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•·•

,ega D-8 The Sunday Times-Sentinel

August 3, 1986'

Pomeroy Middleport

~Free-trade agreement defended
once again caved In to pressure
By IRA R. ALLEN
' WASHINGTON (UP!! - A top from foreign exporters and are
: trade offlc.lal says Republican quite willing to continue sacrificing
:complaints abou t U.S. renewal of a American jobs on the altar of free
;worldwide tl'xtUe trade agreement trade."
Yeutter replied, "That's just
·are · ''Jlllitlcal fodder" leading to
complete
nonsense .. . Maybe that
:next week's vole on overriding the
makes
good
JDI!tlcal fodder be·
.president's veto of a tougher
tween now and next Wednesday,"
,measure.
·. U.S. Trade Representative Clay- · when the House votes.
"The president today announced
:ton Yeutter said Friday if the
that
U.S. trade officials have
Multifiber Arrangement with more
succ
essfull
y renegotiated a
lhan 50 trading partners llad not
stronger
and
more comprehensive
'been signed, "we would go back to
Multifiber
Arrangement
that will
~be law of the jungle" with open
help
the
tex!Ue
and
apparel
indus) rade warfare. ·
i But Sen. Strom Thurrnond. R tries compete more fairly in the
international marketplace," said
~.C .. predicted the agreement could
' ead to an override of President White Hou se spokesman Larry
--Reagan's veto of a bill that cuts Speakes.
:lexllle Imports :lJ percent.
Yeutter said the overall agree: He said, "It appears to me that
ment with 54 trading partners
~ur negotiators in Geneva have
~

~rred

early Friday In Geneva
and •closes most loopholes In the
previOus pact that allowt'd Asian
Proct\lcers to export clothes made or
ftllel'&amp; tKit subject to duties.
RA!agan llad promised to negotiate ... tough new MultlOber
Arrangement last December when
he vetoed the bill.
Sen.. Ernest HoU!ngs, D-S.C..
called the agreement "a fraud and
a sellout of the American people."
"! am deeply dlsap(Dintoo' In the
president that he has not stood up
for this Industry," said S..n. James
Broyhill, R-N .C. "It seems to me
that the administration with an
agreement like this Is helping us to
get the votes necessary to override
the veto."
Yeutter said tile vetoed trade bill
would lead to retaliation 'against
American farrners because the five

!U.S. rallies to help stricken farms
•
:

By United Press International
~ A group ol NASCAR drivers, a
~canadian Industrialist and the
~ federal government all found ways
.~ to helpSoulhernfarmers struggling
~to survive a $2.3-bllllon drought -

.

~' the

region's worst on record.

: A 46-truck "Hayride !m" cara: van of NASCAR trucks traveled
: from Charlotte, N.C., to Columbus,
• Ohio, Friday and was scheduled to
~ pick up some 20,!XXl bales of hay
&lt;Saturday to feed starving cattle In
~ Nort h Carolina.
: Supporters crowded onto hlgh• way overpasses along the 480-mile
: trip Fr~ay waving "Thank you"
: signs and taking pictures, said

. NASCAR flagman Harold Kinder.
: who drove the lead truck.
" "I 've never had a feelin~ exact ly
: like that," he said. "It made you f&lt;'&lt;'l

proud that you were participating."
In Washington Friday, Agriculture Secretary Richard Lyng announced a broad relief program
that includes shlpment of surplus
grain to Southern farmers.
"At the behest of the president,
the U.S. Department of Agriculture
is launching an intensified effort to
help farrners who are victims of
this national tragedy," he said.
In Canada, Industrialist Hamson
McCain said Friday he has
launched a drive to gather 2,400tons
of hay for the drooght-strtcken
farmers.
Farmers, businessmen and pli·
vate citizens in lhe Pastern Cana·
dian province of New Brunswick
already have pledged 6Ql toos of
hay for the project.
"When I saw this campaign being

DPEC meeting unproductive
•

By EDWARD ROBY
r GEJ\EVA tUPI I - Four oft he 13
:members of the OPEC oil cartel
:rejected a plan to eliminate thr
:organization's excess production
and raise oil pliers by imposing
~tricl production limit~ . tt.? plan's
0Atgerian sponsor said todav.
; Algrrian delegation officials
)lamed thr holdouts as the United
..Arab Emirates, lraq, Kuwa it and
:S.udi Arabia .
• The ministers ' rrject ion lrf1 thr
1nembers ::ts far apart as ever on
~ow to curb pruduction and r&lt;'versf'
'1he crash in oil prices.
; OPEC members together have
:lost hall of thPir revenue thjs Y'f'a r
-with prices falling from S28 to about
~10 a barrel
: Sheik Ahmed Zaki Yamani of
·dominant Saudi Arabia, asked if he
thought tll&gt;re could be agreement ,
·merrly replied : "We are hopefu l. "
: Algeria, supported ~- other
:oPEC "hawks" Libya and Iran.
'wants total production slashed b;·
·up to 4 or 5 million barrels a da.v to
elim inate the world oil glut and
'"'faJS('
'
'
pi'ICf'S.
; But Saudi Arabia and its Persian
:Gulf allif's want only voluntary
·r£'S iraints on grounds it Lc:: impossi·
bl(;' to achieve agreement on strirt
·and enforceable Individual quota s.
There was still no sign of how
.,much longer til&lt;' haggling would
4

lasT but SPVPral delPgates said they
lhoughtthP conference- the fourth
in five months - would end Sunday
or Monday.
A committ('(' of fivr ministers
lat e Friday adjourned itsdiscussoon
of a plan to im(Dse country-bycountry production quotas that
would redu ce the ca rtel's daily
production to 16 million, instead of
the current 20.5 million , OPEC'
spokesman JamPs Audu sa id. He
~aid thr talks were inconclusive.
The ministers of Kuwait and
Ecuador joined the quota panel that
Initially included on ly Nigeria.
Indones ia and Algeria . But United
Arab Emirates oil m inister Mana
Saeed Otaiba refused to participate
and said he was "not optimistic"
about the concept.
Gulf war foes Iran and Iraq have
placNl political conditions on their
quota alloca tions.
Gulf delegation sources said the
quota plan was discussed only to
appea se Algeria and other OPEC
pricP hawks. includ ing Iran and
Lib~' &lt;:I .

TIIC'

mrmbrr counlliPs were

unllkely to share production cuts to
achieve a criling of 15 million-16
million barrc'ls a da ~· bC'cauSP thr
conferrnce has ah'f'ady n:jected a
morf' modrst curtailment .to 17.6
million. th!'~' sJid.

mounted in the United States, I
said : My God, we should join that,"
McCain said. "The Americans are
the most generous people In the
world. They're the first to reach for
their wallets when someone's in
trouble. Well, they've got a lot of
trouble now."
In Columbia, S.C., more than 125
farmers rallied to thank Midwestern farmers for free hay, and they
formed a non-profit farm relief
group \lith an "Adopt-A-Cow"
program.

{Continued from D-1 I
W.R. "Dick" Brown Insurance,
David T. Evans, Creations by
Sandy, Convenient Food Market,
Carter Tractor Sales, Blackburn
Realty and Altizer Farm Supply.
The sales, which lasted 5V, hours,
were highlighted by the donation of
some animals to various organiza tions and events. Ohlo Valley Bank,
which bought Tanya Cochran 's
!(!'and champion hog, donated it to
Ill&gt; Galiia County Children's Home,
while GailipolL' attorney William
Eachus donated a hog he (Xlrchasoo
to Gailia County Children' s
Services.
A steer owned by Mike Harden,
jointly purchased by OVB, C &amp; S,
Central Trust, Buckeye Building &amp;
Loan and Farm Credit Services.
was given to the annual Farm-City
Day fuoclion.
It was announced durtng the sale
thaI River City Farro Supply would
present a trophy and cash award to
the top lamb, swine and steer
project born and raised In Gallla
County, starling with the 1987 fair .
The presentation will be made
during the Parade ri. Champions.
Auctioneers wbo kept the bidding
brisk were Thmmy Joe Stewart,
GaUipolis. and Lee Johnson, Rt. 2,
Crown City. Ring men were Tom
Woodward III, Skip Meadows.
Wayne Jividen, J .E. Sommer, Pete
Sommer, Bud McGhee and Eugene
Stephanie
Carter,inCourtney
Elliott. Working
the ringMorl-1·
were
son. Jo Ann Stewart and Tracy
Stewart. and clerking was done by
veteran Charles Shaver, who has
worked at every livestock sale since
1952. and by Tom Fllpe.

1987 RCII

1987ftCII

1987ft011

13" REMOTE
COLOR PORTABLE

19" COLOR
PORTABLE

25' ' (OLOR CONSOLES

26" COLOR
CONSOLE

$579°0

Quality

Service After
The Salt .

•

PINE, PECAN, OAK

·$4880°
1'87

RCII

19" REMOTE
COLOR PORT ABLE

1917ft011
20" STEREO
COLOR PORTABLE

$388°0 $5290°

ELBERFEL-DS
POMROY- 992·3671

name, and will only holld support
for a votetooverrtde the Jresldent's
veto.
"While the Reagan administration will no doubt praise this
agreement as exemplary, It Is clear
that there has been little or no
progress made In solving major
problem~ that existed In the current
Multifiber Arrangement," Thurmond said.
"By renegotiating the. MFA, we
have provided the maximum posSI·
ble protection lor American textile
workers without sacrificing jobs In
our healthy ex(Drt industries or
overho rdenlng American consumers," Whlte House spokesman
Larry Speakes said.

He said the "sledgehammer
approach" of the bill Reagan vetoed would cost consumers an
extra S44 billion for clothing In the·
next five years tecauSl' It would.
keep out cheaper Imports.
There are about 1.4 million textile
and apparel workers In the United·
States and perhaps 600~&lt;XXlworkers :
in related fields who!ll' jobs are:
directly threatened by textile and ·
apparel Imports, down about .
:JJO.!XXlln the last five years.
.
Without the MFA, Yl'lltter said, -otll&gt;r countries would be entitled,
under the General Agreement on·
Tariffs and Trade to impoSl' lillionsof dollars In penalties against.
American exporting Industries.

.. * * llelcome * * j
~ATIONAL BAR ASSOCIATION

Mason County
fair opening

Daily Number: 589

-Page 6

Lotto: 8, I, 13,

17, 39, 9

•

at y
Vol .36, No .63
Copyrighted 1986

Tonight, mostb' clear. Low · ..
around 60. Ught and varlabiO :winds. TUesday, partb' cloud;y.
Hlgb In the mid 80s.

•

enttne
1 Section, 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, August 4, 1986

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Testimony accuses Rhodes of job favoritism
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UUPii - Allegations that
former Gov. James A. Rhodes participated the same
type of state employee manipulation that he accuSl'S
Gov. Richard Celeste of doing are contained in court
records of a 1981 suit against Rhodes.
According to a story In Sunday's Cleveland Plain
Dealer. the former governor personally instructed
department heads to hire Republicans for state jobs

61st Annual Meeting

on numerou s occasions during his four terms as
governor.

Rhodes, the Republican candidate challenging
Celeste In the fall election, has frequently accused
Celeste of polltlclzlng state government.
The testimony also claimed that administration

least two ot his own appointees of setting up a JDlllical
hiring system similar to what the forrner governo r
has accused Celeste of doing since he took office in
1983. Celeste has defended his administration' s hiring
of Democrats, claiming similar practices were
common durtng Rhodes ' 16 yearsin &lt;iftce . Among the
ailegatlons In the records:
-Rhodes mel with departments heads and told
them to hire qualified Republicans;
-Ohio Department of Transportation officials
Instructed the department's regional offices to hire
Republicans first. If there were no Republicans
available, independents could be hired . then
Democrats, In that order;
-State officials would check with the Ohio

officials Implemented Rhodes' orders by establishing
a sophisticated hirtng process that Included regular
checks of employee voting records and gave priority
to Republican applicants who contributed to Ill&gt;
party.
Details of a political screening system allegedly
used during the Rhodes years are contained In the
depositions of two former state officials and in
documents filed with the lawsuit obtained by the Plain
Dealer. One of the depositions had been ordered
sealed and was not public record.
The lawsuit was settled oot of court In 1982 and the
former employee was rehired bY the Rhodes
administration at a substantially higher sa lary.
The testimony reveals Rhodes was accused bY at

Republican Party to make sure transportation
department emp loyees h&gt;red by the administration
had made contribu tions; and
-Voting records of many state employees were
regularly inspected to make sure the employees voted
In Republican primaries.
When questioned by the Pl ain Dealer. Rhodes
denied being involved in a plan to hire Republicans
and would only say, "I never got involved in that I
employed the top people."
In the suit , John Podsobinsk i , a former tPmJX&gt;rary
employee in the tran sportalion department's St.
Clairsville division, claims he was deniM a
permanent job because he did not contribute to the
Republican Party.

·Group considers S. African sanctions
.,.\\UrrtOII
''
SEPARJ\TE S1RUGGLE'! Shown above, Nicaraguan PresIdent Daniel onega motions as
he addresses the Nallollal Bar
Association In Denver Friday.
Ortega wooed the nallonal black
lawyers by compartnr ther
Sandlnlsta revolution In Nlcamgua to the struggle of bl~~eks m
South Africa.

---LA__R_G_E_S-EL-EC·-T-IO_N_ _ _

-l

Fire scorches canyon
SAUGUS, Calif. (UP!) - A !Ire
fanned by stiff winds scorched !Ol
acres of brush In a dry canyon,
damaging one home. destroying a
tool barn and causing minor Injury
to one firefighter, officials said
today.
About 300 county and slate
firelighters contained the brush
fire Friday night after fighting the
blaze In the Bouquent Canyon area
for eight hours.

--·-- -

. . ._._.

..

- ------- --··· -· -...- - -.
Rock of Ages offers you a choice of 6 different colored
granites. Whatever your requirements may be, complete
•atlsfactlon Is aiSuroo with Rock of Ages.
MOI\i.-Tli[.'; .•THURS.·FRI. 9 4.M.-4 P.M.
Other hours by oppt. by calling 593 - 1455

MILL-END FABRICS - Grand openlac of MID-Iflld Fabrlco,
Middleport, wW be held aD week with special JrlcesOO merdlanclse.
Elva Corbin of Apple Grove, pl&lt;lured, operates the bu!UieM with the
assistance of her husband, Dwight.

STANLEY A. SAUNDERS
MONUMENTSGallipolil . OH .
352 Third Ave .
PH . 446 -2327

r••·······---:.·-·······--------------~
Consolidated Report of Condition for

FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS COMPANY
ASSETS
Cash and balances due from depository Institutions:
a . NonlnterPSI ·bearlng balan&lt;J&gt;s and currency coi n ........... .. .. ........ 2,036,000.00
b. Interest-bearing balances ............ .. ...... .......... .. ........... ..... .... ......... 200,000.00
Securit ies .. .. ...... .... .. .... ......... ................... .... .. .......... .... ...... .. ... ... .. .... 21,014,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell .......... ......... .. ................ ... .................... 2,950,000.00
a . Loans and lt&gt;ases, net of unearned Income .. .. .. .... .19,859,&lt;XXl.OO
b. LESS: Allowance for Joan and tease losses .................. 173,600.00
d. Loans and leases, net of unearned In rome ,
allowance, and reserve .. .. ...... ... ... .. .. .... .. .... .... .. ......... .... ... .. ..... I9 ,ii8n,OOO.OO
Premises and fixed assets (Including capitalized leases) ... .. ...... ... ....... .459,000.00
Other assets ........................ ............... .. ................. .. ... .. ..... ...... .. ...... 654,000.00
Total assets.. ... .
.. .............................................. .. ......... .. 46 .999 ,000.00
LIAWUTIES
Deposits
a . In domestic ofllces .. .. .. .......... .. ...............
.. ... ..... ............... 42,1i4 7.1)(]0.00
111 Nonlnterest-bearlng .... ........ ... .... ... .......... .... ... ...... 4,1ll4 ,000.00
11 l Interest-bearing .... ... ....... ... ... .... .. ......... .... .......... 37,843,&lt;XXl.OO
Other liabilities ...................................... .......... .. ... ...... .. ........ ....... ....... 1 1.1.000.00
Total Liabilities ..................................... ... ... .......... .. , ,.... , ... ... ...... ... .43,Hi(),OOO.OO
EQUITY CAPITAL
. .. 400.000.00
Common stock .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ... . .. .. ... .. . .... .. .... .. .. ..
Surplus ............................ .. ......... ... .. .. .... .. ................... ..... .. ..... .. .... ...... 600.000.00
Undivided protlts and capital reserves ... .. ...... .... ...................... .. ...... 2,R39.000 .00
Total equity capital ....... .... .. .. .. ...... .. ... ... ...... .. .... .. .. .... ... .. .. ... .......... ... 3,8.19,000.00
Total !labilities, Umlted -llfe preferred stock,
·
and equity capltal ...... .. ........................ .. .. ... ... .. ......... ... ................ 46.999.000.00
!, Roger W. Hysell, Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby declare that
this Report of Condition has been prepared In conformance with the Instru cti ons issued by the Board of Governors ot the Federal Reserve System and the Sta to BankIng Authority and Is tr.ue to the best of my knowledge and belief.
Roger W. Hysell , Cashier
Wt&gt;, the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of this Report of Condition and declare that II has been•exam!noo by 'us and to the best of our knowledge
and belief has been prepareilln .conformance with the Instructions Issued by the
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the State Banking Au-thorIty and Is true and correct.
·
THEODORE T. REED, JR.
RICHARD C. FOL!iROD - DIRECTORS
LESIJE F. FULTZ
JoAnn Crtsp, Notaty Public, State of Ohio. My commission expires July 17, 1988.

By MICHAEL DENNlGAN
LONDON (UPI!-Afteradinner
with Queen Elizabeth ll, British
PrlmeM!nlsterMargaretThatcher
and leaders of six Commonwealth
nations began a meeting today to
considerthelmpositlonofeconomlc
sanctions against South Africa.
Thatcher, who opposes general
economic sanctions, was '' isolated''
at the mini-summit, said Zambian
President Kenneth Kaunda who
called the meeting "crucial."
·The session began at Marlbo-'r&gt;rough House, the headquarters of
the49-nationclubthatwasformerly
the British empire.
At the start Sunday of the
three-day "review meeting," tiP
seven leaders agreed Pretoria was
making Inadequate progress at
ending apartheid but put off until
today the controversial question of
Imposing sanctions or not.
At Buckingham Palace, the
queen Sunday night hosted a dinner
for the participants In the Commonwealth "mini- summit. "
TheLondongathelingwascr~n -

of Pomeroy, Ohio and Forelp and Domestic Subsidiaries, at the close of business
June 311, 1988, a stale banldnclnstllutlon orpnlzed and operated under the banklnK
laws of this otate and a memher of the Federal Reserve System. Publillhed In accordance with a caD made by the Stale Bankln1 Aulhorlly and by the Federal Reserve Bank of this District.

COLOR TELEVISIONS
HAVE ARRIVED!!

1987RCII

countries that would be hurt most
bY the trade bill take «l percent ot
U.S. farm exports - many grown
in the same states dependent on
textlle manufacturtng.
Yl'lltter said the pact, besides
closing loopholes, allows the United
States to Impose urdlateral restraints lor two years In the case ot
Import surges and contains anti·
fraud provisions.
.
''This agreement Is worth a lot ri.
money" to U.S. textile producers,
Yeutter said, but provided no
figure.
Thurmond, from a textile- producing state, said the new MFA
"will only have the ellecl or
throwing gasoline on a smoldering

Ohio Lottery

Amount

THE 1987

S3Q800

by trade representative

."

Grand opening set
at Middleport store
The grand opening of Mill-End
Fabrics, 270M ill St.,Middleport ,
will be held lhls week with Elva
and Dwight Corbin, owners,
featuring sprcial priCE's on thelr
merchandise.
Mr. and Mrs. Corbin. who
reside near Apple Grove, have
been associated In the business
as partners with another couple
since February and more recently became the !&lt;lie owners.
Corbin while working some in
the store is employed at Kaiser
Aluminum.
Both be and his wife make

periodic toips to North and South
Carolina where tll&gt;y do most of
their buying.
In addi tion to yard goods, the
Corbins stock quilted fabric s
suitable for bedspreads with
some matching piece goods and
coordinating !lim, quilting supplies Including frames and racks,
balling bY the yard, backing,
tares and trims, pillow covers,
some patterns, accent and trtm
materials, and craft supplies.
The shop is open 9:30a.m. to 5
p.m. daily, except Thursday and
Sunday when itlsclosedaliday.

!zed as a follow-up to a fUll
Commonwealth leaders conference
last October in Nassau that proposed economic measures against

South Africa's white-minority
government.
Before it took place, the dinner
had been described as inforrnal
with no speeches but (Dliticians
said that they expec ted the queen,
who is the titular head of the
Commonwea lth , to use it to seek a
compromise.
No details were given on the
palace dinner.
Despite Kaunda's statement thai
Thatcher was "isolated" by her
anti-sanctions stand, a Brit ish
source said she was ready to
negotiate and hoped to reach a
"suceessful conclusion" to the
mini-summit.
SirL!ndenPindllng,prlmemlnlster of the Bahamas and chairman
of the meeting, said sanctions
would be discussed tnday.
"We will gel down to the business
of what further flltas~r.!!!' _might be
taken by the ~mmonweal!h wilh
respect to South Africa," be said.
The leaders of Britain, Canada,
Australia, India, Zimbabwe, Zambia and the Bahamas held a
three-hour session Sunday.
"It was significant that the heads
readily agreed that adequate progress has not been made, and that

roast to raise _funds to aid the
hungry and homeless.
About $5,&lt;XXl of tiP city's grant Is
expected to go to the Community
Free JobUst, a program that helps
unemployed people find work, city
officials said.
The program started 5\1 years
ago In Barbara Cordle's kitchen .
Since then, Cordle has been a
tireless crusader for Columbus'
poor and hung. She sa ld sh~ has

By United Press lntematlonal
Tons or llay JDUred into the
drought -parched South bY truck
and train, but agriculture officials
say it is only a stopgap measure for
rarrners who have already suffered
$2.3 billion In losses.
As a hay lraln from Kentucky, a
convoy of NASCAR race team
trucks from Ohio and trucks
donated by private businesses
rolled into South Carolina, North
Carolina, Georgia, Alabama and
Virginia durtng the weekend.
farmers expressed their thanks and

agriculture officials worried about
the future.
Jim Devine, a spokesman .for the
North Carolina Agriculture Depart ment , said it takes a bale or hay a
day to feed a 1,000-pound cow, "So
you see a bale of hay doesn 't go very
far. "

But Tal Thomas of Blackstone.
Va., was glad to get 35 bales.
"Even one bale helps when you
don't have any," Thomas said.
Devine called the massive,
mostly volunteer operation that has
brougt.. uncounted tons of free or

helped 1,600 people find work but organizations.
She said the $5,1ffi will be used
has another 2,600 names on her job
primarily
to provide direct help for
list .
the
unemployed,
such as helping to
The program pperates oot of
pay
rent,
food
and
utility bills and
donated office space and on a
shoestring. It spent $13,&lt;XXl last buying bus tickets so they can seek
year. Including $6,!XXltrom Cordle's work. Some grant money wlll be
used to run the all-volunteer office.
pocket.
Cordle, 46, a llcesnsoo practical
The grant from the city will be the
•
nurse,
said her crusade began when
first big chunk ct money Cordlr has
a
man
at her church continued
received. The rest comes frorn area
praying
for
weeks for a job.
churches and communit y

Strikers saying no to concessions

•
DISCUSSING TRANSPIAN'J'S - M.J. Modica, R.N.,
one of three coordiJiatol'8 for
IJfellne of Ohio Prorurement
(LOOP), was at Veterans Memorial HqiPital this past wook to
speak to bolpllal ~ aomel
concemklg organ tl'IIIIIIJ)lanla
lion and donation. 'J'Ite d31·long
1n1en1ce was ocheduled lhroush
Ten!ll&amp; Collins, olreclor of mtl'8lng at VMH.

some progress has been made.
The meeting or "mini· summit"
was organi1ed as a follow-up to a
full Commonwealth leaders conference last October in Nassau that
proposed economic rneasureg
against Sou th Africa's whlte- ml ~
nority government.
The Nassau accord provided for
the review meeting now to consider
sanctions - Including ban Ding air
travel to or from South Africa,
barring new investrnenl or reinv ~
estment of profits earned In South
Africa and forbidding imports ot
Sou th African agrlcu lturaf
products.
The se\'en leaders ate lunch
to~ther Sunday at a downtown·
hotel. Indian Prime Minister Rajiv'
Gandhi. who flew In Sunday
morning and was the last participant to artive. was host at the
luncheon.
At the alr]&gt;ort.""Githllll! mll(!e t(
clear he wanted to implement
quickly the sanctions outlined In .
Nassau .
Some officials have suggested
creation of a committee to coordinate Commonwealth sanctions with
Europe and the United States.

Hay shipments flood into parched South.

'Hands' money may help Ohioan's job program
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPII Money raised bY Hands Across
America may be used to lend a
hand to a free employment ofllce
run by a Columbus woman.
The city has been given $10,1ffi of
the estimated $50 million raised by
the May 25 event when five million
people linked hands from coast to

there was no genuine Intention on
the part of the South African
government to dismantle apar !held." Plndling told a news
conference.
Pindllng charaterized the tone of
Sunday's meeting as "cautious"
and said it was tak en up mostly bY
reports from a Commonwealth
''Eminent Persons Group'' that
visited South Africa and from
British Foreign Secretary Sir Geoffrey Howe. who returned last wee k
from Pretoria after failing to win
concessions on race reforrn.
The seven-member Eminent
Persons Group previously said
Pretoria was not ready to consider
reform and caUoo lor economic
pressure.
Thatcher a!(l'eed with the others
Sunday that South Africa was
foot-dragging on race reform, a
. blih!fanl!)ng British _soun.t.. ~id .
Butliesafdsli'liiisnotcHal!gt&gt;dber
basic position on opposing
sanctions.
He said that, while agreeing
Pretoria has not made adequa te
progress towards ending apartll&gt;id
- its policy of strtct racial
separation- Thatcher does believe

PITTSBURGH (UP! ) -Picket- "We know we're In for a fight and
Ing steelworkers said they planned we're wllllng to carry that fight on
to hold their ground In pressing lor for what we believe ln."
contract without wage cuts and
The last strtke by the steelbrushed oil USX Corp. warnings workers' union was In 1!159 and
that the work stoppage could lasted U6 days.
permanently silence some steel
USX Chalrrnan David Roderick,
plants.
saying that the company cannot
The nationwide walkout by 44,!XXl afford to meet the union'sdemands,
United Steelworkers, Including warned that certain "vulnerable"
23,!XXl who were already laid off, plants, If shut down, might never
was In Its third day Sunday. USX reopen.
had rejected a unlono!lerThursday
"U he thinks that threat's scaling
to keep working under the existing us, he's wrong," Conn said. "11lese
contract as negotiations continued. plants belong to him. If he wants to
USX has Bernanded concessions In shut them down, he could do It any
wages and benefits.
time.
No further talks were scheduled,
"The people on the lines want a
a company spokesman said.
decent wage and decent beneOts.
"This Is going to take a long They (jon'! want it aD," be said.
The union and the company stlll
time," said Donald Conn, president
refuse
to hodge over whether the
of Local 'lJfii or Pittsburgh's Irvin
action
was
a strike or a lock oot.
works.
The
union
contmded they were
"Morale Is hlgh. The company
loclled
out
by
the company after
better know for sure that the USW
Isn't blowing hot air," Conn added. usx refused the ooiitiiict extension

ri.fer.
USX, however, held that the
union rank and file authorized a
strtke and refused to allow Its
members to work uoder the
company's last offer.
The company said the union
labeled the move a lockout so
members could qualify for unem ployment compensation, thereby
easing the drain on the union's $210
mlltlon strike fund.
The picketers are filing · for
compensation, but cannot receive
money from the fund untll 21 days
after the work stoppage, Conn said.
USX spokesman Tom Ferrall
refused to comment on the union's
assertions.
"Mr. Roderick's statements
speak ilr themselves and I wlll not
speculate on the length ri. the
strike," he said.
One lnduslly analyst, however,
Indicated he believed USX woold
'not change Its posttk&gt;n.
w

low-cost hay to states suffering the
worst drooghl in a century "a
stopgap measure. "
"You can bring all kinds of
freight trains and airplanes In here
with a lot of hay, but you see It's
going to get eaten up very quickly.
That' s why we need the assistance
of tiP federal government," Devine
said.
Agriculture Secretary Richard
Lyng announced a broad relief
program Friday that Includes
shlpmenl of surplus grain to
Southe rn farmers.
"We are grateful that Lyng
rrcognlzed the despera te situation
we are in and came across with the
aid we need for feed for li vestock ,"

Devine said .
"C..ttlng hay to the rows- that's
wh at it's all about," said Frank
Graves, an Agriculture Department officia l in Virginia who helped
organize a Ill-ton weekend shipment to farmers from Nottoway,
Lunenbu rg. Dinwiddie, Amelia and
Prince Edward counti~ .
A 1rain carrying more t llan 71,!XXl
ba Jes of Kentucky hay arrived In
North Carolina during !he weekend
and about ID,Iffibalescamelntothe
state on NASCAR's "Hayrtde 500'
truck convoy from Columhos, Ohio.
Another 12.iro bales went to Fort
Bragg. N.C.. on 43 trucks driven by
Ohio National Cjuardsmen on
summer training exercises .

Benefit's backers unhappy
with low attendance figures
MANNINGTON, W.Va. iUPIJ -Coal Aid , a weekend concert
in lended to put a song in the hear1 s of out -of·work roal miners,
Instead lrft promoters singing the blues about tow anendance and
roo ink.
"It doesn't look they tthc bills ! were met ," chief organizer Bill
Pritchard said wearily, after the 16-hour event onded a round 2a .m.
EIIT Sunday In this coal mining townofnorthet' nlrol West Virginia .
Thousands had been expected to plunk down $10. but only 1,f:AJQ,
turned out to hear 17 bands, Including such performers as Johnny
Rodriguez, Jim Glaser and Gary l£wls and tlr Plavboys.
Pritchard had hoped to raise $100,tm but he said it appeared thr
gate would not even cover the overhead, Including $20.!XXl to pay the
pertorrners.
The event was planned for months and the money raised from the
ticket lee was to go Into the United Mine Worker's District 31 Relief
Fund which covers miners In 32 counties of West Virginia.
Pritchard could not say how much money was raised. He said
many people pledged donations a t the roncert and th at money must
be In hand before a final tally can be mad e.
Saturday night's crowd was a disappointing 400 but eventually
reached 1,500. But Pritchard suggested even oom r of those sneaked
past security to see a free concert.
While be was dlsap(Dinted at the turnout and the amount r1 rnoney
raised, Pritchard said there was one happy chorus - the concen
gave the jobless miners some natio:llll'"attention.
"The attendance was not what we llad hlped for." he said . "But we got good press coverage and I thlnk the message got out."
Pritchard complained that the concert lacked the necessary
organized support from the UMW. !ndivldual 'ofliclals In the union
pitched In, he said, but thedlstrlct of!lce would not put Its fuU weight
behind the venture.
"We could have used organized support from the union a number
of months ago," he said. "That certainly would havr OO:,n helpful."
Undaunted bY the setback, Pritchard hopes to put on a similar
show next year. He sald a f""ber cl. backers already have
approached him.

�Monday, August 4, 1986

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

------------------------~----~

Commentary
I

Long road ahead ______W_ill_w_m_F_.B_u_ck_ley;.._J_r.

The Daily Sentinel

I

Ill (;ourt Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Sen. Joseph Blden of D:!laware,
a&lt;jdresslng Secretary of State
George Shultz and tlr television
camera, acted as !bough he had just
come to town from aJ years In the
desert and discovered Pontius
Pilate sentencing Chris! to tlr
cross. Secretary Shultz said calmly
that he "resented" Blden's suggestion that Mr. Reagan's speech had
been "Immoral" and a tacit
approval of continued apartheid In
South Africa. Mr. Shultz can be a
tough customer when h&lt;&gt; wants to
be, but thl're are restraints rn
secrl'laries of state addressing
congressional committees. D:!an

DEVOTED TO THE INTER~TS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA

~lb

rsm~
~v

r-T"'L..JL--r•

M"'"E2'd• ~

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor ·
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

Achi'SOn once complained that 00
percent of foreign policy for a
secretary of state is domestic
policy.
What Mr. Shultz didn't say,
others can say. For instance:
"Biden, old shoe, when did you
discover the evils or apartheid and
the tl'Cesslty that the United States
declare economic war against that
government? Apartheid has been
going on for l! years. When first did
you comE' oot for sanctions?"
Everything in politics, and much
In life, is a maner of timing. Why
are we so excited at this particular
moment? Because of the ernE'!'-

gency decree In South Africa?
There are 8,000 South Africans
being held wlthout charges filed
against them, and In American
circumstances such a figure would
be intoler&amp;ble. But has It not
occurred to any observer of the
current scene In South Africa that
the government there might have
reckoned that In tile absence ct the
emergency decrre , 10 times 8,000
might have been killed In general
rioting? Isn't It possible that history
will judge that there was less
suffertng In South Africa than there
would otherwise have reen, had tn&gt;
government failed to act?

lE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome-. They shoold bP l ess than l:XI words
long. All letters are sub!E'C't toed lUng and fTllSI be signa:! w!lh name, a&lt;! dress and
telephone number. No unslgnW leHer s wlll be publi shed. letters should be in

good laste, addre-ssing Issu es, not

~ rsonalltles.

Ohio Politics

Crisis reaction
By LEE LEONARD
UP! statehouse Reporter

COLUMBUS, Ohio !UPI) - U nuclear missiles approached tlv&gt; United
States, a "Doomsday Plane" capable of staying aloft ~'r days would whisk
tlv&gt; president Into the skies, keeping him safe until the crisis blows over.
ThE're are those who suspect that Gov. Richard Celeste spent oome time
in his own "doomsday" aircraft a week ago when a grand jury indicted two.
top Democratic fund-raisers for bribery and perjury.
Officially, the line is that Celeste and Ohio Development Diri'Ctor I
Clarence D. Pawlicki went to Japan to visit senior executives or a major
manufacturing company about the possibility of locating a factory in Ohio.
In the absence of any proof to the contrary, Celeste and Pawlicki
probably did go to Japan, though It's tempting to believe they holed up for
the weekend In the stockroom of a Pick 'N' Pay in Cleveland until the
indictments cooled orr.
The governor's oroce offered to produce the airline tickets to Los Angeles
and Tokyo, however, and one neutral oource who was along for tlv&gt; rtde
confirmed the trtp to Japan.
But Celeste produced no results from his personal lour{lay trade mission
to the Ork'nt. He said 11&gt;: Japanese executives had questions about specific
sites In Ohio. Skeptical reporters wondered why Celeste didn't take along
any technical experts, as he usually dol'S. He said he didn't need them.
"What they were really interested in was the commitment and support
from the chief executive of the state," tv&gt; said.
Celeste did, upon his return , face the tough qui'Stions about the
indictments of thetwo Democratic fund-raisers, one or whom works for his
own campaign.
If he were going to answer the questions, It seems unlikely he wou ld have
concocted the Japanese trtp as a dodge. But maybe tlv&gt; interlude allowed
his strategists time to determine what answers would play best with the
public.
Said one longtime political observer: "He learned a lot from (former
Republican governor) Jim Rhodes and one of tlv&gt; things he learned was, U
you've got a problem, take off."
1

There is increasing pressure on the insurance companies, particularly
from Celeste and House Speaker Vernal RUle, D-New Boston, to
~ demonStrate wlth figures that t~ftltiT1l11Wide atrordlible liability
Insurance coverage for businesses and local governmen ts.
The insurance industry has insisted the "crisis" is the result ri too many
lawsuits, outrageous lawyer fees and generous awards. The Republicancontrolled state Senate pushed through a package of tort reforms to take
care of the problem.
But the momentwn is swinging I~ oti'Pr way now, as consumer groups,

altorneys and organized labor press for reform of Ohio's insurance taws
and better regulation of insuran(.'(' companies.
Rifle has promised a two-pronged package will be sent back to tlle
Sena te by early September, and last week Celeste said there will be no
wholesale revamping of tlv&gt; civil justice system until the lnsuran(.'('
Industry comes clean with data supporting the I'IPf'd.
The sense is that Celi'Ste and Riffetooktheirlumps from organized labor
wtv&gt;n they pushed through workers' compensation reforms earlier this
summer; they're going to make surP labor gets a better break this time
around.

Letters to the Editor
For a more pleasing site
Now tha 1 Pomeroy has cleaned
up the riverbank 1and Improved
Pomeroy, looks 100 percenli why
are we letting the merchants and
residential use this side or 1he road
for billboards, advertis&lt;&gt;ment, etc .?

We even have two junk cars sit ling
on concrt.&gt;te blocks.

Come on, City Council, can't we
pass an ordinance and make this
view for the passing motorist morr
pleasing?
Dorothy Ka rr

Thanks for the help
I wish to thank Scott Frederick.
employre of Powell's Super Value,
and Jimmy Hawley, a customer,
also, Chief of Police Rought for
tlv&gt;ir assis tance concerning tlv&gt; hit

skip aec idPnl on Powell 's parking

Jot July 7.
Thanks again,
Mrs. Avice Bailey
400;3 State Route Gll
Shade, Ohio

Today in history
By United Press International
Today is Monday, Aug. 4, the 2ltith day of I~ with 149 to lollow.
The moon is almost new.
The morning stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under tlx&gt; sign of Leo. Tlv&gt;y Include poet
Percy Bysshe Shelley In 1792, Scottish romedian Sir Henry Lauder In 18111,
"Quren Mum" Elizabeth, rrotlv&gt;r ofQuren Elizabeth 1!, In 1900 (age til),
and United Press IntE'I'IIational White House reporter Helen Thomas In
J\l'JJ (age li6) .
On this date in history

In 1735, freedom or the media was established In the American colonies
wtv&gt;n John Zenger, publistv&gt;ror a New York Cilynewspaper, was acquitted
of libel charges.
In 1914, Britain declared war on Germany, one day a!IE'!' Germany
declared war on France, beginning World War I. The United States
·initially declared Itself neutral
In 1949, more than 6,001 people were killed wh&lt;&gt;t\ an ... rthquake leveled 50
·towns in Ecuador.
· In 1972, Arthur Bremer was found guilty of slnoting and wounding
Alabama Gov. George Wallace. He was S&lt;!ltenoed to 63 years In prison.
In 1985, Cuban President Fidel Castro confirmed that fugitive American
financier Robert Vesco was In Havana and rECeiving unspecified medical
:tmtment.
· A tlooghl for tile day: Scottish comic Slr Harry Lauder said, "Oh, It's
nice to get up In the morning - built's nicer to stay In bed."

I

Three more ex-baseball
players enter ·nail-of-Fame

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, August 4, 1986

And then tllere is this matter of
timing. Viewed against the African
scene. the crimes of South Africa
assume grandeur only because the
governmenl is composed or white
people. And this is a subtle form of
racism, as H to say: That which is
bad is bad If committed by a white
man, but understandable H It is
committed by a mere black. Adam
Wolfson, In the Policy Review of
last fail, deplores the lack of
self-government In South Africa,
but then concedes that there is no
popular accountability In Angola,
Benin, Burkina Faso, Burundi,
Cameroon, Cape Verde, Central
African Republic, Chad, Comoros,
Congo, Djibouti, Equatorial Guinea, Ethiopia, Gabon, Ghana,
Guinea, Guinea-Bissua, Ivory
Coast, Kenya, Lesotho, Liberia,
Madagascar, Malawi, Mall, Mauri·
tanla, Mozambique. Niger, Nige·
ria, Rwanda, Sao Tome and
Prtnclpe, Seychelles, Sierre Leone,
Somalia, Namibia, Sudan, Swazi·
land, Tanzania, Togo, Uganda,
Zaire and Zambia. We are talking
about &amp;'i percent or black Africa.
It is true that there is brutal
railroading of people In South
Africa - and elsewhere. For
example, the Ivory Coast expelled
16,000 Beninese in the mid-1960s;
Ghana gave two wreks' notice and
expelled :xl0,001 "aliens" In 1969;
Zamtla expelled all its "aliens"
some 150,001 pooplein 1971. Uganda
expelled 50,(00 Asians In 1972, and
lll years later expelled thousands of
Banyarwandas; Kenya expelled
almost 5,000 refugees from 1979 to
1981; Ethiopia lrgan a massive
rPiocalion of 1.5 million persons In
1984. 1n May of last year, Etlllopl3/l
soldiers ruthlessly forced 50,001
starving people at 11&gt;: Tbnet relief
camp to leave, and then set the
camp on fire, as part of a national
policy to resettle prople In the
western region of Gondar.

Restricted access_____J_ac_k_A_n_de_r_so_n_&amp;_J_o_se.:...p_h.....:Sp:._e_ar
WASHINGTON - The CIA is
apparently confident that it can
bamboozle members of tlv&gt; Senate.
but it doesn't want to take any
chances with Senate stalfers who
might be expert enough to challenge the agency with embarasslng
questions.
This, at least, is the conclusion we
draw from the fact that Senate
aides - even . those with top
security clearance - have been
systematically excluded from CIA
briefings on such sensitive matters
as nuclear non-proliferatkm. The

policy has been in effect for several
months, and State Department
officials who have gone along with it
told our associate Lucette Lagnado
that they are "only foilov.1ng
orders" - presumably CIA chief
William Casey's orders.
The result is that senators get

their secrPt briefings from CIA and
State D:!partment officials without
tlle presence of staff aides whose
special knowledge might give them
the chance to being up the finer
points of the issui'S involved .
This disturbing attPmpt to res!Tict access to important information is illustrated by the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee's
briefings on Pakistan and Its

development of the "Islamic
bomb." For years it has been
suspected that Pakistan has be&lt;-n
trying to build a nuclear bomb, but
tlrre's a sticking point: II Pakistan
is known to have a bomb. or to be
working on one, U.S. military aid
must by law be cut orr.
In the face of Pakistani denials,
the issue hinges on technical
niceties: What kind or enriched
uranium is Pakistan producing at
its nuclear plant in Kahuta? Is It
only 5 percent, as the United States
has demanded, or 311 pen:&lt;•nl, as
Intelligence reports have sug·
gested? Sources say tllat 9J percent

enriched uranium is necessary to
produce nuclear weapons.
Aitlnugh Pakistan has apparently shut down its plant that
reprocessed plutonium, Its
uranium-enrichment factory Is still
churning away, according to our
sources. And because India has
rPportedly reen expanding its
nuclear weapons capability since it
first tested a nuclear dcvi(.'(' in 1974,
it is a matter of serious concern to

tlv&gt; United States that Pakistan
seems determined to join the
"nuclear club" too.

It happens that the United States'
six-year, $3.2 billion aid program to

Pakislanis is about to run out. The
Reagan administration wants to
renew it ilr anotlv&gt;r six years, with
an Increase to $4 billion. But
Congress mandated that aid would
be cut off iftherewas solid evidence
tha t Pakistan had buill a nuclear

ning , &amp;1, of Austin, Texas, has bero
·whipsawed by two federal agencies
for the past four years. She learned
rn May al, 1982, that the Labor
Department ha&lt; told the U.S.
Postal Service to stop all payments
on tlv&gt; Manning Mail Service's
weapon.
government contract lx&gt;cause of
Last fall, we'"' told, tlv&gt; White altege!l labor violations. She has
House prepared a legal brief that
been fighting ever since to collect
consisted - if oomewhat ging&lt;&gt;rly the $al,!W4.83 sir says is wed to tv&gt;r
-that Pakistan has not produced a by the Postal Service.
nuclear weapon. But our sources
It took her 19 monthi to get a
also say thai there was serious hearing lrfore a Labor Depart dissent within the administration ment administrative law judge_
over tlv&gt; reliability of this brief. Then it took six month; for tre
Certification of Pakistan's "no- judge to reach a partial decision,
nuke" sta tus sremed In doubt.
and anoilv&gt;r five rmnthi to reach
This is what makes the maner ct his final decision. He ruled partly In
congressional briefings by the CIA Manning's favor, and the Labor
so crit leaL Senators have too many Department appea led. The case
other things on their minds to be still sits somewhere In the depart able to quiz tlv&gt;lr OA briefers ment's appeals office .
properly on the arcane issue or
Last Ili'Cemlrr, Manning wrote
Pakistan's nuclear capability. But to President Reagan begging for his
staff aides who might know the help in getting a decision rut of the
right questions to ask have reen Labor Department so her checks
locked rut of the briefing room.
would lr released . She got
The result is that the Senate will response from the Postal Service
be voting in tlv&gt; dark on renewal or assuring her that the Labor Departaid to Pakistan. and anotlv&gt;r ment wou ld reply to her letter to ire
nuclear power could be born with president. She has yet to get a call
America as an unwitting midwlfe. or a letter from the Labor
THE OMBUDSMAN: Joy Man - Department.

t

BASEBALL HONOREES - Acreptinr JlaU-&lt;lf.
Fame Aw!UUI at Cooperstown, N. Y., Sunday were,
left to right Mrs. WlBiam Lenhardt (recelvrng for her

telephone sen rice.

WILMINGTON, Ohio iUPII · &amp;ngals head coach Sam Wyche
says he is pleased with his team's
performance in its annual intras·
·quad game.
"I hope our offense has played tlv&gt;
·toughest deft't1se they will all year,"
Wyche said after the defense held
the orrense to just three first downs
ln tre first half of Friday's game at
' the Benga l's training camp.
· Doug Gaynor and Tim McGee,
both former holdouts wbo signed

early this week, highlighted the
game. Before a crowd of 8,:x&gt;O
people, Gaynor, battling lor the
third quarterback spot with free
agent Sandy Osiecki, completed
five of six passed for 76 yards.
McGee caught two pasSE'S for 59
yards, including a 46-yarder from
Gaynor late In the game.
"I'm still limited," Gaynor sa id
after the game. "I'm not n... rrorm,
but I !~ought I threw well."
01 Gaynor's effort, Wyche said,

On the suriace this sounded as
though it was In the public's
interest. If one large company was
providing good service at reasonable rates to tlle public. wouldn't a
c:bzen smaUer companies competIng for the business provide even
b.:'tter service at f&gt;Ven cheaper

Before our telephone service

By MIKE BARNES
UPI Sports Writer
LOS ANGELE~; iUPII - The
Dodgers h~vr won seven straight
games. Pedro Guerrero says he will
inake his first start of the season.
. Mike Marshall comes off the
disabled list. and Fernando Valenzuela takes the mound.
Bring on the first -place Houston
· Astros ... tonight!
''I can't think of a better Ume
than now to play tlle Astros," said
Los Angeles reliever Ken Howell.
Perhaps the!'!' is no better time.
'The defending NL West champion
Dodgers, who edged til&lt;&gt; slumping
'Cincinnati Reds ~ 1 Sunday to
complete their secood straight
series swrep, trail the Astros by just
6\2 games.
During their surge. the Dodgers
have been getting better defense,
better pitching and - most lmpor·
tanl- getting healthy.
Marshall, with 18 homers, ap·
pears rE'COvered from a strained
back Injury. And Guerrero, who
was activated last week, said In a
pre-game radio interview he would
start In the outfield tonight when
Valenzuela faces Houston rookie

Jim DeShaies.
"It's exciting to play on a wlnnrr ,
on a club that Is playing to its
potential," said right-hander Ore!
Hersh!.ser. "Frustration is starting
to leave the locker room.
"They (theAstrosl areromlngin

for three games and We' ll have
seven with tlv&gt;m &lt;:Ner the next two
weeks. They're going to lr seven
tough games. We have to start off
real hot."
Hershlser was certainly hot
against the Reds on a muggy
Sunday aftE'!'noon at ~er Stadium. Using his ann, bat and legs,
be helped stop Cincinnati wilh a
virtual ooe- man perA:Innance.
Hershlser, 11·7, hurted a lour·
hitter &lt;:Ner seven innings, drove in a
run with a suicide squeeze bunt and
sUd lDme from second oo Bill
Madlock's tie.IJreaklngslnglein tlv&gt;
sixth.
Howell struck out four of thl' six
llllters he faced for his 11th save,
thus JI'PServing the triumph that
p.Jt tlv&gt; ~ers at tlr .:x&gt;Omark lor
the ftrst time since June 19.
With the score 1-1, Hershlser.
leading olllhe sixth, reached first

should be found to open the way for
AT&amp;T to once again restore our
national and International leader·
ship In telephone service under
public-service regulation.
Perhaps we need a new piece of
wisdom: "If you fix something Ihat
was working and discover you have
made it worse. 'unfix' it."

rates?

Thus. In the name of public
service, the Department or Justice
and the !Pderal court lowered the
tnom on AT&amp;T and forced the
breakup of the telephone system.
As a U.S. senator, I resisted this
action against AT&amp;T. Later I
startled some ri my liberal friends
by ti'Stifylng In federal court
against tlv&gt; telephone company
breakup.
I took the position on tlle
pragmatic grounds tllat a publicly
regulated telephone monopoly is In
the rubllc Interest. It Is one of those
areas wtv&gt;re competition spells
chaos rather than public service.
It can be argued thai some
telepoone users In heavily populated areas may benefit from lower
telephone charges under the new
system. But If their service Is
deteriorating, their equipment is
Inferior and their bills defy interpre·
tatlon, what have they really
gained? As Senator Sirmn points
rut, "If present trends continue,
people In rural areas will be paying
more for service because competl·
tion In high-density areas will for('('
down prices for some and up
somewhere else, and 'somewhere
else' ls rural areas."
It wUI not be easy to reverse the
federal action In breaking up
AT&amp;T, butthatisexactlythecourse
l would now reco!Tl!TI\'!ld.

Berry's World

.'
"No, this Isn't that new, colorful zinc oxide
sun block. Actually, It's WAR PAINT!"

II "

J

injuries .

The final scon· of the game,
which did no discernablr "teams,"
was 10·7.

KIRTLAND, Ohio (UPI) -The
Cleveland Browns reached an
agreement with nose tackle Bob
Galle Sunday.
Qub officials said he signed a
series of one-year contracts.
Colle, who played In the fro Bowl
last year, is In his flfth year with the
Browns. The fonner Notre Dame
linebacker was drafted seven years
ago by New England.

••

"'
when B1.ll Gu u·1ckson, 7·7, bobbl~
his runt for an errur. Steve Sax
sacrificf'&lt;i and one out latE'!' Mad ·
lock punched a single to left to give
Los Anwtes it s 11th victory In IJ
games.
Ano ther bunt by Hershiser- one
ofthreeempioyedby theiJo&lt;\lersin
tlv&gt; third inning- !Jed the score!-!.
Mariano Duncan bunted for a
single, stole second, advanced to
third on Reggie Williams' sacrlfi(.'('
and scored when Hershlser following a pltchout- managed to
get his hat on a high and tight 1·2
(itch for a successful suicide
squeeze bunt.
"When I came to the plate Ill&lt;&gt;
next time (Reds' catcher Sail
ButE'!'a asked me, 'How'd you get
thai bat on the bail?"' said
Hershlser.
"I fa:e."'
said, 'I was just
protECting my

"This is the pinnacle of my life
Robinson, n&gt; said, "broke the
and my career," said the 48-year- color barrier and made 1black
old McCovey, who played all but players') dreams of playing majorfour of his seasons with the San league basehall a reality."
Francisco Giants.
Doerr played second base for Ihe
"Even though it's raining, It's Booton Red Sox from 19:17 to 1951 ,
Sunday, and it's summer. And and Lommrdi caught 6:&gt;• ihe
summer and Suodays rpean two Cincinnati Reds In 10 of his 17
tlllngs to me -baseball and family . major-league seasons during th&lt;•
"For me, each has enriched the 193ls and 1940s.
otho'r, shaped my charactE'!' and
A sure-handed second baseman
values. Together, they have who captained the Red Sox learns ol
brought me here."
ltv&gt; 1940s, Doerr said he felt "like. a
McCovey, who played from 1959 little boy, oot a man 1i! years old .
to 19!ll, became only the 16th player
it's a great thrill to be here.
inducted in his first year of
He said his dreams of playing
eligibility, not Including the original
major-league baseball, making tlw
seven enshrined in 1936.
majors, playing in an All· Star
Among his achievel!l{'nts, he was CamP, and a World Si'ric·s W&lt;'rt '
the National League's Rookie oft he rea liz..od .
Year in 1959. Its Most Valuable
"But this tops off all the gOO&lt;!
Player In 1969, and NL Comeback
lhings thai have happened to me.'
Player of the Year in 1977.
An excellent fielder, Doerr alr;. u
With 521 career home runs was a remarkable hitter for Cl
most by a lelt·hander in Na tional
middle infielder. Dutinghisear£&lt;'1'.
League history - McCovey is tlrd
he batted .288 with 133 home mr"
CANTON, Ohio iUPII - Both for ninth-place on tlle all-time list
and 1,247 RBI.
New England coach Raymond with Hall-of- Farner Ted Williams.
The honor for Lorilba nli. who
Berry ond St. Louis counterpart He also cracked 18 grands slams,
died in 1977, was accept&lt; &lt;I b.' Hena
C;,&gt;np Stallings got what they were most PVer in the NL and second
Len hard(, his sister.
looking for going into Saturday's overall to Lou Gehrig's 23.
Lenhardt recalled tha t her
Among the "family" memlrrs
llail of Fame game- a chance to
brother caught both of Jol•my
McCovey thanked were his mother,
(_·valuaiP rookit&gt;s and young
Vander Meer's baek to-bar k no
his managers, former Giants owner
\'(I!Prans.
hitters in 19:11, and that "The•
Huf RPrry rrceivf'd a bonus in ltv:&gt; Horace Stoneham and current
Schnozz'' often joked abuut hts own
owner Bob Lurte, and the late
f 'alriots' 21 -16 victory.
legendary lack or Sjlf&lt;'d .
"I wor1't say that winning wasn't Jackie Robinoon.
our S&lt;-condary objective," s a i d , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - -- - - l l&lt;·l " . "but it certainly feels good to
start· lhf' prPseason on a primary
notr.
"tl/uarterbackl Tom Ramsey
Pspeciaily stood out In my mind. Of
n:JurS&lt;•, people tend to look a bit
better when your team wins, but
Tom would 've stood out in a loss."
Hamsey, New England's lOthround pick In I983, completed 17 of
23 paSSE'S for 254 yards and the
game winning touchoown to wide
receiver Cedric Jones in the third
Moot• GJ~6•91
quart er.
2~ O • ~QOt".l l
Stallin gs, trough he sa id he was
"disapjXJinled" ovt'r t!r defeat in
his first game at the St. Louis helm,
XL-100
no!ll •tl.,iess was pleased with Ill&lt;&gt;
Single Knob
play of moki Ps Va i Sikahrma and
John Lre.
Electronic Tuning
Sikahema, a fuUbark who is a
lOth -round choice ou t of Brigham
3 ONlY
Young, returned a punt a record 91
yards for a touchdown and Lee, a
S&lt;'&lt;-'Ond-round pick from UCLA,
kicked Oeld goals of 28, 39 and 25
yard&lt;.
"It's a pleasure to watch a rouple
or kids respond when issued a
challenge," said Stallin gs. "We
l'CI''.Diag;;,., "
figured Lee would be a cont 1ibut or.
But Slkahema knows he 's a long
shot, and he's busllng his butt for a
job."

Patriots trip ·
Cards, 21-16

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two strikes.
Both Hershlser
came wilh
Cincinnati,
1}6atbunts
Las Anwles
this
year, hasbst six straight games. all
on Us current road trip. The Reds
managed just tour hits Suoday ani!
have scored rnly one run In earh or
the last two contests.
"We've got to bope lor a big
Inning and get it going again," said
Manager Pete Rose, whose club is
10~ behind Houston. "We have the
horses; we just have to get t!Fm
going again."
In other National League games
Sunday, Piltsburgh blanked St.
Louis 3-0, Philadelphia dumped
Chicago 6-2, New York edged
Montreal 4-3 in 10 Innings, Atlanta
downed San Francisco 4-2, and San
Diego topped Houston :&gt;-l
Pirates 3, Cardinals 0
At Pittsburgh, Rick Reuschel
tossed a six-hitter to spark the
Pirates. Reuschel, 7-12, walked one
and struck out fiVE' in notching Iris
second shutout ol the season.
Pittsburgh jumped on Danny Cox,
5-9, lor three runs In the first, v.1th
Barry Bonds, Johnny Ray and R.J.
Reynolds each knocking In a run.
PIIUIIes 6, Cuh!i 2
At Philadelphia, Mike Schmidt
broke a ~2 tie In the eighth with a
three-run homer to carry the
PhilliE's. Schmidt conni'Cted orr
loser Frank DIPino, 1-6. for his 24th
homer after singles by Jeff Stone
and Juan Samuel. StPVe Bedrosian,
8-3, was the winner.
Mets 4, Expos 3
AI New York, Ray Knight
blooped a two.CIJ t single down the
rlght·lield Une to score Wally
Backman from second in the
bottom of the lOth to Ult the Mets.
Roger McDowell went I 2-3innlngs
to Improve to 9-5.
Braves 4, Giants 2
At San Francisco. Dale Murphy
drove In two runs and Ol:zie VIrgil
hit his 12th oomer to lead the
Braves.

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JOHN · A~. WADE, ·M.D. Inc.

Reach agreement

...

"Doug looked good for a guy that
only knew a han&lt;jfui of plays. "
Emanuel King aXd James Griffin
Intercepted pasSE'S for the Bengal, ,
Rookie linebarkPr Leon V.'hitr
recovered a fumble. Six Bengais.
including last )'l'ar's NFL offensive
rookie-of- tlv&gt;·yrat Eddie Brown,
mi"ed tlv&gt; game because of

:surging Dodgers edge Reds

a

deteriorati'S any more and the costs
climb any higher, I urge that
Congress schedule a careful invi'Sti·
~atlon Into tlv&gt; telephone Issue.
Then , if it seems wise. icglsialivc
steps can lr taken 10 correct tlle
application or antitrust procedures
to telephone service. Some way

late brother, Ernie Lomhardi); WHlie McCovey and
Bobby Doerr. (UPI)

Wyche pleased with squad after
.practice tilt; Gaynor looks sharp

Unfixing AT&amp;T _______c_eo--=-rge_M_cG_ov_e_.:,_rn
The late Lyodon Johnson was
fond of citing a familiar aphorism:
" If something is working, don't fix
it."
It's too bad thi s common wisdJm
was not applied a few years ago to
the Bell Telephone System.
At that time everyone took
efliclent telephone service for
granted . It was simply a matter ct
picking up the phone and dialing or
asking the operator for help. AI the
end of ttv&gt; month yru got a clea(iiy
stated bilL
There was only rne basic system :
AT&amp;T, tlv&gt; farmus Bell System. II
was a telephone rmnopoly regu lated by federal and state agencies.
It worked beautifully.
Beyond dispute, the United States
under "Ma Bell " had t tv&gt; best
telephone serviee in ttv&gt; world.
Now, as U.S. Senator Paul Simon
(D.-111.) recently obsE'!'Ved In a
report to his constituents, "The
telephone system Is a mess.".
I used to pick up my telephone
wlth total confidence. Now each rail
Is a mini-adventure Into uncertainty and frustration.
Now tlv&gt;re is a covey of phone
companies wlth dilferlng systems
and differing levels of service.
!true systems oo not seem to be
compatible with others. The bills
are so confusing that even experienced business people have trou ble Interpreting them The quality
of the phone equipment Is uncertain, andoneooes rot know whether
to buy or rent the equipment. In
general, OVE'I'ali pbone service has
deteriorated badly in recent ~ars .
What happened?
What happened is a clecislon by
the Department of Justice and the
federal court a few years ago ·to
break up the AT&amp;T rmnopoly ory

'

COOPERSTOWN. N.Y. (UPI)Willie McCovey, one of the most
feared hitters ever to play baseball,
cried Sunday.
The 6-foot4, 225-pound slugger
who menaced opposing pitchers
during a 22-year career said an
emotional thank you as he joined
Bobby Doerr and Ernie Lombardi
as the newest members of the
Baseball Hall or Fame.
Standing in a steady drizzle
before abuut 5,001baseball dignitario-s and fans outside the Hall,
Mc&lt;:ovey choked back tears twice unsuc~essfully - during his
brief acceptance speech.
He called his induction "tlv&gt;
pinnacle of my life," and spoke of
his friends and associates in the
gmne as an extPnded familv.

INGELS
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'

�Pags 4--The Daily Sentinel

Monday, August 4, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Bears big hit ·'over there'; top Cowboys
By Unlled Preis lnlemational

.

.

;:
11IE REFRIDGERATOR A BIG JOT OVERSEAS -Chicago's
;: WDUam (Relrldgerator) Peny tackles DaD as ace Tony Dorset, causing
.- him to fumble the ball during Sunday's pre-season exhibition .,otbaU
~ game In Wembley Stadium, London. (UPI)

.·..
..
..,·•
.

Scoreboard ...

~ Majol"8
•:

;

William "The Refrigerator"
Perry brought his oversized act
across the Atlantic Sunday, scoring
one touchdown and helping the
Chicago Bears to a 17-6 victory ewer
the Dallas Cowboys in an NFL
exhibition game played In pouring
·min.
Before a capacity crowd of 82,699
packing one of soccer's rmst
hallowed stadiums, the Super Bowl
champions received a 1-yard touch·
down run from the Bpound Perry
and a 48- yard tumble return for a
score from Dave Duerson.
"Maybe slx years from now
would he fine," said Perry. when
asked If he would llke to play In
London again. ''The ·crowd didn't'
know too much what was going on.
They didn't know when to cheer or
not, but they seE'med to he having a
good time."
Chicago forced three tumbles and
two lnterp&gt;ptions but gave up 302
total yards to Dallas. The Cowboys
managed just two field goals by
Rafael Septien while Kl'vln Butler
added one for the Bears.
"We're going to be that kind of
defense this year," Chicago coach
Mike Dltka said. "We're going to
give up yardage but, hopefully, we
aren' t going to give points.
Bears quarterback Jim McMa·
oon was a dlsmal1-for-6 for 12 yards
in the first half and did nol play in
the second.
"We have to pass better and we
have to come off the ball a little
ll'tter," Dltka said. "But, overall, lt
wasn't that bad."
1be British fans, who have takPn

By United Press lnlemallonal

Amerkan League
East

West
Houston.. ...
59 46 .562
Sa n Francisco . 55 50 .524 4
Los An ge les. .. 52 52 .500 6\0
San Diego. ...... 51 53 A90 710
Cin cinnati.. ..... 47 ~; .461 10 \0
Allanta ......... 47 57 .452 11 \0
Saturday's Results
Los Ang&lt;&gt;les 7, Cincinnati I
Philadelphia 12, Chicago 2

By LOU RABD'O

soould be a snap to Brian Brennan,
generally regar&lt;Ed as one of tlle
smarter Browns.
"Truthfully, I am struggling,"
said Brennan, a third- year pro out
ot Boston College who caught the
scouts' eye with his sure hands and
abUlty to adjust to routes in a
pro-style offense quarterbacked by
Doug Flutle.
"
"I'm not just struggling with tbe
new offense ... I'm a little rusty."
Brennan Is also having problems
reading tbe blitz, something Coach
Marty Schottenhelmer Is not cwerly
concerned with. "With a new
offense, most receivers have problems picking up the blitz this early
In camp," he said.

Library lines:

The 6-foot -1, 2J.5.pounder- rated
fourth on the Saints' depth charthit on four ct six passes ilr ':Y7 yards
and Iwo touchdowns.
'"The protl'&lt;'tlon was fantastic,"
Fourcade said.
Fourcade's competitors for startIng quarterback did not fare as
well.
Fronlru!Uler Bobby Hell'rt, who
started the Saints' final Ove games
In 1985, completed three of 10 passes
for 14 yards and one Interception .
Dave Wilson hit on eight of 15

brandt, 9-8, was tlle loser.
Blue Jays 8, Omles 4
AI Thronto, Thny Fernandez
snapped a 4-4 tle with his sixth
oomer of the season. a two-run soot
In the seventh Inning. Rookie
left-bander Jolm Cerutti, 6-3, hurled
41-3 innings of shutout relief to earn
til' victory. Thm Henke picked up
hls 16th save. Mike Flanagan, 5-7.
was the losing pitcher.
Y Mlloees 12, Indians 8
At Cleveland, Rickey Henderson
knocked In three runs with his 19th
oomer of the season and Mike
Pagliarulo added two RBI to spark
the Yankee attack.

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PH. 992·5432

lentvckr Frild Chlcktn

IS

ing Book machines and cassette
players. We will be able to
&lt;Emonstrate bow the machines
work and soow you first hand the
materials you can get to use on the
machines. U you know of anyone
woo Is visually impaired or physically handicapped and cannot turn
OOok pages, you might kE'ep this in
mind.

New OOoks are arriving at the
library regularly. U you are not
coming In, you might not lmow
what you are missing.

Penny, Kyle, Jes,.,, Brook
Bingham, Shawna Wlblln, Glouster; Kennlt, Martha, Justin GOkey.
Jim, Allsha, and Jason Duncan,
Tim and Tony GOkey, AMette
Bare, Shade; Linda Smith. Dan·
ville; Bud and Martha Varner,
Pam and Tam Varner, Duncan
Falls; Jordy and Pam Varner,
Philo; Clarence Carsey, Joe and
Janet Judson, Ray Judson. Eric
Beard, Tonuny Gilkey, Samantha
Moore and Danlelle, Malta.
Bessie and Raymond Brlckles,
Radcliff; Dannie Putnam, Kenny
GOkey and Sharon, POmeroy;

Darrell and Mary Young, Bob and
Brenda Young, Nelsonville; RogPr
and [)(&gt;a Hayes; Jerl't'Tly Hayes,
Opal Rutt er, Bobbie Bailey, Esther
Matheney, Mike and Amy Ma·
tlleny, Lyman and Faye Stanley, all
of Albany .
Roger Gilkey and Diane, Phylls
Fuller, Teddy Marcy. Jackie
Forbes, Phillip Forbes, Columoos;
Guy and Elll'll Thoma, Sheryl
Thoma , Ida Young , Rutland;
Dwight and Terri Sturgeon and
Bran&lt;bn, Racine; Junior and
Evelyn Wiblln , Pagevtlle; Earnest
Wood . Kingsbury .

and Gladys Fisher were recognized
for coming the farthest, John E.
Halliday, the oldest man; Louise
Waltz, the oldest woman; Michael
Bidwell, the youngest boy; Cheryl
Jewell, the youngest girl. Prizes
were awarded to each of them.
A picnic lunch was enjoyed With

the birthday of Keith Mut chler
being observed. Families represented were Ihose of J)(&gt;stra and Roy
Anderson, Ross and Mattie Halliday, John E. Halliday, Matthew
and Ellabeth Edmundson, and
Frank and Ruby Halliday .

Door prizes were won by Becky
Rife, Jimmy Taylor, Ben Rife,
Amy Taylor, May Taylor, and Alice
Jones.
Officers for 1987 were elected and
Include Ruby Rife, president; Ron
Taylor, vice president; Mary Taylor, secretary; and Lucille LRmley,
treasurer. Those attE'!lding were

..

May and Merrill Taylor. Rebecca
Rife, Ben and Ruby Rlfr , Lydia
DeLong, Harriett Thompson ,
Pomeroy; Don, Mary, Amy and
Jimmy Taylor, Coolville; Allee
Jones, Albany. and Ron and Brenda
Taylor, Footoria.
The 1987 reunion wlll be tE'Id July
6 with !he pl ace to be announced.

•••

0

C hr y'&gt;ler

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• Annuei.Percentage Rate Financing
Dealer contribution may alfect final

992-6421
retarJ buyers

Middleport
Chrysler Credit Corporallon on ~eater stOCk.
I terms. See dealer for details. .
.

. ..

·Yeary birth

r---People in the news---.

Mr. and Mrs. Jolm T. Yeary of

Mr. and Mrs. BobStevensriFort
Myers, Fla.. have been here
visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Ward Sayre, Racine, and her
daughters, AprU Roach and famUy,
Racine, and Cindy Moms and

chlldren. Pomeroy.

Quote of the day
By Utdled Pra. fate
u .,,
Kurt Petellln, describing an

avalanche that left ooe llellow
cUmber serlou.sly inJured and two
others ml.ulna' on Mount Baker
Washington stare:
"1 looked up, and I heard a
rumbling.... The next thlnf I !mew,
I wu almost at the vecy edge rt It,
and then I wal rolllnl down with I1'IY
pack, and I said, 'God let me get
up,' and _I jUII kept swlmmlng. The
next thlnf 1 knew, I popped up."

m

) ,

'

&amp;inday evenin g and Monday visItors of Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Kn app,
Michelle and Amy, Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Knapp are
row residing In their new home on
Wo~ Pen Road .
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Bailey were
recent visitors ct Mr. and Mrs.
Roll'rt Bailey Sr.

Otarley Smith and Mrs. Danlel
Worley, Stacy and Daniel .
Mrs. Leeslle Frank and Sarah
Beth ct Texas Rooo were Wednesday visitors ct Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Haning and Ronald.
Mrs. Daniel Woley and Stacy
visited with Mrs. Iva Jolmson
Friday tmrnlng.
Stacy and Daniel Worley were

. South Charleston. w. Va., are
· announcing the birth of an eight
pound, two ounce son, Philip Diehl
Yeary, oo Saturday, July 26, at
Thomas Memorial Hospital in
South Charleston.
Mrs. Yeary Is the fanner Jo Ellen
Diehl rt Pomeroy.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Allen Yeary rt Portsmouth and mawrnal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. James A. Diehl rt
Pomeroy.

PRICE

•

Mrs. Daniel Worley, stacy and
: Daniel, ct Daniels, W.Va. spent
: several days here vlsltlng Mr. and
· Mrs. Charley Smith, Stacy and
: Daniel.
Mrs. Harley Jolmson and
: Tammy, Peggy Murphy and Mrs.
: Jerry Holley and Calvin were
: Friday visitors ct Mr. and Mrs.

Visiting

DEUVERY

. COMBINATION DINNER
DINING ROOM ONLY

POmeroy Library. The tum this
week will be "Greta, the Misfit
Greyoound".
The video club Is off to a good
start. 1be people who have joined,
have been making good use of our
collection. Remember, for $15, you
can have access tower :llOvideosa
year. Not a bad deal.
In tlle near future the Pomeroy
Library will be selling up a
demonstration center for the Talk·

!Wolf Pen community hap

-

Subsrrlben not desiring to pay ttit' car. • r1('1" may remit ln advanCl' dlr~t to
. · The Dally ~nllnel on a 3. 6 or 12 month

every Friday at 2 p.m. at the

'

...

TUESDAY NICHT

POMEROY I OHIO

··Halliday reunion held at Forest Acres

The 18th annual reunion of the
; Taylor-Harper families was held
: recently at Forest Acres Park in
· Rutland.
: Honored were Harriett TI!omp: son. tlle oldest woman; Merrill
Taylor. the oldest man; Ron and
· Brenda Taylor, woo traveled the
· larlhest; and Jimmy Taylor,
: yourgest present

.....

Onr WHk .................. .... ...... ....... $1 .25

11 0 WEST MAIN

·Taylor, Harper families have reunion

~

Onr Month ...........
$5 .45
. On£&gt; Year .... .,..... ..
.. ... S6.'i.OO
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Da lly ... ....... ...... ....... .......... 25 Ct.&gt;nl s

Descendants o! the late ThOmas
and Milda Jane Hudnall GOkey held
their 16th famUy reunion on JU\Y Zl
at the roadside park on Route 33,
south o! Darwin.
Attending were Paul and Pauline
: GOkey, Leroy Gilkey, Dave Gilkey
: and Shelly, Lancaster; George
GOkey, New Marshfield; Rick,
Daniel, Courtney GOkey, Garold
and Gladys GOkey, Virgil GOkey,
Myrtle Gilkey, Scott and Tammy
Wolf. Amber Wolf, Cindy Gilkey,
Jolm East, Shawn East, Vera
Sharpe, Charlene and Audry
Sharpe, Athens.

·:
:
.
.

The annual HaJJiday reunion was
held recently at Forest Acres Park
with 24 !amUy members attending.
Officers elected tor lhe 19'17
reunion were Grace Furbee, presi·
dent; Pauline Atkins, vice pres!·
- dent; Sharon Jewell, treasurer;
: Anna Halliday. secretary. Arnold

I

4

By Carrter or Motor Route

EBERSBACH
HA D ARE

Gilkey reunion conducted near Darwin

.·

Owners plan meet

Dlrectx&gt;zy, published annually.
Michele was selected to receive
oonorary award I'l'Cognitlon and to ;
have her blograpby published In the
next volume rt ~·s Who Among
American High School Students,
1~8i. 1be publlcatk&gt;n I'l'Cagnizi's
uwerclassmen, exclusively. who
have demonstrated leadership In
academics, athletics, school and
community acltivles.
Michele has malntalned a 3.6
grade point average through her
lunior year at Poca High School as
well as participating In til' school
drama club. She was elected as a
lifetime thespian ct that troupe. She
also has been active in the study of
martial arts wer the lasttwo years.
Michele Sue Zirkle
Only slx percent of all junior and
senk&gt;rr class studenis are hormed
In WID's Who.
Michele Is the daughter of and is the granddaughter d Mr. and
Michael P. Zirkle and Edith Knittel Mrs. Paul Haptonstall, Middleport.

Sentinel-Page 6

Closing on Sanrrdays

By RUI'II POWERS
A sbortage o! staff at this time
has mooe H necessary to close the
Middleport Library. on Saturdays
during the rmnth of August. We
oopethls won't be an inconvenience
to anyone.
A closing program for the
children woo partlcipaied In the
&amp;immer Reading Program, will be
held Aug. 13 at tlle Middleport
Library at 2 p.m.
Cl!lldren's Dims are being soown

We'll even :.'fnl•h

&gt;

•·

Two honors have been bestowed
up Michele SUe Zirkle, formerly ot
. Middleport, a student at Poca High
School In West Virginia.
Michele has been named an
Academic All American by the
National Secondary Education
CouncU and has been selected for
Who's Who Among American High
School Students, 1.98&amp;86.
The Academic All American
Scholar Award gives recognition to
superior students who excel In the
academic disciplines. Those selected must earn a 3.3 or better
grade point average and scholars
are selected only through the
recommendation of a qualified
sponsor.
Michele was nominated for the
natk&gt;nal award by Mrs. Dorene
. · Darby, a faculty member at Poca
· High School. She will appear In the
Academic All American Scholar

~arterback.

NY Yankees outlast
Cleveland nine, 12-8

UPI Spons Writer
Texas
Rangers first baseman
:•
W L Pel. GB
Pete O'Brlen solved his foot
•: Boston ......
61 42 .592
:- Balllmore
51 47 .548
problems against a Milwaukee
:;: NI'W York ...... 5!- 48 .541
Brewprs pitching staff that lately
r Cleveland .
55 49 .529
has
cured a Jot of hitters'
San Fran cisco 7, Atlan ta .1
~ Toronlo ....
56 50 .528
malfunctions.
New York 4, Montreal I
•• D&lt;&gt;troll ..... ...... 55 50 .524
The Rangers defeated the Brew·
St.
Louis
7.
Pittsburgh
3
-: MIIwaukE'e ..... 50 53 .485 II
Hous ton 5, San DiPgo 4
ers 7-6 Sunday, Pndlng a four-game
•,.
West
Sunday's Results
:"california .. .. .. . 56 48 .538
series In which they collected 56 hits
New
York
4, MontrE-al 3, 10 in nin gs
•: Texas .. .......... 55 51 .519 2
and scored 30 runs. Texas won three
Pillsburgh 3. St. Lou iS 0
;..Kansas City.. . 47 58 .448 9\0
of the games, losing Saturday 9-8.
Philadelphia 6, Chicago 2
&lt;"Chicago. ......... 46 57 .441 9'h
O'Brien had three RBI, Including
Los Ange les 2, Cinci nnati I
:;:s.atlle .........
41 59 .443 10
Atlanta 4. San Franc isco 2
a two-run homer, to lead the
I"'Minnesola ....... 45 59 .433 II
Sa n OJpgo 5, Houston l
Rangers attack. O'Brien has three
:;:oakland .......... 45 62 .42t t21J,
Monday's Games
- .•
Saturday's Results
homers and 10 RBI In his last five
New York !Darling 11-3 1 at Chi - games.
·: Kansas City 13, Boston 2
cago !Eckers ley 5-61,4:05 p.m.
·,. BaltimorE' 5, Toronto 2
"I wa s getting into bad hablls
Cincinnalj (Denny 7-lOJ ar San
:... CJeveJand 6, New York 5, lOJnnJngs
with
my foot position," O'Brien
f'ranclseo /Mulholl and 0-41 , 4:05
-'; Chicago 5, Detro!! .1
p.m.
said.
"I seem to get in dlffPrent
:'-- MllwaukPe 9, Tt&gt;xas 8
M
on
trea
l
!Tibbs
5-61
aT
Pl11sbu
rgh
.1' Minnesota 8, Oakland 0
habits every year. When I've got
!Walk 4-6 1. 7:35 p.m.
-~ Seallle 1, Ca liforn ia 3
my foot In line with the plate, I've
Philadelphia !Hudson 6-101 aTSt. ll'en able to hit with my back foot
Sunday's Results
Lou is !Conroy 3-61,8:35 p.m.
•• Boston 5, Kansas City 3
ATlant a !Ack er 1·11 aT San Diego and have gotten more power."
.- Toronto 6. Balllmore 4
Milwaukee starters lasted just 12
!Dravecky 1-81. 10:05 p.m.
•• New York t2 , Cleveland 8
Houston
ID&lt;&gt;Shales
6-3
1
al
Los
1-3
innings in the four- game stint,
• Chicago 10, Delroil I
Angeles fVa iPnzuela 14 -61, 10 :35 p.m .
. .. Texas 7, Mtlwa ukt:'f&gt; 6
yleldlng 2ll earned runs on '!/ hits.
Tuesday' s Games
•' Oakland 5. Minnesota 4. 11 in ni n gs
"Texas swung the bat very
Nf'w York at Ch ica.a;:o
..· Seat He 6. Ca lifornia 3
aggressively,"
Mllwaukee man·
Montreal at Piltsburgh, night
~''
Monday's Games
ager
George
Bamberger
said.
Philadelphia al St. Louis. nigh t
~ BaltimorE' (Boddlc ker 13-51 at
Atlanta
at
San
Di{'
go.
nig
ht
'They
hit
the
baU
well
and
whacked
/roronlo !Johnson 1-01. 1:35 p.m.
our pitchers around a bit . Our
0:: Chicago !DeLeon 1-01 a1 BosTon Hou ston a r Los Ange les, night
Cincinnati at Sa n Francisco. night
:• (Clemens 17-31,7:35 p.m.
hitting has been good lately butiJJr
.: Milwaukee !Higuera 13-71 aT NPw
pitching has been shakey."
Transactions
:·York !Drabek 2-41.7:35 p.m.
Milwaukee starter Danny Dar·
Callfor nla (Candf'la ria 4-ll at
win
lasted only four innings SunBas
t.~
hall
;::Min nesota tHealon4-!0 t. 8:35p.m
ChicaJ::o
1AL1
Placed
first
day,
yielding eight hits and slx
,.. Oakland TRijo 4-81 at Sea ltle basf'man Gr£'g WalkE'r on 21 · dav
unearnro
runs. Four of the runs
:;:tMorgan 8-10 !.10:35 p.m.
d lsab 1('d Ii st; rf'C a llf'd out( ield£'r . IirS1
:Tuesday 's Games
came
in
the
first inning, when the
baseman Ru ss Mor man from Buffalo
-~
Chicago at Boston . night
of AIT'f'rira n Assoda 1ion.
Rangers wasted little time - and
. Mllwak('('
at New York , nigh!
Lo s Angt&gt;les- Act iva ted outfi e ldf'r
few pitches - In taking a quick
• Texas at Ballimore, nighT
Mik f' Ma rsha ll : sent J ose Gonzalez to
lead .
Kansas Clly al Toronto, night
AlbuquPrqu e of th£' Pac ific Coast
By the time the game was four
LPaguf' .
Cleveland at !X&gt; troll, night
. California al Minneso ta, nigh!
Mon trea l - Pla ced sOOr tstop Hu pitches old , Texas was three runs
bie Brooks on I he !5-day di sabled lisT ahead. Oddill' McDowell jumped
I" Oakland at Seallle. night
,;
and
&lt;'a lche r Mike FFit zgNa ld on thl'
National
Leacue
;
on Darwin's first offering and
21 -da y DL; moH'&lt;I pllchf' r J()('
Eaot
Hcs kel hfrom I h&lt;• J.i -day to 1I» 21-da y blasted it lnlo the seats for hls 14th
w L Pet. GB disabled
list: reca lled Infi elder Luis home run of !he season and third
-: New York ..... .. 69 32 .683
Rlv('ra
a
nd
ca trhrr Dann Bllan:X&gt;llo
leadoff oomer of the year. Scott
:·Philadelphia ... 52 50 .5t0 17 % from Indianapo
lis of the Arnf'rlcan
.500
Fletcher then took a pitch before
!8% Associa tion 1AAA1
·) \fontreal. .... .... 50 50
:•St.Louis ....... 47 55 .46 t 2~%
poking a single to center. O'Brll'll
Pltlsbu rgh - Op tioned ouHi('ldrr
44 57 .436 25
•j:'hlcago ...
Mik e Brown to Haw aii of ttx&gt; Pac ifi c
hit Darwin's first pitch Into the
42 58 .420 26 'h Coas t Lea~r 1AAA 1: purchased 1hP right-field stand'l for hls 15th homer
,:.Pillsburgh
co ntract of ou tflf'ldr r -fi rst baseman
before Darwin struck out tlle next
: - - - - - - - - - - - -.,. BPnny Dis l ('fano from Hawai i.
three batters.
Jeff Rllssell. 3·1. the second of a
·, The Daily Sentinel
quartet of Texas pitchers, ImNEW YORK IU PII·-Ownersof proved his record to 3-1. Darwin fell
(US PS t45-960l
lhe eighl SU IVIVing U.S. Football to 6-7.
A. Dlvl§lon ol Multimedia, lnr.
Elsewhere in the American
LRague clubs plan to meet Monday
League,
Boston clipped Kansas
to decide lf the league plagued by
Publlshl'&lt;i rvl'ry aft('rn oon, Mond a.v
City
&gt;-J.
Toronto
topped Baltimore
t hrou~ h Friday, Ill Cou rt S!. . Podeficits will conllnue after winning
mt&gt;roy , Oh!o. by thr Oh io Va!ll'y Pub6-4,
New
York
outslugged
Clevejust $1 in its anlltrust suit aga inst
lishing Co mpany 'Mu lltmPdla, lnr ..
land
12-8,
Chicago
shellacked
))e.
Pomrrov. Ohlo 45769. Ph . 992 - 2 1 ~ . SPthe NFL.
ro nd c13ss poslaQ(' pa id at Pom('roy.
troll 10.1, Oakland edged Minnesota
Ohio
54
In lllnnings and Seattle shaded
After a 12-wl'&lt;'k trial federal
California
6-J.
Mrmbrr : Unltrd Pn:.ss ln t£&gt;rna!lona l.
jurors last week gavp the USFL a
Inland Dally Pr~ s A.ssoclalion and !h('
Red
Sox 5, Rllyals 3
moral victory - finding tlle NFL
Ohio Newspaper Assoc tat ion. Nationa l
At
Boston,
Wade Boggs singled
A dv er tl sl n~ RepresPnt a live, Branham
monopolized pro football - but
through
a
drawn-In
Infield In the
N~· spaper Sales. 733 Third AvPnU(&gt;,
awarded only a symbolic $1 in
Nf'W York. Nf'W York 10017.
seventh lnnlngtollfttheRedSox.
damages.
POS1'MASI'ER: Sl&gt;nd addrf'Ss ch;mgPS
When tripled, as required by Nipper,(). 7, pitched eight Innings to
to 1lw Dally Scntlnt'l. 111 Court St .•
antitrust law, tlle $3 Is a mere drop earn the victory. Calvin Schiraldi
Pnll'&lt;'roy. Ohio 457W.
hurled the ninth tor hls first
In Ihe league'socean ct deficits
save. Otarlle LRl·
major-league
SUI8CRJPTION RATES

"

to American football tlle last few
years, were especially appl'l'Clatlve
of Perry, whose celebrity and sheer
bulk has now spread to two
continents.
Enthusiasm lor the game flagged
late In the fourth quarter when both
teams substituted freely. There
were occasional chants of "Boring,
Boring." The only cheers at that
point were for tlle Dallas Cowboys
cheerleaders and a naked man who
streaked across the field before
being subdued.
In other training-camp news:
At Hanunond, La., New Orleans
Saints head coach Jim Mora was
fuU ct traise during the weekend for
quarterback Jolm Fourcade, woo,
Instead rt taking a bow, passed on
the credil for hls sterUng scrimmage stats to hls teammates.
Fourcade, woo entered the
squad's training camp at Southeastern Louisiana University
ooplng ooly to make til' final
45-man cut. rose to the occasion
Saturday to ll'come a legitimate
contender for a starting nod al

attempts for !M yards, and Richard
Todd . was i&gt;-of-13 for li yards,
Including one interceptkm and one
touchdown .
"I think Jolm Fourcade played
well mough toda y to make a spot on
this team," bead coach Jim Mora
said. "I think he Improved his
chanres out there."
At Klriland, Ohio, the Cleveland
Browns receiver having the most
difficulty with offensive coordinator Lindy Infante's new offense Is
the type of player the o!fense is
geared around.
Infante's optiOn-route passing
system stresses Intelligence and the
abUlty of tlle receivers to adjust
their routes, something which

The

By WIU.IAM C. TROI'I'
United Press lnlernalkmal
FROM SOAP TO SPIEIJIERG: Meg Ryan says ll'r Betsy
Montgomery character on "As the World Turns" was ooeof the mosl
hapless in the world ct soap operas. "My character cried more than
any person on TV," says Ryan , who has since moved on to a role In
"Top Gun" and will be seE'n In Steven Spielberg's upcoming "Inner
Space." "She was an orphan wbo had two bad marriages, an
11-month pregnancy, a five-day delivery. Her life was one blg
trauma. When my contract expired it took my lear ducts a year to
shrink to nonnal."
RACY IMAGE: Danny SuDivan's victory In the 19ll5 Indianapolis
fill led to acting roles, endorsements and other trappings of famr,
including quite a reputallon as a carouser.
"I wouldn't say I'm a playboy," he says. "Let's say !llme ct It Is
blown out of proportion although I do llketohave a good time. For me
a playboy just does what he wants to do. Not that I haven 't done that
but I work hard for a living." SuUivan has a girlfriend, Los Angeles
decorator Julie Nitti, 32, who Isn't that fond of tlle playboy image.
"She doesn't always like It but she has traveled with me enough to
realize how things get blown up."
As an example of exaggeration, he mentioned the 1983 racetrack
death of Olivier ChaciDn, woo was Christie Brinkley's boyfriend at
the time. "The press had niedatingChrlslle Brlnldey when actually
JuDe and I Wen! spending time consoling her alter the death of
Olivier,'' SuUivan says.
Sfti!J.E 8TYMJED: Pleroe Jlrolnan's popularity backfired on
hlm. When his "Remington Steele" series was canceled In May, It
cleareil the way for him to become the new James Bond and star 1n
" The Uvlng Daylights." But tlle Bond role raised his stQCk !ll high ,
that NBC decided to un-cancel -'~teeie" and make it a mid-season
replacement, greatly disappointing Brosnan.
"I had just had enoogll,'' he iays of the series. " In ~t. I'd had
E'llough after two years rut had sJ&amp;ned a seven-year oontract." ·
Broenan told People magazine that he's also had Ellough~ televisiOn
1111\1 Hollywood. "You learn bad habits as an actor (on television).''
he said.

STOREWIDE
ONE EEK ONLY!!
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
AUGUST 4 THRU 9

•

•ng

ust

o!!l
HURRY I SALE ENDS
SATURDAY, AUGU$T 9
' I

'

�,.

Paga-6-The Daily Sentinel

Monday. August 4, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'·

County Agent's Corner

·.

• EXnE

TO PERFORM
N~n~~h~~
Exile, wW be opening night performers at the Mason
Counly Fair, Tuesday, with soo;..; at 3 and 9 p.m.,

act'ording to Brian BUUngs of the fair's entertainment
committee.

Mason Fair opens Tuesday,
featuring
Exile, Sammi Smith
...
.. . By LEE ANN WELCH
OVP Staff Writer
' 'lite Mason County Fair gC'Is into
run swing Tuesday. and headinin~
~week of activitif'S will bP Exile.
sammt Smith, Michael Martin
Murphey, the Gospel Harmony
Boys and the Cha llengers ..
"You can't go anywhPn' !01 '$4
and see this kind of enterta inment. ··
said Brian Billings of the fair
entertainment committi'E'. For the
$4 admission price, Billings noted.
fatrgoers view ail the ex hibil s and
see top-notch entertainment li ke
E,xiie and Michael Martin
Murphey.
"We try to get (&lt;•ntertainmPnll to
please the biggest numlx'r of
people." he added
Exile. corL•idered to be one of 1he
top country bands in th&lt;• nation. will
open the entertainment lineu p
Tuesday. with shows at :; and 9
p.m., according to Billin gs.
Their current release "Hang On
to Your Heart." and the sing!•·
"Super Love." are on the Bill board
.:~.arts, he added. Other hits from
tliP group include "Wokl' uv in
Love" and "High Cost of Leaving."
·The band has a big following.
Blllings said. noting they all live in
Lexington. Ky .. and arr natiH&gt;s of
the Blu~rass State. "Wr are

hoping to draw an audience from a il
three stat!'S tKent ucky, Ohio and
West Virginia I " Billings added.
Mlcha('l Martin Murphey will
take the stage on Saturday of fair
week. at ~ and 9 p. m.
Popula r for a number of years ,
Murphl'y's bits include "Wildfire"
and "Ca rolina in I hf' PinPS." A

crossowr artist. Murphey has also
writt en or co-penned music for the
fi lms "Hard Countty" and "UrLJan
Cowboy."
Murphey was also awarded thr
Best New Artist from the Academy
of Cou nt ry Music Association
tCMAI .

Boys were also the first gospel
quartet to appear on live network
television on NBC's Today Show in
tiv&gt; early l!l"J()'s. hosted by Dove
Garroway. Bil lings said.
The Challengers, who will per·
form Friday, will present two
di !feren I shows. Billings sa id. One
will tF roun try and the other a
1950's show. he noted.
The group has appea red with
Crystal Gay le. the Oak Ridge Boys
and Mickey Gilley.. .
"We try to book the bPs! shows
with thl• money we are a llowed lin
the fair budget 1. Billings said. They
trv Jo kE'l'p the quality of shows
high. and he added there is no way
the Mason County Fair could touch
entert ainers like Alabama and the
Sta tiers lx'cause of their one-night

SJmmJ Smit h will appear at th e
Mason Count y Fair on Thursday at
:l and 9 p.m .. and has been named
&amp;&gt;st New Female Artist from the priCf' .
CMA. She has recorded "Help Me
"But each year. th&lt;&gt; fair gets
Make it Through the Night. " bigger and ll'ttrr." Billings said.
"Toda)' I Started Loving You "Wf' have good participation from
Again " and "As Long As There's A al i three rounties." he added, noting
Sunday."
many fairgoers come from Mason.
The CosJX'I Harmony Boys from Meigs and Ga llia Cou nt ies.
Entertainment for the Mason
Hunt ington. W.Va ., have tong bf'en
favor it es in this area. 1'hev wil l be Cou nty Fair is booked through Bob
performing 3 and 9:30 ·p.m. on Ga llion Productions, Billings said.
Wednesday.
Ga llion works with approximat ely
They have been named Amoos - 100 fai rs and fest ivals throughout
sa dors of Gospel Mu sic for thl' sta le till' Uni led St'atf'S.
of West Vir!(lnia . The Ha rmony

Ap1cuMure
I would like to thank tlv! Holter
families tor oostlng tlv! ))llry
Twilight Tour on July 2&lt;1 .The Halter
families put togettv&gt;r an excellent
tour and It was well attenli'd by
more than 100 persons.
I toought llv&gt;re was a couple of
highlights in the tour- one was the
preparation of a manure lagoon
going In to handle llv&gt; disposal of
manure and the ottv&gt;r was an
excellent, organized farm soop.
The Hollers, Roy, Alan, and Ed, did
an excellent job in describing what
they were doing.
Again, I would like to thank them
for an excellent tour.
Speaking of ttv&gt; manure lagoon,
one of the greatest benefits to a
manu.re lagoon is being able to haul
manure wtv&gt;n 11v&gt; land is dry and
doesn't compact as much.
Soil compaction, we are learning
more and more, is a culpret that we
have got to lEal with. This soil
compaction has been brought on
either by continued spring production and the use of tv&gt;avy fteld
equipment. This has rea lly caused
problems for us.
The yield losses from rompaction
can be tremenoous - more than
25'il In some years, and this Is
according to a soil scientist at the
Agricultural Reserve Service oft he
United States Department of Agricu lture. We need to do everything
that we can to prevent soil
compaction. Compacted soils Umit
the Oow of water to 9.lb-soU levels.
creating a number of problems.
One is poor drain age- the soU
drains very slowly or not at ail. It
stays wet in the plow layer, which
delays seed bed preparatkm. plantlng, and harvesting. Poor drainage
also Increases the chance of
disease, particular root rot.
Another is Inadequate root development. Water is trapped after
each rain at ltv&gt; bo.ttom ct the pow

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Lo~e l&gt;J, F&amp;AM, meets Tuesday,
7:30 p.m. at temple.

•Residential
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PH. 992-2772

L&amp;S
TRANSMISSION
REPAIR
Rt. 7, Pomeroy, OH.

OPEN MONDAY
THRU SATURDAY

We also have black gas pipe for
industrial use, septic tank pipe
and all fittings .

PH. 992-7 403

6-23-86-1 mo.

PH. 742-2656
RUTLAND MINE SUPPLY CO.

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
VETERINARIAN
CLINIC

34D 18 New lima Rd.
RUTLAND, OHIO

E. Shockey, DVM

PT. PlEASANT OFFICE

ELITE POLE
BUILDINGS

RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL
AGRICULTURAL
Custom Design

BEND AREA CALL

Seovice

Ripley Office
For Hours
304-372 -5709

CALL 667-3271
Co111p1rt the Qalllf
Befort Vft~f mo.

14 ~tlc

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
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992-3410
LIMESTONE
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TOP SOIL
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10-8-tfc

Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE OF SALE

PARCEL NO. 2: Situotod In
the Townthip of Rutfond.
County of Moigo 111d State of
Ohio. In Section 1, Town 8,
" - 14 of the Ohio Compony's Puldllleglnnlng In the c:enter of
t11e p.~btie ro.r on the .,.
bolwwo Miloo M. Hyoott Wid
CoQiclllllle; thon011outh 17
rods; tlwl01 4 rods;
- .. north B ond 1/ 3
dog,_ - 16 rodo 11 .,leo;
-01 north 83 degrees Will
8\\ rodl to the ptoco of
beginning, contolnlng &amp;3/ 100
on oera, more or len.
ReforenOI 11 mode 10 dead
of Pout - . to Ridi•d
8-g o......w.l In Vokome
262, Pogo 833, Mllgs Cwnty
Dead R--.!s.
Ap p R A 1S E0 AT
$12,000.00. Tho. reot Ollila
cennot bo oold tor tau than
two·thtrdlthe-olsodvlkoe.
TERMS OF SALE: Cosh.
Howlld E. Fnnk. Sheriff'
of Mtlgo County, Ohio
171 28; (8) 4. 11 , 3tc

Sec. II . Thio Ordin11101
shell toke offecl .,d be in

mont or loos111d -.g • port of
tr101 of lind oon-.vod II¥

Emili Honioon

to Cltrtn01

ond EdWord E'*oiJOclo II¥
Ml doted Juno 23, 184Z .,d
rocOrdocl In Book 1110. Pogo
297oftheMtigoCountyOeod
R=.,ao Is,_ to Ml

--------------------------------------------------------------~of:1112,~
$Non In v..,me
R~ord
•-dod
Pogo 833. Mllgo County
a~oo~~ng

to

OeodREJJcopling
'"'m the
·
doocrlbod
rill-e
2.44-ocro
•••leotod to
M. T-rior, ol o1. v.-- 155, Pogo
39. Meigs County Ootd

w.,.,.

Rooonlo.

'

of

Public Notice

ORDINANCE N0. 1173-811
An Ordln.nce To Authorize

of Aut E11110.
Be It ordolnod by the
Council
the Vltlogo of
Mlddlop001 I I followa :
Soc. I. Thotthe Council of
the Vltloge of Mlddloport,
Ohio, pursu1111 to Soctlon
721 .03 of the Ohio RoviHd
·Code ICCOpt bids for tho drll·
ling ond produe11on of oil
and g110 101dor the r•t Hill•
ownod by the Vlllogo oituOiod In Sollobury Township,
Molgs County, Ohio, do·
ocribod In Volumo 227. Pogo
857, Molgo County D•d
Recordo. Tho offor tro leooe
the r•l oetato shiN provldo
IIIII no wolt lhott be drHiod
which witt lntomro whh the
- • dlopoool focltlttoo
oitultod on the IMI oetltll
111d thollho VIUego ,...,.
the right to opprovothe lociltlon of ony drHIIng •"• end
the loeatlon of any prt!duc·
lion llnH ond/ or oqulp·
mont.

Swim Molds · Inlerpreting Services

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Cany Fishing Supplies

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Here
IU!IN!!! PHON!

Roger's PARI! VILLA

SPECIAL!

APPROXIMATELY 2112
ACRES OFF ST. RT. 7 NEAR

198 7 DOUBLE WIDE

S16,900

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL?
IF SO, PLEASE PHONE
HOME NATIONAL BANK

14" Wide
Mobile Homes
ltarling AI

sn,soo
12 and 3 Bedroom•)
NO DOWN PAYMENT!
MONTHLY PAYMENTS
BELOW RENT COST
Open 7 Days A Week

949-2210.

"AI R•ronablt Prict1"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

-

Addons and remodeling
Roofing end gutter work
Concrete work
Ptumblng end electrical
work

!Free Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Day or Nliht
NO SUNDAY CAUS

1614)

CARPENTER
SERVICE

4- 5-' 86 tfn

992 -6215 or 992·7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

4-15-' 86-lc

CLC COINS

RED'S
CARRYOUT

SlUS &amp; SERVICE

Buying I Selling
Gold, Silver
14K Chains, Coins,
Collector's Accessories
Bullion

Woods •n load

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

2 Miles ,._ lldwoll
3 lllloo tr. . Yioton
HOURS:

Authori1ed John Deere,
Ntw Hollo net, Bush Hog
form Equipment
Daoler

Monday· Thvractev
10 A.M .- 9 P.M .
Fritley &amp; Satutday
10 A.M.• 11 P.M .
Clooed Sunfty

SUMMER HOURS
1-7 M-TH

985-3937
Call for Directions

388-9331

6-16-'86- I mo .

304-863-83 21

•SPEED OUEEN IAUNDn
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

•SArELUI£ SALES &amp; SERVICE

J.R.'s REPAIRS

TO HELP YOU BUY AND SELL

at lop of hill.

~.

Wt Hut - fill Tl•
S~tp Ttehlelu
•• D1ty

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

TV -1114-US-1248
APPL.·614-t49-1145

RADIATOR

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

Choice of

Maleriall

"o••

SUPEIIOI
SIDIWG CO.

Public Notice

608 EAST MAIN

NEW LISTING - Bradbury - Recently remodeled 3 bed·
room ll ome w1th pa rhal basement. huge equipped kot chen.
dn~~ng " "'· a11d free gas to house. $35 ,000.00.
NEW LISTING - MIDDLEPORT -:-- Nrce 2 story 3 bedroom
With I ~ baths, enclosed troni ~H ing jXJJCh, hrepiace. ca r·
JXlrl , lots of storage space Ma ny other leatures. All for
$37,500 00
7078-Embrolder

RACINE - Newer sec tiona l home. Occupied on ly a short
time' 3 bed rooms. I\\ baths, central arr, equrpped krlch en.
Ail electrrc. Extra nice condition . ONLY $26,!1:10.00 .

the

tn sp.rat•onal 23rc1 Psalm

in cross stitches. w•th

PUBIC NOTICE
In compliance wrth Sec·

tion 5705.27 of the Ohio
Revlsod Coda, tho Melgo
County Budget Commission
will meet TuHdly, Augult
5, 1986,01 9:00A.M.,Intho
oudltOt's office at the Molgs
County Courthouoe to orgontzo 1 Budget Commtoolon for 1881.
Willlom R. Wicktlno.
Meigs County Audhor
IBI 4 1te

SMAll
WANT ADS
PPQ(

A811 PutOII -

POMEROY

pretty floral edge 1n bnght
color s. easy stitc hes

NOTICE TO BtODERS

Transler .

The Bo11rd of Education of
the Meig s Local School Dis·

Send $3.25 plus 75¢
postage . handling. lor

trict
lo
sea led desires
bid s for the

each panern
lenf to:
Allco ..... Cr!flt,
.... Milt :J 1:,

The Daily Sentinel

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

~-t2~1W, Wttflilt.

NY

ttm."""'._,AfMH.

for

:''~~~~iii

tho 1988-87

year :

Gnsoline and Oil Pro,dulcts l
Tires and Tubes

In order to bft considered,
all aeeled bids shall be recmived tn the Tre11urer'1 Offlee. 621 S. Third Avenue.

Middleport. Ohio, on or bo·
foro 12:00 o'clock noon
Augull19. 1986 .
The Board of E~l'o':r:~:

ret.VII the right to
or reject 1ny and all bids .
Meigs

1114)
1814. 11 , 18, 3tc

E¥E1HE
WANT ADS
FOfl G.REAT IUYS

I

POMEROY -Six acres close to town - w1th nice I \\ story
frame home. with three to lour bedrooms. Equ!Jped kitchen
with mce cabonets. 10x21J ~orage building, pa lro. garden
space. and an A/Cunit. Ail lurn iture &amp; appliances 1ncluded.
Pnce red uced to only $19,000.00 .
RUTLAND - Ahome w1th everyting! Beautilul ranch home
w1th an ootstandin glam1iy room COfflllete with bar and f"e·
place. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths. separate utilily. Large deck. 2
car carport. with stota ge on large lot. Also has a satellite. and
above ground pool. $55.~0 .00 .
MIDDLEPORT - North Third - 2 story home with 2-3 bed·
rooms on 40'x 113' lot. Gas FA. heat. Garage. Woold make a
nice home lor your lam ily for only $14 .~ 0. 00 .
PRICE REDUCED TO BARGAIN lEVEl - 2 story home in
Pomeroy in n1ce condition - owner will sacrilice at
$20,900.00.
HENRY E. ClELAND, JR ................................. 992-6191
JEAN TRUSSEll.. ........................................... 949·2660
DOniE TURNER ............................................ 992-5692
OFFICE :........................................................ 992· 2259

2 puppiet 10 WIHIIIIS old . Call

2920.
Black

poodle,

female,

houte

dog. 304-676-5123 .

2 week old orphan kitten with
bottl• and milk. Phone 30467 6- 3466

6 Lost and Found

EASY ASSEMBLY WORK!
e714 .00 per 100. Guaranteed
paymmt. No aaln . Details · send
st amped envelope: Etao -6847
3418 Enterprise. Ft. Pierce, Ft.

33482.
EASY ASSEMBLY WORKr
f714 .00 per 100. Guaranteed
payment. No sales. Details send
stempa:t 111nvelope : Elan-711S
3418 Enterprise. Ft. Pi erce. Ft.

33482.
up duters now tor
Friendly Home Panie1. Earn your
kit by having Friendly Parties.
Toys and Gifts. a good way to
make extra income . Ca ll your
Fr iendly Home Dealer now . Also
booking parties. Magnolie Nita
. •• 614·992-3661.
Signing

2 baby calves k&gt;tt nea r Keno.
Call 614 ·986-4426

Need 10meone for light house
cleaning in my home . Days and
tome weekendt 614- 99 26583 ~ 614 -992- 7314 .

Lost: 2 female German sho rt hair
Pointers. Lett seen · on Beech
Grove Rd . rieer Rutland . One
wearing rad nylon collar other
brown luther co llar. 614 -742·
2848.

304· 675-1429.

Lost . Sand Hill Road . White door
from refrigerator unit of a
refrigt..-.ted truck . Reward . 304·
67!5 ·4640 .

9

Wanted To Buy

uted cart
Jim Mink Chev.-Olds Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson
614·446 -3672
TOP CASH pakl for '83 modal
and newer used cart. Smith
Buick· PonliiC , 1911 Elstern
Ave .. Gallipo lis. Call 614 ·446·
2282.
WANTED TO BUY used wood II
coat heateu. SWAIN'S FURNI T\JRE . 3rd. &amp; OHve St. Gallipolis . Call 614 -448- 3169 .
Buying daily gold , silver coins.
rings , jewelr'l. 11erling ware. otd
coins, large currency. Top pri ces . Ed. Burken Barber Shop ,
2nd . Ave. Middleport , Oh .. 614 -

AVON, 3 opllfl tefritorits , ca ll

Adv ertising Sales , male or ftt·
male, no experience nece11ery,
full or pert time. 304· 676·5963
after 6 :00PM

Man to help milkcowt. Murray f.
ville. Jeclclon Co., WV . Farm.
Tebey Dairy, Rt 96 . West
Parker~ burg. 304-883-3705 . ...l
------ 1 · ~~

E11ablithed C:On'ft eny neet11 ex~
perienoed awning innaller, • • '
periSloed siding instelter. Mutt
have e~tperienoe, truck, equipment. telephone. Onty Qualified
Cellon please. 304-676-5282
batw01111 11 -12nm Monday th~~
Saturday .
~ ~
HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES ·
11 your future ltill untettled?
Check into tile Army NaUon1l
Guard. We have good pay,
training , and up to t1B,OOO
available in educational benefitt.
Serve part -time. 304-876-3960

or 1·800-a..2 ·3619.

VINYl &amp; A'UIIIUM
Conoplate "--titling
Aoofint ef all TyfOOI
Worlled in llolllt • •
20

yelrt

"Free E...._..

CALL COLLECT:
Ph. (614) 841·5425

7· f5·M 2 mo .

MIDWEST
SEAL &amp; STRIPE

SPRING lOFT
New A Small
Monthly Ranta!
Plw Initial ln11oilotion
Puf1 l Salt..., In Y.,...
' - Todoy (!toll wi1fl
Option to lay)
l~ Dwntd, 20 Yn. hp.
tlN S WATER REFIItNG
W111 !lh !Jr•J
7-2 .

304-n2-2996

Serving this area
with PoweSeal seal
coating and striping
and making of
Asphalt &amp; Concrete.
1-1114-696-1337
1-1114-593-8693

THE CHJAUTY

Hewanl L Writesel

PliNY SHOP

ROOFING

F" AN y,., ,_.,, N.m
Offito Sutrllos &amp;
furniture, .....,.,

PW~

"

Airline Job• $17.800 te
&amp;68,60 0 -Yaar now hiring. cal(·
Job l ine 1-618·459 ·3536. ei1: '.
A-19BO for information 24,.
houn .

'• i

12

....._F_

Signs, ...... 11..,.,
Capy iorftW, he.
25J Mill 5t. . . . . .rt

104 Morlloorry Ai. h-ay

992-3345)12/~n

ACCENT
742· 2027

SYIACIISI, OliO

n. S.l•l• o. '" ~•IfI
HIAYY LAnE .D IATltSI

.I

, SJU5

.

CEMINT DOGS &amp; CATS
10"1. Off
llMPS&amp;fltWIIB
'It PIKE
r

949-2263
or 949-2168

•AlUMINUM SIDING

•llj)WN IN
INSULADON

81SSDL
SIDING CO.

Built
" Free Eatlmat•"
Ho11111

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2160
No Sundoy Calls

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
9115-3561
•W.shera •Dishwa1t.ln
•Renges

4-5-Jic

Roger Hysell
Garap

3-D AUTO &lt;ENnR
ltOI'I

AIIO TrtitlllitlfH

P • ••·I~ S612

2;J'1t
'

w. -

lt.

'ml-1':':·
I

Fi;_

,_.,.Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR •·

or ·

ftofM.~ ~

Wlff CIIIN ftH .......,. " m;
Trained end eKp . 614-992-6689 . J
Ot 814 · 992 -7314 .
' "!
.

·I

Special n .n ting care for elderfv ·

in p-iv a re horre. Call 614-992J ~~

Have vacancy to r room and · •
bo•d for elderly. ReatonsbJe...

,

=c-;c;;-;--:--;-.,----;--~ · .

18 Wanted to Do

- - - - - -·
White mate. retired, eble bodied.' \
wantt room &amp; boltf'd on farm in
country in eAchange for Nghf•l
work , yard. gerden a etc: . Pta. .
sand rupon1 e to Bo• T20 in e1ra
of the Gallipolit Daily Tribuna, ·
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Oh 1
46631 .

immediate opS~ingl without
waiting till or test . 11 5 ·
t68,000. Phone ee Uutfundable.
!6021 838-8885. Ext. eos.

Wilt d:lo blbylitting in my hOfl'l:.
C1n give references . Close. to1
school . 304-&amp;76· 3774.
'·

3000 GtNemmant jobs lilt.
t16 ,040 · 169 ,230 yr . Now
hiring . Ce ll 806 -687 ·&amp;000 e,;t.

Htn deuo n 1rea .
5400 .

Bush Hog , Galtipoli1 Feny

•n4:

304- 6711-'

R-411112.

FinanCial

Individuals who are willing to
provid e room and board and •
famity atmosphere to emot io netly d ilturbed aduH s. Reimbur·
Mm..-.t f450 pet month. For
more information conuet 8•b ·
are Co11 at Woodl1nd Centert,
call 614 · 446· 5600

21

Due to recant e11pansion kJcal
COfllJaRY hal Mv..-al open ing•.
Mud be over 18 and hiiVe
curr..-.t driver's llcanu. No
•per len ce necessary. e14, 000
f irt t year. Call 10AM to 4PM ,
614- 446· 7441 .

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VAllEY PUBliSH·
lNG CO . recommenda thll1 vetu
do businflls with people ""
know. end NOT to send mon-t
throulfi the mail until you hM
nv..tigated the offering . ~ ...

·· ··-Ganrpoliii........ ·

.
Pomerov ···· ··· !

&amp; Vicinity

Middleport ·•
&amp; Vicinity .

·n .·eo OM '•ders .. ... 131

='j.':.,..,
ou
.,_'Ill ,.,.., ,.............
d........ Ill
Tnrd! led
~

................Mini
'"'''171
1111

'"'IIINITAI.I.ATION

!'I'll WAIIJIAN1Y ·

-tfc

~~

Moving Sale Aug. 4 a. 6, at
Argebrights. Corner of Butt Run
Road &amp; Van Buren St .. Vinton.
Oil .
Garege111a. t.....o fiMifv . Aug. 2,
4. &amp; 6 . Acrau from the H1nn.,
Trace Hivh School located rt
Mercerville. Oh io.
S1le 60 Nell. Cloth•
'h price. other itamt reduced .

P'AI'ITS end SERVICE

Itt. 124,

'·..

814 ·992-8022 .

Mieh~•n·

All M•b•
•Dryer• •Freezers

I

•YJNYL SIDING

Help Wanted

MARITIME TRADES
Seeking 10 appli cents to lilt
immediate opening• w it h intetnetion•l organiution . On -th ejob tr1ining, good st1rting N ·
lary. excellent benef it• package,
world travel. Applicants mu1t be
in good physical condition ,
t.tween 11·24 years old . Cell
toll tree n Ohio 1-B00-2821384 , Mon .-Thurs .. 91m· 2pm.

2-17-86-tfn

•Refrigeretors

"frlt htimt1t11"
Jnstallatian bailable

New

NEW- REPAIR

ICIIT OUT FOR FUTURf USEI

FENCE CO.iNY ·
""·After
992-6931
S Call
&lt;t&gt;

Situations
Wanted

.,,

•• •

" \'

Business
Opportunity

•~

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
" Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

and Graduation
StatioMI'y, .... IIi&lt;

6-23-'86 -1 mo.

'

992 ~ 3476 .

Hirtng l Federal go-vernment ;o bs

of Council

CLELAND REALTY INC.

1149.

in your •ell and ovenaas. Many

IWir .•••

Cemplate &amp;utt• Worll

1-13 -tfc

Coush•
Is a'waltln
Va'll give him a eaiU

Dwarf rabbit . Call 814 ·446 -

11

Tired of Hartl
Rusty Wolor?
Wa
Tht An ·

HGIJII LONG

Middleport. Ohio

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FtOUCtARY
Eottte of Thoophllus Louis
Smith, daceuod. Coso No ..
25,198.
On July 22. 1986, In tho
Moigo County Probota Court.
Coso No. 26.198. Sue Etten
Zirkle. 126 Peocod&lt; Av!llue,
Pornaroy, Ohio 45759. wu
oppolntod Eucutor of the eslll!lof....__.,.·oLwioSmlth.
,....,.._
-ood, lato of 121 Pe~­
cod&lt; A-ua, Pomeroy. Oho
46769.
Robert E. Bud&lt;.
Pro bote Judge
Lana K. Nesselrood. Clerk
m 28; 181 4, 1,. 3tc

Government Jobs. f18.040 ·
U9.230-yr . Now hiring. Call
805- 687-1000 ht. R-9806for
current federal I Itt .

Giveaway

6873.

7-1-16-1 mo.

992-2196

Public Notice

A1 per Artk:le lX, Tren1fer1 and
vauncill. •ction 8 , potting, af
Fruth Ph.,macy .
the negotiated agreement be·
tween the MlTA end the Bo..-d
Decorated eak111 tor any occa· of Educ.tion, the Meigt local
sion. Weddingt e tpecialty. Wilt School Dtttrict it potting the
deiNer for am~~n fee. 614 -992· following vacancies for Its regu6601
lar teadling staff: Chapter 1
Pomeroy Elementlry, ChiJ)ter I
Cere for the elderly, room, 'h time Middleport Etementlfy,
board , laundry. 24 hour care. 'h time Rutland Elementary, end
Reuonable rates . loll T.l.C . Business tncher !Typing and
304 -773-6828.
Acco unting ) Meigt High School.

lmt.lla...,. service

PAT HILL FORD

2te

Reduct~ ufe &amp;. fatt with Gol•••
capsul• &amp; E· Vap 'w1ter pillt'

Servtr:es

De-¥ey H01ton.

17) 28; 181

8133 .

Emplovmr.nl

Ail mejot All!llian• ••
pairs (in•••• flticro wav•l - llect!OIIItl Or·
gans . Mololle oeovice.

Juty. 1aae.
AnEST: Jon eudo . Cltrk
Pre1id~ 11

..end

NHd tutor tor Second grllde
rNding level. Cell 614· 261·
8251 ..ter 6:30PM .

TYs, l"ttmas
Satellite S.lts

4/ 1/ tln

"CLELAND CLAN"

Follow Rl. 6&amp; SoulhiPPfOl. 2

ling t beat• tn Meig1. 011111,
M11on aret.
rnumt 1nd
NIIJV requirement• to Salet·

from Ch•tlire or 5 mila• out
from Porter, Cell 814· 388 ·

1· 6 . 60 -16lT Coo per Super
Malt er highway tread .
Orig . equip. tire . 80 Ford 160
4,;4. Celt 614· 992-5366 betwHfl 6 and 10 pm .

SEE ONE OF THE

992·5587 for hofo.

Experienced building m ..tri...
salntnln to call on contr1ctor
•d indu1trial cuttomers for
retail lumberyard. Must be wil-

Road

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYlVANIA

Help Wanted

man. P.O . Box 445. GalipoUs.
Oh 411831 .

We pey c,.h for late model clean

BOGGS

11

aupplin . pre-cut quitt
low prices. ThtCountry
Shop. S.R . 55• w•t B'h miles
IJCIUOrOI.

814 -742· 2889.

YOUNG'S

CUSTOM IUH.T
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

992-6550

CHESTER-915-3307

Real Estate General

446-0294 .

Rabbit Hound and hOuse dog to
giveaway. Both matu. Call

INTERESTED IN BUYING

MOBILE HOME SALES

Cle.ner
one Rd.
h•lf Call
mila614
upGeorgn , Creek

814 - 448 ~ 1909 .

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

BISSELL
BUILDUS

PLUMBING &amp; HEA nNG
New location:
168 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 45760

repair , plftl. and auppliet. Pick
up and delivery. Davis Vacuum

Tree for firewood . 304-675-

-

1-3-'86 tfc

force from end aft., the . ,.
tielt dote providlll !&gt;\' lsw.
Paosod tho 14Jn doy of

looM

of

Co~erilllll Hearing Air Selection

8-13

Farm E•ul~tnanl
Parte &amp; Serwlee

54 Misc . Merchandise
Public: Notice

~

!

7-7-'86·1 mo .

Real Estate General

tersection. Get in lefll1ne and turn

Ill e.,,, St . h1111 101 . Ohto 4\769

Eme1rgency

RE!IOIN(f PHONE

PH. 304 -1175-2441

10a~

"

(614)

305 Jackson Ave.
SMALl ANIMAl HOURS
Mon .-Wed.-Thun. 3-S pm
Tue&lt;. 6:30-3; Fr i. 1-2 pm
lolurdoy t0 -11 :30 om
lARGE ANIMAl &amp;
SURGERY BY APPT.

left lu st

FREE HEARING TESIS WEDNESDAYS

a
LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
:z::

Guaranteed

SWEEPER ttnd uwing machine

4

6-:Ml -'86-1 mo .

All Work

Poul

TO YOU"

FREE Eot . &amp;
Work G~t.ed in Wrilll'lg

RACINE, OHIO
Offiu 949-2438

From Harsh

"WE COME

Etemonts
w/ APS DUPONT TEFLON
- - t l o n o AM
7/9/'86/1 mo.

RAYMOND E. PROFFin (MAC)

For Industrial or Residential Use

' "Free Estimates"

~ ne .

~nltntl Clmlfttd

•

HIGH PRESSURE PLASTIC
WATER PIPE

miles- jus! past M:mtown Rd . il'l·

PHONE
992-2156
Or Wn1t Da•Mw
Otpt

992-20"'8

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

DIR£CTIONS TO LOT : Cross 1011·
hee Belpre brldJt; stay in ri Rbt

The Daily Sentinel

comr. thtnce ~
1024 loot ., pt- of begin·
ntng, oonlllnlnt .&amp;.&amp; .,,.

,

ly Michael Norton

FREE ESTIMATES

or

I'IOitl'llll't

304·675·2295

RUTLAND - Rutland Village
Council will mee t 1\Jesday. 7:30
p.m., at the civic center.

RUTLAND - Rutland Village
Council will meet at 7:30 p.m.,
Rutland Civic Center.

POMEROY - Bible School,
South Bethel Church. begins Mon-

Range 14, of the Ohio Compony's Purcll-. 111d begin·
ning II I point illha owthlina
of the Ebersbecll lrect .,d tho
north line of tho Dolph HyMII
tr ICI. Slid point being 78.5
foot ..t of N.Y.C. Ry.. Right
of W"'f, -co north 17V.
dogt- 170 foot ., the
com• ofscllooliot
-01' -.th 80 degr- ..t
208 foM; · -01 north 10
-W"'f
- -of State
208 foot
to rld&gt;t
of
Routo
124;
-01 _..., olong right of
w-v 117 loot; llwl01 muth
267 to Dolph Hyoelt's

CAll CAPTAI4 srEMIR

EAST MEIGS - Important .
bu siness session for the Eastern
District Athletic Boosters meeting
at 7:30 p.m. Tuf'Sday in the high
school cafeteria .

TUE§DAY
CHESHIRE - Wayside Garden
Club meets Tuesday, 7 p.m .. Little
Kyger Congregational Christian
Omrch.

TIJPPERS PLAINS - Orange
Township Trustees will meet at 8
p.m. Monday at the home fl. Clerk
Dorothy Calaway.

Olfolowl :
Being in Section 1, To.., 8,

$18 MIN. 3 ROOMS

•Certainteed •Mastic •Aicola

3 Announcements

POMEROY - Pomeroy Youth
League swimming party Tuesday
at London FI:Joi for aUplayers and
families: picnic. 6 to 7 and
swimming, 7 to 9.

MIDDLEPORT - Revival. Ash
Street Freewill Baptist Church
begins Monday continuing through
Saturday, 7:30 p.m.: Clovis Vanover evangelist.

POMEROY
Meigs High
School Band Boosters meeting at 7
p.m. Monday in the high school
band room. Scheduling for the fair
food s tan&lt;j will be posted.

of

ANY SIZE ROOM CI!AIID

Can Meigs COunty farmers help?
You certainly can. If you are
interested in donating hay or trucks
to lv&gt;lp with the transportation,
please call 1-!00·282-1955.
Tree DecHne Problem
"Dead oaks, hickories, ash,
yellow poplar and other species
were wide-spread this past summer
in lbrests decline. Some of the tree
li'cllne has been caused by insects
but a lot of this goes back to the
drought of 1983 and 1984 and the
hard winter of 1983-84 and 1984-&amp;'i.
Weather during the growing
season ls only one factor causing
stress to trees. Weather during
other seasons is also important,
espeeiaUy winter and spring. The
winter fl.1985was moderate and the
spring was ronduclve for early and
9.1Stained spring gro"1h. Good
weathe r for the next two or three
years will he needed to repair the
~ress conditions to the trees.
Poison Ivy Time
At least 85% of Americans are
sensitive to some degree to the
infamous three- leaf plant .
Polson ivy and its cousins rotson oak and poison sumac -are
responsible for more itchin g, oozing
blisters than any other ca use.

day through Friday, 7 to 9 p.m.
Classes for nursery through adult .

MONDAY
CHESHIRE - Kyger Creek
Athletic Boosters meet Monday,
7:30 p.m.. high school to plan
football preview.

isiOlod out of the Common
Pleu Court of Moigo Cwnty.
Ohio, in the 0018 of The City
Loon &amp; Sovingo Co .. Ptointiff.
ogoinot Richlld 0. Blelling. ot
at. Oefandonto, upon • Ju~ th""""
cmont
..o No.
85 ""'-·
CN 236 i1being
llid
Court. t wit! offer tlf - · 11
t11e front door of the Courthou• In Pomeroy, Moigo
County. Ohio, on the 29th cloy
Augult 19811. ot 10:15
a.m., tho following Iondo end
...........to. bcotod •• 37625
Stile Routo 124, Pomeroy.
Ohio 46769:
PARCEL NO. 1: Situllod in
t11e Townonlp of Rutfond.
County of Meigl end State of
Ohio, bounded 111d delcribad

NOTICE

Ohio's Hay Fev..."Ohlo has hay fever of tre right
idnd," according to Steven D.
Maurer, dlret"tor of the Ohio
Departm ent of Agriculture.
Farmers have responded over·
wtv&gt;lmlngly to Ohio's hay relief
effort. By last Friday, Ohio farmers
have pledged over 7,500 ton;; fl. hay,
which equals approximately 234,lll
bales. Over 450 tons of hay have
been sent to North Carolina. South
Carolina, Georgia, and Florida.

Community calendar / area happening

By vtnue of., Order als.te

wW a1!to feature performances by the Grubb Family
Singers, the ReOectlonsTrlo, the HomebowltiQuarlet
and the BuDders Quartet.

season.

fllestoro• Faded
Oxidized Finishes To
Showroom Luster
.CARS •TRUCKS
•BOATS •PLANES
&amp; MORE
Preserves &amp; Seals

N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

VINYL
A~ PLACE Mf N1
WINDOWS

3 Announcements

Crah

GREAT BEND ELECTRIC, Inc.

WE HAVE MOST All POPULAR BRANDS AT
THE SAME LOW PRICES

10

f•

GOSPEL MUSIC - The G!l'lpel Harmony Bo:rs will
fie lhe feature attraction at the Mason County Fair,
:itionda.v, In performancesat31U1d9:00p.m. The day

VINYL SIDING

including industrial chemicals,
oousehold products, and cosmetics.
Those blisters, incidentally, are
ttv&gt; 9.lbjeet of one of the strongest
popular myths about poison Ivy.
People generally tend to believe
that tiv&gt; it chy oondition can be ,
spread by the oozing material from
the bllsters. But not so. The effects ~.
of poison ivy are ca used by the
plant's resin - a sticky substance
that certain kinds of plants have in
their sap - roming into contact
with the skin . Thus, the spreading
takes place actually before any
blisters have formed by sap
deposited on ttv&gt; skin. Once the
oontact with the sap occurs, it takes
about 12 to 48 hours before reaction
takes place.
Because of this time lag, a person
has a chance to avoid getting roison
ivy even after direct ron tact with it.
If you suspeet that you have
!l)llen into poison ivy, the first thing
to oo ls to wash the exposed areas
thoroughly and Immediately. Also,
clothing tha t has picked up the
oiicky resin should be washed as
soon as possible.
Clothin g, and even the fu r of pets
tha t have come into cont act wi th
the plant if left uncieansed, can
spread polson ivy even days la ter.
Washing carefully with soap
chemically breaks down the rf'Sin
so that It can be removed easily .
If a person should get polson ivy,
though, Immediate attention with
simple trea tment is probably the
best action. Mild cases of poison ivy
may require no more than wet
compresses or soaking in cool
water to relieve itching. Addition·
ally, a diluted solution of baking
soda is often recommended for
drying up oozing blisters. There is a
v ar ie t y o f ef fec tiv e non prescription drugs on the market,
such as calamine lotion ~nd others .
that use a oombination of m laminc
and benzedryl. These will both
relieve the itchin g and dry up the
watery blisters.

layer, which limits root growth and
results in a soort, stubby root
system. Since roots do oot fully
develop, subsoll nutrients and
molstW't' heoomes unavailable to
llv&gt; crop later in the growing

The Daily Sentinei- Page-7

Business
Services
----------T"'---------r----------,r----------,.----------r----------1

Thanks are offered to hosts
of tour at area dairy farm
By JOHN C. mCE
County Extension A,enl

Pomeroy- Middleport, 'Ohio

Monday, August 4, 1986

••~lo"GuaraMeld

,,.. DlllwWW M Trt lute Aree

·.

3 family yard sa te Friday, August
1.2. 4 at509 Secon d St . Maton,
W. Ve Women. mens clothing.
1000 Harlequin romance books,
baby furniture, mite items.
3 ramilv . Kid• cloth" •nd toys,
household items ..-.d much
mo re. 718 BMIIdway. Aaetne.a
Augu st 4th and 5th.
til"

Y ~rd ule August 6 &amp; 7. 9-1. 140
Grant St .. MktdJeport . Clothes,
bookl . whatnot . dlah.. .

2 redwood t.wn chairs . uphOft ·
ter roclc9f, storm doors . c lothet,
Au g. 4 .5 9 -5. Starlin'g M ,.N~
above Eastern High Schoo l. •

··--·-·prPteaiianf·····

August 4 &amp; 6 . St. At . 124.
driYew•v on left p11t M-.. ~

&amp; Vicinity

wood lake. 9 :00 · dark. An.
tiqu .. and nice household itenfa.
C:On11U1er. encyclopedi&amp;s, clO thing. fruit jar1.

...... ···· ···· ................... .
Jutv 5th, y11d ule 9 till darlt.
Qellipolit ferry , Ruga. bicycle &amp;

misc .
Big Y•rd Sale, At. 2 Bolt 388,
Ripley Rd. Anne Schmitt ,.. ••
dance. AM t hrN days . look for
slgnt . Mon . Tues. Wed.

HOUSE IMRFIDWING?
CI.WIIPWITH

ClA~
··~ .a.:.
~ .

.• . . .

(lf«

W1t tr St . SyflcuM. Tues 4
Wed . 12 :00 t ill 6 :00 pffl.
Clothes, Iedi n size 7 a. 9. Tutle
r"idence .
S....-eral femiliee . Au stic: Hill1,
Syracuse. Augu1t 4th, 6th, and
8th . C hildran1 lt..,.,s, 55 gill.
aquarium fltochd) , odde and

·-

endo. et4-lt2·1021 .

6 ..mMy. Mans, womens child ·
, ..s ctothlng Lg .
Mlac.

*•·

lotwHnHioRIIodo~ndCIII.,d

Reelty . E. Main 8t. Po,..roy.

Aug. 4-9. g ,Q0-4:00.

�Page-8-lhe Daily Sentinel

fi
• -·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio.

LAFF·A·DAY

Buaineu
Opponunity

44

Apartment
for Rent

Monday, August 4, 1986
74

I(IT 'N' CAltLYLI ®br i..rry Wright

64 Misc. Merchandise
Clllahll'l't Ut_. Tirtlhop. Ov..-

Carry GUt. groc.rv • dell for ula.

2 bdr. utlll11• panillly fum.,

SundiY Ill• C· 1. C-2 license.
NMr M.;gt min•. Call 814-

ens mo. Coli 30C-B71-B104
.. 304-171-7828.

742-2132.

Fund rainn ~r ale, minimum
inv•trMntl. Mu:irNJm poten·

D-4 Cttlpllllr diiJzer 4WIY bl.te.
oood condition, t8 ,000. Cell

75

tlol. 304·118e· 30:MI.

614-241·92CB .

Former Town • Country Betuty

Portable .. d floor, model Q)for

TV. CoU 114·441·1149.

2930.

304-1175-3388

Own

Of

871·

Roon for rent, ct.y. week.
month . Galll1 Hotel. Call 814448·8&amp;80. Rent as low as 1120
month .

own Jetn ·
Sponawe~r. laditt Appll'el.
Childrens- Maternity, L1rge
Silft, Petit: e. D111ceweer, AcceasoriH or 8rid1l Shop, Jord·
ache, Chic, LH. Levi. lzod.
Oheno. Gu•s. Calvin Klein ,
Sergio Vll .. tl, Evan Picone, Liz
-vout

Fuml1had room $111. Utiliti•
pd. 919 2nd Galllpolit. Sh~re
bath. Single m•l•. Call 814-

"I d on r t know what I1m
fishing for. I haven't caught
anythm'g yet,n

Cloiborno, Members Only. Gil·

oline, He1hhtu: , Over 1000

::~=~~-,··~~":. ~!~~~~

grlf'ld opening, et.:. Can Open
15 dlyJ, Mr. t&lt;aenan (305)

078· 31139.
St•l Building Dealenhip with
M1jor Manufacturer · Sal• 6

1--...;.-----------------1
32 Mobile Homes

EnginHting support . Starter Ids

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST. GALLIPOLIS. RT 31.
PHONE 814·448·7274.

Professional
Services

Bftt offer -1978 14~~:65 Fair·
mont Bayvitw'. 2 bdr. all elec.
Ex. cond. S1t-up on lot for rent .

W1tM wells serviced end drilled .

Free estimet•- Ctll 614-9925008 0181--742-3147.

Co11814-245-&amp;1111 .
1 970 P1rrleaa 12:.60 2 bdr.,
nM Clrpet, new furnace. good
cond .. 14,000. Cell 814-256·

Es t at ~

Real

8704.
31

:mi. south ofGallipolil, •29.900.
. Call devs

614 -&lt;U6-1615 or

t2BOO. Cell 614-446-0390.

2 bdr. mobile hom•. Storms &amp;
1creens, underpinning • bloc:k

evenings 614-446-6222 .

oil lor UBOO. Coli t14-218·
8074.

3 bdr. home, close to town, 2
baths. partly furnished . Gaa

t399&amp;. Coli 814·387-7410 of·

hNt, low utilitin . Clll614-246-

3 bedroom double wktt with
g1rage and large yard . P1rtielly
furnished. 3 mil• out of Pom•
roy on R t. 143. Require deposit
127&amp; per month. 814·882-

7401 .

Two bedroom houH. •111.00
month plus deposit tnd ret..-enCII, locettd 11 Southside. W . V1.

1970 Champion 12:.60. 2 bdr

3 hou . . for rent : 190!5 N. Main
St. 4 bedrooms 1300.00; 2324

Uncoln Ave. 4 bedroom~ UIO.;
2207 0111 51. 2 bedroomt t2!50.
Deposit &amp; Alference~ . 304-

14•85 2 bdr. on one ecrtl .. d.
Vinton area. 2 children •ccepted, no pet. Call 814-388-

Call 614-388-9893.

911B1 .

76 1•x70 Rosemont 3 bdr., 1
bath, AC. WB hook-up, 19000.
Poueaaion 30 days . Cell 814·

Mobil• home. 2 bedroom. fur ·
niehed, patio . loeeted within
city limits. C•ll614·446· 1232.

\.ower level. Rustic Hill. Syrl·

's:u1•- 3 bedroom. large kitc:h~n.

lergelivingroom, tir. cond., dtth
washer, ctrpeted, ltrge g.-•ge.
Price redu ced. 614-992 -7418.
~h .. 6;30 61 .. ·992-3402 .

1- •t..droom home on 7 acres
-_..unten paraditt in Chester
132 .000 . Call 614-986·

',ru .

·4392 .

379· 2816 or 614-379-2IOB .
r

Salesmen for establishtd home
improvement compln'i - Must
hll'tle b...tnns ability for direct
Nl•. pre.ent busine11 like
appMrence &amp; like sell ing. 304·

876·1212.
-------- 1 ~ fte4

Establ ished compan'i needs ex pltt'itnced awning lnltllltt'. tJt ·
perienced aiding insten ... Must
htve expltt'ience, truck . aquipment. telephone. Only Ou1lified
Callers pleau. 304· 675-6252
betWeen 11 -12am Mondey thru
S1turday.

~

. bedroom 2 '1.:! bllh , large
~itChen . 61/2 yea" new. 1 mile
it1l t of Rutland . 166,000. 1.11
~ere . 16x30 Pool and deck.

614·992 3543 .
70x1001ot. 1 1h atoryhoun . 3to
4 bedrooms. dishwuher, double
range stove, fully ctrpeted.
wood and coal burning stove.
Clo1e to school and hospitaL
C all 614 -992 -6060. Any rtiiOnable offet may be consid e red
Reeds vill e. by owner. Two for
the pri ce of one. 2 bedrooms,
li'lling . dining room. ki1chen.
bath with ex tta room . All tully
carpeted large porch, fenced
yard with aatillite T.V. Also
apanment whic:h includes 1
bedroom. living room. kitchen
area with bath. workshop and
gerAge. Forced air g11 heat. own
water well, larg e lot and maintenan ce fre e siding 846 .000. Call
614-378·61 56 .
2 bedroo m home in Syracuse.
Alum. t iding, 1torm windows, all
c ~ et . some furn iture. elec. or
QIS heat. 8• 10 building . small
lot. assuma ble loan. t263 mo.
,ns unn u And ta111s '"peyment.

HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES ·

Is vour future still unaettl.t1
Check into lhe Army N1tionel
Guerd. We have good JNI'i.
trtining, tnd up lo 118,000
IYiilable in education•l benefita.
Serve pert-time. 304-876-3960

or

1 · 800 ~ 842 · 3619 .

surftl;l, reasonable rates. Call

304-678-2338
1969 Buddy 12•65 with 1914
two room add -on. underpenning
and porch ~ning included.

304-8112-3788.

'83 doublewid e, ecre land. wood
siding. firepl ace. ceiling fen .
outbuilding . neer H1nntn

School. 030.000.00. 304 ~ 743 ~
7266 .

33

Farms tor Sale

Beautiful ho me in Flatwoods
area ot Pomeroy 17 acrta •
spring fed pond av1ii1DI1. Call
614-.... 6 -235 9

GoYtnnment ho mes fro m 11 ju
repair). OelinQuent ta)l pro pen't'
~ epo uess ion s C11 ll 805-6876000 h t H-9805 for current
'f!PO lil t
Mode rn 3 bech oo m home. re duced to 848 .000 00 30 4·

875·1047
Beeut iful 3 bedroom, br ick
home. air condition, centr al
heat . ca rp eted . bu1 1t-in kitchen.
2 baths, laundry room, attached
gArage . fen ced back yard. storege buiktin g, Camp Conley area,
3 mil es from Point Plea11nt.
304-675·4338.
New home. 6 a cres land. 3
bedrooms. 2 full baths , dining
room. den with wood burner. 9
mil11 from twan It Flatrock,
145 ,000.00 w ill consider trtiler
11 partial payment. 304 -896 -

333&amp;.

Furnished house and lot in New
Haven. 112 .000.00. 6U -992I 169 aher 6:00 PM.

34

For Sale: 60x90 ft . commerci al
zoned building . Brick construction . large garage doors. South
Fifth Ave . Middleport . Phone

44

Apartment
for Rent

Call 30•· 676 ·510• m 304-

676 -6386 or 304-871·792t.

Furnished 2 bdr. tpt. utilities
partially paid. Call 304-1766104 or 876·6388 or 304-175-

7921 .

1 and 2 bdr. apts. for rent . B11ic
rent for 1 bdr. 1116. Belie rent
tor 2 bdr. 8212. Also 1200 aec.
dep. req . Clote to Foodl111d end
Spring Vellev Piau. Jackson
E1t1te Apartments, 814·448 3997 . Equal Housing
Furnished apartment. adults

....... 304·17t·29&amp;3.
8 room house, 21 tcrll. 11d2

btock building, othtt' outbuildIng•. Gellipolit Ferry area. Moving , must HU. Asking t67 ,000.

5113 , &amp;U -992· 2026 evenings.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Aeceiving bids · off e rs on 20 or
41 acres of land with pond
loCited in G1llia County on ~lo
G t~nde · Centerpo int Rd . For in·
format ion Calll14-281-t&amp;40.
lot in Ch11ter Township, Baum
Sub divis ion. 120ft. by 180 h .
All utiliti.. avalleble. Call 614-

419·9e30 .

Ashton building Iota with public
Wit If, mobile homee permitted.
304 -676-2336 Of 304-676·

22t7.

M..on County, 60 e cr... 9 room
houae ph.rs bath, 4 mil• from
Leon. 149.500. 304-188· 2950
Of 768 -8782.

Rental s
41

Houses for Rent

large 6 room unfurnished first
floor tpt. in historic home
1djecen1 to city
1326 mo.
plus utilltie1, Ref .
dep. required. Call 814-441 -«26 or
eve. 814·446 -1819.

par•.a.

Mer chandi se

2 m inut" hom new Oallipollt

32 Mobile Home•

dr~petlet , windowt, iniUiatton.
wiring. Hou1e ia ~PQtleaal t310
per mo . Call IU-211 -5110.

2 bdr. Ill. In Mlddlopon. AC.
d._hwlther. e11 . loel1idft. UIO

month. Coli 114·441·8201 of.

.79 Holty Par• 14.1190 whh

terl:1&amp;.

1810 otter 4,30.

Hou.. for rtnt 1ft AdcU1on

...._pendo. e•c: - cond. 304-171-

IOwnohlp. Coli 614·3e7·7418.

4 Mdroom houn for rent In

lyrocuoo. Coli 614-892-7el8
ottori,OO p.m.

• 2 c:olllng lono . .,.......

On Covnty Rd. 21 . I bedroom

left 011 r~nt.ct lol. t11 .000.

141·2481. In Eootorn Loc:ol
DIOirlet.

deck, 1 v, b81h.

c,u

814·

~~====:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;;;;;;;;;::;::;;;;;=:;;:;:::~

SWAIN

&amp; FURNITURE 82
Olive St .. Gallipolis. Ncrw &amp; uted
wood -coalatovea, 6 pc wood lR
.. ita 1399. bunk beds 1199.
1n1ron
199. new &amp;
Ul.ci bedroom suit•. rang11,
wringer washers, 6 aho•. New
livingroom auit• t199 -t599 ,
ltmps, •lao buying coal lr wood
11ov•. Cll1614-446-3159 .

recnn..

0000 USED APPLIANCES
W11hers. dryen, refrigltt'atora,
r1ngu . Skeggs Appliances .
Upper River Rd . betide Stone
Crett Motel.l14 -441-7398 .
County Appliance. Int . Good
used spplianc;• and TV sett.
Open SAM to &amp;PM. Mon thru

Sot. 614-448-1e99. 827 3rd.
Ave. Gallipolis, OH .

Valley Fumiture. new &amp; used .
large seetton of (Jiality furni ture , 1216 Eutern Ave ..
Gellipolit.
Chedl OUt l"oltrydey low prices
on furniture &amp; IPPii~nces . Mol lohtn Fumiture. At . 7 North,
Kan11.1ga . Cell 614-446 ·144-4.

Coli t14-448-1108 o• 614 ·
448 -44&amp;3.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofas end ehtira priced from
1396 to 1996. Teb/11 ,150 and
up to 1125 . Hide· e·beds 1390
to 1596. Aeclintrl 1225 to
t375 . Lamps 128 to 1125 .
Dinett• •109 ~nd up to 1496 .
Wood table w-1 ~Wa 1286 to
t796 . Desk t100 up to 137&amp;.
Hutchtl 1400 and up . Bunk
beds complete w· mattrnsn
1295 and up to 139&amp;. Bebov
beds 1110 &amp; 1176. Mattr•na
Of bo11 aprings full or twin $63 ,
firm 173. 1nd 183 . Queen seta
1226. King 1350. 4 drtwer
chest t86 . Dreeaers 189. Goo
cabineta 8 , 10, 6 12 gun . G11
ot electric range 837&amp; . Baby
mattreun 136 &amp; 146 . Bed
tramn 120. 130 King fram e
UO. Good 1electian of
bedroom auit•. me1al cabinets, hndboardt 130 and up

a

to

Used Fumiture; W11her &amp;
dryer, oa• r~nge . electric , .. g • .
amtll color tv. wood tmte &amp; 2
bench•. beds, dretllf , &amp;
rtclinlf. 3 mil11 out BullVille
Ad. Open 9AM to 6PM , Mon
thru Set . 61 4 ·441·0322 .

TIPPin double ovtn stove &amp;
used c tfpet. Call 614 -446 -

Furn . apt . 1 bdr., 1235 utiliti•
G1Uipoli1.
Call ._.&amp; -4416 after 8pm.
low in come. one bedro om
apartmentt m Meigs County.
limited to lduhs wn:h emotiOnal
dilordlft . For more intor~tion
clll B1bare Cox , Coordinator,
Community Support Services,
Woodland Centers. Cell 614-

448-&amp;&amp;00.

Modem 1 bedroom ap.nment .
Cell 61 • ·446-0390
1 bedroom •pt . for rent . Basic
rent sterts U 16 . e month that
Includes all utilitln. D1poatt
required of 1200. Contact Village Mtnor AP1. Middleport.
114-992-n87 . Equ11 Houting
OppOftunity .
Pomeroy 2 belt. Naylors Run,
1175 mo . •100 deposit, ytrd,
pltio. Clll 1f1er lpm 814 -992-

8888.

9749.

Pickens Used Furniture. Good
quality ultld furniture. Op., 9 to
6 or call for tPPOintment.

304·875·6483 or 875-14&amp;0 .

2 SPICM in Ohio Valley Memory
Gardens In prime location . C1H

OhK&gt;. CoR 814·44t-97n. ove.

614-446·7032 .

814-441·4719 .

2990.

Salel 50 percent off! Flllhing
errow aiQn 12691 lighted. nonanow t2691 Non -lighted t2291
Free lettenl Few left. See
locally . 1 · 800·423 · 0113,
anytime.

Fair Special. chain saw cttain s.
buy one get second hllf price.
Siders E..-ipment, Henderson,

W. Vo .. 304·675· 7421 .

1978 f100 18915.; Hou11 fur
rent UOO . month . t100 . D.P.

depoolt. 1-304-1175·4122 .

APARTMENT FOR RENT · Now
accepting IPPiie.tlont for rentel
.-rtmentl' tn Muon Apt1 LImbed . Two bedroom IPit It

e111.00 p• month. Rontol

rat• may be high•

on lno:omo.

dep~ndlnt

Housing wlfl bo
IV•MIDII to each ippllcanl ,..
gardlela ot thtif' rae.. color,
r.... lon, MK or nllural Ot"igln.

lntor•IOd oppi_.. lhould col
304· n:J-101 1 or ......., 0.

nile ltrlib or Witt• Jultlae It

tho mllln oftlee. 1871 1....
Roed, Reynolclaburg. Ohio

bldg.

SPL' 30"x40"x9"

Hor.. Bldgo. 614·332·9741

3 blod&lt; -nill 12.800. Coli
11C·3SB-818B.
lntem1tion11 H trector new
rubber, with cuhiv1tor, plowl.
disc, drew bar, M91 . Call

614 -28t-fll22 .

340 lnttmatlon trtc1or wide
front. PS, Jive power, live
hydrauliCI, with mowing ma·
c:hi'le &amp; driW bar. t2,296. Call

Building Mlterials

Blodl, bric• . .wer P'P•. win·
dowL lintels. etc . Claute Win ttfl. ~io Grande, 0 . Call 814-

197&amp; Grtvely wtlk behind 1rtc:tor . Roto tiller, 30 inch mower
and Sulky, electric 111r1. 1900
firm . Tan den Pellow loy trell•
with ramp a. All me-tit I 750 .

614·992-814t.
J .D. 460 dozer. 8 w•y bilde.
wind\. canopy. 814-742-2328 .

Build ing materiel• , cement ,
btoc:ks alltlzea. yard or delivery .
Gallipolis Block Co .. 123V.. Pine
St., G•llipolis, Ohio C1ll 614 -

John Deer~
Die~IIOorer . ln
good oondition . Call 614·992·

446-2783.

AlurTinum IWnings will fit a 38 ··
window . Gallipolis Block Co .,
123Vt Pine St .. GaHipolit. Ohio
Call614-446· 2783 .
Block. brick. mortar and masonry auppliea. Mountain St1te
Blodt. Rt. 33 . New Hav&amp;n, W .
Va . 304-882-2222 .

ao

7401 .

Allis Chalmen 7030 b'actor,
130 hp . lett offar, Siders
E(Jiipmtnt. Henderson. W. Va.,

304·1171· 7421 .

62 Wanted to Buy

t100. 304·1171·3860.

100 ft . antiQue Iran fencing .
Glt• &amp; corner p:tlta klekuled .

Pets for Sale

Now buying lhell com or eer
corn. C1ll forl1111t quotet. River
City F1rm Supply, 614·446·

Oragonwynd Cattery Kennel.
CFA Him1l1yan. Persilr'l and
Siam11e kiHena . AKC Chow
puppin. Cell 114 -446-3844
after 7PM.

Good riding no net for sale. Call
614-446-1166 .

1 year old female Squirrel
Monkey and cage. Aegister.d
Ou1rter Horse. mare. 7 vra. old .
Call 814-742-2.626 .
Re«~-v

to

298&amp; .

64

Registered AKC Cocker Spaniel
puppift . Ch.mpagneand buff in
color. Call 81•-992 -7102 be·
tore 4:00, 61 4 -992· 3006 after.
Beagle pupa 6 wks. old . Mother
dog 1 year old . Pure Bred . 126 .
614 ~ 742 - 2980 .

10 wk . old Beagle pups out of
good huntlfl. Call 614-9923947 . A. tilt' 8 :00 pm. call
814 ~ 992 - 3989 .

Hay &amp; Grain

Hly and field Cl)m for sale. Call

614·949· 2237 .

AKC registered black m•le poo·
die, hou se broken. 304-882-

2683.

57

Musical
I nstru menta

Big Yard S1le, At. 2 Sox 389,
Ripley Ad . Anne Sc:hml1t reti·
dence. All thr• dly1. look for
ttgna. Mon . Tuet. Wed.
Sigma DR 28 Herring Bone
ICOUIIIc gutter. Roaawwood body
tolid spruce top made by Manin
with Martin h1rdahellcase, bt111
uddle. Retail on QUitiF 1489
caae 1100 plus. Sell both lor
8450. Call 814 -448-2301 lfler

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Canning tomatoll alreadys
pictced . 15.00 1 buthtl pleeae
brlng own containers . Call &amp;14-

446 -4599.

Red r11benin . Taylors Berry
Pateh. Cel 114-"6-8692 or

Ut«&lt; llum, ewnlng

a ear pon .

QueM abe. a• bedroom tulle.

2 ontlquo eh"" , olnglo bodo.
wolght bonllh • wolghto. 304773-1712.

83 T-Bird. AC. PS, PB. reAr

defogger, one owner. Call 614·

992-3703.

1977 Cemliro 3&amp;0. 4 speed,
20 .900 originll miles. Original
red paint. Manv ell1rn. t8000.

INSPECTOR.

. 8:36
7;00

11 .00 . 304·1171-1179.

304·1171-3427.
'79 Reneutl le Cer, exc work

71

84 Chevette 4 cyl., 2 door. 6
spd., AM -FM c•stttt, low
mileqe. can 114-448-0137
aftllf 6PM.

84 Llser 6 apd, air, AM-FM

, ,oo.

higt't mileage,

oonooinsr.

t14· 247·3213.

C1nnlng

Tometoea for Nle.

304·e71-3308.

1000. 304·1171·2180. 1

72

Trucks for Sale

773-1721 . Opon 7 doys.

IVI:, \11 ' '

Farm Equipment

beclllnn.-. reer slidi'lg window.
high mU•. runs and looltl good,

19B2 Dodge PU light duty, 226
4 apd.. brown with cream
fiberglass topper. Call 814-367·

1974 Diamond Rio tri •xle log

truck. some extraplfta. ContaC1

79 ChiV. YJton . 65.000 original
mil... very good condition.

t2B9&amp;. Colll14-992-&amp;38&amp;.
1979 Chevy C-10 piel&lt; up, AT.
PS , PB, thort wheel bne, 6 .800

mil... body good, runs good,
rrust eell

own..-

304·1175· 3734 .

leaving area.

' 83 Chevrolet pick up truclr.,

6 ipeed , !Iota of PIPI ntwly
rtbuilt engine, nwr .teel belted
radill tir•. new bltttry. new
pelnt, elena interior, 11 ,700.

t14·448-7289.

Con t14-44t·4944 .

1980 Plymouth Chomp. 37.000
mlln, good cond.. 4 apd ..
sunroof, 11 ,200 or b11t offer.

Coli 814-218·11704.

1984 Volkaw.~gon GTI. 6 apd .,
lir. Cell before 2PM, 814-218-

79 AMC Spirit 34.000 oetuol

milu, blec:k. PS, PB, lit, 8 cyl.,
auto . tnna, p d ti re~, YfiiY
sharp . Caii814-44B ·l200 after

I.

Vans &amp;

4 W.O.

Home
Improvements

Un conditional lifetim e guaran
cee. Local referen ces furni shed.
Free ntimatfls. Call coll ect
1-614-237-0488, dsy or nighc .
R o g e r a Ba se m e nt
Waterproofing .
Ellt erior S. int e rior stucco. Pl as ter &amp; pllllter repa in. low re tes
Ca ll814 -256· 118 2.

1976 Ford ven. 8 cyl. 3 speed
1750. lftt Dffar, 1ftemoon1
304-671 - 4683 . No Sunday
calls.

Motorcycles

Co11614 -448-7414.

80 Toyou CeiiCI. Very good
condklon . ~ .000 1ctual ml-

loogo. 13200. Coli 614-44883418.
by Stor C01lo•, loodld whh
oceoooorl01. 1914 8·18 GMC
pldwp. V·f. &lt;lepd .• PI, sunroof.
sliding baalctl . . a • . runnlnl
lloorclt. 1911 Thunderbird.
CYI .. outo . ...... PI, olr, AM·

......... Col 114-441·0311 .

MHIIY fet'JUIGft, NN Holllftd,

8uoh HOQ 8 - • lorvlcl. o - H Ford E-rt n PI, Pl. AC, I
40 wllltreo10rat0 c:fto011from ..,... 1ooo th., 1.000 mlloo.
llactt lkl•lor, ' " ' wtlour lnt•
rior. AM·FM M1Mitte1111e awr
poym..... Coli 11•·281·7044.

1111 Mu•~r~t V-1, 11r1o, eeoo.
430811 or coli t14·813·4114 .
11 hp Powor King bOOIDr, 4B Coli
814·441·00411.
.
Hoovy duty equipment. pr•s 30 lndl mower, enoWbllde, dleo,
2 Mel room fumilh.t eplftment, · lb. hoiOI. undor hoiOI, tr•omlo· plow. 3 pt hiiGh, hyolr-.
Middloport, Ohio. Allo 2 room olon lock. Phone 304-e71- U,COO.OO . larlouocoMWI 3114' 1112 D... o 024 ....d.. 2 .....
rid • blook )lllnl. Col
1318.
""'· 304·U2·2111.
Ul-31117.
I 14·37H721 .

1881 Yemlh• DT 126 dirt &amp;
•reat. Good condition. 1400.

Coli 614-218·6311 .

1183 Hond1 ShMiow. C11l 114·

44t·31 U ovonlngs.

1178 750 Honde. Low mileevo.
Eactlllftt condition. 1800. Go
cart, Ulad 1 Mlmmtr. 1300. Call

114·982-3792.

be long dead . (60 min.) lA) .
[j) River Journeys: Tho
Murray with Russell Brad-

don jCC) Writer Russell
Broddon follows Austra lia 's greatest river from the
mountains to the let . (60

min .){R).
(j]) Dempaay 8o Makapeace

(60 min.)
8 :05 iJ) MOVIE: 'Taahouao of
the Au~l1 Moon"
8:30 8 iii 1111 Amazing Storlea
An old-fashioned ghost

Fetty Tree Trimming . s tump
removal. Call 304 ·67 5-'t33 1 .

9:00

AS USUAL

!Y.-I?fAJG

0

AO'tRATTQ{/5

Of 8 7 1 ~ 7388 .

l

I

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Most wells completed n m e d ay.
Pump sales and service. 304·

9

89&amp; -3802

8&amp;8 Roo fing &amp; Paint ing. u p .
roofing. repair. painting insi de or
out . Fr iMI Estim ate . l ocal References . 304-67 &amp;-799 1

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

•~

m11o1. nooo. Coli 614-742·

2081C&lt; 814-742-2703.

·a• Kond• 150
304-1171·8113.

Night Htwk.

' 79 Honda '00, u:c cond.

TH IS IS PBS,

A CQ.Y.PLETELY

THAT E.XPL.AINS

C H-ANNEL 14-.
WZ ZO-T V .• .

V IEWER S UPPORTED

THE: HOLE?SIN
HIS SOCKS.

I

S TATION .

Good- 1 Excavating, basement s,
footers . drivew1y s, septic ta nk s.
landscaping . Call anytime 61•441·4 6 37, Jam n L. Davison,
Jr . owner .

General Hauling

ern1. wells , po ols. Anytim e but
Sunday. Call 614-446 -7 404 .
Delivered 1 ton and up . J im
Ltnier, 304 · 675 -124 7 or 6 75 ·

7397.

Watt ers on ' s Wat er Hau ling,
rtl so nable rat es, i mme d iat e •'
2,000 g allon delivery. cistern•.
pool1. well. etc cell 304 -576-

1880 K-ooolol KZ2BOD . rod.

B7

'12 900F au.. Sport. ..• .

cond. Meny 1111r•. 304-87&amp;-

1311 or 1178·7131.

1171 "-0111111 LTD. 1.000.
wlndohlold, UIO . 304·171·
41111.
1111 HorfO¥ Bponotor, ....
CGnd. Cuttom t1100 or best

YOUR MAN. SNUFFY.
IS NOTHIN' BUT A
CHICI&lt;EIII· THIEF,
A MOONSHINER AN'
A CARD CHEAT.
LOWEEIY

1247.

Upholstery

wlndlhield, 3, 200 mil11 .

UOO.OO. W. Boown. 30C·SS2·
2218.

BARNEY

Ken's Water Service. Wells,
cisterns. pools and wate rbeds
filled . Call 614-367 ·06 23 or
B1 4 -36 7· 7141 Or 30 4 -675 Dillard 's Water Deliv ery. Cist·

TRISTAT E
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
11 63

Sec.

Avt ., GallipoliJ.

614 ·446·7833 . , 814·4461833.

R &amp; MFurniture Menu ft cturing,.
81. Rt. 7, Crown City. Ot't. C111
IU-·251·1470. c•ll Eve 61444t · 343B . Old &amp; n e w
Uphoatered.

..... 3114-171-2333.

Mowrey'a Upholater lng eervlng

1111 Hondo 210 4-Tru. Prlco
rlductd to ueoo. Col 30•·
171·1471.

ul countylfll21 Vltrs . Tt\e b" t
in furniture upholstlf ing . C11\
304 · 875 ~ 41154 lor h e ..
eltltm~t ...

1

I

SNAKE!!

HIS PAW
WASTH'SAME

COMES BY IT

DADBURN WAV

HONEST

THEN HE

.

.

.

.

. ••

A llnle glrl was running havoc
in a 1oca1 reateurant. My neighbor.
a veteran of raising lour glriB
smiled, "I don't know her name,

I
,:...;;,,.a:..,,--l Q

but the phase Is - ."
Complete the chuckle quoled
by f1llmg In the miss1ng words

~7,...._,;.,:_;,..;.:..
_

_

_

_

_

L...--1-....L-.J...-.__._ _, you d ev el op from !te p No. 3 below.

A
V

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

A

UNSCRAMBLE LETTE RS
FOR ANSWER
.

V

I

YESTERDAY'S SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
~ - Index - Apace - Creamy - IMPROVED
"If It's true that we are what we eat," questioned my sister·
ln-law, " how come we all aren't light, new and IMPROVED?"

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

. .-'

- ..;

The bidding
gives a clue

.

NORTH
1·1·11
• Q9 3
• A Q 10 9 6 2
.

By James Jacoby

~.

+ Q lOB

EAST
"Revie w the bidding before choos· WEST
+K7
+•o
52
jng an opening lead" is one of H.W
Kelsey's instructions in his book " 101 • J 8 7 3
tl07512
Bridge Maxims ." Often the success of t K 6
+J74 3
a slam rides solely on the lead. West +AK8 62
did not expect today's slam to make,
SOUTH
but wisely did not double.
+ AJ864
South trumped the club lead and im- ·
• K5
t AQJ983
mediately ruffed a small diamond in
dummy . Then he led dummy's spade
..
queen. losing to the king. West re- i
Vulnerable: Neither
turned a spade to South's jack, and de·
Dealer: North
clarer drew a third round of trumps , ·
Norlh East
South
discarding a club from dummy . He West
Pass
2t
could now play hearts, hoping that
Pass
Pass
2+
they split, but first he cashed the ace
Pass
2
NT
Pass
3+
of diamonds, pitching a club from
Pass
4+
Pass
dummy. Since the king fell, he now
5t
Pass
Pass
6+
had more diamond winners to play be· Pass
Pass
Pass
fore trying hearts. On the Q·J of diamonds he threw two hearts from dum·
Opening lead' • K
my. He then played his last spade.
West now had to either discard the L - - - - - - - - - - - - o J
bare ace of clubs, which would make
'
dummy 's queen good, or shed a heart
When West let a heart go, declarer dis·
·
carded dummy's club queen and ing ~ast to ruff. West should trust
cashed four heart tricks to make the South s five-club cue-bod to be showing
contract.
. a void, and should not count on a clolb
Although declarer played with skill, trick He should also mark South wi.tb
he could never have made the sl~m if five spades and m diljmoudl, ~
West had led a heart originally. Then, bidding the minor first and then bl •
on getting in with the spade king, West ding and rebidding the major iB ~
would have led a second heart, allow· standard way to show 6-5 distribution.

.4

•·

1z•.

~·

~~·!*"".,
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I Wild pany
5 Clutrh
10 Shrine

U iii IIIJ MOVIE: 'The El•

5 Eye sparkle
6 Governed
7 Celebes 0 )1
8 Embark

12 Haw aiian
ve randa

9 Capsule
II PartiaJ

13 Punish('d,
in days

refu nd
14 Bernhardt 's
rival

o f ynn-·

ger B ill ie Holiday is profiled , fea1uring in t erviews

15 fhali &lt;'"

18 Chaplain

and film cl ips. (go min .)
liD Ill (Jli Kate 8o Allie

vt-il
16 Ba kl'ry

19 Univ. in
Georgia

When Kate is invited to a

produ ro
20 Ener!!)'
30 Re pudiate 37 Philippine
17 "Is Thai -:;- 2 t Pub drink 32 One finishknife
T hPrt' Is? 22 PractirP
mg
38 Drawing
18 Adh!'sivC'
deception
second
or s i tt in ~
20 S&lt;&gt;n'i&lt;'
24 One (Fr.) 33 Mild oath 39 Meara
25 Salt (Fr.) 34 Therefore
of comedy
of taste
4t Gl mailing
23 Command 26 Hold it! 35 British
to a
28 Condensafilm
address

gala ballet cpen1ng . Allie

(j]) MOVIE; "Tho Groa1ost
American Htro'

9;30 (!) Auto Racing "88: Formula One Grand Pri• From
Pa ul Ricard . France. {90

dog team

tion

Yesterday's Answer "'1
• - -.. .. - - --

director

42 No nn

27 Slur over
28 Request
rN'ipir nf

(Jli Newhart (CCI
George is shocked whe n
he meets his long-lost

Excavating

DA RT I

L I RF D0

liD Ill

441-4477

r - - l '

I I• I' I

.

min.)

I

Phone 814· 446 · 3888 or 814 -

2919

Ii
Ir•I

I

(A)

Cor. Fourth and Pine

UOO.OO . 304·e71-7224 or
114-441-7331 .

G

f.!-.!1;-:.:..1r-:-r

buys her a very expensive
dress - on one condi tio n.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

83

C

HERMY

I~,

phant Man'
(]) 700 Club
® [j) American Maalors
(CCI The career of jazz sin·

Starks Tree and lawn S ervice.
landscaping . 304·676 -20 1 0

B2

2

their homo . (R) In Stereo.

RINGLES ' S SERVI CE . ex pe·
rienced carpenter, electr ici an.
m11on. peinter. rooting I including hot tar application) 304 -

876 ·2088

I ~~ i ti I I

attempt to scare

away the sleazy husband
and wife that move into

Coli. limeston e, gravel. et c.

1982 bw-.....1 Spectre. 4900

interna-

tional terrorist thought to

2464 .

Jem ea 8oy 1 Wat er Service. Also
pools tilled . Cell 81 4 ·2 56-114 1
or 814 -446 -1176 or 614 -44679 11

4dr., 10, 000

c o ntact wi1h an

couple

1985 KtiW'aukl 4&amp;0. 1 982 1&amp;0
M1xlm Yemehe. Sell or trad• .

Just like new. C1H

Mrs.. King A minor car accident brings Amanda in

304-&amp;78 -2398 o• 614 ·446

1977 Mercury good oond. Cal

..c~ .

HURRY UP, KOOGIE 1 GUZ AND HI S
MEI\I ARE GETTING CLOSER !

RON ' S Te le 'll isio n Se rv ic e
Houn calls on ~ C A . Queza r.
GE . Specialing in Zen ith Ca ll

614·21t·1941 .

198&amp; Horizon

ness'
® MacNoii·Lehrer Nowsh·
our
@I Ill (Jli Scarecrow and

Shrubbl 114.00 each, guaran- ~
teed . Tree &amp; stump removal,
mulch, 11nd &amp; gr avel &amp; Sto nedelivered. Don's landsc api ng .
Call 614-446-9646

4C8-IM92 oftor I .

mil•,

Stereo.
(]) Father Murphy
(!) Best of the Supera1ers
{90 min .)
([) I!J I]) Major Loaguo
Baaoboll; T.. ms to be An·
nounced (3 hrs.)
fJ) CD MOVIE: 'Thoro's No
Business Like Show Busi-

ALLEY OOP

Gallipolis, Ohio

74

auction house where she
serves as manager. (A) In

-=------- .

Coli 614 · 246~ 6131 01 814·
241-96&amp;5.

18100. t14· 981·4180.

wi1h

pert-time job- at the same

PIMf:,
ANYBoDY WOULD THIN/C
rt-fl5 WA5 '(ouf? f\IIONeY!

Electrolux aut horized u les &amp;
service . Call Gary Williams on.
Mgr. 304 -768· 3212 .

86

614 "3117· 0194 ·

t:V~Y

J &amp; J 's Home Improvem en t
Vinyl sidin g, overhang. s torm
doort &amp; windows. gu tt fl rs . Ca ll

1982 Chevy vm, new convertion. R1Hey whlel1 , AM -FM
CMattte, eer1h tone coloJ pkg.

1981S Chevy 4x4 shortbed. 306
V·B 4 speed, 1_.l,ton, AM -FM
n1reo. tih wheel, dull tanks

location

panics when David gets a

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFIIIIG

1986 HonA Sh .. ow •• · eond .~
low mileage. Call afttf 6,

19B1 Mutteng PS , Pl. AC . 4

THE? WAY You Fu.&gt;s
A$OUT"

,.

77 Grend Prix new tir", new
thock1, ntw exhaust. C.I1814-

apd .. 4 cyt .• very good con d. C•l

II

- /

pack~ge h1rdtop

&amp; sotl top, very
good condhion. •&amp;.800 . Call

On

"fresno".
ll]J Allee
IBI Jeopardy
7:36 iJ) Sanford and Son
8 :00 U iii 1B1 Valerio Valerie

814-448·8073.

1978 Dodgo Colt woogon 4 eyl ..

1110 Dot.,n 200 IX I 111d..
CROSS. IONI
311-1!0 mlloo P• ....... good
u.&amp;. 38 - t. Joel&lt;son. Ohio. cond. '2100. Coli 114-44t·
614·288·6411 .
3040.

•oqu_,
oo"'ltt•
Une of..., • uNci
mon1. llfiiOit 1111ctlon In
u . Ohio.

924C .

1982 Joop CJ-7 Ronogodo

1813 Chtyy Van-Conversions

S lilfillll ',

AM -FM Clllelte radio. Camper
top, ruMing boards, 29.000
miiM, cle., t7 ,500 or c:an help
with refinlf'lcing . Caii614-246 -

onoioo. Coli 814-448-2472 .

1978 Cougar XR7 Pl. PI, four
lteel-belted radialt 11 ,000.

BANK

Services

1972 Volketw-oen Bug. Good

oond. 304·1176·3029 o• 675.
6727.

fJ) CZ) Star Trek
® Reading Rainbow (CC)
IIll
Healthy
People/
Healthy Business
(lJ Down to Earth
U iii illJ NBC News
(]) The Rifleman
(!) John Fox Outdoors
® 1!J liJ ABC News
® Doctor Who
® Ill (Jll CBS News
[j) Body Elec1ric
iJ) Gomer Pyle, USMC
U iii PM Magazine
(]) Man from U.N.C.L.E
(!) SportsCentor
(lJ Entertainment Tonight

Carol Burnett where she
discusses her role in TV's
firs1 comedy mini-series.

Apache fiberglus told -down
camper. Cell 614 -256-1979
before 3p.m.

81

IIIl News

night

Motors Homes
&amp; Camper&amp;

'81 Chevaue, 1c , am -fm
Calllftt, 4 IPeed. 81896. firm
After 6:30 call 304-676 ·48 3 , .

73

814 -240-111111 or 814·241·
Vellow FrH &amp;tone C1nning 1131 .

P11Ch11 now evailable. Call lor
prk:el 1nd ¥1fll1ill . lob's
M1rke1. Me10n. W. Va. 304-

Apache fibet"glass fol d down

pl'iced und er

1979 Pontiac Bonnllt'ille very
good cond . PS, PB, AM -FM.

nW~~

.

1980 Okf1 Omageauto. 2 door.

304·e71·3246.

Coli 114·448-72119.

I HAVE.N'T £&gt;Wil P\TCAl RN
15lAOO- OR IJ.GO PAOOI'

1970 camp8f. self-contained.

'11 Oldsrn:Jbile, '76 Pont iac

Harold John Ev1n1. Rainbow
Rktge Rd. 2Va mil" wett long
Bottom, Ohio. No ))hone.

Autos tor Sale

Ycr'

Clr. mult Hll. 30•·882-3641 .

or 81C·448·11113.

Tr~nsporta t i u n

I HAVt:N'T &amp;t:N 1ll NEPAl.

s1 .ooo. 304-n3 - 5244.

79

II) (Jli

ET joins Connie Selleca on

Camping
Equipment

78

lotfors of tho
four Krombled words below to form four simple words.

I

iii (lJ I!J (lJ ®

~y

O Reorrango

the set of her upcoming TV
movie. "'The last Fling"' .
fJ) CZ) Hogan's Heroes
I!J ([) Jaopardy
®Nightly Business Report
®News
[j) MacNoii-Lohrer Nowshour
Ill (Jli Divorce Court
!HI WKRP In Clnclnna1i
IBI Wheel of Fortune
7:05 iJ) Green Acres
7:30 U iii CII Now Newlywed
Garno
(!) Inside Baseball
fJ) CD Taxi
I!J ([)@Wheel of Fortune
® Bunorllios
Ill (Jli Enlertainment To-

ARLO AND JA."''IS

Trans miuions. All typ es. Over.
front, rear, 4 wheel drive. Prices
start t100 ., Will del iver . Call
614-379-2220 _

Coli 814· 911&amp;-4322.

1979 Ct'tevrolel lh ton pickup,

1974 Ford Maverick cltan,
11916
cyl .. euto, whh I 1r, 10 rult,
.

,\ t

R!OADY
IF VOU ARe,

304· 67 6· 48 64 .

4•4 with utility bed . Good
condition . Cell 61•·448-8201

Canning tomato•. IUpply own
container. Pick your own . 13 .00

61

good cond. 8:00 ., 8:00 . Mon .
thno Fri. 304-e71·11212.

43.000 mllos . Coli t14 -992·
3721

Good mixed hey on the w1gon .

81C·448 ·7039 .

I .IIIII

A~~

MEANWHILe, BELOW
THE ~ISRARY ...

Ford Escort Wagon

0394

Coli 814-949-3069 oftet flvo.

614·246·&amp;1014 .

looolly. 1-18001423· 0183 .
Gun a forul1, dellerconplua10
pet. FFL hold•. 30C·SS6-30:MI
even ln...

1911

Strew br ule. t1 .eo per bele.

stereo, other options, 17.300
firm . Call 114 -441 -9360 efter

left. SM

eftVII"".

1981 OatMin 280 ZX. 22,000
mlln. NADA valuel7300., will
ICCip1 16000. Call 614-9492764 after &amp;:00.

13.1500. Con t14-448-43BO .

Cell614-667· 3856 .

SALEI 50 pet . OFFI FIMhlng
orrow olgn Uft; Llghtld. nononow Ull .; Nonllghtod 1229.;
Few

1971 Fury II. V ~ ll. •&amp;oo . Cell
614·446-3480.

1982 GMC S·16, V-6, 4 opd.,

go. S.A . Benedum. Succtn Ad .
Reedsville. Ottio. Just off At. 7 .

304·111·2919 .

Fr.. llttera.

61C-379-2728 .

1984 S · 10 4wheel drive pickup,

Clnning IOrMIO• U .OO buahet Plet.; own, bfiflg own

ual typiW'riter

1983 Dodge Ormi 4 dr .. auto .
48,000 miles, 12,900. Cell

Catalina. 304-676-5241 .

246-6121 .

At&lt;C l1111tt pupplea.

WE'Re

Auto Parts

&amp; Accessories

1986 C•mero Z28, low mil.

wood filing clblnat • • drMers
tUiO .; Emerton duel e1uma
jam boll 110.; Underwood mlf't-

blopor

Us. 614·448 ·1221 .

UtMity

with 15 'x8' slider a 3 ' aerv.
door. 15.211 erected . Iron

Met" d•k 6 awival d'lair w-old

Ponly fumllhld . Coli I1C-992·

houiM . P1. PIHIIntlndOaiUpo-

814·"1· 3182 . Up front b'IC·
ton with w1rr.,1y over 75 used
lracton~ , 1000 tools .

bushol. Don Hill ..d Honrv Hill . . ~C.:•I_I_
81_4_·_
21_8_·_
fl_2_2_._ __

ovation oolurm IP•klrl 13715 .;
Cobra anawering m1ehine w -

APARTMENT&amp;. mobllt homoo.

56 Building Supplies

56

6:06
· 8:30

Autos for Sale

collect.

15000 BTU Norge Air Condl·
tioner. 1150. 8 ft b'Uck topper.
fiber gl••· 1400 . Cell 814· 949-

58

992 ·6211 or t14-9112·731C .

Middlopon. Coli e14·992-t713
evonln111. 814·002·8111 dll'fS.

CENTER . SA 38 W. Qellipolil,

1203.

For S1l1: Seara fuel oil lto'lle.
&amp;6 .600 B.T.U. outpu1, with ptd
and pip•. 2-71 gal. 11nk whh
111nd Ill for 1160. 614 · 9925620 lfter 6:30pm.

71

u

Q fi'.l
\:)1.!=1
141to4

(]) Green Acres

14' fishin g boat. 60 hp motor.
treiler-trolling motor. other extras. Priced reasonably . 304·

76
JIM 'S FARM EQUIPMENT

3'30.

120.; Etectro
bt'end I" B&amp;W TV with em-fm
rldio blitteri.. or electric or plug
In olg•otto light• t121 .; 9
gt,~nntl PeiY.,; PA boerd w-2

1908

Farm Equipment

446-2649.

185.

2 bdr . IP1 - near Silver Bridge
Plua. Immediate occupancy.

doo. req . Coli t14·448· 7021 .

61

PUIZLU

(!) Mazda SportsLook

671·2180.

614·2Bt·fll22.

Refrigerator· 19 foot frost free, 2
door unit in s ervice. Very elean.
C.ll614-246-6131 .

1 bedroom 1pt. for r.-.t In

6 rooms houee for rent inquire
918 Second AVe.. 01lllpolit.
Oh. No phone calla

~~nd

49

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

pl•v•

Elec . refrlger•lor, frost -free,
white. 175 . Elac. t~nge, white.
190. Lewn mower, t20. ChUds
twingset. 120. Dining room
table, da,. finllh . 110. C•ll

1637.

Compl..ely remodeted kitchen
furnished . AU MW Nga. 114-

304·17&amp;-34128.

1t'77 3 bt. ShuiU mobilo homo, .

Coli 814·448·4926 .

1 btdroom apt. in Pom•oy.

Pool! Mint condition. 2 bedroom
houte wl1h new pkllh cwpll1ing.

for Sale

11 Court St. 2 bdr ., 2 beth.
kitchen furnished. no pets. 1326
mo _ plus deposit a reference.

614 992 -8618 days. 814·982· paid. 920 4th Ave ..

364-2Cill.
12x80 mobile nome • lot on
Hereford Lane. Will c onsider

Setrt exercite bike. C1ll 614·

3 pc. uald bedroom suite $200 .
1971 Community 14x70 2 br
furnished. ac. front porch. underpennfng . w - water ll'ed.
w11hw 1: dryer. 304· 773 ·15945.

2 bdr , upst1irnpt.. unfurnished,
carpeted , utiliti• peid. No children , no pets. Call 614 -441-

Business
Buildings

Lean A rea. 7 room yard and
glldlln IPC)t, achool bul rDUta.
115,&amp;00. 1f1er 9 p.m . 1 -304·

•

10•60. 1180 includM wtt• 1nd
gsrb.ge, plus 160 security dep·
osit. No drinking. fighting or
pe1a. 614-387· 7287 evenings.

only . Coll814-44t·9&amp;23 .

2186

304·t71· 1....

3 bdr. with l)lplndo livingroom.
Nice yard . 314 3rd St. K1n1ug1.
c.n 61oi-U&amp;-7473.

Opportunit'i .

7 rooms with bath. garag e and
buildi ngs. 2 1h acre-s . Close .to
school and store. Sa til1ite wnh
rotor an d pow er bo• . 614-74 2-

thed • underpennlng. C.n bt

14x70 8260 include~ water &amp;
glfbeg1. 160 security deposit.
No drinking, fighting or pets.
Ctll eveningal14-317-7217.

Houae &amp; tpartment for ainglea.

MOBILE HOMES MOVEO in·

614 · 99 2· 353 3. 614 -992 ·
2088

3-

1903.

12x60 fully furni s hed on
B6x171 111 leYel lot. one third·
acre more Ot leiS. loCit ed·
Porter, St . Rt. 180, ne., St. Rt.
564. Center of town . 117.000.

·t14-678·2613

"'- fr_.., w•h•. dryer, MW
INing roo"' tuhe. 25" coklrTV.

only, utilitiea paid. Call 814·
2 bdr. adults only, no peft, 322
3rd. AVe .. GaHipoht. Ohto. C1ll
614- 446· 3748 or 614-266-

6 room house . 1.2 1c r11 . Double
, car garage. Located on AoseHill.
. Bargain priced 820 .000. Call

co,..lettly furnithtd inckl. .
ltove. •trig.,.tor, dithweth•.

2 bdr. hilly furnished . tdulte

1971 Wind'lestar 3 bdr. good
cond. Call 814-245-9422.

.:Quality home, newly remodeled
.choice location on College Rd.
·.Syracuse, new complete kitchen
·end laundry, air condittoned.
large lot . 614-992-6324 .

COUNTRY MOBILE Home P~rk.
Rou1e 33. North of Pomeroy .

Trailer •peen, small ct\ildrlfl
accepted, Rt. 1. loeust Road.
back of IC • IC Mobile Home.

8 :00

••

10&amp;7.

Car blttari• good eondition,

good. t121 . Coli 814-2&amp;e·
1747.

for Rent

446-4110.

• 614 - 24&amp; ~ 92411 .

t14·241·1131 .

42 Mobile Homes

630&amp; .

House &amp; on e t c::re, close to Rio

Air condition .... (21 116 volt
window ICarry Kool unha. j21
230 volt carural units. C1ll

MobK• home tpace, good loea·
tion . Cell &amp;14-... 8-3&amp;17.

AUCTION

1977 Sllylyne 3 bdt. Mobile
home. gable roof with thing!•
house lap siding. Clll814-992-

2C6·1288.

_4.::.28:..:8_.- - - - - - -

Lorge loll. Coli 614·992· 7479.

~

Boats and
Motors for Sa le

8111 8oet Terry ABF 16 '78 e11 c.
oond. BOhp Mercury. 25 lb.
Merc:ury thrult8f w·foot contno~l.
double live walls, 2 deep c ycle
betteries. 2 gas tankl, CB radio,
full canvas cover. battery
charger, elltra prop, anchor, ski
hamns. skis. sled . Tennessee
drive on trailer w· new wheel
bearings, oCher elltras, will demon strate t4800 . firm . 304-876-

Ylllllhl 200 tri ·moto 3 mo1.
warrany left. •1 .060 . Call 814-

mt• Mlditltn'en"n •tvla.

EVENING

13800. Co11614-98&amp;·3327.

814·446·334t or 814·448·
9211.

e12 ooc:h. Coli t14· 218· 1747.
Colof TV MotOrola Quu., solid

SmalllotonAt.7. Call814-448-

51 Household Goods

1tr 6 .

Grande in Soutt'twenem achool
d~tric::t Must sell. 126.000. C1ll

Lerge lot on Addlaon lulevile.

2 bedroom Ill-electric h~ll.
references plus depottt. Phone
304-458-1106 after 6:00 tor
eppolntment.

9248

Gov ernment home from t1 IU
·repairl . Delinquent tu property.
Repo11euion s. Call 805-687·
·soon Ext. H-•662 for current
repo list.

46 Space for Rent

304-675-1161.

871-2130.

1981 Buddy. 2bdr.. 12xl0.

Homes for Sale

4 bedroom house, fireplace, 3

Houses for Rent

for Sale

furnished . Some arees taken.
Cell 303-169-3200 . ext. 2401 .

23

41

441·4418.

.•

215 fl . Houte Boat. Motor a nd
nailer fully equipped. Price

1878 Mutt-all•uto. model 12
Wlnd'l•ttr. &amp;tllh c:halntiW. Call

TM1DAILJ

Q/4/86

7289 .

992-11n.

ploto.

A ~IAL eaJUS\

l981 Honda CB 760 K purcheled new last year 266 acturel
milet, 11 .100. Cell 614 -446 -

.:.::=---- - --·

Shop tor rtnt. Equ_,ment com-

Television
Viewing

sesu::E:s YIH~, ~ Cfta

Cellolterl. 614· 448-4&amp;80

EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jock·
oon. Oh. t14·211t-1930.

anot 1VIIil8blt. Call today: 814-

Ohio

BdRN LOSER

86 Honda Shadow 600. low
mileage. many extra, ex. cond

1.CJOOtlr-. oil• 12.13, 14. 11.
11. 1e.a. s mlloo "'t Rt. 21s.
Coli 614·211·6211 .
Pl11tlc cilttm ltltl approvld,
pltltlc ltpllc tlr'lkl. pt111lc
c~vert1, metal cutvant. RON

South11111m ButinMI Coll..el
The trein~g you nMCII For the
jobl you went . Fln•cill auilt-

Motorcycles

Monday, A!Jgust 4, 1986

29 Gaze
30 Ominously
31 Mourn ful

cous in Eugene. jA).
10;00 ® Ill (ill Cagney and ll·
cay jCC) {60 min .){A) .
il]J Nowa
10:20 (J) MOVIE: 'Pardnora·
10,30 (]) Taking Stock
fJ) CZ) INN News
® Roundtable j60 min .)
[j) Naws
1 1;00 (]) Bill Cosby Shew
(!) NFL Yearbook
Cll i!J I]) liD Ill (Jli Naws
fJ) CZ) Love Connection
(j]) This Old Houae jCC)
(jJ) Soap
1 1:30 U iii &lt;Hl News
(]) Burno 8o Allen
(!) SportsCen1er
([) WKRP in Cincinnati
fJ) CZ) One Stop Beyond
D ([) ABC News Nlghtlino
(l) SCTV
® Allee
[j) Nicaragua Woo Our
Homo Tho slrugglos ot the

Vf"( St"

33 Lampro•y. e.g
38 Wallt•! hill
37 Rikini pan
40 Hashhouse
43 WiM open
44 Pari of
a lor k
45 Giver

46 Europt•an
capital
DOWN

I Polish c-ake
2 Medirinal

pla nt

3 AgiUitc
4 Ac t or

Linden

DAILY CRYPTOQU~ - Here's bow to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

One letler stands for another. In this sample A is used
· for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
· apostrophes, the length and fonnatlon of the words are all
'hints. Each day the code letlers are different.
CRYP'n&gt;QUOTES

eas1ern Nicaraguan Mit·
kito Indians are chron icled.

(60 min.)

Ill

(Jli Magnum, P.l. A
psychic fo rtees her own
murder- and discovers that

8-4

Magnum is involved . j70
min .) (A).
ID Trop~r John, M.O.
12:00 U iii 1111 Boat of C.roon

P IW LJ AF'B V

H SNI' I UYil

YI' X N B NF'

Tonight's guests are Roger

Moore
and
Leonard
Woxdeck"s bird callers. (60 • .
mln.l (R) In Stereo.
[IJ Jack Banny
(!) Mejor Leeg.. a...
betre GNat..l Hill
(I) National Gaogr8phlc £&gt;.

f' E ill\1 1

S N

F E X

f' A B
G A ·

TBXTP II
GXV (,Jll

M S YF X V

YeetenlaJ'o Cryptoquote: HAI'PI NESS IS NOT A
MATrER OF EVENTS; IT DEPENDS UPO N Til E TID ES
Of' J'HE MIND. - AUCE MEYNELL

plorer

1111 CZ) Rawhide

e ([) Hewell Flv..O

® In the Tradlllon
liD MOVIE: 'Th- Oaya of
lhe Condo(
12:30 (]) Belt of Groucho
(!) Auto Recl"9 '81: USAC
Mldgn From Indiana·
polio, IN. (90 min.)
([) Enlenelnment Tonight
ET joint Connie Sellaca on .
lho tot of her upcoming TV

movie, ··the Las1 Fling··.
(R).

e

CD Rawhlde

(jJ MOVIE: 'Sadal' Part 1 of

2.

'

12:40 .ID MOVIE: 'The Dey lhe
lovi!'JI Stopped'
1:00

8 'Il @

Lele Night wllh

·.

Divld Lertermen ion ighfs _
gues ts ' are Lara ine New· ~ ...
ma n a nd singer Ci u y " :'';·

Houlton . (60 min .) In
Stereo.
IIJ Doblo Clllllt
(I) Archlo Bunke(a Placo
Ill CZ) Wild, Wild Wast

"

••

·'

�•

..
August 4, 19Be:·
•.

~~

10-The Daily Sa 1ti11el

Monday,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

,----Local 'Briefs:-- Bush, Egyptian leader begin conferenc~
...
Mason County fair schedule

'l'UEIDAY
Jr. dalr)' pat sllow ....... .............................................1: • a.m.

f'tttmJ, showbtJ N'iDe ••••••••••••••••..•..•.••.•••.••.•••..•••••.•••••••U a.m.
Flower show" ...............................
,JIOOD
&lt;llattel opens................................................................. 1 p.m.
Pedal indor puD ... ....................................................... 1 p.DL
Exile .......................................................... .3 p.m., Dllln ll.ale
,._g, showing beef, dalr;r ........................................ 4:30p.m.
Mark8 ·tq Sbow ................................................. ,......... I p.m.
Fair Queen contest .................................. 8: ill p.DL, maiD liaae
Fair Warning ...........•....•.......................•..•..•...........•.••.• 7 p.m.
Jr., open swine !!how .. ................................ ..•... .............• 7 p.m.
Youth h!orae show .......................................................... 7 p.m.
Exile ................................ ..........................•9 p.m., maiD liaae
0 ...................... . ...........

Olive trustees meet Tuesday
A regular meeting of the Olive Township Trustees will be held at
7: 30 p.m. Tuesday at the Reedsville Fire Station.

EMS units report six calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports six calls over
the weekend; three Saturday and three Sunday.
On Saturday, Middleport at 2:32a.m. to Stone'Ml&lt;ld Apartments
for Q&gt;cU Frazier to Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at 5:09p.m. to
the Rutland ball park for Richard Lyons to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; PomProy at 11: 52 p.m. to East Main Street for Dee
Icenhower, who was treated rut not transported.
On Sumay. Pomeroy at 7:17pm. toSecoiXIStreet lorDE'IDIE' Hlllto
Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at 9:23a.m. to thE' Rutland baU park
for Bruce Hawley to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at
10:32 p.m. to Rutland Street for Robert Rinehart to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Wolfe family reunion scheduled
The 38th reunion of the James Wolfe family will be held this
Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Torn WolfE', located on Ohio 3!8,
Racine. A covered dish dinner will be served at 1 p.m .. rain oc shine.

Grinstead reunion Sunday
The Grinstead family reunion will be held Sunday at the New
Haven. W.Va . park. A picnic dinner will begin at noon.

School reunion slated Sunday
The Hayes-Young·Hollday School reunion will be held SuiXIay at
the Old Holiday School Grounds on Gilkey Ridge Road. Lunch will
begin at I p.m.

Smith reunion slated
The 40th reunion of the latE' Theodore Smith and Myrtia Titus
Smith will be held SuiXIay, 12: 30 p.m., at the Rutland park. Basket
dinner wlll be served at 12:30 p.m. Friends and relatives Invited.

Green-Ogdin-Caster reunion set
The annual Green·Ogd!n·Caster family reunion will be held
Sunday at the Columbia Chapel Christian Church at Point Rock,
between Albany and WllkesvU!e. A picnic lunch wm be served at
noon. Entertainment In the afternoon.

Hymn sing set for Saturday
A hymn sing with the Gioryland Believers will be held Saturday,
beginning at 7:30p.m. , at the Syracuse Mission Cllurch. Everyone
wei romP.

Masonic organization to meet
Pomeroy Masonic Temple Asooclation wUI rreet Thursday at 7
p.m. in the downstairs ol the temple. All association members are
urged to attend. Any members ol the various masonic bodies are
welcome to attend.

Lebanon trustees meet Tuesday
Lehanon Township Trustees will meet Tuesday, 7 p.m .. at the
township building.

MHS cross country practice set
Meigs High School Cross Country running practice will begin
Monday, Aug. 11. 9 a.m., at the high school.

Marriage license issued
A marriage license has been Issued In Meigs County Probate Court
to Douglas DPan Powell. 18, and Teresa Ann Shuler, 18, roth ol
Racine.

Couple files for divorce
Dorothy Sue Lascar, Coolville, and David Dale Loscar, Galllpolls,
have filed lor a dissolution ol marriage In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court.
Granted a dissolutlon of marriage were ~e P. Murphy and Robert
A. Murphy.

Witnesses called to trial
Orders requiring four Meigs Crunty residents to appear as
material witnesses In criminal proceedings In Ripley, Jackson
Cou nty. W.Va. on Aug. ~. have been flied In Meigs Crunty Common
Pleas Court. Ordered to testify In the State rl West Virginia's case
against Michael Lee Conley were Peggy Smith, Wanda Adkins, Van
Evans and Ethel Adkins, all of Racine.
Paul Miller Fonllnc., Lexington, Ky., has !lied suit against David
McDonald, DPxter, for $2,:n3.14.
The cases of Henry Cleland Jr., doing business as Cleland Realty,
against Samuel John Crow, et. al.; and James F. Barnes against
Susan D. Barnes, have been dismissed.

Sheriff probes break-in
Sheriff Howard Frank reports a brmklng and entering of Whaley's
Grocery on Ohio 681, discovered Sunday rroinlng.
Bolts on the lront door and the Ice machine had been sawed ~
and abOut $400 ol merchandise taken. There are suspects wbO wDI be
questioned Momay afternoon, acrordlngtotM!nvestlgat!ngdeputy,
Kenny Klein.
Deputy Sheritf Jimmer Soulsby also reported that Shelby Pickens.
Ill, Racine, Is being charged with the theft rl gaaollnelrom a rounty
owned vehicle after having allegedly been caught removing the
gasoline by a night wa~ early Monday rmmlng ..Plckens wUI
face the charge In county court today, Deputy Soulsby r~ts.

visit that began with a tour ri
ancil'nt Egyptian temples, Bush
called on Mubarak at the Kubbeh
Republican Palace after laying a
wreath at the tomb of the late
President Anwar Sadat.
"I am going to do a lot ol
listening," Bush told reporters.

CAIRO. Egypt (UPI) - Vice
President George Bush, entering
the Rna! stretch of a Middle East
tour, met today with President
Hosnl Mubarak for talks focusing
on regional polltlcs and ,an Egyptian plea for U.S. ald.
Opening the official portion of a

Shots cloud abortion protest
CINCINNATI (UPI)- Confrontations between pollee, protesters
and volunteers outside the Mar·
garet Sanger Clinic resulted In the
arrests of two antl·abortion demon·
strators lhls weekend.
Three gunshots were heard as a
car passed the abortkm and birth
control clinic Saturday toward the
end of the demonstrations, said
VIctor CarreW, chief Hamilton
County deputy sheriff. There were
ro Injuries or damage cause by the
shots.
The centPr has been the scene of
numerous demonstrations this year
whlch have prompted a court to
Issue an crder prohibiting picketing
on the same side ri the street.

"We don't want any guns on the
picket line, for heaven's sake," said
James Condit Jr., a protest leader.
"We're tor stopping the people
Inside, not hurting the peopll'
outside. That Is rot the kind of
activity we want on a picket Hne."
The protesters Saturday also
picketed the home of Dr. Norman
Matthews, medical director lor
Planned Parenthood.
Hamilton County sheriff's depu·
ties tried to arrest Mike O'Brien of
Project Jericho, an anti-alxlrtion
group, after he crossed to the clinic
side d the street. O'Brien was told
he was breaking a court order
. limiting the number of protesters
who can picket on the clinic side of
the street.

--------

Area deaths
Woodrow W. Eggleton
Woodrow WUson Eggleton, 72,
Rt. I, Bidwell, died Sunday In
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born March 8, 1914, In Southside,
W.Va., son of the late John and
Fannie Fletcher Eggleton, hE' was a
retired farmer and Gallipolis State
Institute employee. He was a
member of Chapel Hill "Church of
Christ.
He Is survived by his wife,
Marcella Green Eggleton, whom he
married on Aug. 3, 1935, in
GaUipolls.
Also surviving are five sons,
Richard Eggleton and Ira Eg·
gleton, bOth ol Rt. 1, Bidwell, Carl
Eggleton of Indianapolis. Ind.,
Dudley Eggleton of NashvUie,
Tenn., and John Eggleton of
Londonderry, N.H.; four daugh·
ters, Mrs. JQhn (Judy) Haffelt of
Rt. 2. Crown City. Mrs. David
(Jane) Setliff of Beckley, W.Va ..
Mrs. Larry (Sara 1 Bailey of
Chester, and Mrs. William

These books make excellent
wedding gifts, Christmas gifts or
just purchase one for yoorself.
To purchase one of these cook·
tooks. stop by the Meigs SWCD
Offlce at 221 West Second Street In
Pomeroy, second Door of the
Farmers Bank building or stop by
our hooth at the Meigs County Fair.
U you would like more Information,
phone 992-6647.

SWCD receives Honor District A'ward
POMEROY - Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District Board
of Supervisors received an Honor
District Award at a banquet held at
the close of the 41st Annual Summer
School lor SoU and WaterConserva·
tlon District (SWCD) Supervisors
held recently In Perrysbury, Ohio.
.Honor District Awards are pres·
mtoo to districts who maintain a
record of excellence after achieving
top honors In the Goodyear Dlstrictlve Service Contest during the past
five years.
Sessions attended during the 3
day meeting Included Conservation
Tlllage Systems; MultiOora Rose
(Illgram; Tools for Managing
Ohio's Natural Resources and Soil
and Water Conservation Programs
and fuming.
'There were tours Monday alter·
noon Including !ann oriented which
visited the ADS · tlle factory ,
Baughman larms and ditch malnte·
nance Information. Other tours

2 to share prize
CLEVELAND tUPI) - Ohio
Lottery officials say two Ohio Lotto
players will shari' a $1,340,().1)
jackpot after they chose the six
numbers drawn Saturday night.
'The tickets. bearing the numbers
1, 8, 9, 13, 17 and 39, are wcrth rrme
than ,;m,troeach. The (l'ize will be
awarded In :a! annual payments of
more than $33.000 before taxes.
Lottery officials said the holders
of those two tickets can redeem
them today. How many players had
lour and five d the rumbers will be
anoounced today.
Saturday's jackpot hegins at an
estbnated $1 million.

Ohio weather
South Central Ohlo
Today, mostly sunny. High Ill to
85. Light and variable winds.
Tonight, mostly clear. Low
arouiXI ro. Ught and variable
winds.
Tuesday. partly cloudy. High In
the mid Ills.
Ohio Exlalded Forecast

.
.·

Veterans Memorial

Saturday Admissions - None. · •
Saturday Discharges - Brenda :
NuU, SyracuSf; Brian Hayes, ;
Rutland.
.
:
Sumay Admissions - James '
Weber, Middleport; Leona Hems; •
ley, Long Bottom.
Sunday Discharges
Anmi':
Sidwell, Willard Hines, Louts{
Kennedy.
o/

~

I

PEOPLES
BANK
THE BETTER BANK
2212 Jackson Avenue

5th Street

New Haven, W. Va . Point Pleasant, W. Va .

Second Street
Mason, W. Va.

675·1121

882-2135

773·5514

USES FOR LP-GAS

RUTLAND
FURNITURE CO.

AND

.,

1 Section 8 Pogoo 26 Conte.
. A Multimedia Inc. Newspape; .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday. August 5, 1986

Pomeroy firemen seek 2-mill levy
By N"ANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Wrller
The Pomeroy Fire Department has requested
Pomeroy Village Council put an additional two-mill
levy on the November baUot to generate more
operating funds for the department.
Pomeroy Fire Chief Charlie Legar, accompanied
by firemen Danny Zerkle and Gary Snouffer, told
council Monday night the additional miUage would
generate approximately $30,272 a year. according to
figures from the county auditor. . ·
Legar said a current one-mill operating levy fort he
department generates only about $9,000 a year, since
it was passed several years ago and Is hased on
property values at that tbne.
Maintain rating
Legar explained It Is necessary for ihe deparbnent
to maintain certain state standards and that Pomeroy
at tills time has a "class six" rating. If department
equipment is not maintained and updated, he said,
Pomeroy's rating will drop to at least a "class seven."
In regard to Insurance coverage. a class seven rating
would mean ·'an increase of $21 a year oo most homes
and a six to eight percent Increase on most

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UPil - Presi·
dent Reagan, firing the first shot in
his war against drugs, says manda·
tory drug testing for federal
workers is justified In some casesand he and his Cabinet are willing to
.. ·· he·screened to set an example.
In launching his campaign Mon·
day against the use of cocaine,
marijuana and heroin In the
workplace, schools, and entertain·
men! business, Reagan said,
"Drugs. in one way or the other. are
victimizing all of us ...
"Mandatory testing is justified
when' the employees have the
health of others and the safety of
others In their hands." Reagan
said, referring to government
workers.
Except for federal workers who
h:lld key security or safety jobs,
Reagan said 1he tests could be done
voluntarily.
"We're pretty much agreed that
what we should seek is voluntary"

GENEVA tUPI) - OPEC oil
ministers, agreed In principle on
sharply reducing output to push up
prices, today sought similar cut·
backs by non·OPEC producers. .
DP!egation sources said the 13
OPEC mlnistt&gt;rs on the ninth day of
their latest conference delayed a
lull plenary meeting while a final
tt&gt;xt was being drafted.
The meeting began just after
noon, which was one hour later than
orlglnaUy scheduled.

RUTLAND FURNITURE
742-2511

Vol.38. No.64
Copyrighted 1986

enttne

businesses," Legar remarked.
Examples of rising prices for equipml'nl were
cited, such as, $100,00) to replace the department's
main pumper which was_purchased in 1970 for$ll,OOO.
Legar also cited rising prices In smalll'r equipment
purchases from $1,00l for each lace mask which
firemen are required to wear to fire hose that now
costs $1.50 to $7 depending on the size.
With additional mlllage. Legar said, the depart ·
ment could alford to pay down on equipment
purchases and then make yearly payments.
Effective service
Legar and the other firemen reiterated that ~.troa
year, plus an additional $2,000 to $3,000 on two lire
contracts, is not enough to manage the department
effectively . Legar said the department used to have
other contracts but those have been eliminated or
lessened as new fire departments have formed In the
county.
Council voted to place the two·mlll levy on the
November baUot with Councilman Bill Young stating,
"It's a service we wouldn't want to do without."
· Pomeroy attorney Steve Story and Dr. Harold

Brov.m presented council with a petition to vacate an
approxbnately 60-by-:JO.foot section of Third Street
behind the old Meigs General Hospital building. The
petition was a joint request from property owners. the
Meigs General Hospital Corp. and VidroCom Inc.
Brown is presidl'nl of both entitles. The street in
question Is no longer maintained by the village, $tory
pointed out.
Complaints aired

The request was made, Brown said. to lead the way
for economic development of that area. Following
discussion, Council gave an ordinance to vacate the
property its first reading.
Two Pomeroy residents, one from Pleasant Ridge
and one from Union Avt'llue, were at the meeting to
Issue a number of minor complaints to the board,
including. the lack d stairs on the parking lot stage,
the need for additional speed limit signs on Union
Avenue or more frequent patrolling by vlllagl'
policemen, and racing on Main Street and the parking
lot on Friday and Saturday nights.
Mayor Richard Seyler noted that extra policemen
arc on duty Thursday through Saturday nights In an

effort to curb activity on the parking lot.
He said additional signs for Union Avenue are on
order and that the Lions Club Is supposed to be
securing steps for the stage.
HI' Invited the gentlemen to anend any coundl
meeting but pointed out that anyone wishing to speak·
offlcially to council should call first and be put on the
ag!'nda.
·
Council has issued a request that property owners
along East Main refrain from parking or puningslgnS
along the river hank. Councilman John Anderson
noted It has been an expense to the village to clean up·
the river hank and he hoped property owners would
lend their cooperation to the clean up effort.
In final matters, council mentioned that abOut tm
feet new water line Is being Installed oolleecliSireet
and that playground equipment has been installed II)
the Mechanic Street and Naylor's Run parks.
.
Council discussed using part d a$625donationtrom
the Jaycees to purchase a tennis net lor the cid tennis
court on East Main. Bill Young Is to check oo prices .
Council accepted the mayor's report of $3570.~ In
fines and fees L"Ollected In July.

Jurist's
brother
suspected ··
of leak

testing lor other workers, he said,
and Indicated they wlll be subjected
to "peer pressure." .
As lor himself and members of
the Cabinet, he said, "Yes, we've all
agreed that we would do it.
"If this battle Is to be won- and it
must, each· and every one of us
must take a stand and get Involved .
Victory .In this case is a dfUg.free
generation."
Reagan proudly noted that his
wife, Nancy, has made the campaign against drug abuse her top
priority for five years.
When asked It his new anti-drug
push meant he was trying to take
over her program. Reagan said to
gales d laughter: "Do I look like an
idiot?"
"Drug use will oo longer be
tolerated," Reagan said. "TheywUI
learn to 'Just say no, "' referring to
the slogan adopted by the first lady.
Reagan's specific plans will be
announced In September.
"This is chapter one," he said.
"'I'll be making s pecific
announcements. ''

Reagan also said more money
will be sought lor the program in
next year's budget.
" II Isn't just rhetoric alone,"
Reagan said. "We know that
there's going to be a cost and we're
going to have to find that money."

'

.

:(~ ' ,,;

Both parties have made drug·
abuse an lsS\Ie and several House
committees plan to pass drug·
related legislation before the Aug.
15 recess. House Speaker Thomas
O'NeiU also has announced a major
anti· drug Initiative.

Gorbachev In their November 19tl5
Geneva meeting and discuss what
additional preparations may be
needed for a summit meeting
between the two leaders later this
year."
But the Soviet news agency Tass,
tn a singiE"-sentence statement
anoounctng. the met&gt;llng, did no!
mention the ]Xanning for a summit
or what otht&gt;r areas would be
discussed.
The different approaches refleeted American eagerness to get
on with the second Reagan·
Gorbachev summit and Soviet
reluctance to agree to a date
without assurances of progress on
nuclear arms control.
Shultz and Shevardadze were
Hrst scheduled to meet In Washing· ~·

Sen. Paula Hawkins. R·Fia .. who
heads the Senate Drug Enforce·
mcnt Caucus and has tested her
own employees lor drugs . said,
"The White House today became
the war room" in the fight against
drug abuse.
The President's Commission on
Orga nized Crime earlier this year
recommended that all federal
workers be tested for drugs, and
urged private employers to do the
same.

ton In May. But the Soviets,
protesting the U.S. bombing of
Libya April 15, canceled the session
and until now have refused resche·
dule it.
The sides agreed to the September meeting last week In a
series of meetings at the State
Depar.tment with DE'puty Soviet
Foreign Minister Alexandr Bess·
mertnykh, the highest·level U.S.·
Soviet meeting since March and
part of a flurry of contacts.
In addition to an t&gt;xchange of
majornucleararmsL"Ontrolpropos·
als between Reagan and Gorba·
chev. separate talks have been hPid
In Geneva on compliance with the
1979 SALT 2 nuclear arms llmlta·
tion agreement and on nuclear
testing. Talks also were held In

In a surprising turnabout late
Monday, the 13 OPEC oil ministers
agreed to quit squabbling and
accept an Iranian quOta plan that
would slash. OPEC output by about
3 million barrels of oil a day.
Anrouncement of the tentative
plan promptly boosted oil prices by

RUTLAND,
(

as much as $3 a barrel.
Oil minister Javier Espinosa
Teran of Ecuador told reporters
that OPEC requested "contriru·
lions" to the cutback agreement
from Egyp, Mexico, Angola,
Oman and Malaysia.
"I rope It will be quite a tot," he
said when asi!ed how much could be
Involved. , ·
The Iranian plan, which Is
supposed tn govern cartel output
through October when another
meeting may be held, sets lndlvkl·
Ujl.l production quotas tn mtuce the
to.tal output of the Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries to
16.7 million barrels a day.
The policy breakthrough seemed
to end a yearlong feud between
OPEC price hawks, Including Iran,
Algt&gt;rla and Libya.

By MAT111EW C. QUINN
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Admin·
lstratlon sources have conflnned
that the brother of Daniel Manion,
the controversial conservative recent ly appointed to the federal
bench, is under lnvesUgatlon for
aliegroly glvlng U.S. • InhiiJI8ftlcle'

BEEF QUEEN - JocU Brown, 16, cl Leading Creek Road,
Middleport, was recently crowned Meigs County Beef Queen by Jbn
Lucas, president of the Melp County lleel Cattle As8oclatlon. A
daughter of Kay and Jack Frederick and amemberoflhe MelgsCounly
Beller Beef Club, Jodi will IISSUIIIe her duties next week at the Meigs
COIHIIy Fair. Jodi Is also eligible to participate ln the state beef CJ!een
competition sponsoml by the Ohio Cattlemen's Association. A
requirement cl the slate contest Is to submit an essay regarding the heel
Industry. Jodi's essay Is eiiUtled "A WomiUI's Role in the Beef lnw!iry
-Where Do We Go From Here." 'The local oonle!it wasco-spo.......OO by
the beef cattle as!Dclalion and the Meigs

Moscow

on

nuclear

non -

proliferation.
Redman said the two countries
also discussed meetingtotalkabOut
Afghanistan. Those middle·level
talks, part rJ. a series on world
troublespots, "could occur next
month ."
The U.S.lnformation Agency and
a Soviet delegation scheduled a
news conference today to announce
a series d cultural , health and
education agreements between the
Soviet Union and private American
crganizations reached under the
guidelines of the first summit last
year.
Reagan and Gorhachev, at their
first summit In Geneva Nov . 19-:al,
1985, agreed to two !urthPr meet·
lngs, one In the United States this

OPEC seeks cutbacks
from non-members

---~.

BOTTLE
GAS
.

•

at y

By MATDIEW C. QUINN
WASHINGTON iUPH - The
United States and Soviet Union
have put back on track the
touch·and·go preparations for a
summit this year between President Reagan and Soviet leader
Mikhail Gorhachev, but a summit
date still has not been set. . ,
The two countries made separate
announcements Monday that Secretary ol State George,Shultz and
Foreign Minister Eduard Shevard·
nadze will meet in Washington
Sept. 19-20.
State Departml'nt spokesman
Charles Redman told reporters the
United States expects the two men
to "review progress achieved and
areas addressed by President
Reagan and General Secretarv

This fuel is one of the country's most versatile sources of
energy. It is both portable and easy to regulate . Its most com·
mon use is as a straight source of heat. It cooks food , warms
homes, dries clothes, heats water, and barbecues for home·
owners located in suburban, small town, and rural areas. It can
also power refrigerators and air conditioners. Portable LP·gas
brings city comfort to families everywhere. It can do anything in
the wilderness that it can do at home, and LP·gas has long been
a major comfort for campers .
LP·gas is also a staple on farms , where it's used for crop dry·
ing, flame weeding, tobacco curing, defoliation, poultry and pig
brooding, stock tank heating, and frost protection. It also powers
trucks, pumps, standby generators, and other farm equipment. .
Commercial establishments, such as hotels, motels, and res·
taurants, use LP·gas much like the homeowner. Industry relies
on it for brazing, soldering, cutting, heat-treating, annealing ,
vulcanizing, and many other uses.
As an engine fuel, its minimal emissions allow it to be used
indoors, which e plains its wide popularity in fork·lifl trucks .

(

•

U.S., Soviet negotiators renew summit planning

USES OF LP·GAS

•PERSONALIZED
SERVICE
•FAMILY ·
OWNED
•WE ARE AS Cl9SE
AS YOUR PHONE

PICK-4: 3982

Reagan advocates voluntary
drug tests of federal staff

NO GIMMICKS! NO MINIMUM BALANCE!

'·'

Number: 949

'l'onlgl&amp;, Jlllrib' dcJulb'. Low •
lhe lower liB. UPI and variable
wtadll. Weclaesclay, moetJr
cleudy wlh a chalice II. slloweN
IUld lh"ndel'llorms. HIP In IIIII
mid 11011. Olance II. raiD • .

•:

SENIOR
CITIZENS!*'

MFMRFR F nJr.

Daily

-P~4

·~

u .S. officials had hoped Bush,
could offt&gt;r Mubarak flrm assuran~
ces of help. However, thE' mallet·:
was said to still be under review in-;
Washington, wht&gt;re there Is concern :
that such steps as a cut in Interest·
rates on existing debts- one raised ;
by the Egyptians - would be a.;
··
dangerous precedent.

FOR

I

Rabbit judging
scheduled at fair

pollcy.
I"'
A sharp drop In foreign exchange;
earnings has forced Mubarak to..
press lor changes In the al~:
package, including a bigger alloca~
uon of cash grants and bett~ ;
rorrowing terins, despite his reluc:,
tance to undertake U.s. ,..
recommended economic refonns. ~

NO
CHARGE
CHECKING
ACCOUNTS

Included Urban and Wetlands.
Those attending the meeting
from Meigs County were Rex and
Catherine Shenefield; Alan, Kay
and Ben Holter; Opal Dyer, David
Burt and Ned Dooley.

Wedneilday illroulh Friday

Fair Wednesday and Thursday
with a chanoe of showers and
thunderstorms Friday. Highs
throughout the period wlll be In the
8Js with a low In tlle Ills.

as

(Teresa) Eshenaur of Akron; 25
grantkhlldren and seven greatgrantkhildren; a brother, William
Eggleton of Tempe, Ariz.; and
three sisters, Mrs. Fred iGuineth!
Parker of Gallipolis, Ida Preston of
Morgantown, W.Va.. and Mrs.
Hollis (Virginia) Harrison of
Gallipolis.
He was preceded In death by a
son, William Harold tTomJ Eggleton, and by a grandson, five
brothers and one sister.
Services will be I p.m. Wednes·
day in McCoy·Moore FuJrrai
Home. Vinton, with Evangelists
Lewis Mlke.ll and WiUiam B. Kughn
officiating. Burial will be In Campaign Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home from 2·4 and7·9
p.m. Tuesday.
Pallbearers will be Ricky Chris·
topher. Scott Eggleton, Terry
Saunders, Mark Haffcll and Brian
Bailey .
Honorary pallbearers will be
Craig and Ben Eggleton and David
AUen Setliff.

Auxiliary offering cookbook for sale
POMEROY - The Meigs &amp;Ill
and Water Conservation District
Ladles Auxlllary has a llmltoo
supply of "Ohio's Cooservation
Cookbook" for sale.
Cookbooks contain over 1200
recipes and sell lor $7.00 each.
Sections In the cookhook range
from soups to appetizers to meats,
vegetables and salads. DE'sserts,
cookies, and cakes are also sections
In the cookhook .

His talks with Mubarak, Sadat's
successor, were to include In-depth
discussion of the peace process
Sadat helped pioneer
well as
Taba, the land dispute hindering
·normalized relations between
Egypt and Israel.
Bush has expressed hope he can
cap his MiddlE' East tour, which
ends Tuesday, by attending the
signing of a breakthrough agree·
ment in the standoff over Taba, a
stretch of Egyptian beach clabned
by Israel.
The Egyptians, however, ap·
peared more Interested in their
immediate problems at home: a
distressed econcmy and a $:JJ
billion foreign debt that has promp·
ted urgent pleas for more U.S.
assistance.
Egyp; already ranks second
behind Israel as the largest rectp·
lent of U.S. mUitary economic aid.
That amount Is estimated to be
alxlut $2.2 billion for the current
year.
The Carter administration
roosted aid to Egypt as a result of
the Camp David Accord and Its 1919
peace treaty with Israel. The
Reagan administration has con·
tinued that as a tent&gt;t dU.S. fort&gt;ign

Ohio Lottery

year and another In the SoviN
Union In 1987.
But the Soviets, lo the intense
Irritation oft he RPagan administration. have delayed agreeing to a
date. apparently to put rrore
pressure on Reagan to reach an
arms control accord. Redman said
oo date has been set.
Administration officials say there
Is still time to prepare for a summit
that would be held in the United
StateS some time after the November congressional elections.
They do not expect the Soviets to
agree to a date until Gorbachev
reviews Reagan's late July re·
sponse to his Juii' anns control
proposal, which isexcpected to take
weeks.

secrets to Clllle.
Sources said Monday night that
Cllrlstopher Manion, who serves as
tile representative of Sen. Jesse
Helms, R·N.C., on the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee, attended a confidential bril'ftng at
which sensitive information was
disclosed that later made Its way .I ll .
the Chilean government.
··
·..

-' ·.

Manion was told d the classHIM
Information - about a covert
American Intelligence-gathering
operation In ChUe - at a Senate ·
Intelligence Committee briefing,
the administration sources said,
and the Senate panel has asked tile
FBI to Investigate how tt was
trans mil ted to the Clllleans.
'The disclosure followed HelmS'
blistering anack on a State Depart·
ment official for falsely accustqg
him d giving Cllile the secrets, and
tMn leaking the story to the news.
media as part of a smear
campaign.
Neither Helms nor Mankm could
be reached for comment oo the
latest reports.
In South Bend, Ind., Daniel
Manion told United Press Intema.
tiona! that he had mt discussed the
situation with his brother, wt !hat
he "didn't kmwwhata staff person
ton the Senate Foretgn Relations
Committee) could say."
"And here I thought the name
Manion was going to be oot of the
newspapers for a while," Manion
said.
The Senate narrowlY confirmed
Manion, 44, as a judge on tM 71}1
Circuit U.S. Court ol Appeals "In
Chicago July 23 alter a bitter fight
In which opponents charged hewa~
too extreme and Inexperienced to
be a federal judge. Hclilis
staunchly delended Manion
throughout lhe debate.
The New York Times reportro
Sunday the FBI was lnvestlj(atlng

'

'

'

I

I

SVNJ)AY FUN- Lo4a ol iiWbiu(leiai!MIII Sunday
allemooa fnlllcldiJgla the lake Iii Ferlled.Run Slate

.

Park while other parllgoers
. canoed IUld rowed their

whether Heims or one d his aldi-s
passed sensitive US. !ntelllj(entE&gt;
!ni&gt;nnatlon to the military gover.n·
ment of Gen. Augusto Pinochet: ·
The newspaper. citing COngfl'S·
sional and admtnislration sources.
said the Inquiry was focusing on
Char~J!S that thc Cl!Ueans had bi&gt;eft
Upped rif about a covert American
Intelligence-gathering operation. ·
Helms told reporters Monday
that Elliott Abrams, assistant
secretary tor Latin America, made
the allegation to the Senate Intelll·
gence Ccmmlttee.
·'He romes up here In the dead o1
night and made thesefalsechargl's,
knowing they are false," lieims
said angrily. "Then he sUps back to
his little. hole at the State Depart·
menl and caDs The New · York
1lmes and says, 'Hey, I &amp;Ot a big
sroop ilr you."'

·I!

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