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fage D-B-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

pil, technology issues brighten
1$)' EU..EN' FREILICH

:;

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~

VPI &amp;•±1!1111 Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - 'l'he stock

: market advanced last week, led by
...on, technology, and other stocks
: that invesrors relieve wW benefit
; !rom a pickup in economic actiVIty.
.~ The Dow Jones industrial aver·
-age cllnnbed 10.5&gt;1 points Ill ~.34,
4.,Its fourth consecutive weekly gain.
!The Dow frEquently flirted with Its
;:~rdh1gho!1909.03-establlshed

:Juzy 2 -

but was wtable to

;surmount It.
~ The market's biggest rally OC·
~-curred Tuesday, when the Dow rose
~.Ql points as major banks cut
:.their prime lending rates to 7.5
:J!ertent !rom 8 percent. The
ooreducttons followed the Federal
~e Board's decision a week
~arUer to lower its discount rate-

:-&lt;t~~eratettchargesonloanstohanks

:;- to 5.5 percent from 6 percent.
. Except for a bout of profit-taking
:!i'hursday, oU stocks attracted
;PJyers throughout tbe week. Some
"'l.echnology Issues also did well.
goods stocks, which had
lt good run during the first half d
· '-9116. garnered less attention. ·
,; Though many investors are
~png for the economy to revive In
~third and fourth quarter, the
jJ&gt;II8'Mll!llt oontlnued to release
:JillIa reflecting a weak economy.
.•
·
';:

t:onsurner

J ed

:'D

.;;;,uUyOU( COMp e(

""
; TROY, Mich. (UP!)- Ex-GeiW
::Corp. Friday said it has completed
' ts acquisition of TRW Inc.'s
:Pmpresoor Components Division,
~tIt declined to disclose the terms
;ot the transaction.
\t' E. Paul Casey said acquisition of
"!CCmpresoor Components, which
fpnxtuces jet engine components, Is
~ Important step In the continuing
~wth of Ex-Cell-O's aerospace·
:llefense segment.

-

The Comrneree Department said
Ire U.S. trade deficit stood at a

and to concentrate on commerdaJ
electronics,
Owens·Corning Flrerglas ~ll2%
to '19\1. The rompa11y said late
Thursday that Its directors had
approved a recapitalization plan to
block a rostlle takeover bid trom
Wickes. Wickes said Friday It
would terminate Its $74-a-share
offer for Owens-Coming.
ICN Pharmaceuticals fell4 to 24.
Its prospects were questioned in a
weekend article In Barron's and In
a Wall Street Journal rolumn
Monday.
Among other blue cll1ps, General
Motors dropped l4 to 72, Eastman
Kodak slipped ~ to 56lA and Sears
lost ~ to 72.
·
Overall, 1,:156 Issues posted gains
while 8.ll slx&gt;wed l:lsses armng a
total d. 2,:ll5 Issues traded.
The Interest-rate sensitive Dow
utlltty index added 1. 76 to end the
week at 2!9.15. The Dowtransportatlon average jumped 10.22 to 772.00.
Standard &amp; Poor's 500-stock
index rose 2. 74 to 252.93; the New
York Stock Exchange composite
lndex added 1.44 to 145.32.
Big Board volume totaled
ffi4,614,759 shares, oompared with
632,131,180 a week earller and
408,1M,li5durlngthesameweeka
year ago.
Composite volume for the week
was 773,925,179 shares, compared '
with 755.~.!SJ a week earlier.
~s advanced In moderate
trading on the American Stock
Exchange.
The American Stock Exchange
index rose 2.93 to 273.85. Advances
outpaced declines :JSS.353 among
the 9l9 Issues traded. Volume was
46,814,000 shares, oompared with
44,63l,:li5 last week and 31,:al4,745
during the same week a year ago.
Wickes led the Amex actives,
rising ~ to 5V.. B.A.T. Inrustries
lollowed, unchanged at 6 3-16.
Amdahl was third , advancing 3 to

record $18.4 !Illlon in July. The
government also said that mJuly,
single-family rome sales fell 5.6
pel'(~nt.

Edward Nlcoskt &lt;t Piper, Jaftray
&amp; Hopwood In Minneapolis said the

stock markellsatthereglnn!ngofa
major change In leadership. Since
mid-July, the best performers have
been energy, utWty and manufac·
turing Issues, he no)ed. Consumer
goods compaDieshave moved to the
b:&gt;ttom at the llst.
James Andrews, head &lt;t instltu·
tiona! trading at Janney Montgo·
mery Scott In Philadelphia said the
market soould rletain a nrm tone
this week.
"PorttbUo managers will be
ready to comm!t a llttle bit more
money to the market," Andrews
said. He said with the Fed trying to
spur economic activity, an upturn
In third-and fourth·(Jlarter corporate earnings stvuld SE!Id til' Dow
up to m before yearend.
On the trading ftoor, Ohio Edison
was the Jmst active NYSE-llsted
Issue, rising \!, to 22'!i. Duquesne
Power &amp; Light followed, easing \!,
to 14
AT&amp;T was third, jumping1% to.
24:;(,.
Oil and cil service Issues rose
after Norway said It planned fD
dlstuss production curbs 011 Its
North Sea cil ootp.~t. Mobil rose ~
ID 35%, Exxon jumped 3~ to 68%,
Texaco spurted 1% to33o/,,Chevron
advanced 1'~ fD 44~, Occidental
Petroleum jumped 1% to :!!Y4 ,
Phillips Petroleum added% tolO~.
Atlantic Richfield added 1\!, to S7 \!,
and Schlumbergt'r cllmred 1% to
34.
IBM rose l4 to 138~ . Merrill
Lyoch raised its Investment rating
on the stock.
Gould added 2 fD 21. The company
said Its b:&gt;ard approved a plan to
divest its defense systems business 21.

*·

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Store Hours:
Mon thru Fri 9: 30-6: 00
Sat 9:30-5: 00,S un .
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Jack Rogers (Youkoubls Uzsku·
rlatlsl, 76, of 120 Pleasant St., Point
Pleasant, longtime Mason Coonty
educator, sportsman and writer.
died Monday in Pleasant Valley
Hospital following an- extended
illness.
Born June 29, 1910, In Chicago,
Ill.. a son of Jonas and Ona
Salclunas Uzskuriat!s, newly ar·
Jived tmmlgrants from Lithuania
via Scotland. Mr. Rogers ~mved
with his famlly fD Minden where his
father worked In the coal fields. He
graduated from Qak HUI High
School and continued his education
at Morrls Harvey College, Bar·
boursvtlle, W.Va., where he was a
summa cum laude graduate In l933 .
A baseball and football player In
both high school and college, Mr.
Rogers worked his way through
Morris Harvey lecturing ln.botany
and conducting forest IY field trips .

yearsandthatonly4.4mlllionofthe
company's 22 million tons of coal
last year came from underground
mines.
"You cannot characterize a
company's record by looking at
only a piece of It," said Murray.
"You oo that and you get a very
distorted viewpoint."
Davitt McAteer, director of the
law center, said the survey did not
reflect one reality of the coal
Industry - that small coal opera·
tors. In general, have worse safety
records than large companies.
partly because they do mt have the
same resources or expertise.
However. he expressed confl·

25 Cenll

dence the · survey accurately
ranked safety records among the
big producers. He said the survey's
ratings were based on statistics
gatil'red by the U.S. Mine Safety
and Health Administration over a
five-year period - enough time to
ensure that a single disaster would
not unduly skew the overall safety
record compiled by a company.
McAteer acknowledged that the
magnitude d the Wilberg disaster
was such that It probably contrlb·
uted substantially 10 Savage Neal's
poor rating. Still, he said, Savage
Neal had one of the worst overall
disabling Injury rates among the
large companies.

said an autopsy srowed the plot of
the small plane died of "multiple
Injuries" and from a heart attack.
Gold said the heart attack hap·
pened before the pilot was decapl·
tated In the collision that sheared off
his plane and much of the jet's
control stabilizers, sending both
craft plunging Into the suborb of
Los Angeles.
The 18 dead on the ground died In
ex{ioslons, fire and from the falling
debris. The 15 found In one home
were apparently attending a party,
It was reported.
Autmritles said Aeromextco
Capt. Juan Prom had been in
contact with tre l.Ds Angeles
control rower just refore Impact
and was IDld to watch lor another
small plane.;... not the Piper- iii ~s
vtcln1ty.
National Transportation Safety
Board blvestlgators said the controller handling Fllght 498 was
"distracted" by the otil'r small
plane, which "popped up" unexpectedly in the airspace, but It was
unknown U the distraction was
relevant. The controller was to be
given a drug test today, officials
said.
The Piper was equipped with a
transponder, which magnifies a
plane's presence oo radar screens.
The device's switch was In til' "on "

Mr. Rogers moved to Point
Pleasant following college graduation In 1933 where he edited the
former Mason County Citizen. a
weekly newspaper, for two years.
At the time he was the youngest
editor In West Virginia.
In 1935 he married Ire former
Thelma G. Coon, an elementary
school teacher from Comfort, and
began teaching bjl!k&gt;gy at Point
Pleasant High School. The Rogers'
combined for well over 60 years of
teaching In the Point Pleasant
school system.
During World War II. Mr. Rogers
took a leave of absence from
teaching to expedite for til' Marietta Manufacturing Co.. which
constructed ocean-going tugs for
Russia.
Combining his interest In sports
and teaching, Mr. Rogers coached
til' high school baseball team for 24

By CIIARUS MffCHELL
Mc&amp;OW (UP!)- U.S. News&amp;
World Report correspondent Nicholas Danlloff, jailed since Saturday
for alleged espionage, wUI eltil'r be
r:Jharged or released within 10 days;
Ills wife says.
Mortimer Zuckerman, owner
and editor In chief ol !be magazine.
planned meetings In Mbscow today
with Soviet officials to press for the
release of Danllof!, 52, an·Amerlcan
Citizen. '
Zuckerman arrived · in Moscow
Monday and charged that Danllotl
was the vtctlm of "a phony arrest
based on contrived
The $ovlet government has said
Danllotf was caught "red·lu)nded"
In an act of espionage Saturday
when he was gtven a ~(!age by a
11011roe ,t)Jat was later loup! to
'cOIItaln maps marlled secret.
\ ln
Barbara, Calif., where
President Reaaan was vacationing,

santa

White House spokesman Larry
Speakes said the admlnlstraUon Is
"angry" about Danllof!'sdetentlon,
but a senior administration oltlclal
said no decision had been made on
what action Reagan would take.
Speakes said that while the
United States relleves a summit
between Reagan and Soviet leader
MtkhaU Gorbachev Is "a potentially
Important event" and that JX'eparatol)( meetings are stW oo sdiEdule.
"Incidents llke this ... cannot help
U.S.-Sovtet relations.''
Ruth Dalllloft, who visited her
huSband Monday- her second visit
In two days at, the KGB lnterroga·
lion center at Lellrtovo prison said DanUotr was "atralned and lull
of 'hnxtety allput the sttuat~n," but
lhat SoVIet au!Jilritle$ luid treated
h1m 1n a "rorrect and buslnesllllke

manner."

'

"What I learned from my
meeting with ,Nick was lha~ In 10
days he woukl either be charilld or

w~~~~,.

' .GRIM TASK

lnvestlgators examined the

fuselage ~ an Aeromedco jel Monday as the search
for hodles continued in the Cerrllo!l, Calif.,

neighborhood devalllated by the crash Sunday of a
passenger alrttner and a private craft. (UPI)

passengers and the six crew
memrers were listed as Mexican
citizens, many of whom lived In the
United States.
It was the worstatrdlsaster In the
history of the Los Angeles airport.
spokesman Thomas Winfrey said.

position, but It was not known If It
was working before the collision.
An Aeromexlco passenger ltst
smwed that 36 of the ~ travelers
aboard the plane were American
citizens. There was one Colomlian
and one Salvadoran. The rest oft he

eight ·and nine-year-old group oft he
Point Pleasant Little Men's League
Is named for him. He alsc managed
the Kiwanis Club swimming pool
for a season, and found time to play
semi-pro baseball lbr a numrer of
years.
Mr. Rogers was a historian for
the famous 13 Club througmut Its
existence. He was also a member of
the Independent Order at Odd
Fello~W and had served as an
asslstabt scoutmaster. A memrer
of til' Presbyterian Church in Point
Pleasant for about 50 years. Mr.
Rogers was an ordained elder and
held membership on numerous
church committees and taught
Sunday School tbr many years.
Oct. :n, 1975. was proclaimed
Jack Rogers Day in Point Pleasant
by Mayor John Musgrave. On May
5, 1985, Mr. Rogers was the
recipient of the prestigous Gene

years with his teams. compiling an
overall 182·121 record. He also
served as an assistant coach In
football and basketball for seven
years. In 1942. he coached all the
high school sports.
Mr. Rogers was a sportswriter
and columnist for the Plllnt Plea·
sant Register for over 50 years,
turning out over IO,OOJ articles
during his wiiling carrer. An avid
reader, hunter and fisherman, his
columns · dten Incorporated book
reviews and his wildltfe experien·
ces. Jack wrote and sold fiction
articles to national magazines,
concentrating on sports, short
stories and novelets. He also
created "Offsldes Oscar," the
well -known " plxllated plgsldn
picker."
For eight years, Mr. Rogers
directed the Little League baseball
program In Point Pleasant. The

prison. Mrs. Danlloff and the
embassy o:iflctal were allowed a
one-hour meeting with him Sunday,
but Caleb Danlloff was not allowed
to see his father.
~ckerman said on his arrlval at
Sheremetyevo airport that he came
to provide help and suwort to
DanUoff and his family "over the
fact that he has been thrown lnfD
prison unjustly.''
He Indicated he reUeves Danllott
was set up as a bargaining chip to
obtain the release of Gennadl
Zakharov, 39, a Soviet citizen and
U.N. ernp~yee who was being held
without bond In New York after the
FBI arrested h1m Aug. 23 .while
h""dlng wer $1,00l to an Informant
tor classified documents.
Speakes said he had no lmowl·
edge ct any plans for a swap.
Danllof! served 5\!, years In the
Soviet capital lor the IIUIJazlne and
three years lor United Press
International In the ear)¥ 1960s.

released," she said. "If he's
charged, presumably there wUI be
a trial."
Mrs. Danllolf said she did not
know whether the 10-day period
began Monday or Saturday, wben
her husband was detained.
During the W;lt Monday Soviet
autlx&gt;ritles allowed Dan Doll's wife,
his 16-year-old son, Caleb, and a
U.S. consular officer to enter the

Speakes said that whle the
Unlled States believes a sunwnll
between : heac• and Soviet
leader Mlkball Gorbachev Ill "a
potaJtiiiiJy lmpontaat event"
and thlil preparatoey meetlllp
. . . 011 IICbedule, "lllcldenla
like this ... Cl8IIID lw!lp U.S.·
Soviet rela&amp;lo118."

'

It also was til' worst domestic
accident since 137 people were
killed Aug. 2, 1985, when a Delta
Airlines L-lOU Trtstar bound from
Fort Lauderdale, Fla.. ID Los
Angeles crashed on landing at
Dallas-Fort Worth Internalbnal.

'

Labor Day celebration In Racine
was filled with the sounds a·
happlness: children laughing,coun-'
try music and feet skipping to the
reat.
But the underlying tones were
grim. Speech after speech by
political and union figures at tbe
celebration, put on by the United.
Mine Workers, bemoaned tbe·
shrinking union membership.
·
Howard Green, a member of the
UMW's International Executive
Board, told the 2,(01 people ga- ·
lhered In Racine that his organlza·
tlon Is at a crossroads, facing a
crisis from non-union mines open,
lng up In Kentucky and West:
VIrginia.
He said non-union operators are
· draining the ltfe blood of the union
and therefore the miners.
"In Logan County," Green said,
"I talked fD a man working tn a
non-uniOn mine woo was getting
$3.55 an hour. That's ridiculous."
UMW District 17 President Bob
Phalm said the dwindling member·
ship In his soutrern West VIrginia
district "Is sickening.'' In 1978 his
district had 29,00l members. Today, he said, It has less than lO,IXXI
memrers.
Sen. Robert Byrd and Rep. Nick
Rahal!, both West VIrginia Democrats, attended the annual celebration and blamed President Reagan
for the union's woes.
Byrd, woo played til' ftddle and
sang "There's More Pretty Gtris
Than One," said the nation 's $170 ·
billion national trad!' deficit Is' to ·
blame formuchofthe problem . The
nation 's workers are not competing
with tbrelgn workers, but with
foreign governments who subsidize
their Industries, he said.
"All we want is a level playing
field.' ' Byrd said. "But this admln·
lstrallon does nothing about the
problem."
Gov. Arch Moore alsc attended .
the event. He said the state ·
economy Is Improving, Including :
moving from the No. 3 coal :
producer ID the No. 2 producer 1n ·
the country. But. he added, "We're
not rmvlng as fast In UMW ·
terrltory as I'd like us ID be."
Mlorevowed "nevertowritecoal :
off."

Jack Rogers

Morehouse Award for dlstln·
gulshed service to sports writing In
West Virginia by the West Virginia
(Cootlnued on Page 5)

Robert Massey, a field represen-:
tatlve for District 17's subdistrict 2. ·
said his rome of Whitesville has ·
changed radically since 1982, when ·
massive mine layoffs began.

Recent woes overshadow
Labor Day celebration
By United Press International
On a Labor Day marked by the cancellation of the traditional
parade In New York- where the tvllday was born 104years agolabor leaders admitted "the past few years have been tough" but
asked Americans 10 "see how far they get witrout labor."
Many of the nation's beaches and parks were filled Monday with
the usual Labor Day throngs Indulging In one last. summer.endlng
round of sunbathing. picnics, and music festivals.
But the celebration of the blue-collar worker In many cities was
tempered by reminders of the labor rmvemenl's recent woes.
Several hundred unHarmed employees of Denver-based Frontier
Airlines, which Died for bankruptcy last week after ceasing
operations, marched in the annual Labor Day parade in Denver.
·;1think this Is the final goodbye with us," Sllldonefllght attendant.
"We're all stW Frontier faml!y, and we're trying to give each other
suwort as much as we can."
About 2iO strikers gathered outside The Chicago Tribune buDding ·
to demonstrate their resolve In a 14-month walkout against the dally
newspaper by 1,!XXI pressmen, matlers and typowaphers.
·
Monday marked the one-month anniversary of a labor dispute,
ruled a lockout in several states. between the United Steelworkers
union and USXSteelCQrp. The dispute;which USXIscal!lng astrtke .
Involves 44,000 workers nationwide, Including about 23,IXXI already
laid off. .
.
.

'

•,

\

McAleer said North American's
safety problems ranged back
beyond ~he 1981-1985 survey • m ·
compassmg tbe last decade.
In the survey, North American
had the worst rate of overall
disabling injuries, averaging 22
Injuries per aiO,!XXIemployee tvurs.
That compared to an average rate
of 8.7 lor the ID largest companies.
North American trailed only
Savage Neal .in I he category of
Intermediate mjury rate, which
Includes aU fatal and disabling
lnjurtes. Savage Neal had a rate or
8.2 such Injuries per IDO,!XXI employee hours, and North American
had a rate
7.1. The ID-compa11y
average
wasof3.5.

~wer ranks

Editor presses for reporter's release

clrCuJnStinces.''

Store Hours:
\1on thru Frl 9:30- '7:00
Sil t 9: 30-5: OO,Sun 12: ()().
5:00

Bethlehem Steel Corp. of Bethlehem, Pa.
Robert Murray, president of
North American Coal Co., said the
survey's conclusion that his com·
pany had the worst safety record
was "unfair" because It did not
consider recent changes at North
American.
He said the statistics used to
compile the ratings were " probably
correct" oot that the survey was
"misleading" and outdated be·
cause It mly looked at underground
mines - not surface mines.
Murray said North American
had sold or closed 10 d. Its 12
underground mines In the last three

~

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~;.

Pric e

22 With MagntJ m Cykndcr

...........

22LR Solid Point

$211

20 GAUGE SOle

M• •ll n Mod.r 6D
~~

Utah,where27mlnersandsupervl·
sors died 1n a fire Dec. 19, 1984.
Other companies ranking among
the worst were Fluor Corp.-Royal
Dutch Shell, of Los Angeles, which
operated the Grundy mine in
Chattanooga, Tenn., where 13
miners died in a December 1981
explosion; R.ocnester &amp; Plttsoorgh
Coal Co. of Indiana, Pa .• and
Peabody Holding Co. Inc. of st.
!JJuls, the nation's biggest coal
producer.
The survey rated Consolldated
Coal Co. of Pittsburgh as the safest
of the big coal compaDies, followed
by Occidental Petroleum-Island
Creek of Lexington. Ky., and the

Noted area educator, writer dies at 76

;;·,';,'7999
1

;

The OC-9 was struck trom below
as It made an auttvrtzed descent
from 7,00l to6,00l feet. All 64 people
aboard were kWed alter a terrlfY·
lng ll-t~second upside-down fall
trom more than a mile up.
Coroner's spokesman Bill Gold

Scop(J

.....
1

Har&gt;O

99

~~--1· · .i; 22 RIFLE
.,;nunln
~
wr1n

• nl-IUo

l e ll

'159

By STEVEN DE SALVO
CERRITO&gt;, Calif. (UPI) - The
pilot &lt;t the small plane that co Hided
with an Aeromextco jetliner In a
disaster that killed at least 85 people
suffered a heart attack before the
two planes crashed and fell like
bombs Into a quiet neighborhood,
autmritles said.
The death toll Included 64 on the
jetliner, three In the small plane
and 18 on the ground. The Los
Angeles Times reported that 15 of
the dead were found in one home.
The pilot, tentatively Identified as
WOllam Kramer, 53. was one of
three people in the single-engine
Piper Cherokee Archer that clipped
the rear of Fllght 498 Sunday as the
DC-9, .apprtlaehed Los Angeles
· J'nvestlgatotS said the Piper was
In restricted airspace between 6,000
and 7,IXXI feet and was requli'ed to
contact ground controllers. But
offtclals said the Piper did not
contact the tower and appllrently
never appeared on radar.

PRO HUNTER '229~9

MINI-MAG
AMMUNITION

Prlc•
16 GAUGE Salo

GAMEGETTER

~- ·ARCHERY

,~ •. l~~;o '79'' '

1 2 Pages

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Small craft's pilot
had heart attack

Iilte.rfiilliiiW'~'

RAM HUNTER '12 9 99

I..I..J:

-

C yi,Mel

Hott/~USA

BEAR
WHITETAILIIB""AR

6"-REVOLVER
I ·n~: c

~'~··15

HOURS
MON., WED.,FRI. 8:30-8:00
lUES. &amp; THURS. 8:30-5:00
SAT. 8:30-4:00; SUN. 1:00·5:00

POMEROY, OHIO
PHONE (614) 992-6614

"""

~

~

308 ,E. MAIN 5I,

High Powered
Shotgun Shells

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 2, 1986

ByGEORGELOBSENZ
WASHrnGTON (UPI) - A
survey by an occupational safety
advocacy group shows North
American Coal Co. of Cleveland
posted the worst mine safety record
of the nation's 20 largest undergrou~ coal companies between
1981 and 1985.
The report by the Occupational
Safety and Health Law Center said
the second worst safety record
belongs to a firm 1t Identified as
Savage Neal, described as a
subsidiary of the Utah Power &amp;
Light Co. at the time of the worst
mine disaster In recent history at
the Wilberg mine in Orangevllle,

JIM
COBB
CHEVROLET -OLDSMOBILE·CADILLA C

tilt 8tAIOft ltAI'tl ftOW

•

•

Cleveland finn rates "worst' in mine safety

ALL
CHEVY
CHEVEn"ES
IN STOCK···

WINCHESTER LONG RANGE

.

6134

at y

PLUS FREE SUNROOF

cloudy Wednesday, with widely

scattered showen~ and Nab&amp;
near 80. The probability of
precipitation is 28 percent tonight and 30 percent wecmes-

PICK-4

•

Vol.36, No.83
Copyrighted 1986

Mostly cloudy tonight, wllh a
low between 00 and 61. MOI!tb'

Daily Number
712

REBATE ••••

9:30a.m.·
5:00p.m.

Nw.;Ji'l1'

Victory keeps

- Page4

Thru

........,ttOs·

Ohio Lottery

Reds alive

Open Monday
Labor Day

llwse wlw wnul · T·Star 11
the l•incsl
Camo Finish

..ot11111

ket ·scene

.eek's stock

Sal.e Prices
Effective
Sept. 13, 1986.
l-or

August 31. 1986

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

�The

Ohio

J,ays 'outgoes~' Indians;
Bosox stay 3 1h games ahead

@ommen
'

'

The ;,Daily Sentinel
ut Court Street
Pomeroy, Oldo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA

"~

Blm~ ........_.._""T",~d•&lt;=&gt;

~v

ROBERT L. WING$,-r

Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

BOBHOEFUCB
General Maaager

Assistant Publlsber/ControUer

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER ol The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LE"'TERS OF OPINION are welcome . They should be less than m words
long. Allleltersaresubfect toe:Jitlng and rwst be slgntd wUh name, addr£'Ss and
telephone number. No 1.11.slgna:l letters wUI be published. Letters should be In

·I 'I

good taste, addressing Issues, not persmalltles.

Ohio Politi.cs
II
I

By LEE lEONARD
UPI StaiMOuse Reporier

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -When he was may&lt;r of aeveland, he was
Dennis the Menace. Now he's just Dennis tiE Dropout; he'll menace no me
again.
For Dennis Kuclnlch, who played the !II bile and tiE II'ess lor ools with
the skill of a P.T. Barnum, has canceli!d any crallblllty he had left by
quitting a battle for governor he said be would flgllt to the bitter end.
In February, Kuclnlch trumpeted himself as theunbossed alternative to
the two major party candidates, whom IE caOed '!Weedledee and
Tweedledum Last week, the party bosses got him to endorse
Tweedli!dum.
Dennis Kuclnich said he was going to take the "For Sale" sign off the
Statehouse but it ended up over his own door.
It Is not yet qutte clear what Dennis received for abanctJnlng the rontest
to unpopular Democratic Gov. Richard Celeste and mce-popular
Republican James Rhodes, a tour-tenn t&gt;nner governor.
Kuclnlch said It was the satisfaction of knowing IE can help the
Democratic party to mend Its ways, and influence voters to support
Democratic candidates.
You believe that, and the tooth fairy will visit yrur bedroom tonight.
Some thlnk Kuclnlch mortgaged his candidacy for national and state
party support Ina future bid for public office. Which one Is unclear, IEcause
Kuclnlch probably would be lucky now to be elected may&lt;r of his own
neighborhood.
What does the Kuclnich witliirawal do to the governor's race? It
narrows the scope of the debate and eliminates an alternative lor Ohioans.
There will be no discussion of nuclesr power plants, the !arm !I'Oblem or
hunger In Ohio. There wUI only be Jim Rhodes and Dick Celeste
hammering each other over who attracted tiE most jobs toOhloandwho Is
the most corrupt.
Secondly, those who would have votal llr Kuclnlch now have three
choices. They can vote for Celeste, voteforRhodes&lt;r ~rtaYhome.SomewUI
stay home. But many, particularly In til! nortbe~ernpartoft!E state, will
reluctantly switch their votes· to Celeste.
Soon balance, the Kuclnlch witliirawal trobably hurts Rhodes' chances
of overhauling Celeste the way he caught Gov. John J . GUllgan In 1974,
when third party candidate Nancy Lazar Brown drew 95,625 votes away
from the Democrat.
Rllodes needs contusion and dl.sa1chantment to win the race, and
Kuclnlch's withdrawal helps clear the picture lor voters.
In welcoming Kuclnlch back Into Ire fold, Democratic leaders had to grit
their teeth. Grit they did, because It was worth It to have Dennis out r1. the
race.
What wlli they do with him now that he's on trelr side again?"! want his
active Involvement In the campaign," said Gerald Austin, the campaign
manager for Celeste.
What he probably meant was, he'd like to put Kuclnlch m a slow boat to
the A20res for Ire rest r:l. the campaign so hewm't beouttelllng people how
great Celeste Is.
After all, how can you believe somebody who says tiE day after &lt;plittlng
the campaign: "I've never hacked rut o! a race In rey Ufe."?

Letter to the Editor
Fair board issues thanks
We of the Meigs County Fa lr
Board want to publicly thank all r1
you who helped make the 19861alr a
success. Many people have been
kind enough to express their
approval of the fair this year and It
1$ through the cooperation and help
of so many that we were able to
have a fair that was enjoyable,
profitable, safe and fun for all who
participated In so many different
ways.
It Is heart warming to have the

t

cooperation of our public &lt;tflclals
such as Sheri!! Howard Frank and
his deputies woo worked faithfully
throUghout the fair for everyone's
safety, the Cwnty Commissioners
woo back us with financial ald. Phil
RolErts, County Engineer and Ted
Warner. Coonty Highway Superin·
tendent, woo are always cooperative and helpful, Steve fuwell and
Bernard Gilkey !rom the litter
control board, who provided Utter

frames. bags and workers to help
our ground crew In cleaning tiE
grounds each day. Jolll Rice and
Cindy Oliveri from tiE Crunty
Extmslon ol!lce who !llpervlse tre
Junior Fair activities, business
establishments who sold tickets,
brought trophies and oovertlslng
and supported the Junior Fair
llvestock sale, and to many other
groups, exhibitors, performers,
worla!!'lllld supporters woo ~Piped
In so m1111y ways.
We wruld like to name everyone
woo helped rut there just Isn't
enough space toctJ so. Nevert!Eiess
we want you to know your e!forts
did mt go unnoticed and were very
appreciated . Each person has a
special part, be It lar!l" or small,
and each did tiE job well.
'10 au of yru please accept our
sincere thanks for your !Elp In
promoting a successfUl lair.
The Meigs County Fair Board
fill' Muriel Bradford, secretary

··' Today in history
Today Is Tuesday, Sept. 2, the 245th day of J9!l) wfth 120 i&gt; follow.
'!be moon Is moving toward Its new phase.
The morning stars are Mercury and Ju~ter.
'!be evening stars are Venus, Man and Safllm.
Those born m thl.s date are under the sign ct. Vtrao. They Include British
pr11on 1efmmer John Howard In 1726; American poet Euaene Field ln
J.Sro; Hiram Maxim, Inventor ct. the automobile llllll!ler and llre8nn
sllencet'. In JB&amp;j; author·Allen Drury ("Advise and Cmaatt") In 1918 (age

I

WASHINGTON - UntO Execu·
live Editor Ben Bradlee m;ently
told them to cull! rut, ~tor
The Washington P&lt;lst were Identify·
lng North Carolina's senklr SEIIator
as "the archconservatlve Jesse
Helms." On the &lt;iller side of the
street, Human Evmts, a'tnnserva·
tive weekly, was sneering at the
senior senator !rom Massachusetts
as "the ultraliberal Edward'
Kennedy."
Over the past :Jl or 40 years the
terminology of politics has
changed. We stW go through the
ritual ot "R~N.C." and "O.Mass",
M except on lbe most. partisan
Issues the labels of Republican and
Democrat have lost their meaning.
More Information Is conveyed by
''conservative" and "llberal," even
If the terms defy exact deflnltkm.
We know one w!En we see me.
But what's with thls "arch"
business? Who's an "Ultra"? It's
reasonable to assume that political
Ideology, Uke gasoline, comes In

grades. Some liberals have lllgber
octane rallnl!ll than otber lberals.
' Some COIISe!VaUves are more
combustible than ot!Ers. For a long
time a need has existed tor some
reasonably objective, empirical
way of putting a ootlceontli! pump.
Reporters are not supposed to lard
their stories with their own
opinions.
Help Is oow at hand. Two
enterprising WashlngtonJans, 'lbJmas 0. Mella and Sueanne Pflffe·
rUng, have just PJbllshed a twovolume edition of rongresstonal
ratlogs. They have reproduced tiE
scorecanls of 60 organtzati&lt;lns
ranging !rom the relatively small
Amertcan Bankers . 'OCiatlon to
the giant AFL-CIO. From this mass
of data, covering lnuxlreds r:l
rollcall votes, a point system easily
could be devised for quantifying
liberals and ronservatives In Con·
gress. The system would prevent
The Post's reporters !rom Injecting
their own prejudices Into the news

Kucinich credibility
low after withdrawal ~~~~s;~;~_,.~·1E16Sf44M

:

I

! I
' I

91); Baseball Commlsskmer Peter UebetTOthln 1937 (e,ge tl), and tennis
champion Jimmy Coonors In 1952 (age 34).
On this date In hls!Dry:
In 1.666, !be GreatFfrer:I.London began; It destroyed Ll,!rohouses In four
days.
In :19!1, one of the wont hurrkanes to hit the U.S. mainland ripped
tMJuah the Florida Keys, ldlllng tmre than liO pa!JU.
In 196, Japan signed an WICOIIdltlonal 8111T111der aboard the U.S.
baitleshlp Mls!curlln Toltyo Bay, formally endiDg World War IL
.
In 1968, the death toll ln a series ct. eartbquake~~lhatltrucltiran was fixed
' at 12,&lt;00.

Sentinel-

columns, a terrible thing to ctJ m 14, by Symms of Idaho. TWo
reporters for The Washington fust.
WOO's the arches! o! them aD? A
sampling of senatorial scorecanls
may be Instructive. On the liberal
side r:l tiE ~Isle Senator Kennedy Is
a clear winner. In the books o! 32
major organlza~ he finished
first no feweJ;" than 16 times.
Metzenbe.um rl. Ohio was almost as
arch, with 13 perfect scores. They
were followed by eight ultras Sarbanes of Maryland, Levin and
Riegle ct. Michigan, Pell of Rhode
Island, Cranston of California, Hart
r1 Colorado, Dodd of Connecticut
and Bingaman of New Mexico. Two
supers made tre cut (Matsunaga of
Hawaii and Lautenberg of New
Jersey). Glenn of Ohio and Bradley
of New Jersey qualified as garden
variety liberals. All the rest were

aJso.rans,
It wW disappoint my friends at
The Post, butJesseHelmsln not the
arches! conservative. In 1984 he
was edged In the 32 scorecards, 15 to

"""

wegtem RepoblicaJis,' · Hatch

Utah l!lld rkelureotldaho, won

!llper ratlogs. Hecht of Ne&gt;•adj
Laxalt ct. Nevada,
Hqmphrey of New
soowed great promise.
Oklahoma could qualitY as
superconservatlve next year.
lllngevlty counts In these
lations, sd Helms and ~~~~~
reason of lbelr senatorial
probably have earned whllttevll!l'

~p~antlfylng
prefix them.
the ~E=1
may,
want to award
has garnered most ct. his
ratings from organized labor.
racked up perfect scores from'the
American Federation of Government Employees, the Postal
Workers Union, the International
Association of Machinists, the
United Auto Workers, the Steel·
workers and the Food and Commercial Workers. The Brotherhood
rl. RaUway and Airline Oerlls
~ed that during his career In'
the Senate, Kennedy has voted on
131 Issues of critical Importance to
labor; he has voted right 124 times,
wrong only seven. For his part;
Helms was found to have voted
right tour times and wrong 100
times. The figures should make
both gentlemen quietly proud.
Contrariwise, the American Conservative Union gave Helms a 100
and Kennedy a zero. Americans for
Coostltutional Action made the
same book: Helms 100, Kennnedy
zero. So, too, with tiE Conservative
Alliance. KennedY Is the 100 peramt
darling of the league of. Women
Voters, the National Association of
Social Workers, the NatiOnal Coon·
ell of Senior Citizens and the
American Association of Univer·
slty Women. Helms gets a satisfyIng zero !rom them au.

MEIGS RI!liERVE VOlLEYBALL TEAM -The
1111 Melp Maralde...Ue reserve vdleybaU team Is
loaldn1 fol'WIIl'd lo a 11100eMful -n. Front row,
beelnJ, from left are Shelly Adams, llealber

By DAVID E. NATIIAN

UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UP! \ - Het
ranking and age told Wendy
Turnbull that she could no longer
beat !be world's tnp tennis players.
Unfortunately for Hana Mandllk·
!l"a. Turnbull did not listen.
The 33-year-old Tuntbull, ranked
17th In the world and unseeded at
tbe u.s. Open for the first time In a
decade, shocked defending cham·
pion Mandllkova 64, 1-6, 6·3
Monday to advance to the Open
l!uarterflnals.
: "When you get over 30. people
begin writing you off." Turnbull
ilatd after beating her doubles
partner for the first time In three
)'ears. "It's been a tough year and
·fve worked hard to come back.
• "It was a shock to my system
J..hen my ranking dropped to 17 and
' wasn't seeded," the Australian
J;ald. "But, as tt turned outlt was the
&lt;best thing for me. It got me
motivated."
: In olber fourth-round actiOn
1\'IOnday, men's tnp seed Ivan Lend!

priced

loose woo play political hardball
;.;,...._._ they provide some splendid ammunition. The publisher Is ~a
Research Inc., l.l3J Connecticut
Ave., Washington, D.C. 20036.
Every connoisseur of the ultra and
the arch will want a set for
Christmas.

Rescue plan ~------J_ac_k_A_nd_e_rs_o_n_&amp;_D_a_le_Vt_a_n_A_tt_a
WASHINGTON - W!En i!deral
hank regulators announced last
month they would spend $131)
mllllon to keep afloat tiE falling
Bank of Oklahoma, It marked only
the eighth time In rmre than half a
century that they have come to tiE
rescue of a struggling bank Instead
of allowing It to illd.
We have learned, In fact, that the
action marks a shift In policy. For
various reasons, fewer banks will
expire ln tiE future because the !eds
will be gtvlng rmre transfusions.
In the case r:l. the Bank r:1.
Oklahoma, officials of tiE Federal
Deposit Insurance Corp., the key
banking regulatory agency, were
concerned aboot the entire regional
economy. The banking community
In tiE Southwest has been teetering
on the brink o! disaster llr m:mths
because too many loans are
dependent on the sagging oU and
farm markets. Allowing a major
Oklahoma bank to shut Its ctJors
could panic skittish depositors and

,run

Investors, thereby creating
on
deposits In banks thrrughout tiE
state.
Another reason more banks will
be balled rut In the fUture Is that
regulators have decided It Is time to
"democratlu!" the system, to give
the smau Institutions tre same
guarantees of survival that the big
banks have always had.
There are only two ways lor the
feds to handle a bank failure - pay
oil Insured depositors and let lbe
bank die, or repair it and merge It
with a healthier Institution. The
regulators will always &lt;4&gt;! for
saving the big banks because trey
simply cannot afford to make good
on the Insured accounts, and
because such a failure would be too
disruptive to lbe economy. It has
been unwritten policy for years:
The big banks are fall-safe.
All this has oow been conceded on the record and for tre Orst time
- by one ct. the nation's top bank

regulators, WOllam Seidman, In a
recent Interview With our associate
Michael Blnsteln.
Altoough Seidman has been
chairman of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corp. for almost a year,
be Is a maverick ln some respects.
His canctJr demonstrates It, as does
his sartorial lEnt: He eschews
pinstripes ln favor of Western boots
and belts. He founded the business
school at the University of Arizona
and worked In the Gerald Ford
White House, where he was one r:l.
tile architects of the banking
deregulation movement.
In his talk with our asSOCiate,
Seidman openly discussed some (1.
the most provocative Issues con·
fronting the hanklng Industry today. He condeded, for example,
that regulators have had a double
standard In deallng with bank
!allures. Big banks often get balled
out or mergo&gt;d with another Institution, thereby protecting both In-

!llred and unlnsured·deposlto.:S:dnd
creditors. Smau banks, on the other
hand, are shut down and the
uninsured are left holding the bag.
As Seidman put It: "At the
present time, we don't have a way
techr)lcally of closing down a very
major bank without freezing a bull"
amount of money In the system."
He was referring to banking's
role In the nation's payments
systems - tbe clearing of checks,
wire transfers, automated payment arrangments and securities
cleamances. The quick and
ctent operatiOn r:l. this conveyor belt
ot croolt -which carries more than
a 'trillion dollars a day In transactiOns - Is crucial to the whole
economy. Federal Reserve Board
Chairman Paul Volcker warned
two months ago that the faDure of a
major bank could "Interrupt a long
chain of payments and dramatl·
cally and unexpectedly affect &lt;iller
unrelated Institutions."

em-

Good news from Chicago ___. :. . :_Ro:. .:. b.:. .;_ert:. . . :.~.:. . :a=lte: . .: .rs
CHICAGO (NEA) - "Chicago,"
says Studs Terkel, "Is a metapoor
for the rest of tiE country ."
If this city's beloved raconteur
and oral historian Is rorrg,t, the
nation can celebrate because Chi·
cago ftnaDy has reputable political
leadership after 21 years of May&lt;r
Richard Daley's autocratic rontrol
and almost 10 year8 of lnstablllty.
After Daley died In 1976, his two
successors as mayor mooe Hille
effort to reform the municipal
government and poUtlcal appara·
tus devoted almost exclusively to
perpetuating tiE rontrol of th:ose
already In power.
Mayor Harold Washington,
elected In spring 1983, was lbe first
to seriously chaDenge tiE political
organization maintained by Da·
ley's proteges. This provoked a
confrontation that lasted three
years.
During that period, many of
Washington's Initiatives were
thwartoo In tiE 50-memll!r ctty
council. The mayor's 21 allies m tile
COunc0 were CODSistelltly CAI!Voted
by a block ct 29 led by Edward R.

Vrdolyak, wro has been deter·
mined to sustain power of t\lley's
political machine. ·
But the 001-Une &lt;rganlzatlon
blundered In Its treatment (1. blacks
and HIBpanlcs, woo In recent yean
ha:--e constituted in ' lncreaalng
proportion oe the city's population.
Daley and his t&gt;llowen wrongly
assumed that tbey·wouldbeoontent
to remain aubaervlent towhlteo and
not lnalst upon their fair share of
poUtlcal powet;.
'
Late last year, bowever, a federal
ju~ hanclf!d down a decision 111 a
1982 c!vO suit and ruled that SI!YI!t
city councu dlSlncts hill been

constituted to prote:t tile Daley
Now that he can llnally govern
machine, rat!Er than to reflect the tile city, Washington has emerged
political strength of ttl! blacks and as a confident, , vigorous and
Hispanics.
tooughtful leader - although his
Maintaining a Chicago tradition, reputation may be tarnished by an
tiE special elections held In ~ ongoing federal Investigation Into
sevm districts last spring were !be relationship between the city
replete with gunshots, bomb government and a debt-collection
threats, mudslinging, suspectal agency.
voting Irregularities and court
Fin ally. Vrdolyak and his antes
challenges ol tiE results.
W!En the smoke had cleared,
Vrdolyak's 29·21 margin had been
psred down to a 25-25 division with Washington holding lbe power
to cast tie-breaking votes.
That brought an end to three
yearS- of frustratlllg, unproductive
stanctJtfs In which shrill rhetortcal
exchan!l"s substituted lor government action.
Almost 70 pending Washington
appointments to municipal boards
and commissions, some or which
had been In limbo lor almost three
years, were llnaDy approved by the
city rouncll.
In addition, Washington galnal
approval r:l. a bond Issue to finance
needed street repairs and other
long-overdue leglslatlon,
The most recent evidence ct. lbe
belated collapse of lbe Daley
ccganlzatlon OCCUITI!d .when Washington wrestEd control o! the
Chlcsco Pail&lt; District !rom Edmuild l. Kelly, a longtime Daley
loyallat. With an annual budget of
$320 mDllon and a jlllyroll crt almost
6,&lt;00, the park district was trnpor.
!ant to the old·llne OrganizatiOn.
More than lbree'fllurths ct. Its
employees were clasll~ as "tem(Drary" worki!rs, maJitng tbem
wlnerable &lt;o dlsmlual whenever
they displeased the political
machine.'

are maneuvering to defeat Washington w!En IE seeks re-election
next ~II'Ing.
Indeed, political lntrlgue Is a
permanent part of government
bere. "There's an old saying In
Chicago politics," notes highly
regarded campaign consultant Don
Rose, "that anybody who's not
paranoid Is crazy."

Hovatter, Renee Voong, Mary B.-cller, Amy Epple,
and Cbrlstle Sauten. Second row, stanclng, are Heidi
Camlthe1'8, OuioiUchmond, SbeDa Hendricks, l!elly
Douglu, Lesley Carr, and CJililf Hobaiotter.

Mandlikova upset; Lend) in
U. S. Open quarterfinals

Thedoesn't
Mella-Pfifferling
come cheap. compmThe two
:~~~=f~j~==~ dlum
volumes are
at $115, but tor

"Enjoy, Pandora."

Tom Henke, 9-3, worked 2 1·3
Innings lor the victory. Henke
The Cleveland Indians presented struck rut live of tiE seven batters
Lloyd Moseby of the Toronto Blue re .laced.
George Bell's hit his 28th homer
Jays with a problem - and the
of Ire season, a tm-run soot , to pull
, solution.
With the sscore tied 44 and the the Blue Jays even at 4-4 in the
bases loaded ln the ninth Monday, sixth.
In other games, Baltimore dethe Indians changed their defensive
feated
Caltlornia n. Minnesota
alignment for Moseby. The way
they did It, though, tipped him of! as beat Milwaukee 9-3. Boston downed
to wbat pitching sequence to Texas 64, Chicago shut out Kansa •
City 4 0. Oakland nipped New York
expect.
"When they brought In that 9-8 and Detroit edged Seattle 6-o.
Orioles 9, Angels 3
!Ieider from right, I knew they
AI
Anaheim,
Calif., Eddie Mu r·
weren 't going to pitch me In, "
ray,
Joho
Shelby
and Fred Lynn hit
Moseby said after stroking a single
to gtveToronto a 54 victory. "I did home runs to stop Ca liforni a's
know what they were going to do to seven-game winning streak. Losing
me and that kind of takes the pitcher Mike Witt. 16-8. had a
personal seven-game winnin g
pressure of!."
steak
sttoppal. Baltimore winner
Ernie Whitt led off the ninth with
Scott
McGregor.
9-11, Improved his
a single off reHever Ernie Camacho, 2·3. Camacho fielded Willie ltletlme mark to 19-7 against tre
Upshaw 's bunt and threw wildly Angels .
Minnesota 9, Brewers 3
past fi rst base, sending the runners
At Mlnneapolis, Gary Gaelfi
to second and third. Pinch hitter
Rick Leach was walked intention· drove home five runs with a pair of
ally to load the bases and Ron home runs and Tim Laudner added
a solo homer to lead the Twins past
Shepherd ran for Whitt at third.
"It's not just one person making Mllwuakee. Neal Heaton, 6-12.
an error," lamented Cleveland pitched six innings for the \OCtO')'
Manager Pat Corrales of Cama · and Grorge Frazier recorded his
cho's poor throw. "Everyone on this fourth save. Juan Nieves, 10-8, lost
team has been taking their turn." his fourth straight start.
Red Sox 6, Rangers l
After Tony Fernandez' bouncer
At Boston, the Red Sox kept their
to short forced Shepherd at home.
Cleveland Manager Pat Corrales lead at 3'h games over Toronto.
positioned right fielder Cory Snyder Tony Armas stroked a three-run
just to the right of second base tor double and Bruce Hurst, 9-7, got the
victory. With the loss. the Rangers
Moseby, a left· handed hitter.
"If you want In know the tru th , remained 5 ~ games !Ehlnd the
that's the first time I've seen II (the An!l"ls in the AL West. Ed Correa.
defensive alignment)." Thronto 8-12. took the loss.
White Sox 4, Royals 0
Manager Jimy Williams said. "But
At
Kansas
City, Mo.. Chicago
it makes sense. You go with
pitcher
FlOyd
Bannister.
9·10, '!Ired
whatever percentages you think
a
seven-hitter
for
his
IOOth
career
will go In your favor."
·
victory.
Bannister
has
pitched
Regardless of the percentages,
Cleveland came away a loser as complete games In five of his last
Moseby sliced a ball through the ten eight starts. Kansas City starter
side of the Infield to win the game Otarlle Leibrandt fell to 11-11.
A's 9, v,.,~~ees 8
and give the Blue Jays their ninth
At
Oakland,
Calif., Jose Canseco
consecuilve victory, tying a team
record set last year. Toronto has stroked four hits, including his 28th
also won 16 of its last 19 games to oomer, and drove in two runs to
move within 3 ~ games of Boston in push his major league-leading RBI
total to 101 to spark a 16-htt A's
the American League East.
By BILL WOLLE
UPI Spotts Writer

beat No. 15 American Brad Gilbert
7-5,6-1, 6-2; No.4 Stefan Edberg of
Sweden blitzed American qualifier
Dan Goldie; No. 8 Henri Leconte of
France beat American Aaron
Krlcksteln 6-3, 7-5, 64 and Amerl·
can Tim Wilkison beat Andrei
Chesnokov of the Soviet Union 6-0,
6-2, 6-3.
No. 3 seed Bocts Becker of West
Germany meets American quallfer
Gary Donnelly and No. 2 Mats
Wllander of Sweden faces No. 16
Miloslav Mecir of Czechoslovakia
in fourth-round play today.
The women's No. 1 seed, Marlin a
NavratUova. advanced to the quar·
terllnals Monday with a 6-4. 6-2
victory over llth- seeded Gabriela
Sabatini of Argentina. Like Lend!,
Navratilova has yet to drop a set
thus far In the Open.
Two other top women's seedsNo. 2 Chris Evert Uoyd and No. 3
Steffl Graf of West Germany gained .three·set victories lo move
Into the quarterfinals. Every.I.,Ioyd ·
beat No: 14 Catarina Undqvlst of
Sweden 6-2, 2-6, 6-2 and Graf topped

•

,~Southern volleyball
i_t eam defeats NGHS
By SOOlT WOLFE
VINTON -The Southern Tornadoettes' volleyball team npenal
1986 season play with a 'i'N AC
triumph over North Gallla, claim·
lng 15-0, ]5.{1 shu tout victories.
· Leading servers In game me
were .Rachel Reiber with 11 and
Crystal Hill with four.
In game two tre Tornadoettes
Were led by Tammy Holter and
Jennifer Arnold with five markers
each. Southern was 31-!or-39 for 19
percent In serving percentages.
' Southern's reserve volleyball
squad began Its season last Wednesday with a win over Gallipolis,
Mtlnlng 15.0, 7·15, and 15-3. South~rn was led In srorlng by Becky
Evans with 14 points and Jane
Wllllams with 8.
In tre nightcap Southern's var·
lsty played a near perlect game ln
game me, winning J5.7, but fell to
tiE largl!r Blue Devils 7·15 and 11·15
In game two and three.
Southern was led In sroring by
Wendy Wolfe With 14 points and
Rachel Reiber With 7. Gallipolis
was li!d by Natalie Wrtght with 15.
. Sout!Ern now owns a perlPct 2.()
league slate after Its hard fought
SVAC triumph over the Hannan
Trace Wildcats, overcoming a 12·13
lleflcll In tiE rubber match on throe
successf\11 serves by JUI Nease to
win tile match 15-8, LH7, and 15·13.
Southern was led by Wendy Wolfe
with 1li points, Rachel Reiber had
12, and Jennifer Arnold With 6.
. Southern had an excellent serving
percentage of 81 peroent.
In the reserve match with liT
SHS won its 11rst league tUt J5.3 and
~- The little SHS gals were latin
serving by Becky Evans with 11,
Tracy Beegle with 10, and Aimee
HOI and Angle Manuel each with
Southern's ' resetVes are 2·1,
•: ·while tiE varsity Is now 2-1 overall.
.':: This season marks the seventh
; ason lor . Southern voUeyball
· coach Suzanne Wolfe, who , has
· ~en returntnr lettemen comlni
; · 'beck t&gt;r the 1986 cal11lAlan.

. tour.

Last season Sou them posted a
5-17 record overall, but oopes to
produce a winnlngcomblnatlonthls
year with a m11ch experienced
team, that Includes three year
\'llrstty players Rachel Reiber,
Wendy Wolfe, and Jill Nease.
Senlol'$ Wendy Wolfe and Rachel
Reiber will share duties as co captains.
'!be SHS reserve squad. which
has six returnees from last year
and lour players up from .the JR
High program, will have Becky
Evans and Tracy Beegle as
co-captains.
Following is a complete roster
and schedule:

....,..

SOOTIIEIIN

vAll8ll'Y IIOSTI!I\

\'•.

=-f.'Z.':·::::::: :: :::::::::: ~.
N..... Jm ................................ .......... &amp;-.
•Retbef, Rlichel ... '""''"''." "".' ....... ' .... Sr.

Smith. Karla ......... .... ... .. ' ............. .... &amp;-.
lbetss. Tanuny..................... .....

...Sr.

•Wolfe. Wendy ................. .... .. .
.. . .Sr.
Arnold, Jennifer .......................... .....Jr.
Grueser, AngtP ................ ................... Jr.
Holtf'!', Tammy .................... ... ... .. ..... ... Jr.

Hill. Crystal ............ ......... .. ...... ....... Soph.
~ co-eapta Lns

RllllDWEROilTEKS
Playf'l'

Yr.
"BeeRle. Tracy ............. ... ................. Sop h.
Dudcflntt. l...eslet&gt; ...... .. ..... ........ .......... Sop h.

~~':,~~iP·: :::·:.:::: :·:. ·:·::::: =~:

Johnsm, Dawn ................ .... .. ... ...... Sop h.

Winl!tnnnft', Becky ......... ........... .. Sooh.
HIU , Aimee ...................................... Fr.

~=-~: ::::::::::::::·::

::::::R

Wolfe. Trtcta ................................... Ft.
WUUamo. J.,.. ............. ....................... Ft.
Clrtlo: Potneo.. .............................. ... .'.Jr.

•&lt;:oeoplllnO

Raffaella Reggi of Italy 6-1.3-6. 6-0.
In other women's action, No. 8
Bonnie Gadusek heal No. 13
Stephanie Rehe 7-6 (8-6 1. 4-6, 6· 2;
No. 7 Helena Sukova of Czechoslo·
vakla beat No. 12 Zina Garrlson64.
2-6, 6-4; No. 9 Manuela Maleeva of
Bulgaria topped No. 6 Claudia
Koliie· KUsch ct. West Germany 6-2
2-6, 7·6 (7·1) and No.5 Pam Shriver
beat No. 15 Kathy Jordan 64, 6- 4.
Navratllova meets her .doubles
partner Shriver in a quarterfinal
match today while Graf meets
Gadusek. Navratilova has beaten
Shriver 25 of Ihe 28 times they have
fJayed but two of toose losses have
come at the Open.
Turnbull, the ddest player In the
women 's draw, confused Mandlikova with a variety of ofl·speed
shots.
"! have the kind of game that
aggravates Hana," TumbuU said.
"! junk her around a little bit. She
would rat!Er play !Dmeone that hits
the ball with pace and an even
OOunce.''
Not since Billie Jean King in 1973
bad a women's defending champion bowed rut so early In the Open.
King also lost In the Round of 16.
Mandllkova was the third lonner
Open champion to IE eliminated
from this year's tournament. Jolut
McEnroe was a first-round loser
and Jimmy Connors lost In a
third-round match Sunday.
"I really didn 't believe she rould
play as well as siP did," said
Malldllkova, of Czechoslovakia. "I
was mt serving well and balls I
would usually put away I couldn't
put away."

Toledo drops
opener, 24-0
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UP! ) With the preliminary task of
heating Toledo oot of the way, the
Uth·ranked Florida State Seminoles can now locus all of their
attention on next weekend's game
with eighth-ranked Nebraska at
Lincoln.
FSU committed six turnovers In
a 24.() win over the Rockets In lbe
season opener for both teams
Saturday at rainy Doak Camp!EII
Stadium. The turnovers, however ,
could be a sign of good things to
come. said quarterback , Chip
Ferguson.
"Last year against Tulane 1a
38-12 win) we did the same things,
made the same kinds of mistakes.
and the next week against Nebraska wee didn 't have a turnover
(In a 17-13 win at Lincoln) . Even
after we had turnovers, we kept
moving (on the next possession) .
We'll get away trom those thln(iS."
. Florida State scored on runs rl. 36
yams by Dayne WUUams and 7
. yards by David Palmer,.a 12-yard
pass from Peter Tom WUIII to Herb
Gainer, and a 24- yard field goal by
Derek Schmidt.
The shutout was the Seminoles
first since a 37.0 win over
TennesseeChattanooga In 1984.
"It was a real good beginning,"
said linebacker Paul McGowan.
"They didn't have any real long
drives, and we stopped them when
t!Ey got the ball In our territory.

Green Bay veterans
among those released
tre emergence of rookies Ma r k
Collins as kick returner a nd
Solomon Mlller and Vince Warren
at wide receiver.
The Giants also waived defensive
end Dee Hardison and center
Conrad Goode, and placed running
back George Adams and kicker All
Hajl· Sheikh on Injured-reserve.
At Kansas City, Mo., Horton, a
first· round draft choice by the
Chiefs a year ago, wits cut after
being a disappointment last season.
At Redwood City, Calif.. lbe 49ers
placed running back Wendell Tyler
on Injured· resa"ve following re[lJrts In the San Francisco Chroni·
cle he was offered s:m,&lt;OO by Coach
Bill Walsh to retire. Walsh report ·
edly is convinced Tyler will bP
unable to rpturn from knee surgery.

By United Press International
Lynn Dickey and Paul Coffman.
Green Bay's dependable passing
tandem of the early 191lls, were
among the veterans cut Monday as
NFL teams reduced their rosters to
the regular-season limit of 45.
Also released were three
members of Miami's Killer Bee
defense of the same years. The
Dolphins cut defensive end Kim
Bokamper, Uneback,er Jay Brophy
and defensive bac·k Lyle
Blackwood.
All started In Miami's Super Bowl
XIX loss to San Francisco after the
1984 season.
Other veterans released were
linebacker Brad Van Pelt by the
Raiders. wide receiver Phil McCon·
key by the Giants and running back
Ethan Horton by Kansas City.
Dickey has been unable to adjust
to the Packers' new short-yardage
passing game after years of
throwing the long ball. The big
player In that offense was wide
receiver James Lofton while Col·
!man provided Dickey with a
consistent receiver.
COffman, a tllree-time Pro Bowl
performer and the leading pass·
catching tight end In Packer
history, had offseason elbow
surgery and began practicing a few
weeks ago.
The Dolphins probably will re·
sign Lyle Blackwood Tuesday tl he
Is not claimed. Blackwood's
brother, Glenn, has a thigh bruise
and was on crutches Monday. The
Dolphins are likely to place Glenn
on Injured· reserve Tuesday.
At Oxnard, Calif., Van Pelt, a
five-time Pro Bowler, was joined on
the waiver wire by fellow linebacker Jack Squlrek. who Is best
mnembered for his lnteroeptlon
just before halftime of Super Bowl
xxrn, keying a victory rPer
WtiShlngton.
Rookie Napolea'n McCallum
made the Raiders as a kick
returner and reserve running back.
McCallum, the NCAA's all·tlrne
all-purpose yardage leader, has
been granted permission by the
Navy to play for the Raiders.
At East Rutherford, N.J .. McCon·
key's release was made possible by

allflCk Bill Krueger. who spent
much of the season on tiE disabled
list. evened his record a t 1-1. Mike
Armstrong feU to 0 1.
Tigers 6, Mariners 5
AI Detroit . Alan Trammell drove
in three runs withtv.u homers and a
double to offset a thrff'-homereffort
by Jim Presley and boost the
Tigers. Despite giving up the three
oomers. Jack Morris improved to
16-8. scattering seven hits ai\d four
walks while striking out 12. Mike
Morgan li&gt;ll to 9-15.

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Ohio.

..

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LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities Com·
mission of Ohio has set
tor public hearing Case
NO . 86·01-EL-EFC, lo
review the fuel procuremoot practices and policies of the Ohio Power
Company, the opera lion
of its Electrtc Fuel Com ·
ponent and related mal ·
lers . This hearing is
scheduled to begin at
f :30 p.m. on Monday ,
September 8, 1986, at
City Council Chambers .
218 Cleveland Avenue .
S.W., Canton , Ohio

44702 .
All interested parties will
be given an opportunity
to be heard. Further lnfor·
mation may be obtained
by conlactmg the Com·
mission .
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
BY Mary Ann Orlinski .
Secretary

LEGAl NOTICE
OHIO DEPARTMENT Of COMMERCE
DIVISION OF UNQ.AIMED FUNDS
NOTICE Of NAMES Of PERSONS APPEARING TO BE
OWNERS OF UNQ.AIMEO FUNDS
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
lnfo~llllltion concerning ti'le emourn of t"e fund end any nece ...rv informttion
concem1ng the pre~antmentote Claim therefor miiV be obtained by any pe...on PDI·
Htling • property (proprietary) lnter..t in the Undelmlld Funda bv llddr•alng •
wrinen Inquiry to the Olr.ctor of Commerce, 11 tollowa:

DIRECTOR OF COMMERCE

c/ o luther C. Yates, Sr.
Deputy Director
Unclaimed Funds Section
Two Nationwide Plaza
jCorner Chestnut fl. High Sts .J
Columbus. Ohio 43266-0546
Prucribed form• will be fumi1hed 14)0n I rtqUIIt or l'tquiry in writing
Name and eddru1 mu1t be given sactlv 11 lilted .
·
NOTICE : Neme1 and lddreu of uncleimtd KCOunll ..:lveniled in prior ye1r1 ltl!l
on file with your CO(.Inty' Tre..urer u well 11 t11advert11ed eccoont1 of 11111 then
110.00.

CITY Of CARPENTER : Nei10n, Jospetl 0 .. Rt. 1 .
.
CITY OF CHESTER : Harpold, Fr.nk H.• Unknown; Henry, Au::t1ard , Box 123 .

CITY OF DANVILLE : Ridgeway. Donald E., 12025 McGlnnit Rd.
. CrTY OF DEXTER : O.vi~, lde, Rl. 1. Bx 31 A; S.unde,., P•ul l.Jr., Rt . 1. Smell,
Mtch•l. Rt. 1: Stacev. Cecil L.. RR 1.
CITY OF LANGSVILL~ : Dancey, Gordon &amp; Shir. Rt . 2. Bx 38 : Ferlcrv, Kenneth
F.. 936 Eon• St.; Farley, Robm: , 936 Ebnar St .
CITY OF LONG BOTIOM : Boatright, G. H., Rt. 1
CrTY OF MIDDLEPORT : Bell.y, W. K.. Rt. 1, Blevln•. D., 38 2 Uncoln St.; luah
Cheri•. 201 Pelrntr; Cutttf'. Florence &amp; No. 134 Hudaon St .; OewHI. Gtot"g•:"
Front 91. ; Doc:al, Andy. Charltn, Rt. 1. Bx 1U; Fulu, Beth, 129 FairleneDr.: Gerd,
Mali!. - Bonnie L.. At. 1; Oh_.. , Fr.- kiln D.. 332 Grant ST.: Goff, Graham De-.
wtyn•. 117 N. 4th St.; Heggerty, LucHie, 825 lttc:h St.; Hlggfnbolhem John 200
Dork St.: Hood. Kathy 8. It Jtff, 38504 8railbury Rd..
'
'
·
JohnNn, 0torae. 830 2. lrd Av..; Jon ... WIHtm J .. 4th St. : Ltwll, Mary, 787
Oliver; Lueter. G., 3hS. l!lth: Miller. Johnny. At. 1; P...-c., Merit A., At. 1. Ktlltr Rd.;
R8'ynoldl, Peett, Mlfl8t.; Rb. Clffford L. , 207 S. 2nd St.; Rife. Dorothy, R D 1; Slact&amp;,
Vicky. 449 N. 3rdAw.; Smith, o.,nis M ., 810 N. 2nd St.: Stewart, Marg.flt, 322'11
2nd Ave.; Tannehill. Chellter E., 918 Loc.. St.; Wemaley, Jackie/ Tim, 8.11
len. 16 AaHrold St.

.

CITY OF M.INERSVILLE : Grimea. larrt S. Loren . R 124: Grindley, Rogtt" E..
42924 SA 124; Harford. 0 . L. &amp; D . L., Rt. 1; Merclnku, Shewn C.. 415481 Pomeroy

Pike; Rltchla. C. A. P. 0 . Box 17.
CITY OF PO~EROY : Archil', A110n D., 210 S . Vela Ave.; Archer. Leone. 2105
Yel• Ave.; Beldwn, Phil • Mtry. Rt. 3: lkeale, Llnle, Unknown; Carman, Bruce &amp;
Demi, RFD 2; Cuck'-t Ciifford C .. Ate . 3; hUn, Jem11, RD 3; Ef..lltein . Minnie.
Unknown; E""'n, A ., ~~· 3; Fl1her. MlchMI. At. 4 81t 186: Goett, Thome1, 106
Union Aw.: Huffmen. M1ei'IMI L.a. AI . 3; Jem•. Anthony, 1619 NE Ave .; Jon• .

Jeffrey W., AI. 1; len•d. Curt... 3171,1, Mldl-'lc St.; McCklrt. Jimmy B.. RR 3 :
Meadowt, Midl•l6 Cy, 1838 Unoo.-. Htl.; M. .. Margaret Unknown: Man. p 1 •
mall Kay, At. 2 ; Meiga Co. Cltn of Co .. Coun,.,ua.; Oil linger. Jam•. Rt. 2; Ohlin·
... Jolt w., 103 , _.........
.
, 0~.
- ~M'OICIC ., Rt. 4; P•oell, Ill . E., P.O.Ia21J;
AobM:D ., Rt.• · Pul·
. ~
lit 4: AG&lt;Ioii,.R - f .. V!f!IIOoO-A(IIO.: lluoollol, MM A..' 3.17

,on.,,

'

.I

.~
tl.:II-.D.. Rtl;._, Tfoi,AI.I;Imltii, DIInoL, 411 l.aottylt :
......,
IOIWoyno. NI43,11-HII lid.: ltolk.ldwiWd. ~~ ... lt.; .........
, Wfll. L·., ,t1 .~41 . MH\ lt.; Wlrntr, JIIMI,1101utt:trnutAw.; Wflrftlf,Scotta lu·
11ft. ~p~ Rd. ; WIMtup, Jo• a J.-n•. 220Unlon Aw.: Voung. Geor,.w .. Old
c:~~.....
Rd .. "" 1:
240 ~...... ••·
.
CITY OF POR:n,ANO:
C~ . Un111own; Lonf, Wm .. RFD 2 , Meyera.
~: ~38 N. Or..ty; Witton. Lisa D .. 1414 NE Aodney ve.; WoHe. Timoth'l o..

v"""'·J••·
-·

0

S3.25
'

CITY OF RACINE : Cron, E.. ~ E., Rt. 1 81t 19; Donahue, AllY. George, Rt. 2;,
John1011, Robtrt M.. PO Bx 717, Bro.twaySt .; Jon", Wm . • Debbie, 31480 Pine
Grov1 Rd.; LIWIOO, M. &amp; Morri &amp; C ., RfD 2; OPConnor, Edward, Unknown; Phil·
eon, Frencn, RO 2 81t 26A: Proff /n , Jackie &amp; Lu, RR2 8)( 340; ProHitt. Roy, PO 8 11.
128; Weld, Cro•• lon1, Bit 188.
CrTY OF REEDSVILLE: CaiWO"ey. Robin , AI. 1; Qlann, Roland , Rt . 1: Reed. Ka·
rWI, ,00. Gregory Rlld; Wlboft, 0110, 1'0 Bx11; Whlt:llhllld, Julie D . 151820SR
1U-; Wrilton. Anltra A., Unknown; Wrilton, F111tae1 E. Unknown.
CITY OF RUTLAND : Eada. Kent • .1,.,, lx: 41 ; Fetty, R~ft L.. lx 1151 ;
Tho,.. eon. John / PtuiA ftt 1. h11e) Wotft, lrt a MlfY, Unknown.
CITY OF t'riiACU .. : Do-. Moy!. Ulllln-; IMitll, D.. td. M .. lo 11.

..., .eounoy-T""":
Ttltot 114 Aailluola • ......_.10.114.'11.
1~0

.., ••

'
••

1n. Rt. 1 ;.

Wilcox:, Delia K., 482 S . 3rd Ava.; Wiltford, Raymond A .• Unknown; Woodyard, Me·

._. .. .

'

.'

..,' ...

. ~ ..

' •I

.J..............t~ ..~ ..:....-.J

..

.:

.

•

�Septembef 2, 1986

Ohio

Tuesday, September 2, 1986

Trace, North Gallia
·drop .non-league grid opener~

'

Portsmoulh Notre Dame High
School scored on four r11ts llrst six
possessions Saturday night, then
went on to hand visiting North
Galtia a 25.0 non-conference
setback.
It was the season opener tor both
squads and a disappointing one tor
NGHS head coach Dave Angles.
-''We were flat and just didn't
really show up to play," he said.
."Notre Dame is a tough team to
open your season with. They have a
lot of good peroonnel."
Notre Dame scored on Its first
two possessions. The first came m
a two-yard run by Matt Mayder,
culminating a long drive which
consumed over five minutes. The
secondscorecameafterthePirates

BIG BEND CRAMPS -Tile Rutlaad Lillie Leape

.I

Back, Frank McGhee, MaU Plei'Ol, Terry McGuire,
Jeremy Rupe, Heath Shoemaker, &amp;ic Pelenoo, Tim
Petmon, aad Kevin M-er. Slaacbg behind the
team are ooachell Wa.yne Adan~~audJack Peterson.
Ab8mt was Jom Roee and BJYan McClintock.

8qllld ~ wrappedupaa OlllltiDcbg IZ-1-n
lo claim the Big llebd utile Cbamplo..!Wp. aloo
IIDIIhlag lleCOIId In the 8yracll8e Lllile league
ToumiiiBU. Plclurod are Rully Edmoodl, Gary
Adams, David IJaDey, laocm GeoJ11!, PhWp Smith.

drove to the Notre Dame 25-yard
line but stalled. Two plays later,
game-high rusher Todd Douthdt, 3
carries for 82 yards, for raced 75
yards to paydlrt.
That proved to be mlre than
enough as the Notre Dame defense,
ranked tlrst In Its Southern Ohio
Conterelke, Division I, last season,
limited the Pirates to37 total yards,
11 rushing.
Midway through the second
period, Notre Dame recovered a
tumble .16 yards away ·from the
end2one and scored soon afterward
on a two-yard run by Jim Born. The
final score came with 54 seconds
remaining In the haU as quarter·
back Joe Kayser hooked up with
spHtendJimPierronforanl1·yard

By SCO'IT WOLFE
much improved serving.
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Fifteen girls are dividing up time
Eaglettes varsity volleyball team between varsity and reserve post·
posted Its first victory of the season lions this season, Including retur·
as it defeated Southwestern 16-14 nees Krist! Hawk, Melissa Nutte-,
and 15·7 In two games.
Arlene Ritchie, Lesa Rucker, TaTonya Savoy led Eastern with 14 nya Savny, Bev Wigal, and Lee Ann
points and three aces, followed by Robinson.
Arlene Ritchie, Lesa Rucker, Bev
Following Is a schedule and team
Wigal and Melissa Nutter with four roster.
each, and Krist! Hawk with two.
and Reynolds. Walilng advanced to
For Southwestern Vicki Ham- l'laf&lt;r
Yr.
third as Dan Driessen grounded mond had 5, Krist! Comstock three, Arrrj Berkhlmfr.. .......... .................Jr.
.. Fr.
out. Kevin Bass hila sacrifice fly to Anita Arrowood 3, Tracy Lewis 8, Carrie Be-rnard ....... .....
Amy ConnoUy ... .. ........ ...... ........ ... ... Jr.
score Walilng and give the Astros a and Johanna Donia and Karen Lisa Driggs . . .. . . . ... . . .. . ...... So.
Amy Hager .
. . .. .
. . . So.
3-2 lead. Cruz knocked out Lynch Rose one each.
Krlstl Hawk ............... .......................... Sr.
with his sixth homer of the season.
In the setilng department Tonya Melanie- Mankin ...... ....................... So.
"Our lineup Is pretly well distrib- Savoy was 16 ror 17 and Bev Wigal Mdissa Nutter ........... .... ....... ......... Sr.
Arlene Ritchie ........... .... .......
...... Sr.
uted with good hitters," Bass said. 12 for 14. Lesa Rucker was 8 br 11, Lee Ann Robinson .............................Sr.
.. .................. Sr .
"We've been able to capitalize on a Bev Wigal 5-8, and Krist! Hawk 4-7 Lesa Ruck€'1" ..... ..
Tonya Savoy ..... ........... .................... Sr.
bunch of pitchers' mistakes."
and two kills to lead the EllS Amber Short .....
.. ... .... ....... Fr.
In other games, New York splkers.
n-tsha SpenC&lt;'r ··· ····· .... ............. So
Bev Wigal. .......... .. ....
.. ... ... ......... Sr.
defeated San Francisco 5-2, St.
Hawk and Nutter each had two
Louis downed Atlanta &gt;-2, Clncin· blocks each.
1!.\!Jri!RN
1!1t11
VOLI.El'BALL
nall beld off Pittsburgh 6- 5,
Coach Pam Doothltt stated, "We Sep. 2-Not1h Gallla
.
......... A
Mont rea Iedged Los Angeles 7-6 and played very welt tonight. I was Sep. 3-Metgs ... ..... ... . ..
... H
Philadelphia nipped San Diego 54. pleased both offensively and defen· ~ 4-0akHW ............................... H
...,.;-., 6-Fort Frye.......... ...... ...
.. ... A
Mets 5, Giants 2
slvely. Our girls workl&gt;d hard and !i'p. 9-Hannan Trace .........
... A
At New York , Mookle Wilson really hustled. We needed this ~- ll-Wa1erlord
.................. H
Sep. 11&gt;-Southern ..
. ...................... A
singled in Waliy Backman from game to boost out confidence."
second base to ignite the Mets'
~~~~t!'tciiriSi"tail: ............ : ~
The EllS reserves and Southw·
three-run eighth Inning. Roger estern ended In a tie as only two Sep. ZJ-Southwestern .. ..... ........ ....... A
Sep. ;!1-Mel,os ... . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .......... .. A
McDowell pitched two innings in games were played.
Sep. 25-North GaUia ................ ............ H
77 -Fort Frye ................ .. ........... ... H
relief of Sid Fernan&lt;Ez to improve
Mel Mankin Jed the locals with 11 ~Sep. :11--0ak Hill .................................. A
to 13-7. Fernan&lt;Ez struck rull4 and points and 5 aces, while Amy Hager Oct. 2-Hannan Tracf:' .. ........... .......... H
allowed four hits over the first and Amy Connolly had rour points Oct 4-Trimble ........ .. ......... .. ............. A
7-0hloValley Christian ............... A
seven innings. Mark Davis fell to each and just two aces. Amy Oct.
Oct. 9--Southern ................................. H
4·5.
Berkhlmer added three, Lisa
f,ardlnals 5, Braves 2
Driggs two, and Trlsha Spencer II
~iiiiiiliiiM~~
At Atlanta, John Morris singled one.
IDme Terry Pendleton with the
Mel Mankin and Amy Berkhlmer
go-ahead run in a four- run ninth to were commended for their Inside
rally St. Louis. Ray Sol!, 1·0, pitched play and good sets, while the mtire
one Inning for his first major-league reserve squad drew praise l:lr
. victory. Todd Worrell pitched thP
ninth for his :Jlth save. Jim Acker,
wiD entered the ninth with a
Get tllpei Set. or Sun.
three-hitler, fell to 34.
end get tapes Monday
Reds fi, Ptrales 5
for 'h price.
At Cincinnati, Ted Power pitched

ChiCubs drop 6-4 decision to
Astros; Reds trip Pittsburgh

I,

By MIKE TUIJ.Y
UPI National Baseball Writer
The Chicago Cubs officially left
the pennant race Monday and.
according to Manager Gene Ml·
chael, they did so on merit.
''I'm especially bothered about
loading the bases tn the ninth and
getting nothing," Michael said after
a &amp;4 loss to the Houston Astros.
"Maybe we're oat good enough ."
Jose Cruz homened and Denny
Walilng doubled In two runs to
highlight a four-run sixth inning.
keeping the Astros seven games In
front of seCond· place Cincinnati in
the National League West.
Only two years removed from
winning the NL East, the Cubs have
become one of the worst teams tn

the majors. Only one club, Pittsburgh, was eliminated from pen.
nant contention earlier than
Chicago.
Danny Darwin, J.1, pitched six
Innings for his first NL victory.
Charlie Kerteld pitched two Innings
and Dave Smith recorded the final
three outs for his 28th save. Ed
Lynch, 44, took the loss.
"I made good pitches when I had
to," said Darwin. who was acquired
tn August from Milwaukee. ''I'm
happy they traded for me. It shows
they have confidence In me."
Billy Hatcher opened the Houston
sixth with an Infield single. Craig
Reynolds walked and Walling
followed with a double into the
right-field comer, scoring Hatcher

Scoreboard ...
Majors

Transactions

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F1yen ~ WUdcaiB 6
:
Outstanding plays by Ironton $t.
Joe's Tommy Clay and Joe Gohefn
and a stubborn flyer defense kept
Hannan Trace scoreless thfoulih·
oot rmst of the Wildcats' Saturdily
opmer In Tanks Memorial Stadlu)n
as ISJ posted a al-6 win.
•
Following a 0.0 first quarter, Bill
Clay intercepted an liT pass In t)le
second quarter and shortly after·
ward passed to Goheen tor l8 yards
to takelt In and makeihescoreOO.
An attempt at the extra polntfallEKJ.
The Wildcats continued to batlle
with the hosts throughout the third
quarter when the Flyers' ~ff
Garland broke through liT's d&gt;·
lenses on the one-yard Une fur tile

At that point liT's Jay Jarrell
passed to Grady Johoson, who loQk
the ball In on a 25-yard run. The
attempt for extra points failed.
With less than a minute to play,
Clay again passed to Goheen, and
.Goheen tallied the Flyers' final TO
of the night. The try for extra points
falled.
liT compiled 3l yards rushing
;lnd recorded 95 yards In passllfg
against ISJ on a total rt 45 plays. :

Middleport man takes life
Tommy Scally, 28, died at 7: 55 p.m. SUnday at his residence on
South Second Avenue, Middleport. Death was due to a self-tnOicted
gun shot wound to the head with a .45 caliber handgun.
At the scene besides Dr. James Conde, Meigs County coroner,
were Sheriff Howard Frank, Deputy Doh Snyder, Officer Bill Miller
of the Middleport Pollee Dept. and Middleport EMS.

Court issues marriage licenses
Marriage licenses have been issued In Meigs County Probate
· • Court to Jerry Lester Wolfe, 21, and Dixie Kay Dugan, 18, ooth of
" ,. Racine; Brian Lee Hunt. 20, and Laura Mae Frye, 16, both of
~
Poemroy; Paul Leonard McDaniel Jr., 31, and Deborah Dee Brown,
;; ' . 25, hath of Mlddlepori; Eddie Lee Nelson, :fi,andJudy KayRowe,37,
., both of Pomeroy.
' '
~· &lt;

, · Racine woman files for divorce
''
'
~
·,
,
'

=:

Tim

r

Olive trustees meet Friday

Defending league champion 1-----------......JL----------~­
Kyger Creek conilnues its winning
ways, defeating host Eastern quite
handily In two sets, 15-0 and 15-1,
here in SVAC volleyball action. .
Eastern Is oow ().2 and 0.1 tn
league play, while KC Is 1-0 tn the
SVAC.
We pay top prices for your bali stocks. We have
Missy Kitchen paced the winners
specialized in this field for over 10 yeus. Call col·
with 11 markers, while Renee Ward
teet for 1 quote. Ask for B111d Smith.

The regular meeting of the Olive Township Trustees will be held
Friday, 7:00p.m., at the ReEdsville Ore station.

WANTED:

MHS Boosters meet tonight

BANK STOCKS

added 9, Christina Carroll 2, Janet
Stllner 1, and Jill Drummond 1.
Mel Mankin had the lone Eastern
srore.
In reserve action KC claimed
two
15-7 victortesi
and J.5.1u. oot won In
muchsets,
closer
Tracy Eggleton, Cindy Lemley,
and Janet Stilner each had seven
for t!I' winners, while Melody
Graham, and Cassandra Thomp!lln each had 5.
Bev Wigal and Lee Ann Robinson
each had four for Eastern, Amy
Berkhlmer and Arlene Ritchie each
had 3, Amy Connolly two, and Mel
Mankin l

[IJ

The Meigs Athletic Boosters will meet at 7 this evening at the high
school.
Tapes of the Point Pleasant game will be shown. Jim Soulsby
announces that 200 Club tickets are stlll available and should be
purchased before Friday night's game to becomeeligtblefortheflrst
three give-aways.

fiRST SCIOTO

411 ARCADIA
COLUMBUS, OH. 43202
(614) 261-7092

r;;;;;~~;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~;;::;

FREE

GTE operations merger announced

•

Bank·BY·Maill

r ~ig!K'd

•
'

II()!OitMI'

, , ........ 0
)to TIM!
111'1'1fD11"TU

Saturday's scores

.,

Utrlo Hlab !\t'flool tDIIChraJI RrsWt~
Ry ' 'niU&gt;d Prl""" lnt('mal.klnal
Bo•a1t•r LoraJ 7. f'f&lt;Wo:bul'l: ~Tin,e: n
&amp;•llalrT' S! .John- It Brkl~!'pOrt n

l!ut,....r +Pa&gt; 11. W ~nt•n Krn rv:'d\ !.l
Ca n Mr Klnk'\'
(".an GlrnOak - ~ ~
Cbt Tall :Jl. D.11" Col Whlll' ~
Cln W ~ n HUts 17. C'l n lla&gt;r J;,
fit- ~~ .)()(• n J:: (lf' Shaw I)
f'lf' Hf'nPdlc'rlno:' 1:1. Can cr 7
Ck• Sl [Rfi;rtl u~ 1.1. l.alw Carh"
Cui lll'Sot~ :II. IArbUn 0
Oa y Dunbitr ll. O n i\lkm 1ti
El\'1111 rarh .r;-. Evlrla w ~
~·aiqJu1 -~ IU&gt;\~·101'11' 14
Gal+"&gt; M UI~ H ~ .. I!Pn .JI. Rlclltnono Ht ~

r..

.',

,

We Pay The
Postage Both· Ways!

1fl
Humllloo Tladlrt "ll, n n WllhnM" IH
l.ak1~·und ~ F".d Jl. !\kr Gou11rlilll
Lancasll'r F' ~ tJ'r :11. Zanr flMrl' rM' fi
Lima 14. l.oraln KUt ~ !.1
Mar1nn Cal~ Z!. Mar Pk•:L'\;Inl :11 1011
MK!rkl Cardinal :!1 , Lt'dJ!('flllml (I
N('Y.ark f arh "JI. Tusk\· Cart\ II
r\llr!l :.11. Yourws Wilson o
r\or111 Can Hoovl'l" {1, Cdcra!n

PICK UP A SUPPLY OF PREPAID ENVELOPES
AT ANY OF OUR THREE CONVENIENT LOCATIONS

r:

0rl'F!Qn Strum :JJ, NmtrNmd 6

PEOPLES

HN ·A. WADE, M.D. Inc.

BANK
"The letter lank"

VETERANS
.MORIAL HOSPITAL
'
E~R,

NOSE·&amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

MEMBER F.D.I.C.

"WE HAVE HEARINI AID!"
CAll (614) 992·2104

C&gt;

111M PONOEA:lSA.INC.

second StNtt
Ma1011, W. VI.
773-5514

2212 Jlebon Avenue
Poinl Plll.rt, W. VI,

675-1121

Robin Lynn Nance, Racine, has flied for a divorce In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court from David Lowell Nance, Racine, charging
gross oeglect of duty and extreme cruelty. A restraining order has
been ·Issued by the court against the defendant.
,
A dissolution of marriage has been granted Pamelll K. Bentz and
Keith A. Bentz. Pamela Bentz was restoted by the court to her
malden name Milliron.
Jack Richard Wells has been granted a divorce from Reannie Kae
' Wells.

Cases dismissed tn Meigs County Common Pleas Court include
Racine Home National Bank against Wilbur Shoults Jr.; Racne
Home National Bank against Charles Rhodes; Racine Home
'l , National Bank against Marvin Randolph; Racine Home National
~ Bank ,against RobPrt R. Wood, et.ai.; Dark Dlalnond Coal Corp.
• ~against Dennis Boothe; Connie Kay Chevalier against Allen Keith
,, Chevalier.
In other court matters, a reciprocal actkln for chlld support has
abeen filed by lhe County of Riverside, CaHf.. against Gerald Lee
McDaniel.

KC volleyball
tops host Eastern

Nick Esasky hit his lOth homer to
fu el the Reds. Power.. &gt;-6, had a
pertect game for 5 2·3 innings
!Flore Benny Distefano hit his first
homer of the season. John Fran co
earned his 23rd save. Pittsburgh
loser Mike Blele&lt;-ki, 6-10, went five
Innings. Expos 7, Dodgers 6
At Montreal, Tom Folev's bases·
loaded single scored
Raines
from third with the winning run In
the bottom of t!I' ninth for the
Expos. Jeff Reardon, 7-8, pitched I
1·3 Innings for the victory &lt;Espite
yielding a game- tying homer to
Ralph Bryant In t!I' top of t!I' ninth .
Ken Howell fe ll to 5-9.
PhDlies 5, Padres 4
At Philadelphia. Von Hayes'
two-out bloop double scored Gary
Redus in the eighth. Uftlng the
Ph!Uies to their sixth straight
victory. Hayes also IDmered to help
make a wln!l4'r of reli('Ver Kent
Tekulve, 9-3. Craig Lefferts, 7-6.
took the loss.

'
·
.,
.·
.
·

Cases dropped in court

..P!iilil

a one-hitter over six innings and

'

5th Street
New HMn, W. Ya.

882-2135 .

MARION - A lonna! merger of the ""'en GTE Midwestern
Telephone Operations companies, Including General Telephone Co.
of Ohio, which serves most of Meigs County. will strengthen GTE 's
position In the competitive marketplace. says RR Randall. states
vice president and general manager.
GTE's Ohio operatiOn IUed a request Aug. 29 with the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohto seeking approval fur a plan that woold
combine seven or GTE's regional telecommunlcaitons companies
Into one, headquartered at Westfield, Ind.
"Tile pian Is primarlly market-driven," said Randall. "We must
do everything we can to make it easy for our customers to do
business with us. We'D be large enough to serve major customers,
with multl·stateoperations, and, at the.sametlme continue to bring
advanced technology and high levels of service to rur loca I
customers. The move gives us a rrore unified approach to the
regional market place.
No local service jobs will he affected because of the merger,
Randall satd, and GTE's Ohio operation will maintain Its state
headquarters at Marlon.
The combined company will have mlre than 3.1 million customers
throUghout the Midwestern and G1'1!8tLakesstates, annual revenues
of $2 billion and assets of more than Z billion.
State regulators must approve the merger before it can take place.
Company officials ¥" seeking approval this fall .

Patrol probes accident
A two-car accident on Ohio :tl8 In Lebanon Township Sunday was
Investigated by the state highway patrol.
Troopers said vehicles drivel\ by VICtor R. Crunts, 32, Syracuse,
and wuuam w. RusaeU, 39,Ractne, were both eastbound at 1: 40p.m.
when Coonts: vehicle coWded with Russell's car, which was turning
ten.Counts was attempting to pass Russell .s vehicle at the time d. the
accident, troopers said. Both vehicles were rroderately damaged.

:Crash
kills two
'
· MANSFIELD, Ohio (Ul'l) -:- A
i llfai~S!!eld pilot and ')!ts Wifl! died
i duilng the ~ wpen their
smau private ~IJ'piane ·apparently •
eliperlenced meclWlical problems
: m takeoff from a grass strip and
· craihed tn flames.
· Tbe Federal Aviation AdmlnJ&amp;.
~ trailon wulnveat18a')lng t1r! Satur' daycrashola 19711PiperSUperCub. ~
' Tile plane was piloted by Chlron
Smith, 33.

..

Primary elections set
in Florida, Nevada

Thomas C. Scally n

'

Meigs County Emergef1CY Medlcai Services reports :l calls over
Labor Day weekend, five on Saturday, eight on Sunday and one m
Monday.
Saturday at 3:11p.m., Middleport to Rlvervlew Cemetery Road
for Cllfford Kauff to Pleasant Valley Hospital; Mkldleport at 6:06
p.m. to Mill Street for Margaret Rotxnoon to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Rutland at 8: 12 p.m. to Laurel Road for Dana )Juniper to
O'Bleness.Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 8: 2!1 p.m. transported
Rick McCleUend to Veterans Memortal Hospital; Pomeroy at 9:22
p.m. to Royal Oak Park fur Seth Adkins who was treated but not
I transported.
Sunday at 1: 47 a.m., Racine to Letart Fails for Trudy Spaulding to
Holzer Medical Center; Middleport at 5:56a.m. to South Front Street
!or Beula Oehler to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 10:54
a.m. to Bradbury Road for Wilbur Hanning to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Pornerey at 1:25 p.m. to Royal Oak Park for Angela Mann
to Veterans Memortal Hospital; Racine Ftre Department at 1:46
p.m. loa structure fire at the Cathy McGraw residence tn Portland;
" ' Pomeroy at 2: 06 p.m. to Spring Avmue for Audrey Arnold lo
Pleasant Valley Hospital; Middleport at 9: :ll p.m. to Rutland Street
for Eula Rice to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 10:19 p.m.
to Butternut Avenue for VIrginia Hedrick to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Monday at 2:26a.m., Rutland transported Nora Carol to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

The Dally 'SIIntinei- Page- 5

Area deaths

EMS units answer 14 calls

NI U"""~

l"ln&lt;:lnn.otl+•. P111:.1Arr.'!h '\

1\n'titby"~&gt;o (iam ....
lluusron rRv;m ~ ~ al ('hiP.• ~:~) rM Uif'r
'•41 . ~ lfi pm .
SanF'ranrl&lt;;('(ltl{riJko\.1 J.l-II&gt;Jifo;f'V&lt; Ycuk
rVor:k&gt;rr t:l-·11 . 7 ~ p.m
P11f~IArll!ll + Kip~ r .'Hi, ,1! l lnrlnl'lill+
,r;u ll .- ~nl2 - 11• . 7:"t'i pm
l..ol; AnQI.•If'!io • Wf&gt;k'h li- lU I ;ol Mon iiT'al
rrourrun~ 11 q,_7 .l 'i p.m
S;m !llo 'l&lt;ll tl .;t Poi nT 1l 11 at l'hl1a(J(&gt;Iphl.r
•Bilfiit&gt;r O-IT J. r :r. 11.m
S1 LouLq tTudol· U~1 at Atl:m la rMrt hl'r
1.1 · 1~ &gt;. ? .JO p.m

An~

BrvanT. Ulct\(&gt;r .lar k Flrnpk'. rieht han0' T
[\al\·lno f.1J I\'I'l a nd Third ba'lmlall L~n· 1
S!.'t' !mrn Albuquerqlll' nl llll' P&lt;IC'Ifk· l"o:o~r
l.Cflt!\11' 11\1\A I
Mlnll(•!iOI.ir - Actlv~l('[l pilctlf'r ~·rank

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Pltiladl'~phi,1 .\ .San Ll ~I!O I
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Arril·a tf'd ngh1 ·hanrt&gt;t
fln't SatJ&gt;rha ~i'fl and nu10('kirr Rucf:.· Lm

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Mil"· ~uN., · •~'uo:· k tt \" lch

rlit\...,_,,n 1"'- Hit

from Mi!Lill' ul Ill' ln1errutiurul Ll'ili-.'IJI'
,,\J\A, , pull.'hil.'ill'd ~Uirldt• r IJaH Clark
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A llanta -

r--Local Briefs:---.

~:~~~!i~~:~~~=

Eastern volleyball
SWHS
team ·de~eats
11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

GeOrge G. Hayes

George Gilbert Hayes, !JJ, d.
Thoroas Christian Scally II, 28, of
Ocala, Fla., died Friday at the 528 S. Second Ave., Middleport, dted
Maron Community Hospital In Sunday evening at his home.
Ocala.
Born In Mason, W.Va., he was a
BomJu~, %l,l900, tothelateJohn
son of the late Thomas C. Scally I
Gilbert and Gertie Mansell Hayes, and Yvonne Hackett Scally, of
he was a retired offiC@ol118118ger for Middleport.
Sorvlvtng, In addition to his
the Colum~thlet!S. Club and
was a member ortne!First United mlther. are one brother, James R
Methodist Church of Ocala, Fla., Scally of Columbus; a maternal
Middleport Masonic Lodge and the grandmother, Mrs. George Hackett
at Middleport; a paternal grand·
Shrine Club of Columros.
Survivors Include his wife, Agnes lllotll&gt;r, Mrs. Paul Scally of New
0 . Hayes, Ocala, Fla.; one daugh- Haven, W.Va.; numerws aunts,
ter, Katherine Ann Dtvlto, LaGuni- uncles and cousins.
In addition to his father, he was
tas, Calif.; onesonanddaughter·ln·
law, Edward Charles and Mary preceded In death by two grandPrice, Charleston, S.C.; one sister fatll&gt;rs, George W. Hackett Sr. and
and brotller-tn·law, Anna M. and Paul Scally.
Friends may call at Rawilngs·
Edward Latta, WasMngton Court
House; two sisters-In-taw. Kathe· Coats-Bklwer Funeral Home on
rlne Reed, Ocala, Fla. and Dorothy Wednesday from 24 and 7·9 p.m.
Day and time d. services will be
Dooth, Fort Myers, Fla.; two
announced
later by the funeral
gran&lt;khlldren; several nieces and
nephews.
home.
He was pr§'eded In death by one
son, Jerry M"artln Hayes, in 1984.
Oliver Adam Unroe
Services will be Thursday, 1 p.m.,
at Rawilngs·Coats-Bklwer Fureral
Oliver Adam Unroe. 86, Eureka
Home with Rev. C.S. Zuniga. Burial Star Route, GalllpoHs, died Suooay
will be In Riverview Cemetery. in Scenic Hills Nursing Center.
Friends may call at the funeral
Born Sept. 5, 189l, at Mercerville,
home from 7·9 p.m. Wednesday.
son of the late Rev. John Roher!
Preston Unroe and Minerva
Chester W. Hill
Brammer Unroe, he was a se~­
employed
carpenter. Prior to that.
Chester W. Hill, 91, Pensacola,
he
was
employed
by Gills Produce
Fla., died Monday In Milton (Fla.)
Co. and by Evans Grocery Co.
Hospital.
He was a member of Mtna Chapel
Born Oct. 5, 1894, In GalllpoHs, oon
Church
and attended the First
of the late George and Alberta
Church.
He was a member
Baptist
Diggins Hill, he was employed fur
of
the
Modem
Woodmen
Lodge.
several years by BellTelephone Co.
He
was
preceded
In
death
by his
and as a painter. He had resided In
wife,
Clara
Haffelt
Unroe,
on
Feb.
Flortda for the past 15 years.
He married Eli2aheth Rose on 27, 198!: by a son-in-law, George
Adams; by a sister, Donna Bruce;
July 3, 1926, and sre preceded him
and by two brothers, Denver Unroe
In death tn 1982.
and Clifford Unroe.
Survlvlngarethree sons, William
Surviving are a daughter. Mrs.
HUI of Pensacola, Jack Hill of
George !June) Adams of GallipoLouisiana, and Ruben Hill of
lis; a granddaugl!ter, Claire Lynne
Gallipolis; a daugttter, Mrs. Cecil
Adams of Gallipolis; a grandson.
(Mary) Roach d. Point Pleasant; 17
Oliver Brantley Unroe of Austin.
grandchildrm and ll! great·
Texas;
a granddaughter-tn·law,
grandchildren; a sister, Mabel
Ginger Adams; and several nieces
Lane d. Middleport; and a lrother,
and nephews.
Howard Hili of Ashland, Ohio.
Services will be 11 a.m. Wednes·
He was preceded In death by two
day In the First Baptist Church.
brothers and four sisters.
Services wUI be 11 a.m. Thursday- with the Rev. Joseph Godwin and
the Rev. Alvis Pollard officiating.
in McCay·WetherlDlt·Moore FunBurial wlll be In Mound Hlll
eral Home, with the Rev. Bryan
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
Blair officiating. Burial wUI be in
Willis Funeral Home from 5-9 p.m.
Mound HUI Cemetery. Friends may
today.
call at the funeral home from 7·9
Pallbearers will be Joe Giles,
p.m. Wednesday.
Noah Dale Houck, Wyman Sheets,
Bruce Unroe, Jerry Evans and
Clifford T. Kauff
Gerald Haffelt.
Clifford Theodore Kauff, 76, of
1295 MUI St., Middleport, dted
Surrlay at Pleasant Valley Hospital
In Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Born In Middleport to John and
Lilly Bolin Kauff, be worked tn the
IContinued from Page I)
dry cleaning and coal mining
Sports Writers' Association.
industries.
Surviving in addltiln to his wife
He llisurvlved by hlswife, Clara:
are
a son, Dr. Jack D. Rogers,
one son, Ernest Kauff of Middle·
Pullman,
Wash.; two daughters,
port; three daughters and sons-In·
Mary Ann Mansour, Lansing,
law, Violet and Larry Jetfers of
Mich., and Nancy A. Sanders,
Pomeroy, Dorothy and &amp;ri Henry
of Columb\ls, Sandra and Chester WUllamsport, Pa.; a brotll&gt;r, Bry·
Johnoon of Bidwell; one son and ant Rogers, Buckhannon; and six
grandchildren.
daughter-In-law. Carl and Shirley
Funeral services will be at 2 p.m.
Kauff d. Middleport; 14 grandchild·
ren; 13 great gran&lt;khildren; sev· Thursday from the Presbyterian
Church, Eighth and Matn streets,
eral nieces and nephews.
In addition to his parents, he was Point Pleasant. Friends maycallat
the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home.
preceded 1n death by five brothers
1701
Jefferson Blvd., Point Pleaand tm sisters.
sant,
from · 2·4 and 7-9 p.m.
Services will be 11 a.m. Wednes·
day at Rawllngs·Coats-Blower Fun· Wednesday and one hour prior to
era I Home with Rev. Earl Eden services at the church. Burial will
officiating. Friends may call at the be In Kirkland Memorial Gatdens.
In Ueu of Dowers, the family
tuneral hOme from 6-9 p.m. Tues·
day (today). Burial will be In 5uggests contributions to the Point
Pleasant Presbyterian Church
Riverview Cemetery.
Memorial Fum.

November election. In Nevada ,
former Rep. James Sa ntini. a
Democrat turned Republican, is
expected to face Rep. Harry Reid, a
Democrat, in the race to succeed
retiring GOP Sen. Paul Laxalt.
In Georgia, Julian Bond and John
Lewis, allies In the civil rights
battles two &lt;kcades ago, have been
forced into a House runoff because
neither got a majority In the Aug.l2
primary.
Bond. ttl&gt; front -runner. fell just
shy of a majority. but took only a
small percentage of the white vote
in the seven-candidate field.
'
In neighboring Florida, both
Attidents probed
'
Republicans and Democrats have
Ught damages were incurred to crowded fields seeking to succeed
two vehicles In a hit skip on Graham as goveroor. Ruooffs are
Mulberry Avenue Saturday after· likely in both parties.
The Democratic favorites appear
noon, Pomeroy Police said.
to
be sta.te Rep. Steve Pajcic and
Police said a westbound car
driven by Herbert Noel. Pomeroy. state Attorney General Jim Smith.
struck a parked car owned by On the GOP side, Tampa Mayor
Beverly Roush. Pomeroy. Noel. Bob Mart Inez. a not her party
officers said, left the scene and was stwicher. and state Rep. Tom
later chargPd with driving while Gallagher seem to be leading
former Rep. U:lu Frey.
Intoxicated and hit-skip.
In Nevada. Gov. Richard Bryan
Saturday morning. cars driven
by Sherman Mills, Middleplrt. and is challenged in the Democratic
primary by Herb Tobman, pres!·
Harold Pettit, Pomeroy, received
moderate damages when they dent and general manager of the
Stardust Hotel in Las Vegas, who
collided at an Intersection on Locust
Street, pollee report. No chargPs lost his gambling license when
"skimming" was discovered at the
were llled.
hoteL Tobman was never charged
•
with being involved in the theft but
Fire destroys trailer
was accused of not providing
adequate management to stop the
A trailer owned by Mr. and Mrs. diversion of profits.
Clifford McGraw, Portland, was
destroyed by fire about 1:45Sunday
afternoon.
The couple had been Uvlng in the Veterans Memorial
trailer but had recently moved to a
nearby house. The. traller wa s
Saturday Admissions - None.
already gone by the time the Racine
Saturday Discharges - Mary
Fire Department arrived. The Kelter.
adjacent house was not damaged
Sunday Admissions - Beu lah
but several small ootbuildlngs were Oehler. Middleport; Wilbur Hanalso destroyed by flames. Many of ning, Middleport; Tammy Wright,
the couple's belongings were being Pomeroy: Eula Rice, Middleport.
stored In the trailer and all were
Sunday Discharges - Carolyn
lost. Authorities are oot sure of the Whaley, Opal Barr, Mark Proffitt,
fire' s origin of the fire.
Glenn Tucker, Albert Shoemaker.
Monday Admissions - Virginia
Hedrick, Pomeroy; Nora May
Carol, Middleport; Eleanor Werry.
Meeting cancelled
Pomeroy: Donald Schartiger. Mid·
A meet tng of Rutland Village dleport; Murl Harris, Ewington.
Monday Discharges - Shirle)·
Council scheduled for this evening
Taylor.
bas been cancelled.
By United Press International

Voters In Flortda and Nevada wUI
select candidates for Senate and
governor In primary elections
today, and In Georgia a runoff wlll
settle a House race between two
clvil rights leaders. ·
The Ieadlrig contenders for the
Senate races tn both states face only
token opposition, with the results
virtually certain even bPfore ballot·
ing begins.
In Florida; GOP Sen. Paula
Hawkins and Democratic Gov. Bob
Graham are already fighting the

Noted area

We'll even :,.'1'nlah

the 111m

FREE!

Simply bring In your roll of Color Prinl
Film tor processing, and we'll give you
a roll of Colorcralt Film lo play with ...

ABSOLUTELY FREEl

Jack C. Justice

r;::::::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::::::il
CLOGGING CLASSES
diaM~13usttcewasbomatParkers·
STARTING TUESDAY,
burg, W.Va.,ason&lt;i't!I'lateDewey
SEPT. 9
(Bud) and Rosa Barnhart Justlce.
· Heretirrofromthearmedforcesln
POMEROY VIUAGE HAU
1974, having served In the U.S.
AUDITORIUM
Jack C. Justice, 55, fonnerly of
Athens Coonty, died Friday at the
DeSoto Memorial Hospital tn Arca-

A.nny and on the u.s. Naval

uss

cof~~err Et..~~erpclr: ~~asnga =~
Uu:-

UU.\1

aviation support technician at the
time of his retirement and was
serving as an Instructor at the
Marimar
Diego, CaHf.
Naval Air Station In San
Surviving are two sons, Mike &lt;t
Baltimore, Ohio, and Dan a! ·
ClrclevUJe; a sister and brother·ln·
Jaw, Donna Faye and GaryVeiT(lil·
Uon. Athens: two nephews, Troy
and Matthew Vennililon, Athens; a
grandson and a granddaughter.
Setvtces will be held at 1 p.m.
Thursday at the Wblte Fureral
Home In Coolvllle with Rev. Denver
DodrW r1tlclatlng. Burial wilfbe In
Fairview Cemetery. FriPnds may
call at the fUneral home from 7·9
p.m. Wednesday.

ADV·""'ED
7 P.M.
"""'
BEGINNERS 1:30 , .M.

Compare us with the other guy...
Shoot, we're not afraid!
DISC, 11 0, 126, 13S FILM ONLY
r-------------~

·----'lI

·

'I'

et nterior lit. Extell~r
•Remodeling

eKitchena
-•ROofing

•Sieling

tG111efll Carpentry
eRepelr

ReFERENCES- FR.EE ESTIMATES

Chtrle$ RoUTt . R .Ph

Su~:."v ~~l~~~ ~2~o·.r::d ': ~~ ~ ~ m
ADn.lfd H1nlng. A Ptl

PRESCR IPTIONS

GIG POWELL, TEACHER
FOR INFORMATION CALL

1
If

M•in

· '"""' '"""
o • " n•

PH 99 1 2955

Pomtrov . Ot!

.________:-.:_:_·~-----

992·2622 - 992·6720

I

I
j

1

~=;~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~::;~;;;;;\
·
HOW DO I BREAK
THE NEWS Of DEATH?
,

Most people batt to bt the bearers of sad tidinas- especially
tilt !!dines of doath, actual or impandin1. But the "bod ·ni!Ws·
brin&amp;~r" can actually do11•t J!od by makinl sure that there·
ctiver of lf11 news will hln tht support hi or she needs to bear
and express the f11linp of shock, loss. and sadness.
Evlft for persons wtto ,,. not flrJ' emotionally upressin. it is
lotporllnt for thom to 1111 that thty are with poople who will be
11'""1¥1 wtton they oteti" such MWS.
$oclt l.,porl COIItllO tho form or TOTAIIistaniOJ and ICCOP·
lanco. Tllti!OIIOI IPPftciltlnl tho lull human buutr or tho bt·
rund 11«1011 ovto 11 his flct is contorttd with distress and
tun. It doll not 111•n trylnJ to ~ealm~ or M
russure" hill or
otiltiWist tom oft 11/1 tiPfHIIOnl ol ltolin1.
Ao attlhdt ol aHHiivtllstonln~o phySical toucltine or onbrace
an 1110111-'*'1 than,.., oxoct cho1ce of words. lntlted, if
lOti 111 hi tooodl •HhJ041rfoollnp, yoa will lind tilt ricJtt words.
A11•111 "l'•·ICII!f" l!$letl ~r IIOU!nt foolin1 will be mote suppOrtl\11 than I~ "alu al tilt tlocmtd.
And , .. ,.lltr-,.. !fill! on &amp;ivlouupport won past thtlorllliiiOtKOIOC !Miio4. Tho! lillY bt wlltn you 'rt needtd tilt most

&gt; ••, . .

· . ,, CIDia, 0110
.·HOME .UILDING

Pharmacy
Kenn••'"' McCultDU9h. A .Ptl .

MARCUM C
ION·JIACTING .
614-tiJ-414.1 • '
.

SWISHER LOHSE

I

fl,,.,~­

"$1nlce PIUI ...Attentlon to Oetell"

§",;,_t.ft-

BRUa FISHER

(M-IItl

'!11'111 .~.

'

BILL BLOWER

.
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 6-The Daily Seminal

Tuesday. September 2. 1986

HOGG AND ZUSPAN AFTER

FENCE POST
3' TO 4" DIA.

an.

Page-.7

Library lines

an. $399

New hours at library
By Runt POWE118
The beginning of school and
Labor Day holiday means changes
In Ire hours at the Pomeroy
Library.
Starting Sept. 2, the rew hours at
Pomeroy wW be 9-5 Monday,
Friday and saturday; 9-8 Tuesday'
Wednesday and Thursday.
Hours at the Middleport Ubrary
wlll remain the same. Both llbrar·
les wW be closed tor Lahor Day.
The Summer Reading Program
mred the second week In August.
Seventy children participated,
reading approximately 1,&lt;00 books.
The 1q&gt; 5 readers were Crystal
Tayklr, Mary Chaney, John Cha·
ney, Lee Luckeydoo and Teresa
King. Margaret Johnson, had the
closing program, with crafts and
games. Ice crEam and cupcakes
were mjoyed by the chlldren.
TheTalldngBookDemonstratlon

-UTILITY GRADE 214'5

10'

$122 $154

12'
~184

14'

16'

ECONOMY
GRADE

$214 $24

2X.4 STUDS

(

GEORGIA PACIFIC

ERGLASS SHINGLES

S19~0...

FELT

SQUAII

..

c

TUE!DAY

ORANGE 1WP- Orange Town·
ship Trustees meet Tuesday, 8
p.m., home of clerk, Dorothy
Callaway.

EACH

$960

ROLL ROOFING

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM will meet
Tuesday at 7: ll p.m. Members
asked to attend.

IOU

4X8 PANELS

METAL

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Garden Club Dower show Is Tues·
day, at t.be home of Mrs. Carl
Horky, Mlddi]Xlrt.

INSULATED.
DOORS

LATICE

1 • ~IJI'I,A,ND

S' WIDTH ONLY

RACINE -Racine VWage Coun-

cil meets Tuesday, 7 p.m. Instead of
Monday. T.rash pickup within the
village w!U be held Tuesday and
Wednesday.
.

_......,;;4d' PINE

EACH

/dsel F" Ths
OD If YDutll/1,

'

WOOD SIDING

-

lfl"x4'xl'
8" o.c. Tl·ll

(SliGHTlY Bl!MISH£0)

~

SYRACUSE - Sutton Township
Trustees meet Tuesday, Syracuse
Municipal Building.

$1199

52499

HARRISONVILLE The
Friendly Neighbor Senior Cit lzens
Club Is sponsoring a blood pressure
day Wednesday, 10 a.m. to noon,
with Rutland EMS members on
duty.

3'12'

S27''

HOME

s 59

28d

CHESTER - Chester PTO
meets Wednesday, 7: lJ p.m. Catherine Jonnson, principal, speaker.
Child care provided; retreshnients.

... and Save!

UNDERPINNING

HYSELL RUN - Hysell Run
HoUness Church, off Ohio 124 on

FIBERGLASS

--

418 'I•"

AFER BOARD

88.1 SQ. n.
PEl lOLL

sP;·-2fS'

$479

31/2"123'
us.u SQ. n.

4 PLASTIC .PIPE
II

10

•

7/16"

ss

PEl lOll

n. lENGTHS

SOUD-01

NIFOIATED

A.IICAN IUDE 151/J" $
..

BAll WIRE

141/tC SQ. n.

S12 7810LL

Coonty Rd. 15, will lJ:o In revival
Wednesday, Sept. 3, through Sept.
7. Ser.rices wlll begin nightly at7: :W
p.m. with Rev. George William
from Point Rock as speaker.
Special singers wlll I:e featured
nightly and Pastor Mike Toompson
welcomes the ll'bllc.
mtJRSDAY

POMEROY - XI Gamma EpsUon Sorortty will meet at the
Downunder Restaurant Thursday
at 7 p.m.

----------------"'
I
I
1
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CLIP and SAVE

1

~

! FREE 1
!Oil Change i·

"Mrs. Reagan this rooming said
she thought it was great . !! was just
~&lt;Underfu I - amazingly poised really vecy good, and we were
Impressed," s)Xlkesman Larry
Speakes reporlt'd Monday.

Speakes added, "II would be
in teresling If tt sets off a week In
which they tABCs 'Good Morning
America') beat tbe 'Thday' show"
on rtval NBC.

I

1

I
I
I

I
I
I

WITH
•

! TEngtne i
une-up: 1

I

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1

Mrs. Reagan's press secretary ,
Elaine Crispen, said the first lady
told rer, "We were very proud
parents, " and were pleased at "the

I

. I

$3195
I
I
•cyl. I
. - - - - - - - 1 I S36 695
cyl. S4195
I cyl. I
I
1
I

1 Price includoa (For
I oloctronic ignkion.)

I

I
I

I
I
I

I

engineo wilh
·&lt;
•lnotoll Mopor Champion opork
plugs

.

•Adjun idle opaod
:
•Sot timing
•Inspect emiuions control ayltem
StlncWd ltlnltion ..,_ oquippod
with grlllerlhon 2-bbl corllur-.
oNghtly higher.
:

I Oil up to S Qrts.
I Mhr

1
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!COOPER.
I1

399 so. THIRD
MIDDLEPORT

II
1
I1

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61~99~6421

I

Chrysler•Plymouth
1
Dodge, Inc.
I

'Real men don't shoot birds'
HEGINS, Pa. (UP!) - Animal protesters and tbe 300 men and
rights activists taunted competitors women competing for trophies by
In Hegins' 53rd annual pigeon shooi blasting pigeons out of the air wilh
with epithets like "Hitler would be shotguns.
The protest was coordinated by
proud of you" and "Real men don't
kill birds" but left early to end tbe Trans-Species Uniimitro. based in
WUllamsport, on behalf of the
voiatlle confrontation.
.
Pollee reportro no arrests, but Coalition to Halt the Coleman
more than 00 officers had to step In Shoot, made up of oozens d. animal
frequently tb break up shouting rtghts groups from across the
matches Monday between the country.

I
1

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II ll.tnopgr II
I
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sa~ty!
I

2!4 EAST MAIN

r:&gt;MEROY
992·6687

Buckle up for

State lute
IMurailct
COMjMIIIIes

--..

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L__ .!!!'~! ~~~~---_1

--~

FRIDAY

HEMLOO&lt; GROVE - Meigs

CountY POmcin&amp; ·crange wUI meet
Friday, 7:ll p.m., at the Hemlock
Grange HaD. InspectiOn, election rl.
rl.flcers and judging of all contests
will be held. All members urged to
attmd. Hemlock Grange wUI host.
RACINE - Missionary Brady
Dunn of Guatemala will be In a
special seJV!ce Friday, 7:30p.m., at
Pine Grove Holiness Church. Pas·
tor Ben Watts Invites the ll'blic.

This week only, it's Driver's Choice on thrEie
of Goodyear's most popular steel belted
radials for small cars and imports. Which
one is right for you?

SALEM CENTER Star
Grange will meet Saturday at the
grange haiL A hayrtde will precede
tbe meeting at 7 p.m. The meeting
wlll begin at 8 p.m. and a weiner
roast will tJUow. All members and
interested persons Invited to attend.

Salt Ends Sat., Sept. 13

8EIIERI
Arrlva Radial

$32!.
.....
_
.,.., _ =e-..., ....

RACINE -A hymn sing wUI be
held Saturday, 7 p.m., at the
Fello~hlp Church In Racine.
Singing by Shekinah, from New
Havm, W.Va., will lJ:o featurro.
Pastor Charles Bush Invites the
rublic.

.

BESTI

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- ,. ' 0.:
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tormanee • Use wil!l lfOtlt Of rear

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Attend

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action cutting,
carving and
much morel

S19 60 .ou

FREE
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Safety
atiol•
by WlfCIIIY
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Dll•••••
028AVSEQ

IUY AN
AND WI'U 'IIIIOW
Ill AIUCI I""E

6"123"
n.o7 SQ. n.

1899

wonderfu I sense of humor In :
evidence throughout thP ~how"

1

P175/70R13

Eagle ST Radial•

241/tC SQ. n.
48.96 SQ. n.
S12~o.ou
I'll IOU

JOIJIT

EATING OUT WITH JUUO: Julio Iglesias is the kind of guy woo
will fly 560 miles just for lunch. 'lbe singer was vacationing on the
Spants~ Island of Gallcta this weekend when he decided to take his
prtvate jet to Santiago de Compostela, Spain, for a taste of his
favortte shellfish and some Gallclan wine.
"The most important thing about me Is that I live Intensely,"
Iglesias told reporters. " It was just an impulse." Crowds of fans
flocked around Iglesias as he stood for pootograhers at the city's
famed 11th century cathedral. Iglesias said he was surprlse:l that
"people are looking more at me than at the Door of Glory."
HOPING FOR AN OSCAR: Bob Hope has had a long, fabled
career but there's one thing he still wants - an Oscar. "I have t~W~
oonorary Oscars and a plaque from the'Academy (of Motion Picture
Arts and Sciences) and a gold medaillon," he said. "They've sure
treated me nice but I still havm't won one for acting."
Hope says he Is studying several movie scripts mw In his •
campaign to get in the running for an Oscar. He spoke during tbe
weekend at the Ocean City, Md., Convention Centl'l' as part of the
town's third annual saltwater Festival, saying hls age, 83, isn't
slowing him down.
"I just don't think about my age," he said. "You know that's just a
number. It's how you feel and how you move. I dance and do tap
dancing and all that stutf."
MOVIE'!I AND TENNIS: Between the pro tennis circuit and
fUming his syndicated sitcom, V!Jay Amrltraj has very Uttle spare
time. Amrltraj will be joining comedian Y akov Smlmolf in the cast
of "What a Country!" about a u.s. citizenship class.
"It's not easy, obviously," Amrttraj said rl. his two-headed career
during a fUming break. "But this Is something I've always wanted to
do." Amrttraj has been on the tennis tour lor J8 years and is starting
to find motivation difficult to come by.
"It's getting harder and harder to get motivated to travel, to play
aU the time ... and compete against these 18-, 19-and :1JJ, year-old _
' guys-.''
Am.rttraj, whose acting jobs include a regular role on the
short-lived "The Last Precinct" sitcom and the James Bond rmvte
"Octopussy," says there are similarities between his careers rut
that "in tennis the results are instant. In TV or film you don't know
for a long time and It depends on a Jot d. ot!J:orpeople-not ju st you."

MARK THIS DATE ON OUR
CALENDAR NOW

6"116'

$279

By WILLIAM C. TROTt
United Press lntemallonal

FRIDAY, SEPT. 5, 1986

ROLL INSULATION
31/2"1 16'

SANTA BARBARA, Callf. IUPI)
- President and Mrs. Reagan
awoke earlier than usual this Labor
Day to watch their younger son.
Ron, take a big step up in the show
business world as guest host of
"Good Morning Ainertca."

SAWDUST DAY

SHEET
NORFOLK ELM
4x8 SH(ET

--People in the

SATURDAY

WEDNESDAY

SHED

ALUMINUM SLIDING WINDOWS
MILL FINISH

- Rutlan4 .V:jllage

CouliCU meets Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
at the Civic Center.

PRE-HUIO

$1199
2'12'

Mrs. Vern Story, visited recently
with Mr. and Mrs. Wyatt Schaefer,
Mt. Verron.
Mrs. Mildred Perry, Athens,
visited rreently with her rmther,
Mrs. Edna Schaefer and helped at
the blood pressure check at the
Senior Citizens, 'lbursday.

•

news----.President's son on mornmg news

Calendar/ happenings

2"x4'x7' STUDS

-------101.1

90 LB.

The book station at Reedsville ts
j:I'OVIng to be pretty successtul. ·
About Z70 books have been checked
out since it was put Into operation
May 31st.
The library Is VCR Ready. Come
check us out.

PREMIUM GRADE

$890

Wllm, II.ACI.
IIOWII, G.DI

Utrary.

Attmdance at til! Free Methodist
Church Aug. 17 was 82. Rev.
Henderson, Pomeroy, was the
guest minister, in absence of Rev.
Miller.
Mr. and Mrs. Hennan Kasper,
Daylon, spent the weekend with
Mrs. Bertha Parker.
Mrs. Edna Schaefer, Mr. and

BLACK, IUINT IAII, BLEND, WHITE
GIEENWOOD BLEND

15 LB• .

CeitB' Is set up and ready for ·
anyooe needing to become ac·
quainlt'd with the talking book disc
.and cassettes. You do not have to
have a Y1sual j:I'Oblem to be eligible
llrthls service. Itforsiimereasona
person Is unable to tum the pages r1.
a book they can be eligible.
Story oour will be held each week
at both the Pomeroy and Mlddle]Xlrt Ubrarles. It will be at Pomeroy
on Thursdays at 2 p.m. and at
MlddleportmFridaysat2p.m. The
Senior Citizen stocy oour will be
Sept. lO at 11 at the Pomeroy

Laurel Oiff community notes

EACH

·

2. 1986_.

Tuesday, September

$299

4" to 5" DIA.

8'

The Daily Sentinel-·

By The Bend

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992-2101

242 WEST MAIN ·
.(

•

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-

�The

Tuesday,

Ohio

Sentinel

,Co11-nty Agents Corner

Aplclllll1n

Farm Science Review - This
year's Fann Science Review will
be reid Ill September 23, 2f, and 25
at the

ManY

Caren Agriculture

:center, Lonjlon, Oblo. Hours will be

. from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. oo Tuellday
· and Wednesday and 7 a.m. to 4p.m.
on 'IbUI'!Idly. ·Advanm .tickets are
m sale at our otfloe. The jrlce l:lr
tiE tickets Is $2.00 ln advance and
$4.00 at tiE gate.
Adding Unla 1D Corn Silage .Treating green-chopped com with
:mn-pooteln nitrogen (NPN) Is an

'I

II

economical metbod for Increasing
the crude protein content
the
resulting oorn silage and reducing
the total cost of pucha.sed p-otetn
supplement.
The recommended rate of. NPN
appllcation lor stlnge to be l!d to
' dally cows Is: 10 lb. oU5% nltrogoen
urea per ton ot green-chopped com
that contains 32 to 38% dry matter
(62to 9!% tmlsture) . The urea may
be spread over tiE top ct tiE loads ct
green-chopped . com or may be
metered Into tiE area Immediately
ln front of tiE blower.
Do mt add NPN 1D high dry
matter sUage (tmre than «l% dry

«

matler or less than 00% IJI)Isture).
Much of tile NPN added to high dry
matler silage Is lost. For hlp
tm~low dry matter silage,
reduce the amount r1 NPN added to
reflect the reduced dry matter
content (27% dry matter - Ji% dry
matter equals .75 x 10 lb. d. urea
equals 7.5 lb area per ton).
Treating green-chopped corn
with 10 lb. d. urea will Increase the
crude protein permntage d. the dry
matter In the ensiled produCt 50%
(from 8% crude protein 1D about
12%). The crude protein percentage .
In the concentrate mixture sOOuld

«

one (I' two large meals. This result

142 bushels per acre. Ohio Is
projected at 128 bushels.
For com growers, Dennis Rend·
erson, an economist, says, and I
quote "The best pricing opportun1ty I ;ee mw lor 1986 com that has
oot already beep prtced, assuming
the p'Oducer Is tn the government
Jl'OgTal!l, ts this: buy CCC PIC

18 IJ!Iually obtained when NPN
treated com sUage Is fed.
Soybean ri.l meal contains slgnlfl·
cant armunts of phosphorus (0.75%
of a dry matter basis) . U soybean
dl meal Is replaced by NPN,
mpplemenlal phosphorus should be
used to replace the phosphorus.

&lt;:;JNCINNATI (UPII - Martin
. Urwalek believes a controversial
· West Gennany treatment that
Includes extracts from sharks and
Venus flytrap plants cured hlm of
deadly lung cancer.
Naw Urwalek Is the focus of a
trans-Atlantic brouhaha seething
with International lntrtgue. and
allegations of medical quackery,
tovernment conspiracy and dirty
trtcks.
The U.S. Food and Drug AdminIstration and the Customs Se!Vlce
have banned German drugs such as
those prescribed by Hans Nleper d.
: Hanover, West Gerrnany lor
Urwalek.
. This angered peoplewlthcancer,
multiple sclerosis or circulatory
·iltseases who -justifiably or not believe the drugs are miracle
potions.
· "Haw can they deny this?" asked
Urwalek's sister-In-law Renate
·:K,arklls. "Martin needs the medica tion like someone woo Is dehy·
drated needs a drtnk of water."
· A few weeks ago Urwalek's
supply ot drugs was seized In
Chicago. Since then l&lt;arklls has
wolited to gain their release. His
supply at home will run out In aoout
· a week.
Karklls' lament Is one heard on a
dally basis, said Charles L. RUey of
the FDA In Chicago.
· The drugs were banned because
they were not proven safe and
effective under FDA rules and they
were labeled In German - Instead
(1 English wltoout adequate
. directions.
"Most of these noncompliance
cases are the hallmark of ll'audu·
lent medical operators. This Ger·
man guy seems to lit the mark,"
Riley said.
· Urwalek began receiving treat·
ments whe~ he returned to his
native Gen'nany to seek Nleper,
known worldwide for umrtoodox,
but allegedly successful treat·
ments of movie stars and mlllio·
nalres with cancer.
Nleper's peers generaly scoff at
h\s treatments and oone of his
WTitlngs appear In medical or
public libraries In Cincinnati.
. Nleper says the oody can Jrevent
disease and heal Itself If kept in
proper condition. He claims In his
wrttings and speeches to have a 00
to 00 per&lt;Pnt successful cure rate.
He describes his treatments as
radical and usually two-fold. but
tiillored to each p:~tlent's case.
With cancer. they Involve egtnlilg the cancerous growth with a

formula romprtsd !l'lmarly of
plant and animal extracts, and
putting the patient on a special dlet.
In Urwalek's case, the treatment
centered on dally Injections of a
drug called carnivora, which
Nleper said was obtained from
Venus Oytrap plants In Flortda.
Other drugs were from sharks and
aprtcot pits, which supply the
controversial drug laetrUe.
FDA olflclals distributed warn·
lngs to Its «flees and custans
officers to the to be on the alert lor
Nleper'steUtale medication. Only a
fraction of !be shipments are
caught.
"The FDA can end no evidence
that the Nleper therapies are
soundly or scientifically founded .. .
sale or effective," the FDA said in a
release.
The American Can&lt;Pr Society
and the National Cancer Institute
also condemn Nleper's llllrk.
But Nlether Nleper nor his
patients seem persuaded by the
criticism, and he has strong
supporters.
He attacks conventional cancer
treatments such as surgery, radla·
lion and chemotherapy as short·
term metOOds that "In the long run
do more damage to the oost
organism than they accomplish
against the cancer."
William J . Kraus, a Cleveland
lawyer, said his late wife was cured
of cancer by Nleper. He suspects
Nleper Is shumed because of a
government plot.
"I Imagine the AMA 1American
Medical Association! leaned on
them. Doctors here don't like a
foreign doctor treating all these
people ilnd being successful at It,"
Krause said. "Our doctors Uve on
sick people. They're not going to
promote pl'l'Ventlve medicine."
. Once. Kraus Invited Nleper to
speak Ill physicians at Mount Sinal
&amp;spital In Oeveland. "They were
absolulely cruel to him," Kraus
said.
Several years ago, Kraus was
able to shake loose his wile's drugs
!rom customs with a la'Wult and
pressure from his congressman.
There remains, however, an aura
ri. Impending doom around Urwalek. l&lt;arklls and her sister.
natives of Latvia, fled before the
Soviet Union overran the Baltic
country In 1944.
"My parents ned from commu·
ntsm and came to this country with
Ideals," l&lt;arklls said. "But someone Is trying very hard to crush
those Ideals for us."

Writt

cate. The math works somethln£
like tbls: Loan of about $1.111 plus
market prtce ot about $1.!il - ·cost
of the certificate d. about $U5
(110% of market prtce) equals net
prtce of Sl.'ro. Add a deficiency
payment of $106 and the total
return comes Ill a respectable $2.75
or so."

5 states
approve
age hike

·'Cure' for cancer
arouses protests

NATO EXERCISES - Two Marines from lhe 24
MAU - Mame Amphibious Unit -manned their
post Moliday as amphlhlous vehicles sailed toward

on

shore near Malangetj, Norway, Monday as part of
the NATO exerelses now underway. (UP!)

Veterans' benefit reductions
concern American Legion
CINCINNATI (UP!) -A reduction In Veterans Administration
seiVIces Is htgh on the agenda of
topics scheduled to be dtscussed
today at the 68th annual American
Legion Convention.
The ellects of Agent Orange, a
defoliant used In Vietnam that Is
suspected of causing cancer In
veterans .and birth defects In their
children, also ts to be dtscussed at
the six-day convention which ends
Thursday.
Dale L. Renaud, national commander of the 2.8 mUllon- member
organization, said the Issue ct
whether the American Legton
should vote to oppose Kent State
University's proposed memorial to
the shootings that took place on the
campus May 4. 1910. will not be
discussed.

"That's a local Issue, and local
Issues we don't like to get Into,"
Renaud said. "We have other
things to talk about, like cuts In
Veterans Administration
services."
The Ohio Amertcan l.egton
adopted a rei;olutlon opposing the
KSU memortal at Its state convention In Cleveland last rronth.
Renaud said the veterans soould
discuss a proposed Korean War
memortal In Washington D.C.
Instead because some soldiers feel
Ignored between the masses cl ver s

from World War II and VIetnam.
"I'm not sure !1ley're lorgotton."
said Renaud, himself a veteran of
the Korean War. "but some feel
that way."
Renaud said the Legion generally
favors the Reagan administration's
foreign and defense pollcles,lnclud·
lng Its support of the contras In
Nicaragua. But IE said the vet!'
rans are angry aooutcuts ln the VA,
and part company with Reagan on
the Issue.
Starting this year, some vet erans
will have to pay for health care at
VA hospitals and clinics, Renaud
said.
"To put It mildly, It's just not
light," he said. "We've opposed It
from the beginning."
Renaud said there Is a hlstorica I
cycle of. cutbacks In veterans' aid
about 12 years after the end of a
war. Current cuts and the mdofthe
Vietnam War fit the cycle, he said.
More than 12,IXKI Legionnaires
and their families are In Cincinnati
lor the convention - the largpst
ever hosted by the Queen Oty.
The conventlon and visitors
bureau has booked 6,IXKI motel
rooms. and the organization estl·

mates the veterans will spend $13
million by the time they leave
Thursday.
Phyllis Schlally, the Illinois
woman koown for denouncing the
Equal Rights Amendent and aoortlon, addressed the delegates Satur·
day and urged themtoget ready lor
the bicentennial celebration commemorating the signing of the U.S.
Constitution.
Schlally, a member of the
23-member bicentennial commlsskln, said Americans must have
more than a big party du nng the
&lt;Plebratlon and actually learn
aoout thedocumentthathasshaped
this country .
"The task of the commission Is to
make It he celebration 1 a learning
expertence," Schlally said .
Schla!ly Is working the convention circuit encouraging people to
participate In the bicentennial
celebration.
Other speakers scheduled to
appear at the convention are
Ambassador Kenneth Adelman,
the nation's chief arms control
negotiator, and Defense Secretary
Caspar W. Weinberger.

\

cal of anti-drug efforts by Washington, with 00 percent saying most
d.ficlals were proposing solutions
for publicity's sake and only 24
percent saying official anti-drug
rhetoric was sincere.
The House Is expected to vote
Sept. 10 on a $2 bUllon to $3 billion
Democratic anti-drug program,
and the White House also ha s
promised a new anti-drug plan this
fall.
The poD of 1,2IO adutts, conducted
Aug. 18 through 21, showed corrern
has SQared since Aprtl, when only 2
percent picked drugs as the major
problem lacing the nation.
Only terrorism has soown a
comparable spurt In concern recenUy, but In this latest survey, It

Seeding is underway
:on.Meigs area roads
B)'lllelwE.Deoley
8GI CGM!h"'&amp;L ! '
1
:
PQMEROY - MelgJ· Coonty
1)\adbankl, aloogwtthSalemTown·
IIJip!VIdbanlll, will be Ml!ded with
mlx1ure f1 Katuclry fe$011! and 1
~etch. The seeding Is sche.~ to lake place fn1m Auaust 28
·to September 00.
· Hyd!Jseeden will be Uled to
apply a slurry r1 ,seed, Ume,
1ertlUzer and lnnOculant (a &amp;erml·
nation aaent). A straw mllcb with
~ wm also be applied.
. Tile ma!b'rik lll!edlng project Is
IJimlored bY the Buckeye Hills
Retource and Development Dis·
.
I

a

lrlct In cooperation with the Meigs
County Cmun!ssloners and the
Sali!m Townah!p Trustees.
Selected s1tee have been cho&amp;m
lor seeding to atabllli!e roadbanks
and to assist IVId malntawtre.
Sites are scattered throupout the
county and total acreage« seeding
Is approximately 12 acres. A local
contractor, Meigs Reclamation
Services, has been awarded the
contract.
Travelers within Meigs county
are asked to be alert for malntenanoo CTeWB and Vehicles from 7:30
a.m. to 5 p.m.

By Untied l'l'es8 lntematlonal
Five more states raised their
drtnklng age to 21, sparking a
rampage by 10,IXKI University d.
North Carolina students. last·
minute buying sprees by others and
grumbling by many young adults
who suddenly found themselves
underage.
With the addition Monday of
North Carolina, Wisconsin, Mlnne·
sota, Iowa and Texas, 41 states
have now avoided the threatened
loss of federal highway funds by
banning the sale of alcoholic
beverages to people under age 21.
The Iowa. Wisconsin and Minnesota laws allow loose who turned 19
before Sept. 1 to continue drinking,
but . North Carolina 3lld Texas
banned alcooollc beverage sales to
anyone under 21.
Alxlut 10,(00 students went on a
rampage In Chapel HID, N.C., hours
before the new law went Into effect,
forcing pollee to blockade Franklin
Street, the main road through the
University of North CaroUna
campus.
At least 18 people were arrested
and thousands of dollars damage
was done to Franklin Street shops
before order was restored Monday
morning. No one was seriously
hurt.
"There were bottles Dying every·
where. a bunch of ~¥loping and
hollertng, people just everywhere,"
said UNC junior David Stebbins.
Merchants said soop windows
were broken,llres were set In trash
cans and beer oottles and cans
littered Franklin St~t. . .
·
"We arrived at about 11 p.m. to
see I the rumors (of a rtotl were
true. They were," said Michael
Helplngstlne. owner of Johnny·T·
Shirt.
"People were just oorilbardlng
the place. The oottles and cans
were breaking against wlnoo\W,:·
said Helplngstlne. who estimated
damage to his store and a nearby
shop at $5,IXKI.
At the College Beverage Co. near
Nonh Carolina State University lil
Raleigh, employee Lisa Lewis
reponed brisk last-minute sales
and added, "Nineteen-and :JJ.year·
olds came In with duffel bags and
stockEd up ."

LOS POLVORINES, Argentina one-time Nazi Gestapo chief secret poUce.
iUPii- If war-crimes prosecutors blamed for the deaths of 2,IXKI Jews
Authorities say Kutschmann disare correct, Walter Kutschmann, and 34 Polish university professors
appeared after the war but In the
the last major Nazi war criminal at during World War II.
1910s was traced to West Germany
large , died whil e · awaiting
"The Lord closed his file, "
where, under the name Pl!di'o
extradition.
Wlesenthal said.
Olmo, he was a director c1 an
But Ill his dying day, the man Wlesenthal said two billet electrtcal firm. The suspect thin
who used the name of Pedro wounds on the suspect!s light leg
fled to Argenttna, where he was
Ricardo Olmo and contended he proved the man was Kutschmann
arrested In November 1983 In the
was a Spaniard although he spoke - who suffered the wounds during coastal ~of Miramar.
fell back to 1 percent ll'om 15 Spanish with a German accent the war.
He was released after IE prespercent In the Times-CBS poll claimed he was a victim of
The funeral service - attended mted a Spanish passport to the
conducted In Aprtl.
mistaken Identity.
by 12 mourners- was closed to the
judge to prove his Identity. Then he
The rising concern over drugs
The man woo called himself media, but 50 )&gt;urnallsts and
vanished for a year.
also was reflected In a reversal c1 Olmo was arrested In November on cameramen were on hand lor his
West Gerrnany persisted In Its
the trend toward tllleratlng mart- an extradition request from West burtal at a German cemetery In Los extradition request, and on Nov. 14
juana use, the poD showed, with 57 Germany. He died of heart laUure Polvorlnes, 25 mUes ou tslde Bumos tbe suspect was traCed by pollee 10
percent of those Interviewed want- Saturday and was burted Monday. Aires.
a Buenos Aires suburb and arrested
Ing possession c1 small amounts
Federal Judge Fernando Ar·
The name "Pedro Ricardo again. He was In custody awaltlnf!.a
treated as a crtmlnal offense. A chlrnbal closed the case Monday Olom" was written In small white court ruling on West Germany~$
Gallup Poll In .1m said only 41 without making a decision on the letters on the hardwood coffin.
extradition request when he died.
percent felt that way.
suspect's Identity, which he said
The suspect's weeping wife,
Wlesenthal . In an Interview with
Five out "' six Americans said was now a "moot point" because of Gerarlda, placed a wreath bearJng . Buenos Aires' Radio Continental,
they had lEard of crack, the potent the natural death.
the words "Delne Frau" -German said Kutschmann wasthelastctt~
cocaine derlvative,·and rrore than
But Argentine pollee, West Ger· for "Your Wife."
major Nazt war criminals yet to be
' half oould provide some description man diplomats and VIenna-based
Authorttles said Kutschmann, prosecuted .
.
of It, The Times said, crediting Nazi hunter Simon Wle581thal say rom 72 years ago, was a chief In the
"Only the Utile fish are left." he
lEavy recent coverage r1 drugs by there Is no doubt that Pl!dro Otmo Gestapo, Adolf Hitler's mtortous said.
.
newspapers, magazines and televl· was rl!llly Kutschmann - a
stoil bt this pubUc awareness.
B11t the public blamed teleVIsion
Public Notice~
Public Notice
Public· Notice
Public Notice
and rrov!es for g18Jl!Orizlng drug
use, and when asked to name a
program or movie that did so, cited
IN THE
comptolnt with-In tw.,ty.
IIIII wtlo. oi p!oinlffa.
"Miami Vice," a last-paced pollee
COMMON PLEAS
=:~
A;r,ta::= ~ht doyo otter tho tnt P\1·
Vlh. Alblrt Oaqlllln. 111d bl cotton, which will bo P\lb·
soow.
COURT
-·~......Ooutt.
¥au Chlrtoo
In ... eo...- ......
Go gl b ond Muono llohld onco MEIGS COUNTY. OltO
w•k ,.r
An NBC-TV official called that a AVERY
Counly, Ohio. Clio No.
GOEGLBN .,d
· 11B.dooo·~ ...... Cll J I ' !M!*&gt;d ond - · obt -Iieut........... tho
mlsperceptlon and denled the sOOw HELENE GOEGLEIN, et ot.
1111 P\16t!tlotion w• bo mlllo
oo!'l IN• clotlit Juno 7. ,
glamorized drugs. "In every case
Ptoln- 1112"'!":•~ Avbo-odln on .,. llh iley of Dot-.
. A.,d 1881 .,d tho IW::r·oill)t
YO.
drugs are .. . shoiNn tQite a very
1ro - . . DARK
DIAMOND
COAL
dlv• for •n•w•
oo.,
ond - . ~
destruCtive habit," 11114 Rick G!t- CORPDIIATIDN. et ol.
.,.._ Alllrt G at : '· n
rnence on: that •••· ,. · ~
les', broadcast standards c1flclallor
d .... ,.. .... •Ciwloo G gil 1 o n d D-donto ... =~ now
In on.. of your lollono 1!&gt;
•• ... ,01 .,............... end wlttw .,._
tiE network.
or Gthorwloo CASE NO. II·CI.·1111
pond • , . . _ toy tljo
NOTICIIY
The poU bad a margin of
'-lllineC
J
I
Doric
ond
Dl ..... Coli ..
d ., Ohio llu'H of Clvi , . .
PUBLICATION
~ ~.,..
O'aw...-Coill
ond
sampling error of plus or minus 3
To
Dooll DIE: ow iii Caol Col'- CooliO'i"l~. ond .... , ..... --....-.~
··~ Wltt!lo'! ~time llltld,
percentage points.
JutiOINnt toy .,_ull wln •w.
pcw:alki~t' ~ ._ lnawn
illlld Ard za. •• -... ....
of """'
"""'
,..._
;,, One . end rorodorld ogolnll you foi tho
oJ'M- olo Dconlltl H. bill '""A:=ond
'·
......_3MObot-tol. · - G
\
ond 81/·100 Dalino l:to42.07U11 ootlof doilllildod In tho - ·
Columlouo, Ohio
; .,_ ..... ~ llcNg!MI, ~ lllgethor wlllo . Wilt Md plolnt.
•
for.,.., othor relief It tow or
Lony E. Sptftoor,
dlfi/P~ 0 . . . 111,Pot••aw.
ond Chtliolll ~ ..d
Ohio, &lt;11781, lidoiNM ftOWIII•
In lllully .. - be ..... to
Clertl of c.., rta.
..._,, wiiiMrootloothllrro :~~::..;.~~ bo I
Molga c..,nty, Ol!lo
t
O
... 12th ..., of JUno. ,_, lllllilld 'Ceiol
ly 'Mortono H - .
'.
d I ond ......~,
IXD. -.of .....lrfl' . . .
Alllly G Jl I 1 lild Hollftl . -.....r~ no ..
:r,-z~l e. 23, 30: '
Gc fllhh, .. t iCI will, »
110)
7, ...
.
You
...
lhot
you
bert 0 D f h. end Chlltll thll :
' of
~
' 1
I
be
Ill
ond M !MI. llr•

,.

....................
a
' ,. ,. =end

.

..,a,Jtii.......
t.tc

-=

~··

CLASSUIDADS

r:;c

...... ....

'

&amp;:

.....

c.r.:; llo.,.. ·;::::r;•d.... ..,,..d
""r.:r:- .......... ,::lfled
.=.r:;

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

Notice

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF
MEIGS COUNI'Y, OHIO
PROBATE DIVISION
VIRGINIA CREW.
E-ofllte
E - of t.so1e M. Price,
Dooe•att

Public Notice

:O":i.";",:'-..,:;,.~9:!; ":.

MectnM!011ofnewmattar.
be fo-1011 end
Bekonlainld bvtheCouncil
tha11hellenoond/ o r - - oflhiVRIIItleofMiddtepon,aa
inoronlllldpiOI*Iy,Hany,be follow~
marshallod and the realSec. I. THAT WHEREAS.
mortgage

title qutated and 11kl property

~d atint tahemoutc.:,.~d,.,ut.

certain provisions wh:hin the

tiffn Codlfiod Ordinllloooohould bo
..w
an aided to conform wit!t
Plointiff
be paid from ... pro- of cunont Slllla , _ .. required
vs.
lite oala.
by tho Ohio Conotilution: and
TIE FARMERS BANK AN 0
y.., oro rlqUired lo anWHEREAS, varlouoord&lt;lan·
the Complaint within_,.,. cooofag-ondpermanont
SAVINGS COMPANY
eight (28Idoyoolterlhlloot naNN how"- pooiOd toy
Of Ponaoy, Ohio, ill at.,
Dlflndont

CASE 1124432
NOTICE OF
PU8UC SALE

roPIICiioaon
·

0

=•!!:,•,:'..,~\:..!:, ::!;· ~=ln'::~oo~kl..::!:

=

OICh- for:lri1t (8)MICCII·

coo: ond

~ ::l.'~ ..:,R~~eo.;,':!':""..,':

t'nobeto Court of Molgo doyofSeptambor,1988,and troctwiththeW-H.Dnono
lite ~-alght (281 dayo for Comp..,y 1o _ . , . and
ec..~~~y. Ohio. 1n c- No.
24432, I witt o11or t&gt;r sate 11 ..,._wiiCOIT\IIMiiOOGntltol publish IUCh riiVioiono; end
WHEREAS, the codiflco1ion
pub!lc .,ctlon on Soptembor dMit.
In the Cll8 of your failure to of auch OtdinanQJI, togtrther
24. 1988 11 10:00 A.M .. 11
the door of the Meigo County lniWM' or othelo·Jise reepond with the nM manar to be
Courthouoo. Pomeroy, Ohio. llrequtotldtoythoOhioRuteo adoptod, the matters to be
of Civil Pnocedura, judgment -dod snd tho10 10 be
tho
by
dofoutt wilt be 101\do1ad ropoatad ora befoowthe cou,..
oituotld In 1he County
cit; now, tit"""""':
&lt;11 Morgo. 1n the s- of Ohio. againot you and for the in lite Comp!Mtt.
Be kortloinad bvllteCouncit
•d In lite Viltoge of PolliOfOy, demond
Ootid 1hio 20th day of of the ViMIItle of Mlddl~~portu
..d looundod ..d ducribld •
Auguot, 1988.
totlowa:
.- .-,.wit
Larry SpanC\11',
SECTION 1. Tho ordinonOOI
loghilng litho NOidClarll of Couill of the Vilage of Mlddtopon.
of I lot i&gt;rmooty (8)26;(812,9, 16,23.30.etc· Ohio. ologonerolondparmanbtlo...... Ill lite ol J .
ent notuoe, 11 l'iilliood. recodi·
docoollil: lhonoo
PUbile N OtIC8
fled.
ond con.,&amp;.
Soutli 1 1\\ dog. E111114 fait;
dilled lnt0
-~
component - ·
-Soutli!PI.dog.woillll IN THE COMMON PLEAS
tho- lido of I lft1ll llroet;
1lll-. ch,.,..,o ond -tiono
- . .. Noi11i 3 dog. _ , 31 COURT. MEIGS COUNTY. within tho 1988 RoplfiC8itlOi11
P111101 to the Codified Ordlnon01 north 37 dog . 0111 GEORGE LEMLEY.
OHIO
cea are h81'8by appro\I'IKI and
-110 toot Ill tho place of
lilalnniog. behg the north part
PlAINTIFF adopted.
SECTION 11 . Tho following
of lot No. 474 in oaid d1y of
YS.
· Ponaoy, and behg the oame THE HOCKING OOMESTIC IBCiiona ll1d chapters are
htnby added. lmll'lded or
proportv convoyed by B. F. COAL COMPANY.
repealed • l'8lp8Ctivefy indillggo. 11 "'· 10 Colherine
DEFENOANT cated
in order to cofl1)1v with
~. , _ - dl1ad 0.
N0. 86r:&lt;/241
....-.11 Stater-:
""
SERVICE
BY
19· tSB2, Md ""
TRA.FftC CODE
PU8UCATION
cowdod io Book 58, 11 PIIIIO
The Hocking Domootic Coal
ond ,....
180 of tho Dood Rocordo of Compiny, Nol10rtvllle. Ohio to
_,

,

••

v-.

,..,..gad

Molgo Couroly. Ohio.
Being tho . , . 1'111 ootolo
OOI:Uipld 10 Mra. JWMI H.
c - . . , . oron~~~r 1toro1n. toy

......

hanby noti111d- k hll b-.
nomod -dant in 1 legal
ction 8'ltlttld 0ecqe l..elnae¥.
plolo1tHI ... The Hoc:Jmg Do...,_ H. Cllflord.
toy -ta• mlltio Colli .....,.,
~- ·. . ,~• ._
"~
Boo•
a dad In
•• ~ •
•• fondonl. Thlo tiGIIoro
of tho Matrlo County Oltllgnod c.. No. 811 Cl! 241

R-...__.
and 1o r.-..10 lnllteC..Ionon
R.....
,. ,_, Vot. rn. l'loeo Court ~·. coumv
~ Molgo County Dood IPon•oy). Ohio.
•~
Tho objoct of tho COR1&gt;1olnt
•re •praad is to ecquire tide to the
II •1 11,1100 ond ..,. be ootd following diiocribad reat-e
for IO&gt;t leoo ....,.tftirdo of toy ordor of the Court.
oaid ~ ..... The
ofoalo aid -..,t of oofolowa:
Said rsal-e io dooc:ribed
tho purdi . . money ohll be
Being tho ourlaoo of lite
for Clilh. in lui. 11 lite time of following diiocr ibad ooal tho oato.
IIJ.wit: A tnct of lond in 100
Yirtrlnio c,_, E..eculrix """' tot No. 383 in Sallobi "V
oflho Eototoof
• ~ M ~ "----ld T~. Meigo County.
Ohio, d11crlnd • folloWI:
(812. 9. 11, 31c
llagJnnlng 11 1he nor~ Mt
Public Notice
oointr of Ell)loli Fnzltr~o one ·
. - - - - - - - - ·Mel ....., ain•hllidliiidlw
ocrelollllld....,. baing ir dra
IN THE COMMON PLEAS of the pulitiO .l'olll
· COURT OF MEIOS COUNTY. -.g ""'- Mlddt~ 10
.
OHIO
Gittlp ... Ohio; - · 221 fool Ill lite
DIAMOND SAYINGS &amp; 81 dog. edge of i ct111: thanoo In o
1.0cY! COMPANY
""!111 I ly ...,!liM 218
VI. .
fool along 1he iidgo of I dlfllo
line of 100 ICrli lo1
CLFFORD R. SMITH, ol at 1he No. 380; thonco - 220 fill
o.rtandonla
1o the -oflhepublicroad;
c.. No. 88-r:&lt;/·98
then.. IOU1h 24 dog. NOTICE BY
242 fool along lite of
PUBUCATION
y.., oro hlllby notified thot llid pUblic rood to the P- of
beginning, cont1ining 1
~-- nornod 0-d· 10/100 .....
alllnlhlactlonentltled
R-.rco Volume 121
OiuiW»ild S..iiOI Loan Com&amp;011 Molgo Ccolnty Dood
pony. - · vo. ctllford R. R-.
.
.
Smith. 01 at., Dofoudarto. Thlo
Tho pro,.- of oaid IOikon lo
. -..r.o-llllgnad~­
No. 118-CY·BII. ond lo ,_King 1ltet ... ....,.. Jill-...,
In tho Court of CCMIII\Chl- ilt.te bl , I &amp;did to .~
of Molgo County. Ohio, plaindll, George IAdtll't. toy
4117119. The of ... - o f the Courtlndfor ouch
tallof eo moy be juot ond
Cciqi'M-judgmont ogalnot lite Dolwrdoor~ Ctlf. oqultabla.
Tho -.c~on~ io requirld to
lord A. Smith, io tho oum of
an- tlto·comploinl wHitin
.22.01 1.09. wnh lntorotl _,ty-eightdoyo_.,.,.,
II 1 of 16.38 par publico1ion of 1ltio notioo.
1 Card of Thanks
which 1"11 bo pubtilhld onco

=•_... PI••Js•

769..

~,...

.._ ·r-r-......._

·-

llle

family of Addie
J1111 Burntm wishes
to extend their
thanks to those
people who
expressed their
symP.Ithy in- the
fiiiiiJ'S time of
sorrow.

---for·~
· tho loot publication will
be made 011 the 30th day of
Sopt81Tibor, 191!6, Md the

--eight daya for onwitt co ....,CI II tha1 lima.
In Cllfi of tho foluN of 1he

dlfwldlnt tD . .I'Mr or odw·
wloo _ . t .. -lowd toy
Ohio tluleo of Civil , _ . . .
ludgmllll will bo •••ad
ogalnot - "" ... llllif ..

1501 . t 3

poop-

erty toy pollca. (Added!

505.01 (d)l'lnolty for anim-

als

running

at

large .

(Amended)

a. Auction

register / tag

APP~~~:r:JOF

Hmy C.

Watson. Localldat 310Wellcall $1. Watchforslans
on Buttemut Ave. in Pomeroy, Ohio.
.
'HOUSEHOLD"

Admin! no-frost refrigerator, Jl" Qassic Sears

nalgas range

w/doooble ovens, recliner, portable B&amp;WlV &amp;s!Jna, end tables,
vanity dresser, mist lablas,
cabinet base,

119re0,

Hoover

"Free Estimates''

Probll18 Coo~~ Oh~. Meigs
en Auauot20. 1986. in the
Meigs County Probo• Coon.
Case No. 26.235. Jay c.
R...tt, 3747 Poe Rood.
Medir11, Ohio 44256. appoi'rtedAdminlotratorofthe
o1tata of Truman A. Ru.....
d1iC8180d.
11118 of Union
Avenue. Pomeroy,
Ohio

PH.

949·280 1
949·28 60

•ROOFING
8t
GUTTERING
New &amp; Repair
•SIDING SOFFIETT
•REMODELING OF
All TYPES
•TREE TRIMMING
•CONCRETE WORK
26 Years Experience

TOWN
&amp; COUN11Y
VETERINARIAN

••e-2m.
LOST in O.J . Whho Ad oroo1

CUNIC
Paul E. Shockey, DVM
PT. PUASAIIT OFFICE
305 Jackson Ave.

CooncioglootinGoort~•Crooo.
1 08

HART'S

Tues. 6:30·1; Fri. 1-2 pm

~·t·~~~'\r-~,1M0.f:'! ~eaoo .coll

Saiurdoy 10-11:30 om
LARGE ANIMAL &amp;
SUIGEIY BY &amp;PPT.

Lost .. rthoiVinton-Smallwhho
female dog. Aoword. Coli eu388-8178.
.

PH. 304·1175-2441

lott: mi11fngforovar 2wetkl. e
yellow cow with light flee with
yellow IPOtt. From the Whaley·

R=E.Buck.
lin
to Judge
ctort K. NBisalroad.
(Bi 26, 191 2. 9. 310

SMALL ANIMAL HOURS
Mon.-Wed .-Thurs. 3·5 pm

CONSTRUTION
992-7811

or
No Sunday (ails

811511 mo,

YOUNG'S

ACCENT

CARPENTER
SERVICE

FENCE CO. . ANY

- Addono and romodellng
- Rooting end guHor work

742·2027

45769.

BEND AREA CALL
Ripley Office
For Hours

PH. 992·6931
liter 5 Call

3 Announcements

992·6215 or 992·7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

"Frea Estimates"
lnstallatiort Available
41 ""

4· J5.'86·1C

!CUT OUT FOR FUTVRI Ul!l

BISSELL
BUILDERS

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

without lien and without recourse or warranty. Caah

8 ids witt be occepted ond
Hiler reaeNes the right to

"AI Reasonable Prius"

bid and reject anY and/ or all
bida. Vehicle may be in·
ID&amp;Cted by contacting Pet

985-3561

M•u•
•Washers •Dishwashers
~II

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

Hill (8t41 992-2126 9:00
AM to 5:00PM.
!9)2. 1tc

•Renges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freeren

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS

PARTS and SERVICE

4·5-tlc

IODY WOIK $10 Por Hr.
C""'lot• Car Paioilng'3 75
Pil Sirlpiog/Col!r (...,. biro
C&amp;L PAINIING
Chootor, Oh.
PH.

605.12 Report of oscapo of

exotic or dangerous animals

loddedl
613.01 Js) Deflnkion of
"bulc iii\'IOIAnl". (Amended)

621.02 Venting of h-o
ond bumn. (Amondedl
626 .02 Fotolllcallon
(AmlndadJ

&amp;2&amp;.(1;3 """"'""- of
ofllcor or prMobi,.,...
_..IArnlndodl
!12&amp;.011 F - II&gt; rojiOrl a
crlnto.IArn-1
637.07 Endengoring child·
"'" (Amended) .
&amp;37.18 T.........v pnrtec·

SALES &amp; SEIYICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILII, OHIO

ROOFING

Sec. Itt. Thio o.-coohall
takeellect..,dbelnfotoeflom

and -

1he -

dolo
-·~•Jby'-.
........ lite 11 tit doy of

AUfiUM 1Jae,
Al'T£8T: Jon Buck. Ctlrto

o-,-.

PNoidont of Council

' Midclei&gt;on. Ohio

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Peintln.g

FLEA
MARKET

MEIGS COUNTY
FAIR GROUNDS
POMEROY, OHIO

DEALERS WANTED
BUYERS WANTED
Come One-Come All
Reasonable Set
Up Rates

lhllr Ntw Ma ....,.-

We'll See

You At The

AlsD Transmlulon
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
6-17 -tfc

1·3-'86 tic

J.R.'s REPAIRS
TVs, Antennas

949-2263
or 949·2168

Satellite Sales
Installation
Service

•SYLVANIA

•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY

2·11:16·tfn

•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATEIUT£ SAlES &amp; SERVICE
Wt Htr.t ~ Fill fl•
S.. p Ttthltlu

Electronic Organs
Mobile service
lV-1114·843·5248
APPL.-614·949·2145

ti Dlft

New

loco~""'

RIDENOUR

161 North lo&lt;OIMI

TV &amp; A,PPLIANCE

Middloporl, Ohio 4S76D

CHESTER-915·3307

SALES &amp; SERVICE

8-20.'86 lfn

We C•rry fishing Supplltl

Poy Your' Coble 8o
Phone IIIII Hero
' IUSIIISS PitON!
1m1 "2·6550
IESIDINCI PHONE
t6t41 H2 · 7714

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992·3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILl DIRT

F•ll , '" r, ,,,,

THE QUAUn
PRIMT $HOP

Got ah..d of Old Min
Wint•. Heve thou

F., All y,., 'rlrlllll NM

furnece moton

checked, cluned and
betrlnga oiled for

PWS: Offi&lt;t Soo"lin I.
Furniture, Wtdtling
and Graduation
Sialio-y, Mognotk

'15.00
IUSS EIIC111C
MOTOI IEPAIR

SigM, tulob• St1111ps,
lusin•• forn,

lo&lt;otol lthlod lliiilint (ntk
Wotor Dllfl. Off If. II. 124

Copy Soni111, Etc.
255 Mill St., Midflloporo

mu•. 0110

... 2711o..,olcl.
PH.

104 Mulberry Aw., Pomaroy

992·33453121 ~ 0

--------.1...--------tl

r

HEARING TESIS WEDNESDAYS
c:s. Co~erized H•rirw ~ir Stltc~
z SWim Molds • lnt1np1eting SttYices
FREE

-

10.1-lfc

a:

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
::t Licensed Clinical Audiologist

AUTOMAnC

-z

TRANSMISSIONS
REBIJLT &amp; REPAtiD

SUGAR RUN

FLEA MARKET
fOR INFORMATION

PH. 992·"49
IIIII

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

SWEEPER and
reptlr, pan1.
up tnd delivery,

We can repair and rll'
core 11d1ators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiato11. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

. 'HOURS

.

BLii.E·stREAK ;

Cluntr. on•

TAXI TOKENS ON SALE AT
SENIOR CITIZENS
SWIIHER·LOHSE
HARTLEY SHOE STORE
ClK MARKET
VILLAGE PHARMACY
FRUTH

Racine Gun Shoottl)ontored by
Racine Gun Club. Every Sunday,
beginning 11 1:00 p.m . Fac1ory

Choke, 12 guaga s t.otgunt.

No hunting, fflhinfiJ , 1wimming
or tr~tt.paulng on my farm. J . H.

SomeNIIIt.

4

. . . ..,. .

·- ·-

.

.

,'

•

SUttRIOI .,,.
SIDING' CO~

YIIYl &amp; AUIIIiNUM

Comp"'• Outtor Woli&lt;
Complete Aamo•llng
Roofing of •tl Typeo
work8d In
••

.. -·

RAYMOND
.. ·'...

.

.

~-

-~

,.-=-:--;-;-:-..- 9 Wanted To Buy

.,

We pay ca1h for latt model clean
used car~ .
·
· Jim Mink Chev.· Oida In c. ·

Bill Gene Johnt&amp;n
614-446-3872

2 long haired gray kitta1, 7
weeki old. call 814-446-951112 .
Wooden p•lleti .Stop byGellipoH• Daily Tribuna Office. 826
Third Ave .. Gallipoll1, Oh.

6, 6 weeki old puppiea, bfeck
labldore and 1heep dog. 3045 klttentto good home. 8 week1
old, litter trained . 304·676·

1214.

TOP CASH paid tor '83 mo~el
and n&amp;w"er Uled Clrt. Smith
Buick-Pontiac. 1911 hlltm
Ave., Gaiiii)Otil . Call 614 -448-

2282.

WANTED TO BUV utld wood &amp;
coal hetter1. SWAIN'S FUANI·
TUAE, lrd, &amp; Oliva St. Oallipo·
lis . Call 814 -441 -3168 .
Old Oriente! rug~ wanted . Any
size or condition. Cal toll he

1·800· &gt;133· 7847.

300-676·6361 .

Wanttd 151o 10 IC,..IInd. Mu·l l
be in Vinton Ele. School Dlltrlct.
Call 614- 388-9342.

Duell wing bantam roonen .

Good ltOk·O· matic lt0\11 Cill

Small cuddlv kitten, 4 monthJ ,

300-896· 3972 .

N/Mf..--~'!

8t4-38B·9038.

, '

•

..

Middleport

&amp; Vicinity

., .. -'~ : ' ' .•

.

·

&amp; Vicinity
2nd, lrd . 8:30 to 1 On Fourth

Ava. acrou from Foodland.

Yard Stle Wed. &amp; Thurs. Sept . 3
&amp; 4. Old At. 160 at Evergreen.
Coa rnidence.
Sept. 2·3 4 Famity Y•rd S.le

lnftnt to tdultt clodllng. baby·
walker. etc. Boob. nictln•ckl .
Whitt houM before Mcintyre
Park Rt. ns. 9· 1

3 Ftmity Ytrd Se/•170 .,d 571
Jay Drflte. Thurlday Only 8·5.
Crllftl. glrl1 clothing end m•y
toOd Cllll'l jean1.
(Jar11a Sale Metlge Grocery
abovt KtniUOI Ortv•lnn . liCit.
2 • 3. 8:00· 1:00. Lot1 of
cloth II ..
3 Family Ytrd Stle. Boya, ~rll,

mer,.. woman• clothing.

eood

winter coatt. HouMhold mite.
D•vkl Caldwell ret . Addison ·
Bultvlllt Rd . Mon.·TUH· Wid .
Sept. 1.2.3, 9am to 1
Garag1 Sale % mite off Bidwell
Rodney Ad. on F1irview Rd .
Sept., 2 a. 3, 9 to 6. lots of good
hemt.
4 Family Yerd Sale in Mercer·
ville. Tuet . &amp; Wed .
'V•d Salt fOf Apo1tollc Goeptl
Church Sept . 3.... 5.8 lit Clipper
Mills hit trdtr on left. Baby,
chhildren
&amp; big womenl
clo1hiflg
plus odd16
111d1, 10· 4.

s•

Mtving 1nd ~rd ule. Stipt.
2.3.4.6.6. Twp . Rd . 79 . ~ mne
in blclt of Melgt Fair Grounds .
fll'W tool• tnd antique&amp;.
August 29th end 30th, Sept .
2nd and lrd. Je., Craig. 483
Sl•th St., Mlddlepon. 9:00-1
Something for ev.-yonel
.

September 3. 9:00-15:00. 2
ul•. Aiggt Crnt abova hit·
am High. Wicker furniture,
1tove , childttn's c lothtl ,
wrought Iron pots.
·

Two family . September 3.
Roc:Qprlnga FeirgroundtatFred
Goagltln1. 9:00 •m. Rem

........

810 8.

S.-d. Middtopon.

September 1 throuGh I . lllddlng, linW11. IPretclt. drep•,
curteint. dilh•, pota, plna,
Avon. cklthing. amen ..,.,llencee. Tappan gu rll'lge, bedroom

.,ite, ltrge chllir, ...,.. •Yttllm.
jewelry, Khool drum, lamp1,
loti mi•c·
Rac:lnt , acro11 from CrosS...
September 2 to 1 111:00 til diric.
Loll of mile . 114 · 849·2879.

At Maudl Smith r•ldtnoit ,
Brick St .. Rutl.nd . September
3rd •nd •th. 9 :00-•:oo. Rein
tanCIIt.

560 Bro-- Sl . In Mid '~
Chr.
port. Sept. -~bt, 2nd, 3rd

9 :00-4:00. Numeroua lttma.

li Famltv Vtrd
S._:~t . 1-3,
1:00- 15 :00. Good meu,

Sept. 2nd. 3rd. 4th. llh. TW.,
womtna • children clothing, hMttri, ....,. . ., w..t •••·
11eo llrge lind womrlins olD- blcydll. toyj, cklthtl. IHttMt.

thing, curt•lns. toyt, Hdt· Bwttemut Av. .• PometO~. . ..
prNCit, knldc kniCkt . wtcker.
hornt interior, loolllllr• &amp; mJdl 1643llncoln Heights, Pomeroy,
mort, 7 mil• eltt of Bidwell. 1 Ohio. 9:00-15:00. Yamlha 200K
mit" wut of Ch81hlre on At. 3 wh•ler, Chrinm~~t tr .. with
15154 .
loti of trim, electric mixer, f ..h
equtrlurn.
uld dlthel,
Vtrd Sale Sept. 4th &amp; lith, 9-15. bonlll. books, ltmpl, fruit t-n.
Glgtnlc Yard Stlt. Lott of nice rug (braided} and much more.
cloth•. 1hoet, IOVI, furniture. _
Sop_to_m_
..
_••_•_.,_d_&amp;_••_·_ _
Something for everyone. Rain Of
thlnt. Countf'l Air Eltlttl. 1/• 3 ftmlly. Frld.y, September IS .
mile Dff Rt. 7 on GeorgM Cr... Rultic Hill1, SyrtcuM, Ohto.
Rd.
Winter com. Rein at thin..

.

Chorry P - 11«1. Ciothoo,

Mile.
Oareg•

1 :00-4:00.

at oautlon . llghNIIf'll ...... on
~t. llby lwnl. cktth-. b••· M~~t. women, aktl .....
prlld1. curtainl. toys. Stpt. 3-4 houllhold mile. Ttem.. 1 mH.
8 to 4.
lanatviHI County Ad. 10, t)p.
t• Ad. Stpt. 2nd, 3rd. and 4'th.
Yard ule from 10 tu15. Wadn11· 10:00·1 :00. Phone 114-742·
day &amp; Thursday. S*flt. 3 &amp; 4 . 2 2881 .
Ne~hborhood

a

~:~; i ....

Septembtf 3rd, 4th, Md lth.
John Tilli1'1 te~kltnCI abOve
Eutern High School en ftt. .7 .

l.t• Septtmblr 4th.
H.,m~n •lclenat,
Fivo famHy - · aaro, Alo TytOt Blvd .. Aoolna. Cki1111ng,
Grinde. Poot oollltlo. tum right ...,._ ....... ..,~ - ·

Rd .

Gtrllll Nlt.Junotion At. 7 &amp;
218 . Tllura .• Fri.,
Sat. Sept.
4th. lth ... lth. 8 til 1

N.E.C.A. CONTIACTOI ·
'.

lo1t: Poodle, white with apricot
coloring on back and tart . Lon
around Htrrlsonwllle trN In
vicinity of Vance Rd. and P8ge-

Giveaway

mWee out

GREAT BEND ELErtRIC, Inc.

882·21

3&amp;. Call

L.olt Hereford ttllr 416 lb.
lawrence Powell . Glenwood .
304·576· 2621 '

Georges Cree«

448 -0294.

m"ou1 to mention . Rain
ICMcMII.

1.07 Sycainort
PH. 9'92-7075
PO!IIti'Oy, Oh.
7:00A.M. to 1:00 A.M. Monday thru Saturday

PAT HILL

ANd

villt Rd. Call 114-992-77-78 .
!150 . reward.

Kriner RoN s.pt. 3 &amp; 4 .
Community Ylfd Stle. Aduh
tnll children clothing. Dilh•.
~1oy1,
pen1. ..... , ., mtnUn,
11'1\111 eppN.,._, lteml to nu·

.CAB CO• .

·'

County

•••de•.

ASHLAND
190 • • • • ,AVE.
POIII!IOY, ...

Konlval firms at Jet. of St. R-ts.
681 end 892. near PagwillaMd
Snowville. Pouibtv hat got"" Jn
with another herd. PI••• ..call
collecl &amp;U-898-7229 or &amp;14 ·
693·3297.

·······aaurpons······ .... .......P.om·e;i;y-········ ·

FREE ESTIMATI:S

(B) 2&amp;; (91 2. 21c

64 Misc. Merchandise

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

fann Eq•lp~r~ent
Paris &amp; Service

rulinMI or delinquency of a

(Amended)

Rl. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

Authorized John DHrt,
New Holklnd, Bush Hog
Farm Equipmenl
Doalor

lion-·
JAmondedl
837.18 Contributing to unchild. IAddedl
541 .03 Criminlll damaging
or an&lt;lengorina. (Amended!
541 .04 Crilninal Miocltlel.

Roger Hysell
. Garage

BOGGS

Howard L Writesel

cushions. 2 fishing pot.,., &amp;

and

V. (. YOUNG 111

NOTICE Of
PUBLIC SALE
Tho following vehicto will
be offered at public oole on
September 8,1988111 :00
PM 11 Pot Hilt FOI'd, 461 S.
3rd St., Middleport. OH.
45780.
1981 FORD F2501FTGX26E88KA22392.
This vehicle is being offered

Mill cr... a&lt;eo. cart e • ··•· ·
•8a3.R-ordlifound
Lost FrMiay evening ot Tycoon
Boot ramp-2 poddloo. 3 boot

614-949-2009 after &amp;:00 p.{n .

work
(Free Eotimoteo)

Public Notice

Male bieek Lab. Caoh r-•·•·
call 81Hoi-0370.

Found : 6 weell old tan tnd whitt
pup. lntaniC1ion ot St . Rt. 124

Ann ou neements

- Concnte work

- Plumbing and electrical

ESTATE AUCTION

lllis is the perso111l property of the la1e

New HOIIIII Built

Eltata of Truman A. Ru,..il.
d11C8180d, Case No. 26 .236 .

dogs .

IAmendedl

CALL:

SATURDAY, SEPT. 6, 1986
10:00 A.M.

*VINYL SIDING
AWMINUM
SIDING
0 ILOWN IN
INSULAnON

BISSBL
SIDING CO.

NOTICE OF

505.03(bl Penalty for loiuoo

to

SEPT. S-6·7, 1986
-tnlho-llliil•
OCT. 3·4·5, 1986
~;;,-=
NOV. ·8·9, 1986
Meigl CountY Couwnon

We also wish to
PleooCourt
(8126; (9) 2. 9. , 8. 23. 30. etc
extend our thanks to
the nurses at
Public Notice
Vete11ns Memoria I
ORDINANCE NO. 1174-88
Hospital, the
doctors, and the
An on~n...,. 10 oppro ...
adopt ond ..,... tho 1988
Home Hea lth Cart
noploceio,." 10 lite
Center for their help
Codified Ordinoncoo:Torop•t
in the Cll1 of Addie.
......,... 1n coiotiiC1 - .
~~~~~~~~~~w~~~:~and~~ ~ ._
8
Public 8alt

0

773-5521 .

'* -

G:,-

or ttrevld IITIIH CS.k lqb
~;::====:::==;r;:::======mr=======:::;1 LOST
McCormictc Rd ...... C1M 014-

Public Notice

-g --.. ,

Services held for last at-large Nazi

=

Public

6 Lost and Found

Uttle whrte on Mdl- Lollt In Cit.

.!~~~~~~=r=~~~~=:r~~~~;:~=r-=:::;;~;;~::--

l'lrrluont10 lite ordor of thii

New poll uncovers support
for anti-drug abuse struggle
NEW YORK tUP!) - Ameri. cans are so concerned aoout drug
abuse that two-thirds of them are
ready to fight back by paying more
taxes and three-fourths of fuUtlme
Workers would take drug tests, a
poD pobllshed today showed .
Thirteen percent of time Inter. vieWed In The New York Times·
· CBS poD gave drugs precedence
wer unemployment or fear of war
a$ the nation's most Important
l&gt;l'!lblem.
· The poD, published In today' s
'fllne8, showed 51 percent said drug
tests coukl reduce Ulega! drug use,
and «&gt;percent said the same thing
of .stlff'er penalties lor users and
·sellers.
The public, however, was skeptl-

Business Services

PHONE
992-2156
Or
OaiMJ Stnhlltl Cbuititd Dtpt.
Ill Court St., PoMUIJ. Ohio 45169

bereducedlotakeadvanlageoftHs . The Forecast- The 1986 com certificates now In sufficient quancbange. The usual reduction Is 2% to crop will be a wl¥lpper. Even tlty to cover the 19!16 crop, then at
4%.
though acreage grown Is down, one ha!Vest put tiE cropthe~r ~ ·
NPN 1s used more ettlclently In r1 tile greatest ylelda per ilcre Is Immediately redeem
oan
tile syntlrsls of protein by rumen predicted. A national yield d. 12M • PIC certificates, sell, and pocket
bacteria U ft Is led In numerous rushela per aCl'l! ts projected by the the loan receipts plus the sales price
small ~als per day rather than In USDA; Dllnols leads the way with minus !be cost of the PIC c:l!rt!tl· ,

The Daily

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Tickets .now on sale for annual F8rm Science Review
ay IOHN C. RICE
CcwniJ&amp;t=d•AceM

2, 1986

....... P1.Pieiiianf .....
&amp; Vicinity
.............. ........... .........
Yard Bote. Sopt. 3 .,. 4. Woct

end Tllure. I( • k Mo~le Homa1.

Lo141 .

-aato.....nlod.,AOod.

:i't:1J.:~ ~ 1:00. I
' .
.

-

�'I

Page- 10 - The Daily Sentinel
9

~anted To Buy

Pomeroy

LAFF-A-DAY

44

T,

Buvine dolly OOfd. oilvor coint,
rlngo. jtwolry, 1toriln1 w.,., old
colna, .,.,.. eurr~ncy.
prl·
IMI. Ed. Burkett hrblr hop,
2nd. Avo. Midcllopon. Oh. 114·
992· 34?1.

Very nice apaclout 2 bdr., Nfr.,
renge. covered petkl. In town,
qulat ttrllt, no pett, t17G end
dep. a ref. Cell Esrl Topt.

114-441-0332 doya, 445-0151
... o.

f 1111\l i11JIIi'llt
.'d : rv1,. t' :.

Fumlahtd apartment, tecond
floor. 3 roomt with privtt• btth.
Reterencet required. Call 114·
448·2216.

'

"

114-441-3368 .
Full tlmtr • part time In nurtlng

•tt. with tkperience tnd for
training. Apply at Pinecr•t Ctrt

Bafoo

Conllr.

••

X-ray Tldtnlclen, AART Dllrtlfl-

cotlon prol.,od. At -

"We don't have one, but
• g,II
t hank5 f Or askln

ono

.,.... axperlince d.. irllf. Part·
' ttmt I Winings 1 wttk and
.....,. Olh« weokond . PI'/ lo
comm«tlllrltt with explfiwu:e.
r-.u me to lox TeO In

S~nd·
e~rt 1~;::;;:::::;:::;~::,-;;::~~~~===1
of
the Gollpolll Dolly Tribune,
au Third Ave .. GolllpoUo, Oh 31 Homes for Sale
34
Busineu
46831 .
Buildings
PhtrmaeitU naldedl Fruth Phtr· 3 bdr. houllllfgt \'trd. Olfden,
mtc:y t.. poeh:lont for reg.
ph•mtcllt In 0 tllipolit, Mlddl•
port tnd Welllton Ohio. c.tl Don

8 mi. from town wi'th reterancet,

1186 por month. Coiii14-25117B1 .

Pullin, 614-441·0474 .
lmmeditte mlfllgtmlftt polled
for ~ctl r•lturtnt butln••·
Some experience ntellttry.
PtuM tend rtlllmt to T· 70 in
ce,. of the GtiUpolil Dtlly
Tribune, 825 Third Ave.. Gelll-

poHo, Ohio 46131 .

Wenttd tecurity couple to Uve in
IPirlrMnt C0"1Jiu for freertnt.
Must bl bondtble a hwe
rllftNnce. Ctll 304·876·&amp;806
or 814 -441-9280 .
· Women to Clrt for elderly tHy in
h• horN, by the WMik or 11 We
· ln . CoU 614-992-3223.

3000 govemment jobs lltt.
•11.040-•69,230 yoor. Now
.hiring. Coli 806-187-6000 ht.
~-990&amp; .

· flay Auembly World •714.00
. per 100. GutrltltMd prfmtnt.

~ No11t. .
~ envelope :

Oueltty home, newty remod"ecl
choice kJCition on Coll~gt Ad.
Syrecu11, ntw comp ..., kltch.,
ltld ltundry, eir condlt6oned,
l•ro• lot. &amp;U-992· &amp;324 .
&amp;roomhou11. 1.2ecr•. Double
cer gerage. loctted on Rote Hill.
Bargain priced *20.000. Call

114-178-2&amp;13 .
Rtedtville, by owner. Two b
tht price of one. 2 bedrooms,
living. dining room, kitchen,
bath with extra room. All fully
c.,..eted . Lara• porch. fenced
ysrd with , .. Illite T.V. Alto
apartment which includtt 1
bedroo~. living room, kitchen
.,.. wHh bsth. worbhop and
g~rjge. Forced sir gil htlt, own
wet• wtll. lqelot end mtlnte•
ntnoe hN tiding. t41.000. Call

Lots

&amp; Acreage

Acre rntrk:ted building lots.
Aodni'Y·Herrilburg Rd. Electric,
rurel wettr. Calll14 · 2~1 - 15417 .
Aahtan building lott with pubNc
w•tlf, mobHa hornet permitt~ ,

304·&amp;71-2331 or 304-8712287.

114-992-821&amp;.

Hi! Ill di S

6908 .

41

Houaes for Rent

Duplex for rent 846 Second

114-441-9160.

hou. .. Pt. PleMtm and Gallipolis. 114·448-1221 .

14800. Phone 114·H2· 1217.

Ulce nM, Mod. 12· 12

gttu~

30' full 1500. 032 Stihl dooln·
NW

like new UOO. Ctll 814-

Putlln 814·44&amp;-0474.
HI TECH l.P.N.t netdld for Ptrt
time priv1te dutv In Point
Plttttnt trM, caN HCS Nursing
Service, South Cherleeton, 304718-399&amp;. 9:00 AM to 5:00
PM.

Situations
Wanted

0&lt;

114-992·2089.

Newly' remodelld 9 yesr old
home in Hldlory Acns at
Tuppers Pltln1. 3 bedroom•.
gsrqe. nM cerpetlng, nf!W
.tectrictl JYitem. Located an
beauttful 1 aer1 lot. Ctll I 14 ·

992-7193.

•no\ tcr• on C.R. 28, jutt out of

A1clne. 3 bedrooms, full b...
ment, flreplact. wood-bum.-.
cloJed petk), central 1ir. Private
tttting . Csll afttr 8 :00 p.m .

114-949-2191 .
3 bedroom, 1 'h ttory hcx.~se in
M~dlepo,. . Completely remodaled. Prtced 10 tell. Shown by
tppoint....,t onty. Csll 814-

992-5018.
We ht~Ve VICancy for tld•ty
g.,tltman. RPOm and botrd,
alao •eeping room. Ctll 814·

992-8022.

Blby sitting In my home. Full
time or part time on Ntw Lime
Aotd in Rutlltld . 814· 7il2 -

2778.

N. Perk Drive. two bedroom, full
b•emenl. centre! 1ir cond.
forced elr a• htet. dltlch ..
garege, IIUIM tiding, good
loc.~tlon , close to hot:pitll. bank.
drug end grocery itor•. 304-

575· 1999.

Auu me Jo.n. 3 bedroom home.
f.mlly room. with wood burn•.

fancod yard. 304-912 ·2397.

Wanted to Do

32
L.. aon1 on Ill woodwind lnltru ments. oboe, balloon. hute.
clsrinet. ux. Call Lor• Snow

614-2&amp;1-1114

Will do weUpapeting. Free M:timatt. Low rst.. . Phone before

3:00 p.m. or sfter 7 :00 p.m.
814 ·992· 3125 .
WHI do babysitting in my home.
dly shift. Mondty thru Fridi'W

.. ~ . 304-876-&amp;45&amp; .

Furni1hld haute 2 bdr .. e195,

131 reer4thAve.Gslllpolit. Ctll
448·44 1&amp;after 8PM.
For ult or rent 3 bdr. 1 beth,
Ieitch., sppl. Including gsrsgt.
L~ed 18 Porttmouth Rd ..
O•llipolll. Sec. dep. • rtf.
required. Rent with option to
buy pouibte. Call 8 U -441-

0254.

Ap•rtmenu tnd houltt in
Pomeroy lf81. Depo111 rfMiuired.
Pay own ~llhiee . 1-814-992·
2381 dsys.
3 bedroom, 2 bath, sll electric
homt In New H.ven. W.Va . No
childrlf'l 1nd no ptt1. C1ll
814·949-2470 after 5 :00p.m.
Shown by appointment .

2 bedroom houl8 in Middleport.
Call av«~lngt 814 · 982-34&amp;7.
4 room houtt with b1th. No

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOilLE HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WEST, GALUPOLIS. AT 36
PHONE 814-441·7274.
10xl50 Mtrtttt 2 bdr. liking
11 .800. For more inforft'lltion

clll 114-268-1146 .
1873 Cameron trailer,
n.wo cerptt , n.wo Mght1 • ceiling
fsn . porch , ui'ldtrplnnlng .
blocks, ntldt ul•. U .100.

Busineu
Opportunity

1170 Rosemont 3 bdr., 1 bath,

ING CO . recommends that you
do buU.•• with peoplt you
know , snd NOT to ttnd monev
throu.-. the m1U until you htve
inv..tigated the offering.

Mutt Nil 1178 Nuhua 12xl0
good cond. with 1 Ox1&amp; room,
ti,OOO or a,.tt offer. Call

Need axtrM M)ney? Friendly
ho~ toy
tw• immediet:e
openings tu men~gtfl and
d~nttrato,. in thte " "· It'•
Hly, fun and profitable. We
over 100 exciting toyt and
gifts feftlrtng the ntw .ntmtted
ttllcing doll "Cricket'' whldt will
be adv.-tistd on nelionlllV . No
cnh lnv•tnwnt. no eolltctlng.
no delfv.,lng end no llf"Vice
d\1rge. All you nted iud•irtto
mekt rrGnw;. hiVe fun tnd efM
hours of IPtc• time. No exp•
rlence neceaMrv. C•ll 1-800·

1973 Bsron 12x815. 2 bedroom.
1 Y, batht. woodburn•. wuhtr
a dryer. te,IOO good shapt.
Ctll814·317-0477.

,.,u.

h..,,

2 bclf .. turn., new ctrpet. AC, in
Gslllpolla. Clll814-448-1409.

14x70 Brtvii'W 2 bdr .. unfur·
nithed. very nice. locsted 2 miles
from O•lllpolll, prhttte lot.
Aduhs only. no pets. t210 mo.
Cell BU-•48 · 2300 .
Mobile hom11 for rent, Upper
Rlv•r Rd. Call 114·441-0497 or

81 ..·441·0608.

227·1610.

11600. CoK 814· 742-2796
114-742·2777.

0&lt;

1910 Fairmont 14x70 Deluxe. 2
badroome. exceU.m condhlon.
Clean. Csl11114-992-3013 tfttr
5 :30p.m.

1877 Skyllno 14•70. 3 btd-

g• hear, central air, pstlo, oft
ltreet parting. ktceted In city,
referanctltnd deposit rtquk'ed.
Call &amp;14-441 -41&amp;9 .

! 2 bdr., l1&amp;0 e month. C1ll
114-379-2435.

3 tMdroommobUehometorrent
Cheshire. Call 814 · 387·
7148.

In

Nice2 bedroom mobile home for
rent. New R~eine. Csll 814-

992·6888.
Two bedroom furnished tAil•
on Crtb CrMk Rotd. l1150.00
per month, 304-178-1201.

44

houtt lep tiding . Call

Apartment
for Rent

114-892-130&amp;.
Profeulonal
Service•

M08fLE HOMES MOVED, In·
surtd. rMtOnlble rtt•, Cell
304-171-2331

W•••
wellt ltfVIced and drilled.
Fr• .-time. .. C•M 814-912·
&amp;001 or 114· 742· 3147.

3 bedroom trsller, 304-171·

H ome1 for Sale

· 3 bdr. homt 1101 Adt'lln Ave.

own.-.

c..,...

ono1 now
e ..... of
Gtltlpollo. f"'m Rf, 211 tokt
Krinw Rd 1o flrlt houM on rlaln
'14.000. Cal 114-441·211?.

-. . .. .. ._.. A-·-

·,j mlloo outaldo city Hmlttl 12
IICftl, . oorg. MVIfl room.

1.ttorv

pond,-·-~

F,.n. 4 rooms • blth olasn. No
pett, tdutb only. Aef. a dtp.

1171 Holly P•k wtth upendo.
hilt: pump, txo cond, 304·171·

R~ency Inc. tpartmtnt 2 bdr.,
utilitiet Ptrlly pakl, nice. CaH

contraf tlr, 1•12 - ... 114dg. ll
ooro lot. ll bolllncl M110n,
WY. e11.000. 304-773·U11.

304-175-6104 or 304·17&amp;·
7121.

2 bdr. 2 bathe. kitchen fur·
niahtd, 11 Court lt. U2S por
mo. plus utllhl•. r.r ..... •
d-olt. CoH 114-441·4121.

Z bdr. lllfUm. whh oppl. 0t 111
Gofflpollo. f210
Third
manth .plu1 utllti:lll. Csll 1142415·1&amp;t&amp;.

l....

J31,000. Col 114-448-3718.
ly
lmtH 2 bedroom
hovM, rurtl w.ur. btlh. electric

City. Clll 814·2&amp;8·8&amp;20.

r-lrod Clll 114· 441-1&amp;19.

1872 12•&amp;0 mobllo- 3 br,
11\ bothl. b27
oov..-ed
ooncntt bsak
parch.

33

Bu1lne11
Building•

lltflng. McOulno Atllty Co ..
1402 4111 Avo.. Huntington, .
for Solo: BOdO fl. oom-11
2&amp;701 ... 304-&amp;28·&amp;033.
. . . . bufltflng. lrfclt -Ifni..
A... COIIinl Pricod to oolll Nl,. 2 """·
......... l'hont
·Fifth Avo. MlddiiPOrt,
lldfm. mobflt home. totll ~­
114·tl2·1111don, 114-112·
with CA. on U&amp; · Wldt
ifot Mmaga. Dou.,.. d-oy. lfll. l14-912·2112eov..,...
gi!ODo. petlo. INit o -. CioN
to KC ........ f17,eoo. Col fire domltlltf building. 809
Moln lt .. Point P I - t 304114·317·7170. Wll 1011 fiJ• 112·3381.
.
nflhed. lnciulro.

Lorvo~

COUNTRY MOBILE Home P•rk.
Acute 33. North of Pomeroy.
L1rge lots. Ctll 814-992·7479.

Unlumlthtd apt .. 4 ....,. •
biOth. Ctotrolly locotod. Ono 0&lt;
two odulta, " ' -. . . . -

-... ,.,..!rod. Cal 114-4480444 .

a

3 r. • b4th nloe ol..,.., app.
fumlohtd, clooo to """"""' •

- 1 2 1 1 , . . "'"""'· ..
utllltl• fllld but llootrlc. Col
. , 4;441-7&amp;11 .
WIOft1odttGurfty OOtjflfoto 1M In
--foonlpfox forfrotront
Mult bo bondobto 6 h...
raf.,..oo. CoN 304-17&amp;-1801
... 114·44t-1210.

piece T1n" dNm 1Bt •
cymboll. I - l c dru..

with mbdng board

Sale! 60 percent offl Flalhing
srrow tign t2691 LIGhted, non·
arrow U591 Nonlighttd t2291
Free letters! FIMI left. SH
locolly 1(8001423·0113.
anytime.
Wood-coel stave. Seen free
lltnding with al•• doors. in·
cludet brick fireplaeepad . t450 .

Coli 614-742 ·2163.
He-Mtn tovt with 111 ecc••·
rltl. Mytr1 Jhalow well wet•
oun-c&gt; . 304-17&amp;·1784

bloclt. AC. PS, PB, &amp;0·40

a Rototomt. neN
tlr•. low miiHge.
CDnd~ion,
12,800. Coli

11 " 1•

•••.••• 5.

Mint

814-

S.

Fruit
Vegetable•

1180 Chtvorl., Cltltion, tuto,
V-1. PS. Pl. 'S.I500 mil11 GOOd

oondillon. f1.7SO. Coli 114246·&amp;079.
r~tberrlel.

Aid

Ttylort Berry

Potclo. Col 114·441·8192 or
114-24&amp;-&amp;&amp;014.

u .oo

por ......... 114· 247·

Y-'low FJM Stone Canning
PeiiCh• MW IVIIIIblt. Cell for
price• tnd v•rlttlet. Bob's
M•rket, MalOn, W, Ve. 304-

I .IIIII

:\ 11111111 1''

~&lt;, l1v 1 ' ~ l 1 11 : "

61

Farm Equipment

61

12 Meritt Ctrto PS. PI, tlr,
Hop, 1&amp;.300 or bolt,._....
offer. Calll14-317-0832 .
1977 Lincoln M1rk V cr..m
color with rmnc:hing vinyl roof.
All pow., 21,000 mil•. looks
new ~lide 1nd out. good cond.

Cal 814·24&amp;·9493.
1873 lu)c:* Rtvler1. Good condi-

tion. ..00. CoH 114·843-&amp;281.
1980 Chevttte. •IPMCI. 4 door,

tHt, rHr defrolter. Look• 1nd
Nnt good. t1195. Call 114247·4212.
.

1974 C~ovy Mollbu. 80,000
mil•. t321 . or best offer. C1ll
114· 992·"1103 .

0000 USED APPLIANCES
w..hlt'l, dryert. refrigerators,
rang .. . Skaggs Applltncu,

County AppliMce. Inc. Goad
uMd tppliances end TV Htt.
Op., 8AM to IPM. Mon thru
Sat. 81il·.W8-1899. 827 3rd.
Ave. Gtlllpolit, OH .
Valley Furniture, ntw &amp; uud .
Ltrge 1ecdon of qutltty furniture . 1218 E11tern Ave ..
Gallipolis.

Sotu end chairs priced frOm
t3915 to t995. Tlbl• a&amp;o and
up to t126. Hide·a·bedt e390
to *195. Recliners tZ25 to
t375. Lamps &amp;28 to *125 .
D6nan• 1109 end up to M98 .
Wood teblt w -1 d1eirs Ultlto
179&amp;. D•k 1100 up to U7&amp;.
Hutc:het eqo and up. Bunk
btdt compl~e w-mlttretltl
t21&amp;endupto t385 . Babybedt
t110• t176. Manr. .•orbox
springt full or twin et3. firm
e73, .-wll83·. QuMnttttt225,
King t380. il drawer chetl 1185.
Dr•sart t89. Gun cabinttt 8,
10. • 12 gun. 011 or electric
rtnge *375. B1by menrNIII
t315 • Ul . Bed frtmN *20,
telection of Mdroom tuhw,
metsl ctbin .... hHdboardt t30
and up to til.

Used Fumiture: W•her &amp;
dryer. electric r~not. wood
tal:lle • 2 btnc:h ... bedt, '
reclin•. 3 mH• cut
BulwKit Ad. Open lAM to
15PM, Mon. thru Bat.

••..,,a

114-441-0322 .
Check Ul out on our livtng room
a~h• . U41 • up. Webb.,.
lulhline. NM' Gl.,_n tppllsnCM. Molk)han Furniture At. 7
north, Ktntuga. Call 114 -441-

7444.

Buth HDg sea. &amp; 8tNice. Over 1980 Pont11c Gr1nd Prhl
40 Ulld lflctof'l to cho011 from 11,800.00 or bnt offtf, 304&amp; COf11tletellne of new • ulled 87&amp;· 1808 or 87&amp;·1789.
equlpmtnl. LsrgNt ttlection In
S .E. Ohio.
1982 Chevy CP"11i1r. front
wheel drivt, euto. 4 cyl, new
JIM 'S FAAM EQUIPMENT tlre1, 14,950 .00 . 304. 675-

CENTEA . SA 31 W. GollpoNo, 4181 .
Ohio. Call 114-441-9777, ..o.
114·441·3&amp;92. Up front troc- '78 Mera.~ry Bobc1t runs good.
tors with Wfl"ltlfr 0\'tf 71 uHd

Wecto,., 1000 toolt.

Oood work c.r, good Urn,

dNn. 304-175·8217 .

Tobecoa atlcks for ..... Cell 1979 Plymouth Arrow Jet

114·2&amp;8· 1111 .

1800.00. 304·17&amp;· 3376 or
171 -40n.

Mots! office desks 3 'x5' with
adjuattble twlvtl chairs tnd
filing cJblntll , $126.00-

1880 Ford Felrmont ttMion
Wagon, PI, PI, IUtO, 41,000
miiM, good cond, Clll304-773-

•160 .00 . 304-372·2801 or
372-9822 .

678&amp; .. 713-&amp;430 .
1111 Lincoln Cont. 4 door. Can

Electric ETS room unit fumsce.
br.nd new never u11d U76 .00 .

.,.. &amp;:00. 304-17&amp;·6879 .

304-773-&amp;004.

72

St•rt heevy duty Wllhtr for
111t, good cond. t100 . 30•·

-

w..t Vlrglnil. Phonit
304-882-%729. Fulllln1oftruck
end car pwtt avaMible. Molt
pric. are cut to delitrt colt
ery avtHab

lo

.

1;

~~~~~~;~~;==;
79 Motors Homes

~-

:r.:vf

For aale RICOH office cop6tf
mtc:hine FT4000 with CDHMOr,
lttnd, reduction upllbllity &amp; 3
paper tra~• · 304-e?&amp;·M90.
Ots'h ..ter 55 BTU. re110nlb'-t.

iI

Building Supplies

Building Mtterltll
lk)dl, brick. MWer plptt. windowL llntell, etc. Cltude Winltrt, Rio OJJndt, O. Call 814·

Trscton, JD 420 crawler wtth

Truck• for Sale

66

Cell 814-211-

1031 '

loddor
· -· ~ Ctft
114·949·2919.

62

1177 Chwy plcltup, no nott. I
cyl, suto, AM·FM Callttt.

Wanted to Buy

·

•

'

n,98o.oo. 304-871·4111 .
Now buying lhell oom or ••
com. Clllforlettttquotn. Rtver
Cloy Form Supply, 114·441·
ZBSB.

63

Livelltock

croao. No Suntloy aollo, 814388· 8124.

Wahaveont~tndont*Mood.
Exoolftnt h«d bulft, utrtmtly

oor-. Rtody for Ill oorvlct.
Phone ewe. 114·211·1402.
...fololn bub, ltrVIoo 'IJt AI
. . . dams wkh pepn. Hamm
Valley flrmt. C1ll 114-MI-

Pets for Sale

1o...

del•.

Pine St.
Otlllpollt. Ohio Call 814· ...1· Young bu• KIJ Slmmentel •
27B3 .
Htrolortf. llrod lry KJII-Signol.

7121 .

utumt

MUM¥' Fergu10n, 1 n:IIW flrtld 1-C-op-lo-r-.. .-do-rd~lll-od"':"pic':"":'k-·u-p
chopper. Ex c. con d. •:1100 or truda. I ida wlndowt. ,..,
trodo for 11-lock. 304-41B·
~- • •• 0
•1•0

123~

Pole Buildings by Qutlity
lultdert. WOfkthopt. CtrpOrtl,
animal lhettenl. ,.,.... F,..
ettlmat11 . Phone 114·HI·

1BSB ford AMtgorin good cond.

.,d foldar 04.200.00. fH Cub 1817'-:--;-:-.---:-:-:;:-::;-::::
with culltvetor end mower 1178.-Ford r,lck-up truck. 14 ton.
e1.800.00. Olenridga Farm. u .ooo mi•. Good condition.
304-87.. 1804.
Coli 114·742·2771.

Bilby ollv• Haltteln • Angu1

Biodl Co..

2174.

73

Van•

&amp; 4W.D.

82 Dodge 4x4 cuttGmiz.t van

21 ,000 mlloo. Cl 814·44811821ftorl.
1181 · Chevy conwrtlon ven.
duel Mr, suta, rtet"IO, TV, low
rnilellae. IXC. cond. Ctll 814·

441-4141 .

trEFoF?e:.

•

1978 Concord ctmpar 19 ft.,
Mlf conttin.t. tlaapt 8, AC,
u .I80. Coli 814-388-8S&amp;1 . :

73Ttnycompor 21ft. alum. AI!.
good condition. U.OOO. Call
814 ·44 .. 7371 .
'
1980 Trtnl VM 19 ft., &amp;Jf,
crul11, new Interior . tlrtt.
brH11, 10of air, ex. cond. Mutt
Mil. ti.IOO belt otftr or trldi.

Book prlct o12,000. CtO 114·
448-2746.

EEK 8t MEEK
81

Home
lmprovementa

Ll~

MARRIAGe 15

I!CXJ SIO.!IDJJ"r

A IJI.JClEPR R:JWER

f5(JII.D

cu.

IVm-t:Vr A R£ASOJJA&amp;f.

Pl.AkJT. ..

BASEMENT
WATERPAODFINQ

EVA~iiOtoJ A.A~

MY UI.XLE La.llf:: 1:':1 I~
11-\E. HOSPITAL A&lt;OAHv ..

p.,.,.,

dOO.OO. 4 year old P1lomlno
riding ho"' Glding 1300.00.
304-87&amp;·2233.

puppiN. Coli 114·441-3844 Plgtlor olio. 304-91&amp;·3U3.
oftor 7PM.
Purllbred GNtt D111a pupt, 4 Plgo lor 111o I wftt, ofd. molo •
Week msl• wtth whtte blan~ an t.moto.--mod e30.
clo•t •1 00 ooch. Depot~ win 304-17&amp;·4811.
hofd. Coli 114·441· 1314.

Exlarior • lnlerlor ltucco. Plas-

CoH 114-2&amp;1-1182.

,

EvergriMII, ahtdt • frutt t ...l .

tree 1 ltump remav1l. ~!9h.
- d • - · atona dollvl1'td.
Don's Llnctec._,-. Don Weugh
Prop·. 114-441 -8841. .
•
Evtrg,_ -.1 6 g&gt;tvtl, top
1011. mulch. flrwwood • coli
delivered. TrH • ttump removtl, ditching. Don'1 LsndtciPtti
114-441-9141.
'

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
IF

'

'10J JOINMYCu.J&amp;'1al'u..

HAVE~ ~&gt;.~ew

FRIE\NDS.

;..:.:.......:;.;;.;;=.;;__-----,
'THAi MEliN$ vat COUL.D
GET 300 AAE!SENTS

NI:&gt;&lt;T' CHRISTMAS .

AND HAVE' TO WRITE 300
"THANK 'rO!J" L.I:TTS'R6 .

Auto.

for

S•le

114·949·2118.

0 veer Old TIMing Wtlkef Coan
Hound and ·coon MDhta. •100.

Coli S14-247-2 4 U - 4:00

p.m.

· Col

AKC Aogltt- milo oprloot
Minloturo Poodle pup,
Horirontll here_,, whtltttnd, · H11 flrtt II'IOtl lnd beM
f71 . thrw llleatria r•llt· Two wormtd. e121. or wll trod a for
uprtaht tren:e,... G.E ,j.uto.) fomoit P - pup. Col 114wllii11. Two ald•b¥-tlde retrig- 149·2911.
.....,,.,,._2_1"'""-·
FlrlltOneltor•ln Middleport.
Mu1lcal
67
I
n1tru
11111nt1
Pldclftl Ultd Fumhurt. Good
qutllty u•tdfumltun~. Open Ito
e or ctN for IPPointiMIIt.
304-17.. 44810&lt; 871· 1480.
Iundy IJOmbont !!fO!I I or I
tlmN UOO. Coli 114·44~·
N'aw-fp l......,olroorld, lUI.
10.000 bfu, VCR Zonltll. Wh~·
poo1 ......,_
f~ox . ,
Bundy flu•
-old f:IOO.
tttol. Phone S04-871••19.
Exc. Conl . ·87..8711.

c-

- -- - -

TH06E

THAiE'NABLEHIMiO
ReAD WHIL.E' 6iANDIN&amp;
ON HIS HeAD.

MY 6:RANDFATHER
INV5NTEDA ~R OF
5YEGLA66EC .. .

~LASSE-Sc;;oT HIM

THROWN OlJIOF THE
L-IBRARY YESTERDAY.

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

•n IOOf, ....... _. wlndecu
...._. 1.000 . . . . . .000
ftrm. Ctiii14-J71·-·

londocoping. 304-&amp;71-201 0.

EVENING
6 :00

11441 or f71 · t112.

on-. 304·17&amp;·7891 .

(]) Mazda Sportalook
~If'.!.~T~nbaw !CCI
(jj) Back Poln

.. 6 :06
6 ·.30

s..ultl mohlrcydo 1&amp;0 4

'81 Plymouth Horizon, 4 door. 4
speed, runt good, e1 .400.00.

304-888·3138 .

ABC N

" - ' Who ews
(JJ Doc10r
(jj) CBS News
(jj) Body Electric
· 6 ;36 CIJ Bevtlffy Hlllbilllu
7;00 II (l) PM M-Ine
IV

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

his upcoming film, ·Touch
endCDGo~;,.,_. Heroeo

•

~·

8

1171 Hondo Cl 380'1. iota of
-··Col &amp;14·441-2211 . .
1184 CR&amp;OA oa. 114·441·lllll.

· CoM

wegan

---·48· . . . .

1181 good aond. 1111 Hondt
tr•.
w1nt Int......_ eome •-

Nightly Buaines• Report
~ News MacNeil-Lehrer
Newohour

(jJ) Wheel of Fortune
. 7 :06 C1J S.nford and Son
• 7 ;30 ell) C1J New Newlywed

~'l'n~de llltoebatl

eDffiiJIWheelofFortuno
CD Tui

JtmM loye WaterllfVIce. Alto

•

W•ttauon ' l Wltir Mtullng .
rNtonlble ret•. lmmedlltt

•lo-•.

At. Louio 01 Attento(2 hro ..
•30 min.t
8:00 • C1J MOVIE : 'My Secret
, _ . (RJ .
m Hall Town
Cll

7;31

CIJ 8uparbauto (60 min .f
C1J D (JJ Who'o tha lloso1

!CCI' Angelo feoro aha has
j&gt;olaonad Tony when he Is
strickan
with
11011\0ch
cramps after eating a meal
Angelo preporod . (AI .
CD Howdy Doody
C1J
MIICNaii·Lehrer

Uphol1tery

looltogootl. . . . . - -.

1113 Hondo VII 100, fiOOtl
........ . ..... good.
!10487. . ..11.

.400.

1178 Hontfo,CIX 1,000. I G¥1,
n.1110.oo. JO .......M .

'

71 · Boetl

1nd .
Motore for 81le

.
.
IOtjoft . lloooboal·tnll•.
.

IIH
:t'Jo....'- r•. LCD flollfiMor,
IKtjOollofo, bltltt:Y .... ,.., z
N ...ito. 12,780. Altar IPI!.
14-MI·UH.

I

Till ITATE
UPHOLSTIRV IHOP
111J ..._ Avo.. Oolllpotla.
114·441-7133 or 114·4411131.
· R • M Cuotom Couch• ond
"""""""""'· at. At. 7, Crown
CitY. Oh. ll4-21e-1470, ho.
114· 448·34al. D.,.. dolly . . .
I. Itt. I 130 to I :10. Old • now
Uphoatltltf. ,

Nowohau&lt;

...
•

~,1:30
iJ

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@ INN News
ffi World at Large
[JJ Lost in Space
fll 1LJ MOVIE 'The Front
Page '
@ MOVIE : 'Hitc he d'
I]) MOVIE : ' Bedside Man ·

SNAFU"'

2 :30

3:00

i

•

CD J ... Benny

~.-wc:o'

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACJlOSS

"I'd like to get my hands on the guy who
designed this life rafll"

r~CilDCil®Je()j)GIJ

I

'::~:~' S@~~lA-~t-~s· lAIII
- - - - - - ldlot4
CLAY I. POllAN
Rtorrango Iotter• of ill• . .,-~... ~_,.--..,./-.....
0 lour
xrombled worcb be-

WOlD

CD ......,
• - - -•...a
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WkRP 1 C'-"n · nn•nlllltl
(!)One
a.,ond
(J)AIIC
New.Blu
Nlglltllne
lJouncteUtge:
rooo
1011
FMtlwil '
(It Allee
(]II U.l. Open Tennlo
Hltililltila
·

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12:00

~ ~':1;-'~·

M.D.

I]) NFL 'l'owbook
.
[f) Em.rtehwowm ~_......
• ..,..,.,.
Mlehool Kuton tolke obout
hie upcoming film , "Touch
end Go". IRJ.
·
(l) ."-hide
.CIJ ~ flve-0
MOVIE: 'A Utile l'oln·

(f)

!CCI Ahorthe family poyo o •
vloil to Gro~. o )NIId pony
eruptl at the Seaver home·with Mike In chorgo. IRI .

ond RICk oro framed for
grond theft by o crook uoing
I celtlbrity ~~ MNk:e
o• ofror!t . i!IO'Inin .J iR).

..

eiii..._.~A . J.

8 Haunt
1 Whip
9 Be fo re
5 Open space 10 Receptacle
10 Soupy food 18 "Le.nd an
II Lifting
-,
de\ice
B'way
12 Bay Windo w
revue
13 WIUess
17 Britis h
1• Earl
gun
Grey, e.g.
18 Tennis
15 GUet
tenn
171nstall
19 Leve l
18 F. - Bailey 20 Slippery
Zl Confab
21 Nursery
Eliminate
fixture
26 Spree
22 Stalwart
28 Literary
23 Enl!)lsh
work
river
29 Sarcastic
2&amp; FaBhlon
31 Reflllre
81 Good (Fr.)
88 Recordlna
medium
35 Melody
81 Belonfllng
lAO the Mro.

z•

•Secret

m

·

~ ... ~t4"

C1J 81~ Orohom Cnioade
Cll C.tellrlty Chet.

awea11hops , revealing tho
high coot of Worldwide In·
duotrlal
P&lt;Oduction. 160
. )
min.
(B) loop
1 1 ;Otl ffi MOVIE: ' " .-page'
11 :3 0 . [f) (jf) :ron!tlht &amp;how
(60 mln·.J In Stereo .
G

ner'

Bruce Beattie

e ())

~

IRI

the Bodman'
® CBS Newo Nightwatch
CIJ SportsCemer
I]) MOVIE : ' Armored A1·
tack'
(J) College Football: Mary·

[f) (]It 11811 (60 min.f
(JJ
Spenoer: For Hire
(CCI A beau1iful Russian
ballerina in trouble turns to
Spenser
for
halp--and
tempts him with her love.
(60 min.f (RI

1
-·

r-.:..a_
,.
ii'CIJ Growing,_

(!) Mazda Sports look IRJ .
1!11 (D MOVIE: 'Angel and

rveat time. (60 min. I

o young wo 1ng women n

ton~PortZ.

lla.,. al ~ •
Wondorl)rygCCC)Thtitruo
otorv Of the min ~ho
workod behind tho ICinel
10 dovlioP.rnicUIIr\ 1e told.
,..
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lilly Orohom Wuh·
l!if110!1 ,O rUude
(jJ MO\IIE; ,. _ )he
~. -,
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•

(H) Comedy Break

(I) Archie Bunker' s Place

~y

. (CC) This documentary
traces the organi1ing efforts
1
rk '
I

1

: The

.

(JJ SCTV
llll
Globof Auembly Une

ClilllliiiY Oroh8m w.....,..

illl -

(]) 700 Club

Ill! To a. Announced
• CD Red Skehon Show

e

e

flOG. )04-. . . 33.22.

2 :00

although he was guilty of an ·

(JJ ABC News Nigh11ine
(jJ) MOVIE ; 'Hawaii' Part 2
ol 2.
C1J Bachelor Father

[f) Bumo • Allen
CIJ Jnakle the PGA Tour

GJ) Mp• dy

2.000 golfon doltvo.y,
·· - · ttc. coif 304·171·
2119.

B7

11 :00

@Alice

CIJ Mojo&lt;.._•• llltMiooll :

num faces a moral dilemma

ooher. (R)
1 :10 Cll MOVIE : 'The Desper ate Hours '

(jj) R"'!Jhl~t

' 'Touch and Go '··

pooll flllld. Colll14-2&amp;1-1141
or 114-441·117&amp; or 114·448·
7111.

DNfont'o Wottr Dtllwry, Clot""'· paol, • well . Anytime but

10:06
10:30

(JJ Up Pompeii!
• ,_ Enterulnment To""
niOht
Michael Keaton t~lk s
about his upcomong film ·

General Hauling

8undoy, 114-441-7404.

9 ;30
10;00

rn

Jr. owner.

86

ha

• &lt;BI Divorce Court

Qood-1 hcftttlng, b•Mntnta.
toot111, drtv.weys, HPtlc tanka.

land at Pinsburgh (3 hrs.)

ern Russian peasants during

II ffi J_,tv

Excavating

I]) I Married Joan
(1) Nowo

through 1he Iivas of South·

(]) Spon1Centar
(f) Emertalnment Tonight
Ml.chael Keaton talks about

CAATER 'S PWM81NG
AND HEATING

1 :00

•

1:30

ist wav of life is traced

CIJ Allao Smhh 1111d Joneo

cyl., tHO. Athtey woodbumer · llndlctplng. Call tnytlme 814441·4137, J.m• L. Dsviton,
coli &amp;14 ·388·1211.

•roo·

"" e ""

Hosted bv Willi~.m Conrad.
tTl

\RI

l!l) CD Wild , Wild West
Gl Cl2l Magnum, P.l. Mag·
when he decide s whether or
not to submit evidence th at
would prove e s uspect e d
killer 1nnocent of one crim e

In Stereo.
C1J Fother Knowo Best
CIJ Top Rank Bo•ing from
Lao Vegao, NV 190 min .J

e

CIJ Outdoor. Ufe M'IJazine

@ WKRP In Clncinnl1i

1180

tectiva. (60 min .l IRJ
CD My Horo
ffi MOVIE : 'Tycoon ; Story
of a Woman'
""
'-"' 48 Houro on
CrackStreetDanRathara • ·
amines the drug problem in
America todav with the use
of hidden cameras on the
streets of New York Ci1y. 12
hrs.J
(jj) Comradet : October
Horveot !CCI Tha Commun ·

C1J A~Griffllh
II [f) NBC Nows

...., a

M) Late Nigh1 with
David Letterman Tonight· s
· guests are Richard lewis ,
'late Night' regular Chns El·
lion and Jack Hanna of the
Cleveland Zoo 160 min.J (R)

tCCI David persuades Maddie to hire a female con anisl
as the company ·s new de·

News

II (I)

12:30

a

® •

B3

Motorcycles

.... IV

(]) The Rifleman

. . . Aoofiftg • Painting. txp.
roofing, repafr. pelntlnglntldtor
out. Free htlmate. Local Refer-

82

IJ"" ,... 8 ()) ® aHHHlll

Make Room lor

9:00 (JJ 700 Club
CIJ AWA Wres1fing 12 hrs .l
(1)
(1) Moonlighting

()) Green Acree

18&amp;·3802

Ashby Conet. Cerpentry, ,..,o.
dllling, room ~hion , pelnting,
roofing, concnu, lkUna. block
war\, fTM ..timate. 364-8715-

~d,W

9/2/86

Aolarv or nblt tool drMiing.
Mottw.ll1 completed ••medtv.
Pu~ Nln and ttrvfct . 304-

74

tr-. good - - Coll14·211·
1178 Old• Dollo .. ROfoloapt, • •7.
41,000 -of ...... " ' . . ..... AM .PM--,wlno 1171 Hondo Cl 310 T.
• ..... orulle' 100n.._l, elr. 1!80.00. looN F,..kln fir•
13,81~. Col 114-44.......
ploioa trill ond , . _
uoo.oo. Colt -·2·2810.
:II M - - · t•lop,, Cd 1178 H•tfo XII 7&amp;, Mil good.
.14·44. . .44 •• '

u
2.2 "·
Pl. t1r: IOftt•• AM.PM 1111
tlw.

Evening Television Li8ti

Starkt TrH end Lawn SeMet,

GollpoAo. Ohio
Phono 114-441-38SB or 114441·4471

gtld

1177.rr- AM 1,1100 AM-A~
- V·L411 .....o _.._l Col114-441-17• •

-

Cor. Fourth end Pine

u.eoo. Coif t14-44S·7011.

71

mMOn, pMnter. roofing (inclc4il·
lng hot ttr lppllcttionl 304·
176·2088 .. 17&amp;-7318.

11181 C"-101 Convoroion von,
ioodltf. 11.000 mlfol. 304-17&amp;7.7&amp; .

otil Coroll1 •••don

Call 114-24&amp;-9871.

3 month old mala AKC Reg...
terld Toy Poodle. Whtla. H..t
thot . 112&amp;. Ctiii14·94D· 2042

E-l&lt;I1AV'5TID I

,., &amp; pl11ter rap.trs. Low ret~.

114-992-3194.

1812 Chev. 4•4 pldlup M ,IOO
troct•in. ~e. ooo - · eo Tov·

Reg. Ingle pups 2-4 montht
okl. 1 temon female. I mal•.
&amp;75 each. For mott lnformetlon.
llemtu ktlttnl for tale. Cd

Hf.'S

Unconditjonal Ufltlme guaran·
tee. Loc1l refarenCII fumilh~.
Free •timat•. Cslt colll$1
1-11 4· 237-0488. diV or night.
Rogtrt Ba1ement
Wewprooflng .

1178 Chlwy 12 puunger windiM WM. A(, CNilt, tlh, Ceptlln
doolro, tluol hoot. 13800. Coli

4 .,.. old ,...,. work holM

Dregonwynd Canery K•ntl.
CFA Hlmaleysn,
lfld
Slam•• lclttlflt. AKC Chow

f~ISICf=P

&amp; Campers

AfNGLES'I SEAVICE , ••p&lt;·
rlonotd ,..,....,, oltctrloi~ .

246-5121 .

':! oncratt bloc:kt •llslzn rard or
delivery . 'M11on und. Otlllpollt

.Sif?EN A

304-671-2318 or 114-US,
24S4.

304·571·2198.

66

GET

VI~US

I

o~ PRIO~IT'IE=S:

NEVI?~

RON'S Television Service !
HouM cllt on RCA, Quu~rj·
GE . Spocitllng In Zonltlo. Col

Moving .way tale. men' 1 uNCI
rtntel untformt. Somerville's.
67 Burdette Addn. Trailer for
rent. 304-875-3334.
SALE! 50 percent OFF I Flashing
trrow sign t2891 Lighted, nan·
trrow 12691 Nonlighted t2281
Free letttrt1 Few lett. SN
loeally . 11800)423 -0183 .
Jnytime.

I) VE~Y T'HO~OUGH .

~

J IT'~ JusT A MATTE~

lhrou.-, Soptemblr 8th. Doliv;

THIS FLu VAG:'c:'IN£=

LAB

"'
"'
~

woRICING Fo!Q A
L-IVING, Sift --··

fltttY Tret Trimming, llumt:(
rarnovtl. C.ti3Q4.175·1331 . ,

oftor 3 :30 p.m.

Moving Stle 0 .E. Wllhtf II
dryer, white UOO. Ousrtr 21'
oolor TV tzoo. 11111 floor
motfolorgon with bon do uoo. 1
ft.
171. 2 mttol

MOUNTAINEER AUTO BODY
OPENING
PAATS QRAN 0
SALE! 1318 Fifth St .. N""'

''

'82 PontiiC Bonnwille. 4 door,

Vinyltop, V·l. Air. Auto, PS. P8,
AM·FM ltlfiO, lilt. r111w6ndow
CR08S.SON8
dlfoggtr, velour int•lor. body
U .S. 315 WNt. Jackson. Oh;o, uc cond. high mlluge. 304114-281·14&amp;1 .
882·2791.
M•-v F.,.. eon, Ntw Ho. .nd.

Household Goode

AUCTION 6 FUANITUAE 62
Olive St .. Gallipolis. New &amp; used
· wood-coalttov11. 8 pcwood LA
suite t399, bunk beds t199.
antron reclln•s 899. new &amp;
uMd bedroom tultea. renget,
wringer wsahers, • shoes. N.w
1/vlngroom auita t199· •&amp;99.
l~mpa , 1110 buying coli &amp; wood
ltov•. Celt 814·448-3169 .

.l:'M NOI AGAIN.ST'

•

1• thHts paneling, &amp; box•
ceiling till, porch glider. 304·
8715-1569 mer 11 a.m.

SWAIN

Tronominiona. oil typ•. over,
front. rNr, 4 whell drive. pricee
Nrt e100. will detiver. Csll
&amp;1•·3'79-2220 .

H.vtn,

_ . , "N'U

68

Hat fan and thwrnostat. Good

1411 .

1977 Mercury Cougsr XR-7,

Coli 114·241-8891 .

• ••· 123&amp;. Coli 114· 441·
7076.

Mi•ed htrdwood 1ltbt, t12. per
bundle. Contsining JPprox, 11A
ton1. FOB Ohio P1llet Co ..
Pomeroy. Ohio. Ctll 614·992·

Auto• for Sale

676-41&amp;3.

Mmha1HI1 se

alo- atDooto f21
114-·1·8820.

· W•W
- . Nl'li
wa•.
IPP· 71A.ofpatturtwtth

34

814-441-.0 427.

""'* _.,

HY, A. f.,. in VInton. I room. 1

w-. CIIII14·381·8BU.

For rent trailer space on Teens
Run Road . 1 mi. off At. 7,
Otllipolil School Oist. Garden,
rural water, t30 month. C1ll

f30 6 King ftomo UO. Good

2 bdr. oofumlthed apt. In Crown

2811.

8810.

Space for Rant

LAYNE'S FUANITUAE

roomt, gabled roof wtth 1hin·

giN,

46

Upper Riller Rd . belktt Ston1
Cr•t Mottl. 61 4-448 ·1398.

&amp;14-388-90&amp;0.

1973 1211115 Oraywood MobHt
Home. 3 bedroom. n.w Cllrplt.

Rooms tor rent. dey. week.
month. Gellie Hotel. Cell 614·
441-9580 . Rent ulow •• t120
month.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

NICJ on• bedroom mobile home,

new carpeting, underpinning,
WI hookup , 17.100. Csll 111··
I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH- 379-286&amp; 0&lt; 114-379-2508 .

0766.

osit and reference. 304-178-

~tklng

13.800. Coiii14-3B8-9102 .

For rent Sl..ping Roome and
light hou11 k•ping rooms . Perk
Central Hotel. Call 814 -448·

3 bedroom. full b... ment. tam·

Coli 114-251·9303 .

1972 Atlentlc 12xl0

Furnished Rooms

lly room, gsr1ge. Sec:urtty dep-

42

Mobile Homes
for Sale

46

pota. Ctll814·992· 3911 .

3030 .. 175-3431 '

12~~:04

~ lll.tllCi il l

81 .. ·28f-6110.

Unfumithtd, 2 bedroom ept for
rent. 205 Popler St. S60.00
deposit, 304-875-7541 .

71

I

773·6721. 0 - 7 .....

ohopo. 1200. Coli 114-849·
2166.

2&amp;16.

US Cl

lnatrumenta

Wlnc:h•ter purf11 model 1200
1hotgun 2 berrtll1, never bMn

In Middleport, Ohio, 2 bed room

· ·~

~-;;:::;;;~===r:::::::::::1
--------~67
M 1 1

2142.

dopooit. Coli 814-441-0190 .

Auto Parts

&amp; Acceuoriea • "

Firewood tor11le. Ctll 814·448·
9211 or 814-441-1437 or 114261· 1612.

Land Contrtct. 2 bedroom home
in Srrecuttwlth trneH fenced-in
yard. 8x10 building. tlumlnum
tkUng, fully CJrPeted. n.wtv
remodeled . 1fl block hom
market , pool. perk, tennis
court•. t2150. monthly. C1ll
t"Veninga eher 4:00 p.m. 814-

furnithed tpt. 1-304-882 ·

76

Ltte cenntng 1Dm1tow. John
Hill, St. Rt. 338, Ltttrt Fell1.

2&amp;1-1393.

IF VOLJ PON'T TURN
TillS
TRUCK AROUNP.
.

1985 Ch•cllmete 1ki boat
18'3", 150hp Johnton OB with
accetiOri.. Exc. Cond. 304·
176-3019.

448-3346.

Heavy duty gas statk&gt;n, type •lr
compr1110r, tiOO. Csll 114-

· CAPTAIN EASY

1980 cn.~ittr 26ft Gren 8 ...1u,
280 ht&gt; ONC. ltovo, m, ~ofod
with thower. 1te10, trim tabt.
thlp to shore rldlo, tand1m
treller. Pc cond. • 1 &amp;.000.00.
Coil Andy 304·623-6843 Or
304-629·9200.

Cslllhan ' t U11d Tire Shop. Over
1,000tlrn, tiH112 , 13, 14,115,
11. 11.1. 8 mil• out At. 218.

Wtrm Momtng wood bumer.

Aveileblt now 2 bdf. home
completely remodeled, extre
nice, r•ldenca neighbor, lsrga
front pordt II nice yard for fall
weathlf t3315 per month . Cell

for Nit. Op.., bow with cower,
140 HP,I .O .~ new tutl, all new
lower unit, lrtiler lncluc;led.

/

2 bedroom apt . Getlipoli• Ferry.
304-176-2548 .. 876-5783.

Ave ., Gslllpolit. 3 bdr. IMn-

CAIJ'T ri~D IT.

197111ght- foot A.,bolloot

groom. dinlngroom, niMI kit·
mrig. &amp; rtnge.
1310 plus utilitlet &amp; tecurhy

Ph•mecilt needed for Fruth
Ph~rmacy Storet. Oalllpoflt.
Middleport , Wellston. Ctll Don

31

APARTMENTS. mobile homet,

l TI':IW, 6UT I

1880 115 ft. T..-ry ls11 Boat.
fully aqulpptd DHiy trolfor. j26
. . outbo.-d, troltng motor.
~h finder. Call 114· ,7·
7412 or 114-317-7242.

1 piece olk dlnnet 111. Call

ch..,, btc:lcyud,

992-3533

23

1 bMroom apsrtment uprtalrJ.
Newl~ earpeted throughout.
Ptrtty fumi1hed. Ctll e14 -992-

Boats and
'
Motore for Sale:

bul~ lor opood. good cond.
U ,400. Coli 114-24&amp;·8818:

123,000. Coli 114-992-1010.

lied . Send stemped ulf ·
tddreued envelope : Hewkt
Lending, P.O Box 13C93, Orltndo FL 328151.

21

Aptrtmentt for rent in Pomeroy.
One end two bedrooms. Cal

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 11

'

Antiques

Hu~v•ma•IW•,ch-'"uw•

114·948-22&amp;3.

Pomeroy-Middlaport, Ohio

11ft. Qllttran whh 81 Merc~rv.

63

1 bedroom apt. for rent . Basic
·rent ltarta *216 . 1 month that Ctlll14· 21i&amp;-&amp;251 .
'"eNd• all utlliti•. DepotH
required of t200. Contact VII- Ptattic citttm ttst• 1pp10ved,
'•• Manor Apt. Middleport. pfertlo HPtiC t.nkl, pllltiC
814-992-7787 . Equal Houaing culvlftl, mttsl cutvtrtt. RON
OpportunitY.
EVANS ENTEAPAISES, Jack·
2 bedroom fumilt'ted apartment aon. Oh. 114-281-6830.
for
rent. Adults proferrod. 114· Chlldon s- Supply, Vinton.
992-2749.
Call 614·39B·9614. Au·
--..,.----:-~"""!-::-':": Ohio.
Spocia~ . 20% off Ecllo
Onobod,.omunfiJrnilhod. Toto! QUit
electric apt. Water and garbage uw1. 20% off Echo trlmmert.
collection
free. Located in Po me- •11 .60. Bor oil gol. M .OO.
11"
roy . 614-992-2094.
Chsin th8'Ptnlng, repelr work.
1 bedroom opt. in Mlddlopon. Opon 8-&amp; Mon.-Sat. Clottd
Unfumiahed. •1&amp;0. per month Wed . • Sun.
plua utilltllt. Call 814·992·
counlrydrttm home. Buih
5646 days and 814-949-2218 New
foryou . e18,996.ilbdr.,2bldl.
wenlnga.
Sao dolo modll todoy. Call
814 8 B 7311
2 bedroom furnished apt. fOf
' &amp;·
'
rent in Middleport. Cell 114- Full tile boll •rings &amp; mtttrelt
982-&amp;084.
firm. Like uw, only 2 montht
old. Cott eBOOwilleellfor t310.
2 bedroom, fumithed or unfur- Coli 614-251-1261 .
nllhad. Remodeled. lerg• pttio.
On Spring Ave., Pomerov. C1ll Werm morning llova for ule.
oft• 1:00 p.m. IU-992-1881. Ctlll14·441·9607 .

Unfumlthed 2 bedroom. Newly
plinted. fully carpeted. utilitiet
partitlly furnished . No pets. C..

September 2, 1 986

T.uesday,

ltond. bod . U76. Colll14· 7U·
21&amp;3.

Elln-7115 3418Enter-

teo

76

BfOVhlll bedroom •ke, triple
dr11181' with tl.ltch mirror. nlaht

3-4 bedroom hou11 n11r JChool
tnd hoapltsl. Prlcrad to ..,,,

per dtY •tembling
'cllplay clowna. M.,eritlt &amp;~pp·

18

36

"

BORN LOSER

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®bJ Llrry Wright ·

Household Goode

o...n•.. s..dtttmpld

ASSEMBLEAS WANTED: Etrn

12

749 T"'rd Ave. 1100 sq. fl.
Commercial or wtrehouta.
P•rlcing on tide. Adjtc:ent to
third &amp; Pint St. Call 114-441·
2312 ior tppoinement.

114-378·1161.

: ...... Ft. Pltrct, Fl. 33402.
"lip to

Tuesday, September 2, 1986

3 room fumithed upttelre utili·
till ptld, 1M Locutt, 1200
month ISO tlop . CoH 441-1340
or 441·3870.

J
r

Help Wanted

' Mtkl Chr"tm11 mon..,, 1111
. Avon. MMt 41 percent. Ctll

I

61

P••·Ctlll14-441· 1137.

. . . _... 304-871·1871.

\I

Apartment
for .Rent

Unfurn. 1 bdr. apt., Ctrpeted,
utMIIItl pMd, no childr.-., no

Wr.ntld to buy, lett viJrttor

11

Middleport, Ohio

low to form four

SIZES 12'11-U'II
4GU 11a11 saz.. 121-1o 1o
24'11. Comloflable elalitic

llmple wordo

89 Hoanler
•2 Endure
4-IForward

•5Cu~d~c:e ~~~~~

&lt;&amp;ePalfey

•7 Abhor

DOWN
1 Entice

I

DOMUPI

2 Met
highlight

3 Descry
• Ax. handle
5 Shimmer

wailll dril18 and jacket to
mix and match. SIZe 14%
dress takes 2¥• yarda
45-lnch fabric .

6 Church

7~Bwnna h&lt;1--t-t~rcopltal

13.21 lor each pattern.
Add 751: • h panern tor

--

DAJLYCRYPTOQUOTES - Here'o how loworll II :

~,handling.
fDJ

Foolblll co.cll to player; " You

eure 10o1c out of condHion.

- ..... m

The Deily Sentinel
. , . . _ . . _.• lf 1 11f,
flY
~

um.l'ifoi-.

~--~

. ,.yt been - . "

I·

I

1
M £ NlA 7Rli
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NUMBERED
lETTERS IN SQU(\RES

boOI!I,

•

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'01 ..,NSWER
•

more.

~

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One letter stands for another . In this sample A is~
for the three L's, X for the two O's. elc. Single letters,
apoetrophes, the length and fonnaUo~ of the words are ~~~
hinta. Elich day the role lettei'll are dtfferent.

Complort lloo chuckle quaitd
by filling In the missing words

you devalop from step No. 3 balow.

I' j 1• 1 I' I' I' I
I II II I I I I
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aupplie's, CO't!Wel,
croea sUith; needllpOint,
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AXYDLBAAXR

Whit

haW ~ liMn doing?" Player: .

NEW FOR ONL'( S1
96-~. lull-colOr C.ts-

log'efCrall8 -panama,

Yesterday•s Amawer
27 Rilual
37 Advat~t.age
30 Calaboose 38 'IUnnerlc
34 Turn
39 C hart
informer 40 O'Neill
(sl.)
play
35 Pup
41 Tippler
or oxygen 43 Feather
36 Suggestio n
scarf

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Yeotenla)''o Cr)'ptOquote : WHO TRA VEI..S FOR
LOVE FINDS A THOUSAND MILES NO'I' LONGER TKAN
ONE. - JAPANESE PROVERB 1"
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••Kiftt ,.....

�Page-1 2-The Daily Sentinel

By Unlled Press lnlematlonal

AfederalmedlatorMondaynlght
wasattemptingtoscheduleanother
negotlating session between ofli·
clals ct the Youngstown (Ohio) City
school distl1ct and Its approxi·
mately 1,1XXJ teachers, woose contract expired at midnight Sunday.
MedtatorDavidThorleymetw!th
representatives of the school dis·
trlct and the Youngstown Educa·
tionAssociationfornearlystxhours
Sunday before recessing the talks
at about midnight.
Chuck Zillo, thedistrlct'ssupervl·
sor of school.rommunlty relations,
said 11 might not be untn today
before more talks could be
arranged.
Membei'S of the YEA voted last
week to authorize a strike if
negotiations failed to produce an
agreement on a new contract
before the beginning of classes for
the district's approximately 15,500

WILLARD, Ohio (UPI) -The WU!ard Switching Yard was the
scene of a weekend CSX Transporiatton train derailment that
caused a toxic chemical spill and forred the evacuation of homes
Within a mne radius of the yard.
One of the four cars that derailed, a tanker, leaked !l,&lt;XXlgallonsct
hydroChloric acid which formed a cloud of hydrochloric acid vapor,
which stings the eyes and lungs and can be deadly. O!tlcials
evacuated about 150 people shortly alter the spill at J.f: ll a.m.
Saturday.
'
"Ohio Environmental Protection Agency officials are checking
the area for absorption," City Manager Paul Capelle said Sunday,
He said firefighters used lime to neutralized the chemical.
The tanker that roptured contained muriatic acid, a brand of
hydroChloric acid that Capelle said is less potent. The solution Is used
to treat water at some water trealmj!nt plants, he added.
He did not know the origin ordestbtatlon of the train, but he said th:&gt;
Willard Switching Yard is a major stop lor trains between
Pittsburgh and Chicago. He said some rail !raffle was delayed wlile
the spill was being cleaned up.

Marchers
for peace
visit Ohio
MONTPELIER, Ohio (UP!) Peace marchers on a coast·
to-coast walk spent their first
weekend in Ohio camping In a hay
field and getting acquainted with
temporary peace marchers from
Michigan.
The Great Peace March for
Global Nuclear Disarmament be·
gan March 1 In Los Angeles with
1,m people. By the time 1t reached
Ohio Saturday, the 13th state on Its
tour, the number had dwindled to
650.

They'll spend about three weeks
taking their message through
north:&gt;rn Ohio.
Sunday, some 100 supporters
joined them from Michigan and the
marchers rallied in Montpelier.
Mickey Schneider rl. Maryland, a
spokeswoman for the group said the
Michigan marchers joined the
march in Montpelier because there
are no stops In Michigan planned.
Marchers plan Ill trek about 16
miles every day passing through
Sylvania, Toledo, Oregon, Port
Clinton, Bay VIew, Cleveland and
Bay Village. Folk sinl!{'r Peter
Seeger is to meet the group In
Warren.
Their sdledule calls for them to
move into Pennsylvania Sept. 22
and rrnveon toNewYorkand!lnish
In Washington Nov. 15.
They set up camp In a hay field 00
rnlles west of Toledo Saturday
night. Each member received a
buckeye, the nut ot the state tree,
when they enteral Ohio.
Financial problems have been
the biggest hurdle for the
marchers.
Two weeks after their march
began, Pro-Peace, disbanded,
stranding the mardlers ootslde
Barstow, Calif.
The organizers advised
marchers to return tome. About
half oreyed, but the others remained In Barstow until they rafsed
mough money to rontinue their
march.
'The group has raised about
$400,000 since leaving CalUomia
March 28, said spokesman Marc
Polonsky said. He said it costs
$2,195.71 a day for Dod. sanitation,
water, transportatiOn, malntenanre rosts and permits to keep the
march going.
Providing entertainment for the
marchers is a low-powered portatie radio slaton WQO that ~rates
at lG.lJ KH. This statiOn broadcast
!rom the front of an old school bus
under a special klw-power tirense
gran too by the Federal Communications Commission.
It has just 10 watts, so can ooly be
heard within 20 miles. The group
' broadcasts from ooon uniU aooutlO
p.m.

Ohio weather

I

Soutll Central Ohio
Mostly cloudy tonight, with a low
between 00 and 65. Mostly cloudy
Wednesday, with widely scattered
stowers and highs near 81.
The prnbablllty of precipitation is
!I perrent ,toolgh! and ill percent
Wednesday.
Winds will be from the southeast
at 10 mph or less today and tooight.
Ohio E:dended Forecllli
'ltluniday tmugh Sa&amp;urdlly
Fair Thursday I!Jid Friday and a
chance ct shoWI!I"s Saturday. Highs
wUI range trom the upper 1ls to the
middle 80s each day. OVernight
lows will be In the tow or mid a&gt;s.

students W~ay.
a strike after they were unable to
Meanwhile, non-teaching em· reachanagreementwlththeboard.
ployees In the Youngstown district
Rheba Burtch, president of the
' ratified a new 29-month amtract Swanton Board of Educatlon, said
Sunday night. The school board teachers ·would strik.e Tuesday
approved the agreement M execu· because the two sides were unable
live session Monday.
ID reach an agreement re!ore the
The pact, covering mernrers of rontract expired at midnight
AFSCME LocalllC, calls for an Sunday.
immediate 2.8 percent ply hike and
Burtch said th:&gt; teachers rejected
a wage rropener clause in the each the board's offer Friday and no
of the next two ~ars.
talks had been held store them.
Teachers in th:&gt; Warren City
"We are ready and walling (to
School District' also ratUied a new continue talks)," she said. Burtch
contract Sunday night. Def41ls of said teachers want a two-year
the pact were not available.
contract With a starting salary of
Schools In the Warren district Sl5,m. Teacherscurrentlybeglnat
opened last week, and memh:&gt;rs of $14,188.
·(
the Warren Educatlon Associatlon
Teachers in the Jefferson Townhad threatened to fJJ on strike ship district In MOntgomery OJunty
Monday if the contract was not have set a strike vote lor next
ratified.
Monday In their wage dispute with
T!!llehers in the Swan\l)n School the board of education.
District near Toledo made plans lor
Meanwhile, clerical workers of

tre Ohio Education Association:
went on strike at midnight Sunday•·
evm tMugh officials of the OE1agreed to return to tre bargaining:
table.
A spokeswoman for the Ohio·
Associate Staff Union said Sunday:
that the OEAsaid 1t would return to·
tre bargaining table Monday;
evening.
:
The OEA broke ctf talks Friday·
night, and the OASU, which '
represents Ill secretarial and tech·•
ntcal workers, voted to strike whent
Its wntract expred at midnight"'
Sunday.
The OASU wanted to wntinue..
negotiations, but the OEA walked ~
away from the table while the
OASU was .working on a counter ·
rroposal, said union spokes~~oUman ·
Sharon Sutrerland.
Major unsettled Items Include~
retirement and job security.

~I

~~

Model
LA5400XP
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Capacity ... but
only 24" wtdel

Vol.38. No.B4
Copyrighted 1986

-,

By JEANNE REALL

Uolled Press International

Fonner Gov. James Rhodes
received a degree of divinity
Tuesday bestowed bY Vice President George Bush, who said It is
"the Lord's wDl" that Rhodes win a
fifth tenn as Ohio's chief execu Uve.
Bush, speaking at fund -raisers
lor Ohio's major Republican candl·
dates, said Ohioans deserve to
.share In the national economic
recovery led by the Reagan
administration.
"Do the Lord's will In sending
excellenre back to Columbus,
Ohio," Bush said. "We need a true,
tested governor."
Bush appeared before about 400
supporters at a $151).a-plate dinner
in Akron lor congressional candi·
c!a.llt LYOO SlabY. Tickets to a
private ~tlon· IJeforehand sold
lor s:!OO'each.
..
·
Early In !lie evening, Bush
traveled to North Canton for the
eighth annual "Rally With Ralph,"
a $40-a-ticket steak fry attended by
about 2.500 supporiers ot congressional candidate Ralph Regula,

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WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Federal Aviation Administra tion
says there were m reported
· incidents last year involving planes
. that nearly collided in the air and
this year's figures show a 3 perrent
increase.
FAA spokesman Robert Buckhom said Tuesday trere were 24
actual collisions last year, Including
13 fatal coiltslons, none Involving a
passenger airliner.
The collision o! an Aeromexico
· jetliner and a small private plane at
Cerritos, Calif., Sunday that may
h'ave killed as many as 85 people
was the second involving a commercial jetliner in the Unlted States
111 eight years.
1A Pac1f1c Southwest Airlines jet
and a' private plane colllded In
· september 1978 nea:r San Diego,
Calif., killing 144 people.
Federal stattstk;s show that there
were 24 actual collisions of small
~~es In 1984, ~ In 19&amp;'!. 29 tri 1982

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1 "The !lglites ohctual and near
colltslom are really small wile!! you
' consider there are tens ct thousands
• of tughts every day," Buckhorn
said.
He said It was "sliD too early to
·draW any conchislons" about over·
aU avla!ton lllfety from the Califor·
.n1a ali" crash. The Nattonal Trans- - portatlon Safety Board, an
,

$229.00
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R-Canton.
Bush stressed that Republican
control of Washington politics will
hlnl!{' heavny on Ohio voters this
fall, and said the Senate race of
Rep. Thomas Kindness is particularly important.
-Bush called Kindness a "longshot," against incumbent Sen. John
Glenn. bul said the challenger's
electiOn Is crucial for Republicans
to retain Senate control.
Wltlllut such control, Bush
warned, federal spending, and
taxes, wlll grow.
" (Lirerals) still cling to an old
rule ... if It moves, tax tt; if II stlll
moves, regulate It; if it stops
moving, subsidize it, " he said In
prepared remarks.
The vice ll"esident appeared
earller Tuesday in Dayton at a
lUnd-raiser tor Rep. Bob McEwen,
R.Ohlo.

-Bush said the United States faces
challenges ranging from ,keeping
the ecooomy strong to reducing the
deliclt to ellrnlnatlng drugs from
schools.
"There are some Democrats In

teachers as classes were merged,
Assistant Superintendent Dora
Bumgarner said.
"We had to be creative to come
up with some alternatives, because
we don't have enough subs,"
Bumgarner said.
No attendance figures were
available, but buses operated at
about ffi percent their normal
capacity, he said.
Meanwhile, negotiations con·
tlnued through the morning,
Among the contract improvements being sought by the 245
teachers are reduced class sizes
and compensation for longer teachIng days.

in near collisions

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legislative pniposals for tougher enforcement and a
request for perhaps $100 million to bolster existing
programs to discourage drog use and crack down on
those who deal In llllcit narcotics, officials said.
However, one official acknowledged that "a bit ct a
confrontattpn is being set up" between tre
administration and Democrats in Congress wto, like
the White House, see political value in seizing the
lnittattve against drug abuse and support a rrore
extensive - and expensive - federal effort.
The House is scheduled tovoteSept.lO ona$2tlllion
to $3 bllllon federal anti-drug program proposed by
Democrats.
"The pressure is going to be there for a big-money
program," the official said. "The challenge wlll be in
resisting it."
While viewed by some as an easy issue for Reagan

FAA reports rise

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By Unlled Press International

Some 6,1XXJ students In Ohio were
without their regular instructors
today as teachers In the Newlon
Falls and Marietta school districts
were on the picket lines.
Swanton teachers, however, approved a conlf!'Ct proposal Tuesday night and called off their strike
threatened for today. Earller Tues·
day, negotiators for the Young stown district and its teachers
reached a tentative agreement.
also averting a strike.
Today was to be the fifth day of
classes for 4,100 students in Ma·
rtetta, but the pupils were greeted
by substitutes and "a few" regular

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to exploit, the admlnlstra lion has become embroiled
in controversy over calls for mandatory drug testing.
White House chief of staff Donald Regan moved
swiftly last month to rebut a report that the
administration, at the urging of the Justice
Department, might order regular drug tests for 1.5
mllllon federal workers in sensitive jobs or with
access to ctassifled information and fire those who
test positive.
He said Reagan favors voluntary testing except for
those in law enforcement or tre most sensitive
national security positions or those who appear to be
Impaired. In those cases where clrug use is
discovered, Regan said, the response would re
counseling rather than punishment .
The decision for Increased presidential Involve·
men! In the war oo drugs grew out o!firsttadv Nancy

Reagan 's success in improving her public image by
tx&gt;comlng a high-profile champion of programs to
discourage drug use among young people.
The poUtical potential of that decision, which romes
in the midst of what could be a pivotal congressional
campaign, was 111ust rated by a New York Times-em
News poll published Tuesday, which slx&gt;wed that 13
percent of Americans surveyed called drugs the No.1
problem facing the country.
" It shows we're on the right track - that the
public's rehlnd us on this one," said one
administration official.
However, the same poll Indicated th:&gt; publlc
remains skeptical about poUticians and their motives
on the drug issue. Sixty percent said ~mst officials
were championing the issue for publicity and only 24
percent thought most were sincere.

Washington who say now we're
going to have to raise taxes and
trey claim that Is tre only way to
bring down this deficit," Bush said.
"But we ought to do It (redure the
deficit ) th:&gt; way the president wants
11 done, the way I want It done and
the way th:&gt;se congressman here
want It done and this Is by cutting
federal spending, not by increasing
taxes."
Bush said schools are again
teaching dlildrcn values and the
dltlermce between right and
wrong.
"We've got to continue to Instill
standards in wr schools. We've got
to make sure that the diploma your
child gets wlll help him or her get a
job. And we've got to get drugs out
of oor schools," Bush said.
In pral~lng the GQP fllld Its
candidates, Bush said the j)arty has
"conqueredAmerica'smalalseand
replaced It with a new spirit of
rontldence. And perhaps, most
Importantly, we've once again
shown the world lhat, above all.
America stands for Qlle basic
principle: Urerty."
·

No break
foreseen
•
m
arrest
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Soviets might find it In their best
Interest to settle quickly the case d.
Nicholas Danllo!f- a U.S. reporter
arrested In Moscow - rather than
use the incident as leverage In the
case of a Soviet U.N. employee
charl!{'d with espionage, U.S. offt.
cials say.
U.S. officials saw no early breelc
in the Danlloff case, but a State
Department spokesman saki Tuesday that Gennadl Zakharov will be
prosecuted under U.S. espionage
laws_
FBI agents arrested Zakartov, a
ON THE TRAIL - VIce President George Bush addressed Ohio and
Soviet citizen, In New York wren he
MonlgOmery County Republicans at a fund-raiser Tuesday In Dayton.
tried to buy secret documents from
Bush !lJIOke onbehal!offonnerGov. James Rhodes, wiD tinnmlnglor
a U.S. citizen.
electlolllll,ls November, and for U.S. Rep. Bob McEwen. About 500
'Redman said th:&gt; case "will be
people attended the Slll&amp;-a-plate lundJ to hear Bush's 15-minute addre!.•.
prosecuted
on Its merits in strict
(UPI)
cooformlty with U.S. law."
'"The t'Ml cases are totally
McEwen, a resident of Htllsooro, sional Medal d. Honor recipient, Is a
Is a strong favorite to defeat Gordon court administrator mr the Warren different," said Redman. "Danl·
Rorerts of Lebanon In the race for County Common Pleas Court · loft's case Is based on completely
trumped up char~s. "
the 6th Congressional District seat Juvmlle DivisiOn.
Some U.S. o!flcials saw Danlloff,
in November_ Rorerls, a Congres·
Imprisoned slnre Saturday aner be
was arrested by KGB agents In
Moscow, as a struggle tx&gt;tween
various factions In Moso:&gt;w, rather
than a rontest between Moscow and
Washington.
reached agreement with board
lasted just one day .
One riflcial, describing '" rumina·
The school board and HY.! negotiators, but the ooard rejected tions" in the State Department,
teachers in tre l,!nl-student Swan- the proposal. The contract expired suggested that Soviet leader Mlk·
ton district ct Lucas County ratified at midnight Sunday.
Swanton students returned today hall Gorbachev was not consulted
a tentative contract Tuesday nigh!
about the DanUoff arrest, but
after spending about four hours from a four-day weekend.
afterwards had to eilh:&gt;r support
Rheha Burch, president of the
wtth a federal mediator.
the KGB or create a split within the
Swanton Superintendent Roy VI - Swanton Education AssocialiOn, So vie! government .
vian said the agreement provides said the wte to ratify the contracl
"We can't rule oot the possibllity
lor a 7.1 perrent increase in base was '"not unanimous," but she that the Soviets are trying to
pay for flrst -yearteachers, up from declined to release the totals.
Influence tlv&gt; Zakharov case by
A walkout by !'m teac hers in the arresting DanUoH,"' Redman sald.
$14,lll8 last year to $15,:nl, during
15,500-student Youngstown school
the flrst12 mont lis ills In Ioree.
Sen. Richard Lugar, R·lnd.,
In tre second year, the In crease system was averted when a chairman of the Foreign Relations
would be 5.9 percent, to $16,100, he tentative contract agreement was Committee, said Gorbachev should
reached al 6:15a.m. Tuesday after resolve the dlspull' quickly.
said.
more
than two hours ctnegoliating.
Swanton teachers previously had
Classes began today.

Talks continuing to end Marietta teachers' strike

Hondrtds of petltms to com·

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Bush stumps Ohio~on behalf
of Rhodes, GOP candidates

...... -..pt ...........

• 4 Aulomatic W&amp;sh Cydes • 3. Wash f~inse

~!!!l,!

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 3, 1986

By NORMAN D. SANDLER
SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (UPI) - President
Reagan's antklrug offensive takes Ill the airwaves
soon with a televised address to the nation on his
program to eradicate drug abuse and drug
trafficking, White House officials say.
One presidential aide said Tuesday that the speech,
expected to be delivered "stortly after" Reagan
returns to Washington next Monday, wlll be "th:&gt;
ionnal opening" of a campaign against drug
traffickers and users.
The major television networks have not yet been
consulted on a specUlc time and date for the speech.
In recent months, Reagan has turned to televiskm to
promote his defense budget and aid to Nicaraguan
rebels.
The administration anti-Orug effort will Include

. ...............
.......
"' ,.....
,........., ...,...
.........
,..................
. . .I . . . . .. ....,

chance ol showers and
stonns and a low in the mld 1118.
Showers and thundeNorm!i
likely Thursday, with highs near
80. The probability pf preclplla·
tOnlgbt and Ill
lion is 50

Reagan readies anti-drug campaign for TV

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SEPTEMBER

Four split prize
CLEVELAND (UPI I - Four
Ohio Lotto players who have tickets
with the six numbers clrawn In
Saturday's game can redeem them
today and become eligible lor the
jackpot of nearly $2.8 million.
The number of players wto had
four and five ri the winning
numtx&gt;rs was to be announced
today. Lottery offices were closed
Monday due 111:&gt; Labor Day hollday.
Numrers drawn were2,J, 15, 17,
18 and 24. Lottery cfficlals said
$3,751,116 worthoftickets were sold,
thus creating a jackpot d. $2,798,00
that the four wUI share.
The estimated jackpot for next
Saturday's drawing is Sl miiUon.

Capt. Crow
issues picks
for Friday

School syst~m· tries to block j~b action :

Willard residents
flee toxic spill

II

Tuesday. September 2, 1986

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

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Independent federal panel, is Investigating the accident and is not
expected to issue Its final report for
at least eight months.
The board is studying the two
black boxes recovered from the
Mexican airliner to try and dis·
cover the cause of the rollislon. One
ct the instruments recorded cockpit
conversation and the other re·
corded data such as the plane's
altitude and speed.
The number of near collisions In
the air rose about 3 perrent lor the
first six months of this year, with
about 400 Incidents reported
through June, wmpared with the
same period In 19S5, the FAA said.
There were 589 reports of near
colllsbns In 1984.
The FAA considers an Incident a
near collision when a pUot or a crew
memrer reporrs danger ct colli·
slon, ngardless ct whether the
alrcra!l ·is In tile, air or on the
ground, and when instruments
~rd tha\•two or IOOre planes are
less tha,n SlO fl!et apart.
Most . riear collisions take place
when one plane Is descending or
cUmbing and the other Is In level
flight, FAA siatlstlcs show.
One rea~&gt;n tlr the rlslng number
of reported near colllltons is that .
the FAA has lnitituted an Improved
fE.'IX)nlng system, officials said, In
which more Incidents are logged ln.

.
'.

'

.''

• ·- .. -•

--W--•,.. · -~·

Investigators eye
factors in crash
United Press lntemallonal
Sentinel Staff Reports
A Piper Cherokee showed up on

an air traffic control radar screen
at Los Angeles International Air·
port, but probably wasnotthepiane
an Aeromexico DC-9 was warned of
75 seconds before a collision that
killed at least 70 people and maybe
as many as !6.
The pilot of the Piper was
violating regulations bY flying
through airspace usually restricted
to commercial jets when he ran Into
Aeromexlco F1lght 498, sending
both planes hurtnng Into a resklen·
ttal neighoorhood, a National
Transportation Safety Board inves·
tlgator said Tuesday night.
John Lauber of the NTSB said
pilot William K. Kramer, whom the
Jackson Herald or Ripley, W.Va ..
tentatively identified as a tonner
Ravenswood, W.Va., resident wto
onre worked at the Kaiser Aluml·
num plant, failed to rontact air
traffic controller.; as required and
request '"a clearance to ~rate" In
the restricted zone. He said the
radar Information available to air
controUers would not have given
them the Piper's altitude.
Kramer reportedly retired from
Khtser's Spokane, Wash.. plant
alter leaving the Ravenswood
facUlty, the Herald ~ed.

One minute and 15 Slronds briO,.
the Piper slasl"l&gt;d d.! the OC-9'stall
and sent it plunglnR to thl' l!I'Ollrd. •
controller had told th:&gt; jctlinrr's
pilot, "AeromC'xico 4911, traffk' 10
o'clock, J mil&lt;' northbound. aiUtudP
unknown ."
"Roger, 498... thl' pilot responOOct.
Laurer said tIY' Mromexlro lilol
and co.pltot "did not acknowt
with any lnfnrmatlon that IIIey 11.c1
spotted th:&gt; traffic."
By "tratlic," th:&gt; NTSB ~
man said the conuollet wa
referring to one alrcra n, but l1f' ld
investigato.-. dctmnlned It ll'l
probably not thl· Piper. Lauher ld
there wen• apparentlY lhl'cr lmAil
planes abovr Cerrit01 - onu t
J,IXXJ teet below the ,leUin«. tllr onr
approaching at 10 o'clOCk and the
Piper.
Asked why lhf• rontrollet- did not

warn Fllgllt

~!li

about the Plpft-.
Lauber saki . ··n·amc .ciYIIcriN o1
that kind art' a dl.lcrei!Onarv
servk'e provldl'd by the lcoft·
troUersl." He added IIIII 1
controller was Jllllblbly "'dMU.
with oommunlcatlons wtlh CMIItr
aircraft ."
The oontroUl'r \'Oiunlarlly •
milled a urbw ~~- b" .,_
analylls Tuetday lid . . to ...
interviewed by NTSB ~
today. .

·--~

'

C-CAtO

Martetta teachers staged a
seven-day strike In 1979.
In Newton Falls. prlnctpals.
supervisors and a few substitute
teachers took the place of 100
striking teachers for a second day
today.
Officials said only aoout ll
students attmded class In .the
1,!IDstudent district Tuesday when
buses were not running , but school
ctllcials said buses ran on schedule
today and they hoped attendance
'MlUid Improve.
No negotiations were scheduled.
Officials said the last strike in
Newton Falls came in 1972 and

....

•~- ,

..

•~-•

,,

•

"'

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