middleport . From
5215 . including utilitie1. Call
614-992-7787. EOH .

2 BR. 12.&amp;0 partty furniahed . 2 bedroom apts. and house in
Deposit required. located in · Middleport and Pomeroy, Pay
Centenary. Ca11614-446-4292 . own utilitiM . Call 614-992·
2381 or 614-992- 2720.
2 BR . trailer for rent. Call
1 bedroom unfurnished ap•rt 614·379-2409 111fter 8:00PM .
ment. In Middleport. e150. per
2BR . t1715 a month. No deposit. month plus utilitiu. Call 614·
Children welcome. Cell 814- 992-5646 days. 614· 949 -2216
evenings.
256·1676.
Mercerville. Ohio , 14x60, 2 BR .,
cilrpet throughout, total elec .
A· 1 cond. If intet'elted eall
614-256-6230 after &amp;:00 PM .

Newly furnished apl!lrtment ,
Working adults only . Ref. and
deposit. Call 614-992-5942
afll!lf 5 p.m .

2 bedroom, furnished. g11 h•at,
air conditioner, wesher and
dryer . Adults onty, no peu.
1160. per month plus utilitie1 .

APAATM ENTS , mobile homes,
houaea. P.t . Pleasant and Gallipo
lis. 614-446-8221 ,

Call814·949·2946
3 bedroom wrth H~ bath .
located Zuspan Moltow . Prefer
elderly couple. Call 614-992-

3229.

•.

3 bedroom. 2 bath, heat fur nished . *215. per month. Also.
nice lot. heat furnished l in
Hani1onville area ::" 61 -'· 7423033 after 8 :00 pm.
2 bedroom mobile home. "h mile
out Jericho ROad; call after 6
p.m., 304-676-8483.
2 bedrooms and 3 bedrooms:,
Gallipolis Ferry. One with central
air, 304- 875-4088 .
Two bedroom trailer, Greer
Ro111d . Homettead Realty, 304·
675-6640 or 304-B82-2405 .

44

Apartment
for Rent

Fumiahed apartment *210.
utilities paid. 1 bdr. 920 fourth,
0111ipolla. C•ll448-441e a'her

epm.

1 1h ec lot on Jerry1. Run Rd.
Apple Grove, wi1h rural water.

Nicely turnith'¥1. 2 BR . apartment. Nice location . Adults only.
Call614·446-2404.

For Rent : AC .. fumiahed, 2 BR .,
mobite home located at K &amp; K on Apartment, fully carpeted, air
EattMn Ave . I 186 a month ... conditioned . total electric .
Oep. and Ref. required. Cell 2216 '/z Mt. Vernon Ave., Pt .
Pleasant. Cl!lll 614-992· 5858 .
614·268· 1187.

Furniahed apt. nut door to
library. One professional Adult
ority. Parking. Ph. 448-0338 .

7827. .

Furnished .downstairs. 3 rms.
and beth. Cleen. No pett. Adults
only . Deposit and Ref. Required.
Ca11614--'46-1519.

Icc-- - - ----- -

. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments for
rent. Ba•ic f«tt for 1 bdr ..
*183.00: 2bdr .. t219.00. Also
require~ a t200.00 security
deposit. CONTACT: Jackson
Commercial buildings for leue.
Eatat" D•pt: Ph 448-3997
Downtown Pt. Plee11nt. StDfeS.
Equal Hous:lng Opportunity.
oHicn. A-One R..l Estate.
Carol Ye~gtr, Broker. Call 30-'·
Furnished Efficiency t145 . Utili876·6104.
.
tiel ptid, 1hare beth. 807
Second A~. . Gallipotlt Ph.
Commei-cial building; metal, In· -'48-4ot1 8 l'htr 7PM.
''lleted, 50' x 1 DO', epproKi·
m1t ..y four yeara old, 1JJ acre lot. Upst1lrs unfurniahed apartment.
Four miiM from new dam aite. Utiliti" paid. c.,peted. noc::hild·
30.0 ·675·3030 or ~75 · 3431 .
ren cw pets. Csll614-4415· 1837

1 .84 actts. nice flatland .
Conven. location. Call814-448-

Brookside Apartments: : 4-'61932 or 446 ·4639 . One Bedroom apartment with large
country kitchen. new appli.., c.,, utility room, water, sewtf
and trash serviees provided.
Quiet area.

Remodeled upsteirs. 2 Bf' ..
unfurn ithed . utilities paid .
Adults onl'(. 749 Second Ave.
Nice 3 BR . flouse. Clote to. Ca!l &amp;14-445-1457 after 3 : ~0
tchoOis end churches. S300 e PM .
montll plus deposit. Ref. requirecl. No pets. Call 814-446- Furni1hed Apartment; 4 rooms
1734 between 7:30 AM . 9 :30 and bath. Centrally loc•ted. One
PM .
or two edulti . Ref. and Sec. Dep.
required. Call 614-4-'6 -0444.
R ecentty remodeled, 1 bedroom, in town. Off-street Pllrk- Apartments for the Elderly."
ing, washer-dryer. Refer~tnces Frenchtown Apanmentl, 727
required . 614-992 -5912 or Fourlh Ave. Opening soon 24
units de1igned for Senior Citi614-992-6723 after 6:00.
zens (62 &amp; olderl &amp; handicapped
Unfurnished ho\Jie and •P•rt· person1. Rent including ldjust·
ment for watltr, sewage &amp;
menta in Ppm•oy. 1100.-•1 60
plus utilities . Also for sale on electrit; it bated on U!lna'nts
lend contract. Call 614-992- tncom111. Equal hauling opportunity . Applic.- ions m-v- be
15059 or614-992· 7511 .
picked up at Spfing Vatl8't' Piau
3 bedroom. Adults. No pets. Call 446-4639. All electric heat
pumps .
304-676-4384.

Business
Buildings

36 Lots· &amp; Acreage

for. Rent

Furnished Apt., 1 BA ., 1225
2 BR .. unfurnished house wfth utilhies paid. 607 2nd. Ave.
gllfage, Ac:cept one cllild. Ref . . Gallipolit. Call 614-446· 4416
after 8:00PM .
and Oep. Call 614-446-9686.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

1979 liberty. 3 BR .. on 1 lj,
acres off Rt . 160 at Porter. Call

33

41

Apartment

Modern 1 lA apartment. Cell
614:448-0390 .
,t

2 bedrOom furnised apt , rl!lf 111nd
deposit, New H111ven. W, VIII.,
304· 882 - 3267 or 304 -773-

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp;. FURNITURE 82
Olive St.. Gallipolis.
NEW- 8 pc. wood group- t399.
Uving room suites- *199-1699.
Bunk beds with bedding- t189.
Full till!l r:TI1Hf8St ' &amp; foundation
starting - 899 . R111cliners
starting· S99 .

USED· IIedo. dreooero. bedroom.
suites. 1$199 - t299 . Desk s
wringer wether, 1 complete
of used turnitura.

lin~

45

Furnished Rooms

Rooms for rent. day . week.
month. Gallia Hotel. Call 514·
446-9680 . Rentas low u8120
month.
Furnished room . t76. Utilities
paid. Share bath . Single male.
919 Second. Gellipolis. Call
4-'6-4418 efter .7 pm.

3 WhHI bicycle for ule. Cell

Waterbed, entertainrfutot center . dinette ut. 16 h . boal.
motor, lrailer. Misc. hems. 23
Pine, Call 61 4-44&amp;-6820.

1979 Thundercrefl tri- hau l,
welk-thru windahleld, 50 HP
M•rcury outboerd motor. Excellent j;:Ondltion. 304· 882· 2760.

Kirby V111cuum clean8f wi1h
attachments and scrubber,
e158. Rebuilt and 1till guaran·
teed. c..h or term•. Call 61-'·
992-7142.

prh•

U6. 0na30gol. ondone45gol:

a

Musical

1976 Pontiac Sunbird. green
ge1 range, browntweedrl!lcliner
solid wood TV cabinet wilt~
doors. Honda 50 motorcycle.
304-676-6072 or 675· 2398
aher 5 .

58

90 Days same as ca1h . with
l!lpproved credit. 3 Miles out
Bulaville Rd . Open 91!1m to 5pm
Mon. thru Sat . Ph. 614 -446·

0322.

PARSOfii 'S FURNITURE
New .,;,ood 6 pc. liv ing room
suites, 1399 .96; New IN ing
room suites from t179.95 to
8700.; Chest of ·. drawers. 4
drawer. S48 .. 6 duw~tr, t59 .96;
End llbl~ from S69. 95 ut .
Used Furniture: bedroom 1uhes.
lull sind beds, twin beds and
rock MI. Recl iners from $99,95
and up
THE WORKING

~AN ' S

FRIEND

CARPET- 91112- ~slow as $50lots to pick from . Also cut
carpet. 16 .00 a yd. and up .
Financing •vail , SwWal rockers,
1100 . Mollohan Furniture ,
Upper River Ad. Call 614 -4467444 .
Dilhwasher. Sears Kenmore.
buih-in, harves1 gold. Used less
than 1 yr. $226. Call 614 -3889608.
'
Ut~ed .

refrigerl!ltor, and sewing
mactnne. New baby baasinet.
Call 614 -446 -7613 alter 4 :00

PM .

4262 .

Air conditioner. 18.500 BTU .
Only uttd 2 month• , Call
614·256-1911 after&amp;.
Rocker love seat, roll way bed.
Iron b111d1. gas heating n ova,
wa1hing machine, old chairs.
Call614-446 -2857.
1989 12x&amp;O Nanco Washer
0ryer. Almost nerw carpet and
refrigeritOt, air conditioner. Call
614-985-4421 aftM 6:00pm .
25 inch Sylvania Console TV . 2
lamp tables, coffee table, lan e
Recliner roc ker. sofa. bed w ith
new Posturepedic Mattress. 3
lamps. picture frames. dishes.
glassware. Tappan Microwave.
small appliances. etc . Call 61-'-

992·62e9 .

nt size wuher &amp;
.; RCA Whirlpool
actor, 1176 . 304l.iving room auitl!l washer' end
dryer, retrigl!lrator, 304· 676·
f\2.0 9 .

63

Six per!IOn Jacuui tor ule.
one -v1111r -old . t3600 .. 304 676· 1165 .
Yellow Amana refr igerator, 304-

675·2698.
Apple butter kettle, t 1 60; s ..u
window fan, 3 speed, S50;

304·875·1731 .
Early American consoll!l 24"
color · televis ion. Needs 10me
work. t60. Phonl!l 304-675 5416 .
Bedroom dresser, 1uitable for
child's room , t36 . 30'-6764831 aher 5:30 p,m.

54 Misc . Merchandise
Callahlfl 's Used Tire Shop. Over
1,000tirl!lt, 1izes12. 13 , 14, 16,
18, 18 .5. 8 miiM 001 Rt . 218.
Call614 · 258-8261 .

Red raspberrin. Pick your own
or we pick. Call l..,lor' l Berry
Pateh . 614- 2•5-6084 or 4-'8·

Grapes ripened ..rly . Concord
and _o th• wine. juice and l•tv
variety. Pick your own M buy 11
~el" room. Dun RoYin fruh
Farm, Rt.. 681 •• of Albany, 0 .
Call 814-898-1298. W•elld-vs
10-e ·. We.tl:end• 9-5.
·
QUality F·r uits •nd Vegttabl"
reta.il 1nd whol.,.le. 8 &amp; S
Produc:e acro11 from Pi1u Hut.
Gallipolis, Ohio.
Yellow Freeuone C1nn ing
Peachn Now Available. Cell for
Vllrietin and pric.s,
BoB·s MARKET
M ..on 773-5721
Open 1 Days

f .nrn Supplli'&gt;
LIVP.SIIIck

61 Farm Equipment
4 ' •8 ' utility trtller. 30'· 675 2159
2-100 lb. pr.opane tank1 - 1 full.
Couch. good condition. See at
No . 7 BurdMtf.l Addn . 304 -676 -

4304.

2-aluminum twnings, fits w in dows 35 " wide. See 1t No. 32
Burdene Addn. 304-675-2233 .

55 Building Supplies
Building M.-tlt'riels
Blook. brick, ttwer pipes. win·
dows . lintels. etc. Claude Win·
ters. Rio Grande. 0 . Call 114246-5121 .
Concr11111 blocks .all si21111 yard or
del ivery. Muon 18nd. Gallipolis
Bloclt Co .. 123'11 Pine St ..
Gallipo lis. Oh io Call 614 · •-'8·

2783 .

Rudv m ix concrete snd all
concrete supplies. Call us Yell.-,
Brook CAment 1nd Suppliet,

304·773 ·6234 .
Pets for Sale

GrMm and Suppty Shop-Pet
Groom ing . All breed1 . . . All
styles. Julie Web~ Ph. 61 4 -448·
0231 .
Oragonwynd Catt~ Kenntl .
CFA Him•layan. Pers ian end
Sismete kittens. AII.C Chow
puppies. New kittent: Si•mese
and Hlml!lll!lyans. Cllll14--'-'6 ·
3844 after 7PM .

1---------Red Ooberm•n pups. 6 wks. old.

CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S . 35 W"t Jackson. Ohio.
614· 281· 6461 .
Massey Ferguson. New Holland.
Bulh Hog SeiH &amp; Sat vice. Over
40 u1ed tractDfs to chooH from
• complete line of new • uMd
equipment. UlrgMt "'.c1ion In
S.E. Ohio.
1931 Alic• Charmtf lr•ttor,
s&amp;OO. Set of tum plows on
rubber. no. 9 tt culip~er .
t75. Hofle drawn wagon on
wheels , t50. Home made
w•gon on rubb.,, 175 C1ll
419-864-A252 .
18&amp; Mistily · Fl1'g . . gn traC1or ,
U&amp;OO. 8 tt. c'anle rack, 8200.
ShaY• poat driver , tiOO. Ford
3· 14 inch pkJwt. t250 . Ford 8
ft . disc, tZOO. Emc:a 6 tt. buth
hog. l.aQ, Also otllet eclulp,
Call 814- 388· 9832 .

Rabbit• and cagn. All for Ale.
Call614-388:· 8868.
Registered Cocker Spaniel pup·
pies ; Adult M i niature
Schnauzer; Siamese kitten and
cat Call 614 -992 ·2607 or
614-992-6516
Threv young raccoon•. 304·
896-3972 .

57

1-1972 F111nder. telecuter gul·
tar. 1 ~ Electra MP~ gui1ar with 6
modulet . 1- Morley Echo. vo·
lume pedal. Call61 4-388-8436.

New Holland 717 ftxage h...,et·
ter: New Holland 467 7 ft. hey
bind; Gehl grindtr miur. AH
goodcondrtton. 304·273 ·4215 .

Wanted

to Buy

Now buying th~/1 corn Of • .,.
corn. Call forlelest quotes. Aiwar
City Farm Supply. 114-«8 ·

2985.
63

Livestock

Duroc Boers. Bred }utt like the
bo•n we tested at lhe Ohio
Testation that gained ovtf 2 ,1
lbs. per day . f'og.,. Benti!IY.
Sebine, OH . 613 ·684 -2398.
Work Horae for sale. Appro•.
1 ,000· 1 ,200 lbs. t300 . Call
814-387-7118 .

64

3 BR. ' home in or trcund
Gallipoll•· Call 814- 448·3128.

5308.

1977 Monte Carta. new Eagle
STs. 70.0000ftglnllm ii... Mut1
seH, tiOO . 304· 81&amp; ·4831 aher
~ : 30 p.m .
1180 Flat X19, e11cell~t condi·
lion. t3 .200. Ot beet o"•·
304-875-6414.
1179 Bonneville P o nti ac;: ,
loadH. higfl mil. Aunt great

01 ,600 304·&amp;70·2543
1981 Chevy Caprice Classic;.

Trucks for Sele

1970 Chw. truck. 6 c:yl .. ahort
whNI bese, AC. Good lruclr..
Cell 61A-441 -1522 .
1972 Whitw Frwightllner COE
350 Cummins Engine. 115,000
miln ou1 ot frame mllliOt. ATO
9510 uansmiuion. Aockw•ll
4 :11 ut+o rears. 10:22 tife1 on

:t:M NoT SAYtNCS .I:
PtlN1T BELIEVE li.
I.'M JUJi .51\YING THeY

79 Motors Homes
S. Campers

5!-fOULD GIVE ~OUAL­

TlMi: .Tb THE
~.~fo:" Tt'tS:OR(.

21 ft . Chttial.! C am pat w ith fu"
bath, ~IMPS t ik Good condition .
Awning .and TV anttnnl Cell
IU-185-4-418.

5579.

1981 El Camino Conquiltl
pick· up . &amp;99~ . mil•. Auto. 4 ·
tpMd , AC , PW, AM -FM lttreb,
cetsette. t10 ,00Q , Call- 614-

MR .

Tr ~ ns purl&lt;illllll
Autos for Sale

1882 Cam•ro. lh•p. Mutl be
..., to apprecilte. e3111.1984 Chevette. nice. •2795.

Coli 814·288·6522.

1880 Toyoto Cotollo. 39,000
mil81, ucel. cond., · fee. air,
AM~FM-Calt, eUtO. 13500 . Call

814·446· 2173.

"'
~

~

I'

i'

•

PA)&lt;TYWILL
IMMEDIATE

Serv1cr.s

i;STABUSM A

Aot~•••Basament

Wat•proofing.
SWE.(PER 1nd MWif\Q mathine
repab , plltts. and suppll• . Pidlo

up •nd ctet;...wrv. Dav is V K1Jum
Cleanet , one half mll• ~o~p
Georg .. CtMI&lt; Ad C111 61.,_
441-0294.

IS 511£. A

Gcx:o COOK ?

St•rkl ltM and Lawn Service.
lawn c.,,, landseap lnljl. 1turnp
removal. 304 · 1576 -2142 or

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

00 vt:U ~EL I EVE IN
LI FE A FTER [)EA"f}-1 ,

Woodcuner· 1 Special · 1875
Chwy truck. t500 . Phone 304875- 2848.

:

Plumbing
llo Heating

llo

4

W.O.

6:00PM .

A Re ALL PHIL050PHERS
SLJQ-l A I'Jl&gt;dN IN 'THE NECK~

~

~£::X~..!:. ! ~,. . .l . ..illr"-.r~,----..1 fn- ,.-·r-"--=,,...Z..,-&lt;ID&gt;-=---l~---..j

ANO HEATING

B4

such as celebacy for pries1s
and the church's stand on
homosexuality, abortion, birth
control and premarital seK.
(l) Cl ()) Spenser. FOI' Hire
Spenser hunts down and
collars an escaped prisoner.

&amp;

BARNEY '

Electrical
Refrigeration

LOWEEZY

IS OUT

IN TH' WAITIN'
ROOM , DOC

W11htr and dryer s:ervlce and
repair. Ae1110n1blt rat•• · 30
yean l!lllperienca. Calll!l14-3457·

(R) C
.
·
{!) Slllco~ Valley Events and
developments over past 80
years that shaped Silicon
Valley. C
IIDl 111112l Night Heal O'Brien
remembers death of his first
partner when killer
reappears.
liD ®News
!I)) Evening News A wrap up
of today's news and a look

WHAT'S
AlLIN'

HER ?

0322 .

""ldentlltl Of commercial wiring. New Hrvlce or repairs
licens.t electrician. Ell lmet~
free . Ridenour Electrical, 30-'·

876·1786.

ahead to tomorrow's news
stories.

1978 FOrd F-1150. 4x4. 1hor1
bed lt"P aide. Looks 1rtd runs
good. t1395 . Call 614 · 247~

4292 .
1979 Jeep CJ 7 , red •nd whi1e.
fiber'glats top, &amp;7.000 mllea,
t3,&amp;00. C.ll aft• 8 p,m .,

304-876·4243.
74

Motorcycles

1986 Harley Davidton , FLTC,
E.C. always gareglld. Mtny
ac:ce~aorl• · Aski,. e1100. can
Dey• 814-448·1331, Evwnin~-

814·4U·4411 .
1877 Hondo Goktwing 1000.
Good cond. •1000. Call 614-

448·9671 .

B6

10:051IJ MOVIE: Submarine
Commend (1 :27)
10:30 CIJ Celebrity Cheft Ann
Landers and Danny Aiello
liD Humen Face of the
Pacific This program
highlights many ancient

Dillard Weier Strvice: Pools
Cisterns. Wells. Delivery Any:
time. Cell 61-'·448•7404-No
Sunday calls.
J S. J Wa1er Service. Swimming · •~
pools, cisterns. wells. Ph. 81•-

246·9285.

customBreserved by

R e. R W111ter ServiCI!I. Home
cisterna. wells.. pools filled.
Formtrly James ~ova Water.
Call 304 ·676 · 6370.

emu

Wattl!lnon's Water Hauling,
raa1oneble rates , immedi1t1
2.000 gallon d•INery, cisterna.
pools, well, etc. call 304· 576-

2919 .

1180 Honda CRIO Dirt bik•·
Good Cond. ••2&amp;. Call 304·

PEANUTS

410 Nighthawk. Excellent con·

B7

HE'I!WHERE'S

dillon. tBBO. Coli 814·448·
4096.

Upholstery

100 KawUikl. Good cond. Call
114-311-1818.

A &amp; M Cuttom Couchu end
Reupholsterv. St. At. 7, Crown
City. Oh . 814-266-1470, Eve.

1985 Hondo CA 1lZ6. Good
Shopo. Coli 814-379-2812 .

814·44«1·3438 . Opan drilly 9 to
4:30, Sit. 8 '30 to 1:30. Old &amp;

1979 Hondo T1111 90. 0450.

I :;:-...:..~::-:""":"-:--Mowrey's Upholl11flng 1erving

/

3CM·I71-1731 .

1982 Honda CXIOO. wind·
lhl.. d. aadlhb111. good ttiapa.
Good mileage. 304-882· 270-'.

EI/ERI'BOD'/
601NG? COME BACK!

. .... .

Dobbs. (0:30)

TI-lE SUN 15
B~EAKIN6 THROU6H !

new Upho•tered .

tricoun•var••22y•••· The belt 1 '
In furniture upholaterlng. Cell 1 1 1
1
3Q4 · 17&amp; - 41 84 lor free
ettlm"•'·
• :

.

t

...

SOUTH
• 7.3
.K 5

.'

+AB643
.A842
Vulnerable: North·South
Dealer: West

4.5.

West

Nortb
Obi.

Pass
Pass

6t
Pass

East

Pass
Pass

Pass

.

Soutb
5+

"

Pass

..

s•

Obi.

.,

Opening lea(!: • K

,.
now ruffed small in dummy, and East ; ~
had to follow . The lead of dummy's ·. '
last heart left East with the Q-9·7 of ·
trumps. Declarer held the 8-6·4 and ·
dummy the K · ~ . East was doomed - · ·
he could ruff with the queen but would ·.
riow have to lead away from the 9·7 . ·
giving declarer the last two tricks and "
his contract.
·

·.

'"

..

..,,

'

..
.' ,
&gt;•.

. .'

... .....
,.,

'

"

... "'

for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different .

CRYPTOQUOTE
8-25

u c

Y E 0 A

LEVU

uc

BM

TA

a

W A C P W A

•

·.

.K 7 6 5

.!\CROSS
41 Prod
1 Nimbus
42 Ruffian
5 Calif. park 43 Beverage
9 .Capital
DOWN
of South
1 Asylum
Yemen
2 Wise
10 French
saying
river
3 Measure
11 Weatherfor area
cock
4 United
Yesterday's Answ•er
12 Isolate
5 Dog's
14 Easter
13 Boo-boo 28 Revere nce
skin
ailment
15 Destiny
30 Street
111 Fall behind 6 Swiss
21 "La Cage
language
16 Bard's
canton
- Folies" 32 Fencing
7To an
adverb
22 Soft drink
move
extent
17 Trawler's
· 23 Count
33 Infuriate
need·
8 Press
24 Psychia· 38 Debt
statement
18 Poem
note
trist
19 Disfeature 10 Union
27 "Sleuth" 39 Whee l
general
20 Abhor
22 Spanish
cash unit
23 Frowned
upon
25 He,b rew
measure
26Jet black
27 Garment
29 Playing
marble
30Maxim
31 Wing
34-Baba
35 Recline
36 Calendar
abbr.
37 Croesus
was one
39 Executed
40 British
weight
unit
8125
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work it:

LBU:YCDU

I

..3

..

EAST
+54
.,0 6 3
• QJ 97

•9 874

a

(0:30)

.AQJ2
tK1052
• Q J 10 9

WEST
.KQJ109862

. After West had made a pre-emptive
bid of four spades, he committed a
bridge sin. When the opponents bid
live diamonds, he bid again. Not only
did that ignore the fact that he had a
partner, but it also gave the opposition
more bidding room. North could now
pass five spades, saying to partner, "If
you have a fatrly good hand, we might
even have a slam." So South did bid six
clubs, corrected to diamonds by
North. It certainly seems OK for East
to double that contract, but that too
was questionable, since it provided de·
clarer with the information he needed
in order to bring in a touch-and-go con·
tract. Here's how.
After winning dummy's spade ace,
declarer took a club finesse. Then he
led the 10 of diamonds from dummy,
covered by East with the jack and
won with the ace. The king of h~arts
was overtaken with dummy's ace and
all of the club tricks were taken with
repeated finesses. East had to follow
lo all four clubs. Next a heart was
played to dummy's queen and a hea•t
ruffed .. Declarer's second spade was

"

B·t&gt;-01

One letter stands for ano~her. In this sample A is used

® Taloa from the Darkolde
Love Connection
11:30 CIJ iUl Tonight Show
C!J SpolttCenter (L)
(J) WKRP In Cincinnati
(J) Nlghtlne C
IIDJ ® Tl'llpper Jolin, M.D.
01 Sporta Tonight Action
pocked sports highlights with
Nick Charles and Jim Huber.

am

..

isLONGFE .LL&lt;OW

Tonight
11:00 CIJ Herdcatlle and
McConnlck
·
• CIJ (l) Ill (J) IIDl 1111121
dll News
{!) .Sign Off
[]) Silicon Volley Events and
developments over pasl 80
years that shaped Silicon
Valley. 1;1
Q2) Monerllne Curren!
raporte on world economics
and financial news with Lou

' I
•'

··-..

. AXYDLBAAXR

Klrlball.

Formertv Ken's now John·•
Wlttr Service. John Wwtterton,
Jr. Own•. 1. 000 Of 2,000 gel
tarvice. 30•·571-:2248 ,

882·2422.

~1 : 00)

IIIli&gt; Soap

General Hauling

NORTH

By James Jacoby

and looks at other issueS

Cor. Fourth and Pine
Galllpoli•. Ohio
Phont~ 814-«6· 3888 or 814·
446-4-477

575·7985.
Vans

E:VEN B E L.I E:YE IN
LIFE B EFQRE DEAl '1-i.

6FOfLE56'+

CARTER ' S PLUMBING
1979 1 ton Chwrolet, eAcellent
condiUon. 304-882 ·2695.

60\AETIME5 I CON'T

.A

Compounded
errors

dance club. {R) 1;1
9:00 CIJ 700 Club
®Top Rank Boxing
(l) Ill ()) MoonllghUng
Maddie goes out on the town
;n search of a lusty one night
· stand. (R) 1;1
{!) liD One VIllage In Chine
Chinese women speak
openly about love, marriage,
birth conlrol &amp; jobs. 1;1
IIDl I) il2l Houston Knightt
Rash behavior causes Lundy
to be abruptly bounced from
the force. {R) C
I!)) Lorry King (lvel In depth
interviews with top
newsmakers and celebrities,
10:001JCIJ dJ) NBC Newt Special
God Is Not Elected. This
documentary examines the
changing faces of the
Catholic Church In America,

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

578·2903.

B2

BRIDGE

Maggie over a new teen

8t5·l802

..
. ..

The llred clerk lifted the grocery bag, and its bot)om gave
way. "They don't make bags like lhey used lo," she moaned .
"That's supposed lo happen In lhe. DRIVEWAY."

a

Rotary Of cebl• tool dfitftnljl
Most wds compl-'ld ,.,.,. dev .
Pump HI• end urvios. 304-

Comp lete rh e chuckl e quoted
by fill ing in the missi ng words
you d evel op from ste p No. 3 below.

YEsiEIDAY'S SCIAM-LETs'ANSWEIS .

1111121 Simon and Slmon
The Simons try to help A.J.·s
fOrmer fiancee ·recover her ·
memory. (R)
11)1 Primonewt Wrap ups ol
the day's world news and in
depth feature reports. (1 :00)
® MOVIE: Blue Col..r {AI
(1 :54)
IIIli&gt; II!QVIE: The Maltese
fralcon (NRI (1 :40)
8:051IJ Chielo, Part 1 (NR)
8:30 (j)
(J) Growing Pelnt
Jason gets into trouble with

WATERPAOOfiNO
Uncondiitlonel litM ime guann.
tee, local ref•enc:ea turnishllld,
F'" nttmetn . C•ll ooMifd
.1 ·114· 237·0488, d., or night.

0

VIsual - Rayon - Which - Bodice - DRIVEWAy'

i

8,SEMEN1

"I better- a - doctorl"

TO

0 ()) Who'o lhl Bolt?
Angela's new efficient,
British office clerk clashes
with Mona. {R) 1;1
(}) liD Nove New genetic
studies prompt controversial
~estions about man's origin .

Home
Improvement•

B1

5 1 I . I .I
6

. ..

e ~~ic:~~~~ER LETTER~ I I' I .I A I I. I I

(T)
(J)

YOU TWO STAY WITH TH E
G U"' AND BE PR EPARED
10 SAC&lt; UP MR . WOOilMAN
IF HE RUNS INlQ 11«)U6LE!

992· 7489.

Hay, t1 .00 a bale. 304-773-

5185.

"'

"'
d:&gt;

w~h his young

PRINT NUMBERED l ETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

fl) (Z) Milton Berle
7:05 ell Sonlord end Son
7:30DCIJ (j) Newlywed Game
C!J Belt ol Bill Dance
Outdooro (R)
8()) Judge
®l Wheel ol Fortune !;I
I!)) Crouflra (0:30)
Ill Q2l dll Jeopardy! 1;1
®Soap
7:351Il Honeymooner•
8:00 CIJ Dektari A Cub Called
Danger
.
D Cil dJ) MOVIE: 'Return to
Moybi.!!J' NBC Movie of the
Week t;1
·
® Profeosional Karole WKA
Karale from Tulsa. Oklahoma

' ALLEY OQP

1972 Winnebago motor home .
•to.&amp;OO. 304-If!l7e -11l1 .

OLIVEAS Tr" Trimming. top·
ping. u lmm"'g. prunin9 deed
1987 5 ·10. PS, PB, 4 lpi!IM!, . wood. storm damage. take
longbtK!. 1 SOO lb payload . for
downs. HM Estknates, 304·
Nle or trade. Call 814 · 992·
&amp;7&amp;· 381 7.
8575 .

1979 V~kswegon ven In good
cond. C•ll814•440·8&amp;53 •fter

1988 ChiiV. Cavell•. black.
Oelulii:W Interior, cruiH. AC ..
AM~FM· radio. C1ll 1514·241-

. "I've bred a new species of speckled
hlblscus ... lt only grows In rooms where you
spray paint the ceiling a lot."
·

1985. DOdge Daytona Turbo Z,
red-iUiver , bhw:k l..lh.-. ~try
optiOn. tiiOO. and tat.e' oYet2
yaeu pnman11, 304 .· 11~ -

Mixed hey *1 . bal111 on wagon .
Hay for bedding 80c. 304·875-

9110 or 44S·2323.

3 or 4 Bedroom hCM.Ite In Kyger
Creek School Diatrict. Aef•encesPh. 814-448-8821 .

1981 Ford EKort staHonwaeon.
d-vtime - 304- nJ. &amp;388: IY..,·
in; · 304-n l-5771.

Good mhted hay. •1 .215 per bale.
Call 814- 448-0373 or 448·
3120.
.

1177 C.m•a Rill'( Sport, Pl ..
Pl .. Auto. enoo. Call 114211· 1 141 or 288-8&amp;43.

47Wanted to Rent

1983 Skylark 22 h selfconta ined, • -"' c wUent condh ton
king t ile bed. tub. Cal l 304-875:
3275 1tter 6 p m

_,.,G;:......;Er.::N.,.:T-_:.;A.....:E~-1~

1 _J.--.....L._J.-...1.
L~.J._.....L.

iaenaon

1978 Old• s11tiofl wagon , 1977
Ford Van. 304-4&amp;8· 1130.

1981 Ford Ranger XLT Sup.,
Cab. 4 cyl .. 5 spd .. 4 WO .. qulld.
1tereo. 10.000 mil" . •12.000.
Call 814 · 387-0438.

Coli 614· 245·11040.

K &amp; K. 304-875-1078.

198&amp; 'Ch~y CaliSIII!If. -' speed.
Mr. AM ·FM cu~en•. Good
conditfan. e2tt5. 114 -t92 ·
6170 Of' C114· 9!12 · H87

73

1983 CamlfO Z-28. T-top. PS.,
Pl., PW.•nd door locka, AM -_
FM-Cau, AC .• eJCirl nice. Bleck.

SPACES FOf' RENT - Trailer
lots, Rt. 1 . Locust Road , btck of

1979 Chry!lller . Must sN 10
aweci•te, Call 114-941 ·2558.

1984 Chevy Super Cab 5 ·10
truck. air. ps. pb. extraa. 304·

HayS. Grain

--

198-' M ustenu. Li11 tl 200 .. ~~
14400. Calll14· 982· &amp;190;
1982 Ford EXP. Sun root, PS.
PI , AM ·FM . UOOO. Call 614·
••c!Hl809 ett..- e.oo pm.

r

and financial news with Lou
Dobbs . (0:30)
1111121 iU) Wheel ol Fortuna

FRANK' AND ERNEST•

Playing a game

==·

L.

reports on world economics

budGo. 814· 985·4422 .

oft• 5:00PM .

'

St1inl.i1 steel .. hiUit SYit..,.-.1
Now eu110m made for your
truck. motot' home Ofclualc car;
With lit .. time warranty . M~o~HI..­
Man. 9 Stimpson A~te . , Athena,
Ohio . 1-800-843·3761.

w . Vo. 304· 87S· 7421 .

1979 Pontiac Bonn ... me, 2 dr.,
PS., PB., lih: and crutia, AC .
EJtcel cond. Ca11814-387-0317

Space for •m•ll trail.,.. All
hook··upt. Cable. Al1o efficiency
roomt, air en~ c•ble. M11on,
W.Va. Caii304-713-BII1 .

1983 Ch...,ftte . Standard, 4
speed. in go od col1ditlon.
49,000 mllee. 132 BulterMJt.
PomllfOV. Oh io.

Feuy Tr" Tt knmlng, atump
ramoval. Calll04 -e75-1331
·

62

,,

-.

R 0 L E W I .,-:.! .

I

a

'

•

• 1 · 1 . .. palient the doctor pointed to the
I
I
=~ lad's
earThe
andboy
asked.
"Is and
thai sald,
your
,.~-~=·==·
nose?"
cringed

I:OSIIJ Dow.n to Earth Stereo.
1:30 D CIJ dll NBC Nlgh11y Newt
. ®NFL Fllmt P,...rrto Bill
. Brown (R)
(J)
(J) Alii&lt;.News !;J
{!) Nlghdy Butlnett Report
iiDJ e1121 CIS Newt
liD Soapbox with Tom Cottle
Teenage panelists talk about
drinking and drug use among
their peers .
.
I!)) ShowBiz Today News of
the enlertalnment world Is
anchored live from New
York. (0:30)
® Jefleraono
IIlli&gt; Mr. Peepero
&amp;:351Il Leave It To Beaver
7:00 CIJ Hardcll118 end
McCormick
IJ CIJ PM Megezlne
® SportoCenler (L)
(j) Entertainment Tonlghl
a()) People'o Court
(}) liD MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewaHour (1 :00)
t!tJ NeWI
IDl Moneyline Current

',.'

Camping
Equipment

72

814· 246·9497.

7479.

1982 Chrysler l,eb•rron , 4 dr.
Sedan. 4 cyl:, PS .. Pl .. cruise.
tift . AM -FM . air. 16.000 mlln.
A tieing tl600 or Nit offer. Call
814-2415 -6801 1fter &amp;:00 PM . . 7B

13,100. 30.--8715 -2583 .

1983 Z· 2B Camtro, 32,000
mil" on bod'( . 600 mil" on 3150
engln•. 5 tpd. loaded. louwen,
bra and car cover Included. Call

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Perk.
Route 33. North of Pomeroy.
Rental tniltrs. Cell 814-992-

®Good Times

Struts. e119.95 pa ir, ln1t1Bed.
Mo1t models. Mufflet" Man. 9
&amp;t impson. Ave. Athens. Oh io .

Bars. chlint, and sprochts to tit
llmott any 11w . SIDERS
EQUIPMENT CO .. Htnd•ton.

71

Office Sp ..ce for Rent . ExceHent
for Anorneys, Accountant, etc.
Close to Court Hou1e. C1ll
Wileman Real Estate Agency.
614-446· 3644.

1988 Cemaro-i'ed: wi1h •xtrl
strip package, PS .. PB .. cruiu,
tilt, rNr louver. E•tra eleen 1nd
nice. t9600. Call anyt1me 81-'·
387·0881 .

...' .

M

Ill (Z) Honeymoonera

1ruckl. Vtns. 4J14' s. Muffter
Men. 8 Stimpson Aw .. -'th-"'·
1177 Pontiac v_.,rura. y . 8 , Ohio. 1-800· 843· 37e'7.
Auto ., AM - FM -Cau. Runt
good. Must Selt 1400 or belt 1877 Chevy Cheve"e, good
oHer. Call &amp;14-245-9157.
motOf. Sell fOf partt. 1100.
304-882· 3323.
1975 Charger SE. good work
e'er. 1979 Mustang. good work
ear . Can 61-'. ~79- 2652 .
77 Auto Repair

load.cl wfth optlonl. All pow•t

Good used trumpet. t126 . firm.
Good Marching Rifle, never
been' uled . 61-'· 992-5791.

46 Space for Rent

Ouol oxhouot Olto, o99.96 "'·
stalled . Most Forda. Chi'Yy

552~ .

Musical
Instruments

Electric guitar and amp. Yamaha
12 string acoustic. Both excel.
cond. Also other guitart. Cali
614-446-0566 .

::-----~--...,-~ ·fe-

f'ON ' S Televis iOn S••v it e
HouM ells on RCA. Ouaur,
GE . Speel.aUng In hnl1h Cell
304 -1571-2398 or 114-448 2454,

T030 Ferg, trector, new tires,
paint. new motor. whh I fl . bust!
hog. 12250. Call 614-2815-

Cell 614 -379-2813 .
Half Chow Chow puppie1.
Mother AKC Reg. Weaned.
Ready to go. S25 eech. Cute.
Call614· 446-2108.

Autos for Sale

~

GOTDAE

I ( I t l Ii

a()) IIDl 1111121

liD Secret Cltr

1400'843·3717.

/lr

Antiques

Wanted To Buy old 1800 log
house , call614-245-9448

Fruit
Vegetables

8892.

56

Couch 1or sale. like new cond. 1
vr. old . 1175 . Ctll 614 -446-

&amp;

71

I

® SportoLook (T)
{!) Dr. Who The Power of
Kroll

buy Junk
trenemi•tlonl.
ln•tallation
available. Call
we

Signet clarinet witn reed clip.
reeds, Uttdonetclloolt•m. Will
ulefor t300 .. 304-882-3081 .

Sofas and chairs pricflld from
$396 to $995 . Tables $50 111nd
up to $125 . Hide-ii ·beds 1390
to 8696 . Recliner~ S225 to
$375 . lamps t2B to 6126.
Dinette• $109 and up to $495.
Wood table w -6 ch1irs $285 to
t795 . Desk S1QO up to 1376.
Hutches t400 and .up. Bunk
beds complete w-maUresses
S29fi 1nd up to f395 . Baby beds
51 10. Maur ... es or bOx 1pring1
full or rwin •&amp;a. firm na. and
688 . Queen sets U25. Klng
$350. 4 dr~wer cllest $69. Gun
cabinets 6 gun . Gas or electric
range t375 . Bab'( mameue1
$36 I. · *45 . Bed framfl $20.
S30 &amp; King fr1me UO. Good
selectton . of bedroom auites.
metal cab1ners. headboards 1$30
and up to $85 .

D CD IIl

dll Newo

lnternalty in1peC1eCI an.d gua,an -

TONY'S GUN ' REPAIRS , hot
reblueina. now taking ord•
ord~r• for custom Mausars. c all
304-IP6 -4631 . .
·

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE

Thieves

~:·:,M:':~:·:·:·-::~:;:::=r:==~~=~===~~tMde14·448·0918 .
57

-. .·'.

"

8

TUES., AUG. 25

•

lAME

·&amp;:GO CIJ Big Volley The Good

u..d and Rebuilt transmiuiOf'le.

County Appliance. 'Inc. Good
used appllenc" and TV sets.
Open &amp;AM to 6PM . Mon tllru
Sat. 814-446• 1699, 627 3rd.
Ave. Gallipotis. OH .

USED APPLIANCES
Waahen, dryers. refrigl!lt'ltors.
nnge1 . Skaggs Appliance•
Upper River Rd . beside Ston~
Crest Motel. 614-446-7398.

Auto Parts
&amp; Acc~tssories

76

WOlD

EVENINO

12' alum.lnum boa, and 6'h HP
Johnson motor . 304- 875 ·
:1231 .

Workboots S18 &amp; up . (Steel •
soft toeJ . Call 61 4-446· 31 69.

GOOD

8

145 h . Chrvll• runabov1 boet.
motCM', trtllet. S•ll or trade for
van. truck. 23 Pine St. Cell

814· 448·J820.

814
986· :i'931
·
Call
814·.985-3839
or
.

Television
V-iewing

Call61-' ~ ~8 - 7fil95 .

Co11614·448· 3469 . ..

Homelite Chain S.w. 8ft. truck
topper. Mayteg Wringl!lfWuher.

BORN LOSER

Boet1 end
Motors for Sale

•19150.

Bolens-Hu1ky 10HP Wiscon1in .
42 " mowerdeck, rota tiller.
plow. snow blade and dump bed
trail•. 81400 or trade for v•n.

. C1talylic converters. only
t89.96 . Molt mOdels. tnstell•
tion also available. Muffler Man
9 Stimpton Ave., Athens, Ohio:
1 ·BOQ.843·3717.

The Daily Sentinei- Pa~~

I'Orn&amp;roy- Mitdleport, OliO

1987

18 ft . SttJcraft Cruller. Mere.
110 . with trailer . he:, cond .

Instruments

Valll!ly Furniture, · new &amp; used.
Large •action of quality furniture . 1216 Eastern Ave ..
G•llipolis .

715

~5.

Pontoon Baal- 50 H P, John 10 n,
· trail•. t27SO. Call 4514-448·
..043 after 6 :00 PM. .

f11h tanks. complete with stand
l!l!'ld fish, both tor S225. Cell
614· H2 -87B3 .

NEW· Weotorn bootl· 130.

5024 .
3 rooms and bath. gas hel!lt.
ground floor. waaher and dryer
hook up, no children, immediate
OCCUJ)Iricy. No pets,. phone
304-676- 4480 ext 63 or 80.

KIT 'N' CAilLYLI ®b)' LMr)' Wrlfllt

814·256·6090 .

G11 range. $50, Cloth•

Tueldily. August

Tuesday, August 26, 1987.

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

L Y E.U

L A

P B N Y A. M ,

T D U

E T GA
B M

uc

·.

X C

SCLAP .

.·

J E N X C V E G X

Yesterday'• Cl')'lltoquote: WHEN A MAN HAS NOT A
GOOD ~EASON FOR DOING A THING, HE HAS ONE
GOOD REASON FOR LETIING IT ALONE. - THOMAS
SCOTT

,•

,.

•

I

•

�0-The

--Local briefs-Grey to hear cases Sept. 2
Judge Lawrence Grey, Athens, presiding judge of the Fourth
District Court of Appeals,. announces that four cases are·
scheduled to be heard on Sept. 2 when the court convenes in
Meigs Cou nty.
In addition to Judge Grey, the court is comprised of Judge
Homer E. Abele of McArthur and Judge Earl Stephenson of
Portsmouth.
The court of appears reviews all cases heard or tried in lower
courts in which a decision is being appealed. These cases might
have been tried in common pleas, probate or juvenlle,
municipal or county courts and may be eithereivU or crjmlnal
cases.
The f,wr cases to be heard on Sept. 2.1nclude the State versus
Basham, Reed versus Reed, Davis versus Motorists Insurance
Co., and the State versus Barstow.

"

Squads have four rolls Monday
Four calls were answered by local units Monday, the Meigs
County Emrgenry Medical Services reports.
.
At 2:29p.m., Pomeroy and Chester took Willie Morrison from
the Baum Lumber Co.. to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Salem
Township Department extinguished a brush fire on Vance Road
at 5:53p.m.; Rutland at 9:34p.m. took Dennis Searles from
Loop Road to Holzer Medical Center. and Tuppers Plains at
11:56 p.m., treated Nara Hartrnan on the New Hope Road.

Name Fisher ...

Continued from page

gas self help program . The
program Is a feasibility study
and the possibilities of a low cost
purchasing of g&lt;s. The cost of the
study will be $300 for the district.
Brent Bissell was accepted as a

tuition student for · the current
school year.
Board members attending
were Robert Snowden, Robert
Barton, Larry Rupe and Richard
Vaughan.

r

J:le1l£f______________~c~o~nt~in~u~ed~._f_ro_m~p_a~ge__1_________
Power Co. office and a member
of Pomeroy chamber,.a luncheon
for invited guests was held at
Pomeroy Village Hall. The luncheon was sponsored by MaldenJenkins Construction .

Kenny Buckley, ODOT supervisor; reported that final painting, seeding, .mulching and general clean-up at the bridge site
will start next week arid probably
take two weeks to complete.

from page 1
; J Jleport . · · - -Continued
M ..,uu
--- ----darkened area so the chamber of
commerce will improve the
interior of the depot building at
Diles Park so it can be used for
the display. The bubble machine
will be used outdoors at Diles
Park.
A bea·n dinner in the evening on
Sept. 18 wilJ.open the block party,
festivities and county buoiness
people, village officials and
chamber members are invited to
attend. The block party will
occupy about the same amount of
space in the business section as It
has in past years , Blower said,
and a variety of live music will be
presented from the stage begin·
nlng at about noon. A color
television, a VCR and a number
of gift certificates will be. given
away during the day. The annual
'paper airplane contest will again
be held and there, will be a
hamburg eating contest sponsored by Pleaser's Restaurant. It
was decided that bicycles and
skateboards will not be permitted in the block party area. Meigs
Industries -.viii handle the post

party cleanup, Blower said. He
asked for village help In the
pre-party preparations. An open
house wlll be held at the new hall
of Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
American· Legion, during the
ear)y evening hours on Sept. 19
and a dance to be called the "blue
jeans ball " wUI be held at the hall
from 8 to midnight with music by
the Crossover Band.
Mayor Hoffman reported that
progress is being made on a

CLEVELAND iUP l) Monday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Daily Number
152.
Ticket sales totaled $1.165,292,
with a payoff due of $933,827.
PICK-4
3596.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$176.514.50. with a payoff due of
$79,490.
PICK-4 $1 st raight bet pays
$3,888. PICK -4 $1 box bet pays
$162.

South Central Ohio
Mostly cloudy today, with a
chance of showers and highs
between 75 and 80. Cloudy
tonight , with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms and a low
between 65 and 70. Showers and
thunderstorms likely Wednesday , with highs in the upper 80s.
The probability of precipitation is 40 percent today and
tonight and 60 perc e nt
Wednesday.
Winds will be variable at less
than 10 mph today and light and
southeasterly tonight.
Ohio Extended Forecast
Thursday through ·Saturday
A chance of showers Thursday,
with clearing skies Friday and
mostly sunny Saturday. Highs
will range from the mid 70s to the
mid 80s each day. Overnight lows
will be in the 60s early Thursday
and ranging from the upper 50s to
the lower 60s Friday and Saturday mornings.

Announ('ements
To meet Thursday
A special meet ing of Racine
American Legion Post 602 will be
held at 7:30p.m. Thursday at the
post home.
Women's fellowship meets
The Meigs Count y Churches of
Christ Women 's Fellowship will
meet a t 7:30p.m. Thursday at the
Bradbury Church of Christ with
the program to be presented by
Middleport Mill E nds.

you'd understand ," said a sheriff's department officer at the
scene of the accident this mornIng. "Everything was just so
mangled that It took a long time
·
to get bim out."
A small fire in one of the
trailers was also extinguished by
the tire department, according to
the fire department spokesman.
One of the first people on the
scene was Mac McDonald, Point
Pleasant, accor.dlng to the sheriff's deputy. McDonald was on
his way to work at the Goodyear
Tire and Rubber Plant and had
stopped for a traffic light at the
intersection of Routes 2 and35, he
said ..
"I heard a truck driver say that
there had been an accident," said
McDonald , who returned to the
scene this morning.
Because he carries a fire
extinguisher In his vehicle, he
said he decided to proceed to the
accident. "Instead of going to
work I thought I'd try and help
somebody," McDonaid said.
When he arrived on the scene.
before police and rescue unit s
arrived, Cave was conscious,
McDonald said. " He was talking
when we got there. He was
screaming 'Get me out of here.'
He had blood ail over him a nd he
was gasping for air," he said.
McDonald and others .on the
scene attempted to pry the metal
away with a crow bar but were
unsuccessfuL "We go t up there
but there was nothing we could
do," McDonald said. " He was
· just jamm ed in there too tight."
The tractor portion of the 1986
GMC vehicle owned by C.W.
Transport , Inc. of Bridgeview.
Ill . that Cave was driving was
estimated to be a total loss. while
damage to the trailer wa s estima ted at $5,000, the sheriff's
spokeswoma n said. The trailer
portion of the tractor-trailer
operated by Hensley and owned
by C.W. Fletcher, Inc. of Circleville, Ohio, wa s estimat ed to be a
total less while damage to the
trac tor portion was · listed at
$10,000, the spokeswoman sa id .
The sheriff's department Is
continuing its investigation into
the accid&amp;nt.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Admitted -Christina Pullins.
Pomeroy; Clyde Bobo, Reedsville: Willie Morrison, Fairview,
N.C. ; Ivory Bush, Middleport.
Discharged - Barbara Pratt ,
Laur&lt;J Scott.

Baryshnikov limes (wo
MANSFIELD, Mass. tUPll Due to popular demand , a second
performance has been scheduled·
for ballet legend Mikhail Baryshnlkov and his dance company at
the Great Woods Center for the
Performing Arts.
Baryshnikov will appear Sept.
3 and 4 at the ampltheater.

Area deaths rr:=;;:::::;:;:::::=::=::~
.THANK YOU

Former Minersville resident
Frederick M. Hood Sr., 67, of5145
Trelus Way, Sylvania, died unexpectedly on Aug. 3. Mr. Hood was
born Nov. 24, 1919andwasaclose
friend of Floyd arowp, Middleport. Services were held Aug. 6at
the Reeb F1,meral Home In
Sylvania. Burial was In Toledo
'Memorial Park.

,

..

"

FACEMYER LUMBER
CO. FOR BUYING
MY HOG AT THE
'87 MASON
COUNTY FAIR

658

9152

Page4

•

at y

Vol .37. No.76

\~

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"ll.
'

Cloudy, chance of showers tonight. Low near 70.
Showers likely Thursday.
Highs In 80s.

•

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, August 26, 1987

Copyrt~htod 1987

2 Sections. 16 Pages · 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Bad weather stalls tankers in Persian
Gulf
.
.

.

.THIS YEAR'S RESERVE CHAMPION PAIR
OF LAMBS ~ Tile reserve champion pair ·of
lambs were purchased Friday night at the ann.ual
4-H-FFA llv'e stock sale by Peoples Bank, Pt.
Pleasant, Mason and New Haven. The animal,
owned by .\dam Sheets, Pomeroy, sold for $5.25

Bailey second in horseshoe event

· k
D8l"}Y S t OC

Harry Lee .Bailey. 1126 E . Main
Sl., Pomeroy, took second place
in the Governor 's Open Horse·
show Pitch! Contest held at the
Ohio

•

prices
(o\s of 10::!0 a.m.)
Provided by
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewi
Firm

MANAMA, Bahrain iUPI) - A northbound
convoy of re- fl agged Kuwaiti ta nkers was bogged ·
down in bad weather near the volatile Strati of
Hormuz as the Western naval presence In the
Persian Gulf region esca lated with tht- approach
of more British and French warships.
A heavy haze and Arabia n desert sa nd storms
driven by 25-knot winds reduced visibility to
several hundred yards Tu~sday in the sout hern
gulf and Strait of Hormuz. holding up the tankers
and their U.S. Navy escorts. shippirig sources
said.
Two re-fiagged Kuwaiti tankecs. the 81,2&amp;3-ton
Surf Cily and the 79;999 'ton Chesapeake City have
bee n·anchored in the Gulf of Oma n si nce Sunday,
waiting to make the 550-miie jourMy to Kuwait.
A southbound convoy, which Included thC'

Jler pound. The bank purchased three other
animals. Pictured are front, 1-r; Adam S~eets,
owner, Jcrod Cook, as$1sllng; standln,, . Jim
Lewl~ , president and CEO of Peoples Dank, Pam
o\sh, Fair Queen, ScottOberholzer, Fair King, and
Randy VanMeter, vice president of the bank.

FIT and TRIM

Price

mlne,damaged superfanker Bridgeton , passed
through the Strait of Hormu~ Monday alter a
voyage that Included a 10-minut k standoff with an
Iranian warship.
But Iran Tuesday sought to play down the
incident. saying there was no confrontation only a display of U.S. military muscle.
.
The Islamic Republic News Agency said an
Iranian navy source " denied report s of an
encount er on Monda y between an Iranian warship
and a convoy of U.S. ships escortin g Kuwaiti
ships."
The !RNA dispatch denied reports that
helicopter.gunships from the amphibious assault
carrier USS Guadaicanal hovered over the
Iranian W'lrshlp.
"The tJ .S. claim is utterly unfounded and is a

OPEN -- NOW TAKING
APPOINTMENTS

Am Electric Power .......... .. .27 )'6
AT&amp;T .......... .. ............ .. ....... 34 %
Ashland Oil .............. .. .. .... .. 70 Y,
Bob Eva ns Farms ...... ........ 25 ~
Charming Shop pes .............. 31 ~
Federal Mogui. ... .. .... .. ........ 47 V.
Goodyear T&amp;R .. .. ........ ....... 73 Y,
Heck's lnc ................. ......... 41h
Lands' End ............ ............. 53V..
Limited Inc ... ................. :.... 49
Multimedia lnc ......... .. ........... 71
Rax Resta!Jtant s ...........·.....

Bailey won five games and lost
three. pit~hing H9rlngsout of the
402 pitched for a percentage shot
or .17.1 percent.

"A NEW CONCEPT IN
EXERCISING"

HOU~~: ~U!'~A-~~ P .M.
MONDAY thru SATURDAY
12 NOON -10 P.M.
SUNDAY

FIT AND TRIM

~~

Robbins &amp; Myers ................... 11
Shoney's Inc ................... ....... 32
Wendy's lntl... .................... 11 y.;
Worthington lnd ......... ......... 25 16

lOS Butternut An.

-992-3033

PIPER

Pomeroy

NEXTTOFARMERSBANK

Racine Cou ncil ha s given a
first of three required readin gs to
a vicious dog ordinance.
The ordi nance provides that
vicious dogs must be regi s tered
with the chief of police as well as
with the count y auditor; a dog
must be securely confined in a
locked enclosure with a roof and
also on a chain so as not to be able
to reach the s ides of the enclo_•..,,.·l.:'&lt;
ur~- While o(f 11re~es. the
anfriial "must be oil · a six foot
chain and muzzled. Owners must
~ave a $50,000 liability polic y and
violators will be fined $1,000 and
six months in jail.
Meeting recently. the council
acknowledged don ations of Cora
Beegle, Buzz Beegle, and Shirley
Beegle to the vill age for the
Shrine
Park in memory of the ·
2, Point Pleasant. The Roushes won the VCR as a
late Joseph Beegle. A thank-you
result of vlsitinr: ihe Meigs County Fair display of
lett er from Coac h Bill Hensler
the motor company.
was read thanking the town for

NAMED WINNERS - Nona Nelson, left,
owner ol the Smith· Nelson Motor Co., Pomeroy,
presents a VCR to lfl•ne and De!lnls Roush, Route

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71

But a spokesman for Britain's Transport
. Department, which must approve re-registration
or ships, said he knew nothing about the.transfer.
Earlier Tuesday, British Foreign Secretary Sir
Geoffrey Howe reiterated government policy and
said that as far as Britain is concerned, "the·socalled process of re-flagging is not something that
plays any political part at all."
·
The Foreign Office has insisted that under
British Jaw, re-flagging " is a commercial matter
for shipowners" and does not involve the
governmen t.
A U.~. Navy battle group headed by tht'
refurbished World War .!1 battleship USSMissourl
also is steaming toward the Persian Gulf. At
present the United States has more than 40 naval
vessels in. the area.
.
In Tunis. Tunisia, the Arab League passed; a
motion Tuesday criticizing Iran for not heeding a
U.N. Security Council resolution demanding· a
cease- fire in the nearly 7-year-old war betweeen
Iran and Iraq.

•

OUIIIIC.

Ut .

•

A three-year contract which
would ha ve expired Dec . :n was
extended a nd pay increases for
teac hers and ad m ini stra tors
given when So uthern Local
Board of Education met Monda y ·
night In regular session. Pa y
increases are retroactive from
July 1 of this year. The extended
· contract will expireJ une 30, 1989.
Under the extend ed contract.
the salary for a teac her with no
experience and a bachelor's
degree is $16,300 for the 1987-SR
school and $17,000 for the 1988-89
year. A beginning teacher with a
master's deg ree will make
$18,198.95 this school year and
$18,980.50 next.
Under the contract which was
expiring, a teacher with a bachelor's degree and no experience
would have made $15,868.50 this
year and with a master's degree
would have made $17,717.18.
The salary •for a teacher with
five y,e ars experience and a
bachelor 's degree will be
$19,586.08 this year and $20,427,20
next year. With a master's
degree a five -year teacher will
receive $21.868.08 this year and
$22,!l07.20 in 1988-.89.
Under the expiring contract
the salary for a five-year teacher
with a bachelor's would have
been $19,067.59 and with a master's, $21,289.18.
With ten year's teaching experience and a bachelor's degree a
teacher wlll make $23,535.57 this
school year and with a master's
degree, $26,278.86. Next year's

hydrogen overtu r ned where the
two highw ays cross east of
downtown . An area a half mile
around the junctjon was evacuated as a precaution.
Emergency crews worked
throughout the night. allowing
the liquid to escape as firefigh ters poured water on lhe truck.
The vented hydrogen turned into
gas upon contact with the air.
seqding plumes of whit e vapor

Increases will be $24,546.30 and
$27,407'.40 respectively.
The salary under the expiring
contract lor 10 year's experience
and a bachelor's degree would
have been $22,912.fi.3 and
$25.583.20 with a master's.
Also under the expiring contract, step Increases stopped at
13 years experience. Under the
new conl'ract, step increases wUl
be given all7 years and again at
25 years. A teacher with 17 years
experience will now receive
$27.261.75 and $30,432.10 for a
bachelor's degree and master's
degree respectively. Next year a
17-year teacher with a bachelor's
will receive $28,432.50 and with a
master's. $31.739. A teacher with
25 years experience and a bachelor's will receive $28,281.13 this ,
year and $29,496.70 next . With a
master 's degree and 25 years a
teacher will get $31,573.10 this
year aqd $32,929 next.
· Another contract change Includes payment of $50 a day to
teachers and administrator for
unused personal days.
Appoiqted by the board as head
teacher at Letart Falls Elementary was Roger Roush. Hired as a
teacher at Letart Falls was Dixie
Circle and given a continuing
teaching contract was high
school teacher Barbara Beegle,
Employed as substitute
teachers were; Jane Manuel,
elementary level; ·Pamela
Murphy, elementary: Judith
Crooks, English and general
science; Lu&lt;!llle Haggerty, eleI

assistance in re moval of absence of the mayor, council
bleac hers from the field. A tetter authorized Cleland to proceed
from Joyce Manuel was read in with the permits for the apartregard to a large tree that has .ment complex construction and
dangerous limbs hanging over the renovation of the medicalher tra iler . Council authorized dental building. The permits are
Frank Cleland to send a letter to required by · the flood damage
the heirs of the lot where the tree prevention ordinance because
is ·located and explain the poten- both structures will be In the 100
tial liabilit y .
year flood plain . Council is
A letter was received from the studying the problem of resiFarmer Home Administration in .!Wats · not . ~ saUs~~Y
refei"ence to the Elmwood Ter- • · contalqers fOr the dlsjibs!t)on of
race apartments .project which garbage and trash. The next
wlli have 'elght one bedroom and meeting will be Sept. 8, Tuesday,
12 2-bedroom facilities. The pro- since the regular meeting night
ject is designed for famiiles but falls on Sept. 7. Labor Day. ·
Attending the meeting were
senior citizens will qualify. The
project is lor low income Robert Beegle. Frank Cleland,
persons.
Carroll Teaford. Larry Wolfe,
Cleland reported that the council members; Clerk Jane
budget commission ha s ap- Beegle, street commissioner,
proved the 1988 village budget Blenn Rizer, Robert Johnson,
with only slight increases in the fire chief; Marshal Joe Kirby,
general fund receipts. In the Peggy Kirby and Joe Drasko.

traffic resumes after ordeal in Columbus .
wafting Into the air.
By 9 a .m .. the trailer had been
righted, a new tractor had been
hooked on and the rig moved out,
police officers said.
" They're moving cones and
flares and letting the traffic
through," police Sgt. Bob Douglas said shortly aft er 9 a.m.
The reopening of the highways
also cleared the way for approxi-

Southern board extends pact

104."

2P&amp;OI

rem~ved,

By GRETEL WIXLE
COI.•UMBUS. Ohio 1UP II -An
overturned tank truck that
ieakl'd hi ghly fl ammable liquid
hydrogen wher~ two busy interstate hi~thways meet
near
downtown was ri~thted today
allowing traffic to resume.
Interstates 70 and 71 into the
downtown area were· closPd
Tu~sday night when a tank&lt;'r
carrying 15,0011 gallo ns or liquid

tml
~®

1'1.11 II ....THill
Tl Wll •ziiiiiiPflll IPIEE

show-off of military power," !RNA said.
In another incident Monday, the destroyer USS
Kidd sprayed machine-gun fire across the bows of
two Arab fishing boats that strayed too close to th e
southbound convoy.
West ern navies are continuing to build up t.heir
forces In the region following Kuwait's decis ion to
request U.S. and Soviet help to stem a series of
Iranian attacks on Kuwaiti shipping.
In Egypt, authorities said a fi ve-ship French
mine-swee ping force .ordered to the gulf two
weeks ago slipped through the Suez Canal
Tuesday and into the Red Sea.
' A British mine -sweeping force also is on its way
to the Persian Gulf.
In London, Independent Television News
reported Tuesday that a Kuwaltt-owned supert a~ ker Is being transferred to a London subsidiary ·
so that t.he ship can be re- flagged and receiv e
British naval protection In the region.
!TN identified the vessel as the 267,000-ton
superta nker !II Faiha, owned by the state-run
Kuwait Oil Tanker Co.

Racine Council hears initial :
~eading of·new dog ordinance

OWNEI, NEIUA SEYUI

JELVET

U!

Daily Number
Pick 4

lARGE ROLL

!!
5

Ohio.Lottery

Molitor's .
streak
•
continues

~~mb~~~~~die-r~i~;~i~~~~iii~iii~lll~~~;~~~~~~~iiii~iiii~;~~~~=~---·

Weather

State school foundation subsidy pay ments to the three Meigs
Coun ty local school districts for
August tot a led $581,598.01.
Amounts rece ived by each district include Eastern Local.
$122'.120.95; Meigs Local,
$334.842.24, a nd Southern, ,
$124,634.82. · In addition. the
Meigs County Board of Education received a direc t allotment
of $28,093.75.

(Con tinued from page 1)

port. Larry Ewing of Rio Grande
College is assisting with the
project. The mayor also reported
that progress is being made on
the two new basket bail courts at
Hartinger park. Plans are underway also for the establishment of
a volleyball court ~t the park as
well as for lights to be installed in
the new areas.
A!tending· the meeting were
Mayor Hoffman, Clerk-Treasuer
Jon I\uck, and councll members,
Dewey Horton. James Clatworthy; Jack Satterfield. William Walters and Bob Gilmore.

Lottery numbers

Funds distributed

Truck ...

'·

mentary; Helen Maag, elementary; Valerie J . Hanstine. ele·mentar y; Bernadette H .
Anderson, mathematics and
science; Mary C. Canady,
music: Nancy Basye, elementary; Conl)le Smith, elementary;
Vicki Haley, elementary; Jeff
Skinner. social study; Kathleen
S. Parker, vocational agriculture
production and business; Charles G. Bush. science: Larry
Gibbs, Letart, W.Va., physical
education; John W. Barcus,
political science and sociology;
Carolyn Tripp, English and read ing ; Brent Marshall,
bookkeeplnf:·basic business; Robert Shaver. music and driver ·
education.
Hired as substitute secretaries
were Nancy Carnahan, Pam
Diddle, Teresa Drummer, Shirley C. Pyles Evans, Peggy S. Hill,
Toni M. Hudson, Susan L. Roush
and Mildred Williams.
Hired as substitute teacher's
aides were Nancy Carnahan,
Tammy Chapman, Phyllis J.
Cross. Pam Diddle, Teresa
Drummer, Shirley C. Pyles
Evans, Peggy S. HU!, Tbnl M.
·Hudson, Deborah Rizer, Robyn
Reiber and Mildred Williams at
Racine Elementary only and
Theresa VanMeter at the kindergarten only. .
Hired as substitute cook and
substitute' custodian was Nancy
Neutzllng. Hired as substitute
cook and substitute teacher's
aide was Allee Williams .
Continued on page 6

mat ely 5,000 people in the area to
like a "mini atomic bomb" . scene for cuts on his lefl ear and·
return to their homes and
because of the potential for . arm. Parsons escaped injury.
businesses.
Schoonover, who was cited for
explosion. said Battalion Chief
They spent the night with
Robert Smith of the Columbus failure to control his vehicle, told
family a nd friends in other parts
Mayor Dana Rinehart he felt the
Fire Division.
of the city, and about 10 people
Ail highway lights were turned rear wheels of the rig begin to slip
went to a shelt er set up at a school
off because officials feared the on pavement wet by light rain
O\ltside the area. said Red Cross
electricity could spark an just as the tanker truck apofficials.
proached the tur n that leads
explosion.
One wing of Children's Hospi·
Hydrogen, which can be used traffic from I- 71 southbound to
tal was on the eastern fringe or
to heat-treat steel and to make I-70 westbound.
the area. Hospital workers
Vince Gutierrez, a member of
other chemicals. is extremely
Union
Carbide's emergency removed patients from rooms that . flammable .
faced the affected area into the
'' It's the same stuff the Hinden- sponse team, said the tanker was ·
hails and covered windows with
burg was full of, and It's very not damaged enough in the
sheets and mattresses to reduce dangerous ," said Wes Drake of accident to set off any of Its own
the dangers of flying glass In an
the Ohio Environmental Protec- self-triggering safety
•
·
tion Agency, referring to the equipment.
explosion.
The tanker truck is owned by dirigible that exploded In New ' Before the transfer procedure
began, a venting system on the
the Linde Division of the Union Jersey in 1937.
tanker
was used to allow the
Carbide Corp. In Ashtabula. A
Truck driver Jerry Schoonhydrogen
to be slowly vented to
Union Carbide team arrived over, 45, of Bristolvllle , and his
decrease
pressure inside the
from Belmont, W.Va. shortly relief driver, Patrick Parsons,
after the accident to transfer the 38, of Jefferson, were en route tank. Firelighters· also hosed
from Ashtabula to Loulsvllle, Ky. down the tanker throughout the
hydrogen to another tanker.
Authorities treated the tanker Schoonover was treated at the night.

ROAD BLOCK - Pollee and fire personnel In
· Columbus block an on-ramp to Interstate 70
Tuesday night after. a tanker truck hauling 7,000

pounds of liquid hydrogen overturned on. the 1-78,: :
1·71 lnterchang~. Some ~.ooo people wer; ~
evacuated and roads were closed In a hall· mile; .
radhltJ.·(UPI)
., :

'

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'

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          <elementText elementTextId="39450">
            <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="39449">
              <text>August 25, 1987</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="348">
      <name>hood</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
