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'

Ponieroy~Middleport, Ohio

Pl!ge-1 0- The Daily Sentinel

CLEVElAND tUPI) - There was one grand prize winner in
Saturday night's Lotto drawirig, with that person winning $1,295.268,
lottery officials said Sunday_
_
The grand prize winner, who has me year to redeem his ticket, will
receive 20 annual Installments of approximately $6!1, 763, or about
$51,810 after federal taxes are subtracted.
Lottery officials said 259 people had five of the numbers correct
and Will receive $1,013 apiece, while $53 Will go to each Of 13 216who
had four of the numbers.
'
The winning numbers were 6- 19-~-:0.31-36 (six, nineteen,
twenty-eight, thirty, thirty-one, thirty-six).
- Next week's grand prize will be at least $1 m!Ulon. The grand prize
in Wednesday's Super Lotto drawing will be at least S15 nnlUion.

Teamsters reject concessions
CINCINNATI (UP!) - HudePohl beer truck drivers set up an
obstacle to the sale of the brewery to SchoenUng Brewing Co. by
rejecting contract concessions. a Teamsters leader said.
- Robert Bethel. president of Teamsters LDcal 1199. ~aid the vote
was 52-46 against concessions which woold have towered the average
weekly wage of a driver from $500 to $400.
The offer also lacked job security and drivers could have lost their
jobs after a merger, he said.
·
Bethel said Schoentlng president Ken Uchtendahl Indicated the
drivers' rejection ended Schoenling's attempt to buy Hudepohl.
"I think they're just going to pull back their bid," Bethel said. He
saw no prospect for continued negotiations on concessions.

Religious college closes doors
COLUMBUS (UP!) - One of eight religious s~hools being
investigated for operating as a college without state authorization
has ceased to operate. a spokeswoman fort he Ohio Board of Regents
said.
State officials began investigating four of the schools after the
Columbus Dispatch ran a series of stories In September on diploma
mills and unauthorized schools. The others were reported to the
Board of Regents after the stories appeared.
Under Ohio law. a school is operating Ulegally if it caUs itself a
college or gran ts degrees without authorization.
Patricia Skinner, director of certificates of autrorization for the
board said the pastor of Eastern Union Bible College In Columbus
wrote a letter to the board saying the school has changed Its name
and quit offering bachelor's degrees.
The school will continue to offer Bible study classes for no cr'edft.
Two other schools. Heritage Baptist Academy in Canal
Winchester. and Harvest Temple Bible College In Oytle. said they
never offered co!lege credits. Skinner said the J3oarP of Regents and
the Ohio attorney general are Investigating the schools.

Athens County judge quits bench
WASHINGTON (UP! I -An Ohio judge has been forced to resign
from his seat in Athens Coonty Common Pleas court in order to
receive a prestigious fellowship to the U.S. Supreme Court.
J udge Thomas Hodson. 38. was selected recently-to serve as a
fellow to Chief Justice William Rehnqulst
However. Ohio Supreme Court Chief Justice Frank Celebi'('Zze
says Hodson can not temporarily leave the bench because Ohio law
allows no long term leaves of absence except for health reasons.
Hodson aske&lt;} the Ohio General Assembly in September to change
the law. but the lawmakers never got around to passing it, so Hodson
resigned after an old political enemy from Athens, Joe Sabino,
petitioned the Ohio Supreme Court to remove him.
In resigning, he gave up the remaining four years of his term and
he took a $5,000 pay cut

Clevelanders may puy for repair
CLEVELAND tuPll - City fi'Sidents may be forced to pay for
sidewalk and curb repair because of the pinch in federal block grant
money, say~ Mayor George Voinovlch.
.
_
"We've got to spend the money on the projects that will leverage
additional private and governmental money or provide more jobs,"
Volnovich said Saturday. "We've got to bemorecreatlvein the use of
block grant money. "
The city had close to $40 nnllllon in block grant allocations In
1900-81. but has been allocated $.!4.4 nnlillon for 1986- 87 and wUl
receive SZl.9 million In 1987-88. Voinovich said.
"1 believe in the New Federalism ci the administration, but 1oon't
believe New FederaUsm means no federalism," Volnovich said.
"The federal government has a responsiblllty to help cities."

By United Press lnlemallonal
·The campaign of fonner Gov,
James Rhodes to unseat Gov.
ftich_an;l Celeste Sunday received
the backing of the Cincinnati
Enquirer, but Celeste was endorsed
by The Akron Beacon' Journal and
The Toledo Blade.
Both The Blade and The Beacon
Journal said they were making
their choices reluctantly_ "Negatives are the basic theme
of this year's race for govei'IIQr:
The casual approach_to ethics in the
adrrilnlstratlon of Richard Celeste; the lack of vision in thecampa)gn r1

.'
'
James Rhodes," The Bearon Said.
"Both are troubling: but for the
future of the state of Ohio, we think
the better choice for governor Is the
Incumbent, Richard Celeste, 48, the

'

Contract acceptance finishes
ll8-day steelworkers' strike

UAWiocal
considers pact

r;::========================:===========l;:

e
e

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The Daily Sentinal
"Your Home/Own

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for title·
-Page 4

·Daily Number
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Moistly clear tonJPt, with
low near 45. J"artfy doudy
Wednesday, with highs near 61. ·
The probabYfty of precfpflallon
is near zero throu~ Wednesday.

•

enttne
Vol.36, No. 123
Copyrighted 1986

-

.

1 Section , 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, October 28, 1986

25 Cent•

A Multimedia Inc. Newspap&amp;l

Council approves ownership transfer action
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel staff Writer
A move to transfer ownership of
the Sears-Fruth _ complex, bull!
partially with funding secured by
the v]jlage through the Ohio
Department of Development. was
given the approval of Middleport
Vlllage Council at last night's
meeting.
Mayor Fred Hoffman advised
that But Haptonstail, operator of
Sears, is interested in purchasing
· the buUdlng from Greg Gibbs and
has asked to takeover the loan from

the village fund at the same rate.
· Council passed a resolution by
unanlmous vote to make the
necessary changes In the loan
name, which would permit Haptonstall to proceed with the purchase.
l;loffman noted that the village does
oot have to secure the approval of
the state to make the transfer.
The mayor reported that the
yillage will receive no revenue
sharing montes next year but that
an additional $2,700 wUl be coming
in before the end of the year. He
said that .the village had approp-

rlated only $11,944 in the current
budget, had received $16;24lincludfng the balance from 1916, and
needed ,to appropriate the balance
in revenue sharing funds. Council
gave the . first reading to an
ordinance which would allocate the
money to various funds.
Hoffman reported that the$16,552
in community development block
grant fund s allocated by the Meigs
County Commissioners to purchase
and raze the burned-out buDding on
North Second will be available In
early 1987 _ The property will be .

resold by the village for development once _the former _ Empire
Furnitu re buUding has been torn
down. Discussed at length at the
meeting was the ferry service to
operate between Meigs and Mason
Counties while the Pomeroy-MaSon
bridge Is closed for repairs. Mayor
Hoffman, and Council members
Dewey Horton and Jack Satterfield
attended a meeting Qf village
of-ficials and business ·representatives rn til:&gt; matter last week. It was
the general consensus of the

prospective ·operator. Dorsel
McCoy. Point Pleasant, and others
that the · best location would he
between Middleport and Clifton.
W.Va. Hoffman said the Middleport
levee is ln good condition but t~at
the Clifton levee would require
considerable work.
Hoffman and Council commended But ~lower and Bill Nease,
of the Middleport and Pomeroy
Chambers of Commerce, for their
Involvement in the project and
spoke of how vital It is to the
businesses of roth towns that the

.UMW ,authorizes
By DAN CARMICHAEL
.UPI Labor l!eyortcr
ATLANTA IUPI) -TheflerceJy
Independent United Mine Workers
union may merge with another
labor organization in a move that
reflects hard times In the coal fields
and the poUt leal clout of Its young
pl'l'Sfdent.
In less than ll minutes Monday,
delegates to the .union's first special
conventlon In its 97-history approved a package of proposals
advanced by President Richard
Trumka.
The delega tes authorized
Trumka to negotiate a merger or
affiliation with another union. In the
past, !'Ven talk of merger would
have been heresy.
But Trumka, 37. warning In an
emotional speech of tough contract
negotiations and a bleak future for
the union unless it adapts. persuaded the 1,500 delegates to
overwhelmingly approve his
"game plan.
Delegates also authorized removal of the "cap" on the UMW's $70
million strike fund, which would be
Increased by a 2.5 percent assessment of the membership. Currently, the strike fund contains $47
million.
The near-total lack of opposition
to the proposals was proof of the
political sfrength Trumka has
consolidated since his election as
president in 19112.
Trumka warned of the union 's
-weakened position at the barg~~in - ing table because of increasing
mull lnational ownership of coal
companies and operation of nonunion mines. Multinati&gt;nal companies derive only a portion of their
revrnu&lt;'S from coal. insulating
tix'm ti"om the imp'act of strikes.
"Brothers and sisters. the future
of the union and our members is
precarious." Trumka said .
"We must have the ability .. _ to

-

-

-

merw &lt;r affiliate with other labor
organizations:" Trumka said. "We
need to have as many different
plays as possible in wr playbook."
Speaking later with reporters.
Trumka said he had not discussed a
merger with any other u_nlon. but
described a possible merger as a
"tool" to enhance the UMW's
strengt h.
"As we enter this next round of
negotlations. It is not sufficient to
negotiate a oon- concessionary
contract." he said.
The UMW faces tough going in
coal lndustcy negotiations. The
national contract expires In Janual)' 1988. but talks are expected to
begin later this year.
\llere was considerable speculation by delegate; tllat Trumka
might engineer a merger with the
Ott. Chemical and Atomic Workers
Internatk&gt;nal union, wiDse president. Joseph Misbrener, spoke to
the UMW convention.
Trumka also announced an
agreement with OCAW to share
information about their commo11
corporate opponents at the barg;tfn·
ing table.
The UMW's ranks have been
D:pieted since the coal boom ci the
1970s, declining from some 160,000
members to approximately 100,000
today.
The OCA W also has suffered
from .the bust in America'soilfields,
leading to speculatk&gt;n that the two
unions are "natural" allies.
Trumka . who began working In
the coal nnlnes at the age r:l19 and
later _earned a law degree, said the
J"i?gotlations would be "hard" and
"difficult.''
Delegates also approvJ"(( a proposal to ·cancel next year's convention and hold it In 19\ll. That means
there wUl be no convention In the
midst of the national coal negotiations in 1987 - the same year
Trumka is up tbr re-election.

,\ strike by the approxima te
150 tea chers of the Meigs Local
School District - sch!'dufed to
begin at 12: ill a.m. toda_v -was
averted Monda y evenln!(.
Negotiators for the teachers
and lhe Meigs Local Board of
Educa tion moved into ,~a final
session at 1: 30 p.m Monday and
before 8 p.m. came out of the
session with a tentative agrrement for a new contract.

Meigs Local Board of Education
has thrre days to hold a special
meeting tri formally ratify the
agreement.
After several extensions by_
the teachers, the contract between them and the roard of
education had lx&gt;eQ ex tended to
12:01 a.m. on Oct. 16 and
provisions were made for rmre
extensions on a day to day basis.
However, the teachers association did mtify the board. In .
Teachers of the district met at writing, that its members wo:lld
8 p.m. in the nearby Meigs go m strtke at 12:01 a.m. Ocl2l If
Junior High School. Midlleport, a new contract agreematt was .
and ratlfied the agreement. The mt reached.
·

ferry be in operation wring the
bridge closing.
Horton ooted that McCoy has said
Middleport's levee l&lt;; a better
location' due to the oownstream
angle and particularly slnre it could
be used durtng times of high water
without any problem.
Council talked about traffic flow
and Horton said that Mayor
Hoffman had worked out a pattern
for getting on and off the fer!)'- to
go on to come down Front Street .
park on the left hand side of the
(Continued on Page 10)

Auditor
hopeful
bashes
Celeste

·merger bargalning

board avert strike

/

992-2156.

Ohio Lottery

Me,igs teachers,
•

If you jams uro• thr~&gt;adhare and your
wht't'ls arr worn, don't rr&amp;Kh! M11ney
for thr te~&gt;nage nt'ces• itir. ran he
yours. Call Th .. Daily Seniinel Circula•
tion Dl'pl. for morr information -

Mets nip

'

ulnce, and with unbouhded admiration still 101~ the job Jim Rhodes dld
during his 16 years as governor, we
endorse Governor Celeste f9r reelectton.ln the hope that hewutri&lt;le
to the occasion and demonstrate I~
honest and effective · leadership
Ohio needs," The Blade said.
·

-.

$25 .00

~-

Monday, October 27, 1986 t

development" and other ar€8s, the
newspaper said.
_
The Beacon Journal also noted
Celeste's problems with his ~
appointees.
- _- · - ,
1
''AdnnlttedJy, because of the '
· Democrat."
ethics Issue, there is a ri&lt;lk In a
The Blade, which endorsed Cesecond Celeste term. But in terms .
leste four years .ago; said it was
of -overall state government, Of '
- qlsappolnted by an admlnlstratlon
_ The editorial Siogfed wt many of where Ohio should be headed, there :_
that lias !Mien Rlarked by "atroRhodes's
accompllshments as evl-_ Is a greater risk In Mr. Rhodes's '
cious" appointments and the numerous indictments · of Its dence of his ability -to govern hodge-podge cJ dated Ideas, vacant :
members, but encouraged by his dfecttvely in the past. Btt his promises and absence ri vision." ,
The paper said, however, that the ;
abtllty to lead the state Into the neKt campaign is bereft of imaginative
programs and "blueprints for endorsement may have gone the :
decade.
_
"With understandable reluc- progress !n, badlY needed ecomrotc other way were Rhodes's running ;
'mate, HamUton County Commissioner Robert Taft, heading the ;
tjc~et.
•
"In sharp contfliSt, Ml1. Rhodes, '
77, is rooted In the past. Aside from :
tre contrtbutions of Mr, Taft, the '
Rhodes campaign has been hopelessly out of touch, .even with large ;
.
.
segments of the ,Ohio Republican
with a 5 percent wage restoration In proposal is development of a Party," The Beacon Journal said:
HANNIBAL, Ohio (UPil Overwhelming acceptance of a the llnal year of the package, was labor-man11gement cooperation
The Enquirer safd_lt was enthust'team that would address the poor astlcaly endorsing the Rhodes-Taft
Ia bor contract between members of 1,077 to 2118.
Local 5724 of the United Steel-- • Ormet agreed to provide the relatk&gt;nship between top company tlcket. which last week was en- 1
workers union a~d the Orrnet workers with preferred company officials and the union.
dorsed by the Columbus Dispatch,
The proposed contract also proAluminum Co. closes one of the stock and create a profll,sharing
"James A. Rhodes has already .
most rontroverslal chapters In the program In exchange for the vides that the lo&lt;'al union president been govermr of Clllo for longer
concessions.
and grlevance committee chair- - than anyone else In history. He stiU ·
history of the Ohio River plant_
About half of the 1,500employees man will -be able to devote all of ' has much to give Ohio In terms o' .
Employees Sunday approved the
contract, -ending a 118-day strik~ are scheduled to return to work their time to union activities and strong, purposeful leadership. The '
that was marked by several violent Nov. 3. More will be called back labor-management relations, while Enquirer believes he deserves the
confrontations between the com- weekly untU the plant is back to still drawing their regular Onnet cpportunity. The prospect that
capacity In Ailrtl.
salaries: ·
pany and the Sll'ikil]g workers.
Cincinnati's Robert A. Taft II would ,
"I'm glad this strtke is finally
Duling the strtke, an investor be a key figure as lieutenant •
The vote on the 43-month agreement calling for an average hourly over because we now have an group put together by Boyle closed governor makes the prospect aU the :
wage and benefit reduction of $4.00. opportunity to buUd a new future, a a deal to purchase Onnet from its more appealing," The Enquirer :
future that can provide jobs for a lot foFmer parent companies, Consoli- swd.
:
of good people," said Onnet dated Aluminum and Revere
"During the Rhodes years, •
President Emmett Boyte In a Copper and Brass.
Ohioans used lo joke about his
statement released Sunday.
The roinpany has been unprofita - h.arplng on 'jobs.' The jobs Issue, to :
"We must prove that Ormet can ble for some time, and Boyle him. was not just the most
become a competitive independent maintained throughout the strike . Important issue, but the mJy Issue.
aluminum
producer that will sur- thitt Orrnet needed concessions to If Ohioans can find rewarding,
LORDSTOWN, Ohio (UP[) vive
and
will
provide jobs and become . rost competitive in the productive, satisfying . jobs, he
Auto workers at General Motors
security
for
a
long
tel'm future. " he world aluminum market.
t:elleved, they will be sound and
Corp.'s -Lordstown car and van
said.
The plant has been running at less responsible eitizens."
assembly plants began meeting
Celeste, The Enquirer said, gives
"I felt that it would probably be than half of oorrnal operating
today to discuss a tentative local
the
strike,
with
capacity
during
ratified
hut
not
this
strongly,"
said
service" to the cause of
only-"lip
contract agreement.
a
bout
:00
salaried-employees
mwnj&lt;ibs.
"His
administration has given
Kenny
Cozart,
president
of
USW
Members of UAW Local1112 will
tainlng
production.
LDcal
Si'24.
Ohio a climate In which old business
vote Nov. 17 on the proposed
Onnet has received commit- finds It difficult to grow, In which
Cozart said a number of emfour-year pact, which was reached
Oct. 14 after 10 weeks on ployees who wereorlglnaUy against ments for loans to help It return to · new business finds it difficult to
it accepted it when the oompany · full-scale operations.
I~ocate.''
negotiatlon s.
If the strtke were to conti11ue and
The Enquirer also enoorsed Sen:
The proposal will result in a 2 lowered the number of jobs lost
eventually
force
the
company
to
from
75
to
15.
He
said
the
15
people
John
Glenn over Republican chal.
percent pay htke and job security
cease
production.
the
existence
of
who
will
mt
be
rehired
wUl
ooUect
a
Ienger
Thomas Kindness, a Confor 8.000 union workers.
two
nearby
West
Virginia
operaretirement
package.
gressman
from the Clnctnnatl area-.
Local1112 President Bill Bowers
tions
would
have
been
thrown
into
"We are never satisfied with a
It spilt the ticket in the four .
said additional raises would be
statewide races, endorsing Demo.granted to "variable operators," a contract where you've got to take a doubt .
American Electric Power's cratlc Incumbents Anthony Cetenew classification of workers who step backwards," Cozart said. He
Kammer
power plant in Marshall brezze and Mal)' Ellen Withrow for
would be trained in at least seven added that the union bargainers
were satisfied with an auditor's County sells virtually aU the attorney general and state treasdifferent job areas.
The cro8s-tratned workers will report on the company's finances electricity It generates to Ormet, urer, respectively, and Republican
give the company more flexibUity. sayiong the wage scale flt what the -while Consolidation Coal Co.'s c-hallengers Ben Rose and Vincent
-Ireland Mine supplies the roal used Campanella in the races for operation could bear.
Bowers said.
Another key element In the in the pov.er plan L
s:ecretary of state and auditor.
·
The contract also cuts the

number
overall
lions fromof 107
to 58 job
and,classlflcatrims the
number of supervisory personnel
on the plant floor.
Bowers and other local union
officers traveled to Detroit last
week to present the package to
officials at GM and the UA W
internati:lnal union. The International approved the package, and
Bowers said he expects GM to do
the same.
The unlon official said the new
contract secures the jJtr; of union
members. unless the company is
forced to eliminate a work shift or
reduce production ilne speed because of slow car sales.

--

..

,...------.-Ohio Briefs:-- 2 newspapers -suppo~ ·,Cel~ste candidacy
One ticket nets Lotto prize

~

~---

.

By LEE LEONARD
UPI statehouse Reporter

RICHER - The Carleton School In Syracuse was

$8,000 rtcher as the ~•• of oontributions made to the

school Monday afternoon to provide funds for
development of the school w-ounds. The school
received Sii,OOO from the Middleport-Pomeroy I!A:tary
Club Orfppled Children's Ftmd a,nd $3,000 from the
Meigs AliSOClatlon for Retarded CKlzens. The money
wUJ provide for a ball fltold, a picnic shelter house, a
wheek:halr path IUld an outdoor baskethaB wurt to he

carried out in three phases over a t hree-ycar period.
The money lor the ·Rotary contrihution came from
Interest Iron\ the estate of the fate Elsa B. Kimes.
Pictured at the presentation are: front, I tn r, Nora
Harri&lt;l Rice, president of MAJU:; Lee Wedemeyer,
Cark'ton School superintendent; James Diehl,
president oft he Rotary Club; hack, Itor, Tom &amp;wen,
BUI F'riUlcis, Lee W.l\fcComas, Kart Kehler ID, and
BUI Blower, Rotary Cluh members.

New war of words erupts
•
over arms stance at summit
By RICHARD C. GI«&amp;
And White House aides indicated
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The today the admlnlst ration is sending
White House and the Pentagon:s top to U.S. arms negotiators In Geneva
arrns control expert are accusinl( this' week a wide-ranging packag-e
the Soviets of trying to split NATO of proposals lncorporatinl: Reaallies by sayin~: President Reagan gan's summit offer to eliminate all
agreed at the Iceland summit to _ balllstic missiles within 10 years.
eliminate all nuclear weapons.
Aides said Reagan attended a
Assistant Defense SecretaiY RI- meeting Monda y.- of a National
chard PerltJ, one of the rx&gt;gotiators Securtty Council planning group
at the surrlmit in Reykjavik. said that drew up the Geneva directive
Monday that Reagan "did not go outlining in prl11clple a unified u.s.
al_ong" with an offer by Soviet - p()slti:ln on the summit proposals'
leader Miki)ali Gorbachev to abol- Reagan and Gorbachev discussed
Ish all strategic nuclear arms and In Iceland .
that !hero was "no -discuss'ion on
NATO depends on nuclear wea how one would define strategic pons based In Europe to deter the
arms."
SoviNs from launching an attack
"The president did not say that. with _oonventional weapons. The
but the Sovletsareseeklngtocreate Soviet bloc outnumbers NATO In
the lmpresslon, that he did," Perle . conventional weapons. Any U.S.
said In an interview. "! think the agreement to witlxlraw nuclear
Soviets want to create the Impres- weapons- whtch include nuclearsion that something was agreed at armed bombers and artillery shells
Reykjavik that wasn't agreed at as well as ballistic missiles - ti"om
Reykjavik.
Europe would be certain to spark a
" I think the Russians are trying major disagreement and a split
to make an Issue that would-create within NATO.
problems with the allies," he said.
Perle said Reagan would not go
Perle. a hardliner considered the along with ellrninati&gt;n of all nuclear
administration's top arms control weapons because "he understands
expert, said Reagan proposed the perfectly well" that the Soviet bloc
elimination of only -all ballistic is _stronger In conventional fforces
missiles within 10 years "whatever than NATO.
the range."
What lu!ve baUooned into issues

following- the summit Oct.ll -12 are
questions about whether the presioont fully understood the complexities of what was being negotiated
and whether the Soviets. oorrectty
reported the oontents of the negotiations, which they based on notes
taken at the session.
During the weekend, Deputy
Soviet Foreign Minister Aleksan dr
Bessmyrtnykh quoted Reagan as
saying: "U we agree that by the end
of the 10-year -period all nuclear
arms are to be eliminatel:l, we can
refer this to wr delegations in
Geneva to prl'pare an agreement
you could sign during ywr visit to
the United States."
Perle said the Soviet notes were
not an "agreed text" on the talks by
roth sides. He said the U.S. side
took its own not es and made oo tape
recording.
White House spokesman Larry
Speakes. who also accused the
Soviets Monday of tl)'ing to divide
Western allies, said ills not "usual"
diplomatic practice to disclose
discussions at private summit
meetings and the admin istration
wUl not release ootes on the talks.
The Soviets have ihreatated to
release the nnlnutes of the session.
which woold be a· breach ct
diplom alie protocoL

COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPI) -Ben
Rose, the Republican oomlnee for
state auditor, said Monday Gov.
Richard F. Celeste is living high off
the hog at the Governor's Mansion.
and he used a live lobster to
punctuate his accusation.
Rose told reporters hls Democratic opponent. state Auditor
Thomas E. Ferguson, has been soft
on the governor in his audits of the
Mansion expenses.
"Tom Ferguson has a hlstol)' of
looking the other way or doing
nothing when it comes to protecting
tax dollars that are abused by his
political friends," said Rose, brandishing the squirming crustacean.
Ferguson responded that his
agency audits the expenditures of
the Goveroor's Mansion every, two
years and wUl make a r(port 11
anything illegal is found.
Rose said Celeste has purchased
lobster tails, stuffed flounder, crab
legs and veal cutlet, as well as
expensive china and designer
bedsil&gt;ets. He conceded the expenses are not illegal. and many
are for the benefit of guests. but
added:
"A goveroor with flair and style
ooes not have to waste the
taxpayers' money ."
Rose suggestal that Celeste
serve Lake Erie penn or Ohio
catfish. beef or chicken . "We don't
need an impertal goveroorship in
Ohio." he said.
"The state auditor approves
every expendi ture state , government makes, and 1bm Ferguson
has not llfted a linger to (JJ €Stion the
goveroor's Ufestyle at the Mansio n." said Rcse.
Rose said--If he becomes ~uditor,
he will quietlY discuss any question-"
able ex(Enses . with tix' oHending
sta te r:lflceholder. If they 00 not
stop, he said , hewill!llblicize them,
regardess of the officeholder's
party af!Uiation.
Ferguson said his office makes a
post -audit ct til:&gt; Cl'&lt; pendt urcs r1 thf'
Goveroor's Mansion eve-v two
years.
"If there are anv vblations of the
law, we report tix'm. and that's
exactly w'hat wc'U do in this case."
-he said.
Ferguson suid the governor is
appropriated a certain amount of
money to maintain the residence.
and has the authority to spend that
ll)Oney. "If the Legislature had put
any restrictions on that money, we
would follow those," said the '
auditor.

Lee retrial ·judge denies acquittal motion; defense begins
GALLIPOLIS - Alter Gallia
County Common Pleas Court Judge
Richard C. Roderiek Jr. denied
three motions -for mistrial and
another for a direct acquittal of
Charles L. Lee II. Lee's defense
attorney called the his first witness
to open the presentation of his case.
Alter Gary Bane, juvenile officer
with Gallla Coonty Probate Coort,
was called to testjfy, the. prosecution rested and James M. Casey,
Lee's new attorney, made his

motions to RDderlck.
The Point Pleasant a ttomey
motioned .for a mlstrtal on three
co11nts. TwO onne counts were
based on testimony by Carl E.
Langford, county chief lnvestfga·
tor. last Thursday.
Casey's first point claimed. upon
Lee's orlglnal arrest tor the shootIng death of Barbara Twyman on
April 6, 1910, Lee was mfsfnfonned
of hls lights and ail questions about ·
the alleged murder weapon should

have _ t?een suppressed until he
received proper legal counsel.
Th.e then-17-ITa_r-old,_ who wa!
convicted of the murder, also was
under duress during the interrogaUon, Casey said.
A statement made by Langford
about a polygraph test was the
defense's second point for nnlstrtal.
Langford accidently made a referralto the test, whtch-cahnot be held
as adnnlssable evidence. The statement was stricken from court

records immediately.
Langford also remarkea arout
_ Lee'~lld being revoked. !l&lt;lnd Is
usually revoked because authoi'ities fear the suspect wlU leave the
area. Casey said Langford's referraJ to this may Influence the jurors
into believing his client is guilty.
Alter the three nnlstrial motions,
Casey moved that Lee be directly
acqutttt&lt;tl, cliifffitifg tHllt tile tr(fsecution, lacking physical evidence to
ilnk Lee 1o the_murder. failed to

prove the youth's participation In
the murder beyond reasonable
doubt
1n response, Prosecutor Joseph
L. Cain said that Lee properly
executed his lights waiver prior to
the interrogation and .both of
Langford's afore-mentioned statements were unintended and properly stricken from the records.
Considering both counsel's statements, Roderick refused Casey's
mlstrtal _request and denied his

a

direct acquittal motion. Roderick
said he dented tho acqulttal,motlon
because a reasonable mind, based
on evidence brought forward by the
prosecution. may find otherwise.
Following the denials, Casey was
instructed to call his first witness. Before the state rested Its case.
Bane was asked to testifY. Bant&gt;
was present during Lee's Initial
Interrogation and Informed the
youth of his rights.
Bane said he heard Lee tell his
(Continued on Page 10)

�..,........._ ..
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October28, .1986

Commentary
ll1 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

.

~mliil ~._~ ..-.--....c:~.-

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ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publl!her
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

~

By DAVE RAFFO

get her. Injuries to both players also Cary Clark picked the Glanis New York Mets scored or recorded
made using them together difflcull. defense apart. Schroeder threw for a key out In their 8-5 victory aver the
EAST RUTHERFORD. N.J.
However, the Giants needed
carcer·high 4W yards and Oark Boston Red Sox. With 3: 151efl in the
(UP!) -New York Giants Coach offensive change after a 17-12ioss to acaught
11 passes for a club-,rccord third quarter,. the crowd· erupted '.
· Blll Parcells did some experiment· Seattle. They used ()ttis Anderson
when the Series ended.
241 yard~. ·
lng Monday rugh\ and found th~ at ftillba:ck Monday and found him
"The noise hurt us ,'' Redskins
The Gian ts wen t ahead :ll-3 on a
formula to cure his team's offensive to be a pretty solid blocker. The :tO-yard pass from Phi l Simms to h'llard Rus~ Grimm said. "II j:ulled
ms.
Giants even paired Anderson and Bobbv Jotmson early in the third lis offside a couple of times : But
Parcells wanted to try differen t Tony Galbreath In the backfield on quaricr. The Redskins came back they played ha rd 8lough to win
fonnatlons and personnel combina- the!~ second· possession in hopes ,of on a 1-. yard TD run by ·George anyway."
·
.
tions against the Washington Reds· taking so.me pressure off Morris.
Roget:S was held to a season-.tow
Rogers, and Schroeder's 42-yard
klns to snap the Giants from \heir
Morris turned intp the workhorse scoring pass to Clark later in tte 30 va rd&gt; on 16 carries, rut scored a
scorlng slump. The Giants opened anyway. He carried 31 times 10 roll quart er.
rushing TD for tiE lith straight
.
the gamewlth.two tight ends for the up the second biggest game of his
"l reaDy didn 't anticipate thai game. }ie matched lenny Moore
first time, and · the new bok careei· and the · fourt h largest mM,Y big plays." sa id. Schroc:&lt;Jer·. · tor 'the second longest streak in
confused the Redsklns and helped single-game rushing total in Giants .who completed 22 of 40 with two NFL history. two behind John
Joe Moirls to an 181- yard· rushing history, His 11-yard TD run gave in terceptions. "They tried man -to· Riggins' record of t:l straight.
. game.
New York a 10-0 lead en route to a man coverage on us and came up
Morris scored twice, including on short-lived 20-:l advantage.
,.
Transa('tions
short . Sui at th&lt;'. end we were the
a 1l-yard run with 1: 38 remaining, ' l\1orrls declined to talk alter the
who caine up stv rt."
Ra.whall '
to lift the Giants to a 27-~ victory . game, b.Jt his teammates praised ones
Max Zendejas' 29-yard fi eld goal
fhlt·ago- ~· anwd .llmrn)• Pil'f·
and Into a three- way tie with him.
with 4:00 left tied ttl.~ game.
l'l:d l to rrunl ufrit'4'.
Washington and the Dallas Cow•
RaskNhall
"I'm going to let the stallslics Zenci?jas kicked a Zl- yarct&gt; r lalr in
s :u:rimwntn ....,. Sigu(•d rc,okh·
ooys for first in the NFC East.
speak for his accomplishments," the (iJ·sr half. Raul AUegre, Who
Ut·ut 'l• llou~lot"ilnn l ·~t·uHnnlra(•t.
"We didn't plan to use it .that New York cent er Bart Oates said. earlier kicked field goals of .rr and
· .'''"Ill•· ~ lkt"""" ''""'d Hh'k)·
much," Parcells said of the two· "I can't speak any bette· than what 44 yards·. nussed
.
en
der ear IY
S!Jlll'rN.
,
a ..,-yar
t'uull&lt;tll
tight end look, "but once we got it he did on the field. I can give ) 'OU a
lhe fourth quarter.
N••w Orli•an&lt; - Wulwd wid•·
· MORRIS 'rOUGH - New York Giants hack ,Joe Morris (20) takes
going we were going to try and lot of adjectives, like superb . in Both
tmms were a bit ronlused
rt•dm Gi•tdu M"'k''"' nlllnju.,..l
Washington's
Neal Olkcwicz (52) along lor SOllll' ol hi' first quarter
rt~•·nt•; gtutrd ,Jt•rry Rtiymnnd
make them stop it. We're just outstanding, wonderful. detPrbv crowd noise at Stl'Unge tlmt'S.
yardage during Monday
NFL ~::une in East Riltoorford, N. J.
trylrig to get a little bit. more mlned ... "
Many of the 7:i,9?;! fans at Giants r======~=====-~Th~e~G:.'.ian~ts:·~w~on!!:._:27~-::20~._!_!!~~------------­
p:&gt;Wer."
"I though Morris wds great," Stadium
brought [Xlrlable teievi:
The Giants occasionally have Redskins Coach Joe Gibbs said . sK&gt;ps to watch Game 7of t he Wa rld
used two tight · ends on short· "We let it get away early and liEn Series and cheered whenever too
yardage situations. But because when we came back we rouldn 't go
Mark Bavaro and Zeke Mowatt are all the way td 'take II away irom
the only tlghl ends on the roster, them."
THE GINOIRIRIAD
Parcells resisted using them to. Washington's Jay Schroeder and
uPI Sports Wrller .

party_~·.- -·- -·-:-J_am__,.e_sJ_.K_.il_pa:-:-tr--,ick:

university Is really fu lflllln} 1'ts history, the politicalth&lt;rganlzatlori ct· ;,
obligation to its own students, That Western societies, e ~eat•works
obligation Is "to see to it that when of Western art and literature, the '•
they leave after four years, ttey major achievements of the sclen- "
leave as educated men and tlflc disclpllnes-lnshorl,thebas~ '!
body of knowledge which unlvenl· •
women."
lies once took It u[XJn themselves a&amp;·:,
Bennett's complaint is that too
often oor lnstltut io ns of highe r their otilgation to transmit, unden,r,.
the name of a liberaf ed~cation, .
learning · ·fail· to provide what
. ""
•~
•
H
de
from
ages past to ages present an~ termed "real education.' e future.
''
fined this In a paragrap h:
One problem.
lBid Bennett, 118'1n~ '·
"At a minimum," he said, "a real
·
1asstca
· 1 the sheer variety d. Blucatbnal .
Bl~catkm
embraces t ,_
·~ c.
·
"is
·
h
t
.
ta
and Jewlsh-'-ur ttan er ge, the offerings. A typi.cal coUege catalog ..
J._
1s Uke an old-style menu· In . a .
facts of American an d Eurol"'an
Otlnese re;taurant, wh~re a cuslo- ·
mer may pick from Column A to,.,
Column B. "Whatwer may be said
of this as a meal, ills rota model for,,
college, curriClihlm." Harvard'.s '.,
~..,.....,,..,-rr-r. vaunted "oore curriculum," sal!l ,
the secretary, plunging recklessly 1
""~~~~~7'.~ ahead, Is llttle rrore than · a .
symbolic nod, a head feint, m the .,.
direction of real education.
. '
~~1-&lt;~J...~~~;;; Bennett went· on ~ "criticize ..
universities for their silence on
moral issues, Faced wHh' su.ch a '
real problem as drug abuse, many.,
of itEm "duck or throw up tlrlr
hand&gt;." The coUeges are much too ·
concerned with money. Their jresldents and tenured professors ll!ftd , ~
to !J'each In areas beyond illelr •
competence. Often universities
demonstrate "a p~vastve kind of •
conformism and ln!oleranc.."· ~
Their li beral bias against conserva, ...
live ex!l'esslon violates the bailie
principle of acaderilic•trredom. 'In
brief, an ex traordlnary ,gap lies
between rhetoric and reality, and
one day public support wllt erode. ·.
All this was too much br•·
Harvard's jresldent Derek Bok: '
who strode to the [Xldlum when ".
Bennett lumbered off. Bok was so ·
but Insists he's not CIA. He says he's in angry that twice his voice broke. He •
accused his rumpled visitor of.. ,
need any storm windows?"
811fdging in superficiality and cant: ·

.
· \
CAMBRIDGE,
Mass. --'- Big BUI an example.'

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lb

'Giants in JJe for first after 27-20 win

••

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'

-·Raining on tJte

The ·Daily Sentinel

•,

Daily SaniMf · .
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
1
Tuesday, October 28; 1988
page~2-ThQ

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

·
Bennett, the U.S. secretary of
Whereupon Bennett launched
education: came to Harvard Un1- Into a 2;.mlnute m:'ltlclsm of the
verslty ·the other day ait part of shortcorrilngs · of an Institution
Ha rvard's 350th 'anniversary cele- ' possessed of $3.1 billion endowbratlon. He rained all over the ment, a library system "staggering
. ay party.
.
In Its holdings," an.d research
birtlxl
Considerlng the •occas.lon, Ben- Ia.boratorles. "that a. re the envy of
n~tt 's thesis was nothing .If not
the world." Harvard's faculty is.
'
tactless.
Many of the nation's . justly renowned for Its scholarShip
colleges and universities, he said, and Intellectual brilliance; the
are falling short of their educational student """'' is brainy arid reresponslbUlty. They are .not doing ~urceful,""''
but none of these things,
~
Bennett, ''Is eVidence that
the job they are capable of doing. · said
"Let us," he said. "take Harvard as Har\lard or any simUarly situated.

AMEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Daily Press
Associallon and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are- welt'Ome. They shoukl be less than DJ words
long. All letters are$ubject toeditlng and rrust be·signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsignEd letters wUI be published . Letters should be In
.R:Ood taste, addressing Issues, not persooalltles.

Presld~nt Reagan is giving his all to the midterm political campaign to
help Republicans retain control of tiE Senate. .·
He wants the "Reagan Revolution" to continue after he has left the White
House. and by electing candidates who share his conserVative philosophy,
he believes that can be done.
.
But Reagan has not always had his way even wHh a Republican majority
In the Senate. He and the majority parted company on tougher sanctions
against South Africa to show America's repugnance, as Reagan has dten
put It, against apartheid, the system of separatkm of the races.
Reagan also has had to compromise, accepting less rroney than asked
for on defense and more money than he wanted for the Superfund to handle
toxic wastes.
, ..
But Reagan has won many legislative battles by virtue r1 his pe-oonal
Intervention and lobbying. Asenator a a rongressman will get a telephone
call from the presidenturglnghlm towtefor a rertalnmeasure.Irrplledln
·!,he call is a promise to campaign for the candidate, ora warningthatthere
will be no campalgnipg for him.
•
'
Every president has done II. And in the majority of cases, It is dl!ficult,
sometimes impossible, to say no to the ll'esldent.
.
.
Reagan has been determined that his second term would be dyJ1!1miC
and that It would not cater to potential successors walling in the wings. His
high proflle on most Issues indicates that he does mtwant to be rountedout.
So his ambition and drive Is not abatBI. And he has set aside the llnal
week of the midterm election campaign to be avallable to lend support to
Republican candidates who may be on tiE ropes. It Is difficult to remember
a president who has done oo much campaigning for his party.
It's no secret; he enjoys the hustings. He likes to make speeches and he
has a sta!fthat provides the rBI, white and blue settings where he feels very
much at home. They lift his spirits, and his style is easy, affable, exuding
confidence.
When Reagan has needed the support of the Democrats to sli!lY a soljd
front In foreign policy, he 'has urged unity and blparl!Sanshlp. Bll when he
is on the stump, all that is forgotten.
,
.
He does not mind accusing those who want to cut his military budget r1
endangering national security. As for his dealings with the Soviets, welloo
matter, he wants total suwort.
,
· ·
·
He has said on several occasions that tiE Soviets are waltlngto will from
disS€!lsion In the United States what !lEy cannot achieve at tile bargaining
table.
His relationship with Speaker Thomas O'Neill is a case In point. They
made up and broke up more times than·young lovers. But In' the end they
were philosophically at odds.
·
O'NeUI was chagrlned wren Reagan attacked the Democrats after the
speaker had called him before the Iceland sununlt assuring him of his
party's support
,
Politics being adversarlal at best, It s understandable that when the
president wants to help Republicans he Is going to have to go for the
Democratic jugular.
.
The president, who undoubtedly wUI campaign for the Republican
presidential candidate whoever he is, has scoffed at those who think he'iVm
retire to his California mountain ranch after his White lbuse days are
over.
Sure, he will spend time tlv:&gt;re, wrttlng a lx&gt;ok, maybe a rolumn, joining
corporations, going on the lecture circuit, as past presidents do. But
political person that he is,t!Erels no question that he will on the campaign
trail whenever the call comes. ·

c

a

_Going all out

"He admits he's an American
Nicaragua on business. Do we

'!'''"'"

r-;:====:::::::::::::=::::j

Hunting with
landowners pennission

From the wild

By Keith Wood
resources . One person whu stands
· Meigs Co. Game Protector
among Ihis group Is very dedicated
Each year farmers-landowners to our natural resources. lie is
are closing their lands to hunting constantly involved in act ivities
opportunity In Ohio. This occurs within our county and in the stale.
either through negligence or plain This individual for the past eight
disregard to the landowner. With an years has made surc tha1 1he Joca I
in crease each Y&lt;"~r of hunters busincsst'S have had hunting and
taking to the field an Increased fishing licenS('s, d('('r penn its, and
number of complaints wlll be trapping .permits available to the
investigated and ¥iolat9r~ prose- public for the Ohio Division of
cuted. So a reminder to the runters, •Wildlife. He has been im·olved In
as you hunt your respected anim- varpus children's activitk&gt;s within
als, RESPEcr the landowners and Meigs CountY In hopcasall ofusdo,
their property. GET THE LAN· that this generation will havp
DOWNERS PERMISSION!
enjo,vment of ou r natural resources. 1bis individual is Roy Howell of
In Meigs County we have many Laurel Cliff n!'a r Pomeroy, and
people who, what you would say. although he may be passing his jQb
are true sportsmen and conserva - as club agent onto someone else in
tionists. This group of people the Meigs County Fish and Game
include men, women. children who Club. the people of Meigs Coy,nty
truly care lor our wildlife and can be sure thai Rov will continue
his ilfe long dPdication to Ohio's
Wildlife and RcsourCI's. So. a big •
thank-yoo goes out to you Ro.v. and
for tte short lime I have be&lt;-n game
protector in Meigs it has been Hn'
hooor Working along with .vou.

..

When oil talks ______J_a_ck_A_n_d_er_so_n_&amp;_J_os_ep:_h_S_:_p_ea-:-r
WASHINGTON - Did a Louisiana ollman who contrtbuted.heavlly to Republican Party candidates,
and who had himself paid a fine for
prlce gouging, Improperly prevail
on Vice President George Bush to
press for an end to federal
regulations that made [XJSSible the
pro~utlon of oil prlce-conti'ol
violators•
Rep. John Dlngell, D-Mlch ..
suspects the worst.
General Accounting Office auditorS Investigated )he situation and
concluded that "there appears to be
nothing Ulegal or improper about
the oll producer opposing" the
regulations, and they "could not
determine to what extent, If any the
producer influenced" changes In
the rules.
Dlngell. chairman of the House
Energy Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations, acknowleged that the oilman's solicitation
of the White House was not Ulegal.

'"

tlon. The GAO auditors. he fumed .
would do better to "Investigate
Dlngell."
As for the $51,00) refund he was
ordered to pay by the Energy
Department for overcharging on
his oil durlng the period or price
controls, Woods res[Xlnded with the
succinct ootrage of an aggrieved
sports fan. "I wuz robbed!" he told
oor as&amp;&gt;Ciate Lucette Lagnado.
Woods had appealE!I the department 's finding admlnlstrat ively
and lost. He eventuallY wound up
having to pay a total of $93,l1Xl,
Including Interest I:Jr the price
control violation.
The oilman he Ueves there Is no
need to apologize for his determined efforts to eliminate the
Ener~ Department regulation
that nq ulred &lt;tl companies to
retain ~a:ords on the jJice-rontrol
perbd, 197:&gt;-1981. The ~ords were
vital to tiE government's prosecution of violations.
,;.1t thP Mna~c::m~n ;~ .v.nn~"~.-......t
In a letter to Bush bt February
·close look at this aspect ct the affair.
1984,
Woods recalled discussing the
The Louisiana ollman, Dalton
Woods, hasn't exactly run for record-keeping requirement with
cover. He told 'us he considered the vice president "dUring tt.e
Dlngell's actions "harassment" Reagan Finance Committee recepand [Xlinted oot that the ~AO )lad tion at yoor home in Wastington,"
cleared him after a lull lnvesliga- and asked Bush's help In elirnlnat·
lng the rule. He even suggested that
as a "political move" that the rule
be eliminated as part of the Paper
Work Reduction Act- a strategem
Ulat was lrt fact foll&lt;iwed.

Woods also raised tte specter of
"a hostlle administration being
elected at some future lime (that)
could rw pen a wave rJ. audits and
arbitrary assessments of punitive
char!J'S and lines against our
IndUstry" If the on companies'
records were retained.
He dosed with an appeal for
"ybu r help In brlnglngthis lssuetoa
dose" by the Issuance of a rule
change eliminating the recordkeeping req ulremen t.
On thesameday, Woods wrote to
then-Em!·gy Secretary Donald
Hodel, recalling their dlscusskm of
the detested regulation "eluting the
Louisiana Mardi Gras In Washington." He added: "! have also
discussed this issue with Vice
President Bush, and he was•vlslbly
dlstW'bed by the postponement .of
the jrOposed (rule change) anll
. offertJI to lend his support if
•
needed ."
Woods m::elved replies from both
the vice president and the en~rgy
secretary - rourtes les befitting a '
Republican stalwar t who had, the
GAO reported, contlibuted $51,950
to GOP causes In 1919-8!, $Sl,WO in
1981-82, and 938,!m In 1983-&amp;l.
Woods was Informed that the
reco ill-keeping rule was being
reviewed.
The regulation was ultimately
changed. Dlngell wants to know
just how much of the bureaucrats

who chan ged the rule were Influenced by oilman Woods.
For his part: Woods Is standing ' I
his gro~nd . " It I; my duty and IT\Y :.:
pleasure to work on behalf ct I~ oil ,.·
and gas Industry," Woods said. He 1
characterized tiE regulatbn as
"designed to harass and rob the ps
indu stry ."
.

•
Bush ,

Michigan second,
OSU 17th in poll

I

Regardng contacts with
and Hodel, Woods said: \"I am a .1
Republican. I have worked with these prople ... l have fought a clean
battle."

.''

REFORMING TAX REFORM: '.
Even before I he ink was dry on the 1
SWeePing faX bill produced with
ruch supposedly Hertulean labor, ·. '
we were lEa ling ll'll rrnurlngs from •
congre;slonal sources about the (;
need for "technical oorrectlons" '
next year. This should be a warning
to an taxpayers to check your ··:
wallets and the gold in yoor teeth. · ·~
The speclal-lnte-e;t bbbylsts were ~ ;
wisely lying low under the ons-' ·
taught ofpopularrupportforthetax •)
till, rut they're' already beginning ''
to emerge from the bunkers.'
They'll be working next year to ': '
overcome the reverses they suffered this time - and In a ,
tvn-election year they could : ~
1
.rucceed .

"

Betting on a convert ______R_ob_e_rt_~-,-al_te"""'":'r~:~

·Today in history
Todily Is Tuesday, Oct. 28, the :Jllst day of 19116 with 64 to IJUow.
The moon is moving toward Its new phase. ·
There Is no morning star.
The evening stars are Mercury, VelUs, Mars, Jupiter and SatW'n.
Those born on Ulis date are under the sign of Scorpio. TIEy lnclud\!
rlllemaker Eliphalet Remington In 1793; Brltlsh novelist Evelyn Waugh In
1903; Dr. Jonas Salk, a developer c1 }Dilo vaccine, lp 1914 (~e '12); actress
Elsa Lanchester In 1902 (age 84), and former baseball commissioner
Bowie Kuhn In 1926 (age 00).
On this date in history:
In 312 A.D .. In a battle that marked ttv:&gt; beginning of the Otristlan era in
Europe, Constantine's army defe~ted the forces of Maxentlus at Muivlan
Brldge·· in Rome.
.
In 16.'16, Harvard College - now Harvard University- was ilunded In
eambrldl!e, Mass.
In 1886, the Statue of Uberty, a gtft from France, was dedicated 111
Bedloe's Island in New York Harbor.
In J.911i, "Walker !amUy spy rlng" leader Jom WaJicer pleaded guUty to
charges he betrayed U.S. Navy secrets to the Soviet Union. The same day,
the Pentagon orde~ the automatic dlschar!J! of anyooe who
acknOwledges drug useorllomosexualitydurlngscreenlngof a112.1 rnUUon
actlve-dlt ty personnel for AIDS.
A tlr:lllght for the day: Evelyn Waugh wrote, "Mannen areespeclalty
the need rJ. the plain. The pretty can get away with anyt~ng."

.

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LAS VEGAS, Nev. (NEA) - Wllen
the Las Vegas Chamber of Commerce
recently held a special luncheon to
hear from candidates for federal office in this year's elections, !indio&amp;
the designated location was ·not an
easy task.
·
.Attendees had to naviaate their
11ay through Bally's-Las Vesas btackiack tables, slot machines, keno paror, race book, sports book and poker
Jarlor before reachins the hotel tuncion room reserved for the political
. went.
That ndyssey is hardly unusual In
Nevada, where "gaming" (it's bad
form to say "gambling" here) and
tourism are inextricably linked and
thoroughly dominate the slate's economic, cultural and !OCiallife.
Contests for seats in Coagress Ulllally attract little interest inside or
outside the state, but this year's Senate race could produce a crucial shift
from Republiclln to Democrat.
Although Nevada traditionally has
favored centrilt Democrats, that party's strength has eroded in recent
years and both the state's senators
are Repubtlcans. One, Sen. Paul Laxall, has decided to retire rather than
seek a third term and has hand-picked
as his successor James D. Santini, a
lifelong Deinocrat,
' Within a few weeks after Laxalt announced last AullJIIthat he would not
seek rHiection, Santini slmultaneoualy proc:lalmed hil ntw allegiance to the Repubtlcan Party ~nd
declared himMif a candi4ate for the
Senate seat.
Tbole moves appareolly were orchestrated by Laxalt, who has liecome 1 major behind-.tbe-&amp;&lt;enes power In Republican politics both in bis
borne stall and In WaahiJIItOII, D.C.,
where he holds the unofficial Iitle of
President Reapn's "best friend" in
Congress.

.

- ...
..:_........._. Laxalt served as chairman of Rea- nism among some Republicans and plans.
1
gan's 1914 campaign COITimittee and further conceded that "the polls I rely
Thus, Laxalt says he has committe«{,
Is general chairman of the Republi- . on" showed Santini trailing Reid by 6 "almost every waking moment
r
can National Committee. To fill the percentage points.
Election Day" to strenellleniri&amp; Suti •
post ol RNC chairman, he selected · Laxalt is considering running for ni's bid ·and has prevailed Upclll ~··
Frank J. Farenkopf Jr .. a Nevada president in 1988. but tHe defeai'of the gan
to fly to both Las Y~&amp;as and R
:
protege.
candidate he selected for the Senate on Santini's behalf in the final days o ~
Laxalt's influence in the party here seat could adversely affk't those the campaign.
. •
· Is seemingly ub,qultous. Santini's
I
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campaiiD manager, A.C. "Ace" Rob•
inson, came directly from Laxall's
'
I'
Washington staff, where he served as
I
I
the
senator's
administrative
assistant.
Rep. Barbara F. Vucanovich, the
Republican whose 2nd Congressional
District Includes Reno, Cam&gt;n City
and the state's desolate "cow counties," was elected in 19B2 after serv' '
ing a's Laxalt's Reno office manaaer
''•· 'I
for almost a decade.
• •
\
Democratic Rep. Harry M. Reid,
represents the tst Congressional District, which encompasses Las Vegas
and most of Its suburbs, but he is vacating that seat to run against Santini
for the Senate seat. The Republican
nominee in the race for Reid 's seat is
' '
state Sen. Robert T. Ryan - who also
"
''
is a Laxait protege and former mem- ·
I'
her of the senator's staff.
Wbile Laxalt does, as those relationships suggest, enjoy enormous political influence, he has hls share of
I
troubles - many ol them related to
'I I
Santini's campaign.
o·1l· I
I
The 1985 Laxalt-Farenkopf strate; I
gy of publicizing Democratic defec' i
},. I
tions to the Republicans as a sign of
GOP growth has turned sour in 1988.
'
Many of the converts have been de'
feated in GOP primaries by party
" '
regulars who resented the newcom' f
ers' audacity.
'
When asked a! a mid-Octc!ber press , ·,
"
conference here about Santini's con"They've deregulated everything eise - ' why
, ''
version, Laxalt acknowlectced that
' •'
NOT the CIA 7"
the• switch had en1endered antago-

.nttj

Berry's World

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Ohio

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NEW YORK !UP!)- Alabama
and Nebraska, both losers for the
first time this season in weekend
action , each fell slx spots in tte
latest UPl Board of Coaches poll.
Alabama dropped from second to
eighth after losing to Penn State,
23·3, while Nebraska, which lost
20-10 to Colorado, fell to' tile No. 9
spot In balloting Monday.
Miami, which was ide over the
weekend, held onto t.he No. I spot
for the fifth st ralght week. The
Hurricanes. 7-0. received 47 of 50
first-ploce . votes to earn 74.1 of a
possible 750 points. Ohio ~tate ~as
tied for 17th this week.
Only. one point separated No. 2
Michigan and tlird-ranked Penn
St.
The Wolverines, who earned 111e
ftrst·place vote and lil8 points,
jumped from No. 4 last week to No .
2. The Nlttany Lions received two
No. 1 votes and also climlEd two ·
spots to reach No.3 with 007 [XJints.
The national rhamplon, to be
crowned illlowlng the Jan . 1 Bowl .
Games, wUI receive- a $32,1lXl
non-athletic scholarship from the
Gerrits foundation and United
Press International. .

lOY SAYS ....
'):-;::::-,...:_:Now TakIng
Chrlat"'aa

IIINVUT IN YOUR INVESTMENT
WITH A HOME IMPROVEMENT LOAN •••
NO PAYMENT
UNTIL 1987

Orders Fo

Country

-"

0
0 '''"''"'
C1ment Work

Oa.,n .

0 h trl Room

J:....I..-_,..;;~....IC;;_~

0

K•tchtn

0
0

0
0
0

0

lntulll oOn

H.. l!ng

O coohng

Root
Gtr•tt

0
0
0

Fam•IY Floom
Wlfont

WtndOWI

Sldmg
'l'ou N1mt II

'10 50% 10 59
'VAR IABlf

1

~;;: esr

I

%
ANNUAL

PEACEHT4GE

RATE

EXAMPLE: Assume a $10,000.00 loan for 120 months. The monthly payment
of principal and interest would be 5137.84 . The first monthly payment would
. be due 90 days from the dale of your loan. Loan is secured by a second
mortgage on real estate. ·

Cou
Taters,
Chips.
Placed

Wood Stove Holds
Onions, Bread &amp;
Orders Must Be
By Sat. Nov. 1st

loclted In lilt 3r- Kom On
lh1 liJIII Just Abon The
PIIIIIIIJ·M.non lri~l' ·

773·5977

IIU&amp;LMCMIII

The Bank That Makes Things Happen

.1/uti!/.R 1mc

LENDER

97 North 2nd Ave., Middleport
992 -6661

358 Second Ave., Gallipolis
446-0903

Maso11, WV.

America's Rlvorite Store

......

S.•~rP!Ace

The Daily Se~tin~l
(liSPS · 14 ~·1Nl01
A Division of MUutmedluj Inc .

Publish~ ev£'ry art rr noon. Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St., Pomrroy, Ohio. by thr Ohio Vallry Publishin g Companv/Mulllmt'dla, Tnr.,

•e •

PomC'roy, Ohio 45769 , Ph . 992-21!16. Srcond r lass pO!ltagr paid at Pomt'roy,
Ohio.
Member: United Press IntPrnallonal ,
Inland Da lly Press Assoclutlon and thr ,
Ohio Newspaper Association. National ·

Advertising Representa tivE', Branham
Ni'\l.•spiiper Sales. 733 THirtJ AVenue,

NL&gt;W York, New York 10017.
PO!ITMASTER: ~nd address Ch3RRe5
to Th• Dally Sentln•l. lll Court Sl..

Pomeroy, Ohio 45700.

SI!BScRII'TION RATES

By Carrier CH' MotOr Route
One Wl'&lt;k ...... ................ .... .........11.25
, One Month ... ........ ..... ................. $5.45

One Year ........... ...................... $65.00
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Daily ............................ ...... . 2.'; Cents

Subscribers nOT desiring to pay th£o ca rrler may remit in advanet&gt; direct to

Thf' Dally Sent inel on a 3. 6or 12 month
basis. Credit wlll bt&gt; given carrlt"r each

week.
No subscripllons by mallp&lt;"r.mlttl'd In

areas where hom(' fa rrier .!lt'rvlce Is
avalla~le. .
·

Moll8ubl&lt;rtpllon•

Iulde Melp Oounl)'

.

13 W..tts .................. ................ $11.29

26 Weeks .................................. $34.116
52 Weeks ............................. .. ... 1416.56
Oulllole Melp Coaal)'

13 w..,ka... ........ ;............ .......... I1B.2D

26 Weeks ............... .............. .... . IJS.!O
52 w..ks .......... :....................... $67.60

II

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

October 28. 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

...,;;--

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·- .-~

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tl·fiJ'
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SlR

Meigs Co~niy's three local sch'ool dlstrtrts ·received $587.182.88 as
their paJ;t of $172,809,8SU5 distributed In the October Stale School
FourxlatiOn subsidy payment, AccordlngtoStatr AudltorThomasE.
Ferguson.
Amounts r€Ceived by each district Include, after deducalioru; for
retirement, Eastern LoCal, $119,757.01; Meigs Local, $339.194.17;
. Southern Local, $12ll.2.11.71). In addltkm. the Meigs County Board of
Education received a direct allotment of $.ll,737.7!i.

Ill mer Ihal gave the Mets the lead over llaRioa lor the
llrsllbne. New York rallied from a ~dellcl to win
Game 7 and the 1986 World Se~ by defeatalg the
Boston Red Sox, S-5, In Shea Stadium. (UPI)

Scoreboard ...
NFL results

Dl'lwer at LA Raider!'&gt;, 4 p.m .

NATIOSAL f'OOT&amp;~LL LEAGUE
8)' Unitrd Pres~ lntern~tlional
,\m frh:an Conft•ren t.'f'

l\1' ,Jf"LIO Ill Sean le. 1 p.m.
!'ttonda)', Nov. 3

Mjnn f!!'OIII at \hs hin~IM , .t p.m .

LA Rams at

• SM' En~

0 K 0 .000
Cent raJ

: lndnp).t..

5 3

fn r nnt
Cl\'ln d
Ptlshr
~

o

" 'nits Confereru.'l'
Patrh!k Division
W L T PI•. GF GA
Ptt~hr.-h
K I 0 li .t&amp; :n
Phildlph
7 I 0 U s.t 16
Wshntttn
~ ~ I
9 37 39

m

3 3 0 .625 173 IKO
! i 0 .!50 115
I i 0 .125 1-15 11M

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Hoo ....:n

St•M' Jn.oy
1\"l' Rn~; rs
1\'l' lslnd
• 1\ dams

Wesl
... l&gt;fm t•r

i

1 0 . Xi~ 209 136

... St&gt;al11('

$

:J 0 .625 178 1211

: KnlSJO Ct
;; 3 0 .62llli!l 1~
, LA Rdr!&gt;
5 :J 0 .6'll11U l.fi
I i 0 . 125 1116 !'l-1
• San Oi~
!'liatlonal fon ffrPnCt'

Dallas
l\'V Gnts

Phldlp

St. Louk
'

.

• fhica,;
.._ ... Mlnnst
,. r Detroit

••
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•· T~

B:,·

GrP.n 8~·

Lt\ Rms
Allan~:!

•
•

San Fm .
s~ Orl

1&amp;6

10~

t2'!

19~

0 . 1'!5

:J5
2lil
3-t

K' L T Pts. GF GA
3 2 3 9 '!6 !It
3 -1 I 1 3-t :Ut

St. Lou~
Chicago

3 I I 1 ~ U
2 3 2 6 11 l3
! 3 2 6 !JO -11

LosAn~loi

Van1.m' r

3 i 0
'.! 5 I

&amp; 38 -15
5 It !9

1\lontnoa I 6. l.Di AIllPies $
Tue-dil.y's Oames
Pilt shurch ;W; Hartford , 7: S5 p.m .
t.o:. Ana-ele. at Quehf!(:, 1: 3$ p.m .
Philad t'lphla at Nl' lslanckoMi,

!\"\' Giants i!"i . \bs~«ton ~
Sunday. SO\ . 2

Atlanta at NN' Encland 1 p.m.
Butfalo a.t Tafl1)a Bay. J p.m:"'
Clnt_in natl at Detroil, I p.m .
('lenland at IIHIIanapolis, I p.m .

M:fl-5 p.m.
fhl cago at TorMIO, i: l5 p.m .
fal~ary al ~tlnnl'Sata. A:35 p.m .
Wa.-.hln~an at Vanl'OU\'er. 11::15
p .m .

O~all~"'

at N\' Giants. I p.m .
f'hlladetptUa at St . Lout!&lt;. I p.m .
San frallci!' t.'O ttl NN• Orle-dn!ot, I

\\'cdnftrlday'li Gllmes
Buflalu at Montrea l, niJht
NY RIUI&amp;er;, at St. Look, nil;ht
St&gt;W -l eN.ey at Plttshurl{h , •i«ht

p.m.
Grf'(&gt;n Bay at PIUshurr;h. 1 p.m .
Hou!OI.m at Miami. 1 p.m .

7
l'!tl "

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i ,,\rbOflltSiitU· ti* IJ
M,,\llahllma !H)
t)il'lw-.. b (f-11
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lll..ltU ... hlftMS.ld.-jJ..I)

Ill
Uil l

·~····111&amp;.11

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til !I
31:! !

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Uft' l Ohio scour 11t-!1
n (IW ) B.y klr I-H I
It (IWJ j.iou. f':tlll · ~l

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n't'f'hfnc

NEW YORK (UPIJ - Tons of
ticker-tape and confetti will rain oo
Broadway today when New York
celebrates the Mets capturing the
World Sertes.
Maya- Edward Koch and Gov .
Mario Cuomo will · kick off the
parade at · ll)()n EST at Battery
Park. Thousands of fans are
ex~ted to line the famed till·
roughfare as the team !J'oceeds up
to aty Hau .
"Thmorrow ·(Thesday), there
will be a tremen!hus outpouring,"
Kocb said from Mets bcker room
after the Mets defeated tre Boston
Red Sox S-5 In Game 7. "It brings
tile willie town togetrer.''
Even before t~ md &lt;t tre game
city -officials were scrounging for
genuine ticker· tape. a rommodliy
nearly obsolete In today' selectronic
age.
Trans-lux Paper Products, a
Coonectlcul llrm beUeved to be the
last autbentlc dcker·tape venoor.
donated l.EliO gallons of tre curly
)&gt;aper. The American Stock Exchange llurxl llve :D- gallon bags
that had been stored away.

! z

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J.~nrMLt'CI

Olhfor.r.

Plan big parade
on Broadway tootavl

rnt

11 i\rtu.,. ..lf!O (1 · 0
U Arizona (I-I)
u LTn..l IS - ~1

IJrlt::tuun

M"'-...h,.Jp-" Sl. it lt •, PIU10•
bur1t11. )'(tllfttor4 :.fttl \1r(lal~~o Tt&gt;d~ .
Tht• S~ttlonul fhiKTl pion. 1o hi• ''""' nMI
f.,lkwo• inJ~: ,.., -llln . I &amp;oWl G11.m'"'· • ·Ill .

sst.•

rr-.·t•l\'f' 11o
••lithlf'llt· ~~faf'!jhip
frontllw (0 4'- rril.; t "oundaUon liiUt l ' nH~&gt;d

Pn-

lntt.,nathnt~~ol.

Series droughts
M'orl• !Wri..,.
C'tl..ntpM..Wp DrMIIM"
flln'f'M Dro.«IMK

r.

Monda)•'s Result

I .QIJI '4ll 1 2~
0 .To$ 15:! 1311
Monday, Oct. 27

i/l.i li

~hll", flf't)r~ht ,

a

0 .T:JO IU 127
I .611-M 16i 132

P ulnto;
":"13 1
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Smv the Divis ion
•
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6 .. 0 12 n 3-1
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t I i 'ZC ~
('a l~ary
3 5 0 &amp;
l4

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6 2 0 .-:M IS9 110

97
1J.I
113

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5 2 t I!
Boo;ton
S I 0 10
)lonln•al
I 3 t 10
Ha'rtlord
3 t I ;
Bultalo
I 6 'l -t
Cam pht"l Conferent'f.'

W L T Ptt . PFP.-\
6 '! 0 .730 IP U 3
6 '! 0 .750 226 1 3~
3 5 0 .Ji5 1!1
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fenlral
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3 3 0 .625 176
:s 3 D .315 1!3

.... 0 . ji( ~ 31
i! 3 t M :J3 37
:t 3 I 7 t4 23

Quehet.•

Ea.-.t
\\'shn,;

College ratings

9 p.m.

"ATIONAL HO('KE\' LE~GUE
By United Preoos ln11•rnatlonal

81 2116

.625 11&lt;5

f hlca~o .

NHL results

L T P et. PF PA
7 I 0 . i~5 206 166
3 3 0 . 6~219115
3 !l 0 .3i5 198 w
2 6 0 . ~50 145 Iii

1
\\

. Miami
• Burfalo

\\'uhln(lon at F..dmontm, night
Chlca~o at Detroit, nl~:ht
Calrary at \\'innipeJ. nll:hl

Kan!Oa'l ('lty at San Dl~o . l p.m .

Ea.. I

:'\'\' ,f('l !ot

I

Middleport Halloween party set
The annual public Hallow~n party staged by the Middleport
Chamber of Commerce wHI be held Thursday:
.
A parade will form at .tiH&gt; Sears-Fruth parking lot at 6:30 rrovlng
through town to the iuniorhigh footbilll field. Prizes wlll be awarded
to the best costumed In various age groups and treats will be given to
all children attending.
•

Chlt•I&amp;Jn ( ' uhi -IIIK-pr!P!Wn l [4K)"t•an. 1
Chlc•qo Whkl' Su.\:-ltl'i· Jtf'fttffil {It)

Bm.ton Rf-d Sn-ltl~pr~ · nl riKI
,\llnfti"~oOfil

T ...·l•"

[" 'a,.hlna;ton

~ll.lltrs) -lltt · prf'M4'ftl {itt)

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S1n

Fr.nd,.u

(llant ,.

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1'""'1 Uroua;hb
rhllacMpWa Philli,.,., JSU. !WI. n

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RatU"""'* Ortnlft!oi (St .

Lowl~o

Br.wnto ),

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Btoold,u

fkwt•""

tta-1!1». l! yt&gt;.,.
Mllw••bo• lnm.,., 111HIS1. -t:1 Jellf'!o
Ollklald r\'11 1Phl'-*lphla. KIUtto-ls

i'llf), IUI-mt, I! )'l'ano

rlrK"Ia•l ltPdti. I._.UI'n. U ~-.,111!'
Pktllllll'llh Ptr.l,.,, IIU-1• • ~ )'f'llhi
~ rfloill 11~.

IIQ-11-JS,

:n )'f'lll'!'i

Fre&lt;:&gt; clothing day will' be held at The Salvation Armv. llo
Butternut AVf~.. Pomeroy, Thursday from tO a.m. untU roon. All area
residents in need of clorhlng ar~ welcome.

Meet the Southern Tornadoes

'

t

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY .

Freshman Back

Sophomore Tackle

Sopllomoro TIICkle

992·6687

Want Ads
Nawr ........... .

State life
I
! II
CIWJ hi

They YGit -" ' -.rt

TUE$PAY NISHT

joins in day of prayer

Halloween party Wednesday

respond to 7 calf..,

'.

}

Court

("i:me.~

' JEROD MOORE
11-9, lliO-Pound
Fre!lhmiMI Tackle
t

PETEY HENDRICKS
~ !26·Pound
Freshman End

I

PM. H!·S432

POIIIIiiY, 011.

IF YOU'VE BEEN READING SECONDHAND
COPIES OF THE DAILY SENTINEL YOU'RE
SmLING FOR SECONDHAND NEWS.

'

Couple file."i for di.'i.mlution
'-

Conn!!' Fa)'C 13UJ'Ion. Mlddlepo11 . an&lt;l Stophen AUrn .Bw·ton ,
PomNo)·, ha,·c filed for dissolution ol' tht'II· mmTiag&lt;' in the Meigs
' C'oon1,1· Common Plci! s Cuu11 .
In an a&lt;"llon of Capital ~avlhgs and Loan aguinsl Mlcharl S. Faw.
r l al. lhr \ou11 has onl!'rrd that tiK• plalnllff roco1•rr from ltJ:o
defendant. thl• sum of $.1,31l'i'M plus lnlerrst from Oct. 1.
A dismissal cntl)' has be(on .ftled In Ill&lt;' l'ilS£' of E 117ab:'l h Roush
agalnsl Pow!'ll SuiX'n·alur In&lt;'.

r ------------SAVE 200fo

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Frild Clilk..

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I·;

"YOUR HOMETOWN,NEWSPAPER"

~

CALL TODAY
. 446-4367

\,

road, and after getting off to travel
straight out to Ire traffic light. It 's
anticipated that bel ween 1.500 and
2.000 cars would us~ lhe ferry
everyda)'.
Again this year Cou ncil will apply
for a gra nt fori rash containers. The
ooe last year w.~s denied. Mayor
Hoffman said.
Council. on a vote of o-1, with
AUen King casting the di ssenting
vote on t hP basis of incrrusedcostlo
the viUage, approvro changing the
status of Bru~ Swift from part·
tlmr to full-time !Diicc offiCI'r.
Hoffman sa id thai Swat has been
working .'l2 lllurs since anOiher
&lt;iflc_oer had rcc:1 uested to have his .
lllurs n-duced from 40 to 32.
II was II'JlOriPd by Hoffman lha t
new signs have IJCCn Slt'Ured for
every st r&lt;:t't cornC'J'ln town and 1hat
aU bla:k and white signs will be
replaced using a seven fool !!'vel
inst~llatiOn In an effoJ1 to avoid
damage by iuwnii&lt;'S.
The t:roblrm or Ihe blinking light
lrhind ttJ:o Sundl)' Store was
dlscussr'll and tre ma,1·cr will refer
lhe mattrr lbr corrortio n.
Meigs .Junior High School sta dlum-lmprO\'Pmenls werr notro by
Bob Gilmore. The work ha• been
done under 1re diroclion of Jolm
Blake with numrrou s volunt!X'rs.
and lht' &lt;tficlals commend&gt;d those
workers.
A complaint againsl disromlnulng n·tck or n·eat night was
pr('s('llted by a ·cound lman. but no
Jl('tion lo r·hanw the' dccision was
taken. A pari)' is being held by thr
Chamber of Commrre&lt;'.
Mal)' Wallace met with rounclllo
PXfCC'SS her apprccl_
atkln for the

I

.'

0 CIJIR!NT SUISCRIIER
0 NEW SUiSCRIIER

529 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis

Can You AHord To Wait?"

!Conllnued from Page 11

work of 1re !DiiCC officers and lt.&gt;ir
help lo tl'r on sevo·ut occasions .
All ending were Ma)'()' Hoffman ,
CouncUmrn .James Clatwonhy,
AUen King. Dewey Ho11on . William
Walters, Bob Gilmore and .J ack
Saltl•rfield, and Clerk .Jon Ruck .

Come In and Apply Early For Financial Aid.
Find Out What You Qualify For But Don't Wait!

O.I.G. (Ohio Instructional Grant)
Extended Deadline 11-28-86
AICS ACCREDITAnON

NEW
ERIE PIPELINE
H
INE
ANR Pipeline Company has initiated a toll-free telephone
number-that Ohio landowners are invited to use to identify
concerns with - or just obtain information on - the proposed
Erie Pipeline System.

Ohio weather ·

MAIL TO: THE DAILY SENTINEL
111 COUll ST.
POMEROY, OHIO 45769

THE DAILY SENTINEL

'
'

llwnscs have bern lssll€d In the MPigs County Probate
CrXJt1 10 Bnt&lt;'e Franklin Rifll&lt;'. TT. Route 2. \h!'Stl'r, and Debra
Mul'lr K i n~. nouiC 2. Owstt'r; Charles Edward DavL~. al.
Middlrp011. and Shrrri LyM Hunnrll. 19. Middleport: and Dennis
R&lt;l,l' Shuler, 2.1. Langsville. and Jennlfrr Jorlle .JonC's, 20, Dextcr·.

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'"ONI _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

CROW'S FAMILY IESTAUIAfiiT

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marriage liceme.'l

South C61tr.d Ohio
'Mostly clear tonight , with a low
~ar '"· l:'artly cloudy Wednesday,
wtr . llighs near 65.
; file probability of precipitation Is
~ar zero through Wednesday.
Winds wlll be diminishing to near
10 mph tonight.
Ohio Extmded Forecllllt
'llluniday throullt Satur!IQ
A chance of sill wers malll~ In
the rortrem part of the state
Thursday and Friday, with fair
weather across the state on Satur·
day. Highs will be In tre 50s
Thursday and Friday, rising Into
the low to mid ros Saturday'
Overnight lows will range from the
mid 30s to the mid 40s l!f!rly
Thursday and In the low to mid .'lis
Friday and Saturday rromlngs.

CITY _ _ _1- - ; - - - - - - - : , - - - -

$3.25

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Marrla~r

ADORISS - - - - - - - -- --

FOR JUST .

•

HURRY:

SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS COLLEGE

Council approves

Sc'·&lt;'n calls were answered by local units Monday. the Meigs ·
COtJnly Emcrg&lt;'ncy Medical Services reports.
AI 1: :~1 a.m.. Rutland took Wanda Gardner from DanvUic 10
Holzer Mroical \enter; MiddlEport at 3:19 a.m. took Rayrrond
.Justl~ from North Third Avenue, to VC'terans Memm1al Hospital ;
Mlddlepot1 at 5:47a.m. took Mary Still. North Second Awnue, to
Vrtrrans Memmial; TupPers Plains at 7:19a .m. took Essie Knapp
from Silv~r Ridge 10 Pleasant Valley Hospital; F\lml'ro)· at 9:12a.m.
took Darl~nr Hicks from The Mapifs to Wtcrans Memorial:
Mldclleport al .1: 16 p.m. took Elmer Altllluse from ~rth Second
Avrnue to Veterans Mrmmial and .at 7: 2~ p.m. RacinP took Curtis
Jones fmm Soul hern High Schoollo Vctcl'ans Mt'morlal.

STOP
OETTINC
YOUR NEWS
SECOND HAND

NAM! - - - - - - - -- --

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Area deaths

HtJRRY!

On Monday. Oct. TT, the Dav of International Prayer for World
PeaC!', while leaders of the ~ai"lous world religionS gathered In
Asslsi. Italy for a Prayer of Summit. members of Sacred 1Heart
Catholic Church in Pomeroy again pxpra;sed t t.&gt;ir commitment 10 a ·
world fr&lt;'&lt;' of nuclear weapons.
The parishioners exprtossed their solid a rit~· with the Prayer
Summit In prayer and by joining with Thr Grea l Peace march and
support ing the blue ribbon projecl. 1".1rl~ hioners signed treir names
on a blue ribbon thai will be Joined toot t.&gt;rs and wrapped arOtJ nd an
appropriate capital building on Nov. 1'&gt; when 'J'h:&gt; Great Peace
March arrives in Washington, D.C.
The ribbon will encircle the IllUding conveying Ihe message, "No!
lo.· nucleaJ' weapons and Yes! to peaceful. resolutions of world
conflicts." The Great Peace March has over COO U. S. citizens and
internallonal marchers will are walking 3,23!i mUes from Los
Angelps lo Washington, D.C.. to demons! rate rommltment to global
nuclear disarmament.

1----....,.------...JL-----------:

MAIL OR BRING IN TtiE COUPON BELOW WITH
YOUR Pl YMENT OF 526.00 FOR -6 MONTHS
AND RECEIVE ACLEAN, CRISP UNUSED COPY
OF THE DAILY SENTINEL DELIVERED TO YOUR
HOME EVERYDAY.
.
MATT LYONS
i&gt;-10, lSl·Pound

Pari.~h

I

SAVE 20°/o.

GARY REESE
6-3, 210-Pound

Trick or lreat night will be reid In the Portland arw from 6:30 to
7::!0 p.m. Frida)•. Resid~nts wishing to treai children arc asked to
tum on !heir porch lights.

Squad.~

BUT IF YOU A~T NOW YOU CAN HAVE THE
DAILY SENnNn HOME DELIVERED FOR JUST
Sl.OO A WEEK
·

TIM RYAN
:&gt;-7, 145-Pound

Portland slate.r;; trick or treat ·

A community haUoween party will be reid Wednesday nigh I from
6: .10 to 8 p.m. at the Bas han Fire L\?partment under sponsorship of
the Ladles Auxlliat')'.
All children of the Krno. Eagk&gt; Ridge and Bashan communities
. "'" invited to altend. Costumes will be ju~cd and prizes awar&lt;Pd In
· lhr calcgOJ"Ics of 1 lhrough 12 years of agr. and tll&gt;S!ill2. and up.
Rcofreshmenl s will be served.

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The Daily Sentinei-Page-6

By T.R. E!'STIIAM
aU SOUI'C!'S except agriculture in lhe Northeast. according to the · Aprll-lo-June period, the ~~ quar'
WASIHNGTON (UPII - The total non-farm personallncame- deparlmenl's Bureau of Economic terly growth In the nation. Wage
Far ·west 'was the locomotive for was strongest In the W('stern states Analysis. The national average was blosts from manufacturers, state·
U.S. Income groWth In the sectind of California. Nevada, Oregon and 1 percent.
and .toea I gQVernments and espe:
quartt&gt;r of 1986, with Arizona Washington, the Commerce L\?Income crea tion In t_he Far West claUy tourist-related service Indusoutstripping an otberwise sluggish partment reported Monday.
was spread a£'ross Jre Industry tries contributed to the rtse.
Southwesl with Income creation of
Cumu tatlve Income growth was · spectrum, with advances· in dura more than twice the national an estimated 1.5 percent in the Far ble and non-durable manufacturtng
Following Arlzooaln the state-by·
avE'rage.
. West, foUowed by-1.2 percent In the and S£'rvlce industrl£'s, the bureau state tally were Nevada with 1.7
By reglon,gro.,.1hofincomefrom · mid-Atlantic stales and,l.l percent analysts said. ·
per&lt;Pnt ; Florida, 1.6 percent;
As a region , the Sout hwest did not California, )&lt;ansas and Wycmlng;
fare so well. Overall income growt h 1.5perU'nt; New Jersey. Ne'wYork
In Arizona, New Mexico, Oklahoma
and North Carolina, 1.4 percent;
and Texas, held back bv a luU in oil and OlMectlcut. Georgia. Hawaii.
and natural gas drilling activity, llllnols, Minnesota and Oretron. 1.3
roS£' only 0.8 pcrcenl In lhe sromd percent.
quarter.
with
Rev.
Charles
Lambert
and
and
jO!oif.ph Cox
Artzonans have sa!n their total
Rev. Russell Tavlor officiating.
As a sin gle stat e. however,
inrome rise by 9.7 pei'C('nt slnce·tiH&gt;
Joseph T. Cox. 77, a resident of Burial will be in Mlna Chapel Arizona led Ihe natklnwithpersonal S('('Ond quarter of 1985, tying New
Income growth of 2.3 percenl in th£'
62fi . Third Ave.. Gallipolis. died Cemetery.
Hampshire for the swif!es~pace of
Friends may call al the · funeral
Monday evening at Holzer Medical
income crea tlon In the last year.
rome on Wednesday from 2-4 and
Center.
Velerans Mt&gt;morial
Born July 7.1909. inGalliaCounty 7-9 p,m.
The Great Lakes region showed a
IO the late Hiram and Sarab Cox. he
Admitlro - Raymond Juslis. sluggis h O.R percent lise, while the
was pr€Ceded in death by his first
Mlddlep011: .Jack Delph, Pomeroy: Plains state&gt;, the Soutreast and
wife, Hazel Marie Cox in 1970.
Mary Still. Middleporl: Darlene Rocky Mounlain states hf.Jd to the
Dorha
C.
Parsons
He married Judith Marie Cox In
Hicks, Pomeroy ; Anna Sidwell, national avera~~:e d 1 percent.
1976, . In Poim Pleasanl She
Docha CottreU Parsons, 87, 12;, Glenvlile. W.Va.; Ze lia . Taylor.
Alaska. hll hard by tre drop In
sutvlves. ·
Middleport: Catha Alvardo, Mid· energy drilling and exploration . .
Main St.. Polnl Pleasant, died
Five ~oru; suiVive: l~sUP. Joe. Sunday In Rapid City. S.D.. follow- dlep011: Waid Johnson. Pomero)'. saw It s ·income fall 0.9 percent .
Jr.. and Marc~s Cox. all of lng,a short. iUness.
Dischargro- J eri)' Colmer. Ida during the quarter and 0.2 percent
Gallipolis; Howard Cox. Colum·
Young.-lcel Ball.
Born .July 4.1899. in Leon. W.Va ..
· in the last yt'ar.
bus; Ray Cox. Cheshire; one
shr was the dauj!hter of the late
s tep-son. Harold Thompson . John Conrell and Emma Baile,1·.
Syracuse.
Sre was a member oft re Chu 1·ch
Five daughters: ·Miidrro Dyke.
Washington CH; Betly Mooney. cl. Christ In Christian Union. Poim
Louisanna : Shirley Coleman, Galli · Pleasant.
She was frt'CelPd in death by hrr
polls; Hazel St!'Wart. Bidwell;
lru
sband. J .C. Parsons, who died
Nancy St!'Wart. Cheshlr&lt;&gt;; one
Feb.
9, l!V;7.
'
step-daughter. Martha McNeal.
Surviving arr one daughter:
King.&lt;ton. Ohio.
Four brothers: Floyd Cox, Clar- Elois~ Lewis Hullng. Rapid City.
enc_oe Cox. and Ches ter Cox, all of S.D.: four &gt;Dns. i:X'lmar. Point
Gallipolis and Brady Cox, Colum- Pleasanl, L\?nver. Syra('use, Carl,
bus; two sisters: Lucy Halley. i:X'trolt , Mich .. and Charles, Wes·
·,
Can't wait to get you started in one of our
Gallipolis and Edna Bostic , terv llle; one brotrer. Charles Dowell. Leon; and lo grandchildren .
many job skill training programs such as:
WrsleiVIIIe.
.
23
great-grandchildrm a nd one
Twent)'·,elghl grand and 30 great ASSOCIATE DEGREE
DIPLOMA COURSES
J(l'ant children and several nieces great -grea !-grandchild.
•
Micro-Computer
•
Medical Office
Funeral servic_oes will be Thursand nephews suiVIve.
• Business Administrator
Secretary
Two sons preceded him In dealh day at 2 p.m. at tre Church ofC hrisl
In Chrlstian Union. with the Rei'.
In Infancy. along with one step·
• Executive Secretarial
• Jr. Accounting
daughter. one bi'Other and one .James Bunn ctflciatlng. 13w·ial will
• Accounting
• Secretarial
lr In Lone Oak Cemetpry. Friends
sister.
He anended the Big Four Church may caU Wllcoxrn Funeral Hom!'.
Point Pleasant. after ~ p.m. Wed·
In Crown City.
'
Funeral seryices will be 2 p.m . nesda.v and one Jvur prior 10
"We Can't Wdt Any longer!"
Thursday at Willis Funeral Hom€' service~ at the church.
I

Free clothing 'distribution planned

I~i:J':: ;~~hd~: :w~~~ m~~h ~~~~/\!d =ri~!~

KNIGiff Ni\MED SERIES MVP - Rll3 Knight,
will barely made the New York Mets roster it spring
(rdining, Monday nigbl became t!Je , Most Valuable
Player of the 83rd World Series. Above, Knight Is
iongratulaled by Len Dykstra on seventh inning

'

Porrieroy-~iddleport. Ohio

I

Schools receive foundation. f~nd~~·

· Dwight Evans, who drove In nine my greatest thrlliln baseb8U." ·
"We tlllught this was tile spot for
runs In the Ser~ to set a club
Schiraldi,"
said Bostoo Manager
record. ll&gt;mered off Ron Darling
leading off t!H&gt; ·second. Rich John McNamara.
It wasn't. Len Dykstra stDgled,
Gedman. the next hitter, then
belted a 1·~ p\tch that defiected &lt;tf went to_second on a wlld pltcliout
rtght fielder Darryl Strawberry's and scored on Rafael !laltana's
SowhenBostonled~lntreslxth
glove and over the waU for a 2·0 single ·past the gimpy Bu::kner:
Inning of Game 7. with Its hottest ·advantage. Wade Boggs' two- out Hernandez' sacrifice fly mooe It 6-3.
Sid Fernandez quieted Bostoo for . ;
pitcher' on the mound MOnday RBI single gave Boston a three-run
1\ro
innings, and Roger McDowell
night, the outcome of the World edge.
Series was never In doubt.
Meanwhile, Bruce Hurst was sent tre Re9 Sox cjown -In tre
The Mets wOtJid win. Sure · !hminatlng the Mets. The left· seventh. But Evans did rot want a
enough, they did.
han&lt;Pr; seeking to becornetre first r!peat of 1976, when the Red Sox
"This club has shown the abilliy to win three ~ries games since lost Game 7 to Cincinnati.
His two-run double off McDowell
to come back from adversity all Mickey Lolich 1n 1968, allowed just
gQt
Boston wtthin a run and pllhim
season." Keith Hernandez said ooe slligle through 51-31nnings. But
1lll
feet from a tie score.
after New York captured its first It all came apart after that.
But
th2t's as lar as tile Red Sox
Series crown since 1001 with an S5
"My job at that. !Dint was to
·victory. "We had our backs against protect the lead and not let I slip !Jll. Jesse Orosco got Gedman to
the wall In the league championship away," said Hurst, who was able to line out. fanned play&lt;tf hero Dave
series, and It came down IOWinning pitch on thra:o days' .rest after Henderson and induced pinch hitter
four of five (games) from Boston. Sunday night's rai!fout. "That was Don Baylor to ground out to
shortstop.
.
Strawberry homered In tre
to
tie It up, we'll win It And we'dld." Mookle Wilson singled with cne OtJt ·eighth and Orosco, of all ~pie.
singled In another run offAl Nipper
Of course trey did. After all, they and Tim Teufi&gt;l walk~ offtre tiring
for two lnsuranre runs.
were playing the Red Sox, will have left·hander to looo lhe bases.
The Red Sox went cjown 1-2-3 In
row lost four straight Game 7s In
Hernandez then gQt tre . Mets
tre
ninth, with Orosco fanning
the World Series since Babe Ruth back in the game when he !Dked a
Barren
to md the game. Police
pitched them to the championship two-run single to .left center on an
rrount!rl on ll&gt;rseback prevented ;
In 1918.
0-1 pitch.
Three times they were one strlke
"I've always hit well with men In most oftre fans from !DUringoutcn ·
away from wrapping up tre title scoring position and 1 felt very tre field as the Mets fonned a ,
jubilant mass of humantty ~ tl1e ;
Saturday night, but a Bob Stanley comfonab'l: up there In the 'sixth"
mound.
wild pitch and a BIU Buckner error " ·§ai(i' "Hernandez. "There was rio
The triumph was the 116th of tre :
made them play another game.
way 1 was going to swing at his hook
season
l:lr the Mets, who posted 39 ;
And that, of course, meant (cuiVeJ !JJiwaltedfortrefastbaU.' '
comeback
victories In tile regular .
another loss.
.
Gary Carter foUowed with a
season. They beat the Astros kl the ;
"We'll probably be remembered looping fly that fell In !root of right
as chokers." said second basem~ fielder Evans. and pnch runner NL play&lt;tfs, with thrre &lt;t the wins :
coming In trelr last at·bat. They bst .
Marty Barrett, who tied a Seres Wally Backman scored to tie it 3-3.
the ftrst two games of tre Series at ;
record with 13 hits. "But we were
The Mets then coUectErl thra:o
Shea,
but won It all by sweeping the ·
su~ to come In fifth place.
JOOre runs in their next at-IJat to go
'
last two.
I don t care what the fans think. abead to stay. Calvin Schiraldi, the
(Game 6) was a one In a million loser In Games 6. became the loser
~ in Game 7 w~n he served up a tie·
comeback ... and t~y did it."
The Mets did It again Monday breaking romer to Ray Knight
night. But to win, theyhadtofoUow leading off the sevmth.
the formula: give the Red Sox an
"It was a 2-1 fastball " said
early lead. then roar back. Make Knight will was named tre' Series'
'em think they have a chance. then Most Valuable Player after a 3-for-4
snatch victory away.
pertorman&lt;P In Game 1. "I decided
to be real aggressive. I looked for a
.
pitch andtt was there.u·s JX'(lbably

lit-It'

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.

By MIKE BARNES
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YO~ (UP! I - Comeback
has been the No. 1 charaeterlst~ c:J.
the 1986 New York Mets. Collapse
has 'been the trademark cl. t~
Boston Red Sox for the last 68 years.

I

.. . ....

---Local
. Briefs:----"- ·Study shows economic gro~th out west·.

Mets rally, edge Sox·
for 1986 ·baseball ti.tle

I

·•

Tuesday, October 28, 1988
0

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Cars ba"k on tra"k

1

CINCINNATI (UPIJ- Worllm
al 'the QUeenSj!ate ramm~~ tmnl·
na I In Cincinnati managed to get
eight derailed cars· back 6ft the
track Monday, less than :H hours
after they derailed.
Seven or the cars contained the
flammable chemical benzene ,which IS suspected of callllng
cancer- but all the caniern•!d ,
upright and there were no 111b. ·
Offtclals said there was no daJIII!'I'.

"

The toll-&amp;ee number is:

1-800-223-ERIE.
'

Do.n't Let Cold Weather Catch ~ou
With AWeek Batte;;

$54''

The toll-free number will be in operation during normal business
hours, Monday through Friday.
ANR wants to cooperate with you and wants all Ohio landowners to be fully informed relative to the pipelin.e project. The
hotline is for your convenience. If you have any questions about
the Erie Pipeline System, please calll-800-223-ERIE.

Group

22F
6 'YEAR
24 IN
WARRANTY
71
74 '
UPTO 51b
. CRANKING AMPS

~ -Pipeline COmpany
I - l i l y ol The Coatal Corporllion

Pomeroy• Honlt &amp; Auto

&amp;CIORoi I

tee Center Detro«. Michigan 48243

•

690 }. MAIN Sl., POMEROY, OH.
. '
992-5742
ServinG Meigs Co. 20 YEAR 1966-1986

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'

The Daily Sentinel

Beat of the Bend
.
•

'

October

Meigs native wtns ·status
on family .practice panel · .
'

By BOB HOEFLICH '
Sentinel stall Writer
! Congratulations to Dr. Milisa K
j;Uzer. M.D.
• Th e Holzer
C:llnic has been
Qdvised that Dr.
. ~lzer has been
made a Di~1lon1·
ate of the Ameri·
can Board of
Fami~y Practice.
: A native of Mcjgs Cou nty. Dr.
Rizef·joined the Holzer C:linic staff
InAugu st .
( She recPived her medical degree
~"Om the University of Cincinnati In
1983. She · then completed an
Internship at the North Carolina
Memoriaf Hokspital in Chapel Hill
\h 1984 fo llowed by an internship in
fam ily practice at the same
hospital.

,.

clarified a tax levy to be voted upon
by residents of the township at. the
Nov. 4 election.
There Is .8 of ooe mill to be voted
upon lor cemetery maintenance
and it is listed a s a new tax.
However. a one mill levy lor the
same purpose goes off the tax
duplicate thi s year so res !dents wlll
actually be pay in!( .2 c1 one mill less
if they approve the cemetery
malntenanCf' levy on Nov. 4.

RUTLAND - Rutland Church d
the Nazarene will be in revjval
Tuesday through Nov. 2with Rev.
George W!tllams, evangellst, Point
Rock. Services wilt begin at 7 p.m.
each evening and at 10::.! a.m. and
6::.l p.m. Sunday. Thursday will be
Sunday School night.
A special feature of th,e revival
wUl be music by Linda i.Drm2en,
song evangeUst. I.Drenzen Is mtJon.
ally koown for her style

.

more lnlorrnation call 949&lt;.:!73 or
!159:2161 after 5 p.m.

The Pomeroy and Mlddleporr
Chambers of Commerce are trying
to do something about the $!ll.OOJ
problem which has arisen in the
establlshment of a fer·ry · '\('~Vice
when the Pomeroy~MaSOil Bridge Is
closed for repairs.
The chambers are offering to sell
advan!P tickets for ferry servlce·to
raise fundS which are needed lo r
The Racine Emergency Squad constructing a landing across frol)"l .
wut be sponsoring a mixed-wiley- the Middlepor1 levee and to help
ball lou mamen t beginning at 9a.m. with the insuran ce and other start
Saturday at the Southern High up monies tha t are go ing to he
~hool Gymnasium.
needed.
·
'fulphies will he awarded and the
'!'he chambers need quick action
drawing for opponents will&lt;be held since work on preparing the ferry
at 7 p.m . on Oct. 30 at the Racine landing must he done before winter
Squad building. If you na&gt;d any weather sets in.

Interest continues in the weekly
11mes~Sentlriel
Mystery Farm
contest.
Winner of the Ocl.19 edition farm
picture identification is Tom Ander·
son. Box 243. Rulland. Tom was one
of 13 contestants who corwcllv
identified the fa rm as thai of .Jotffi
T. Hollida)'. Tom. is I he winner of a
$5 prize. The winner- Sine£' there
were so many correct cnl ries ~
was selected by lottery.

"1

~t

Tuesday. October 28. 1986

church

eipertlse on the plano, as ~II a·s
the powerful, rich ·VJ~ancy of her
voice. She has travelEd throogh 12
years In gospel singing, four. .years
as minister ri music and four years
on the entertainment circuit. The
professional quality of her music Is
excelled only by the spJiitual
dedication and fervency with which
she· sings.
Everyone Is Invited to attend the
revival services.

By LIND!\ WElWELMAN
WASHINGTON (UP!) -A new
fafJ11 bankruptcy law wlll ''breathe
hope into the lives of thousands of
farmers" struggUng wlth massive
debts, support ers'~y. .
·
.
President. • ~agan _,signed the
special f~rm ··Jeg!Sla't k\n Monday,
and the measure
Is inserted
in to the natl6n's lfi.~ktuptcycode as ·
Chapter 12, developed eSpecially to
aid family farmers.
, 'liJe,'l¢w )il'w~ \J:llen&lt;letl .to · give
,sqm~~~~hh¢rs a better. chanee to
'-~~~~ tnetr n~~~.wrn allo:v
\lle~e~q;~ay m~h'loot§ ·over. time
/~~p,e~ ~~- r&lt;lr¥'them to liquidate
' Irnme&lt;:hately..
.
, .~
(It.will ) tru~v breat~Je•rope lrito ·
1he lives orthousands of farmers In
Oklahoma and elsewhere Who are.•
smothering under the weight of
overwhelming debt," said Rep,
Mlkr· Synar, D-Okla., who Jntro·
duced 1he measure in the House ..· ·
"The biil is fair to creditors,
doeSn 't cost the ~payers one red
cent and It wm mal&lt; ea·d!fference."
Synar declared.
"It IS the most extensive reWrite
of the federal bankruptcy code in 00
years,and will greatly enhanCP the
fi nancial vlabUJty of man y family
farmers." agreed Sen. Charles
Grassley , R·lowa. the measure's
chief Senate sponsor.
,
The Agriculture !Rpartment est!·
mat es about 175.000 farmers, who
lllld nearly 40 pe-oent of the
nation's farm debl, are In the worst
financial shape with heavy de bts
and weak cash Dow, Sbl)"le hold
scant holJ€ t heir farming opera u6ns
will sur'vlve.
Under the new law. farm ers with

Omitted
, ·The name of Amanda Slaven, .a
fifth grader, ·was unintentionally
omitted from the listing of the first
six weeks grading period honor roll
of the Pomeroy Elementary School.

Michelle and Amy. Racine. spent ·
Sunday wllh Mr. and Mrs. Charley
Smllh.
Mrs. Robert Balley Sr.. has
returned home from Pleasant
Valley Hospital where she under·
went surgery last week. Mrs.
McCrea ·or Florida , siSter of Mrs.
Bailey, was an overnight guest of
the Baileys.

Under Governor Richard F. Celeste the gay and lesbian
movement has made great progress.
1982 Candidate Celeste was supported by the homosext98l Governor Celeste issued an Executive Order declar·
ing that "the Executive Branch of State government
and under the jurisdiction of the Governor shall not
discriminate in State employment against any individual based on the individual's sexual orientation."
This was the first official recognition of the homosexual movement by an.Ohio governor.

A Lebanon Township official has

Harris installed a program titled "The Bartender as a
Gay Health Educator" and promoted the program in
gay bars all over Ohio.

'

' 1986 The Columbus Dispatch reported that Scott Walton ,
Executive Director of the Stonewall Union . Central
Ohio homosexual organization, stated "I don't know
what will happen if Celeste is not elected." He said
the Ohio /\IDS Coalition was financed by the state
and is linked "to the man in office, (Celeste)." It is
obvious that Celeste is key to the success of homosexual groups in promoting homosexual causes
throughout Ohio.

The Ohio Department of Health published "A Gay
Man's Guide to AIDS and Sexual Health" at taxpayers' expense. the pamphlets advise homosexuals how they may avoid ~IDS through "safe" sex
practices. These brochures are designed to preserve
. the homosexual lifestyle, while addressing the AIDS
threat.

RUSSELL

Russell seleaed
Mandy Russell, daughter of Ron
and Na ncy Russell of Racine. won
first runn er~ up In the Miss Teen
Division of the l'i'Iiss Dream World
State Finalist Pageant al South
Point recently. She was presenled a
trophy. Mandy has a brother,
Michael, and is the .granddaugher
of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush of
Apple Grove, and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Russell of Wolf Pen Road,
Pomeroy.

.

.

A gay and lesbian community publication (Tiie
News) now boasts that Columbus is the "Gay Capital
of the East/Midwest." ·

The Ohio Department of Health, with Celeste's
blessing, started an AIDS education program
for student• at the 8th grade level in Ohio public schools.

Another pamphlet, "AIDS- Reducing Your Risk ."
published by the Columbus AIDS Task Force with
explicit' language and pictures. was intended to be
circulated primarily in the gay and lesbian community. However, this pamphlet was distributed by a ,
homosexual group from a booth at the 1986 Ohio

WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to

How cal} they instruct 8th grade students on the
dangers of AIDS withO!Jt revealing what homosexuals do to get AIDS?
'

.'

GOALS SOUGHT BY THE CELESTE ADMINISTRATION ·
FOR HOMOSEXUALS · .. ,

•

''

• All state labor contracts should include a sexual orientation anti-discriitlination clause . This has already been
implemented in new state labor contracts signed by the
Celeste administration under Ohio's new collective bargaining law.

•

!

h"·iff
i'

• "Spoulal" health insurance benefits for homosexual
couples when one il employed by the ltate.

Brandon Christopher Thoma.~

Thomas birth
Michael and Lori Thomas ar&lt;
annourtein!( the birth of a son
BrandOn Christopher, at O'Blenes!
Hospital, Athens, On Sept. 20. He
weighed seven pounds.. twelve
ounces.
-- Maternal grandParents are Mr.
a nd Mrs. Dorsey Burkhammer of
Coolville. Maternal great ·'
grandparents are Mrs. Betty. Hoi· '
comb and Mrs. Minnie Clem.
Paternal grandJjarents are Mr. and.
Mrs. Larry Thomas. Pomeroy, and

PJILernal grCat·grarulJlarent&amp;.are
oOa· Rea of Mlnersvllle, and Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Thomas, Pomeroy.

• A revised Bxecutive Order giving homosexuals "minority"
status to be covered under Ohio's equal opportunity laws..
This would assure Affirmative Action hiring quotas for
homosexuals for all state offices.

• Requiring buaineiMI or organlutions doin• bull• •
ne11 with the ltate to malntain hiring quota• for
homo•ezqal1. ·
THROUGH THE POWER OF HIS ELECTED OFFICE AND
DEPARTMENTS OF GOVERNMENT, GOVERNOR
.
. CELESTE

0
0

'•

Trust Co.. NA of Middloport-,
Ohio. to sell for cesh ti-e
following ooMateral to wit :
1976 Ranf!en 19' with 140

HP 1/ 0 Mercury Motor end
Boat Trai~ .

The Central
Trust
Co .. NA.
Middktport1
Ohio,
reservt11 the
right to bid ec this sale.
{1 0126 . ~7 . 28 . 3tc

Enclosed is my contribution for S
.
I would like ~·- copies of the pamphlets mentioned in
this ad.

'

- -·#.-

.

UPJ WEATHER FOTOCAST ~;

Name __~------------~-----------------­

Public Notice

. Street --~-'-----:--------­

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities .Comml·
sion of Ohio hao scheduled lor
hearing C.ie No. 1111· 17$ ~
GA' AEM, In tho Motter a/ the
Application of Syracuse Home

State ,...---~-------- Zip ---'----

Phone -------~----------------

Paid lot by the Ohio Clltlllll rot Dtteney ani! Health Potllicat Ac~on Committee, Bitt SteensJand, Chairman, 2456 Nollh

sw 114.. Cokainbua, Ohio 43221

Ccmpony, Inc. lor

authority ,to 'lnc:Naoe .,d
adjust

'.

Its ratao alia Cliarg•

and 10 ch.,ge Hs tarlffo on on
emergency and tamjlorary ba·
sis pursuant to Sectton

'"

'··

PLUMBING &amp; HEA nNG

Second Avenue, Box

i.:.::....:l

f7r':"'1
.....
~SHOWERS

;.. •, ,1;
"'

Annou ncem r.n I:;

New location: ~~ .
I ~8 North Second
· Middleport, Ohio 45760

Galliriolis, Ohio 45631

AIR
FLOW

i '

SALES &amp; SERVICE
(CUT OUT FOR FUnJR!

WEATIIER MAP - Thundel'SIAlrnns will be scattered over central
IU!d south Florida. Skies wW he mostly suMy over the rest of the
siluthem two lhlrds of the ·country, with partly cloudy ski es prevaUing
·wer the oorthem third. MOO!I.Ii the nation wW hav e high temperatures •
Iii the ros or 'lOs.
.

Meigs County Agents Comer

Now is time.~to take soil
samples; lists are updated .

PHONE
992-2156
Or
Oaillw

Public Notice

4909.16 of the Ohio RoYiood
Code. The heoring wMI be held
on Wedneoday, NCMtmbor 19,
1986 at 9 ::10 a.m. octheoflice
of tho Convnltctlon, 180 E.

Broad Street,

Columbus,

Ohio. At 1hat lime, in1Br81t8d
partioo wiM be affotded on
opporiUnity to p.....,t public

testimony.

l;f1--Btilifms- -

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
ADUCIARV
On 0 - 1 4, 19911 h the
Moigo County Probote Court,
c... No. 25.286. llom•d J.
Oiddle, P. 0 . Box 337, Roche.
Ohio 4tin1 . wu IIIPOinted
Executor .. the .Illite a/ Oval
Diddle, decaoo.!, late of R. D.
2. Rocino. Ohio.

RobortE. Bucl!,
· Probote Ju'*to

Lena K. N-roed, Clertc
110121 . :!a; 11114. 3tc •

0 ppor1unity

oom1t111 retuma.erewll·
ling to undergo aotonolve
trolnlng, ond -uld llko
to conven 1 emellnvutment Into 1 he1tthy in ·
come - eend your rasuma to: ·
\
•DonTox.lnc .
BOK 721X
c/ o Dolly Ientine!
111 Court St.

Oh . 48789

FIDUCIARY

-M•it• County Probote
Court, C11o No. 28232.
Morjorlo L. Crow, 8288 A~
br.Iaht Drive, Vtrglnlolooch,
VIrginia, 23484, wu 11,..
tho

pointed Executrix of tho • · '

tate of Goldie P . Swort, de ,
ceeoed, loto of P. 0 . BOll
County '
'

Aobo!'l E. Budi, r
Proboto Judgo j

Lona K. Nuoelroed, Clerk

•

•DishwHhers
•Ranges

•Refrigerators

•Dryers •Frf;Htzers

PARTS .and SE

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP

F11 All

y,, Plllll•l Nnlr

PLUS: Office S.N~Iits &amp;
furniture, Wedding

and Graduation
Stationery, Mf191otic

Signs,

Ru~tr

Stomps,

Busin•s Forms,
Copy Servkts, Etc. ·
255 Mitt St ., Middleport
104 Mulbtrry Av., Pomeroy

992-3

KINDLEWOOD
STOVES
MADE IN GAlliPOlll
\OLD IN GAtliPOlll
SERVICED IN f.AtliPOlll

FREE STANDING •

·lV.s, Antenn·as .
Satellit1 Sal1s ·
lnst alia tio n
· Servic.e

BUANS WOOD OR COAL

NO MONEY DOWN
?0 Doy1 \nnw
A; (u;h

OLD nME
HEATING CO.
7D1 2nd A.e.
Gallipolis, Ohio

Real Estate General

,

Jf281fln

. ..DEN NV .CQN.G:'
614"·8'43"-5248' .
WILL HAUL
RfASONABLf • ~fli.A.LE
JVST CALL!
992~3410

AUTOMAn(.·

TRANSMISSIONS .
REBUILT &amp; REPAI~ED

SUGAR .RUN
ASHLAND
190 MULBEIIY AVE.
POMEROY, 011.

PH. 992-9949
lob Barton.

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

BISSELL
BUILDERS

• VINYL SIDING
• ALUMINUM SIDING
. •BLOWN IN
INSULAnON

"At Reasonable Prices"

PH. 949·2801
or 949-2860

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Day or Night

NO SUNDAY CALLS

N1w Ho1111s Built

.

4-16·'86 tfn

"Free Estimate~"

PH. 949-2801

· or 949·2860

GUN SHO.OT

No Sunday

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

YOUNG'

1

,

CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Addons and remodeling
- Roofing and gutter work
- Concre1e work
- Plumbing and electrical
work

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

6:30 P.M.,

Faclary Chcb
12 Gauge Shotg11n Only

10·8-tln

(Free Estimetea)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 ar 992·73!4
Pomeroy, Ohio
4-15-'86-lc

JltiiGS CO.

HUMANE

SOCIETY HAS BEAUTIFUl
ICITTENS and CATS FOR
ADOPTION

EUGENE LONG

SUPERI.OR
SIDING CO.

Roofing of att Typeo
Worked in home • •
20 year•

448-0294 ..

Racine Gun ShoOt spon10red by
Racine Gun Club . Every Sunday,
beginn·ing at 1:00 p.m. Factory
Choke, .1 .~ g~~g' ahotguna. ."

REEDSVIlLE - A neat 2~3
bedroom home on a large level
lol. Basement. la rge 2 car
garage, storage shed. Alumi·
num s~ ,n~ Good cond11i0n.
&lt;Jt~ $23.000.00.
MORNING STAR SUBDIVI ~
SION ~ 3 acre parcel of
vacant· land. Road lrontage,
water and electric available.

$9500.00.

ST. AT. 325- Vacanl wooded
land. ApproKimalely 119 acres.
Lois of road lronlage. No
minerals. $30,000.00.

lnnoculation s
HALF COST ot SPAY/
NEUTER II time of Adoption
Balance Pa id monthly to
Humane Society
CAU 992·6505

992-5427 ... 992-3026

10/ 5/ 1 mo.

81-\ acres. mosHy wooded.
Garage. Close to slate park and
~untin&amp; $15.00l.OO.
~enry"E.

Cleland. Jr.
992·6191
Jean Trussell ..... 949~ 2660
Dottle Turner ..... 992·5692
Office ................ 992·2259

AW

...

Sat. Clo&amp;ed Sunday.

A n eintion hrents of My Child,
Cabbage Patch. Cricket, RHI •

Baby -and Teddy Ruxpinl Now
taking orders for fur coata.

school cheer-laldet" and footbtlll
player outfita, party dre~•• 1nd
ether 1peciahy oudh1. Phon•
614· 992·7532 or 814· 992·
6379. Makes a gr..1 Christmn
pre1en t .
or trespauing,
Mynea Farm located Chestnut ·
Ridge Roed.

No hunting

4

Giveaway

Cutu abandoned kinen. nei!Mt•
good home. Call 614•379·

2436 .

·f

2 10 week sold puppies, both
female. Call 614· 367-06&amp;1.

.

'

Yard Sale lah overs give.way .
Mu1t like all. Call 1514 ·448.

.963 5.

3 calico kittens &amp; 1 long hlired
bleclt &amp; white. CaM 814 -44a.

7075.
3 pa rt Beagle, At 588. C.U
614-446-3969.
•
2 long haired kiuena. litt.tr
trai ned . 304 -675-5043.

6 Lost and Found
FOUND Bauett hound Cell to
Identi fy. 614-..,.6 -1354.
LOST 800 lb. Hereford cow~
Strayed hom wi•ilfll Wattoa
Farm. Owl Hol low Rd . E1111~ ,.
Shade. Maybe in Sliwr Aldi•""'l
area . Call 61 4-667·3502. •
' oM;

~

FOUND tan and whtu cotMeci
Junior High area, 304-1?1- •

1320.

... ••:: \

,

""7,..-- --=v-=-a-rd-:-:::S...,al:-e----,.. ·

..... Gallipolis........... '•
I

&amp; Vicinity
Yard SaleCen1anaryTownhou•' '
Oct. 31, No\1. 1. Corellt dish•, 1
home in1trior, cofftt pot, m ixer, ,
jewelry . m1nress boxaprlngs .. ~

••

•

.... ... PfPieiisiinf ........
&amp; Vicinity

CALL COLLECT:
Ph. (614) 843-5425

RADIATOR ·
- SERVICE

11 -l&amp;.tl

ACCENT

FENCE COMPANY ·
PH. 992-6931
. AftetS Cal

742·2027

We can repair and r&amp;&lt;
core radiators and
heater cores. W.e can
also acid boifand rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks .

PAT HILL FORD
992·2196
Middleport, Ohio
1· 13·tfC

"frH Estimates"

Installation Av~lablt

SALES &amp; SDVICE

Roger Hysell
Garage

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVllL£, OHIO

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

BOGGS

· Autflorizod John D•rt;
Now Holland, lush Hog

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

AI,.

farm Equipmtnl

f~tlll

·

1rapplng supplies- Nl.. . lhei,
Whaet litea. Also buying Gin ~
lt'"l!J . George Buckley . 814·
6&amp;4 -'~7•)1 . Hra. 2-9 p.m . Mol1•,'

"Free Ett:imetes"

MIOOlEPORT ~ N1ce 2 slory
3 bedroom w1th I'" batl!&gt;,
enclosed fronl s1tting porch,
fireplace, carport ~~ ol
storage space Ma ny olher
features. All for $3 7 . ~0.00.

~

up and 'denverv. Dnia Vtc:• •..

Cluner, one half mile
Georges Criilli -Rd . . Clll t:i ·•

.

S500 Adoption Fee
Includes Wormed and First

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling

POMEROY,O.
. 992-2259
BRADBURY - Recentlyremodeled 3 bedroom home Wlth
parti al base men t hu ge
equipped kitchen. dtntng area.
aud ~ ee gas to . house.
$35.00100 . .

I

Bashan Building

VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM

611
E. Main

~'

SWEEPER ' li~d Hwing mechi,. .,.
repair. ·part I. 1n~ iUP,P.Ii•. ,p,

'

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

OPEN 9 AM ·6 PM
10123/86/tfn

,

Electronic Organs
Mobile servi.ce,_~

OR

FIREPLACE INSERT

•

Pay Your Cable 8r
Phone .Bills,Here
·
' BUSINESS PitON!
l6t4I 99Hs5o ·'
I!SiliNCf PWON!
16141 992-7754 .

E•ulhllltnf
, r
Plrll &amp; StNiet

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEAOQ.UARTERS FOR

•SATELUTE SALES&amp; SERVICE

•landsca ping

MOVING SALE - 221~ Jtttoli-'
son Avenue . Monday through
Wedne1day.
Yard St~~la, refrtow•tor. blib"l
clo1h81 end 1oya. clothing, mtac,
etc . Tum Into Jr. High. hou•
behind track . Wad . Thurs. 10:00
AM t ill 1.

9

Wanted To

~uy

.,

Wepey cuh for lett modelclun
und Cltl,
Jim Mink Chev.-Oids Inc.
Bill Gene John ton

614-446 -3672

'·

TOP CASH paid lor '83 model
and newer ultd car1 . Smith \
Bulck ·Pontiac, 191, Eestem 1
Ava .. Ga llipolis. Ca ll 814 ·441 ·

2262 .

WANTED TO BUY uMd ¥tOod &amp; -..;
ccal heater1. SWAIN' S FURNI - \
TURE. Jrd. &amp; Oliw St . Gellipo.
lis. Call 614 -446 ·3159.

Buying da ily gold, 1il11tr coina
rin.g1 , jewelr y, l ttrling Wire. old
com•. large cu rrency. Top prices. Ed . Burkett B1rber Shop ""
2nd , Ave. Middleport, Oh . 114~ ~

• lENIIH
•SYLVAIIA
•SPE£0 QUEEN LAUNORV
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

•All Types of
Excavating

~

TtliiJI!aslon

6 · 17~ tlc

MEIGS
EXCAYAnNG
COMPANY

.. ............ .. .......... ·· ·····-

Used mobile homes. Call 614446: m76 .

PH. 992:5682
or 992-7121

Dtaltr

·'

REPAIR

w~h unfin~ hed

On Octobor 14, 18Be, In

110) 21 , 28; 111) 4, 3tc

·~•Washers

'REPAIRS

tfamily
oNG room
BOTTOM
3
II~====l=·3-:'::1f::c
bedroom
home - A
on approx imatcly

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF

Aocine, Melgo
Ohio. 4Bn1 .

. All M1ku

We CatTy 'F.i1t'tinv $u'p pli"

86

Public Notice

OPPORTUNITY
Fr•11:11111 ovolloblo in

tho Pomoroy·MiddWport
oreo. If you ore prollclont
ot proporinglndlvtduolln·

64 ~isc . Merchandliii

Public Notice

(101 28. 1tc

Pomero

KEN'S · ·~
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

BUSINESS

Util~ies

1

R~ll

lmergency 04~t.2~i1"6,

Office 949-2438

-z (614)
446,7619 ~ (614) 992·6601
417
1213

Writt
Stntinel Clmilied Dept .
111 Ca11rt Sl.. Pon~efOJ , Ohio 4S7U

NOTICE OF
PRIVATE SALE
Noclce Is hereby given that
"' No•. 7 , 191111 at 10:00
A.M. a priva1e sale will .. held
at the offices of The Central

RACINE, 91f10 . .

."!~ ..... ~

'

a: . '
i1j LIS~ · M. ~~~~. ~.S ..
::1: Licensed . Chnt~:~~l Audtologist

1

Public Notice

OPEN :Mon.-Fri, 8 am·9pni- Sat. 8·6
Walk-ins Welcome
EAR PIERCING,' MANICURING, PERMS AND
AU YOUR STYLING NEEDS

....

IS USING TAX DOLLARS TO PERPETUATE THE GOALS AND
POLITICAL ACTIVITY.OF THE.HOMOSEXUAL COMMUN ITY.

I
IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO JOIN US IN THE STRUGGLE FOR
DECENCY AND HEALTH FOR THE PEOPLE OF OHIO, CONTRIBUTIONS MAY BE SENT TO: OHIQ CITIZENS FOR
DECENCY AND HEALTH. PAC. 2455 NORTH STAR RD .,
COLUMBUS, OHIO 43~21. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
AND SAMPLES OF MATERIALS MENTIONED IN THIS AD
ARE AVAILABLEU JPON REQU"EST.

AM ESTt0-29-86

. N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

~2·576~

FREE HEARING ·TESIS WEDNESDAYS
CJ Cotl1lutenzed HalliN! Air SllectiQO ·
z Swim ·Molds • Intarpretinc SeiVices ·

The Daily Sentinel

IN OUR OPINION, THIS IS A BRAZEN MISUSE OF PUBLIC FUNDS AND INSTITUTIONS.

GREAT BEND ELEttRI(,~· Inc•.

1M£. .....,,

Debbie Meadows- Owner; Imoiean Blevins
Loretta Holsinger. $helly Ohlinger
Melissa . D 0 ~ing, Merri Amabu

'
The following goals were listed by the Individual Sexual
Orientation Committee in its interim report to the governor
on january 28, 1986:
· .•

.7

sector

"My comm.i tment to I•Y and lesbian rilhts
and to all civil rights will not waiver."
'

•

NATIONAL

:Northeast

The Columbus Citizen journal reporting on the Midwest Gay and Lesbian Freedo'm Parade in Columbus
' .
stated that Governor Celeste sent an envoy to the
rally with his official message:

Harris as a "gay health consultant" to act as /\IDS'.
liaison to the homosexual community. (Harris is not
a medical doctor). The Associated Press has reported ttl.\! Harris opposes AIDS testing for homosexuals, even though th'e Department of Health
sponsors such tests.

much as $1.5 ·rrilllorr · ap'plles o~y .to famlly farmers who
fur bankruptcy under earn at least half their gross income ·
farm sectlori .of ·the from farming and can attribute at
code. The provision least Ill percent of their debt to Jt.

douses

ment of Health, Dr. Thomas Halpin, to a member of
the Ohio Senate stated, "We estimate 30,000-40,000
persons in Ohio are infected with the AIDS virus.
Although not all of these ii\Qividuals will develop
AIDS, they are potentially infectious and may infect
ten of thousands of other individuals."

1914 The Ohio Department of Health employed Buck

.

By John C. Rice
leaves to yellow and red Is the
Coonty Extension Agent
longer nights a nd shorter days. In
Agriculture
· . fact, a severe kill ing frost may
Soli Testing - 1 have mentioned actually ruin our fall c~lor slDw by
severaltlmestbeimpohanceof soil destroying tbe leaves abilrty_ to
testing. Also, now is an exCPllent carry on a number of chem rcal
time to take soil samples. The price processes necessary for the devel ~
for soil tests has changed some. opment of the beauti ful colors.
This Is due to the fac1 that we now
Throughout the spring and
need to collect fot postage. FJeld surruner.- the leaves serve as food
crops and commercial vegetables factories for t he tree. Their green
By United Press International
now cost $5.75 each and lawn and . color Is a blend of several pogments
Rain doused the Northeast and
gardeil $amples now cost $6.25 ;,. the two most Important being
parts of the Ohio Valley and Flolida
•green chlorophyll and a yellow
each.
early today. and a mixture of clouds
Upating
Mailing
Lists
~ We are
~gment caUed carotene. The chlo·
and fair skies spread over much ri
In the process of upda ting all or our rophyll captures energy from the
the rest of the nation.
mailing lists. If you were maUed a Sl;' n and combines it wit h carbon
Rain was scatter.ed over non hem
card and have not returned it and dtoxlde and water lo form c arbohy ~
New England. along the northern
would like to remain on a mailing dra tes, the tree 's food.
Atlantic Coast and from central
please return the card JmmeAs summ_er draw s to_a dos~, the
list,
Pennsylvania and Cf'ntral New
diately. If you dldnot receive a card shorter pertods of sunlight trtgger
York state across Ohio and Indiana.
and wish to be on any of the an Internal chemical change in the
the National Weather Service said.
following maJIJng lists. please caU leaves. The amou nt of chlorophyll
"It's nothing heavy," weather
us at 992-6696 and Jet us know which t:eglns to decrease and we see more
servfce forecaster. H~,ITY GordOn- ' U
sls yof would like to be on.'The of the yellow pigment. Everirua lly.
said. "If's sca ttered along the
mailing lists are as follows: bee~. when a larw a~unt of t)le
norther n IAtlanticl coas t
dairy, crops, Ch{lstmas trees, chlorophyll ha s vantshed, we see
primarily."
beekeepers. sheep, poultry, com· .the yellow fall colors of .the el ms.
In New York Oty. the rain Ultal
mercia! vegetables, swine, fore· poplars and some htckones.
in time for the New York Mets and
stry, and fruit.
Red and purple autumn leaves
the Boston Red Sox to play the
North America n Livestock Expo· are prlmarlly the result of a red
seventh game of the World Series
sltlon - Want to go the North pigment called anthocyanin. There
Monday night. The game was
American Livestock ·Exposition in Is Uttle. If any. anthocyanin In the·
rained \llt Sunday night.
LoulsvUle. Kentucky. for a day? A leaves of most trees during the
Rain also fell in southern Florida .
one day trip Is being planned by the spring and summer. But as fall
where warm air pushed tempera·
Gallia County Extension Office. approaches. chemica l changes
tures to n:cord highs Monday.
Bus fare Is $20.00 per person and ca use the leaves to manufacture
Mlam) reported a . high of 89
you· pay for your own meals. They considerable amou nt s of anthocya ~
degrl'('s, topping the prE.VIlus re- will leave at 6:00a.m. on Wednes· nln. resulting in the autumnal reds
rord l38 set in 1985, and an 87-degree
day, November 19 from the Gallla and Jl.lrples of the dOgwood and
reading In Hollywood. Fla., sur·
County Fairgrounds and wUJ return oaks. The exact color of Ihe leaves
pass€d the old record of ~ set In
late that night. Call our office at depends on the amount s of other
1981. '
992-6696 or the Gallia Cou nty Office pigments also present.
Gordon said warm tempera tures
at 446-7007, to make reservallons.
Some years we have bright. vivid
were expected again in soutllern
Reservation deadline is November colors while in other years they are
Florida Tuesday but record highs
!i.
relatively drab. These differen ces
were unlikely.
Frost Doesn't Cause Leaf Color are due prlrnarUy to the lale
Rain also wa s sroHered from
_For many people. frost warnings summer and early fall weathe r. In
wes tern Montana across the Idaho
mean It ·s time 10 biing In poHed early !aU. su nn.v day s and cool
panhancJJe.
plants and begin watching leaves nights favor both the breakdown of
The weather over much of the
change to the reds and ~Ids of chlorophyll and the formation of
rest of · the nation was mixed . autumn. But the Idea that frost anthocyanin. This leads to vivid
Gordon said. "Some places have
cau!les the color chan!((' Is a coloration. On the other hand ,
clouds. and some of them have
misconception. says an EX1ension cloudy weather and warm nights
clear skies. It's ju st kind of normal
forester at The Ohio State usually result in muted colors.
for Ihis time of vear." he said .
University.
Drought, excessively hot periods
Storms over I he . weekend
Contrary to what many people of time or ot ~r weather that
drenched the Tampa and St.
think, the frost 1s not responsible for stresses trees duling late summer
Petersburl( areas a Florida with up
the vibrant leaf colors thatcharac· will ca use poorer coloration . An
to lOth inches of rain. flooding some
terizeanOhloautumn.'l'herealkey early killing frost will also sulxlue
·
st reels. ..
. to the transformation . c1 green , leaf colors .

1985 A letter from Assistant Director of the Ohio Depart-

Celeste's order also established the Ohio Individual Sezaal Orientation Committee, funded
at tupayer ezpense to guide the implementation of all gay and lesbian programs in state
government.

•Ces - _, ..·'

271N.2~

Rain

State Fair, and at the Ohio Department of Health in
Columbus. The pamphlet was so offensive that it
was removed from the fairgrounds:

ual movement.

. debts or'ru.
cou lcj •apply
the spec Ia)
bankruptcy

now

Wolf Pen · happenings
Mrs. Leslie Frank, ,and Sarah
Beth of Texas Road, were Wednes·
day visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Haning, Ronald an(!· Mrs. Gladys
Tuckerman.
Mr. ·and Mrs. John Mitch of
Pomery recently· visited Mr. and.
Mr. Gary· Mitch and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
LangsvJJJe, and Kevin Knapp,

7"

The

Ohio

President signs- ~ farm~ ·~ .bill

WHY HOMOSEXU
SUPPORT CELESTE

.' Pauline McNemar. F razrvs~
burg. Ohio. formerly of Hemlock
Grove in Meigs Count y, ·1s a patient
at Good Samaritan Hospital . Cards
may he sent to her al 000 Forest
Ave.. Zanesville. Ohio 43701 . Her
d~ught cr is Mr·s. JrcnP Bax ter of
P.omero.1·.
· Local history buffs are advised
that a 1;,1 page SUIWY of genealogi·
cal resources is al'ailable in the
Southeastern Ohio libra ries.
The material is titled, "Local
Histmy and Genealogy ResourCPs ·
Guide 10 Southeastern Ohio" and
was devrioped by t ~ Ohio Valley
Area Llbi·aries !OVAL ! through a
gran t from the Ohio Humanities
Council . Personal copies can te
obt·ained by writing OVAL, 2o2 w.
13th St. , Wellston. Ohio 45692 and
including $2.50 ~ check or money
order - to cover mailing charges
and hancJJing.

Revival slated

1986

992· 3476.

•

Want ed to Buy 1t11nding timber

phono 304 -676-4412, a:oo:
5 :00 PM oft"' 1 :00 PM 304.''-·
675·3924 or 304 -372 ·5192. 1 l'

Fmplnv til Pill

Ser me "
11

Help Wanted

.,

We Hu.t Afull Tl""

•Basemen1a
•Sewage Systems

.... , .. ~tltl ..

. '"'

•Wa1er &amp; Gaa Linea
•Water Wall Drilling
•Trucking

.IDENOUR .
· TV &amp; APPLIANCE

Call:

CHEMR-915·3307

4/ 1/ tfn

I'

Excellent inoonw for pen tili1e r
homt uaernbty work. Fot Into. ••

&lt;OII312 ·741 ·1400 .. qU ,

.

Mekt Chr•tmu money, .-i, ~
Avon . Make 45 perc.,t . Catt ,
614 -446· 3358.
. '

,.'

1

�--t.

Page 8

'

October 28, 1986

Sentinel

LAFF-A·DAY

78

Lite lnsurinca SuperviiOf, O..e

&lt;1f America'• great lift in .. ,.~

agmd• h• an epportunilyfora
supervisor in the Gallipolis area.

••tt

sal~ background of at
two
years. skould 18f'd his or hw

busin8111s eard to Mr. White. 870

n~~~~

. NorthotVInton.., St. Rt. 1101o
tM place to buy your u.d auto
perta . You'll receive fltt.
frio&lt;ldly- 9 the lrtot- _. ,
P!M't• ....,...... Call 'l14 ·• •·
1111.
'

43215.
3000 Government Jobl List.
S 16 ,040 -159 ,230 Yf . Now HirR-9805.

1_0/28/BB
MrqNQ I

AAD t.le-'&amp;::IZ~1111

'

ing. Call 805 -687 -6000 Ext.·

IAMI

.

T I N () 0 N

8:00 .(I](J).(JJ(JI·()I)~

•.

News
Cilllti .VIIIey · ·

Need women ~ ere looking
forWard t o Christmas. Help PJt
the gifts under the tree by hwlng
a Friendloj Hon. Party It home
or just by uking your friendl1or
an &lt;Wder from a book . Over 700
ite ms to dloose from! Get vo~rs

•m
..."-- .·
(J) 3·2-1: eom.ct (CCI

il!',...., ....

e

1]). NBA T.,.Y , '· ·

r
·_: I

•

e ()) f'BC N_.

7· ' IS

t11 0ooc1 ntnte

1:35 (J) ....rly H. . l...
7:00
(I] PM Mtlgllllne
~ Hol,!lcootle 8tiCI McCor··

·~

e

for butin"s
acooun ts. Full-Time. •&amp;0,00().
$80,000; Part-Time. S12,000$18,000-No Selling, repeat business. Set your own hours.
Training provided . Call: 1 -612938 -6870, M·f . Ba~ to Spm
(Central Standarf;t Time).

'

18 Wanted to Do
Sepr'ie Tank Pumping. Commer·
cial &amp; res identia l. 2 •ucks for
pro rf1)t !$8t'vloe .
per 1' 500

sao

gal. load , RON EVANS ENTER -

Jackson, Oh . Call
614 -286-5930 .

PRIS'ES,
c oli~~

ATTENTION CAMPERS' Will
move' your campers frOm e..-np
site tq winter •orage area. Call
614-7A2-3166.

Fmanc1al

21

Business
Opportunity

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. recommends thtt you
do buainMS ""''" p.oplt you
know. and NOT to 1a1d money
through the mtit until you lliYe
investigtted the offering.

---------=------=-·I
COpen
btl.,tiful

shoe

store . Ledies·Chlldrens· Mens.
All firS1 qu1tity merch.ndise.
Over 200 top name brands· Over
1500 styles. G6orie V.,derbih. 9
Wea:1. Even Picone. Andrew
Geller, Liz Clalbome, CtpMzo.
B1ndolino, Bus. Betr Traps.
Calico. Reebok. Strtde Rite.
Buller Brown. C.ndi•. LA
Gea r, Cherokee, Florsheim,
Freeman, Bostonian and many
more. 812 .900 to 839,900
inciudet beginning inventory.
t11ining , fi11tures .-.d grand
o pening promotions. Ctlltodty.
Prestige Fashions 501 -3292362 .

23

Professional
Services

Sta rks Tree and Lawn Service.
Hedges , sh rub s, bu·sr.es
trimmed. landscaping, 11ump
1 nd leaf removal. 3l4: 67&amp;·
28 42 or 676-2010 .
• ......,

Real [slate
31

3 bedroom double wide with
large ytrd . Part~lty tumishld. 3
miiM out of Pomeroy on Rt.
143. Aveileble ,.a.,."'ber 1,11
t275 Coli 614-992·7401 .
For r8nt or sale, 3 bedroom home
In country. Clo• to Dexter and
coal minH. II interetted, call
614-742-2729 .
3 bedroom hcmw in Che1ter.
PrettJ retiftd couple. No child·
ten . 8200 per month plu,
utHiti• end depotlt. C•ll 014.
9B5-4300.

Small .a room hou11, unfur·
nished fot rtftt. Adult• only.
614·949-2519 .
•

Homes for Sale

3 bdr., air, pool, garage. Nice.
Commercial proptrtv. cornM
lou &amp; highway frontage . Ult
with us. We have buyers. A-One'
Real Este'tt·Broker. Call 30•·
674-5104 or 304-&amp;74-6386.
3 bdr. 1 bath. new c:trp.t • wall
paper. oulslde newty pelnttd,
pert. tum ithtd. good lOcation &amp;
neighborhood. 518 Jty Dr. Ctll
614-445-1583.

20 acres and 1973 E-ai• Trailer
with 2 bedrooms ptus 1 ldd-on
bedrO(Im. Gt5 r heat. Tuppet'S
Plains-Chester wetar sys1em .
Will sell separaBly. Suc:c•s Rd .,
Tuppers Plains. 814·117-1431.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent.
alee., fum . · or unfum.. sec.
requlrtd. Convenient
location. Ctll 614-«1-8558 or
614•441· 4778,
I
depolit:

2 bdr. fullyfumil~ed!idt.ll.tt only,
uti!. paid. Call 814-«8·4110.

Roush Ln . Ch•hire. Tr•ilor &amp;
approx. VI acre lot with porch 6
ttoraga building . Call 814· 367·
7492.

2bdf. unfum ., all ttec: .. 2 mil•
At. 568 prfvatelot noo month.
Call 514-446-4e07 ., 614 ·
448-2602 .

G1111t Buy· 12xSO 2 bdr. mobile
home 24x28 metal pole build·
ing, approx. 11 ' c.IMtance. e~ttrl
hook up for mobHehorN. lard en
lf)lce, til this on t.rge comer lot.
sl1e 8611112. No hilltlo mow, in
Pttrku, have to Itt to eppre·
ciate . Call 614-379 -2212.

2 bedroom tnliler, 1dutts or 1
baby. No petsl t135 P!'' mo.
Coli 814-2111-1157.
2 bdr. Crown Ciiy ~rei . C1ll
814 -255-S.a4.
2bdr. mobilehomenearHMC no
*161 water inetuti!Kt,
t100 dopoo~ . Coli 614· 446·
3817.
pet1.

197.a, 12xl6 CarritD• hou•
trtil•. 3 bedroom. 2 bath.
Electric. Calll14-185-3128.

10d50 2 bedroom mobile home.
nur Recine. Call 614·992 ·
5868 . Available Nov. 2 .

' 81 Windsor . 2 br lerge living
room &amp; kitcllen , 2 porch11 IIi
Und.,.•ning, great eond. Must
Mil. 304-882-3715.

12x86 2 bedroom lrailtr in

oauntry, Peeeh Fork Rd . Total
.. ec. •175 monttl , *100 depoait . 614-992 ·7013.

1982 Clayton, 12~~:60, all elect·
ric, exc. cond .• bett rt•ontble
offer. 304-87B-2485.o

2 mobile homes for rent . 2 and 3
b•room. Furnished. S186 and
1210 month pkts udlltla 1nd
dopollit. 814-992-7479 or 614 992-3638 .

8 &amp; R Mobtte Homt Mover"

insured, rMsonabte l'ltet , cell
304-675-6512 ot S75 - 24B~ -

10x60 housetraller, Fleetwood. 1 bedroom Duptu trailer for
01200. 304-882-32a9 ., n3- ~t. t125 per month for one
6958.
and I 140 tor otllar. Parttr
fumilhtd. You pay utilities,
1 21160 mobile horM ..d lot on owner ,..,.s water and MWige.
Hlltt'eford Line. Apple Grove .00 Call 114-992-2394.
1lh 1cra lot. 304-57&amp;·29153.

44

trail•. utility btdg ..

stor8ge bklg., l,i acrt 141nd. Rt . 2,
4 -mlles North ftom Point Plea·
unt. AnnA Sctlmit:t. 304-1766422 "' 575-7978.

Pnmuoy no down payment
ooed od. '3 bedroom, equipped
kitchen, b1th, b•tment, AC ,
carpor1. Call 61o\·992-2802.

380 Grant St .. Middleport. I
roomt, beth. gtrtge. work shop,
good locttlon. Call 614· 992·
2602.
2 br, kitchen . bathroom: wi1h
laundry room, living room I
dining room, 111 eh•c. Approx. 7
mile• from Pl. Pl. on At. 82. 2
tracttapproa. 1 ec,.mor.orl••
overlooking Kan.wlla River.
140,000 . Coli 304· 675· 6440
between 8 ~ 30 and 4 :30.
log home , 3 ·4 br, 111 elec . fully
c•rpeted. tinl1hed biMm... t ,
Ambrolie. 7mll•fromPt. PI. on
At. 62. Chy wlter, ~d
dfivewty. MPUt ttnk. lh•t.d
on ~ .l!=ft, owriDolingK~
Rhlir. oeo.ooo. Cell 31M-876·
8440 b1tween 1:30 and 4:30.

Apartment
. for Rent

Regency Inc . 2 bdr., kitchen,

1976 Frttdom Detu11e, 1 2~~:15, . nice, good location, reaton~ble .
6 rooms and beth. 8a30 frottt Call 304-e?S-5104 ., 304·
porch. one outbuilding and 671 -7437.
cistern, $9,000.00 with half
1ae land . Ptlestlne Road, Ash·
ton. bus route. 304.·&amp;71· 2231 .

D~t.x

for rent 846 Second
Ave., Galllpoalt . 3 bdr. livln·
groo"', dfnhgroom.
kltch.,, bldlyard. retrig. • ,.nge.
•288 plus utAttl11 a •curity
••• lit. Caii514-445-0f90 . .

"'*

Communhy ,,.uer, com·
Pttely fumlthed with .,... ,bed.
1ir cond . underpenn.lng,
porches. Everything goea. 30.a.
773·5945 .
u~70

Nicelf fumilhed mobile home

CA It tl•t. IAC:II. Jocatlon.
1974 Hollypark, 1001.100 lot , ldults only. Clll614·446·0338.
chain link ftnce, Plymale Aoad,
G•Jiipolil Ferry, 304-876-2.029 .. 6131tli 3rd ~ AYII. 1 bdr. private
beth, *140 per me~ . Oepoth
required . Clfl 114·441·4222
betwe• 9 5 .

a

Fumkhtd · apt . $235. Ulillti•
Plld . 1 BR, 920 4th , G•llipolis.
448-41l18 lfter 7pm.

Business
Buildings

Fumittled ept. 1 bdr. 1235
utNitiel ptMI . 701 4th GeHipolis.
Call US-4.416 tfter 6 pm.

Commercial or ttorage bu'kling
for rent 140. 150 Third Aw.,
Gallipolis. Otlk». Call 304-1754473 Ilk for Gary,

fPMnilhld efficiincy *150 utiH·
""' pold, lh... both. 701 4th,

Golllpollo. Coll445·4418 oflor 6

pm.

Fumilhed 3 rooms and bath,
dten, tduhs only, no Pl'll· Cell
514-441-1519.

41

Houses for Rent

Nletfy tumlthtd 2 bdr. 1pt.
Acfuttt only. Inquire at oorn.,
Fir11 &amp; Oltvt St . II Bhepperds
lel•lSifVic:e.

2 bdr. house wfth v--ee c•·
pewd, curtalnt. dlthwtttier •
refrig . Nttr n.w citY poOl. 106
KiniOn Or. Aent UOO mo. dep. 1 bdr. ept. ovetlooklngcityPtrlc.
&amp;le11e requW..t .,Call 814· 441- K·D t110 per month. Call P.J 's
114-441-1111 or evening•
4347 .
•
514-445·2325 .
Nice hOuM for tal• or rent in
CnJwn City on Rt. 7 . C•ll Smell tpt. ·2 room. tumilhM.
utiNt._ peid , would lllce rttifed
514-256-1001.
pereon.
requl,... Cell
Houtt tor Nnt lOt Cblfr;' lt .• 514·&lt;M5·4083.
Vin10n. OH . Coil S16-4461 ltedroom • · for rent . 8Mic
1107.
tWit llertt tl11. 1 month th ..
7 rooms
b . ..mtrit.
yard. lnducloo o1t utiN1ioo. O.,.Ooh
.,_ ful
_ Ref
• .._.,

,....,.c.

..,....,.. Gf saoo. Contect Vii·

roqulrad . Cell 514·441·0143.
1 bedroom hou• fumllhlld.
0140 pluodopooit, nodi-or
po11. Coli 114-445-0321 .

• • MlnOf Apt, Middleport.
. lf4·M2 -nl7. E-1 Houolnv

-....... -..""""'....--,,._..

·-

2· 3 btdroom ho"•ln Ponroy.
Untumilhecf. Iugar Run Mel,

~unity.

AP,artmtnts for rent in PorNroy.
One Mel two bedroom&amp;. Call
514·192·1215.
1 bti*eollll ....nmett. NMiy

- ; I '. HUO.,oVId. 402'h
........ Doo 114-MI-2181 cw 24 ll. 1'1. - Coli

114· 992-2120.

51 Household Goods

AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St., Gallipolis. New &amp; used
wood-coal stoves. 6 pc wood LA
suite $399, bunk beds $199.
111tron recliners 199. new &amp;
u11d bedroom tultes, ranges,
wringer wethers. &amp; 1hoas. New
livinvroom suitea $1.99-$599,
lamps, 1110 buying coal a wood
11ove!: Clll 614· .t46· 31 69 .

2 bdr ., aU utllitiee paid' excep1

12•65 Vindele, 12•6eapendo, 2
decks with awning , woo~­
bum•. dishwtsher, underpin·
ning. Call 614· 251·1608.

6 room house. 1.2 tCI'ft . DoutMe
car garage. located on Rote Hill.
Bargain ptlctd UO.OOO. Ctll
614-678-2613 .

In Rltint, nice 2 bedroom
' duple11 . Partly turnistltd. 8200.
per month plus deposit. Call
614 -949· 2801 Of 614 · 949 ·
2860.
.

Merchandise

SWAIN

3 bdr. hou• full b.ement. Call
305-675-3030 ., 304· 676 3431 .

'

34

Garage to ttore cit for winter,
pref8f' vicinity of hospital. 304675-3788.

W. Vt. lO.a-675· 74.a&amp;.

CA*H for your u•d home.
Buying pre '70 models. Contact
Mr. Eilel•t 800·828-0712.

12 '~~: 65

47 Wanted to Rent

814·MZ-IIII .

CoUnty Applience. Inc. Good·
ulld appliances 1nd TV tets.
Open 8AM to &amp;PM. Mon thru
Sat. 614-«1-1&amp;99, 627 3rd.
Ave . Gellipoli1. OH.

Valley Furniture, new &amp; used .
large see1ion of quality furniture . 1218 Eutern Ave ..
Gtllipolis.
lAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sof11 and chairt priced 1 from
'83915 to *996. Tlbl• 160 and
up to 1125. Hidt·a-bads t390
'to 1516. Recliners $226 to
8376. Limps 828 to $126 .
Dinettes S109 and up to $496.
Wood table w -6 chair&amp; 1285 to
t795. Desk t100 up to t376 .
Hutc:h• '1400 end up. Bunk
bedt CO"'I)Iete W•mattree•s
t295 and up to t395. Baby beds
$110 &amp; $175. Mattrenes or bo~
sprint• fvl or twin *03, firm
*13. tnd tal. Queansetse226,
King U&amp;O . 4 drawer chett t86 .
Oreners 189. Gun c.bintt1 8 ,
10, &amp; 12 eun . G•• or electric
range 1376. Baby mllttres••
136 S. 146. Bed frames 120,
UO &amp; King frame 860. Good
nlection of bedr.oom suites,
metal Clbinets, hNdboardl
and up to 186.

Front Dilc Brake Service for

most cars. •11. 99 In ltlll new
Personal computer. Commo·
dore 128, 1571 disc drive, 7
programr. 8600. C'al! AI 814·
992 -2914
.
. •

••· replace &amp;ids. Phohe
575-zen eltor 5 ~"' -

3 HP, two stage, ttrtiicestetion

Halt price! Fluhing 1rrow iignt
t289! Ughttd. non-arrow *2791
Unlighted 82491 Free a.ttersl
See locally. Ctll today! F•clory:
1-800·423-0163, anytime.

•

$yfvl/1- Fllllt- VIper- Upmost -PAYOUT
tvlr notice depll'lment: When- you hilt the
., word 11ve, It II utullly the beginning of an ad deelgned to
make you PAY OUT monay_

·Did

WV. At. 36.
Surplus . Army, Denim, Rental.
C1rllart Clothing, Kids Cemoutlege (Fret Helmet wilh Com·
phne Suit PurehMe with copy
this AD at Aegu•r Prk:e). Fri.
Sot. Sun . 12 :00-8:00 p.m .
Other Days after 4 p.m. East o1
Revenswood . H.O.· " Sam "
Somerville. {T-Sgtc U.S.A .O.
Ret.)

N(IW buying lhell

63

a

Three 8 f1 b11eboard hNtera.
$40.00 ooch . 304-675-642B
after 6 :00.

55 Building Supplies

P1111ic cistern ttate tpprov..t,
ptM;tic eeptlc tanks, pintle
culwrtt. ,...... cuiYtrts. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jock·
.... Otl. 114-218-5130 .
Firewood tor ule • 30.00 Pll
lood . Col ROll" Moodo, 514·
311-9341 .

Pole Buildings by Quality
Buildart. Workshops. carpona.
animal 1helterr. gtragn. Free
ntlmates . Phone 614· 384·
5762.

Ceblnet Zenith llyll stereo
t27&amp;. 0. hOt 'Mittr tank 30 gil.
Troilot - 20 In dirt bib. 24
In ·Ill ' 21 ln. 10 apd bike. C1H •
114· 317-7215 0&lt; oflor 3 5143S7·0122.

1111 Ford Etcort station

-rd.

-- ___

- .•·-~
Nbullt
12!- · 23200.Oftlllrio.
-

,__

Me wHAT:t
•

WRoN• WI'Mi ME
IN. 1100· OR I.E$$. .

a

framadformurdor. l60min .l
Pert 1

-0

Town

.

tate -~~'

e

' I

Rog . P - H.....nl lult, 4 ' "
old ...... ,... , by
Purol., For... Rlploy, W. Vo. W1
1400 to 1500 IN. t'IN.OO,
304-&amp;71-&lt;M78.

orvan t3oo. Coli

19M Dv&lt;tgo Sl&gt;ollr¥ 01..,;. I
"'"""' T•""'· IOOd ...... 304152· 1141 .

1910

a...,

IIIII.,

good ..,. cer,

...._t

82

1. . Fotd R•... ooe. """'·

Colll14-261-1411 .

1979 Cllovy plduo,, PS, -

--.mor. Cllll

114. 441-1131 .. 114-441-

wMe1

un.

,.77,.,dao_,..,_

Jolln'tAIIIo '"""· I - I I I I I..
Glllp1Ut.. ott.

I

I

-~~ ... J04.MZ·:M37.

111·4210 _

fl-.

•-tee

,.
- · .oo.GD.
1111 '""'

olll3.

Willi·-

For Mle"' tr.U 71 Cenuz•
Stlngroy. • Y - • VJrogo.
Coii614-:MI· 563'1.
1l7l T - C-o

~

UOI'f-

Jemn Boy• Weter lervtoe. Also

oond. 1179CIIovyl•n-l'l
toft. LoU fJf e . . .. Cell 114·
441-1110.

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

1111 110 llonrr. VI,
Colll14·112-2710 .

irw. - ·

D'"'rd'l Water Delivery. Cisterns, pool a Will. An.,.me but
.... .,. 814-441-7404.

14 VW lloiiM IITI, I .-!.. irw.
AM·'M Oi run., ~y _...,
"HIIe nM . c.Me1.a-Me·••·

74

........,

Motorc,-

W11ttr1on'• Weter Hauling ,
renoneble retes. imm.diate
2,000 gollon dollwlry, clotorno.
peolo, woll, ote. coli 304·&amp;71·
1119.

-1------.:...--- 1-c.-•.,-.-~~....
--,.-.-o-.

Mlb'o
1o1oo. l!tio
opoclolo. 1112Ch- - - ·
cloon U,315. 1879 , _ . . .

TC -3 4 ..... - · .• ,....

1811 .......

lhrw- - ·

2100 - · '"'• ••

11n,ontfocLoM.,o2dr.,V-5,
Nnogood Mil . Coi1114-&lt;MI-

1
""""-- t7,300 trm.
ZH-1115 .

2100.

1Ha

1177 C"'lff• Cl•oic, -~~

-do

"c'T
· ••·
- 1 14 •

MORTY MEEK.LE AND .WI~
. :.:.NT.:.:H:.:;R:.:;O.:.:P::_____,_ _, . - - - - - - - - - - ,
IS.J.NATTRACrl\.~
r E~~~URI:
FFC:c:W. THE

''IOU ARE IN Fa:l6ESSION

OF .SEVEN LIBRARY eCoKs
0/ERDLIE SINCE JUNE 12..

SLJI&gt;-JSHINE LOA.N CCW.~NY. 1 '

'

10:00. Cllllll1111.(80 mtn.l- .
l])l'ruChcmpll • " - ·

',

.llllut lntlrief.,.... ••,..._

Fot .... fMWFen4erltm.acii-

"" ·· Itt - · .irolooil.
- Coli ·1 · - 14· - · .. -Coi8 ·441-11M.

514-HI-1114- I p.m.

o.n-. ·

- . . ~ L o - L... "~
,. -·-····
Zilditn.. .cymbles and ttend,- rro11. Coli~
114-&lt;MI-0771.
owntr wHI to flMnoe, 304·17J..
oond. " ' - ond out ,.
3860.

I pc !logon druin oot wil!l

--:os.

. . _.~ -

·

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

11
I07Nod..
l200. c:att

' I

BARNEY
IT LOOKS LIKE .
WE GOT MOTHS
IN OUR CLOSET.

.

11 :00 • Cil ()). Cll ~. !DIIll :
News
. .
'

., .

.•.

mil*;
•
' ·'
l])~llaalng:

WHAT
'iOU SAV

198&amp; BI'Mdara Cup· Re-

... ,'

•

·a._

•

.'

Wetcon'\U V ~1 . (10
Stereo.

Guido

..

One lettA!r stands for another. In this sample A is used
the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
.apoelrophes, the length and fortnation ol the Y!Ords are all
.• . hinLI. Each day the code letters are different.
for

Whl11,

YKNF

T K

.'

XF

XR

ETANFF

B K K Y

!It;:.!,
P.l.
• !DI Hot 8llolll Wllill in·

veottg.ijng a bizarre ,..1h,
Amanda and J - . uncover

I

a

••

~-

,

r\'11101

!

KQ

12:30

I

Jallorllawlllda

Cll T.... of me Unex-

ill (S

.
lr. _

114-311-1411'.

.,

R V N

5

e~ ())Mit.
IIIII Pecple
M . ._ .Tile Horae

~ Lio~~ ,
·iO.Idl111i"
QU1.81S .. . 9an
T
To 8t ~ . .
irK/ .Am Kelty fnlltl the Buf·
12:4t
!DJ MOVIE: 'Thlnl Girl
flllp Bltlo. (80 mln.l In Storco.
. fN111 till Left'

.'

I

1. . .

t :00
.

!])·Top "-111 lllllng from
Manw.tle,IN flO mln.l (II) .
(JJ AIC Newt Nluh.. ,.

GrMn fed fretnr belf. C..l

FXDN

K U U K .F X ·

EASY ENOUGH TO BEGIN-AJOB, IT'S-HARDER TO SEE
IT TifROtlGH.- MARGARET THATCHER

(IJ

i=v L.tw=

FEQQ~...!_3 NTR

RxKT. NYBOS
VKHN
. Yee!Dtlq'e Cryptoqaote: IT'S EASY ENOUGH TO
BE A ~ARTER, BliT ARE YOU A STICKER TOO? IT'S

a

.

W A E C

em·

(70min .l
· 12:00 (J) lumc Alliin .
I]) NFL Filma (II).

PEANUTS

0

0 H N

R K

cocaine ring witl1

1trong tin 10 a foreign

HXRV

COWLNY

(J) . . . of GoaUitlo

'

.

(I) ABC '"=.:Y!'lll•

RCA llftc:tavision-video diJC
....,... 34 mo.~ ... t175. C.ll
5"·317-7641.

'

CRYI'TOQUOTE

X T YX B T 0 R X KT

..

I

'
•'

10.118

min.l ill

I•mr.,..

•I

TRISTATE
U,HOLITIRY8HOP
1113 .... ...... &lt;loi"-No.
114•••71
.....
·- ·· '~3 or 114·441·

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

I]) SportaCtmer ·_
I)) WI(RP In Clnal111•t1

..•

Up~latery

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOI'ES- Here's how lo work II:

Luther Vandroaa and FaN .

.. 'i

1:n1.

love

11:301icD [jJI T.......;
.
Gues1 hos1 Garry Shendllng

' I

'·

I Ridge
2 Geralnt's

Heahh C... In Amar·

lcti A panel diacuaalon
reviewa 1ht unique heal1h
problomo ciiUIId by the
AIDS epidomic. (80 min.)
(11 The Honey_,,.
1 1:05 (J) MOVIE: 'Tile R-·

• •·'

~~ ·

(I) Country fJpmo
liD Manegtng Our Mlra-

clac:

..

411 Daft
47 Dorothy's ·

view
•rnM~A'B'M

THAT?

1.:-+-++-

;· ·
Island
~-:': -45 Billow

(JJ HMI-Ite Mel M:Cer·

PAW-·

•

31 Dre!l8 size
38 VIrtuous
:f "·· 42 Wonlllip
• _.. 44 Corll

~:

' .

liD CWery

•

..

for two
28 Hunt tor
31 SweM!
.32 Color
33 Outburst
,, 35 Companion

,
:'

--

- .CiliNNN-~

'

114·ZI·~- ~11~3~3~.~~~~~~~~~

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

28 Dance

10:05 (JJ Plirlrclt of Arnertc.:
Puerto Rico (60 min.l
10:30 (JJ Celalltli)J «;heft
· '

'l·

-- ~~plro;;ne:30::;:4~-8~7=5~-3=19:0:.==="""" rloto.

IHtlnn.Citlrt•-

..

(!) Qdd Couple

2

28 Prototype

ete Coverage from
CO. (60 mln.l
.
(I) • (f) Jeolt 8tiCI MI. .

liD (11 ,._.

XIIIO ox.

,.79 . . . . . . . . . .
_ , _ _ ........_

and

~ 12':8isn po"•'"· (80 mjn.( ·

•

-,-r..
- . -.-..
-o.
1
Doilvorad 1 ton ond up. Jim
UOI«. 304-871-1247 or 875·

87

'

not11r111 ruourceo '

man

8 Heany drink
9 Ordlnan~e
10 Hillbilly's

35 - liquor
38 Civil
15 Burn
18 "Picnic"
plant
wrong
17 Pile
playwright 25 Enthuse 37 Therefore
181naltle info 20 •271n the eyes38 Born (Fr.)
21 "Not on
Richard's
of the law 39 Demented
ydtJr -!"
Almanack" 30 Do
40 Sioux
(never)
21 Elevawr
o~n~se~n~se~!
241lreed
(Brit)
34nee&lt;llew:o~r~k~4~1~N
Minimal 43
or sheep

c...... .,......

!CCI M10 mln.l·

Cool Md 1-tono dofivory,

1400. '" ot 11oe. Colll14·- 17" I.

...,, Heht . . _ - ..,, IIPt

Gil MOVIE: 'Men-

Afrtc:o~M: TOala ol h·
plulllltiuot ICCI Thlo episode oxplorn the hlotory af .
exploha1ion of Afnce'o hu- .

- l

7 Broach

in Mexico
relative
18 Subscribe 18 Salty meat
again
17 Attend
22 Concept
14 Espouse 18 Prong
23 Seedless

(CCI

General Hauling

pooloflllad . Coll&amp;14-211-1141
or 514-445·1175 or 114-4487811 ,

a

. liD

448-4137, J""" L D1vl10n,

73

e

hunt For

Jr. ownar.

86

ICCI I60 min.l

province
12 An
American

Doubt'

,-,

- - - - - 1 1.. 2101.

11 Spanish

(I) MOVIE: 'Shadow of

1177 a-,. 11.- ro11oo. Y· l

...... ti,IOO.OD

aor

ship wi1h SuMn Tarry. (10
mln.l In 61er110. .• ·
()') 700 Club ..

I]) Roller Oetb¥ (60 min.l
(I) •
()) Moonlighting

Oood· 1 E~~~:c:weting, b-m111t1.
tooters, drlvtwiYt. Mptlc tlnkll,
ltrldiCIPIItG. Clll lnVfllllt &amp;14·

Openill1lead: • Q

ACI088
8 Golf term
I Tuesday
4 ·-with
In ftlrna
Me, Henry"
the pope 5 Rampart
10 Craze
8 Profess

YIIQM ·

and Abrtltllt ' - problema
in~ rela1ton·

.

Pa.oa

Pus

. by THOMAS JOSEPH

from his

•'

!NT

3NT

· li~tJ·~-

~

•gino: opertlion in Loa

Plumbing
&amp; He1ting

lloyo . . .

-ir..

marriage. Luca·a

gembling . organization be·,

Excav1tlng

PUB
PUB

Laudertia!e

•ratio tskea·Julie to ·a pooh resort in an effort to uve his

I
ii

.... 17t·4113.

1852 Chovy &amp;. 1.. 4o4, DDnd. lab of eatr•. 111..,. 3D417t-4Z30 01
171-

EEK &amp; MEEK -

~

,,'

, CARTER'S PWMBING
AND HEATING
Cot'. Fourth and lltne
·
Glltlpolo, Ohio ·
- . , S14·445-3111 or 114441·4477

your

e

·: I

.

- ....................
...- . .... -· ...
ltletllry. , . .

Citotltn oo out,

I

Altiby Conltruct"m , c•rp•·
twy. Nmqdt4ing, room Hdition .
cement block worlt, rooting,
intwior Md e••rlor painting,
tiding , Roofing. Fr• ..ttm.tn.
304·&amp;71·M45 ot 875-5152.

aet

•

L---------...J

E••-:

I

Rowv or c•le tvol drlling.
Melt w.llsoornpleted 11m•dwr.
PUMp .... and •Wee. 304·
111-3902

...

ille

19B2s.rtooN4WD.._,ve
cand. 03,710. Cal 514·-·
4141 .

~~-

Lo-y Gonlo
S14-J81 -1301.

one~c... ~4-m-1421 .

.ltlwl'o AutoS-. Gollpallo, Oh.
-

Autoe for

''

ltMkJ Tree tnd. lewn Stnliot,
Htdau. shrubs, bushu
trimmed , l•ndtelpino end
lt\Hnp remowll. Lelf Nmowt .
384-1· a -2010 .. 571-2142.

...... 01 ,119- IIIIo W.

75 CMwy Llluno S-3. PI, PI,
V·8, now .,.,, good oond . Coli
814-:M&amp;-111«1.
·

Piano for Nle. "W.,... I" ....
apontible party to UIUft'le 1m1n
monthly ptymfts, on rnod.m
styte c.oneole pillno. MIY 1M .._.
IOcatty, PI~ ell!. M~111•
1-100-123-2880.

wu ...

72 TN"'"I ..

~\!!h

Musical
Instrument•

'71 ~ Jltl 7. '79
Mavllriell, ltoth
noN•.

...... .. doltolt.V-•
r
tlono. 31M-111-ZI•--I·----""--,.--....;...
PM.
1179 Cll......... 4 .,.,. - -

71

l

~INGLES'S SERVICE, oxpo·
rlenOid oarptn.. r, .. ectrician,
maaon, painter, roofing linducJ.
lng hot tor ot&gt;PIIc:otlan) 304171·2011., 575·7147.

1172 GrMd TorottO GrMUI
noodo -tor, 394-1122810 .

EAST

would
p-ab theclubl
aee and
play
back a
beart. Becado not
~pill, you1he s1ory of 1he S111ua of
would uve to try for a spade trick to
Liberty's original design and
make llle pme. Welt would then take
cons1ruction and chronk:tes
bla ace tllld defeat you oace apln with you win the club kine and then awltcb
1he process of repairing end
·bla 1te1rt trtcb
to spades. If West hu the club ace and
restoring the 1111ue. (llq
·
Fort
bridge
profeulontakes
your kine with It, your ~-10 of
min.l
II
JPNIIIIImlllollllbowed
me
thla deal ·bearta II safe from attack. And If Eut
(11 MOVIE:-....
TM Flnlll Choplc/ Pan 2 . . IIC • cltll&amp; It u a IOOd "lnatrac- riles lmmedllltely with bla club ace, It
8:05 (JJ MOVIE: " l;.,ldo R•' _ tlw" ~- If y• like tbe 1teart king beats the air u you play small from
8:30 -.CIJ
(J) G.-tng ,.._ . ud 11M 1 111'/r club from dummy, your band, ensurlnfiYOU of three club
nnlblnc caa 11op you. If Eut ducks, tricks llld your coatract.
' ICCI
9:00 • ciJ Gil Crime Story To-

; I

•'

to

heart trlcu

eoalrlet wben yoa eventually pia~
clubl.
·Witlt If you - tbe heart king and
plaf*l dummy's club queen? East

e CD MOYIE: 'F.I.S.T.'
Cll
. MeoNeii·Lehrer
Newahour
(]I
()I) Wlnrd (60 min.l
[fil t,'laldng o1 Uberty This
onll' hour documen1sry 1tlls

'I

Fony TIH T - g. otUmp .
_ . . , _ Coll304-871-1331 .

Spo~.

1983
· ··AM
·FM ,..0. - -tlroo.
- ·
rinlt, U, 'Jtl, Johft'l AIM
DragorMynd Cittery Kenntt. • ..... 1 . - . IW., Odie •
CFA Himal1yan • . Pettian anti Cit.
Sl.meew kftttns. AKC Chow
puj)ploo. &lt;;oil 1.14-448 -3844 1979 Mo""'ry M~ulo 4 - ·
oh., 7PM.
.
AC. Pl. Pl. rodlo, ··running oOnd .• prlco, U .MI.
AKC Rog. GMrnon Sh011hord Colll14-317-n17.
pups. Champion bloodlln•, Si,. t..::_:_...:.,__..::______
&amp; dame. Ready for tmmtdllte 1112 DMaeOf1D;-' At . ..,.
lilt. C.ll614·441·.a211 .
rirM, bw m
• · d •• l .

58

of 2. In Stereo.

I]) Buperbouta Seed Mu·

Hou• c.N1 on RCA, Ouaur,
QE . .,_dtling in Z•fth. Call
-304-1'11-2311 or 114-441- 24114.

•Kn
tK6U

WEST

7:35 (J)' ThiiHtkit!n
· ,.~ymrm'MI-one~era
8:00 • (I] [jJI Metlack Matlock
must face • longtime court·
room adversary when he dofend• dying . crir.ne bosa

Cil Hell

RON'S Televi1lon Service.

Magnu,.., pt, ps, ec,
ot.-4of.,UO...,...o
ob _ _ ._ _ _ _..,..._
IM,
~e

tlon . M4'111-..-J:

Reg. ChllfOiais luU, II'PfOIIIi·
motoly 1700 ..... 4
ald.
304-171-2170 .. 304-171·
1824 - 4 p.m.

Pets for Sale

. . . __ loot -

71

eo......,:v.,-

drlwl. Colll14-317-1221.

IOr

Dogwood,lluo Spnrco f12 .50.
TJMI, ltumPI • IMYH N·
moved, mulch, fill dirt, firewood.
-1. Don't londoc-. 614441-1148.

._...., ..........._ inttrM&gt;r. M.

UvllliDck:' 2Q h.cl en•,....

delivery. Ma10n und. Gallipolis
Block Co.. 123'A Pine 81 .,
Galllpollt, Ohio C1ll 814·441·
2783.

54 Misc. Merchandise

Colll14-211-1251 .

-.w ., 2121 Jeff.r.n Aw.

.... ~ - · ""' . , _ .fill'

57

1,000tirel. tllet12, 13, 1.a . 16,

I
I

..._..,Ofin!l.

-e

shown. Payment ,-. -"" . ,. hloh ""'-•· ..., ••. , IM'Ifved OflliiiiUI. Trail riM .,.U, u-. 304-m·•"'· · •
. Pricod ta ool. noa. JM-171- 1111
conolf1799.

Picken• UNd Furn jture , w•sher- . Puppies. hOlt llo"'llo holt Bluo
drver. l'llfrigerator, gaundtlect· Tid!. *20.00 s~ . 304-1715·
ric: range, King Wood end coal 42Be.
ttove .

11. 11.1. I mil• out At. 218.

18nCI!rv••N.,..•.•-·
fDOcl ...... '*Y ....
wo.... MIO. C.ll 104-en.
7712 lhlr 11 l .m . Of CIA

Regitt•td ._,lrttf MrM, fl'd·
ing. I Y'Nf'l lkt, vaod an. 'Will

Quilt tops, 825.00 e.Ch, 304·
675 -6396.

56

-

Nftl

Livestock
'

23 indo~ Zenith color TV con8Die;
blondepoodtepup1. Cham·
need• work, 1100.00. 0 .8 .0 . . ACK
pk»n lined . Wormed II tailed.
304· 675-6504.
1126each. Ca11S11l·441·7372.
Whirpool 115 cu ft freuer. call
Pit Bull pupploo for ulo. 125.
oft"' 6,oo PM. 304-576 -2461 .
ooch ,Coli 614-742-2450.
Excellent Christmu Gift ,
" Sharp" , Carouul, mlcorwave, Pupploo, Gom10n Short hoi&lt;Od
1 cu ft withcookboolc. t150.00. pointerL Exe. ,bird dogt. 3()4.
·5n-2ue.
304-675-1145 .

UMd lire Shop. Over

1332.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
U.oonditiontl lf"lme gu.ran·
teii. LOCeiJ".t.-.Rc• futniehtd.
Ftw ... lmata1. Call collect
1-114-237-0411. doy ., night.
Ao1er1 ••••m!tnt

Ot tar

RovloterOII ponad
Z'lr
yooro old., Coli 514-143-5210 .

HALF
signs 12891 lighted, non-errow

1 3 good wooden windows
1 -plcture w.,dow, plus storm
windows &amp; screen for etch.
. 304-575•1595.

coin

com. c.llflrlat*lt.,-.. lllver
City f•m Supply, lt.4-4412911 .

arrow'

Cone,ete bk&gt;cks all&amp;iles yerd Of

Call.lh~n's

'tfLL

I.

lf.IWI

HoW dO you play three no-trump? It • A 10 7
.i88H
yoa'n! my avence reader, your objec- .QJOB&amp;
.71
tive 1i to make nine tricks safely and ua
+10 I
lllll'tlr. So tate a look at tbe Nortlt- •a s
.A 10 96
Situlil e.rda In todoy'a deal and cover
SOUTH
tbe ll:lat-Welt b.utdlso you won't be
+Q3
dlib -.'led a yOil pWIIhe play.
• A 10 5
S•JIII )'011 win tbe kine of bearta
tAQJ8
In dllainy llld Jlay _a spade. That
.K 742
woalf be wn11111 Eut held t.be spade
Vulnerable: Neither
ac:e a.ll too1t It rlpt away to lead back
Dealer:
South
a ltlatt. In tbat ecenarlo, Welt would
hold tile club aee llld would be able to w..t
Sol..
Narllo Eut

eGIIGIIJ~
(lllenaon

ALLEY OOP

•1tl4 Fotd LTD IJI 102 V.&amp;,
L.aodOII with • - · Auto.-~.!
with ov01clriwo . 1-114---

NORTH
+KJ2

.QJ3

(CCI

to

*2791 Unlighted $2491 Free
lettenl SH k)c:ally. Csll todeyl
Factory :· 1(8001423 -0163,
anytime.

Doing·it
the right way

Ilia Me, F""'er

min.l

a.m . to

GOOD

Setrt upright free~er , 30 ln.
elec. range, 2 air COr'lditloners
27,000 BTU &amp;14.0008TU . Call
81 4 -448-4866 .

'l

' I

. I· •Atiihlng
PRICE

James Jacoby

me mWho' a the ao..1

Walker• Wrecker,

~

BRIDGE

Cll WhHI or Fortune

Squire fireplltt in11n. top of the
line. eiectrh; blower~ uted one
winter only, •650.00. 304·6762927.

nut .
4412,

UNSCRAMBLE FOR
ANSWER

YlmiDAY'S SCIAM-1115 ANSWDS

hammed vs. Johnson. 180

Home
Improvements

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

())Judge

(J)

26 inch Quasar T.V. tor Ill&amp;.
Good condition . t100. Cell
814·992-6B10.

Building Materials
Block, brick. sewer pip" , win·
dows. lintels. etc . Claude Win·
len. Rio Grsndw, 0 . Call 614 ·
246 -5121 .

Rocker reclinks like nell¥, u•d
.twin &amp; full tile bedding. Corbin
• Snyder Fumtture. 9156 2nd.
Ave, Gallipolis. 814-441· 1171 .

0

I ft. wide tn1ck c.mper. Water
tank, fuman. sink. 11ove with
oven. Porto-potty, IIHP• e.
01'60. 514·986-3839 .

81

I

fort

30_..

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

type air compmsor. A&amp;kint
0750 . OBO . Coli 614-992 7364 nening1.

Used Furniture : Wuh.r &amp;
dfyer, electric range! gas range ,
wood tabte &amp; 2 benches, beds,
drelltr. &amp;. redlner. 3 miles out
Bulavitle Ad . Open 9AM to .
&amp;PM. Mon. thru Set.
614· 446-0322 .

New &amp; u•d rthig.. ranges,
wethers &amp; drv••· 6 pc:. wood
l.room suite 1400. Moflohan
Fum ., Rt. 7 North. Gallipolil.
Oh . 614-446-7444 .

..

clilc Pld• tumid •dtNe roto~s.
rtp~cli: burlnrp, ln . .ct cat•·

no

USED APPLIANCES
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�-·-

Tuesday. October 28, 1181

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-1 0-The Deily Sentinel

hio .Briefs:---.

-Kroger ·officials ·app()int new president .
CINCINNATI (UP! I ..:.. In til? . man Lyle Everingham. ·
wake of management ···dlfferenIn a statement, Everingham said
ces," of!lclals of the Kroger co. re and Kagler sharro rommon
have. named Joseph A. Pichler to views wer Kroger's corporate
replace William G. Kagler as direction, including a current respresident of . tlie nation's second . tructuring effort as well as til?
largest supennarket chain.
company'srontinuingemphasls oo ·
Pichler, 47, previously was exec- rost control and operating
utlve vice president of Kroger and efficiencies.
also chief executlveof!!cer of Dillon
"The very essmce d. a rorporaCompanies subsidiary.
lion Is individuals working together
Krogerof!!clals saldMondaythat to reach rommo'nly agrred upon
Kagler, 54, who had been president goals und:&gt;rtll? same philosophical
slnce January 1983, _was leaving umbrella," said Everingham. "BUI
Kroger due to "personal dltferen- Kagler and I share til? same goals
ces over the management of the for Kroger, but we differed over the
company."
approach to reach those goals.
However, til? Cincinnati Post,
"With the elevation of · Joe
clUng unlli:&gt;ntlfled solli'O!s inside Pichler, the overall . b ng-term
the company, said Kagler was st~ategy of Kroger will rotc~anllll·.
forced to resign. The newspaper HIS man~ement talents will msure
said Kagler had told associates he a co ntinuation in til? office of
was "stymied" ~ Kroger Chair· president of the high regree of

Lee retrial judge
mother. "Shirley iFurst I doublecrossed me." Furst, 43 and Lee's ·
girlfriend In early 1983, was til?
person wbo advised the sheriff
repartment of Lee's alleged partie!patlon In the murder.
On the morning of'&gt;\pril 7. Bane
testified that Lee turned to him
while eating breakfast in til? county
jail, saying, "You lmow I did It,
·
don 't you?. "
Unli:&gt;r cross.examination, Bane
admlttro that Lee may have
considered the court official as his
confldant and, according to Casey.
anythlng said by Lee to him should
not be used in court .
Miranda rights, by law, offer an
Individua l til? right to counsel
and/or a confidant. !3ane said Lee
may have viewed him as a
confidant tecause the official offerro moral reassuranre dtringthe
·questioning.
Bain also admlttro that, in his
opinion, Miranda rights sh:&gt;uld re
administered each day an itdivid·
ual Is questioned . Lee was not
informed the rmrnlng of April 7.
The issue of Lee· s question to
Bane - " You know I did it, don 't

!Continued !rom Pagel l

what tre argument was about and
"we saw it wasn't going to be very
pleasant. so we left."
Mrs. Dalley also testified to
events on March W, 1983, the day
Barbara Twyman disappeared.
Mrs. Dailey's husband John. a
trucker, left for Chicago and Mrs.
Lee called her to ask her if sre
wanted to go shopping. She said yes
and with her son. Benjy. Mrs .
Dailey went to Mrs. Lee's house in
Point Pleasant.
When they arrived, sometime
he tween 1:30 and 2 p.m.. Mrs.
Dalley said Lee was in the
basement. playing with an Atarl
game, and called up t re stairs to
Benjy. Lee dld cometot re top cf til?
stairs and declined an Invitation to
fP to Huntington,'W.Va .. withtrem
to sh:&gt;p.
Mrs. Dailey and Mrs. Lee.
accompanied ~ their motrer and
Benjy, went to tiF Hill's store in
Huntington and returned to f'Jint
Pleasant around 5 p.m .. sre said.

li:&gt;dlcatlon and exceUenre Blll 's ituatiOns at Kroget'."
. .
Kaglet perSonified._' '
Pichler was eleeted executive
Kagler had teen a &lt;bmlnant vice president of Kroger il August
force in Kroger'shard-llnestance in .1985. He joined Dillon in 1980 after
dealing with labor unions that serving for six years as dean d. til?
represmt employees. When Wiions school of business at the University
refused oompany requests for wage of Kansas. From 1968 to 1970. he
cutbacks, Kroger closed the stores. servro as special assistant to til?
ln the last thr!f' years, nearly 200 assistant secretary fo r man power
Kroger stores in ilur states closed. In the U.S. Department of Labor.
"Kagler was the armlta) t il the • Pichler Is a graduate of Notre
company'seffortstocompetermre Dame University and has a mas·
effectively in the face of incrmsing ter'sdegree In buslnessadmln istranon·unio? competitkln," said Eliza- !Iori and ·his ~ctorate trom the
beth Shtels, grocery ·analyst at University·· of .Chlcag~. He was
Hilliard Lyons broker~ge : "His elected to ire board :of. dir~tors of
emphasis was rnlabor costs and he Kreger wren Dillon ):leea'me part of
clearly concentrated on the union the company 'in January 1983.

.
'
CINCINNATI iUPII ' - Many parents in the Oakley res ili:'il\lal
section are not letlnlg tneii' cfitulren walt alone.for the school bus.
· In the past six weeks, two girlS have been sexually anacked in
Oakley as thev walled for the school bus In til? morning. Five weeks
ago, a 12-year· old girl was attacked and last week, an 11-year cid girl
was assaulted.
Police have dist rll;mted a drawing of what they relieve t IF man
looks like, but they have no suspects.
"We're stepping up patrols (in the area 1." said Pollee Lt, Patrick
Olvey.
•

LORDSTOWN, Ohio iUPI) -A carrying new automobiles that
Pennsylvania company hired to were to re dlstriruted to arm car
clear the wreckage of Sunday's craters by Total Distrti:JJtlon Ser44-car C·S·X Corp. train derailment vice lnc.. a company owned by
faced a difficult task because oftre CSX. Nine otrer cars were loaded
location of the mishap.
with automobiles headed for distri·
A csx spokesman Monday said butlon In Je~sup, Md.
Hulcher Emergency Service Co.,
Each rail car -.carrfes · about 18
called to return the ra ll cars to the automobiles.
Seven d. til? derailed cars&lt;:_arried
tracks, was hampered In Its efforts
because or the relative inaccesslb· auto parts. four of them headed for
the General Motors "Corp. assembly
lity of the derailment.
"This Is the worst derailment in plant In lordstown and thrre
this area that any of the railroad destined !ortll?Volkswagenassempeople remember." the CSX offl · bly plant in New Stanton , Pa.
cial said Monda y. "The cars are
The refrigerators.
remaining cars
were loaded
· stoves.
disparked on their sides, across the with
hwasrers and washing mochines.
tracks, down in a valley."
Although a dainage figure was
The 44 cars, carrying aulomobiles, auto parts and major appllan- rot available, a CSX ·spokesman
ces, left the tracks just west of tte said property lOss Is estimate:! at :!1i
CSX Goodman yard o!fice in million.
The 44 cars were'part of a 131-car
lords! own. blockin g til? rail com·
train
that originated in Chicago and
pany's main east and west tines.
had
stopped
in WUiard tefore the
CSX officials hoped to have the
mishap. The train was destined lor
tracks .cleared today.
The cause of til? mishap had rot Baltimore.
No one was lnju red as a result of
been determined Monday, rut the
company's investigation oommlt- tiF d:&gt;rallment, and noneoftiF cars
tee was on til? scene, rurveylngthe carried any dgngerous rubstances,
a CSX spokesman said.
situation.
Thirteen of the rail cars were
~:_::::::.:_::.__.::_::_:_::::_=:_~:_

Daily Number .
726

PICK-44-4-18

. CINCINN4TI (UPII.-,-;ThefateoftiF rhinoceros around the l\ll~ld ..
· Is helng dlsc~ssed in Glncinna ti this wrek.
·.
.
Cincinnati Zoo director Ed Maruska Is hosting a confermoe ci
rhinoceros e~perts: Tliey are worried that the mino rna~ becom~
extin ct,'mainly because of hunters. In some parts d. Asia and Africa,
rhino horns ~re highly prized. and very expensive.
Maf1!sk~ says there were 8,000 black rhinos in east-central Africa
a year ago. Today, that number Is down to 4,1110. .
&gt;'

Remov.al att~mpt called 'ironic

enttne

,

• Vol .36, No.124

2 Sections. 20 Pages

Copyrighted 1986

HAMil.TON (UP!) - A juvmile rouri judge calls a citizen's
attempt to try to remove him from office "ironic."
.
Sandy Christensen is try ing to collect the necessary 10,337 petlbn
signatures to start removal proceedings' against Butler COUII!y
J uvenile Court J\l(]ge David Niehaus.
.
_
The attempt eomes after til? judge ordered a 3-year-old A!r-1
removed from her mother's custody and placed in her fat~r's ,
custody. A month lfiter, 'the girl died after being reaten and Iter
father has been charged with Involuntary manslaulltlter.
''It's all ironic," said Niehaus. "Working with kids Is IllY,lite's
. work. I'll just have to wait until it' s aU ()Ver to say anything. ·

By FRANK T. O&gt;ONGOS
WASHINGTON (UPI) -An air
traffic controller handling til?
Aeromexlro jetliner that collided
with a priva te plane Aug. 31 was
busy scolding another pilot fo r
flying Into a restricted w ne at the
time of the fatal crash, documents
show.
But feli:&gt;ral officials say they do
not believe the controller was
distracted from his jab, and they
stress that advisirig til? errant pllot
of the danger of his rules violation
was proper. .
The Federal Aviation Admin is·
!ration documents released Tuesday contain a transcript of final
conversations hetween tlie los
Angeles air controller and til? pilots
of several planes at the time of til?
catastrophe two months ago.
. Sixty-seven people aboard the jet
and til? private plane and another
15 on the ground died as a result or
the in-flight collision over S)lburban
Cerritos, Calif.
The transci-ipt shows that al'Ound
the time of the accident, the
controller was rebuking til? pilot of
a small Grumman aircraft that
strayed into the block of aii:space
known as a tennlnal.contl'OUed
area, or TCA, which Is reserved for

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Cancer
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outlines
proposal

airplanes , such as commercial can jet: "AU right. We'll maintain
carriers with altitude-reporting one niner zero."
equipment.
At this time, the controller had to
"OK. yw 're right In the middle of turn his attmtiOn to tre Grumman
the TCA, sir/' til? rontroller told the . plane - and 58 seconds later he
Grumman pilot. "~ wwld suggest could mtflnd the Mexican jet Cfl his
in the-future yru bok at yrur TCA radar screen.
chart. You lust had an aircraft pass
At 11:56:05, following unsuccessrlght off your left above you at 5,txXJ ful attempts to raise the Mexican •
(feet) ·and we run a lot of jets plane, the rontrcller asked an
through trere right at 3,000."
Arrierlcan Airlines jumoo jetto look
There was no indication from tre for the lost aircraft, saying, "I just
transcript that the Grumman- lost contact with a DC-9. Let me
threatened the safety of the Mexl- know If you see anything &lt;bwn
can jet, but an FAA official said til? there. please."
controller "was just doing his job."
Twenty-one seconds late- . tre
The transcript shoM the con- pilot of tre American re;ponred.
troller last heard from Aeromexlco
"Okay," he told t re controller, "I
F11ght 498 at 11:52 a.m. local time. sre a, uh, very large, uh, smoke ·
"Aeromexlco 498, maintain yoor screen off on tre left sicr of the
presE!lt speed," th~ controller said aircraft abeam - uh, til?, uh, the
at 11:51:45 a.m.
ncse of the airplane right off our
"Roger Aeromexlco -~" the left. It Is a very large srmke, uh,
pilot of th~ Mexican jetUner nepUed , column, uh, coming from It and, uh,
thrre seconds late-. "Uh, what emanating from til? ground. Arid at
speed &lt;b you want? We're reducing our altitude at 8,(0) feet, •there's
to two nlner to one niner &gt;I'ro."
another smoke column vertically
·Nine seconds late- , the oontroller overhead . It looks like It , !llmethlng
advised the plane, "OK. You can smoked up, uh, ahead and then
hold what yw have, sir, and we went down in."
have a change In plans. sir. Stand
The smoke was billowing from
by."
til? wreckage d. the two planes that
Thrre seconds later, the final had slammed into the quiet rururtransmisslon came from til? Mexi- ban neighborhood.
·

Despiie flap, arms progrees made
By ,flM ANDERSON
where we left off at til? end of the
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Despite Iceland summit." said Speakes,
the dispute over who is to )&gt;lame for who was traveling with Reagan oo
the breakdown at the Iceland a campaign swing thrtitgh the
summit, li.S.-Sovlet discussions South.
are quietly advancing on several
According tot be WhiteHouse, the
front s, Including a new accord on U.S. proposals oo the table when the
space exploration, admin istration Reykjavik meeting broke &lt;if Oct. 12
\)ffic ials said.
ca lled for removal of ooth slcrs'
· White House spokesman Larry -intermediate-range !Uiclear weaSpeakes also conflnned Tuesday pons from Europe, a 00 pe-cent cut
lhe administration had sent new In all nuclear weapons over a
instructions, based on the Iceland five-year periOd, and the lola!
summit between President ~agan elimination of balilstic mlsslles
and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorba- · after 10 years.
ehev, to Its .anns negotia tors In
According to til? Soviets, Reagan
Geneva.
had called for elimination d all
. "We're prepared to take up IUICiear weapcns at the end of the

Pomeroy Chamber readies
Thursday Halloween party

..

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

.FAA releases papers
in Aeromexico crash

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

IIIW.

, Partly cloudy tonight, wJth a
low near t(], llfostly sumy·
Thursday, with highs near GO.
The probahUity of precfpltation
Is near zero through Thui-sday.

•

___________j__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _- : - - - - : - - - - -- - - - -

Hamlin King, Lee's original attor~y. was questiOned.
King said Bane as ked him into his
office in juvenile court on April 7.
told him about Lee's questiOn to
him and told King he was reluctant
to dtscuss tt with anyone else.
Unli:&gt;r Casey's questiOning, King
said he went to see Bane again a
day or""" late- and as~ Bane if it
was possible Bane heard Lee say;
"You think I did it, don't yw?"
"He tBaneJ agreed that it was
possible that's what he . (Lee) had
said ." King said. noting· that Bane
had told him til? statement "caught
him by surprise" wren it was
made.
King also testified to h:&gt;w he
assisted Shirley FUrst make a
statement in June 1~ In which
Furst tried to establish Lee's.
lnnorence. King said that at til?
time sre wrote tiF statement- in
til? liltchen d. Lee's rmtter's house
In Point Pleasan t - FUrst read
·earUer statements he had roUected,
"which kind of anroyed me." ll?
said.
She tren proceeli:&gt;d to put down
-hrr own statement. King said he
ooly helped in pclnting out significant details that he felt should be in
. IFr statement.
King noted that Marsha Lee,
U&gt;e's rrother, had mrUercontacted
him il Chicago while he was at a
conferenre to infonn him that
FUrst wanted to make a statement.
"I told her that UShirley wanted
to make a statement . tren ~ all
means take It," King said. "I
wan troll in her (Furst'sl handwrit·
ingsoMrs. Lee wouldn't beaccu.~
d making it up."
0
That's why Ire statemmts carry
FUrst's Social S~u ri t y numiJ' r and
marks around tiF edges made by
Mrs. Lee, he explained.
"Wouldn't It re fair ,br this jury. ,
since you once represrnted" the ·
.client . to say that. you're biased
· toward this defendant ?" Cain
: asked.
"I have very strong feeli ngs
about him IJ'Ing inrocent ," King
responded.
The criense's first wlt~ss, caUed
at 10:35 a.m. ofthe trial's sixth day,
was An~ l G. Sayer ci Elkhart, Ind.
Sayer. a wa itress at tre Frmch
Quarter during til? spring of 1983,
said she saw FUrst til? night IJ'Ior to
the murder ·at the Kanauga bar
with a gun similar to til? alleged
murder weapon.
The relendant's father, Charles
L. Lee Sr .. wascaUed totestify. The
elli:&gt;r Lee said re was confronted~
Fuffit and her son, John, at least
twice after the yrunger Lee was
taken into custody. The l!-year-old ·
Lee swore that Furst and ll?r son
lnstlgatro an argument With him In
a Point Pleasant bar il May 1983.
Thrre months late-, Lee testified
that Shirley Furst addressed hlnl,
d:&gt;mamlng $1,1110and a plane ticket
Re2ularand
to Florida , where sl'M&gt; woold Uve
with rer sister, for her rl!fuw to
testify against his son.
Also testifying for the li:&gt;fense
was Sandra Daliey, the crfendant's •
aunt and sister &lt;i Marsha Lee. Mrs. I
Dailey dtsru~ how uncomforta·
SURGEON GENE RAL'S • WARN lNG: Smoking
ble rer lamUy was with l2e dating
Funt, and testified that on Jan. 5,
Causes Lung Canc~r. Heart Disease,
1983, sre and her family dropped In
Emphysema. And May Complicate Pregnancy.
tv ~It wlti)Mi's, Lee and found her
and Furst tn· the midst of an
ar1111ment. Sre sald ~re clm't know 1'------,---------------~
~

.Ohio Lottery

Capt. (:row's
predictions •
·for Friday
~~7? - - Page 3

Zoo h~sts conference on rhinos

Dera1"Iment
.
-presents pro· blems

..:==:.::=::_:::_:::_:::_.:::::._::::::::__
0 Philip Mnrri..: In~·.

Police seek girls' attacker

A pertormance by the Meigs High School Band will open the
annual Pomeroy Halloween party spo nsored ~ til? Pomeroy
Chamter of Commerce at 6:30p.m. Thursday. •
The party will be held In til? stage area on the upper parklnglotat 7
• p.m. following the band progra rl). Frlzes wUI be awarded for til? best
· costumes and there wUI be games. The winners of the poster contest ·
staged by the chamber at the Pomeroy and Salisbu ry Elementary
Schools will be anrounced .
.
Costume judging !"Ill be in four age categories: pre-school, 0·5;
graqe school, 6-12; trens. l3-17, and adults, 18 and over: 'Categories d.
judging will re prettiest. ugliest. scariest and most original . Free
lreats will be given to 12-year-oldSMd under attmding the p:~rty. In
case of rain the party will re moved to the Pomeroy VlUage Hall
auditorium.
On the evening of til? party, the P.A. Denny Sternwheelerwtll also
re on location at the levee and will be offerin g one-hour cruises. Cost
is $3 for adu Its and $1 for children. Hours wUI re 4to 5 p.m. and 5: 30 to
6:30p.m. The Meigs High YICA organizatiOn has reserved the ooat ·
from 7 to 9 p.m. .
Anyone needing furtiFr infilrmatiOn may contact Sherr! Hart at
992-5001 or 992·3810.

10-year perbd.
The subjects of the otrer talks
range from cooperation in search and-rescue qJeratl:lns at sm to·
strategic anns, nuclear tests, maritime boundaries and human rights.
A State Department spokesman
said til? discu~ klns are resigned
"to push forward the horizons of
bllate-al cooperation."
Secretary or State George·Shultz
and Soviet Foreigo Minister
Eduard Srevardnadze will meet In
Vienna, probably on Nov. 5 ci Nov.
6, when trey attend a oo nference on
til? Helsinki Treaty on Security and
Cooperation In Europe.
The two are expectro to resume
dialogue on arms ront rei discussions as well as on otrer issues that
were not addressed at the Iceland
summit.
The U.S.-Sovlet talks on .space
cooperation began Tuesday at the
National Academy of Sciences ln
Washington and are scheduled to
end later this week.
The talks, which follow a preliminary exchange in · Moseow in
September, could lead to a reestablishment of an agreement for
cooperation In space exploratkln,
neplaclng the bilateral pact which .
the Reagan administratiOn allowed
to lapse in 1982.
State Department spokesman
Charles Redman said til? talks
would mt involve til? Strategic
Defense Initiative, Reagan :s "Star
Wars" research project for a
space-and ground.JJased antimissile system.
The head d the U.S. tro m in the
talks i&gt; John Negropcnte, asslslant
secretary of state ilr oceans,
environment and science.

_.- ......
RECEIVES COAL FACILITY GRANT - Bowling Grren, Ohio,
htventor Albert Calderon, above, received a $4.9 rriffion grant to
buDd a test facility for his pollutiOn-free coal buming proress,
officials said Tuesday. (UP!)
·

Pollution-free coal
test facility funded
converted Into a gas th at Is
By JIM SIELICKI
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio rumed pcllutlon-free to ~mer­
(UPI) - An inventor wbo says ate steam and electricity.
The presld:&gt;n t of Calli:&gt;ron
he ca n bum high-sulfur coal and
still produce low-cost electricity , Automation Inc. said he has
without environmental prob· worked since 1919 on developing
lems Is a little closer to his goal. Ire technology .
Bowling Green has agreed to
Alrert Calderon has been
buy
power !rom ·eatcrrcn when
awarded a $4.9 million federal
grant to build a prototype his prototype ~ant opens In 1990.
Most of til? proposed $45
faclUty to be used to test his
metbod on a large scale, Rep. million cost for the plant wUI be
Delbert Latta. R-Ohio. an- paid thrwgh til? sale of industrial revenue bonds.
nounced ']'llesday.
The financing was threatened
Congress also has agreed to a
special transition law in its new ~ the rew tax law, which wou ld
tax ~ tha t will mainta in til? have eliminated the tax exemptax-exempt status of the bonds tion those oonds enjoy, Latta
that wUllle IsSUed to fiMnce ttie said . The project was the
_recipleni of a special transit ion
project.
law he lobbied for, Latta said .
•
Calderon said his meth:&gt;d
Calrercn has long been an
advocate of til? count ry switch· pressufizes coal unt UIt yield; a
lng from an oil-based ecoromy gas virtually free of compOunds
ro ooe relylngon.ooal. He sald.hls of sulfur and nitrogen and
prcress will create a market ilr particulates. By-products or Ire
the natl:ln's vast reserves of process are sulfur and ash. Both
have applica tions in &lt;trer indushigh-sulfur coal.
"Til?re Is nothin g! hat can stop tries. Calli:&gt; ron said.
· "This Is a totally selfus, because we have til? mo·
ney," Caire ron said at a news contained !l'ocess. There wlll be
ro ac ld rain. problems." said
conference in Latta's office.
Latta,
who 19harnploned Calli:&gt; rUnrer his metlnd, sulfur and
on's
cause
through Congress for
otrer impurities are removed
til?
tax
law
exemptl:l n.
under pressure and tre coal Is

WASHINGTON (UP!) ~, The
National Cancer Institute has
issued a long-range plan to halt the
.steady rise In the c~ncer death rate
nationwide and cut in It hall by the
turn ol the century wit6 lifestyle
changes and better medl(,lll efforts.
The plan released Tuefday Is not
the final word In tre a!ttl-cancer
•
effort, but it takes an educational
tack - promoting less smoking and
· more healthful diets and malting
new detection and treatment tOctt·
nology more available.
"It ll'ieans act ing on present
knowledge," said Dr. Peter Greenw,ald, associate NC! dlrectOf for
prevention. "We have for the"first
time a comprehensive , pl&lt;l \ of
action that shows how manyi'jf us
can work tngether to lower 1our '
chances for getting cancer. "
Dr. Vincent DeVita. dir~tcl · of
the government's lead agenej' In
til? war on cancer, said a final
solut ion to the disease th at killed
462,000 Americans last year can
rome only from a ~tter understanding of how oody reUs become
malignant .
Theannualcanrerdeath rate has
, heen Increasing steadily for more
than 35 years, climbing from 143
reaths for every 100,100 people In
1930 to 169 per JDO,OCO In 1983,
primarily because of lung cancer.
Tobacco is the No. 1 target In the
new effort. The NCI said tobacco is
associated with an estimated 30
percent of all cancer deatiE in the
United States and is the major
cause of lung canrer. expected to
kill more men and womE!l this year ·.
than any otrer type of cancer.
"Because It takes 15 years fo r
risks to r~urn to near normal, It is
critical that the number of smokers
be reduced to one-half of l9lll levels
by 1990 fo r the year 20Xl goal to be
reaUzed," the report said.
.The goals are to reduce the
percentage of adults who smoke
trom 34 percent to 15 perrent or
less. and to reduce the pa-rentage
of you ths who srroke ~age 2J from
36 percent to 15 percent.
Diet is the other lifestyle change
teing advised. About 35 percent of
today' s cancer deatl's may be
relate:! to diet, and the neport
predicts 30,0CO Uves could be saved
l:ry 2000 "if Americans wou ld
modify their dietary habits."
The report said "a convincing
group of studies" prcvlclesevili:&gt;llC('
t!lat foods Slich as fruits, ..egetables
and cereals ro'ntainlng fi ber have a
protective effect against canrers of
the colon and rectum. which kill
00,(0) Americans E&gt;ach year. In
addition, the institute endorsed
recommendatiOns to reduce average fat consumption trom :rr
perrent to 3l percent of tota l
calories.
The report 81socalledfor&lt;'xpand·
ing cancer de t ~tiO n examirtatiort~
to rmre pecpletospot tumors early.
wren they are easily trea ted .

Retrial counsel query defendant's mother, ftrearms _e xpert
'

Kings
&amp;lOO's

: Menthol

,
Mir's. suggested pricing based on iull·prica brands. ·
,

I

Kings 10 mg "lar;' O.Billg nicotine- 100's: 12 mg "tar:' 0.9 mg nicotine av. per cigarette by FTC method. .
&gt;

'

'

GALLIPOLIS- Arifle could not that the evidence bullets removed ing such a statement. The majority
havedlschargedttlebulletsloundto from. the victim's head and chest of d:&gt;rringers possess rlnlngs, re
have kllled Barbara Twyman on . could not have been discharged said.
•
March 20, 1983, according to a from.a rifle. According to tests he
The derringer was delivered to
Bureau of Criminal Investigations performed, Dye said tre'.22-caUber DyeonDec. 7,1983,acoupleofdays
representative testifying Tuesday bullets were subj ected to skidding, after he tesUfled in til? original trial
In til? retrial of Charles Lee II In , forming unpara llel riflings. Abullet and one day after toon-soorlff's
Ga llla County Common Pleas discharged from a rlne· would deputy Raymond Pope testified
Court.
acquire parallel riflings, Dye said. that the BCI had lnlonned LangAlso. a witness who saw vehicles
The skid marks, he added, are ford, via telephone, that too flreann
parked at the George Twyman more Indicative of a revolver. A )Xlssessed a smooth barrel.
residence near Elvington til? day of revolver, ·owned by Shirley Furst.
Durtng the retrial's rmrnlng
the shooting was brought 'in to 12e's ·fanner girlfriend, Is the session, Martha Sowards, nexttestify for the !!rst time.
alleged murder weapon.
door neighbor &lt;i the Twymans,
The prosecution was to begin Its
Dye also said he woukl not have testified t&gt;r the l!rst Ume In eltrer
cross-exainlnatlon this rrorning of told Carl E. Langford. Gallla trial. The Ewlngtoo resident said
Marsha Lee, mothe~ of the defend- county chief Investigator, In a she and oorchUdrE!l weredrtvlngto
ant, after she testified for the telephone conversation that the Vinton the rmrnlng of til? alleged
defense Tuesday afternoon.
Panzer · derringer, found In til? murder date to ruy a neMpaper.
Lee, 20. Point -Pleasant, was . Furst household, possessed a .
When they passed the Twyman
convlc!ed of Twyman's murder In smooth barrel. Dye said he knows reslrence, sre said, she saw tour
December 1983.
re would have had to have cal'll parked in the lot. Three d the
Ronald Dye of the BC! testified examined the l!reann before mak- vehicles were mt owned ~ thP

Twymans. she said, one of which
was red and white. She said she
thought It relonged to til? l.Duls
Hunt !am~ of Ewington .
Sowards said sre and her famlly
passed the Twyman trailer sometime between 11 a.m. and roon. She
told this lnformatl:ln to VInton
Marshal Bob Meade !llmetlme in
1983. rut soo was never contacted
for questioning, siF said.
Defense anorney James M.
Casey also eaUed tlrre of Lee's
former Point Plmsant High School
teacrers and o~ former classmate
to the wlt~ss stand as character
witnesses Tuesday.
Ruth Sawyer, a mathematics
teacher, and wrretta Jackson,
SOCial studies, each teltlfied I.eec
was what they characterize as a
typical student. Sawyer, currently
in her 17th ~ar r1 teaching, taught .

Lee during his sophomore and yearbook were mem~rs of ~r
junior years. Jackson, with ll years ~arbook class. sir said; Le&lt;&gt; was
,
ot teac hing, taught Lee In his junior rot.
year. Due to his arrest, Lee never
Greg Barker of Leon. W .Va .. a
attenli:&gt;d his SEJII:lr year.
former business classmate of Lee's
"He (Lee) Is til? typeo!studentto during tre defendant's freshman
rememlrr," Sawyer said. "If all year, also testified .. Barker. who
tre students were like him, teach- works for .the clerk cl. the West
Ing would be mu ch easier."
Virginia House of Delegates. said
Jackson testified soo remem- Lee was quiet and got along wit hhis
hered ·rearing Lee state re was classmates. Barker was not called
fPlng to quit school .and marry to the stand In the first trial.
someone. She quickly lllscouraged
Called to the stand ~ Casey wa,
him from that Idea, sre said.
· Mars I\a Lee, who tes tlfiro in detail
Til? third prep leacrer to testify . about hi!r knowledge of her son's.
on Lee's behalf was Avena Jackson, relatl:lnshlp with Shirley Ful'lll,!wt
'
adviser of the high school yearbook which she disapproved.
and ooe r1 Lee's instructors his
"I told him it was kind of stupl~.
freshman year. The 44-year sre was five years dli:&gt;r than 1
teacher . said Lee voluntarily as- was," Mrs. Lee said. "It kind of took
·
sisted ll?r with the yearbook ~ me by surprise."
Mrs.
12esaidshe
fciundltdUflcul[
taking pho(l)graphs &lt;i school activities . .Most students oorldng on the
. (Continued on Page 14)
·:: ·

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