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                  <text>1 0-The Daily Sentinel

.

Monday.April4. 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Shop the
·want Ads

Zaccaro cocaine
trial begins today
~STEVEN

BREDICE

RUTLAND, Vt. (UP!) - Prosecutors -and defense attorneys
prepared to pick a jury today to
Oeclde whether Jahn Zaccaro
Jr., son of i984 Democratic vice
p~ldentlal nominee Geraldine ·
Ferraro, sold cocaine to an
undercover policewoman.
Zaccaro, 24, Is charged with
selling $25 worth of cocaine to an
undercover pollee officer In 1986
while a senior at Middlebury
College. He could be sentenced to
up to five years In prison and
Jined $10,000 If convicted.
A charge of cocaine possession
was thrown out last month.
Zaccaro withdrew from · the
expensive private school and
now attends Hunter College In
New~ork. Hehasdonevolunteer
' work at Covenant House In the
city to help tight teenage drug
abuse and prostitution.
Rufumd District Judge Fran·
cis McCaffrey will preslde at the
trial which Is expected to last one
week.
Lawyers tor both sides have
offered little or no comment on
the case and Zaccaro's family
has not answered requests for
comment.
The case begap, Feb. 20, 1986,
·when plalnclot!M!'s state pollcew·
oman Laura Manning went to his
oft-campus apartment posing as
a college student Interested In
buying cocaine.
When Manning asked Zaccaro
1f he had any cocaine, she said he
replied, "How much?" and
pulled a tray of 15 bags of white

By SHEILA MULLAN

behavior, like he's being accused
of doing by the plain tit!."
The suft alleges the store
owners were negligent In allow.
!ng Smokey to roam around the
store, something the cat has d!)ne
for about eight years, Ludln said.
But Smokey's celebrity has
turned the case Into a sideshow.
~~~ plight has prompted articles
In sever111 newspapers, the Wall
Street Journal and People
magazine.

PITI'SBURGH (UP!) - Smo·
key, an elderly cat who lives In a
downtown stationery store, lias
captured the public's heart and
support for his court battle
against a customer who claims
be scratched her.
"He's got a·leglon of admirers
and a Smokey Defense Fund,"
the eat's defense attorney: Gary
Ludln, said before the case's
scheduled hearing today In AlSympathetic letters addressed
legheny County Common Pleas
Court. "We want to make him a to the cat from North Allegheny
Elementary School fourth itar."
graders
are plastered In the
Plaintiff Nlckkl Sikorski, a
store's
front
windows.
leJal secretary, )las sued sta~lon·
"Smokey
Is
not a mean cat;:·
era J.R. Weldin Co. of Pittsburgh
said
one
crayoned
letter. "Go for
for $3,000 In damages, alleging
the
gold,
Smokey,"
read another.
Smokey scratched her when she
The
fourth-graders
studied the
went Into the store to buy tape for
case
to
learn
about
the justice
ber bou, attorney Richard Gor·
system
and
have
taken
up the
don Johnaon. Johnaon Is repres·
feline's
cause,
said
their
teacher,
entlng Sikorski In the suit.
"AI 1he attempted to purchase Mary Jean Baker. ·
the Item, sbe was attacked by the
alley cat," Johnson said Sunday.
''The students have learned
''We bave since discovered that about the Constitution and the
the alley cat stays ·rlght by the system of justice It guarantees,"
Baker wrote the store.
~·h reitater."
Ludln dlaa eed.
About . the · only thing . the
plaintiff
and defense agree upon
"He'l a tie slow," Ludln said
.
was
that
the photo session for .
of Smo , who Is 18. "He's old.
People
magazineIn which both :
He'• ot a ver'y frisky pat.
Tbe 'a been no prior Incident of Sikorski and Smokey appeared I
- was In teres tlng.
~y ll:lnd inyolv!n, ageress!ve

'

.,

champion

AND IT'S A GREAT TIME
TO SAVE THIS WEEK
.
AT....

4

Daily Number
.414
Pick 4
6177

Page3

Showers likely tonight.
LOw In mid 50s. Wednesday
showers, scattered thun·

derslorms. '

ELBERFELDS!

•

•

•

at

e
Vot.38, No.232

enttrie
I Section. 10 Paget 26 Centa
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday. April 5, 1988

Copyrighted 1988

•

Liabllity msurance coverage councll topic
By NANCY YOACIIAM
Senllnel Staff Writer
Although Pomeroy V!llagew!ll
pay the same premium for
!lability Insurance for the pollee
department, the coverage Is
being cut by half, according to
Information presented In Monday night's meeting of Pomeroy
V!llage CounciL
Two years ago, the cost for $1
million liability coverage for the
pollee department went from
$1,600 per year to $3,918 per year,
according to Jane Walton, vii·

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!age clerk-treasurer. The pre·
mlum tlten remained the same.
This year, the $3,918 premium
will stlll be In effect; but starting
later this month, the coverage
will only be $500,000.
Coverage for the pollee department Is provided by Brogan·
Warner Insurance, Pomeroy. No
reason for the coverage decrease
was given by the company, ,
Walton said.
In anticipation of rate In·
creases for medical Insurance
coverage for village employees,

Councilman John Anderson sug·
gested that Walton begin Invest!·
gating other Insurance programs
which might provide the same
coverage lor less premium.
Walton said one area Insurance
agency had already contacted
her about providing coverage for
the village at a lower price than Is
now being paid. Anderson also
suggested checking Into Health
Maintenance Qrganlzatio·ns
(HMO) , before the village's June
1 !nsuranct renewal date.
Council also discussed repair·

lng the floor In the gymnasium of and Installing tile before making
the village hall . Anderson re· a final decision on the gym floor .
ported that concrete prices are
Baronlck said It would be good .
down right not, and that for to have the three new upstairs
apprOximately $700, a three-Inch offices In the village hall rented
cap of concrete could be poured so that rent money could be
over the existing floor, finished applied to the downstairs lm·
off to a •mooth surface, and then . provements. The offices were
left until the vlllage can afford to finished during the w.Inter
have tile Installed.
months and are now ready for
Counc!lmembers Betty Baron- occupanc:r.
ick and Larry Wehrung said they
It was reported by Councilman
w~uld like to have estimates on
Bryan Shank that the new tr1,1ck
leveling the floor In the hallway for Pomeroy Volunteer Fire

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$39900

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) State education 11nd law enforcemen! officials Tuesday unveiled
a new program to teach elemen·
tary school pupils how to say
"no" to drugs and alcohol.
"The only way we're going to
stem the tide of drugs Is to start
with the kids who aren't on drugs
yet ," said Attorney General
Anthony Celebrezze Jr. In outlln·
lng the Drug Abuse Resistance
Education (DARE) program to
the media. •
Under the program, wl\lch was
Initiated In Los Angeles In 1983,
uniformed pollee offt~rs are
trained to go Into the classroom
and teach young people about

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MOUNDSVILLE, ''w. Va.
(UP!) - Authorities In three
states searched Monday for
three murderers who hammered
. a hole In a briCK wall and then
used bolt-cutters to cut thtough a
fence In a ."well·planned" escape
from the West VIrginia
Penitentiary.
Authorities said the convicts
are b()Ueved arm~ and. should
be considered dangerous.
Corrections officials said they
believed the !mnates had help on
the outside and that It was
possible they also had Inside
assistance. The officials added
that the layout of the 123-year-old
prison was a factor In the escape.
"The problem Is the way this
place is laid out. It's the physical
plant Itself. We simply can't

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"Because our cells are below
standards, we cannot keep them
locked up for long periods of
time. That's court orders," Do·
~ drill said .
Pollee using ti·acklng dogs
discovered Monday morning that
the inmates walked about hall a
block from the prison before
being picked up by a waiting car.
" It obviously was well·
planned," Dodrill said. "We've
got to assume that plans also
were made for the outside once
they got out."
Corrections officials also were
trying to determine If the In·
mates received Inside help, since
the escape went so smoothly,
said Dodrill.
"We're certainly not overlookContinued on page 10

Arizona governor impeached

Electric

$78900

watch every nook and cranny In
this place," said West Virginia
Corrections Commlssoner A. v.
Dodrill .
All three Inmates ·- Tommie
Mollohan, 46, of Boone County,
Bobby Stacy, 37, of Columbus,
Ohio; and David Williams, 29, of
McDowell County - were servlng life sentences without parole
at the prison.
The ' three had been among
several inmates out of their cells
during a court·.Ordered recrea·
tlon period. Tney were disco·
vered missing at 10:15 p.m.
Sunday after prison officials
performed a routine headcount,
Dodrill said.
Conditions In the prison were
declared unconstitutional In 1983
by the state Supreme Court.

Direct-Drive

.,

Washer

Large Loatl
Capacity

PHOENIX (UP!) -Gov .Evan
Mecham was convlcted_Monday
by the Arizona Senate of obstructing justice and misusing
state !unds, becoming the sev·
enth U.S. governor removed
from office in an Impeachment
trial and the first In 59 years.
The Senate · then decided
against barring Mecham from
state ottlce for life, but It was not
clear whether that meant hewould be allowed to run In a May
17 recall election forced by
opponents who organized hi
anger over what they said was
Mecham's Insensitivity to
blacks, gays, Jews and other
minorities.
"Well, they don't like my
politics, so we tlnlshed a political
trial. It's as simple as that,"
Mecham said with a smile as lie
left the Senate building to the
cheers
of supporters.
1
1 Asked ff he would run In the
I recall election, Mecham Hid,
] "We'll hold all of our options
1open." The attorney general's
1 office said legal research was
i needed to determine Mecham's
status for the May election.
Mecham, 63, a tint-term Re-I publican who also faces a crlml:
nallndlctment, was convicted on
1
a 21·9 vote by the GOP-controlled
1 state Senate on charges he
obstructed jus_tlce by blocking .a
state Investigation of an alleged
death threat by one of biB aides
against another.
The Senate, by a 26-4 vote, then
convicted Mecham of Illegally

I

•Eay-

1

i

'

loaning $80,000 In state money - . cham with concealing a $350,000
raised at his Inaugural ball and campaign loan was dropped last
·then deposited In his protocol .week to avoid the posslb!llty of
fund - to his financially atltng prejudicing the governor's crlmi·
automobile dealership.
nal trial, which Is scheduled to
The votes automatically· re· begin April 21, on felony charges
moved Mecham just 15 months of fraud and perjury stemming
a.fter he took ott!ce and elevated from the loan.
Rose Morford, the Democratic
State officials said the recall
secretary of state, to the gover· election would proceed as sche·
nor's chair. Mofford had been duled. Six people flied nominal· ·
acting governor since the House !ng petitions to get on the ballot
of Representatives voted to lm· with Mecham. However, legal
peach Mecham Feb. 5.
questions have been raised about
MQJtord said the end of the Moftord's candidacy, the result
five-month trial . and the lm· ot·a draft, and Mecham's ellglbll·
peachment conviction meant lty was In 11mbo.
The recall was forced by the
"the end of some difficult times
In Arizona."
Continued on page 10,
"As we work together to bind
the wounds, let's clear our hearts
of suspicion and hatred," she
said. "Let us go forward together
as Arizonans .... I did not ask for
this burden, but I do not shirk
from the job before me. With
God'S' help, I ;will not let you
down."
The vote on whether Mecham
should be permanently dlaquall·
fled from holding public office
failed to gain the two-thirds
majority required.
Seventeen senators favored
the "dracula clause" and 13 -10
Republicans and three Demo·
crats - voted against II.
Mecham's press aide, Nonnan
Martin, said the governor was
"surprised, but pleased" that the
~enators did not bar him from
office for life.
·
A third article charging Me·
GOV. EVAN MECJLUI
.J

self-esteem, decision making,
communication skills and positive alternatives to drug abuse.
The program focuses on fifth
and sixth graders, but curricula
are available for kindergarten
through fourth grades and for
seventh and eighth grades .
The young people are taught to
recognize and resist subtle pressures of their peers to experl·
men t with a !coho! and marl·
juana. labeled as "gateway
drugs" by Sgt. Don Van Velzerof
the Los Angeles Pollee
Department.
The program has already been
tried In 35 states and 500 clUes,

Including Medina and Lake
County, Ohio.
. The Ohio Department of Edu·
cation and Ohio Association of
Chiefs of Pollee are cooperating
on a statewide program.
"We feel very strongly that
Project DARE will make a
difference, " said Irene Bandy,
assistant state superintendent of
public Instruction.
The Depar!ment of Education
has allocated $50,000 in federal
antl·drug funds to the Assocla·
tlon of Chiefs of Pollee. Celebrezze's office added $40,000 to a
$401000 federal gra nt for the
program.

Con8ider lJlockade. against Panama

.

0

.YOU'LL SAVE MORE AT ....

MICROWAVE OVEN

WIUlams. All are serving life ter018 without
m'ercy lor llrsl degree murdel'. Stacy was
convlcte4 of the 1982 killing of a Huntington,
W.Va., pollee olllcer, Paul Harmon. (UPI)

STILL A,f LARGJ!; -,._ Three West VIrginia
Penitentiary Inmates eseaped Sunday from the
!ac!llty at Moundsville. They are, !rom left,
Bobby Dean Stacy, Toml Lee Mollohan and David

Department Is now · a't D!l's
Mountaineer Company In Ra·
venswood, W.Va . where finishing
details are being Installed. Shank
said the truck should be In
Pomeroy later this week.
Finally, Mayor Richard Seyler
a nd Councilman Anderson a re to
meet toda y (Tuesday ) with Ohio
En vlronmen ta I Pro tec tion
Agency authorities In Logan . The
compliance schedule for updat·
lng Pomeroy's sewage system
will be discussed.

State unveils ~ew program
in fight against drug abuse

$39900

Gunman opens fire
·on ex-wife~s family

Cat goes to cotirt·

Ohio Lotte..V

'NCAA

IT'S SPRING

powder from under his sofa.
prosecutors say.
Zaccaro's lawyer, Charles
Tetzlaff, claimed the undercover
buy was an Illegal search because Manning did not have a
warrant. He unsuccessfully
. argued that the evidence from
the visit should be thrown out.
Tetzlaff did get a cocaine
possession charge dismissed
March . 23 by arguing that ·a
warrant to search Zaccaro's
apartment did not cover his car,
where pollee said they found 8
grams of cocaine, about $1.600 In
cash and drug transaction
records.
Prosecutors are appealing the
ruling and plan a second ttlal If
the charge Is reinstated.
.
Tetzlaff claimed Zaccaro was
unfairly singled out for prosecutlon because of the celebrity
status of his mother. a former
congresswoman who shared the
1984 Democratic ticket with
presidential nominee Walter
Mondale. McCaffrey ruled Tetz·
,!aft cannot make that argument
before the jury.
Zaccaro has said he left Mid·
dlebury during hls senior year
because he was told he would
have faced an Internal hearing on
the drug allegations.
In February 1985, Johp Zaccaro Sr. pleaded guilty to schem·
ing to defraud in a real estate
deal and was sentenced to 150
hours of community service. He
was subsequently Indicted and
acquitted on charges of soliciting
· a bribe from a company trying to
get a cable TV contract.

EDNEYVILLE, N.C. (UP!) - · gunfire, nonetheless drove away
-A gunman opend fire on and was stopped for speeding a
mourners gathered at a country . short time later by Hendersonchurch for the Easter Sunday ville pollee.
When Investigators arrived at
"" funeral of his ex,w!fe's grand·
mother, kUling three and wound· the church, they found Bowles
lng three others as they fled, and the Owensby&amp; dead In the
authorities said.
church parking lot with 25 to 30
Henderson County Sheriff's witnesses gathered nearby. ·
Capt. Tom Hatchett said Michael
Pollee took the three survivors
Leslie Rainey, 40, was charged to Pardee Hospital in Henderson·
with three counts of first-degree ville, where Andrea Rainey was
murder and -three counts of admitted In stable condition.
assault with a deadly weail\&gt;n
Johnston and her daughter
with Intent to kill, Inflicting were transferred to Memorial
serious Injury.
Mission Hospital In Asheville,
"We've got a mess, we've got a where a nursing supervisor said
real mess here," said Hatchett. both were In "critical condition
"These people 'Were all related, but stable" late Sunday night.
.or I should say formerly re.lated.
The six were arriving for the
One of the wounded females was funeral of Andrea Rainey's
his ex(·wlfe) ."
'
grandmother, Effie Justice, Hat·
Authorities sa _ld Ra~y, chett said. •
armed with "at least one nd·
''The funeral was just siartlng,
gun and one shotgun," b an or just getting ready to begin.
firing as the six victims arrl ed The family was the last to
at the Mountain Home Baptist arrive," said Hatchett. "He
Church about 3 p.m. Rainey was confronted them as they drove
still standing In the church Into the parking lot.
•parking lot when sheriff's de tee·
"As the gunfire erupted the
tives arrived 30 minutes later.
women- stlllln tile vehicle when
Killed In the bloody assault was he started shooting - took off
Rainey's former father-In-law, and one of the wounded females
Wll1ord Owensby, 61; his former was driving the car when they
mother-in-law·. Ponelle were stopped."
OWensby, 60, and Cha.rles Scott
Hatchett said the rampage
Bowles, 24; whose relationship to apparenlly stemmed from a
the family was unclear.
longstanding property dispute
Wounded In the attack were Involving the gunman and the
Rainey's ex·wlfe, Andrea Ral· victims, .a n of whom were
ney. 40, now of Kennesaw, Ga.;
"related In one way or another."
her sister, Sheila Johnston, 30;
"Apparently It Is a domestic
and Johnston's ll·year·old situation that's been going on for
daughter Wendy.
some time and It got out ot hand
The six victims had just today," he said. "The best we're
arrived at the church and were able to determine Is It's a dispute
getting out of their vehicle when over some property or. property
the shOOting began. Sheila John· lines going on for some period of
stan, critically Injured by the time."

Kansas

992-2156

.&lt;I

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Reagan administration Is considering a near-total economic
blockade against Panama to
escalate pressure for the ouster
of military leader Manuel Antonio Noriega, American officials
said Monday.
The measures, under the International Economic Powers Act,
. would Involve some of the same
punitive measures already used
against Iran, Libya and
Nicaragua.
One official said, "That's the
economic s!loe that hasn't
dropped yet."
•
President Reagan and other
top officials have said the United
States wants Noriega - under
Indictment In the United States
on drug charges - to leave
Panama, where he has near·
dictatorial powers as head of the
military.
''
But Noriega has rejected U.S.
overtures, which have Included
promises the United States would
not pursue his prosecution If he
took refugee In a third country.
The admlnl$tratlon has tried
some economic measures agalnt
Noriega, and is dispatching 1,300
more American troops to Pa·
nama to reinforce security for
the more than 10,000 U.S. citizens
and mtlltary personnel already
there. ·
The Panamanian military
pushed the administration closer
toward declaring the economic
boycott, according to officials In
Washington, when a vehicle of
the Panama Defense Forces
tried to halt a convoy In which the
U.S. ambassador, Arthur Davis,
was riding Sunday.
"It Is the kind of thing that
directly affects us for practical
and symbolic reasons," one
ottlc!al said. "We take It very,
very seriously."
"The American security
guards are not trained to tool
around," the ottlclal aald, ad·
dll)g, "The Panamanians were
very lucky they didn't get blown
away."
The new economic · pressure
could come In a variety of forms.
As one official described It, "The
president can do just. about
anything he wants to Panaman· .
tan 11sets, Including confiscation ·
ol Panamanian bank accounts,
sblps, aircraft and anything else
he can lay his hands on."
Alao, as In the cases of Iran,
Libya an~ Nlcarjll\ll. the president could Invoke total or partial
trade embargoes.
Under the wording of the act,
the president may act by declar·
ing "a national emergency." He

In California, where Reagan Is
does aoes not neea the approval
vacationing,
White House spa·
of Congress for such action,
kesman
Marlin
Fitzwater said,
although he must consult with
"It's
always
serious
whenever a
key members of both the Senate
U.S.
official
Is
harassed,
but on
and House and keep them ·
the other hand, the episode
advised.
Congress has already laid the resolved Itself pretty quickly
groundwork for Invoking the with no harm to th e
stern measures with a resolution ambassador."
Fitzwater also said the U.S.
approved last week urging action
against the threat posed by ec.onom!c sanctions Imposed so
far " will be significant and
Noriega.
·
The harassment of the ambas· things are only going to get more
sador Sunday was another sign of difficult lor Noriega, and we
the Increasing tension between think that he will leave,"
Noriega and the United States, · But the spokesman added,
which recognizes President Eric "It 's just hard to say how long
Arturo Delvalle as the legitimate that will take."
leader of Panama. Delvalle was
In an Interview published Monforced Into hiding after he tried to
day In The New York Times,
fire Noriega.
State Department spokeswo· Delvalle opposed an y new U.S.
man Phyllis Oakley said, "We economic sanctions because they
consider any threat to the safety could make It more difficult to
of the ambassador to be serious. oust Noriega "and might generAs always, we will take the ate a negative effect towards the
necessary steps to protect United States and might not
provide Immediate effects."
Americans."

Name s~ker ·for
Democrat meeting
State Senator Eugene Bran·
stool will be the featured speaker
at the Meigs County Democratic
Party's Jefferson-Jackson Day
dinner, this Saturday, 6 p.m., at
the Senior Citizens Center In
Pomeroy.
· Branstool, from Licking
County, has been a legislator for
14 years. He was elected to the
House of Representatives In 1974
and went on to serve four
two-year terms.
, In 1982, he was elected to the
Ohio Senate from the 31st Dis·
trlct and holds that seat today.
representing Licking, Hocking,
Fairfield, Perry and part of
Muskingum Counties. He Is presently Senate Minority Whip.
Durlpg his first term In the
Senate, Branstool fought to save
the jobs of 250 coal miners In
Perry County by helping to
persuade Michigan coal users to
postpone a ban on Ohio coal.
Key legislation that Senator
Branstool has been responsible
tor Includes Ohio's enefiY con·
servat!on law; worker access to
medical records held by employ·
ers; creation of agriculture dis·
trl~ts to preserve Ohio farm
land; the public employees'
collective bargaining law; the
hazardous waste law and In·
creased penalties !or fUing fraud·
ulent health Insurance claims.

Henry Hunter, local party
chairman, reports that State
Senator Jan Michael Long and
State Representative Jolynn &amp;$:·
ter wlli' also be on ha nd for the
dinner, along with lOth Congres·
slo'nal Dis trict and local
candidates.
Dinner will be served at 6 p.m .
with the program at 7 p.m .
Tickets are $7 each and may be
purchased from an y Democratic
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Commentary
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Pomeroy, Ohio

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PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

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LETTERS OF 'OPINION ate welcome. They should be less tha n 300 wQrds
long. All letters are subject to edit ing and must be si gned with name, address and
telephone humber. No unsl~ned letters will be published. Letters should be. In
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Dru~ real
By lack Anderson
WASHINGTON- As the United States was rushing 3,200
troops to Honduras to lace the
Sandinistas, It was ignoring the
most dangerous threat there to
our security : drugs.
A sca nt · few U.S. agents in
Ce ntral America are battling the
Medellin cartel, a multibllliondollar cri minal consortium,
which is tightening its control
over the region. The cartel
supplies 80 percent of the cocaine
that is smuggled into America.
The cartel uses Honduras, with
its craggy coastline and sparsely
settled hinterland, as a hub for
the transshipment of U.S.-bound
cocaine. Some of the same
Honduran officers who Washing-

more a llied governments and
destablilized more countries.
They have bribed ministers,
genera Is, judge.s and police
chiefs from Colombia, Haiti and
the Bahamas to Panama, Honduras and Mexico. Lesser .author!·
iies are also carried on the
cartel's payroll. Often, those who
can't be bribed are murdered.
The cartel's enforcers have reportedly gunned down thousands
of rivals and recalcitrants.
This has brought some Latin
Americarr governments to the
brink of chaos. The most notorIous recent example, of course, Is
Panama. The cartel's prize contact there, Gen. Manuel Antonio
Noriega, assumed power several
years ago and turned Panama

The fable of the
shepherd's head
By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senlqr Editor
WASHINGTON -In a far distant galaxy on a far different planet, a
people of far different shapes and hues lived together in relative
peace under an elderly ruler.
Under ancient law, a time was decreed for this leader to yield up his
authority and to return to his home place to hew wood and attend
\.
feasts .
As the change approached, the law prescribed a lengthy and arcane
ritual for the discovery and empowerment of a new ruler. Among all
the citizenry, those who fel t the call to leadership spoke out, girded
their loins and went forward to a series of tournaments to test
themselves against each otl)er.
This being a land of advanced ideals, these tests did not call for
feats of physical strength or skill with weapons. Instead, each who
wished to rule was called upon to declaim to the people and to display
themselves In he streets and marketplaces. Then, In ways too
confusing to be explained, the c itizens who cared to participate in the
ceJ"('mony of selection signaled their favor of one or another of the
aspirants.
On this occasion, more than a dozen people declared themselves
worthy to rule. They vested themselves with the Images of animals,
one group adopting the mighty elephant, the other the staunch
donkey.
They were a richly diverse group: lawmakers and governors,
warriors and shepherds. Some came from the cold land of the north,
some from the warm south; some claimed to be from everywhere.
But each cia imed only he knew the true and best way to lead the
people to peace and prosperity.
And so the long testing began. In the severe and frozen north ,.two
lawmakers of the region prevailed, regaling the tillers of the Iimd who
spoke loud there with pledges of fealty and sympathy. Surprising the
wizards who chronicled the testing, two shepherds also fared well In
that test.
In the next joust, cold but nearer the sea, one who sat at the feet of
the old ruler and another who ruled in his own province were the
choice of the people.
Then the testing moved to a larger, some said super, arena in the
South. There the reigning ruler's right hand man scored a most
famous victory, driving t~e other elephants from the field and
achieving a mysterious state of grace known to the high priests of the
selection process as Big Mo.
Among the donkeys, one of the shepherds, a man so unlike the
others that he .had not been considered a serious contender for the
mantle of leadership, began to gain unexpected favor, even among
the many citizens he did not resemble.
This development caused considerable consternation among the
wizards and the high priests, who had considered the shepherd no
more than a curiosity.
"The shePherd's song is sweet, and his rhy.m es are a treat ," said
some, "But no one yet has asked the shepherd what his words
really mean ."
Said others , ''He is a shepherd who speaks to the sheep of his own
flock, not a man of government who has had a voice in the councils of
state. And furthermore, what has he ever run except his mouth?"
But it remained for one last wizard, a man who looked like most of
the citizens, to ask the question that really was causing thhe dismay.
Gazing over the audience with all four eyes In both of his heads, he
declared, "Th!!se are passing fair questions. but what we really
must decide is whether the majority of the people of this land are
really ready for a leader with only one head."

.DAVID~ GoLIATH

"l'mwonderil"!g just how ·long Jesse Jackson's luck will hold up.''

It's time to critize Jackson
I had the pleasure of appearing
with Rev. Jesse Jackson on the
PBS MacNeil-Lehrer News Hour
recently. As always he is a man
worth jousting with. The only
part I didn't like was when
Jackson said that I couldn't see
the difference between him and
Col. Moammar Gadhafl, appare~tiy because some people think,
In Jackson 's not very felicitous
words, that "all of us may look
alike, but we are not alike."
I can indeed tell the difference
between Jackson and Gadhafl.
Jackson Is the very smart
American. Gadhafi runs the
Libyan terrorist state that In the
past gave money to Jackson's
organization, People United to
Save Humanity. When I mentioned that , Jackson artfully declaimed, dudgeon soaring, that
"he had never met Mr. Gadhafl
and never been to Libya," which
I'm sure is true.
In any event, Jesse Jackson It
top-drawer political goods. He's
original and quick-witted. He's
becoming at least slightly more
moderate . He's a dynamic orator
and a demonstrably fine candldate. Don' t blame Jackson that
he's put the Democratic Party In

a position where Q,ne " party
elder" (anonymous, of course)
was quoted in The New York
Times as saying that, if Jesse
kept winning, the party "would
be in an impossible situation.
We'd have the choice of turning
our backs on Jesse and alienating
the blacks, qr nominating him
and almost certainly losing In
November."
That's not Jesse Jackson's
fault. Blame anonymous eider
Democrat and all the other
Democrats this year who
wouldn 't s ay publicly that 1hey
disagree with Jackson's policies,
not even some of them . What
happens lf tltey don 't publicly
disagree with him and he gets a
plurality of delegates - which
may happen? If an Anyone But
Jackson strategy then emerges
to deny him the nomination it will
surely appear to be one the
grounds of race, and that's a
repugnant reason.·
So the right way for Democrats
to deal with Jackson is to
scrutinize him as if he were any
other candidate. That means
judging his proposed 10 to 25
percent defense cuts, his salute

to Che Guevara, his plan to have
a "code" to tell private businesses where to invest their
capital, his support for race anq
sex quotas, etc. The list Is long.
Gov. Michael Dukakls appar·
entiy doesn't understand what's
going on, which may be why his
"Inevitable" candidacy lost to
the heretofore "impossible"
J ac~son
•·
can did acy in Michigan
by 2-to-1. After the massacre,
The New York Times reported
this about Dukakls: "The gover·
nor said he saw no basic
distinction between his message
about the country's future and
that offered by Mr. Jackson and
the party's other candidates."
Dukakls may have missed his
true calling. With zingers like
that, guaranteed to gain votes for
the Republicans , he could get a
job writing press releases for the
Republicans, he .could get a job
wr 1t1ng press releases for the
Republican National Committee.
In the nicest language possible
let's put the situation this way:
Jesse Jackson is very, very
liberal. The Democratic Party
has been losing national elections
because It Is regarded as becomlng too liberal. Democrats like

Hispanics in the USA

Today in history
By United Press International
Toclay Is Tuesday, Aprll5; tHe 96th day of1988with270 to follow. The
moon Is waning, moving toward Its last quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn.
·T he evening stars are Venus and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Aries. They include
English philosopher Thomas Hobbes In 1588; Benjamin Harrison, a
signer of the Declaration of Independence, in 1726; French painter
· Jean Honore Fragonard In 1732; English physician Joseph Uster,
who Introduced antiseptic surgery, In 1827; educator Booker T.
Washington In 1856; actors Spencer Tracy In 1900, Melvyn Douglas In
1901, Bette Davis In 1908 (age 80) and Gregory Peck In 1916 (age 72);
rtovellst Arthur Halley In 1920 (age 68), and impressionist Frank
Gorshln In 1934 (age 54) .
· On this date in history:
In 1895, Oscar Wilde . was arrested in London and charged In
connection with his Intimate relationship with Lord Alfred Douglas.
In 1951, Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were sentenced to death In New
York for stealing atomic secrets for the Soviet Union.
In 1968, violence erupted In several American cities In response to
the assassination of Martin Luther Kl~~i-Jr.
In 1976, reclusive billionaire Howard Hughes died of kidney !allure
during a flight from AcapulcO to Houston.
In 1982, the British fleet sailed to recapture the Falkland Islands
from Argenf!na.
.
.
ID 1987, the collapse of four-lane bridge on the New York Thruway
dumped four vehicles Into a !loaded creek and killed 10 people.

a

·•

A thought for the day: Booker T. Washington said, "No race can
prosper till It learns that there is as much dlgnl ty in tilling a field as In
writing a poem." ,
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threat in Latiri America

ton has ·trained and armed
allegedly are paid to protect the
cartel's smuggling operations.
The ·· Reagan administration
has pulled ou(all stops to disrupt
the strident Sandinlsta regime In
Nicaragua, bu t little has been
done to breal&lt; up the murderous
Medellin cartel, 'whose illicit
drugs have taken a terrible toll in
wrecked lives and rampant
crime across the United States.
President Reagan's avowed
intent is to halt the subversion
and destablllzatlon of Central
America by the Sandlnistas. The
irony is th a t the Sandinistas have
been surpassed in subvers ive
skills by the Medellin drug lords,
who have certainly. corrupted
more high officials, undermined

UNION CITY, Calif. tNEA)- grew by 30 percent during the
"The eclectic mixture of nation- same period.
Almost 63 percent of this
alities and cultures," boasts a
promotional bookjet prepared by country's Hispanics are of Mexithe Union City Chamber of can origin and live primarily in
Commerce, "gives the commun- California and elsewhere in the
Ity an international flair rarely Southwest. Another 12 percent
are Puerto Ricans concentrated
found in the suburbs."
That's an understatement. The In the New York metropolitan
1980 census found that about 46 area.
Cubans, who have settled prinpercent of Union City's population was white, 17 percent was cipally in the Miami area ,
Asian amf more than 8 percent constitute another 5 percent
· trace their roots back to vario~s
was black.
But by far the largest minority nations In Central and South
group was Hispanics, whd ac- America and to Spain.
Mexicans and Puertlo Ricans
counted for almost 28 percent of
rank
lower than other nationalithe residents of this rapidly
ties
on
almost all socio-economic
growing community near the
scales.
They leave school earlier,
southea'Olern corner o! San Franearn
less
money and are more
ciso Bay.
likely
to
be
unemployed.
Hispanics also constitute the
Probably
the most striking
largest ml(\orlty group in adjacharacteristic
of the country's
cent Fremont, Hayward and
Latino
population,
however,ls an.
Newark. Like Union City, they're
growth
rate
that has
annual
predominantly blue collar subreached
3
percent
In
recent
years
urbs located between Oakland
(compared
with
1
percent
for
the
and San Jose.
rest
of
the
population)
and
is
That substantial concentration
of Latinos Integrated Into expected to remain at that
middle-class communities belies elevated level well fnto the next
the stereotype of Spanish- century.
Slightly more than 14 percent
speaking people Illegally sneaking into this country, then living of all families nationally consist
In poverty In dusty towns just of more than' four people -, but
north of the Mexican community almost 27 percent of ali Hispanic
or crowded Into big-city barrios. families are In that category.
As a result, the country's
Indeed, the nation's Latino
Spanlsh·speaklng population .
population is extremely diverse.
According to t~e Census Bu- more than doubled between 1970
reau, the country's total popula- and 1987, from 9.1 million to 18.8
,
tion Increased by 6 percent mllllori.
Hispanics now account for 37
between 1980 and 1987 - but the
Spanish-speaking population .;ercent of the populance in New

Into a drug smugglers' haven.
Panama's b~ nks , which deal in
dollars , are ideal for laundering
drug profits.
There are tnen like Noriega in
half a dozen countries . - men
high In the ruling circles who
have sold out to the Medellin
cartel. The cartel has such at
tight grip on Colombia, for
exa mple, that it openly challenges the authority of the
government, routinely murderIng jlldge's and officials.
·
In the Bahamas, many people
in hi gh places, including a top
minister, have close ties to the
dr ug lords.
. The cartel's man In Haiti is a
military commander so ruthless
and powerful that the govern ment dares not oppose him.
In Honduras, a former Army
intelligence chief is said to be the
cartel's l&lt;ey man, and a secret
network of military officers is
allegedly paid off.
In Mexico, the government Is
honeycombed with officials on
the take from the drug cartel, our
sources say.
The massive scale of drug
trafficking would not be possible,
sources stress, without the col ..
laboration of high-level authorities. It is only a matter of time,
our ~ources warn, before the
cartel will erode good government here, as it has done In Latin
AmeriCa. For the drug lords, it is
simple economics. They have
discovered that it is cheaper to
pay bribes than to pay taxes.
Who Is responsible for the
mushrooming growth of the
Medellin cartel and Its insidious
influence? The ultimate blame
lies with the drug users; their
purchases have created thls
Frankenstein monster. It is the ·
yuppie who thinks it Is fashionable to snort cocaine, the street kid
who shoots It into his veins. They
are the ones who have become
America's public enemy No. 1.

MANNING DRIVES - Kansas center Danny
Manning drives on Oklahoma's Harvey Grant
during the first half of Monday's NCAA

championship game In Kansas City. The Jayhawks won 83-79 to lay claim to the NCAA title.
(UPI)
..
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KANSAS CITY , Mo. (UP!)- champion.
When the final buzzer sounded,
When Oklahom11 scored 8
both the ball and the game we"e stra ight points to take a 65-60
in Danny Manning's capa ble advantage with 12:13 remaining,
.
Kansas appeared ready to fold .
hands.
Kansas capped Us improbable
"That's where I thought they
journey ·to a national champion- were gonna crack," said Oklaship Monday night behind 31 homa center Stacey King, who
points from Its All -America for- wept during the Jayhawl&lt;s ' postward. Playing his final collegiate game celebration. "They'd
game, Manning added 18 re- cracked against us before during
bounds, five steals and two the season, but tonight, Danny
blocks In leading the unranked Manning went a little higher than
Jayhawks to an 83-79 triumph ever before."
against heavily favored OklaChris Piper hit a jumper and
homa in the title game of the Manning followed with a 3·point
NCAA Tournament.
play along the baseline to tie the
"This is something that about score 65-65 . Manning scored 9
two months ago was totally points and Piper 6!n a 17-6 spurt
unexpected," Kansas Coach that put Kansas ahead 77-71 with
Larry Brown sa id. "Our kids 3:05 left .
·
"This has been like two differ·
)lelleved we could beat them . We
had a confidence I've noticed ior ent seasons for us," said Piper ,
a long time."
who had 8 points , 7 rebounds and
Manning, who provided .virtu - 3 steals while playing tough
ally ali of the crucial plays, defense against Harvey Grant.
rebounded Ricky Grace's mean - "The first season was !Ike a
ingless 3-polnt miss as the game nightmare and then In the second
ended. He started to carry the season, we've reached the pinnaball to midcourt and then just let · cie of college basketball."
it roll ge ntly as his teammates
Milt Newton added 15 points
stormed the court to unbridled and Kevin Pritchard 13 as the
applause from .the partisan Kan· Jayhawks stunned Oklahoma
with 64 percent shooting. Kansas,
sas crowd of 16,392.
The Jay)lawks, 27,1J , finished which suffered a pair of 8-polnt
with the most losses of an NCAA losses ·against Oklahoma during
basketball champion, but they the regular season, hit 17 of Its
played superbly Clown the first 20 shots In a breathless first
stretch . After' a m!dseason·loss to half that ended 50-50 .
"Kansas played a great bas-·
Oklahoma dropped Kansas to
12-8 and lowered Brown's expec- ketball game," said Coach Billy
lations to an NIT berth, the Tubbs, whose Oklahoma team
Jayhawks turned to a miserly finished 35-4 . "In the first half, I
man-to·man defense.
• don 't thinl&lt; you can shoot it any
Kansas beat Kansas State to better. It's a bitter defea t,
win the Midwest Regiona l and because we thought w~ coulu win
then upset Duke Saturday to set it all. I hate to see our seniors go
up an all-Big Eight final at out like this. I'm proud of them
Kemper Arena. It was the first and they'll go on to do better
NCAA basketball title !or Kansas things in life."
since 1952, the last time a Big
Oklahoma 's final charge came
Eight representative finished as in the last minute when Manning

.

missed the front end of a 1-and-1
and Mookle Blaylock hit a
jumper to pull Oklahoma within
78-77. Manning hit 4 free throws
lit the· last 14 seconds to secure
the victory.
Dave Sieger led the Sooners
with 22 points, Including 7-of-13
shooting from 3-point range .
King added 17 points and Blay·
lock had 14 points a nd 7 steals.
Grant, who scored 21 points
Saturday against Arizona in the
semifinals, managed just 14
points. Oklahoma's bench was
outscored 14-0 as Grant, King and
Blaylock each played the entire
40 minutes .
"This feels great to be able to
Close out my career like this, In
front of people that have cheered ·
for me for four years," said
Manning, whose next moment of
suspense will occur during the
NBA draft lott ery . "This is •••
something we deserved - It :
wasn't a gift. Luck presents an '
opportunity and we were prepared for that opportunity . We
capitalized on all of them. "
Manning was an obvious choice as the game's outstanding
player, b~t his teammates made
valuable contributions. Newton
hit ail six of his field goal
attempts, Piper wouldn't allow
Grant to post up Inside and even
Scootet43arry sank an important
foul shot. ·
"I've never looked at any of the
NCAA games that I've been
associated with before, but I'm
sure I'll look at this one and be
entertained," said Brown after
his first championship In 16 years
of college and pro coaching. "A
key was the fact that we had
played them before. We didn 't
fear them. "

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 14~HO I
A Division of Multimedia, Inc.

Published every afternoon , Monday
meroy, Ohio, by t.he Ohio Valley Pub·
llshlng Company/ Multimedia. Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph . 992-2156. Se·
cond class postage paid at Pomt&gt;roy,

Ben Wattenberg
Dukal&lt;is are now quoted as
saying they agree with Jacks~
vision. Others merely say he Is
"the conscience of the party."
Do these people have beliefs•
Are they really the same as
Jackson's? Are these people
professionals? Do they know how
to add electoral votes? Are they
looking for an electoral debacle
of an order nofseen before in this
country - one that could pull
down Democrats In the Congress, in the states and in the
cities?
Will anyone speak up loudly
and say, "I disagree!'? Or will
they be gulled by Jackson's plea
that he can deliver the goods "If
the party rallies behind me as 1
have rallied behind the party."
Like many of Jackson's comments, there is some truth there.
It Is also true that In 1985 Jesse
Jackson was threatening to bolt
the Democrats and start a third
party.
Jackson Is no political saint. He ·
is not the conscience of hls party.
He will be a better poli.t iclan If he
must deal with criticism of his
views and his history. Just !Ike
everyone else.

of Mexican descent but they are
hardly newly arrived Immigrants. Instead, many are
members oJ the second or third
generation of their families to
live In this country.
Their fore bearers settled here
when Union City was ·an agricultural community. They worked
long hours lor low pay in the
fields where sugar beets, cau II·
flower, tomatoes and gladlolas
were raised.
Today, stoop labor is only a bad
memory for most of Union City's
Hispanics. They work In Industrial plants that produce mattresses, adhesives and a host of
other products.

.Berry's World

Ohio.

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BOBBLES BAL., - Cleveland third baseman
Brook Jacoby bobbles a hot shot olf a Texas
Ranger bat in the third inning of Monday's

LOSf
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American League opener in Arlington, Texas.
The 'Rangers downed the Tribe 4-3. (UPI)

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Bell slams 3 homers; Indians
,drop season opener ·to Texas
By JOE ILLUZZI
Saberhagen.
UPI Sports Writer
Criticize George Bell all you
"I had better luck than he had
want for his behavior of late. One
today," Bell said of Saberhagen.
thing he 'c an't be accused of,
''l think it's .a great honor and I
however, is not doing his job.
am really happy .
Over the last four years, Bell"A lot of people have been hard
in between spats with the media, . on me, but for the pastflveyears,
Toronto management and the
all I've done Is go out to the park
fans- has produced some of the
and do my job."
best statistics of any major
Jimmy Key, who surrended a
leaguer.
two-run homer to George Brett in
Last season he won the AL
the first Inning, recovered to get
Most Valuable Player Award and
the victory and Tom Henke was
Monday he began the season
perfect in two Innings for the
looking like he would capture the
save.
Honor again.
In other AL games, Detroit
Bell, embroiled In a spring
topped Boston 5-3 In 10 Innings,
controversy over where he would
Chicago defeated California 8-5,
play, became the first major
Milwaukee bias ted Baltimore
leaguer to ever hit three home 12-0, Texas edged Cleveland 4-3
runs on Opening Day and led the and•Oakland beat Seattle 4-1.
Blue Jays to a 5·3 victory over
Rangers 4, Indians S
Kansas City at Royals Stadium.
At Arlington, Texas, Pete
Bell rag~ during spring train- O'Brien hit two solo home runs,
Ing because of Manager Jlmy the second breaking a tie In the
Williams' plan to move him from eighth, to lead the Rangers.
left field to designated hitter. He Texas starter Charlie Hough )VOn
protested all spring and even
his 13th straight decision against
refused to play a game, prompt- the Indians. O'Brien's second
ing the Blue Jays to suspend and homer, the lOOth of his career,
fine him.
came off losing reliever Chris
WIUiams penciled Bell in as Codlroll.
DH Monday, so the Dominican
Tigers 5, Red Sox 3
doesn't seem to be bothered by
At Boston, Alan Trammell hit a
the move, at least not during the two-run homer off reliever Lee
Smith with two out In the lOth to
game.
Bell slammed the first pitch he lilt the Tigers. Jack Morris,
saw this season Into the left-field starting his ninth straight
stands In the second inning, season-.opener, won a duel with
drilled a two-run homer In the Roget Clemens. Smith, acquired
fourth and added a solo blast.ln from the Chicago Cubs In a major
the eighth to become the third deal to Improve a poor bullpen,
Toronto player to hit three took the loss.
homers in a game. All three
While Sox 8, Angels 5
homers c:ame off Bret
At Chicago, Kenny WUllams

Win)will help meet goal, Lyle says

•

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through Friday, 111 Co urt St .. Po.

Robert Walters

Mexico, 21 percent in Texas, 19
percent in Callfornl;~, 16 percent
In Arizona, 12 percent In Colorado and 9 percent In both New
York and Florida.
In Texas, Latinos comprise
more than half of the population
in El Paso and almost half ln San
Antonio. More than one-third of
the people living In Miami and
more than one-quarter of those
ilvlng In Los Angeles are
Hispanlt.
Although Hispanics currently
constitute 7 percent of the country's population, the Census
Bureau projects that the figure
will soar to 12 percent by 2020 and
19 percent by 2080.
In Union City, most Latinos are

Sentinel-

Kansas stuns ·•Sooners ..for NCAA cage title

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
·Tuesday. April 5, 1988

'

The

GREENSBORO, N.C. (UPI)Sandy Lyle said his victory In the
$1 million K mart Greater
Greensboro Open will help him
meet one of his PGA Tour goals
this year.
Lyle, a native of Scotland who
won $180,000 with his playoff
triumph over Ken Green Sunday,
plans to play In only 16 American
e\lents this year .,,But he would

flke to add one more to the list.
"Winning (ln Greens~oro)
should sew up a spot for me In the
Nabisco," said Lyle, referring to
the season-ending $2 million
Nablso;o Championships of Golf
at Pebble Beach, CalU., !'lov.
10-13.
Only the top 30 PGA Tour
money winners are eligible to
play in the circuit's richest event.

hit a two-run homer in the fifth
and doubled to trigger a five-run
rally In the seventh, sparking the
White ~x and spoiling Cookie
Rojas' managerial debu t. Rick
Horton, making the transition
from the bullpen to the starting
rotation, was the winner and
Mike Wilt tool&lt; the loss .
Brewers 12, Orioles 0
At Baltimore, Dale Sveum hit a
two-run homer and Ted Higuera
scattered three hits over seven
innings to help the Brewers deal
the. Orioles their worst openingday loss. Higuera won for \he
first time In Ba!tlmore in his four
major-league seasons . Mike Boddicker was the loser .
Alhletlcs 4, Mariners t •
At Oakland, Calif., Dave Stewart allowed two hits over 8 1-3
Innings and Dave Henderson
drove In two runs for the
Athletics. Stewart gave up a
single to Mike Kingery on the
first pitch of the game and
yielded Micl&lt;ey Brantley's oneout single In the ninth. Mark
Langston took the loss.

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5:!

RAISING TROPHY .:.. The Kansas Jayhawks raise their NCAA
championship trophy high after defeating Oklahoma 8S-791a the
NCAA tournament final. Shown here are, left to right, CHat
Normore, Danny Manning and Kevin Pritchard. (UPI)

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�TUMday.April5. 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1\!':.~t§}aDts post season-o
Majors

Transactions

.,..,

AMERICAN LEAGUE

W L Pee.

De:troll
Milwaukee
To ronco
• N ... w 'll'ork
Ba.ltlmore

I
I

GB

OUOO It 1.100 -

,lit o, 1:: - ~
0 1 .0001
0 1 .0001

B'oscon

Clew land

01 .0001
Wes,t

Chiearo
TnaM
Oaldand
,\llnne501.a

Seattle

1 o 1.000 I 0 1.000 I (I 1.0011 0 0 .800

0

I .000
I .000
I .000
Mondll)' 'l Reau.lta

Ca llfomla
Kan!lllA Oty
Delrolt 5,

0
0

Bot~lon S,

~

1
1
I

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. Milwaukee 12, Balllmore t
Toro nto 5, K&amp;bU.II·(;Ity :f
Otk:ap i , CaiUonala S
Texas 4, Cleveland 3
Ollldaad t , Seattle I
'l\leldaf'A Games
Mtnneaoea (VIola n.un at New Vorlt
( Rhoden 11-10), 1 p.m .
Seat til! (Moore t-Il) at Oakland (WeiC h
Il-l), 10:3$ p.m.
·
We4beaclt;f'll GarneA
MlnnetWta at New York
DelroU at Bolten
Seattle a1 Oakland

Milwaukee at Bahlmore, nlcht
C.!Uomla a! Cblup, •liN
Toronto at Ha~ CUy, nlchl
Cleveland at Texas, nlrht

CMca~~:o

O l .tOU
' 0 .000

•

PlHsbura;b
Montreal

00

.000

J,A,

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~

01 .0001
01 .0001

St. Loub

I
1

0 I.OGO 0 l.otO -

0

I)

.000

Ro)'!lter and catcher Ri ck Ceroae on

wal W!!U for pu.rpo.e of their uneondl·
Ilona! releue.
Ptusbuf'l• - AcqWred rirbl-haaded
pitcher Scott Medvln from Holl!l&amp;en for
S!S,IIDG and a.111lped him loBill'faloofthe
Eas&amp;ern Lea~ (AA ).
Teu.s -Siped h'ee-a,enl piCcber Guy
Hottman lo • 1-year conlracc ; pu'
o~fl eld e r Bob Brower on the 15-dllJ
dlaable d 118t.
Buketball
Phoenix - Placed center J eUCook on
th e dis&amp; bled llilt.
Collen
lo~ Wt"llle)'&amp;n - Placed basketball
CO!Wh J erry OI8Gn Monday on probalf;Min
for '"'o yean af&amp;er be was arret&amp;ed tor
alle&amp;edly !k!alplllll" NCAA IOW'IW'nenl

&amp;leketa.
NAJA - Terminated the memberllhlp
of Brllltol (Tell.ll. ' Ct'!UeJt becauae ol
'1mprope:r recrultln&amp; procedurN aDd
oilier vlolaUoDM In Ita men'• bWeCball
pro pam.

Peac h Bowl - Named 0 ..11. Maeko"¥tll
&amp;uodate executive director.
st. Loula - Anno~m c.e d rHiinatloo of
Jim Bakltenuatblellc dlredor. eHediW:

3t.

Football·
llldlaMpolts- Named Kelt• NewMm
anhuant public rel.a llo.u dl~ctor .
NFL - Granted PIIUblll'fh rW~nlnr
back Crall Heyward abd Brlslwn Vounr ·
llrht end TTevor MoUnl eiiJibiiUy for Ule
"' April U-!11 coUe1e draft.
.
HorM! Raclq:

V.S. Trottlna AAsoclaUoa- &amp;11pended
drivers Henri ,lion, Gillet

h~trne88

G.,ndrob, BrlanPelllnaand Br.lanYaDo ,

West

Cincinnati
San f"l-lln.
At&amp;a!U
HOUfHOn
San Dl ego

Guidry 'o n U-day dlaabled ll•t; placed
Infielder Wa)'De TolleM'l .. o• lkii.J
dlaabled .1.151: placed lllflelder Jerry

J~ne

NATIONAL LEAG UE
Ea. I
W L P1..'t, GB
New York
1 0 1.000 Pblladel pbiA

B&amp;ieb&amp;ll
New York (ALJ - Placed plcber Ro1

Pro results
%

0 0 .000
~
o 0 .000
~
Loa Aq~le~~
0 1 .OOCI I
Monday'll IL&gt;ults
CIDCiruaaU 5, St. Loul1 4 (I! lnnliJII )
New York 10, Monlreal 6
San Fra~~elM!o I , Lo1 Anreles 1
Tuesday '~~o Game•
Plltsburctl IDunnt 1~8) at Phlladel·
phla CRawley 17·ll), 7J ~p. m .
Cb~aro ISutciUfe 18-IO )' at•tlanla (H.
Mahler 8-13), 7: tel p.m.
Sam Dlexu (Widtaon l•llJ Ill Hoi.IIJton
CSc otlll-13) , 11; S5 p.m.

San Francl~~eo (Down11 IZ.9) at LAI•
Anrele~~; (Herlltl18er 15-18) , 10: 06 p.m.

WedneiCia,y'a Games
SIUl Oleto at Ho1Mk1111
Ch IUifO at A.tlanta
N... w Vork al MontreaJ, nl.rhl
St. Lou!• at Clndtulall, nls:ht
Plltlburrh at Philadelphia , alght

NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOC.
Monday's Game~~
No 1ames rteheduled
Tuetlday'1 Games
Detroit ai New .Ieney, 1: SO p.m.
New Vork a&amp; Phtladelpll.l&amp;, 1: SO p.m .
Mltwaukee a1 AUanta, 1: SO p.m.

Cleveland alladla~a , 8: SO p.m.
WuhlqtooalO.Iup,ll: It p.m .
Denver &amp;I Roue &amp;on, 8:31p.m.
Vlah a1 Phoenb, 1: JO p.m.
Sealde al LA Laker8,10:31p.m.
San t\nlonto at GoldeoSiate,IO: 8fl p.m .
LA Cllppen at Portland, Ill: Sf! p.m . •
Wednelld....,·• Game•
Wuhlqton at Cle¥elabd , etrht
Chtcap at Mtl...aukee, nl1hl
Phoenix at, Dallas, nl1hl
Portland al LA lillpper11, lilrltt
San Antonio at Saeramcn&amp;o, nl(ht
Golden St&amp;IP at Seatde, ntrt;

: Red rally, edge
Cards in opener
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
Cincinnati Reds borrowed a
formula they used with great
success last season to begin the
1988 campaign with a victory,
Four Reds rel!evers - Jose
R!jo, Rob Murphy, John Franco
and Fat Perry - held the St .
Louis Cardinals to only two hits
over the final seven Innings
·, Monday, allowing the Reds to
pos t a come-from-behind 5-4
Opening Day victory over the
Cardinals In 12 Innings.
C!ncl.nnatl won the game when
Kal Daniels singled home Jeff
Treadway, who had walked and
moved to second··on a sacrifice
bunt.
"We have a good bullpen, and
I'm g:&gt;lng to try to use It," Reds
·manager Pete Rose said, •'but I
don't want to set a record . (Reds
rellevers combined for 392 appearances a year ago, a major
league record.) I'd just as soon
get another Inning or an Inning
and a half from my starters."
Rose received only five Innings
from Monday's starter, Mario
Soto, who was making his first
appearance since last May 22 .
Soto surrendered six hits, the
most damaging being a.three-run
homer by St. Louts pitcher Joe
Magrane, walked four and struck
out one.
Soto left the game tra!llng 4-1,
but he avoided taking the loss
thanks to his relievers.
Franco said he wasn't surprised that the Reds ' relief corps
picked u~ right where 1t left off
last season ,
"They got nothing but zeroes
from the fourth Inning on. I think
you could see today why we are
~Qnsldered to have one of the best
1
' b\lllpens In the league," the
left-bander said.
·
The Reds came from behind
for 47 of their 84 wins In 1987, and

~Hannan

the bullpen combined lor a major
league best 3.10 ERA.
"This was just like a 1987
scenario," said Murphy, . who
worked ,the eighth and ninth
lnh!ngs . "We !ell behind, the
bullpen came In there and shut
them down, the offense came to
' tile and we pulled out the gaf:De."
But one thing unlike last~ son
was In evidence Monday stricter enforcement of the balk
rule. The umpiring crew called
four In the first five Innings- two
each against Soto and Magrane.
"Obviously they're going to be
a lot more stringent on the balk
rule this year. That was evident
today," Magrane said. "But I
have no complaints today . They
were calling them according to
the rule book."
"It's a tough situation to_put
the umpires In," Rose said.
"They've done everything a
certain way all their careers, and
now they have to change. But If
they ask the umps to enforce the
rules the way they are written
and they do It, I can't complain."
Franco wasn ' t as
compromising.
''I hope the umpires ease up on
calling balks as the season goes
on. I hope their calling one won't
cost me or the team a game. If I
lose a game on a balk, It's going
to cost me some money (for
arguing) . I know that right now.''
Cardinals manager Whitey
Herzog - credited by some as
being the reason for the Increase
In balk calls due to his frequent
complaints about the Minnesota
Twins pitchers In the World
Series - said he hopes to see
more called this year.
"The balk Is very simple, but
they haven't called It In the past
10 years," he said_. "I think today
Indlcates we might see a change
this season. "

Trace,
•
·Oak .Hill cop wms

•

Oaks 19, SWHS 1Z
'Junior Larry Jarrell singled
Oak H!U racked up 10 runs In
with two outs In the top of the
ninth Inning to send junior Todd the first Inning off Southwestern
•, Saunders acr.oss the plate with starter Zane Colley en route to a
the game's only run, gtvtng 19-12 win over the Highlanders
Hannan Trace a 1-0 victory over Monday afternoon In Oak Hill.
Colley walked four and gave up
North Gallla Monday afternool)
· lour hits to partially account for
In Vinton.
.
Senior Richard Stitt, who the Oaks' early offensive barstarted the game for the Wild- rage. In the second Inning
cats, pitched five Innings before eventual loser Brett McDaniel
giving the pitching chores to gave up five runs up&lt;in his relief
of Colley. Joe Hammond, who
eventual winner Tim Brumfield,
finished
up for the Patriot squad,
who struck out ~ven , gave up
was
a
little
more effective: four
, two hits and walked one batter.
runs,
five
hits,
three walks and
For the Bucs, junior Kevin Smith
two
strikeouts
In
4 1-3 Innings.
pitched to all but the Wildcats'
Capehart
won
for the Oaks,
last batter In the ninth, and was
with
Maynard
picking
up the
the losing hurler.
save.
Maynard
also
hit
a
home
Hannan Trace w111 play a,t Coal
In
his
two
at-bats.
run
Grove today and wll! host Kyger
The Highlanders will play
Creek Wednesday. North Gallla'
will play at Southern Wednesday , today at South Webster arid will
•
Hannan Trace ................... 1-7-3 host Eastern Wednesday.
North Gallla ..................... 0-10-1 SWHS .......... ...OOO 030 9-12-11·3
Oak Hill .10 5 1 0 2 1 x-10-13-1
WP - Brumfield
WP - Capehart
LP- Smith
LP - McDaniel

VPI Sports Writer
·
Darryl Strawberry 11nd Montreal's Olympic Stadium have had
a couple of things In common
lately -they've been sources of
hot air and home runs.
Strawberry, who generated
controversy among the New
York Mets th 1s spring wl th
published comments about his
teammates, went 4 for4 with two
of New York's major-league
record six Opening Day home
runs Monday: powering the Mets
to a 10-6 triumph over the
Montreal Expos.
Apparently, a new heatblowing system Installed In
Olympic Stadium, which was
enclosed with a dome last season,
helped long fly balls clear the '
outfield fences. Len Dykstra hit a
three-run homer lor the winning
RBI off Dennis Martinez, one of
sever( homers In the game,
another major-league Opening
Day record.
"The ball was really carrying
well today," Dykstra said. "I've
got to admit the air was blowing
In here more than last year. It
must have been the air conditionIng. If It was, I think Montreal
w111 make sure It's turned off
•
pretty quick."
"I hope they don't turn 1t off
while we're here," said Mets
shortstop· Kevin Elster, who also
homered.
Doc Gooden struggled through

Athletics six
discrimination
trial begiris
PHILADELPHIA (UP!)
Saying women will no longer
settle for second place til college
athletic programs, an activist
group went to court Monday to
force Temple University to divide Its resources evenly between men's and women's
teams.
The group charged In a lawsuit
that Temple 111egally discriminates against women by spendIng five times more money on
men's sports programs thap on
·
women's.
The suit Is viewed as a test case.
on whether such one·slded spendIng Is a violation of Title IX of the
Education Amendmen.ts of 1972,
a law designed to prohibit schools
racial or sex dlscrlmlnatlon at
schools receiving government
funding.
' 'The rul!ng In thiS lawsuit will
·· affect sports programs In col·
leges and un!versltles across tile ..
country, and have a major
Impact on all girls and women In
educational Institutions," said
Marcia Greenberger, founder of ·
the Na tiona! Women's Law
Center.
The NWLC Is representatlng
the plaintiffs In the class-action
lawsuit, filed In 1980 by a groupo!
women athletes at the Philadelphia university.
The suit charges Temple with
violating the Equal Protection
Clause of the Constitution and the
state Equal Rights Amendment
In addition to the Title IX
statutes.
Temple has contended the
charges of dlscrlrnlnat!on are
false and unfair. Temple lawyer
Robert Reinstein said last week
there are actually more women's
teams at Temple than men's,
He saki Temple spends only as
much money on each team as Is
necessary to make the team
competitive In Its division. The
high salaries demanded by
coaches and the Intensity of
'competition tor recruits In sports
l!ke men's football and basketball are simply the real! ties of the
marketplace, he said.
·Court documents list Temple's
1986--87 per capita ,operating
expenditures for men's teams at
$7,426, compared to $3,817 for
women.
. The trial before Senior U.S.
District Judge Joseph Lord III Is
l'ltpected to last up • to two
months.
Rollin Hatter, a former Temple student who was one of the
original plaintiffs In the case,
said she and her team members
felt cheated bee au!!~! of what they
saw as an obvlollS Inequity In
financial
. given to men's

•

•

wms

-

By·The Bend

I

The Daily Sent_inel
Tuesday. AprilS. 1988

---

Page-5

..

Beat of the Bend

Morris hospitalized ·

.

By BOB HOEFLICH
Dan E. Morris, superintendent
o! the Meigs Local School District, Is having
some health
problems.
He was hospitalized at Veterans Memorial,
the Holzer Medl·
cal Center and
Riverside Hospital In Columbus.
According to the diagnosis , the
problem Is one which can probably be handled through medication and diet. Dan has been
returned home. He's to take It
real easy for a whlle and there
should not be company at this
point In !line. You might want to
send along a word of encouragement, hwoever. It means so
much at times like these. The
address Is 156 Lincoln Hill Road,
Pomeroy, I'm sure Dan will be
glad to hear from you,

. '.

TAGS OUT DIAZ - St. Louis catcher Tony
Pena tags out the Reds' Bo Dlaz In tiie sixth Inning
of Monday's National League opener at River-

•

live Innings, allowing a careerhigh 11 hits, for the victory.
Randy Myers pitched 1 2-3
Innings for the save.
Kevin McReynolds hit a ninthInning solo homer, his second of
the game, to giveth~ Mets a club
single-game record and ecl!pse
the previous Opening Day record
held by five teams.
·
"We only got one of the
homers, but I have never seen the
ball carry so far In this stadium,"
Expos Manager Buck Rodgers
said. "I thought Strawberry's
second home run · would go
through the roof."
Strawberry hit his second
homer.of the game to lead off the
seventh. His smash hit the roof In
fair territory, giving·the Mets an
8-4 advantage. McReynolds followed with a homer off Randy St.
Claire. Strawberry led off the
second with a home run to center
field, giving him an Opening Day
home run In three '!f his , six

front Stadium. Dlaz slid home on a ball bit by Nick
Esasky. The Reds came from behind to beat the
Cardinals 4-3. (UPI)

major-league seasons.
Giants 5, Dodgers 1
"If there wasn't a roof on the
At Los Angeles, Dave Dra· top of the stadium the ball would vecky threw a three-hitter and
have just kept travell!ng," Brett Butler tripled home two
Strawbrery said of his second. r uns during a three-run fourth
. ''We did It today, and I hope tha t Inning, lilting the Giants. Steve
we can do this same thing for 161 Sax homered on Dravecky's first
more games. I know I hit that pitch, but the left-bander did not
pitch very hard."
allow another hit until the sixth,
Last season, Gooden spent also by Sax. Fernando ValenzuOpening Day in a New York ela took the loss.
·
hospital undergoing rehabiUta- . - - - - - - - - - - - t!on for cocaine dependancy.
"I know 1 wasn't at my best,
Now Open For Spring
but I'll take theW," Gooden said.
Season
"I never felt better about an
Opening Day. It was much better
COMPl£TE LINE OF VEGETABLE
than last year when I had to
&amp; BEDDING PLANTS AND
·watch the opener on television."
GERANIUMS NOW READY.
Hub!e Brooks hit a two-run
HANGING
BASKETS, AZALEAS,
homer off New York reliever
FRUIT
TREES
&amp; SHRUBBERY ·
David Cone In the eighth to make
OPEN DAllY 9·5-SUiiDAY 1· 5
It 9-6.
In other games, San Francisco
whipped Los Angeles 5-1, and
Cincinnati edged St.Louis 5-4 In
SYI&amp;CUSI-992·5 766
12 Innings.

The Class of 1968 has
disappeared.
April Smith, president of the
Pomeroy High School Aluinnl
Assoclallo!l, reports that all
records on the class have vanIshed and the lnforma tlon on
them, names, addresses and so
forth Is urgently . needed for
planning the 1988 Pomeroy High
School Alumni banquet .
If you can provide information
on any member of the class do
Call April at 992-3483 - that
would be In the evening- or drop
her a note containing the Information to 1691 Lincoln Heights,
Pomeroy.

HUBBARD'S ·
GREENHOUSE

The Ohio University Depart-

ment of Residence Life has
extended congratulations to
Mark R. Smith for academic
excellence during the fall and
wlhter quarters. A. 3.5 grade
point average or above Is re-

Spring into Action!

Numerous awards were presented at the annual banquet o!
qulred for the commendation. Racine Future Farmers of AmerMark Is the son of Shirley and Ica held at the Southern High ·
Gene Smith, 359 Pearl St., School cafeteria.
Middleport.
Receiving Greenhand Degrees
·were Mike Atkins, Shawn Baker,
Do you have a question - or John Barnes, Fred Engle, Doneven questions - concerning nie Freeman, Tim Haynes, ·Aa·
cancer?
ron Knopp, James Langue!,
These questions can deal with David Lawson, Joe Rice, Brent
causes, preventative methods, Rose, Mark Taylor, Chris Wolfe,
new treatments, risk factors 'Or Darrell Young, Keith Young and
the availability of local commun- Larry Young. Presented Chapter
Ity services and the answers are Farmer Degrees were David
as close as your telephone.
Custer, Gary Freeman, Aaron
A new toll-free telephone ser- Lauderrn!lt, Bobby Saltsman,
vice Is . now avallalbe to you Chad Taylor ·and Sha~non
through the Ohio Division of the Wllllams.
Amerlpan Cancer Society, The
· Awards presen\ed to members
service Is staffed by volunteer for District 10 participation Inoperators who have been spe- cluded: Marvin Bickers, third
cially trained to handle most for placement In production~
cancer related questions. The toll sponsored by Mr. and Mrs.
free number Is 1-800-227-2345.
Charles Yost; Mlck Eakins,
fourth for fruit and vegetables,
Sue Ann Beegle, president of sponsored by John Hill, and
the Southern Athletic Boosters,
fourth for floriculture, sponsored
wrote the following note to an by the Ferrell Gas; Scott
supporters of the Southern TorBickers, fourth In diversified
nado Basketban Team which
crops, sponsored by Falrplaln
again had a very good year:
Tractor; Benny Dailey, fifth for
"We would like to thank the
home Improvement, sponsored
businesses and Individuals who
by Racine Planning Mill; Brent
backed and sponsored our bas- Rose, sliver rating for public
ketban team during the· 1988 speaking, The Creed, sponsored
tournament. It Is a special by Star Supply Co.; Shannon
feeling to know that not only
Wllllams, honorable mention tor
Southern people are behind us,
publ!c speaking, sponsored by
but also people and businesses
within the county.
"In addition, we would l!ke to
give special thanks to Scott Wolfe
of the sports department for wen
written articles, The Dally Sentinel for the pui-ple background
the day oi the Regional TI'ournament and local businesses who
Mrs. Richard Barton presran 'plctures In the paper.
ented a program on roses at the
"It ts nice to know that our
March meeting of the Riverview
county takes so much pride In Its
Garden Club held at the home of
young people".
Mrs. Donald Myers. Mrs. Terry
And, thank you, Sue Ann.
Cline and Mrs. Donald Putman
You've helped all of us Southern
were co-hostesses.
Boosters to keep srnll!nl!'.
Mrs. Barton talked about the
varltles and how to plant roses.
She said that they need six to
eight hours of sunlight for
Grueser, Racine; Jul!e Hawk, healthy growth. She also told how
Reedsville; Melanie Hemsley, · to trim the bus)les and how to
Pomeroy; Belinda Jeffers, treat them for diseases and
Pomeroy; Deborah K. King, prepare them to survive the
Racine; David H. Mora, Pome- winter.
. roy; Mel!ssa Nutter, Reedsville;
Mrs. Okey Connolly, president,
Tam! Parsons, Racine; Lee Ann welcomed Mrs. Barton and JaRobinson, Coolyllle; Carrie L. nell Spencer, guests. For devoRucker, Reedsville; Resa J.-· tions, Mrs. Putman read the
Sawyers, Racine; Mark T. Shrlv- "Irish Blessing", poem of the
ers, Reedsville; Wilma Smith, month: Roll call was answered
Portland; Todd Allen Wilson,
Reedsville; Hobart A. Barker,
Rutland; B_o nnle Friend,
Pomeroy.

Now is the time to see how your car
,_·--, . . ~. · weathered through winter.

SPRING

r
'

Va. A dessert course as served by
the hostesses to Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Osborne, Mr. and Mrs.
Denver Weber, Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Whitehead and Mr. and
Mrs. Lyle Balderson. Prior to ihe
meeting the club members enjoyed a dinner at a Belpre
restaurant. Mr. and Mrs. Os·
borne will host the Apr!l meeting.

Harrisonville hagpenings

'

'·.·
.. . •

- 'lf .

_L·-

Mr. and Mrs. V!rgll King and
daughter, Gracie King Mansfield, visited over the weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Ol!ve Coomer.
Mrs. Katherine Wright of Connecticut spent several days with
her mother, Adrienne French,
Athens, and visited here with
Mrs. Norma Lee and Mrs.
Frances Young,
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey
returned home Tuesday after
spending the wlntfr In Florida.

.APIIL
;·••..,4••'•·t51VIIGSI

DMC
EMBROIDERY
FLOSS

s

by a flower seed exchange.
The Apr!l meeting will be at the
home of Mrs. Harllss Frank. In
May 19 club members will tour
Stabl's Nursery at Little Hocking
In lieu of the regular meeting.
Ice cream pte, sandwiches,
punch and coffee were served.
Favors of plastic Easter eggs
filled with candy were given to
each one attending. Mrs. Lyle
Balderson received the door
prize. Attending besides those
named · above were Mrs. Frank
Blse, Mrs. Ronald Cowdery, Mrs.
Herman Grossnickle, Mrs. Ronald Osborne, Mrs. Tom
Spencer, Mrs. Torn Boggs, Mrs.
Ernest Whitehead, Mrs. Ray
Young, and Mrs. Claremont
Harris.

Mrs. Nancy Price and daughter, Otway, visited Wednesday
with her mother, Mrs, Louise
Eshelman.
Mr. and Mrs. Torn· Buckley of
South Carolina moved here recently to the former Dave Myers
property.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire
visited over the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs . Robert Gibson and
Ray Alkire, Columbus.

An Eastern musical "He
Lives" by Joe E. Parks -was
presented at the Pomeroy
Church of Christ.
Narrator was Frances Eskew,
director and accompanist was
Anna Shuler assistant accompa·
· nls ts, Brian Shuler and Debbie
Alkire. Brenda Cunningham
sang "Is It I?'' with Janet Venoy,
Anna Shuler, and Charldlne
Alkire, accompanied by Brian
Shuler, singing "I'd Like to Have
Been In the Garden.''
A quartet coposed of Kevin
Venoy, Brian Shuler, DanoK!ng,
and Craig Venoy sang, "Road of
Love." and soloists to "Were You
There" were Cra1g Venoy, Dano
King, and Kevin Venoy with
readings by Chris Alkire, RIchard Shuler, "-nna Lockhart,
and Leo Lash, pastor.
Also In the choir were Elizabeth Duffy, Mary Lash, Naomi
Ohlnger, Pat Thoma, Suzan
Thoma, Brenda Venoy, Joan
King, M!ldred Ph!lllps, Sherrie
Might, and Pauline Kennedy

MIDDLEPORT - XI Gamma
Epsilon Sorority will meet at 7
p.m. Tuesday at the home of
Phyllis Hackett for the progressive tea and Installation of
officers.
MIDDLEPORT- Work Will be
In the EA Degree when Middleport Lodge 363, F&amp;:AM meets at
7:30p.m. l'Uesday at the temple.
Refreshments will be served
following the meeting.

BATHROOM
TISSUE

JUNIOR SIZES

IESEIVE YOUI ADVERTISEMENT NOW BY
CALLING •••• 992-2156
THIS SPECIAL EDITION WILL APPEAR IN THE DAILY
SENTINEL ·oN MONDAY, APIIL 25, 1988.
AD DEADLINE IS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 2(», 1988
ASK FOR BIIAN 01 DAVE
\.:

•

--:--

ALL EASTER
CANDY
REDUCED UP TO

50°/o OFF

:I

\

While
They last
. QUANTITIES liMITED

.-------------1'
COUPON
I
I

r

I

:

ANY PURCHASE OF
1 Sl 0.00 OR MORE
I
1
I WITH THIS COUPON
EXPIIU 4·16-18

L-------------1

NO LIMIT

8

FOR

SIOIE
ftt~Mil

- I I SKO• A¥1.

p.m. Wednesday at the home of
Mrs. WilBon Carpenter, Pomeroy. Mrs. James Cia!worthy will
review Edna St. VIncent Millay's
Collected Lyrics. Members are
to respond to roll call with a verse
from a favorite poem. ·

TlltlB8DAY
MIDDLEPORT - Tbe Blue
and Gold Banquet for Cub SCouts
of Pack 249 will be held Thursday, 6:30 p.m., at the old
American Lelion HaD In Middleport. Advance ticket purcbaae
requested.

---

'

I

II

l
l

200 YARD SPOOL

singing "The Lord Is Risen
Today:•, "He Lives", "Now Let
The Heavens be Joyful", "Ten
Thousand Hozannas", :'Beneath
the Cross of Jesus", and "RejoIce My Heart.''

,'

!l $1°0 Off

SEWING THREAD

, J;l.ACINE - Southern ltigh
'
EAST MEIGS - Eastern At·
· School' Athletic . Boosters Will
meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the hletlc Boosters will meet Wedhigh school. All parents of nesday, 7:30 11.m., at the high
basketball players, both boys school cafeteria. All parents of 1
RUTLAND - Rutland Townand gtrla, are·especially uraed to athletl!l are Ul'8ed to attend.
ship
Trultees wiD meet In reru·
attend the meettna at which lime ·
Jar
1e111on
Thul'lday, 6: 30 p.m.,
MIDDLEPORT- The Middlepiau for lbe athleUc banquet will
at
the
Rutland
Fire Statton.
port Literary Club will meet at 2
be finalized:

,_

$1999

4 ROLL PAll

.

-

JEANS

88(. NO LIMIT

RUTLAND- Revival services
WEDNESDAY
will be held at the Rutland
POMEROY -Pomeroy Lodge Freewill Baptist Church cont!nu·
164 will meet 7:30p.m. Wednes- lng through April 9. Norman
day at the Middleport Temple. Taylorwillbetheevengellst.The
Practice In tellowcratt degree. , publ!c Is Invited to attend.
All master masons welcome.
RUTLAND - A special meet·
lng of the Rutland t,.adles Fire
Department Auxiliary will be
held Wednesday, 7:30p.m., at the
·
fire house.

69(

ACID WASHED

Community calendar
PORTLAND- Lebanon Township Trustees meeting at 6:30
p.m. Tuesday at the township
building.
REEDSVILLE - Olive Township Tnstees will meet Tuesday,
7:30p.m., at the Reedsville Fire
Station.

YARN

DELSEY

'

TUESDAY
CHESTER- Chester PTO will
met Tu!!sday, 7 p.m. at the
' Chester Elementary School. Dr.
Dan Apllng will speak on ,the
upcoming levy.

4 PLY RADIANCE

99(

Church presents musical

CBC ·club holds recent meeting
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Myers
hosted a recent meeting of the
Reedsville Community Builders
Club with Mrs. Ronald Osborne,
vic'e president, conducting the
'
meeting.
A thank you note was read
from Warren Picken for flowers "
and cards which he received
when a patient at the CamdenClark Hospital, Parkersburg, W.

Including Mlck Eaki ns, Tim ley, vice president; Chad Taylor.
D,J .'s Trading Post.
Other fWards wen t'to.Marvi n Haynes and Aaron Lauderm!lt. secretary; Marvin Bickers, sen·
Bickers, Star Chapter Farmer Individual awards for scores In tine!; Donnie Freeman , treas ·
Degree, a $50 savings bond and a urban judging wxnt to David urer; · Brent RDse, reporter;
plaque, sponsored by Racine Custer, first ; B€nny Dalley, Mark Taylor, assistant reporter;
Home National B8nk; Aaron second, and Kevi n Grueser, Keith Young, student advisor.
Twenty-nine members aild 70
Laudermllt, the Star Greenhand third, with Torn Lewis Drilling ·
Degree, a plltque and a $50 bond, and · MGM Farm City being guests were on hand for the
banquet with outgoing president,
sponsored by The Farmers Bank sponsors.
and- Savings Co.; Chad Taylor,
Honorary Chapter Far mer De-· Scott Bickers, presiding and
the jVeldlng award, sponsored by grees were presented Robert Christ Grindley, outgoing vice
the Twin City Machine Shop; top Beegle and· Milford Frederick .
president, giving the invocatkm.
District 10 Vice President Flowers given by Harris Farms,
salesmen ·In fruit sales, Joe Rice,
first; Brent Rose, second, and Stuart Parsons was speaker and Hubbarp's, Art H!ll's, Sue's and
Mlck Eakins, third; Gary Free- new officers were Installed by Circle's Greenhouses were
man, scholarship, sponsored by Racine Chapter including Kevin awarded as door prizes and Dan
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Ord; Scott Grueser, president; Chris Grind· Smith conducted a ham auction,
Bickers, leadership, sponsored r-;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
by Jim Carnahan; Gary Freeman, the Bob Lee Citizenship
Award, sponsored by D. J . 's
Tr.a dlng Pos.t; electricity
awards, Charles Lawrence and
Keith Young, sponsored by Big
.' ' .
Bend Electric.
The chapter's parliamentary
procedure team received a silver
rating at the district level.
Members are Marvin Pickens,
Scott Bickers, Chris Grindley,
Kevin Grueser, Tim Willis, Keith
Young and Benny Dailey, sponsored by Ferren Gas . The urban
team pl&lt;Ked first In county
competition. Members recogSKEIN
nized Included Kevin Grueser,
NO LIMIT
FOR
David Custer, Benny Dailey,
James Langwell; the rural team
second with those recognized

Reedsville Garden Club
meeting held recently

_Hocking Tech dean's list
· Twenty-three Meigs Countians
: have been named to the winter
quarter dean's list at Hocking
Technical College, Nelsonville. A
student must maintain a 3.3 or
above grade point average to be
named to the list.
The Meigs County group Ineludes: Susan Bauer, Long Bottom; Theresa M. Bing, Racine;
Glenda L. Bissell, Long Bottom;
Loretla A. Brown, Pomeroy;
Pamela s. Demko, AI bany; Scott
• A. Eichinger, Racine; KlrkF!ck,
· Long Bottom; Dawna R.

condu~ed

Racine Future· Farmers banquet

-IUPOII, a•o

�The

..

Sentinel

Don't ·count this woman
.·out of happy marriage
·near Ann 'Landers: My friend
"Ruth .. was attractive, well-dressed,
hsted the qualities. h&lt;' wamcd in a warm, generous. lovable and fat
woman. He ended by saying, ·" If She had enormous energy and was
your tumm~' is larger than your
never sick a day in het life until she
chest. you are automatically di~o·
oontracwd her fi.nal illness at the
qualified;.'
·
age of43.
I am a woman who c~1n co'ok . ·
In eight months her weight went
fish, ride a horse and ;;ki. I am
from 220 to 110. Her hair fell out
attractive. illlelligrnt. warm , .:;up· ·and she was sick from chcmothera··
poniv(' and an enthusiastic tx'll
py . But she kept up her spirits and
partner. In shore I p0~ the
her appearance wjth wigs, makeup
qualities he w;u11s plus a turluny
and scarves to hide the ravages of
·that is larger than my chest.
tht• illness that wa~ killing her.
That man. will never k.now mt• or
One day, Ruth and I ran into an
my sisters. and it's his loss. Happily. acquainta nce who hadn 't seen her
I hav(' a long·standing solid mar·
in .'ltVcral yea rs. She raved about
riage. Our life together is based on
Ruth 's weight 105.S •nd gushed
appreciating one another. thr
mdl~l)· &lt;tbout how wonderful it
whole person. instead of focusing
was that Ruth finally "took herself
on specific parts that ma y be I ~
in hand ." She then asked. "How did
than pcrfr&lt;1.
yo u do it? What weight·los.'i pro•
My husband is not wrncd ofl by
gram did you follow?"
my lUmmy any morr than I am
Ruth looke-d .her in the eye and
turned oil' by his bald head. One of said, " I wouldn't recommend my
th'-: most important concrpts we arc
wcight·loss program to anyone. I
passing on to our three childrCJl is
have terminal ca ncer of' the pancrc·
' to reco~nizc and respond 10 the
as."
whoh.· person and no1 gel hung, up
Unt il :-.he died, Ruth kept asking
on physical naws. ::.uch as 100 short.
me why ~he wasn't acceptable when
too tall , .too fat, roo thin . too much
!oht· was fat .and happy and well.
no:;;e, not enough chin,·L·tc. etc.
:.111d riow that she is thin and dying
Perhaps the man·s anitudr ex·
she is receiving loads of compli·
plains why hr must advcni sc for a
ments. My only answer is, " lr's a
woman. ·· WASH ,. D.C.
sic k world." Can you think of a
DEAR D.C.: Than)&lt; yo u for a, lx-trcr one? -- JANET, ISSAQUAH.
postgraduate course in matr scl&lt;·c·
WASH
tion . Here's a letter lhat d&lt;.'SCrvcs to
DEAR JANET: No. When it
be included as a case s tud~·:
comes to weight some people go

5. 1988

class has meeting

Ann
Landers

flear Ann Landers: R('C{'mly. I

read a personal ad from a man who

The best evidence is in the
fa.&lt;:hi&lt;m magazines. One need only
to look at pictures of the models.
And you would not believe· how
strenuoll-;ly these women diet to
look like broomsticks. It's brutal.
Dear Ann Landers: I have never
seen this quesdon iri your column.
and I need an answer so J will
know how to behave. It's about
wedding.11.
I have attended three weddings in
the last year and in all three
insta.nces, when the minister said, "I
present to you, Mr. and Mrs.
Blank," the congregation ap·
plauded and let out whoops and
hollers
I wa11 raised a Presbyterian.
Never have I heard people yell in
church. Are things changing~ I still
feel . that it's disrespectful. Com·
ment, please. -· MEMPHIS
DEAR MEM: A wedding ceremo·
ny is suppo&gt;ed to he a joyous
occasion. I enjoy the levity and do
not feel that it is sacrilegious.
Planning a wedding? What's
righr? What:5 wrong? "The Ann
Landers Guide/or Brides'' will relieve
your anxiety. To receive a copy, send

$3 plus a Na. 10, selfaddressed,
sLomrx'll envelope (39 cenrs {KJStage)
tv Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11561, Chi·
cago, Ill. 60611.()562.

Beth Weaver lost the most
weight and there was a tie for
runner-up between Cindy Lam·
bert and Diana Herdman at the
Tuesday. morning Five Points
class o( S!!ndere!la. At the
evening class that day, Michele
Folmer lost the most weight In
the teen class and received her
20·pound weight loss ribbon and
certificate and Me!!ssa Foster
was runner-up.
In the adult class, Susan'Tracy
was accepted Into the slim-ntrim program ror reaching her

goal weight and Cathy Hudson
lost the most weight and Diana
Bachtel was runner-up.
At the Tuesday night Mason
class In the kids class, Eddie
Re!tmire lost the most weight
and was als&lt;i accepted Into the
sllm·n-trlm program for reach·
!ng his goa! weight.
In the ad,ult' class at Mason,
Carol Staats and Audrey Clark
tied for most weight lost and
Bertha Kinzel was runner-up. Jo
Ann Newsome is lecturer ror the
program.

Church of God ladies meet
A bake sale at Ktogers In May
was - planned when the Mt.
Moriah Church of God Ladles
Auxiliary met recently at 'the
home of Sherry Harris.
New folding chairs for the
parsonage will be purchased
with the proceeds. Next meeting
was planned for Apr!l26. Revival
services to be held Aprll10-17 at 7

nounced with the Rev. Stan .
Taubee as evangelist. Mrs. Har·
ris read "John's Letters About
CHRISTOPHER DARST
Love" and "What Damage the .
Tongue Can Do."
Following the meeting, the
Auxiliary visited with a friend
Christopher Doug Darst, son of
who Is Ill. ·
Danny arid Sherrl Darst, cele·
brated his seventh birthday
recently.
A party using an All theme was
held In hts honor. Attending were
The success of the rummage Anyone Interested In joining the his parents, brother, Corey,
sale was noted at the recent group may call Mxs Thomas
grandparents, Bud and Wanda
meeting of the Mothers of Twins 667-6863; Mrs. Eblin, 992'6396; 0 ; Vining, grandmother, Bonnie
Club held at the Pomeroy United Gall Patrick 446-3161
·
Darst, great-grandmothers. GerMethodist Church.
trude Stivers and Goldie GraFinal plans were made for the
rrect10n
ham,
Terri Smith, Shannon and
Easter egg hunt and members
The Buckeye Girls State dele·
Matthew
, B,ob and Karen
had a coupon and recipe ex· · gates and alternates announced
Grimm,
Jeremy, Istael and
change. Attending were Gall In Friday's paper are sponsored
Timmy
~
Ryan
and Chris Jeffers,
Patrick and Cheryl Miller, Galli- by the American Legion AuxULester
Lowery.
polls; Fonda Thomas Reeds- lary of Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
Sending·· gifts were Char les
ville; Debt Gilmore, Rutland; Middleport, not Drew Webster
Smith,
Rita and Junior Smith.
Eloise Drenner, Janet Eblin, an Post 39, Pomeroy. The delegates
Christopher
was taken to Show
Linda Faulk, all of Pomeroy.
are Heather Flnlaw .and Amy
Biz
Pizza
In
Parkersburg In
Next meeting will be held on Hager, and the alternates are
honor
of
hls
birthday
by his
Aprlll7 at 7 p.m at the church. Tamara Leachman and Jayne
parents.
Ann Ritchie, alternates.

Darst birthday

Mothers of Twins have meeting
Co

returned from a 10-day trip to Nicaragua, where President
Daniel Ortega dubbed him "the head of the state of
consciousness of North America."
REBEL IN THE PULPIT: Jimmy Swaggart may be In more
trouble with the national Assemblies of God council. The fiery
evangelist was preaching ln his Baton Rouge, La., church .
Easter Sunday eiren though the organization has banned him
from the pulpit for a year because of his relationship with a
prostitute. "Any type of pulpit ministry, whether It's
admonishing the crowd or reading the scripture or anything like
this would 'be In violation of the rehabilitation prograll\ that's
been recommended to him," said Juleen Turnage of the
national church In Springfield, Mo. Swaggart briefly addressed
a sparse crowd at Easter morning services, asking them lo turn
away from Satan and follow the Bible. Swaggarthassald he will
return to the pulpit full time on May 22 - the end of a
three-month banishment Imposed by the Louisiana chapter of
the Assemblies of God.
GLIMPSES: Geraldine Ferraro, the Democrats' 1984 vice
presidential nominee, and her husband, John Zaccaro, were In
Rutland, Vt .. Monday for lury selection In the cocaine-selling
trial of their son, John Jr. Both parents stuck with their policy of
· n.Qt commenting on the c~se but the def(mse attorneys claim
laccaro was unfairly singled out lor prosecution because of his
mother's fame ... The cocaine and assault trial of former
llghtw~tght boxing champion Hector 11 Macbo" Camacho was to
have started Monday In LaBelle, Fla., built was postponed until
May 3. Camacho, 25, was charged Feb. 2 With threatening an
unidentified luvenlle with a gun during an argument. Pollee
found a small packet of cocaine on him at the pollee station.

Mariega celebrates 200 years
By SANDRA L. LATIMER
United Ptess International
Two hundred years ago a group
of Revolutionary War veterans
established a settlement at the
confluence of the Muskingum
and Ohio rlv~rs. This weekend,
the city of Marietta celebrates Its
bicentennial .
The city's giga~tk birthda y
party begins Thursda y and in·
eludes a re-ena ctment of historic
events, musi cal entertainment,
parade, a gala ball and a
birthday party . The Ohio Long
Rifle Exhibit Is Saturday and
Sunday at the Lafayette Ho te l,
and the re-enactment of military
life by the Fl rst American
Regiment will be Saturday.
The Cincinnati Arl Museum
orters "Illusions In Glass: The
Art of Christopher Ries" through
May 8. The Cincinnati Art
Museum in the Eden Park
section of Cincinnati offers a
bicentennial exhlbl t "American
Master Drawings from the Corcoran Gailery of Art" through
May 15. This Is a survey of 200
years of drawings , sketches and
watercolqrs by major American
artls.ts.
TheT~ft Museum In Cincinnati
also has1a bicentennial exhibit,
''The Framework of the FrontIer: EafiY Qnclnnall Architecture and the Baum-Taft House
1920-198f;" through June 30.
At ~~· other end of the state Is
the Ge gua County Maple Festival, w. tch caps the area' s maple
syrup season. Pancake eating
and l !lipping contests are
planned, as are pancake breaklasts topped with locally made
maple syrup.
Also In Ohio this weekend :
The Western Spring Roundup
is a flea market with food and live
entertainment Friday through
Sunday In front of the Midway
Lanes Bowling Alley In New
Carlisle, Clark County. In case of
rain, It will be held the following
Weekend.
A Doll and Miniature Show and
Sale will be held Saturday and
Sunday at' the ~uaker Square
Hilton hotel In Akron .
The G&amp;L Antique-Flea Market

will be held Saturday and Sunday China: The Quest lor Eternity,"
at the Allen County Fairgrounds. at the Cleveland Museum of Art.
Easter Flowers are on dlsplay "The Year In Review" Is on
at Kr-ohn Conservatory In Cincin- display through Aprll17.
nati through Sunday.
Sunday Is also the last day for
An Easier Lily Show at the "Greece: Sacred SanctuariesFranklin Park Conservatory and Secular VIews" at the Allen
Garden Center in Columbus runs Memorial Art Museum In Oberthrough the end of the month.
lin. "La Reverie Esthetlque:
The Home _Idea Expo at Symbolist Works on Paper" Is on
Veterans Memorial Hall In Co- display through May 24.
lumbus Saturday and Sunday • Functional Ceramics Exhlb!features home products and tlon Is on d!sp)ay at the Wayne
se rvices .
Center for the Arts In Wooster
The Mahonlng Valley Wood through April 22.
Carvers Show will be held
"Watercolor Ohio '88" Is the
Saturday and Sunday at the Kent display at the Fine Arts Center In
State University Trumbull Cam- Middletown through April 23.
pus in Warren.
The Columbus Museum of Arf.
A Sportsman and Craft Show displays "Allee Schllle, 1869·
will be held Saturday and Sunday 1955:-0ils and Watercolors," and
at the high school In Shelby, "Boston Impressionists: SeRichland County.
lected Paintings from the Musem
The Stark County Gem and of Fine Arts, Boston" through
Mineral Club Show will be held
April 24.
Saturday and Sunday at the'
The display at the Toledo
Nazlr Grotto In Canton.
Museum ol Art Is "ContemporThe Toledo Craftsman's Guild ary Screens: Function, DecoraSpring Show will be held Satur- lion, Sculpture and Metaphor"
day and Sunday at the Lucas through April 24. The display
County Recreation Center Jn-· "On the Line: The New Color
Maumee.
'
Photolournallsm," runs through
An Antique Wholesale Market May 29·
will be held Sunday at the Medina
Grallvllle at Loveland offers
County Fairgrounds In Medina.
"Weavlngs of Five Continents"
The Spring Wildflower ' Hike through April 24.
Sunday uncovers nature's little
The Glen Helen Building In
~eautles ~he East Fork State
Yellow Spr1ngs dlsplaY.s "NaPark southeast Of Amelia, Oer- tiona! Wildlife Magazine Nature
mont County.
, Photo Exhibit" through Apr1128.
The Governor's Senior Citizen
The Center of Science and
Art Show and Sale In the Rotunda ·Industry In Columbus has a gold
of the Statehouse in Columbus exh!bltond!splay throughMay1.
, The "First Light" Planetarium
runs through Sunday.
Activities at the Cuyahoga Show Is on display through May
Valley Na tiona! Recreation Area 31.
_
this weekend Include a workshop
on kite making and flying Satur- In The
anclnnaU
offers "Jim
Dine
Contemporary
Art Center
da/; a wlldlflower workshop Drawings Exhibition" through
Sunday.
May 7.
An Elegant Repast Is the
Opening Friday at Denison
theme of the literary dinner April University In Granville Is
16 at the Colonel Crawford Inn at "Boardwalk Sertes " and
Ohio VIllage In Columbus.The "Masks" which will be on display
dlnher Is part of a program through May 6.
where Jerry Rockwood presents
A quilt show opens Friday at
a one·man show on Edgar Allan the Golden Hobby Shop In the
Poe. For reservations, call 614- German VIllage area of Colum297-2606.
bus and runs through May 8.
Special Exhibits
The Akron Art 1\iuseum In
Sunday Is lhe last day for Akron otters "Santa Fe Trail
"Tomb Sculpture from Ancient Series: Photos by Joan Myers" '
/

"A clanilied edvertiaement placed in The Daily Sentinelle~~;­
cap1 - elauifiad display , Business Card and legal notices)
will also appear in the Pl. Ple11ant Regiatl:'lr and,Jhe Galli poli• Deily .t:~ bune. reaching over 1B,OOO hornet.

Satuday through May 15, and
"Expressionist Landscape; 19201940" through June 5.
Kings Island Amusement Park
opens Saturday for weekends
and begins dally operations May
27.
Americana Amusement Park
near Middletown opens April 16
for weekends and begins dally
operations May 26.
Also opening April 16 for
weekends Is Fanatay Fhrm,
adjacent to Americana.
On the theatrical schedule:
"American ~uf!alo" plays at
the Thompson Shelterhouse
Theatre "•t the Cincinnati Playhouse through April 17. Call
513·421-3888 for reservations.
"My Fair Lady" plays at the
. Westgate Dinner Theater In
Toledo through May 8, ·except
Mondays. 419-537-1881.
George Carlin performs at the
Palace Thealre In Columbus
Friday. 614-221·845 7.
Bob Hope and Marie Osmond
perform at the Ohio Theatre In
Columbus Apr!l2I. 614469 -0939 .
Country music star Randy
Travis performs April 30 at
Veter&lt;lnsMemorlal!nColumbus,
614-221-8457.
BalletMet Spring Perfor·
mance Thursday through Saturday, Ohio Theatre, Columbus.
614-224-1672.
Bach Festival at Bluffton College Thursday through Sunday.
419-358·8015.
Dayton Ballet Spring Program
Thursday through Sunday, Victory Theatre, Dayton. 513-2223661. ·
·

•'

.13.00
.33.00

Smokey the cat supporters:
'We won!': PITTSBURGH
&lt;UP!) -Smokey thee at beatthe
rap.
The 18-year-old fel!nethatllves
In a · stat.ionery store won a
unanimous court victory agaln.st
a charge itscratcheda customer.
a secretary who had come into
the shop to buy tape for her boss.
Three arbitrators deliberated
20 minutes Monday and found
Smokey and the J.R. Weldin Co.
stationery store Innocent of negligence Ln having the cat wander
around the premises, said Walter
Lesniak, court clerk for the
arbitration division of the Allegheny County Common Pleas
Court.
"We won!" said a huge poster
on the door of the Weldin store, as
employees Inside sported "We
won!'' stickers on neckties and
jackets.
Plalnllff N!ckkl Sikorski, a
legal secretary, sued J.R. Weldin
Co. ol Pittsburgh for $3,000 In
damages, alleging negligence by
store owners because Smokey
scratched her when she went Into
the store to buy tape for her boss,
lawyer RLchard Gordon Johnson.
Johnson represented Sikorski In
the suit.
The suit alleged the store
owners were negl!gen! In allowIng Smokey to roam around the
premises, where It has lived
eight years.
The eat's prompted articles In
several newspapers, !nludlng the
Wall Street Journal, and People
magazine. One-hundred cat lovers, spectators and reporters
crowded around to hear about
Smokey.
One spectator held a sign
reading, "Smokey for Attorney
General," Lesniak said.
''It was fun ," the eat's defense
· lawyer, Gary Ludln, said alter
the hearing. "It was standing
room only.''
"We would be looking Into all '
options available . for appeal,

~ew

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) State education and law enforcement of!!cla!s Tuesday unveiled
a new. program to teach elementary school pupils how to say
"no" to drugs and alcohol.
"The only way we're going to
stem the tide of drugs Is to start
with the kids who aren't on drugs
yet," said Attorney General
Anthony Celebrezze Jr. In outllnlng the Drug Abuse Resistance
Education (DARE) program to
the media.
Under the program, which was
Initiated In Los Angeles In 1983,
uniformed pollee officers are
t~alned to go Into the classroom
and teach young people about
self-esteem, decision making,

'
'•
•
'

••
I

•

communication skills and post· ~
tive alternatlvps to drug abuse. !

M-"11 County
ArH Code 114

Gallle Countv
AfNCoda814

8715-Pt. Pl ...ant

Purntrvy
Ill-Chest•
843-PortiMad

571-Apple Gn&gt;,.
773-M..an

·Home Health Care
Agency
We Provide Care For the
Elderly In Their Home.

Public Notice
reserves the righ1 to accept
or reject any offer received .

Terms oj.sale will ba ca1h or
credit bY prior arrangement.
(41 5, 13, 2tc

AHANDFUL
OF CASH
IS BETTER ."_
THANA
GARAGE-FUL
OF STUFF

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

Hourly or live-in
Arrangements
BONDED · INSURED
Covered Wwilh Workman 's

Companution

PH.

614-992-2657

l-21-'87-1 mo.

Also Traftttnluio•
PH. 992·5682
or 992'-7121
6-17-Uc

Will do Federal
and State
Income Tax,
typing,
bookkeeping,
and Notary
Service.
Margaret Parker

992-2264

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL · SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT .
10-8-tfc

Rand S
AUTO REPAIR

21 -lwtn•• Opportunity
22-Monll¥ to Lo.n
23-Prot.llonal lln'ICIII

992-21 5~
3 Announcements

MEIGS OFFICE
MACHINES
N•w &amp; Used

SALIS·SD¥1CE-5UPPUES
loyal &amp; SCM Typewriters
Royal &amp; MAX Calcula~•
Reral &amp; Ma• Cosh Rtgtsttrs

HOMEI liLT

BURDETTE CAMPER SALES
ANNUAL OPEN HOUSE
April 8th, 9th &amp; lOth
Special hours will be
9 a.m.-6 p.m. Friday and Soturday
. and 1 p.m.-6 p.m. Sunday.
There will be refreshments and drawings for
daily do.or prizes. FREE with the purchase
of a new YELLOWSTONE camper will be
CAREFREE AWNING! We will also raffle off
an ALUMINUM TOPPER.
So come join in tho fun this weekendl
U.S . ROUTE 50 EAST OF ATHENS AT
COOLVILLE, OHIO
667-3386
Livestock

PH. 949·2969
haler far

YAIDMAN &amp; ECHO
loCated Halfway be·
tween Rt. 7 S. Buhan.
NEW &amp; USED MOWlRS

B. 7 Financing
Yardman

on

BUS. 667-6102
HOME 374-SS99
HOURS: 9:30 a.m.-6 p.m.
Monday-Friday
Sat. by Appointment

H -'88·1 mo.

KOU_t!!RY CLUB
GOLF

LESSONS

sa.oo

6 for 545

Clubs shortened SS.OD
New G•ipo $3.50
Square Groous $10.00
Basket~all Trophies and
Plaqu" $3.50
Engraving

JOHN TEAFORD
Che1ter, Ohio

3·2·'88· lmo.

13 Cows With Calves
7 Bulls, 15 Heifers
APRIL 8, 1988-7:30 P.M.
Fairpla~·
. , W. Ya.
Edwin Wlnt• -Auctioneer

Spen1arMI
Cal Norma

Jacklon o. Horoford As1n.
304·1U-U T4 lor
Real Estate General

ROOFING
Downspouts

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949·2263
or 949·2168
SMALl ENGINE
REPAIR
'Authorized Service
&amp; Parts
Briggs &amp; Stratton
Tecumseh

Weed Eater
Homelite
Jacobsen

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY
Middleport. Oh.
992-661

NEW HOMES
REMODELING &amp;
ADDITIONS
CONCRETE &amp;
BLOCK WORK

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

- Addona and remodeling

Veterans Memorial Hospital
992-2104
115 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
E.O.E.

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. AT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
614-662-3821

Announcemenls

Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog

3 Announcements

Farm Equipment

Dealer

firm
Pull E~~~!~:;::_
8

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

AneNT! ON thee rea ngw has an
authorized ulas and urvice
dealer for Eleetrolux produ~ ~~ ­
Call 304 -676 - 3644 Curt~
McConihay, etk aboUt our
spring cleaning special.

992-6282
319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

Give away to good home-2 Black
lab . puppi&amp;J. 7 wka . old. 1 male,
1 female . C•ll614-266 · 9367.

1:28-'88-tfn

WANTED

Red Hound female . 1 yr. old.
614 ·98~·4242 .

DEAD OR ALIVE

Dropped off Co. Rd . 12 . Fem1le
dog . Blonde, going out of heat.
• Not pregnant. Must find home.
614-742· 2830.

•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators

Free manure, 304-675· 2249 .

"Must Be Repairable"

6

We Service All -Makes

1/22/88/tfn

BISSELL
BUILDERS

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-16-86-ttn

•HEAT PUMPS

FREE ESTIMATES

PH. 992-2172

3·21·81·1 mo ..

Guns, knivM. coins. pocket
wat c he s, military items ~niforml , ate. Paving ce1h . Will
pickup. Call 814-446 -2799 .

Found: Bleck and tan male
baegle. Kingsbury, Wolfe Pan
area. 614-992-5382 .

Bu\olng daily gold, silver coin1,
rings, jewelry, Jterllng ware, old
coins, IMge currency. Top pri•
cu. Ed Burkett Berber Shop,
2nd . Ave. Middleport, Oh. 614 ·
992-3476 .

Yard Sale

MovinG Saie·Tueadav thru Fri·
day , 9-6 . Rodney Village 11-3rd.

614-742-2617

a.m.·• p.m.

llfMt.

or Lean ~~a-ttn

Dalton logging Inc. Buyer of
standing timber and logs. AI ·
banv. Ohio. 814 -698 ·6284.

f 111 ploymcnl

6th Mute.

11

Help Wanted

GOVERNMENT JOBS .

$16,040 · 859,230 / yr , Now
hiring , Your area . 805 -687·
6000 E.. t . R · 10189 for current
Federal ii1f ,

Warm Inside· Aprit 4 , 5 , 6 . 218 f AVON · Sail A11on for Allerees
Call614-446-3368.
Third Ave. Good clothinG. gl111·
ware, dishes, utensils, drap•,
cu".tna. amall appliancet, U:· ASSEMBLERS wanled. Earn
cellent ua*' refrigerator (IC'I monav assembling Teddy Bears..
Free information. Write: Jo-El
maket") , a•cellent etac. atove.
EnterprisaJ, •.P .O . 8011 2203.
Kissimmee. Fl. 32742 -2203.
$ale at Centenary Townhou ...
April eith. Nic:. etothing. bedt·
pruda, Curtalna, gtauwara, GET PAID lor reed ing books!
f100 per 1itle. Write: PASE ·
toys. &amp; Mile. 9 -S.
33L, 161 5 . lincolnway, N.
'
Porch Sala-80 locust St.· Wed-¥ Aurora. II 60542 .
thru Sat . Reeliner, 1oys. an·
tiques , children• 6 maternity EARN AS MUCH AS f-300.00
WEEMY,_At1emblying producta
cloth". miac.
in your home. Sta" right away ,
Mo,-tng Sale· 2 l•ge bedroom No e11perience niiCl&amp;&amp;Jary. Sand
s.ultea, tlvlng room furnitu,.., Call self addra•sed, ltemped envelope lo: HOMECAAFTS , P 0 .'
814 -246·9HO or 388-9604 .
Box 7802 , Huntington, WV ,
Moving Sal a· 1 mile out 8ui11Yilla 26778.
Rd .• Thurs. 6 Fri. . 3pc. bedroom
tolt•. Chill ol draw...-.. r.trigar• Alcohol Drug Counoetor--Bache·
ator, bed. gas cook nove, tor'1 degree, CAC, CDC pte·
swNper, dehumldltler. Mlac lerrad. Job Search, P .0 , Box

Dependable Hearlnl Aid Sales &amp; Servic~
C!l Hearin1 Evaluations For All Ages

413, Gellipoli•. Ohio 45631 By

yard at. Items.

.......Pom4irov ·········
Middleport

KOCH, M.S.

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hats, Pomeroy,

Want to buy : Used lurniture and
antiqull , Will buy entire houaa·
hold 1urnishing. Marlin Wede·
meyer. 614-245 -6162 .

Wanted to Buy, U1ed Mobile
Homas . C1ll &amp;14 -446 -0175. '

Janet Willlama .

1 1· ~.tin

•AIR CONDITIONERS

Complete households of turni ·
ture &amp; antique•. Also wood &amp;
coal heatera. Swain's Furnitu re
&amp; Auction, Third &amp; Oli11e.

Found: Small brown &amp;nd tal1
dog . Wire WP!J hair. Mala. Oliver
St. Middleport. 614-992·7020 .

101 Mabehtna Dr.· Mon. 1!.
Tues .. Antique sewing meehlne,
diahw~ther , clothing, &amp; etc.

and guner wort.
- Concrlle work
- Plumbing and •taotrlcal

•FURNACES

2282 .

SC!VICCS

WANT ro lUI WRICIID OR
JUNI CARS OR TIUCIS
-fill ESTIMATESFor ony of these 1tnitt1 call

Licensed Clinical Audiol011ist
:1: (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
z 417 Second Awnue, Box 1213 ·
- Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

TOP CASH paid lor '83 model
end nJIW&amp;r uted · cars. Smith
Buick-Po ntiac , 1•91 1 Ea11ern
Ave.• Gellipolla. Call 614-446 -

&amp; Vicinity

~ Roofing

!

Bill Gena John JOn
(!14-446-3872

Wanted Standing timber . Large
or 5mallecreaga. Cell614· 612 ·
7348 or 682-1216.

······ Gallijiolrs··········

•Dour
B•ckhoe Wortr:
•Will Do Hauling With
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard Butineaa

915-414T

COOLING

We pay cash for lata model clean
uaed cars.
Jjm Mink Chev.-Oidslne.

LOST: Set of k~va el 127 St1ta
St. Call 614 -446 -741 1 .

7

OEIIRAL CDIITUOOIS

HEATING &amp;

tion sales. 304-773-5785.

Junk C&amp;rs with or without
motora. Call l.llrrv Llvety -614 ·
388 -.9303.

a.

z- · LISA
- M.

Rlcll Purson AuctioniHtf'. li·'
eensed Ohio and Walt Virginia.;
EJtete. antique. .farm, liquida·

LOST: Famate Engliah Set1erWt)ite, liver sp,ou . Orangecollor.
Ebenezer Rd . Cell 614-2455633.

evenings .

"At Reasonabla Prices"

Phone Day ar hnln11

INSULATION
.. -

Lost and Found

FOUND: Clipper Mill area· red
Doberman , young male ,
cropped ears 6 tail . Gall 614 446 - 3733-davs, 446 - 9739

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

letwttn 9

Auctioneer Col. Oacar E. Cliek
304·896-3430 . Uc. N.o. 764·
88.

614-446 -31 5S .

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
98S-3561

CHESTER. OHIO
•HOME BUILOtNO
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOfiNG
REMODELING &amp;
REPAIRS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS &amp;
BACK HOE WORK

J&amp;L

Wedemeyer's Auction S'arvice·
available at your con11enienee
end locetiont. Mar lin Wade·
meyer Auclioneer - 614· 245·'
5152 .

Giveaway

4 .

MAICUM
CONTIACTING

R.t'..-.neft

Public Sale
&amp; AUction

April 8, ,7:00 p.m 1
Hartford Communi'IY Centet .
Big truckload ot new merchen·
diae. Something tor averyoi1a.
304-372-3766 .

TRIPLE P
EXCAVAnNG

1614) ''''·""

8

Auction

l-2-88-1 mo.

and Cable Bills Here
IUSINISS PHON!
16141 992-6550
RESiDINCI PHON!

CONSTRUCTION

Hi:86·fc

,.,

Howard L. Writesol

Pay Your Phone

BELL

Pomeroy, Ohio

,.'

New Gijl.'i!
3·1· '88-1 mo.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

992-6215 or 992-7314

.

Register for FREE
Bird Bolh - No
Purchase Necessary
Com(' In - Lot s of

We Carry Fishing Supplies

V. C. YOUNG Ill
SOUTHERN HILLS R. E., INC.
JUDY DoWitt, IROIER
MEIGS COUNTY PROPERnES CALL:
CHERYL LEMLEY, SALES AGENT
·3171

NEW STORE-NEW STOCK
lOW PRICES

168 North Second
lt'Oddleporl, Ohio 4 57 60

on All Makes
Hootor MC.~D.!•!~Y!••

!Free Estlmtt"l

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687

JO'S GIFT SHOP
'For Spring and Summer
SYRACUSE, OHIO

IAGIES Clt.I-PIMIIOI, OH.
THURS.: 7 PM-E8 6:45

IACINE, OHIO

HEREFORD CAnLE SALE

NO SUNDAY CAttS
3·11-tfn

BINGO

~ervice

Wo

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949·2860

Gutters

(614) 992-!345

RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

New Homes Built
" Free EStimates"

TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO
17 Vrs. Experience

Ph. (6141 143-5486
QUALITJ PIINT SHOP

1411-LI

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

NEW- REPAIR

Long lotto.., OH. 45743

3·7·'11-1 mo.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
·•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

41926 ST. RT. 7
CERTIFIED MECHANIC

·IACINI OHIO

MASTERCARD- VISA- GOLDEN BUCKEYE

Rt. 124, PomHoy Ohio

3·21-'87-1 mo.

RACINE DEPARTMENT STORE
949·1100

Roger Hysell
Garage

NURSES AIDES ,
ORDERLIES , LPN'1

REPAIR

SALE PIICED....... DEVON &amp; NIKKI SUITS
STOlE HOUISI Mo11. lhru Fri. 9 &amp;m.·S p.m.: Sat. 9 a.m.-1 p.m.
"OUR PRICE- MOST REASONABLE"

v Ill'\

fllldlll.idl

H,,., ·
895-letart
11137'-BuffMo

ten 1.. ..

·11-Auto Par1• a Acc.10rial
77- Auto Atp-'r
'
71 - C..-nplng E.,lp.,..ttt
'B- C..-np.-. • Motor HorMI

S11

882- Naw

Ml-lhctn•
742-Rutl•d
117--CoofyMie

wgrll

SHELL TYPE SWEATERS REG. 115.91 ........ NOW $1 091

11-HIIIpW..-..:1

4118-l.eon

241-Latart hila

Moto~

71-IMD I

12-rila.tatld Wtmed
1l-ln"--ranolt
14-aum •• Tra~nn 111
11-lc:lwoota &amp; lniiNction
11..-·A..t'o, TV. CB RIIP-'r
17.- Miec.ll.niiDUI
11-W.mld To Oo

Ma10n Co., WV
Arw Code 304

· 182-MiddMport

n-v-••wo·,

74- MotofC\I'dM

Classified pages cover the
following telephone exchanges .. ,

Jackson Co. Unstock Morbt
When you need us, we'll be
there ... with prompt. con·
cemed insurance service . We
always try to be friends you
can depend on. Call us today.

71 - Awto• tiM ....
n-Tnu:b tl:lr S•le

,)l'IV.Il~,

P. E. MILLER
&amp; ASSOCIATES

63·

cLEDGE. l(J
pouCi·
HOLDE.RS

11id11VIlll'111

Contact Karen Haines

'

oUR

fil'ltl.il\

I

Full or Part time position for technolo·
gists in the X-Ray Dept. Excellent
working condition and benefits. Salary
commensurate with experience.

1

program slated ·for drug
abuse education in schools

t1 -1..e • fertRiz.,

X-RAY TECHNICIAN

certainly," said Johnson. "We
have a mixed reaction to the
ruling. We are disappointed with
the outcome."
PeacoCk strnts In the suburbs :
EAST HAVEN, Conn. {UPI)-A
suburb'an netghtlorhood has
adopted "Petey the Peacoc~ . " a
brash but handsome bird that
honks like a trumpet and ad· •
mires itself In the chrome of a
resident's Mercedes .
The exotic, multicolonid bird
fled a peacock breeder about six
months ago and wandered into
the backyards of Cortina Road.
The breeder does not want the
bird back, so neighbors feed
Petey cat food, table scraps and
corn, and let It poke around in
their garages and sip from their
swimming pools.
"He struts around like he's the
neighborhood mascot," says
Joanne Perna I, who leaves tomatoes In her yard for Petey. "I just
love him. He's magnificent." "
Petey has a black crown, a
royal blue neck and a tall that
spreads Into a 6-:foot green fan
with blue bull's-eyes.
·"People come walking by the
house with their baby strollers
and stop and watch In amazement when they see the · pea·
cock," said Patricia Travaglino,
who named Petey and feeds him 1
a diet recommended by their '
veterinarian.
Petey spent the winter outdoors no worse for the wear,
peeping into windows, perching
on split-rail fences and palling
around with two stray cats. The
Travagllnos have ~gun to shop
for a female peacock companion.
Each night at dusk, Petey flies
up to a tree to roost , said
Travaglino's husband, Joseph.
"When he Illes down In the
morning he sounds like a '147
(jetliner) coming down because '
he bangs Into the trees and all," •
he . said. "They (peacocks) are ;
not very agile birds ."
~

•

13 -IJII•toc*

U-Htr. Or•tn

• - Lob•AcrMI•
31-RMI btate Wanted

Rat.. are to• oonsecutiwe run•. brokMa updeyt wi!lbe dlarged
tor Mch day •• MP•ate *'' ·

1111 ~

I '.JI

t1 -f1tm EquiprNn1
-W1ntad to Buy

J4-Billln•a BYMd ....

1-Loet entl FouM
7 - Y•d let• (paklln .,,1"011
I - Public .... • Auct~Don
9- WMted to luy

t21 .00
MO.OO

l

a

33-Farm. for s•a

5-H~Ada

fHi .OO

d,,qJIII

Public Notice

"SUPER SPRING SA~IN8S"

311 nllll

10 DAYI
1 MONTH

t\
· 31 -Hom• fo.- I ala
32-Moblla Homea tor Sal•

3-Announoarnents
4-0N..-n

f10 .00

I .1111

Th~~tka

2 - ln Memory

n .oo

f&amp;.OO
•B .OO
,,3 .00
U1 .00
fl51 .00

Quirks in the news

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

f4.00
f&amp; .OO
••.00

COPY DEADLIIIIE DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
MONDAY PAPER
- 11 :00 A .M . SATURDAY
TUESDAY PAPER
, - 2:00P .M. MONDAY
WEDNESDAY PAPER
- 2:00P .M . TUESDAY
- 2:00P .M . WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER
- 2:00P .M . THURSDAY
SUNDAY PAPER
- 2:00.P.M . FRIOAY

·

1- C..- ot

0· 15 WORDS 15-2&amp; WORDS 26· 36 WORDS

1 OAYS
3DAYS
8 :JAYS

il&gt;·.d I ',II&gt;·

f\ 11111111 IICI'IIH!Il !:,

RATES

•Adl aut1ide Meig s, Gellie or Mnan countiu muat be prepaid.
"Raeeiva $.50 diiCQum for ada paid in advance.
•
"Frae ad1 - Giveaway and Found •ds under 16 words will be
run 3 daya at no charge.
•Price of ad for all capitallauara is double price of ad cost.
"7 point line type only used .
• sentinel is not responaibla for errors after first day . (Check
for errori first day ad ruiis in paper). Call before 2 :00p.m.
day attar publication tO make correction.
"Adl that must be paid in ad11ance are:
Card ot Thankt
Happy Ads
In Memoriam
Yard Salfll

p.m. each evenjng was an·

---People in the news----------.
By WILLIAM C. TRO'l'l'
Unlted Press International
ON THE JAZZ SOAPBOX: Jazz trumpeter Wynton MarsaU.,
who took home the eighth Grammy of- his career last month and
is the first artist to wln jazz Grammys In flve consecutiveyears,
says the honor Is a musical affirmation. "It Is hopefl!)ly a signal
to others that both NARAS (National Academy of Recording
Arts and Sciences) and my peers have a sincere appreciation
for quality In American mu sic," he said, "and that It Is not
necessary to use gutter language~ex uallnnuendoes and other
trendy gimmicks designed to exploit the immaturity of
adolescents to be a successful recording artist." Marsalis
missed the Grammys because he was on a six-city tour of
·Australia with his quartet.
·
BmTH FOR BRITT: Actress Britt Ekland and her musician
husband, James· McDonnell, are the parents of a new sohJefferson McDonnell, who was born last Thursday night In a Los
Angeles hospital. Ekland, 45 and McDonnell, 27, who was known
as Slim Jim Phantom In his days with the Stray Cats, have been
married (our ·years now and her other children include a
.. daughter, VIctoria Selle!"', 23, with Peter Sellers, and a son,
Nlcholal Ekland Adler, 14, whose father Is record producer Lou
Adler. She's also had highly publlc!~ed flings with rock singer
il&lt;&gt;d Stewart and actors Ryan O'Neal and Warren Beatty.
SPEAKING OF PEACE: Peace activist Brian WIUson says
he gained a ''moral authority'' when a Navy munitions train cut
off his legs In Concord, Call!., last September. Willson, 47, who
now walks on artificial legs, told members of a Unitarian
Church group in Rochester, N.Y, that they are members of a
new era of social change. ''Stand up to these trains and together
we will build a new society,'' he said Sunday. Willson sat~ he just

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156 . .
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. Until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY
POLICIES

&amp; Vicinity
Frid•v. April 8 . OrMn house
b•hlnd Rutland Elemen1uy
School. From 9 ·1 Floor lsmp,
pl•ypeft, v .. cook atowe. dry.,,

.nell wa1h.,, bedepriNidl, cur·

..lne. pa baaement

fum~~~:•.

b•by cloth• and meny other

lttms . Inside. Rain or shiM.

•(
I

May 1, M/ FVi . E.O.E
Rel!abla parson lor lawn mow·
ing. Cell 614· 446-8135.
Needed Auiatant Director of
Nurtt-es for 100 bed snf/ lcf
f•cM itv . Qualifications · Rn, good
man1gement &amp; nur1ing •kills.
E11cellant Ill")' &amp; benefits Send
resume or apply at Scenic Hillt
Nursing Canter. AI . 2 Bo11 26Z.
Bidwell, Ohio 46814.
Babysltuu nHded lor small
.ehitd. Cell•tter 8 PM, 614· 245·
5!03 .

�I

Page- 8- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport,· Ohio

Wanted, l ,P . GIS true~ drlv~rfor
local deliveries and L.P. gas tank
installerS. Both rnus1 have expe·

rience. Pleasa aend reiume to:
Bo;w; Cla142 , c/ o Gajlipohs Dally

Tribune, 826 Third Ave . Gallipolis , Ohio 46631 .
Resident Meneger tor apart!T'eot
complex . Send resume to : Box
278; RJo Grinde, Ohio 46674.

Gover n ment Jobs . 516 ,040 ·
$59 .230 year , Now hiring , Your
atea 1 ·805·687-6000 Ext A·
· 9806 fo i- cuuent Federal list.
Job hunting ? Need a sklll7 We
tr am people tor jobs as Auto
Me chanics. Ca rpen.ters, Electri ci an s, Food Service WorkaJA,
Electronics Technicians, Indus , trial Maintenance Worke:rs.
Nursing Assistants and Order lies, Mac hianists. and Welders.
Reg istor now for classes begin ·
ning April 4th . Call Tri -County
Vo.cationol Adult Centur at 753 35 11 ext . 14, A v&amp;riety of
fun ding sources to pay for
tram mg are av&amp;ilable for those

el;g;blo.
He ir Stylists Across The Street
styhng sal on ls seek 1ng two
addition a l styli11t s who are look·
ing for m o re t h.'ln just anothftr

·

·

Drive,

~

23

Nelsonville.

AVON all erees; Sh irl ey Spear s.

304 -675· 1429.
Got paid for reading buo ksl
' S100,00 per title . Write! PASE517K. 161 S . Lincolnway, N.
Aurora, II 6054 2.

l ocal NortMern Virginia Ho me
MantJfacturer need s Lebor8rs
who are looking for st eady
employment. Guaranteed 40 hrs
pElf week plus ove rtime . Four .10
hour days aro avuila ble as well as
lodging. Calverton, Vtt . 1 -703788 -4222. 8 :00a m to4:30 pm.
WANTED respectable middle
age woman, who needs a home.
to live with elderly lady . Would
have own room and s mall wages
per week . Light housewo rk and
to take care of e lderly woman
w ho is not an invalid. Call
304-675 - 1 578 if interestttd for
more info rm ation. Do not call if
• vou do not need a ho me.
L.P.N. Pl easant VaHey Nursing
Care Cen te r seeking licensed
P.N.s for part time emplovment.
medical and d ental ins urance
ava ilable. If interested call Kathy
Thornropn, Direcmr of Nursing,
(304 )675 -5236. EOP EE.
Pleasanta Valley Nursing Care
Center is in terviewing Registered Nurses for immediate
employ ment. Salari&amp;s begi n at
$9.6, per ·hou r, call Kat hv
Thornton, Dire,.~o r of Nursing at
304 -675 -5236 it you a re inter·
ested. _P leasant Valley Hospital is
an Equal Opportu nity Employer
and Affirmativ e Action
Employer.
Ha ir stylist neuded, apply at
Body Concep rs. 514 Main St ..
Pt. Pit. 304-675-5246 .

12

Situations
Wanted

Elim Hom e, 209 S . Fourth,
Middleport , Ohio, Room and
board for senior citizens. Special
c are In priv8te hom e. 614- 992·

6873.

All types of maso nry . Brick.
btock, stone and concrete. Free
estimattts . Call304-773· 9660.

13

Insurance

Ca ll us for you r mobile homo
in suran c e : Miller InsuranCe,
3 04 · 882 -2 145 . Al so : auto ,
homo, lifo, health .

15

Schools
Instruction

Professional
Services

Piano &amp; Organ lesson s. Call
Marv l uCas-61 4-446·9787 or
446 -4426.
Piano Tuning and repair .
Disoou nt for teachers
Lane Daniels. 614 -742 -2951
Quality 1ervice since 1965 .

18 Wanted to Do
J im '!! Odd Jobs
S undecks, 5iding, pai nting , roof·
1ng. c &amp;rpantftt work. trailer repair. Ca11614· 379· 2416 .
Troo work wa ntod: Pruning,
to pping, re,ovals . Free fUUi mates . Call 6 14-446· 1832 or
304· 676 -4853.
Cleaning-House &amp; oHices. References. Call 614 -446 -8788 or
246-6363.
Will do babysitting in my ho me .
Have reterencas . Call 614 -367-

7671 .

Will mow lawns. Reasonable
rates. Call after 4 :30 614 -992-

•

5066.

~1

Homes for Sale

'Tuppers Plain•· 3 BR .. eat -in
kitchen. large living room. full
basement . gerage, all etect ric ,
ce ntral air . Call after 5 PM -614·
446· 7496.

2 bedroom . 2 baths. 2 car
garage. level lot on Rt . 33.
Swimming pool, uteli1e. close
to Meigs High. Cell 614 -992 -

3264.

Pertially burnt houae on St. Rt .
33 . New aerator septic I'(Stlfn .
Pries negotiable. Call 614·992·
24 73 or 614 -992-6031 .
For sale: Bi· Level. thr&amp;e bedroom home , family - room, one
car garage. situated on 1 acre
m· 1, 1lz mi. from Rutland . Call
Hobstetter Realty , 614 -742-

3092.

Four bedrooms, 2 baths, Ned
S am Addition , central air cond,
basement. garage , fireplace ,
80 's. 304 -675 -6999.

21

Business
Opportunity
I NOTICE I

THE OHIO VAllEY PUBLISH ING CO . racommends that you
do buslne.. with people you
know. and NOT to sand money
through the melt until you have
inwastigated ttl a offering.

7 ¥! acres - #279. well &amp; se ptic,
pond, some woods, mobile
h9me hook-up . $16000. Call
614· 444-7315 or 246-9475.
Ashton , large building lots,
mobile homes pMmitted. public
water, also river . lots. Clyde
Bowen, Jr . 304·676 -2336 .

36

Real Estate
Wanted

Wanted to tease, riewer 3 BR
home with 2 plus acres . Write: 1
A•pen Place. Huntington, WVa ,

Modern ratan bllse, round glan
top ,table. 8100.00. 304· 875 ·

1984 Baja, red metal flake.
181/z', open bow. V-6 engine:
turbo prop., custo m built trailer.
tarp cover. l4Jw hours , ski
equipment. 89,600. all 614 446- 2129 or 446 -3146 .

Mattre11 and boM springs 1811,
twin 820.00 full 826.00. 40"
play pen $10.00 . . 304-6754 589 .

1978 Landen 12 ft. alum . V
bottom boat. Swivel seilu. 6
HP .. Sears motor. Trailer . All
eJtcel. cond. Call614-446-6167
after 6, PM .
·

53

Owens C111bin Cruiser. $2600 or
best offer . Gall6,4 -286-5648 .

Rentals

304-882-2566.

54 Misc. Merchandise

on8 bedroom · furn ished apt,
co nvenient l9ca tion, 304-675-

41

Homes for Rent

Nicely furnished small house.
Adults only. Ref. required . No
pet•. Call614-446-0338.

Nice 6 room house in town . No
pats. Have r&amp;f. &amp; dt~p . S275 . Call
after8;30 PM. 614 -446 -1734.
2 BR . unfurniahud, gan!lga. 1
mile -21 B. 1200 rent. S1 60 dep .
Ref . Married couples. One child.
Call 614-446·9686. ·
f4 acrea , batn. pond , mile out, 2
bedrooms, central air, lease or
sell, 1460.00. 304-675-6999 .
Small 2 room house , utilities
paid. furnish~d. / 166 . 00 week.
304·675 -3100 or 676 -5609 .

6883.

Mobile Home• for Rent. Call

614-446-0627.

32 Mobile Homos
for Sale
1996 Nashua 14~t60, 2 Bed·
rooms. underpinned , central air.
porch, unfurnished . Park Ll'he.
Ca ll614 -446 -9316 Mornings.

1 2x80 2 BR ., washflr I dryer
hookup . In Evergreen . Children
acceptttd. Call 814-446-3897
or 246 -6223.

1 979

2 BR. mobile home-Kerr-3 Y:z
m iles from HMC. 1 8ft. apt. in
Rio Grenda . Call614-246 -91 70
or 388-5604.

1969 Globle MoAfaJ, 12x86 , 2
BR ., 12500. 1973 Cameron,
12•60, 2 BR ., $2600. Good
cond. Call 614 -444 -7315 or
1972 Hommet, 12~~:52 . 2 BR .
E11cel. cond. Call even. after

7-814-446 -4409.

large 7. bedroom with room
addition on 20 acres. Free gas.
Above Racine. $175 per month .
304-372-9336 .
2 bedroom mobile home half
mile out Jericho Road. call after
6 :00 pm. 304·676-6483.

43 Farms for Rent

1974 Cameron 12x66. Total
elect ric. 2 BR ., blocks. 13300.

Call 614-256 -8031.

1980 Fairmont Bayview .
14•70. large li\ling room w ith
fireplace. 1 1lz ~aths . 3 SR . Good
Co nd . Call614-448-4168.
1970 1 4x70 , 2 large BR . on 1
ac re . North of Porter. Rural
water. 814,000. Call614-388·

9719.

Cash lor your u•ed home. Now
buying pre 1980 12' s II 14'a.
Please call 800· 826-0752, aJtt.

316.

70 acres of pasture. Ph miles
wast of Alfred on south side of
C.R . 231 . Phon&amp; 1 -613 -885-

2060.

44

Apartment
for Rent

2 BR . epts. 6 clost~ts., kitchen·
appl. lurniahed. Washer-Dryer
hook-up , ww carpet, newly
pain ted. deck . Regency, Inc.
Apts . Call 304-676 -7738 or

676-6104.

14~~o70
S~;hultz.
All electric.
Wuher and dryer, refrigerator.
stove, drap•, porch. awning
InCluded . Excellent condition.
Call 614-992-6662 or 814992·33 48 .

1-------14x.66 with large addition .

Windsor trailer 3 bedroq ms, with
addition , 3 acres land , out
buildings, Galllpoli1 Ferry, 304·
676 -6930.
1986 Schultz. 14x60, all elactric, 2 bedrooms, 111c cond,
asking •10,500.00. 304 -876-

"'45 · Fiurno'shed 'Rooms

Hu ge 31 ' oval pool wilh daclc .
fence &amp; filter. Installation &amp;
financing available. 1 -800-3450946.

Roo ms for r&amp;nt-week or month .
Starting ~ $120 a mo . Gallia
Ho tel-614'!146 -9580 .

Big Dakota farm home. 3 BR ., 2
be. 81 6 ,995 &amp; up . Model• open.
Call 614-886 -731 1.

46 Space for Rent

2 - 6 HP tillers, 8126 each. 8 HP
Bowlin mower, $600. 6 HP
Wheelhorse mower , $376. Call
614-379-2745 .

RIVER LOTS
For Boating &amp; Camping -For Sate
o r Rent .. A-One Real Estate
Broker, 304-675-5104 .
COUNTRY MOBILE Hom o Park,
Route 33, North Clf Pom'erbv.
Rantel traile rs. Call 614 -992 7479.
Space for small bailers. AU
hook- ups. Cable. Also e fficiency
rooms, ai r and cable. Mas on,
W.Va. Call304-773-5651 .
Spacious mobile home Iota for
rent,J=a mily Pride Mobile Home
Parle, Gallipolis Ferry. W. Va .
304-675 -3073.
Trailer lots, Rt. 1 Locust Road,
back of K &amp; K Mobil e Homes.

47 Wanted to Rent

New completely furni s hed
1partmen1 s. mobile home in
cltv. Adult1 only. Parking. Call
61•· 446· 0338.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET
PRICES536
AT Jackson
JACKSON
ESTATES,
Pike from 1183 a mo, Walk to
•hop and movies . 6,4 -448·

2&amp;e6. E.O .H.

676-5017.

33

Farms for Sale

27 tcra farm • 1 2 acres rolling
land. the rett is wooded . Rural
water. blacktop road, septic tank
&amp; water hookup. Within 4 mi. of

Golllpollt. Coll614-441-210&amp;.

1981 Pontiac Grand Prix. low
milt~age , t~xc cond, 304· 875·

448-9777

~~~N, 7 ~~.~SE 8LDGS. 514·

OeluJte Sea King Inflatable boat.
Compound and recurve bowa.
Fishing gflar. Call 614 -448 -

Used paperback books. BuySail-Trade . Higley's Barbt~r
Shop, Upper At . 7, 614 -446 0002.

135 MF diesel. 690 hours with
MF Dyna Bounce mower, MF
raike. MF #1 2 baler, 16860.
Owner will finance. Call 814286·6622.
-

Firewood delivered. atacked.
635.00. Mason County, Galllpo·
lils. Ohio and other areas within
re&amp;son at our dlscreation , 304·

J.l . Case. 2 roll pull type corn
planter. Good condition. Call
614· 667·6418.

63

Livestock

SURPLUS DENIM. army , rental
clothing, Wild turkey nason
soon. camduflage green , black
wtlite clothing, NO checks.
Political advertlting imprinted
specialties. Sam Somerville, Rt .
21 junction Independence Road,
Eal'l Ravenswood, Fri. Sat , Sun,
noon -8 :00 pm. 304-273-6855.

51 Household Goods
SWAIN
AVCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St .. Gallipolis.
NEW· 6 pc . wood group· 8399.
living room suites· S1 99 -$699.
Bunk beds w1th bedding· S199.
Full size mattre111 &amp; foundaat lon
starting - 899 . Reclineu
•tatting- 899.
USED - Bed&amp;, dressers, bedroom
•uites , &amp;199·8299 . Desks,
wringer washer, a complete line
of u•ed furniture.
NEW- Wettern b4Jots- 830.
Workboots 818 &amp; up. (Steel &amp;
soft toe) . Call 614 -446· 3169 .

Prom gown . size 13 with hoop.
paraaol and gloves, 304· 773·

Horses for sale· Stand11rdbred
and Tannea1ee Walkera. Call
814·446-4766.

2 · Bwk. old lambs. Goodfor4· H

Mixed hay. Call614· 246·6457. j

Kenworth and DaKalbteed corn.
Scott Farm Gran Seeda. W L
variety Alfalf1. 304-875-1606.

Tra nsportat ion
71 Auto's For Sale
1983 Chevy. C11ation. Am radio,
auto . trent ., PS , PB, 19,000
miles. e1460. Can be Hen at the
Gallipolis Oaily Tribuna or for
more information call I 14-4412342 .
1986 Oldt. Calala Supreme.
One owner. Loaded. Mu1taell .
Make offer. C1ll 814-448-1079
,aftw I PM.
1978 Buk:k Regal . Good cond .
Call 614-448-0677.

8492.

57

Musical
Instruments

Dinniflg room table. 8 chaira. 2
pc lighted hutch , 30 4 · 876-

Wurftizarpiano. Goodcond. Call

7 32

198' Lynx. 1983
Both for aale ar
614· 258-, 270.
1987 Ford Eteort GT. I 1pd..
13000 mlles,alr,AM-FM -Cass.
etc. Very clean. Call 814-4480941. _.

zx,

1982: Datsun 280
2 +2. I
tpd. , T•top, naw p•nt. etc. Good
cond . •6700. Call 814·448~
7438.

13200- aCcept paniallrlde. C.ll
814-379·2182.
1984 Mustang hatchback.
41.000 mil• .. auto•• atr. PS.
PB, PW, AM·FM . Sh•p. '4300.
Calll14 -371-2112 .
1973 Ford Bronco. Rt11ored .

1883 Fard EIICOI't. Air,sun root
new tlr•.' EXOII. cond. •2100:
Call 814-241-1111 aft• I PM.
1880 FiM 8tratone oonvM'tlble

Xl·l. I opd,low mil-. hcol.
....... Colll14-"ll·7172,44e·
1880 ohor I PM.
1881 Chw.ne. Auto. Runs •
looka 9ood. 1400. Call 114-

441-1112.

Red Hot bllraiMI Drug dell. .
boeta. 1)11Ma r.,o'd . lur·
pl... Your • •· luy. . . . . . .
CIJ'I,

2 BR . apt. in Crown City. 11150 .

Coll614-2&amp;1-149&amp;.

1-8011-ee7-6000. ht. 8·110&amp;.

Furnlahed effloiencv apartment.
Carpe1 'throughout. Private •
quiat. Single wOfklng penon
Dnty, Call 114·448-4807 or

1171 Chrvtl• I.e ..,on. 4 door.
New Pllln'l 1ncl drel. 11700.

L o -. Aloo Hondo Moped,

..0. Colll14·112-721 •.

446·2e02.

1980 Ch8V'1 Cu ... om, Deluxe
pickup wi1h topper . Call 614441 -7496 aft8f 6pm.
•

~ lnolde the PGA T.,.

(J) II ill ABC Newo !;I
(fl Ntgh~y au11na11 Aapoot

~ Ill tDl CBS Newo
&lt;Ill Body Electltc
IIJ)Inolde Politico '81
® WKAP In Cincinnati
81 (l) Too CloH lor Comloot
8:35 Cil Carol Burnett
7:00 rn Remington SIMie
D rn PM Magazine
(!) Spot11Canter (L)
(J) Entertainment Tonight
Dill People'• Couot
Ill &lt;Ill MacNeil/ Lttwtr
NewoHour (1 :00)

IIJl Moneyllne
Ill tDl 81 Wheat of Footune

i

1984 Ford F360 dual wht~el pick
up, 4 apeed , 37,000 actual
milaa , 2 tone blue, 304-8768799 after 7 :00 pm.
1971 Chev El Camino 3110.
auto, air original. 81 ,296.00,

304-8e2-330e.

FRANK AND ERNEST

LAUNDROMAT

.

/ , oN~ UND~.SHORTS', TWo
T·$1-ii~T..&gt;.

,,

eve~'(THII\J&amp;

, Home
lmprQvements

.

:·\

'

SWEEPER and sewing machine
rt~pair. pal1s, and supplies. Pick
up and delivery, Davis Vacuum
Clt~aner , ont~ ha lf mile up
G&amp;Of911 Creek Rd. Call 614 446·0294.

~

Painting, roofing, remodel ing,
tree trimming. building• t o rn
down. general hauling. Cllll

1977 Honda 15150 four K . 1200
mM11. GrHI shape. Call 814·
441·0948.
1884 • V86Sabre1 100 . 11 .000
mil11. Exct~l. cond. 12000. Call
814·241-9487.

Trenching -reasonable ratea- we·
tar. electric, gas. drainage lilies.
Pipe &amp; fixtures at diiCClunt. Call

Yf.AI-L

614·446-8508.

Siding, oveJhang gutters, 1torm
d00111 &amp; windowa . Free estimate. Ca11614-446-6070.

&amp; stump removal, n&amp;w
lawns - mulch . topa4Jil. Azelias.
shrubs, ahede trees, mowing .
Don's lal'\dscapes -614 -446 9646.

MORl'Y MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
1

I'OU RE INVlTED IV MY
Bl R11-l ~y F.Jo!.RTY NE:&gt;&lt;-T
$ATWR04Y.

RON'S Televlaion St~rvlce .
House cella on RCA , Quar:ar.
GE. Specialing in Zenith. Cell
304-576-2398 or 614-446 -

~

I

f•v.J , ,. •I• I

Starks Tree end Lawn Service.
lawn care, landscaping, ltump
removal , 304- 678 -2842 or

..

676-2903.

BARNEY

..

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

YO'RE NOT INVITED
TO MY BIRTHDAY
PARTY·· ~0, THAR"

•'
CARTER'S PLUMBING

I RECKON AUNT
lOWEEZY CA!il GIT
HER MONEY BACK

SHE WON'T NEED TO· ·
I'Ll GIVE HER
YORE INVITE

FER TH' PRESENT

Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolia. Ohio
.
Phone 614· 446 · 3888 4Jr· 614·

Electrical

•

Residential or ~mmercial wir·
lng. New .18f.._ or repai rs.
Licensed electrician . ES1imata
free . Ridenbur Electrical, 304·

Col 114-388-H44.

1181 Kllwaukl Ka440 . Very
good condition. 1 1.000 mil".
•aoo 6 14-992-5919

A &amp;. R Water Service. Home
clsten, wells, pOClla filled . Form•ty James Bovs Watflr~ . Csll

180

Ma~elm , ~

8000 mil•. e111c cond. •1915.00.

304-182-3308.

1113 Honda VII M81na. will
Nil peru or •sembled. 304-

171-18114.
'83 Hondo Y48

Mogno. 84
change my mlrld, ·no frN ridft
W/0 f111h of cash. 304· 875·

3133.
1111 Hondo,.,._. 70. Nko

Wi-W'~
~In\

AU.

AU. -mE

General Hauling ., ~
•\

Pipe Buggy • trail•. 11000 .
Dh1 bMc• Honcle 480 R, tBOO.

Y8mahe

THE GRIZZWELLS®

876-1766.

85

.

£'001($,

,_......,,-. I mJUt*IT I'P

1 ~~ TO DO
·ASCIENCE

~TA~

5TAI2.S...

OOHA?

, accuoes government of
allying with Luca. Q
Cil Dill thlrtyiOtMthlng
Evening out for MIChael and
Hope degenerates ln1o a
shou11ng mate~~
(fl Volcoo l VI
Exo11c
documentary footage
heightens the magical
realism of Bishop. (NR) Q
~ • a Cag•y • Llcoy
Harvey, Jr. Is raportad
missing In acuon ; Chris '
anacker Is triad. Q
&lt;Ill New1
IIJ) Evening Nawo
(l) hnny Hll
10:30 rn Celobrlty Chill
(I) High Donee 1981
Team Championships from
Orlando. FL (R)
&lt;Ill Tony arown'o Joumot
®Newo
e (l) Hopn't Horooo
10:35 Cil NBA llllokiiHII
11:00 rn Remington st.ate
ern Cil D(J) ~ •I!Jl
!Ill Nowo
(!I Sign Oil

&lt;Ill Men-Mode Famine
IIJl Mone,tlne
• (l) Love Con-Uon
, :30 • rn 01 Tonlghl BMw

ol

~---,..:.1
G_R,.--:OC,:.I_R,.--:-11
. I I' I . ..'-,:

1
•

NN0 l Y

•

I I I' I'

It just doesn't seem right to go
over the river and 1hrough the
r----:-------, woods 10 grandma 's - .

I

ANCHUH

1---rl,;_;,.y.l-'-rl,;_;,:;,15,. ;.:.TI----1 O
.

.

.

.

_

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

8

••

Comp leoe rhe

c~uc k l e

quoled

by ld l.ng in rhe rn 1ssing words
you develop from s1ep No. 3 be lo w.

PRINT NUMBERED . LETTER S IN
THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET IINSWER

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
Morgue - Yeast - Flute - Exhale - LUXURY
"Isn't this a mixed up world?" commented tne old timer.
"Now a car is a necessity. and' walking is a LUXURY ."

())
Nlal•tll•• Q
eill,... 0u;

Delicate inferences abound in·
bridge. Although South !Jiissed his opportunity in the bidding, he and his
partner at least took all their tricks on
defense to exact the maximum penal·
ty against five spades doubled.
South suspected that his side might
have slam when partner removed the
double of lour spades to five hearts.
Then West gave North-South another
chance. When North made a forcing
pass to five spades, South really
should have bid six. North must have a
singleton spade, massive heart sup·port and one of the minor aces to invite slam by passing. Ah well, by now
we all know lost opportunity is part
an4 pam!! of the game.
East won the openiog diamond lead
in Ills hand as North played the three
to Indicate that he held the club ace
(suit preference). When East played a
·spade toward dummy's king, South
took the ace immediately and led the
king of clubs. Why not a low club, since
he knew that North held the club ace'
Because South wanted some help in
worklog out who had the club jack.
North overtook the club king with his
ace and Jed back the diamond four, his
lowest, for South to rufl. South correctly reasoned that North .. would not
waste his ace on the club king unless
.he also held the jack. So, after ruffing,

f-lo-88

• 874 3

+AJ
WF.~;T

EAST

+K 9 8 7
...
+ AKJ6

"

"J 10 95

+108782

+954

+Q10 543
• Q

SOUTH
+AJ2
.K98642
• •2
+KQ3

I.

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
Eut

North

West

Db!.

Redbl. 4.

Pass

5"
Pass
Pass

s+

Pass

South
Dbl.

Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

DbI.

Opening lead: +2

South underled his queen to North's
jack. South got another diamond ruff
and cashed his club queen to set the
contract lour tricks. It wasn't as good
as bidding the slam, but certainly better than lettiog the opponents escape/
lor down ouly three.
~

d&amp;tUtM"eaf
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
l-and
image
5 Epic tale
9 Apollo's
mother
10 "The
Avengers"

39Tangy
40 Destitute
41 "Educating

"
(1983 film)

421rish

river

43 Soviet sea
DOWN
hero
1 Acclivity
11 Fonnerly
2 Code or
12 Gateway
colony
14 Cry of
3
Joke-shop
13 Epeeist's
disbelief
move
item
.111 Sallow
4 Ballerina's 115 Gained
18 Luau
mainstay 21 Devour
baking pit
15
Director,
22 Rested
17 Yale name
18"-to
Oliver- 23 Plowed
6 Chalice ·
field
Billy Joe"
24 Role for
veil
19 Actress
Penny
Fabray,
7Irk (sl.)
8 Unyielding
Marshall
to some
10 Hammett's 27 Borgnine
20 English
sleuth

river
22 "Pagan

28 Sailor's
assent
30 Angular

script
32 Main
artery

33 Flower
part
38 Bard's
adverb
39 Song

syllable

film

Love-"
23 Water

plant
25 Before
(Lfat.)

28 Enthralled
27 Consort
29Timorese

coin
30 Bob's
comedic

partner
31 Weaken
34 Daybreak

moisture
351t
needs

refining
36Fanning
need
37 Fervid

.

.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES-Here's bow lo work it:
'

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE

W F x ·A

FB

Night Mllto, Lou, Chrietlna

KPM

M V H M

e!llfl-

H WZ H 0 B

IIJI Nlwllllgllt

BC'

TCM

BVCSM

e111 'DIIInOIIIII' CIS Llll

'

Upholstery
'·

12:30 (J) Jeclc lenny

1,,t00 mllll. 304-1111·

• rn a ~.~~e Night w1111

Mowrt'I 'S Up~olat•lng serving
tri coun1y er. . 22 year1. The belt
In furniture upholsterih'g . Call
304 - 676 - 4164 for free
eatimetea.

Devld Lllllrman

())-Df~nMIIICIIe

MI ...

[
'

NORTH

. +6
"AQ 10753

.

and AIIChol wltnan 1
rbbbely It • IUPII11llrklt.

. ... . .

BRIDGE

()) lftalde the PGA Tour (R)
II]) Sign Oil

2919.

'

(R)
10:00 (J) Streight Talk
D (l) 81 Crime Story At
Senate hearings, ToreUo

!Ill Megnum P.l.
11Ji Sporll Tonight
.liZ CIS Nowa Spoclol
Election coverogo
1H1 Magnum, P.l. Way tho
Stalking
e!ll fall
12:00 (J) llumo and AMen

PEANUTS

Watterson ' • Water Hauling.
reasonable ratfll , immediate
2,000 gallon delivery , ciaterna,
pool,tt well. fit c. call 304-5 76-

.

I I I I I' I

.

(!) SportaCentar (L)
(J) Cheera

•

•46-3171 .

.

~----,.:0: :·. .c..;.A...:J:.,.::.£. .:;G;._::.G~

• ill Nlghtllnll Q

Paul Aupe, Jr. Water Service .
Pools, ciatt~rns, wells. Call614·

·.

WITH

MIC14AE\.. J, FOX...

R£Pt:&gt;12T ON

304·676·6370.

87

landing a prize asslgnmen1
lor her blnhday. Q
8:00 (J) 700 Club
D (l) Olin lha Hut of tha
Night Virgil narrowly escape•
death at tho hands of
Epson's henchmen. Q
(!) High School llllallltblll
1988 Indiana Cha!Jiplon&amp;hip
from Indianapolis, IN (T)
(I) Dill Moonllghtln~
Businessman who killed his
wile thinks she 's returned
from the dead. Q
Ill &lt;Ill Frontline lnvesligate
the Pentagon's poor record
of cleaning up its to~ic
waste.
~ ei!Jl Coming Of Age A
sports-starved Dick
campaigns lor tho privilege
ot cable television. Q
IIJl Llrry King Llvet
9:30 ~ e G2l Fronk't Place
Frank's eagerness to help
drives n1s employees crazy.

e

446 -4477

J' &amp;. J Water Sarv lcfl. Swimm ing
pools, c ist8fns, wetls. Ph. 61 4 2415·9286.

44111-2380.

3312.

&lt;JUST FOR THA~
I'LL ONLY WA5H
ONE FOOT.

I

Rotary or cable tool drilling .
Most wells completed same day .
Pump sales end service. 304·
B96-3802

Dillard Watar St~rvic~: Pools,
Ciltetnl, Wells . Delivery Any ·
time . Call 814-446 -7404 -No
Sunday calls.

NW,

/

BE 6t.JRE 10 WASH
BE:HIND YOLJI&lt; EARS AND
LJNDS&lt; 'rOLJR. ANEijERNAILS.

Fetty Tree Trimming. stump
removal. Call304-676-1331 .

1 878 Harley O.vidaon Sporta1111'. Exaal . cond. Electric ltan.
e.ooo ml•. ezooo. Call 61 4-

1181

IIII!Jl My Slow Sam
Sam gats a surprise after

..

&amp; Refrigeration
7452.

Q

i

•

614-367-0121 .

84
1978 Kawaukl 400. 6700
miiM. 1&amp;00. Call 114-446·

81 Jeopardy!

Tony strikes out with his
girl-catching techni~uo. bu1
John dOesn't. Q
OJ PrimiNIW11
81 (l) MOVIE: YenU (PG)
(2:14)
8:30 (J) Laat Frontier
(I) Dill The Wonder Yaaro
Kevin 1akes a s1and againsl
nis sister's nipple boyfriend.

ANO HEATING

1031 .

a

®Baoebel
81 (l) WKAP In Clnelnnati
7:35 CIJ Major League hoebatl
8:00 rn Crooobow
IJ (l) 81 Matlack Matlock
goes to Las Vegas to defend
Lt. Manning of murder
charges. (R)
(I) Dill Who'o tho Booo7

controversy surrounding the
nation's vaccine policy . I;J
~ Ill G2l Trial and Error

BASEMENT
•
j;
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guaran· _,.
tn . Local references furnished .
•
Free astimates . Call collect
'
1-614-237 -0488, day or ntght . ••
Ro.garsBe se m e n t w.terproofing .
.

6717.

19815 For F1 50, 4 wheel drive.
PS, Pl . A auto. fuet injection,
long b«&lt;. tT.,1&amp;0.00. 304~458-

Ill

temporarily confines Tony to
a wheelchair. (R) Q
Ill &lt;Ill Nova Exam1no 1he

,,
.

Tt1~EE .&gt;ocjc:S MISSING,

'

"I"HESE MY&gt; 1$
'.'WASH ANP 'WHC:RE-'?''

2454.

truck·-· 304-671·110e oi-

.. ..

/.
/

Sq_,o
(!) Track end Field National
Scnolutlc Championsnips
trom Now Haven, CT (T)
Dill Judge
·
~ Wheel of Footune Q
IIJ) Crooollre

A series of accldants

Dodge Charger 6 speed.
condition . 1978 Jeep
. Eiccellent conditon . New
top, ew tir•. Cell 814-892-

.

James Jacoby

7:05 Cil Andy Griffith
7:30 D rn (J) Hollywood

Services

Tutt~

.

Cheero

81 (l) M' A•s•H

1979 1 8 1f.! ft . t ravel trailer with
duel wheels. Fullv equipped .
Sleups 6. E11cel. cond. Call
614 -992 -5640.

81

,II." low lo lo•m louo s;mple wo•ds

~Newo

fli~

Wkle 8ft. topper. Celt 614·245·

6108.

IIII'I:OOpm.

'

FOR: SUCH

HIMF•AMl

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

R &amp; R Home Repair · e»ainting,
remodflling, roofing. ceramic
tile. &amp; plumbing . Free estimates.
Call 614-446-7746.

1117 Honda 4 whHIIII', I ft

15 rooms. 2 baths. Adultl only.
Firat Ave. Cill 814-448· 1079 .

I 'M (,01NC7TO

FALL

Parts for 1969 Chevell, back
bumper, 2 doors, PS , 12 boh
rear end, windows , hood , 304·
676 -3269 .

1982 Olds. Cutlata Ci8fe. Excel .
cond. 14300 or make offer. Call
61c1· 448-1996 .

PS. PB. AM·FM. crulae. loaded.

•1900. Col1114-446-23to.

2 lA .. 2 ba1h apt. All utllhlet
Included. 1350 a mo. Dep.
requlred . Call 614-446·4222
between 9 -15 .

1HINK

OJ ShowBiz Today
® Factool Ulto
Ell (l) Happy O.yo
8:05 Cil Allee
8:30 D (l) 81 NBC Nightly Newo ·

R:EA ••Y

~RANSMISSIONS ·

82

1875 Corvette. heel. cond. Air,
t-top. auto. trana.• low mu .....

Upltairs unfurnished apt. Car·
peted. utlitlet paid. No childran.
No p.ts. Call 814-441·1537.

379-2796.

1978 Ford F-160, 4x4. GOod
shape. can 114-248 -&amp;223 .

Low mH-. Loodod. . .too.
Colll14-441-2310.

114-446·1932.

14Jn,
65.000 acutuel mllea. Ell.. eond.
Ala:o, Oliver 1rKtor. Cell 6143,1;

negotiable. Call614-266-1796.

1983 Olda Cutlau. NeW cond.

Brooklide Apartments: Located
Bulaville Rd .· 1 BR .spacloua
apartment• whh modern kitchen
and washer -dryer hoo,kups, ca ble televllion available. Call

80 Chevy 4x.4 piekup.

1973 Dodge Maxi-Van. 360,

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

~ff

Coli 614-256 -6e11.

AT, PI, PS . Rear heater . •1000.

~:'::=·========:..L8:1:4:·4:4:6:·4:1:0:7:·=====J 2415-11100.
Excel. cond. t2800. Call 114SNAFU® by Bruce Bea!!ie

~~~~~~=-.::::__:::

1983 Skyl•k Umh:MI, auto., air,

Siamese Kittens . pure bred. Cal
evenings 814-949-2290

Oinnettes, btds , bedding.
dreasen , chests. couches .
c hairs, lamps, co ffee, end table1.
Every day Specials. 1;2 mile out
Jerricho. 304-676- 1460 .

1980 Detaun 8210 hatch back,
vtlly goqd cond, 6 speed.
t1.000.00. Small truck alumn
tapper, like nt~w 8200,00. 304·

Vans&amp; 4 W .O .

8890.

2 reg . 6 veer old white female
Eaklmo Spitz ftoga . Very gentle.
good with klda . Call 814 -441-

YOU

Used &amp; reb4ilt, all types guaranteed 30 days minimum. PricesS9.9 &amp; up. Rebuilt torques -as
low as 139. 350 conversion kit s
to fit S-10's, C· 10 's, metric &amp;
.;tV'erdrive. Hard pans for transn1i11ion &amp; transmission kits. Cell
1 -304 -4230 or 1 -614· 379 2220.

07,000.00. 814-448-1606.

1977 Ford Custom F 1 00 pickup
short bed. after 4 :00 pm,
304-876-6634.

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming . All breeda .. . All
style1. l4m1 Pet Food Dealer.
Julie Webb ..Ph . 614-448·0231 .

St. Bernard pups. First shou '&amp;
wormed . S260 t~ach . tell 1 ·
886·8928 after 1 PM, Proctorville, Ohio.

&lt;lll ~NQ

DO

7694.

1972 Ford-State body tNck . 6
cyl. motor, 3 1pd. tran• . t22&amp; .

Pets for Sal&amp;

AKC Cocker Spaniel pups.
Ready for Easter. Call61 4 -388 ·

~W.,~'=::~oLaot&lt;
Who: Mark of the

Olds .. Bu ick, Pontiac ." Chevy.
Chevy tru ck. Ford, Chrysler·
transmisaio ns (used) a ra in t&amp;rnally inspected &amp; Carry 3000 mi.
or 30 clay warranty (w hichever
occurs firstl . We buy junk
tran smi11io ns. Ca ll 614-446-

0966.
8UOGET

-

8:00rn Crozy Uku Fox
ern Cil D(J) ~eo

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

1979 Oatson, body good cond.
8360 .00 . phone 304- 675 -

1976 C6&amp; Alive Tandem dump,
16'12 ft. Benson bed. New 427
5 &amp;. 4 trena. Call

Oragonwynd Cattery Kennel .
CFA Himalayan. Persian and
Siamese kit1ans. N,w AKC
Chow puppies . Call 61 4 · 448·
3844 after 7PM ,

76

TUES., APRIL S •
EVENING

$400,00. Call 304·576-2467.

1979 Olds Cutlasa, whita, new
engine, just painted, $3,000 .00.
304-896-3823.

9 turkeya &amp; rabbits fo~ sale. CaU
614 -245-6117.

56

PICKENS
FU~ NITUR E

'76 Oids. low mile•. axe cond.
304•876-3834.

Pink and white &amp;atin prom dress.
size 3 , worn once, 846 .00.
304-875-6489 .

·concrete block• · all sizes· yard
or delivery . Mason send. Galllpo·
lis Block Co., 1 23 'h Pine St .,
Gallipolis. Ohio. Call 814-448·
2783.
•

1416 Euuwn Ave.
living room suites 8179 &amp; up,
Bedroom 1ultes $399 &amp; Up .

'84 Trans Am, loaded. 51.600
milea. ,7,995 .00 . 304·676 ·
2332 or 614-446-7389 .

Industrial Loader with log forlls.
2 ton International log trucM . Call
814-286·81574 after 7 PM.

Building Materia ls
Block, bric lc, sewer pipes, win·
dows, lintels, etc . Claude Winters, Rio Grande, 0 . Call 614245 -6121.

J &amp; S FURNITURE

7637.

Hay &amp; Grain

55 Building Supplies

Vallev Furniture
New and used furn iture and
applicances . Call 614 -446 7572. Hours9-5.

*2.500.00. '79 Ford F160.

4WD. 300 engine, PS, PB , 6
speed tranamiaslon. extra good
shape, t6,600.00. 304 ·675·

~7~2;;::::::;T;r:u:c~k:s::::;f:o:r:.S;;::a~le=

5:00pm.

0322.

PS , Pl. motor and bOdy good
thape;. standard shift. $400.00.
'79 Old&amp; RegencY 98, 4 dr., 4
1pd. trans.. 350 enigne. ell
power, 101.056 miles ,

8 wk. old Fair pigs. t60 each.
Call614-256-1610 .

sso.oo. 304-773·6028 altar

90 Days same as cath with
approved crt~dlt . 3 Miles out
Buleville Rd . Open 9am to 5pm
Mon . thru Sat. Ph . 61 4 · 446-

'78 Ford Pinto, 2300 anglrte.

773-6028.

Bridemaids dreu, ain 16-11
tl!lll, pink, idt~al prom drest,

Sofas and chairs priced from
8396 to 8996 . Tables t50 and
up tO 8125 . Hide·&amp;· beds $390
to 8695. Re~;linera t226 to
$375 . Lamps 828 to 1125.
Dinettes $109 and up to $495.
Wood teblfl w -6 chair• S286 to
t795 . Desk 8100 up to $375.
Hutches S400 and up . Bunk
beds complete w · mattre•aaa
8295 and up to 1395 . Baby beds
$11 0 . Manreues or box springs
lull or twin S69, firm $78, and
$88 . Queen sett 1225 , King
S360. 4 drawer cheh 869 . Gun
cabinets 6 gun. Baby mattreasaa
836 &amp; 845. Bed frames 820.
130 &amp; King lrama 150. Good
st~lection Clf bedroom suites.
metal cabinetl, ht~adboerds 830
and up to &amp;65.

6787.

64

From two at4Jry dumolition.
complete bathroom, kitchen,
etc. call 1 -614-388·9884.

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

2e64.

project. Excel. shape. Call 614·
367·0334.

7198.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Was hers, dryers, refrigerators.
ranges . Skaggs Appliances,
Upper River Rd . b8side Stone
Crest Motet 614 -446 -7398.

'76 Ford Mustang II, 302 auto,
8300.00 Of best offer. 304-676· 1

9198.

Moving. everything mull go.
kiln, ceramic s, molds, biaque.
paint and glaus , 304-676-

County Appliance. Inc. Good
used appliances and TV sets.
Open BAM to 6PM , Mon thru
Sat. 614·446· 1699, 827 3rd.
Aw. Gallipolis. OH .

ee2-3308.

1984 Cuth11 Supreme
Brougham , T- top , loadt~d ,

896-3446.

Merchandise

Furnished efflclencv·920 4th.
Two and three bedroom moblhJ · Ave. 1186 . Utllltlh paid. Call
114·446-4411 oh"' 7 PM.
ho,rnes. lA mile C)ut S1nd HID

1978 Windsor mobile home,
141170, 3 bedroom•. centr.. air,
dishwather, waodburner, underpennlng, ,, 2 ,0QO.OO. 304·

JIM 'S FARM EQUIPMENT -

660 International tractor
w / plows, 1ransport disc .•
83650 . 241· International round
baler. 82950. Owner will fi nance. Call814-286-8522.

5 or 6 room house or apartment
in city . Call614-446-2997 after
6 PM .

304-67&amp;-67e7.

1888 Chev Beretta GT , auto ,
2000 milea , 110, 996 .00. 1981
Chav Monte Carlo V-8 auto,
88,000 mllaa, e2,596 .00. 304·

UTILITY BLDG . SPL: 30'x40'x 9 '
eave· 16'x8' tliding door &amp; 3'
service door, *4987 ERECTED.

U Haul trucks and trailen for

1986 Rad Fiero GT. 6 cylengina,

CROSS S. SONS
U.S. 36 Weat, Jackson, Ohio.
614-288 -6461 .
Mastey Ferguson, New Hoiland,
Bullh Hog Salea &amp; Service. Over
40 used lt'actora to chooae from
&amp; complete line of new &amp; u•ed
equipmerft. Large1t aelectlon i11
S .E. Ohio.
·

10 HP D'lnamark riding lawn
mower. runs good. Call after
6pm, 614 -367-7800.

..s6_&amp;
_3_.________
1
Rolod. 304-175-3e34.

61 Farm Equipment

3 Pt. hitch , •eeder, fertilir:er
spreader with PTO shaft . $199
while they la•t .

9636.

•

12 ft . Sears sumi V boat and
accessories , troller m o t o r

&amp; Livt:sl ot:k

G .E. 18.000 BTU window air
conditioner . Us&amp;d 3 moa. Mov ·
ing. Call 614 -379-2791 '.

Mushroom compost org·a nic
fertil izer- 40 lb. bags. 82 each,
Call 81 4 -446-8080.

71 Auto's For Sale

by CLAY R, POLLAN_,;__ _ __

four Krombled words be-

304-676-2364 .

Fmn Sll lllll il:o

o

10

1987 boat, take over payments
nothing down . V-6, 19 ft. 176
hp, fiXttas. used 64 hours.

1-----------'T'-----------l

WORD

v•

€#Ja~(.()I&gt;..T'i&gt;

70 HP 15% ft. open bow bo8t &amp;
trailer . 12000. Call 6t4-38B·
9644 .

SWIMMING POOLS • 8988
ORDER NOW · PAY LATER

Furnis hed room-919 Second
Ave., Gallipolis. 81~6 a mo.
Utilities paid. Single male . Share
bath . Call 446 -4416 after 7 PM .

3 rooms &amp; bath. Furnished or
unfurnished . Call 614 -446 ·
4109 or 379-2740 .

14x70 with expando, 2 BR .. 11/z
baths. located on St . Rt. 7
bvlow EuroMa . Excel. cond. Call
614· 446-1211 or 256-1420 ..

Duke Crown Royal.
14 ~~: 70 . Total alectril;:, 2 BR .,
underp inning, CA, microwave.
porches. Partly furnished . Call
6 14· 266-9340 .

Callahan' s Us&amp;d Tire Shop. 0\18f
1 ,000 tires, sites 12.• 13, 1 4 , 1 6,
16. 16 .5 . B miles out AI . 218.
Call814-256-6251 .
'

rent, 304-675 -7421 .

In Eureka-2 nice &amp; clean 2 BR .
mobile homes . 8200 &amp; $225 par
mo . Dap required . No pen.
Adults only, Call 614-2 45 -

House for sale at Gallipolis Ferry,
3 acres or more, 304·676· 4868
or 675 -2412.

Antiques ·

ties paid. ref&amp;renceaand depoait,.

304-675·1078.

3 bad room house. · 2 baths,
central air, large lot. 32x.3 0 out
bldgs , down paym&amp;nt auume
8 '1~ loan . 304-675-1279.

_c_•l_l_61_4_·_7_•4_2·_2_o_s_7_.- - 1

Financial

Vacant lot on Pine St ., in
Gallipoli s . No Mobile Homes
permitted. 8 4 ,0 00. Call 614 694-3833 after 6 PM .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

vard work, phone 304-6753734.

Chr!stlan lady will do house
clea ning , call Mon and Wed
before 10 :00. anytime Tut~,
Thurs. Sat . 304· 882·3732 .

35 lots &amp; Acreage

6 room house on 1 acre plus, city
water, located Jim Hill Road,
$1 8,000.00 down payment reQuired owner will finance, 304676 -4182 or 676· 2666.

Will mow lawns and do o1her

Law n Mower Rpaira
Lawn St~rvice•
Sma ll Gardens Plowed
304-676 · 1 563

168 acu1 farm . with remodel ed
house, two barns. three other
buildings. free gas. Rutland
Twp. Call after 6 p.m. 614 -742·
2348.

26706 .

1611:29 living room. 2 batha. 3
bedrooma. new csrpet through·
out, partly furnished . Located on
lh acre with a hade tr.... gar ega.
outbuilding and large front y~rd.

All1ypes maao narv, brick, block,
stont and concrete, free estimates. 304-773-9560.

Farms for Sale

Real Estate

245-9476.

Top jobs· require tap skill s: Act
Now / So utheas tern Busineas
Co ll age-446 -4367 AICS Accredit ed Reg . 86 -11 -10558

2 bedroom furn il;hed apt, utili·

Tue.-~Aprii5,~1=9=88==~~==----------------------_:P:om::ero~y=·~M~idld~e~port~,JO~h=io~~~~~~----~::::::~:::~;::;~~~~~~~
f77Qrnro~;;;;;;Dii~~~F
'ttX&gt; IXJII'T J&gt;;r AAve '1l
Television
r:~~:ti~' &lt;0© 1\aUN\ _~£if'S ~ GAM I
C.,i&gt;ISWI IT,
- - - - - - ·Ed;red
AllD I'LL T~~ 'OJ cur
~ ewtng
0 Reo"ongo letters ol •~•

Boats and
Motors for Sale

26 ft. Baylir1er cruiser. 1986
wide bea""'. 1!111 elect ronic, ga lley,
can vas, etc. 360 V-8 eng ..
sleeps 6 . Very low hours.
t27,500. Call 304-727-6B90.

s,u.

~;;:::~~:;~~::::::r;,;::=;==:;:=;;::;:::l244
1.
-:;;::;::::;=::;::::;::::=;::;=::':
33

75

Buy or
Riv&amp;ri ne Andquel,
1 124 E. Ma in Street, PomaJoy.
Houn : M,T,W 10a.m. to &amp;p.m .,
Sunday 1 to 6p.m . 814-9922526.

Beech Street. Midd leport, Oh io,

''Toreadors really make me
mad!"

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

3781 .

APARTMENTS, mobile ho mes,
hous&amp;s. Pt, Pleasant arid Gallipo lis. 614 - 446 · 82~1 .

Oh io. 614 -753-1931 .
AVON - All a reas. Call Marilyn
Weaver 304-882-2645 .

Mallohan FtJrniture. Quality fur niture &amp; carpet at lowest po11i·
ble prices. Fi nancing available to
qi,lalified buyers . UpptH" River
Rd. Gall. 0 . 614 -446 -7444.

3 apt&amp; . for rent. Call 614 ·992 ·
3523 or 61 4 -992-6215 .

tal. Rad iology Oept . 1960 Mt.
Mary

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
room a,artmenrs at VHIBtJ8
Manor and Riveni da Apart·
menr• in Middleport. From
8~ 15 . includin~ utilities. Call
614 -992 -7787. EOH .

982-3711 . EOM .

Immediate openi ng. )( -ray Tech -

St .

Couch&amp;. chair, swivel roeller. 7
pc. dinette set, 4 pc. bfaakfast
set. 9x12 grey e&amp;rpet . Tappan
gas range. Half bed mattrns ,
Calll!lfter 6pm, 614 -268 -1810.

2 bedroom Apt. for rant . Carpeted. Nice setting. Laundry
facilit ies avai lable. Ca ll 61 4·

tQ}IY

r elief . C ontact Doct o r ' s H os pi-

In Rio Grande·Nice 2 SR .• 1225
a mo . Rehig . &amp;,wata rfurn iahed.
No pet,. Ca11614-446-8038 .

1 bedroom apanments . Furnished and unfurnish ed . &amp;200 .·
&amp;226 . p8f' month . Ut ilities t ur·
niaht~d . Ca11614-992-6724 .

job." Coli Terri at 614 -446 -95, 0 I
tor detail s.
1.
21
Business
Assemblers wllf\ted . ....Earn monby iiis'emblllfg· Teddy Bears.
Opportunity
Free infarmation . Write: Jo -El
Enterpr ises, P.O. Box 2203,
FIGU RE SHAPING TABLES
Kissimmee, Fl . 3'2 742 -2203.
Open your o wn figUre ulon with
the orginlal Stauffer Concept
Sell A\lo n
to friends and Figure Shaping Tables. Buy
relatives o r in a territory. Free Factory di rect . 31 2-816-8095.
sign up . 614 -992 -7180.
Ea rn Thousands· Stuffing enveFull or par111me help. Eli m Home
lopes. Rus h $1 .00 end self·
in Middlepon, Oh. Call Ei14 · addressed stamped env elop e to:
99 2 -6873.
Stoffers of America, P.O . Bmt
1817, Findlay, Ohio 46839 .
nologist. Dey shift with 3 - 11

51 Household Goods

LAFF·A·DAY

April5, 1988

(J) Love ConnacUon

•

M VAS A
M F

N

A

·F B
~

c s

G. C . P S M A B : 0
A N A S B C T
Y~ter4q'a CI'J)ttoqaote: WE CANNOT LIVE

PLEASANTLY wmfotiT IJVING WISELY AND NOBLY
AND RIQHTEOUSLY. - EPICURUS

�Paga

10-The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, AprilS. 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Local News briefs ..
Board appoints Gilmore to post
The resignation of Muriel Bradford as secretary of the Meigs
County Fair Board was accepted and Mary Gilmore was
appointed to the position at Monday night's meeting of the
board.
·
·
Mrs . Bradford, long-time secretary, will work with Mrs.
·
Gilmore through the 1988 fair .
Plans were made to add a super-stock truck class to the
Friday night agenda of the truck pull .
It was reported that the committee Is working on a plaque for
the cabin. The cherry plaque will have gold colored pla tes with
the names of those who have donated $100 or . more to the
restoration project. Donations are sttll being accepted and
should be sent to Box 227, Pomeroy.
_
Latest donors are Hollin and Nancy Radford, XI Gamma Mu
Chapter of Be til Sigma P hi Sororl t)l, Ferndora Schaefer Story,
and Jennings a11d Barbara Beegle.

EHS plans dinner April16
The Eastern High School senior class will have a dinner
theatre, on April 16 with the barbecue chicken dinner to be
served/ at 6: 30 p.m a nd the play, "Headtn' for a Weddln' " to
begin at 7:30 p.m . The play will be performed by a cast of 15
seniors. There will be a country store wlth handcrafted Items
and, to wrap up the night , a handcrafted solid oak corner
cabinet wlll be auctioned off. Proceeds wlll go to the senior
class.

Department issues reminder
All public swimming polls and spas must be licensed by the
local Board of Health having jurisdiction .over the county In
which the pool ts located to comply with the recently passed
Substitute Hou se BtU 68.
Keith Little, director of environmental health, Meigs County
Health Department, advises that licenses must be secured
before May 31. Applications for seasonal pools wlll be Issued In
Aptrll of each year , while applications for year-round pools wlll
be Issued In January of each year.
The Meigs County Board of Health has set the license fee for
both seasonal and year round pools and spas at $50, $20 of which
will be transmitted to the Ohio Department of Health.

Chorus being organized
Deadline for joining the AU-Meigs County Fair Chorus being
organized by Bruce Wolfe has been extended to May 1. All
students from Meigs County In grades 6through 12 are Invited to
join. Students do not have to be In the choirs of their respective
schools.

Postal exam set held April 11
The United States Postal Service wlli be conducting an
examination for the purpose of establishing a hiring list for the
positions of cler k-carrier.
.
Applications for the examination will be given out at local post
offices tn the Meigs County area begtnnlng.Aprlllland ending
Apr1115.
The United States Postal Service Is an equal opportunity
employer and e ncourages all interested persons to apply.

Most .of nation ·e!!joys spring .temperatures
By United Press International
Dry· and balmy weather preva iled . over riluch•of the nation
today with pre-dawn tempera·
tures tn the 70s from Florida to
Arizona, while thunderstorms
unleas hed hall !n.North Carolina.
The Nat)onal Weather Service
said temperatures were above
normal early today across much
of the cou.ntry. It was 72 In
P hoenix this morning and 76 In .
Key West, Fla.
Temperatures were in the 70s
over much of southern Texas,
south Florida and the' desert
Southwest.
The country's lowest temperatures were In the northwestern
United States, with late-night
readings mostly In the 20s and 30s
from the northern half of the
Plateau across the northern and
centra l Rockies into the western
Dakotas .
Showers and thunderstorms
s tretched a long .a cold front over
southeast Virginia and northeastern North Carolina, forecaster Pete Reynolds said. Ha ll
the size of half dollars was
reported early" to!ay at J arne~-

ville, N.C .. while hall as large as
golf balls hit Robersonville-, N.c.,
and Hertford County.
Rain showers were scattered
over Maine, Nebraska and South
Dakota.
In a six-hour period ending
ea rly tod ~y. rainfall 'tllas light. In
Millville, N.J., .30 of an Inch fell .
A quarter -Inch !ell at Brunswick,
Maine, and Richmond , Va.
Scattered light drizzle and
patchy dense fog ·extended
across portions of eastern upper
Michigan, northern lower Michl·
gan, western New York state,
northern New England, and the
mid-Texas coast . A dense fog
advisory was posted for the
Texas coastal bend.
Rain was forecast for western
Washington state tonight with
snow In the Washington Cascades and Olympics. A snow
advisory was Issued for those
mountain areas, wh&lt;)re 3 to 6
Inches was expected, Reynolds
sa id.
On Monday, sunny skies and
.warm weather spread over much
of the nation, wlth rain showers
sprlnklejl along the East Coast.

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT 4-6-88

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As oll0:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smllh ·
of Blunt EIUs &amp; Loewi
Am Electric Power ............. 26%
AT&amp;T ... ...... ................. ....... 26~
Ashland Oil ........................ 63%
Bob Evans ........... .-.. ........ .... 17'4
Charming Shop pes .. .. ......... .12%
City Holding Co ................... 33
Federal Mogul. ................... 38'4
Goodyear T&amp;R ............. ....... 63
Heck's Inc . .'.... .. .......: ........... 1%
Key Cent~rlon ........ .. ......... .40'-h
Lands ' End ...... ............... .... 20%
Limited Inc ....... .... ............. 19 '-h
Multimedia Inc . .. ............. .... 65
Hax Restaurants .................. 4'-h
Hobbins &amp; Myers ................. 10
Shoney's Inc ..... .......... .... .... 24%
Wendy's Inti . .. .................. .. . 6%
Worthington Ind .................. . 20

•

a!

D

1·::·.1sNow
RAIN
SHOWERS
Warm " C old
. . Sta lic
Occluded
FRONTS :

ft

ft

Map shows mirwnum temoeratu·es . At least 50°', al any shaded area tS forecast
to recerve prectp,;at:o'1 1'1d;cated
UPI

collection of more than 400,000
signatures by Mehcam opponents angered when he abolished
the state holiday honoring Martin Luther King Jr. In his first
week In office and then made the
series of statements that were
considered offensive to
minorities.
• Mecham sat stoically at the
defense table as senators cast
their votes, making him the !lrst
10vernor removed from office by
s

Impeachment since Oklahoma's
Henry Johnston In 1929 and the
seventh In U.S. history.
The Senate convicted Mecham
of trying to thwart an Investigation Into an alleged death threat
madEl, last November by Lee
Watkins, his ace campaign fundraiser and the stale prison
construction chief, against
Donna Carlson, Mecham's
former legislative liaison.

'

WEATHER MAP - Most of the nation will receive abundant
spring sunshine except across tbe Midwest and the PacUic
Northwest. Showers and thunderstorms WIU be scattered over
southern and central Florida and from the middle Mississippi
Valley across Wisconsin and parts of lower Michigan. Rain will be
likely over from eastern South Dakota across southern Minnesota
with scattered showers from eastern N.&gt;rth Dakota Into upper
Michigan. Ralri will also fall across western Washington state and
northwest Oregon.

-----Announcements---Meeting tonight
Pomeroy Eagles Ladles AuxilIary Z171 wlll meet tonight
(Tues(lay ) at 8 p.m . Members
are asked to bring a covered dish .
Planning session
Anyone who would like to help
with this year's Racine-Southern
Alumni Banquet Is asked to meet
Thursday, 7: 30 p.m ., at the
Southern High.

Dance Friday
Hound and square dancing will
take place Friday, 8 to 11 p.m., at
Lottery numbers
the Pomeroy Senior Citizens
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Mon- Center. Music by Larry Hubbard
day's winning Ohio Lottery and True Country. Admission
numbers: ·
$1.50 per person. Everyone welDally Number
come. Bring snacks.
414.
_ Trustees
PICK-4
6177.
S.~llsbury Township Trustees

are to meet Thursday, 7. p.m., at
the township building .

Rrlsoners.

"These guys are some some
ljad eggs," Wildman said. "I
have bad vibes about this. "
t Mollohan was convicted In
~nawba County In 1981 for
ltbOOting and beating a Brounllnd lfOCer to death. Stacy was
serving a life sentence for the
lp82 murder of a Huntington
poUceman, while Williams was
convicted In 198l In McDowell
COunty· of murder, robbey and
araon.
The Inmate population was 552
Monday. Prison officials have
not taken any precautionary
measures since the breakout and
tnlnates are not under lockdown,

Dodrill said.
Jerrie Clutter, secretary to
Warden Jerry Hedrick, said the
Inmates may have doffed their
prison garb and donned street
clothes before they escaped.
Clutter described Stacy as
6-feet tall, 190 pounds, with blue
eyes, brown hair and a ruddy
complexion. Wtulams Is 5-!oot-9,
183 pounds, with blue eyes, brown
hair and a !air complexion.
Mollohan Is 5-loot-10, 180 pounds,
with blue eyes, brown hair and a
ruddy complexion.
Dodrill said the Inmates broke
Into the prison's basement
through an elevator shaft, took a
pair of bolt-cutters out of a locked
storage room and then used a
hammer and chisel to break
through a brick wall Into the
former administration building.
•'They were all part.o! an Inside
maintenance crew. They knew
where the tools were. Those tools
were not supposed to be available
to them," he said.
Once Inside the admtnistra tion
building, the three broke out a
wlndow, climbed Into the prl·
son's outside yard and cut
through a chain-link fence.
"It took a little work. 1t took a
little time," he said.
I

The commissioner's report came despite
several alleged s!ghtlngs of the men on Tuesday,
all of which were deemed false alarms. Three
men answering the descriptions of the men were
seen at a restaurant In Cross Lanes , but state
pollee Sgt. G.L. Clark said It was probably not the
fugitives.
" I'm skeptiell,l that they would come In
together, three a !'a time, and eat," Clark said.
Four waitresses said the men answered the
descriptions of the Inmates, but no one saw how
the suspects left the restaurant or which direction
they went.
Dodr!ll said the elaborate escape plan Including a waiting car In a parking lot just
outside the prison grounds- points to the convicts
being long gone.

Veterans Memorial
Monday Admissions - Damon
Ferrell, Syracuse; Lyda · Har -;
bert, Pomeroy;· Elsie Wilson,
Albany; Virginia Phal!n, HacJne . .
Monday Discharges - Patricia Shaekel, Flossie Stocy, Da· .
nlel Levingston, Catherine Mees, :
Betty Friend .

STATE WINNER- James Ewing, IHth grader at the Chester
Elementary School, was winner of ,lhe Daughters ollhe American
Revolution's state essay contest. His topic was "MySuageatlon lor
Better Highway Safety." He Is the son of Mrs. Heidi Elberfeld,
Pomeroy Pike, and the (randson of Mrs. Betty Milhoan, regent of
Return Jonathaa Meigs Chaptel', DAR, who sponsored the local
contest. Here he displays his certificate.

--Local news briefs___,

320UNCE -

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Fine six in Middleport court

BRING YOUR
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CLARIOL ·

12 OUNCE

HAIR COLOR LOTION

Two persons suffered minor Injuries In a one car accident at
7:05 p.m. Tuesday at the junction of Rock Springs road and
Flatwoods road, near Pomeroy, according to the State Highway
Patrol. Troopers said Carla Kauff, 16, of Middleport, lost
control and her car went off the road Into a ditch. K\luff and a
.. passenger, Catlna Wolfe, 24, of Middleport, suffered minor
Injuries and were taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital by car.
There was no citation.
•

PAPER TOWELS

99~ . .
·,~

Patrol probes one Meigs wreck

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I

Six defendants forfeited bonds and seven others were fined in
the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Lu Ann Gillilan, Chester, $450, driving While
Intoxicated; James H. Cook, Jr., Middleport, $225, shoplifting;
Rebecca J . Roush, Middleport, $50, !allure to yield; Carroll E .
Cleland, $44; Jackie E. Glassborn, Gallipolis, $41, and Lester W.
Wise, Middleport, $40, all posted on speeding charges.
Fined were Gary W. Lawson, Middleport, $425 and costs,
three days In jail, driving while lntoxtc,ted, and $10 and costs ,
Illegal exhaust; Ralph E. White, Wilkesville, $425 and costs and
10 days tn jail, drlvlr\g while Intoxicated, and $100 and costs,
driving while under.suspenslon; Usa E . Allen, Whitehall, $100
and costs, driving under suspension: Henry D. Johnson ,
Middleport, and Jeffrey Beaver, both of Middleport, $10 and
costs each, stop sign violation; Richard Poulin, Jr., Middleport. ·
$100 and costs, driVIng under suspension, and Harley K. Jones,
Charleston, W. Va .. $425 and costs. three days In jail, driving
whlie Intoxicated.

MILWAUKEE (UP!) - MI-chael Dukak!s got precisely what
he wanted from Wisconsin ~ a
cbnvlnctng . win that made him
the clear front-runner - blunted
Jesse Jackson's momentum, and
added considerable fuel to the
argument that he Is the Inevitable Democratic presidential
nm'nliiee.
The Massac.l msetts governor ,
storming through almost all
parts of the Badger State,
trounced jackson Tuesday In a
primary billed as a high-stakes
showdown between the two men
running neck-and-neck for the
Democratic nomination.
The soft-spoken Dukakis
viewed the unexpectedly -easy
victory as proof of his campaign
strategy that he represents the
Democrats' best shot at ilefeattng Vice President George Bush
!n November and recapturing the
White House.
Jackson refused to say he was

-·· "" '

2 Sections. 1 6 Pa9et 25 ~enta
•· A "MUtiimedi• Inc . 'Newspaper

•
pnsoners

Harmon.
"We're not surprised t hat the s!ghtlngs haven't
On Monday, Huntington pollee offered pro teepanned out, " Dodrill said. "We expected them t&lt;;&gt; ·
·'
tlon
to several people Involved In Stacy's
· leave the s tate and try to get los tin the rest of the
conviction,
Including Ci~bell Circuit Judge Alfred
country."
Ferguson.
Dodrill said the probability that the men are no
The Inmates were .dlscovered missing during a
longer In West Virginia has scaled down the
rout!pe
head count Sunday night. They had fled via
In-state manhunt, and pollee are contacting
a
complex
escape route that Included chiseling
friends and relatives In an attempt to get leads .
l;)rlck
wa ll . scaling down old telephon~
through
a
Law enforcement agen ts across the country have
wires
and
using
boll-cutters to slash through a
been notified of the escape.
cha!nllnk
fence.
Mollohan , whom Dodrill believes masterIt was the first major breakout since 1979, when
minded the escape, was convicted In Kanawha
15
Inmates fled and an off-duty state trooper who
County In 1981 of shooting and beai!ng a
happened
by the prison was shot to death.
Brounland grocer to death. Williams was
Moundsv11le
residents were pen!ed Immediate
convicted In 19811n McDowell County of murder ,
knowledge
of
Sunday's escape because a
robbery and a rson. Stacy was convicted of the
water-logged
steam
whistle failed to sound.
1982 murd er of Huntington pollee officer Paul

Dukakis cops

Hospital news

1~§REO.

-- ..

S~;Je down manhUnt for escaped

Missionary
A missionary meeting will be
held Sunday, 7 p.m., at the
Church of Jesus Christ Apostolic
Faith on New Lima Road near ,
Rutland. A missionary from ·
Liberia will be speaking. Everyone welcome.

COLGATE
TOOTHPASTE

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, April 6, 1988

5UU'I'Iu

i&gt;risOil... __c_o_n_u_nu_e_d_l_ro_m~p-a~ge~1----------------

h
lng that possibility. It !ell in place
"little too well," he said.
s State pollee Issued a statewide
ttll·polnts bulletin and concenV&amp;ted their search In West
VIrginia and Ohio. Pennsylvania
authorities also -were notl!led .
, At least 40 officers were
searching and manning roadblpcks In Marshall County, where
!Pe prlsor) Is located, said Sgt.
Larry Wildman of the West
VIrginia State Pollee.
1 The effort was hampered by
Jlllln, which made It dl!flcult !or
ljloodhounds to track the escaped

at
MOUNDSVILLE, W.Va. (UP!) Three murderers who escaped from the ·west Virginia
Penitentiary are believed to be long gone, and
authorities confined their In-state search for the
fugitives to contacting friend s and relatives .
Corrections Commissioner A.V. Dodr!U said
Tuesday night the Inmates, who used an elaborate
plan to escape the prison Sunday, were believed to
be out of West Virginia and have probably split up.
The men are considered armed and dangerous.
Tommie Mollohan, '46, of Boone County, David
Williams, 29, rJJ McDowell County, and Bobby
Stacy, 37 , of Columbus, Ohio, broke through a
brick wall, scaled a building and cut through a
fence to escape. All were serving life sentences
without any chance of parole from the 122-yearold maximum security prison in Moundsville.

Wi~dy tonight. Showers,
low In mid 40s. Showers
ending Thursday .

8510

Vol.38, No .233

Report fire in Columbia Twp.

•
Continued from page 1
... _________
_
A nzona

Daily Nwnber
719
Pick 4·:'

•

Met~s County Emergency Medical Services reports seven
calls Monday; Tuppers Plains at 12:35 a.m. to Vanderhoff Road
for Est!l Sampson to St. Joseph's Hospital; COlumbia Township
Fire Department at 3: 12a.m. to a structure lire on Jones Road;
. Rutland at 3:43a.m. to Sand Ridge Hoa for James Chapman to
Holzer Medical Center; Racine at' 2:06 p .m. transported
Virginia Phalln to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syracuse at
4:07 p.m. to Atner!care-Pomeroy Nursing Center for Sam
McKinney to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 6: 32
p.m. to Pearl St. for Betty Bays to Holzer Medical Center:
Middleport at 7: 33 p.m . !ransported Bobby Ellis to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

About 15 Columbia Township firemen were called early
Monday morning to Jones Road In Columbia Township where
an unoccupied farmhouse had caught !ire.
The two-story frame house had been empty for some time and
was owned by Columbia Township resident Bruce Caldwell.
Firemen were called at 3: 12 a.m. and were on the scene until
shortly after 5 a.m.
.· ,
A spokesman for the fire department satd'' tll~t tlie house was
completely destroyed and that damages had been estimated at
$20,000. There was Insurance the spokesman said. Origin of the
fire Is unknown.

•
section

•

with a low between 55. and 60.
Windy Wednesday, with morning
showers and scattered thunderstorms and highs between 60 and
65.
.
The probability of prec!p!ta:
tlonts near zero today, 70percent
tonight and near 100 percent
Wednesday.
• Winds will be from the southwest at 10 to 20 mph today and
tonight.
Extended Forecast
Thursday through Saturday
A chance of showers Thursday
and Friday , with fair weather on
Saturday. Highs wlll range from
the upper 40s to the upper 50s
Thursday and Friday and In the
50s to near 60 Saturday. Overnight lows wlll be between 35 and
40 through the period.

EMS has seven Monday calls

Ohio Lottery

Insert

------Weather-----South Central Ohio
Sunny today, with highs In the
mid 80s. Showers likely tonight,

Lawn and
garden

•

convinci~g

disappOinted, but the black civil
rights leader had placed consld·
erable importance on Wisconsin
and had hoped to pull oqt a wlr.,
even though the state has a black .
population of only 4 percent.
In the end, however, Jackson
could not transform the prairie
fire momentum he gained las t
month with a stunning win in
Michigan Into Wisconsin votes.
"To be able to wln and win wlth
this big a vote Is very good news
and I hope It's a sign of things to
come," Dukakis said.
Jackson stressed that despite
his Wisconsin showing, he had
won or finished second In 30
primaries. and caucuses and
contended he was bouyed by
receiving a " dramatic Increase
In white votes. "
.
He added that he was concentrating on having a Democrat
defeat Bush. "I've not been
attacking anyone and no one's
been attacking me, " 'J ackson

Wisconsin ·win

had 44, Jackson 24 and Gore 13 ..
said on CBS. "I'm glad that both
On the Republican side of the
Mike Dukak!s a11d I express that
Bush faced only token
primary,
kind of mat"''lty because our
opposition
from former televicompetition Is really not each
sion
evangelist
Pat Robertson
other - It's George Bush and
had
little
trouble
putting
and
we' re going to keep our eyes on
Wisconsin
in
the
win
column
on
the real prize."
.
his
march
to
the
GOP
nominaWith 99 percent of the vote
counted, Dukakis had 48 percent tion . With 99 percent of the vote
of the vote, while Jackson had 28 counted, Bush had 84 percent,
ll"rcent. In addition to the 81 while Rober tson had 7 percent.
delegates at stake, both men had Sen. Hobert Dole of Kansas, who
looked to Wisconsin to make withdrew !rom the race, received 8 percent.
them the solid favorite - a
United Press International's
critical boost going into New
count
of committed a nd proYork's crucial Aprll19 primary.
In third place was Sen. Albert jected Democratic delegates Gore of Tennessee with 17 before the Wisconsin results percent, follqwed by Sen. Paul showed Dukakls with 631)5,
Simon of Dl!nols, who trailed the Jackson with 615.10, Gore with
field with 5 percent. Those ,373.55 and Simon wlth 169.50. A
results were disasterous for total of 2,082 delegates ·are
Simon, who Is now expected to needed to win the nomination at
end or suspend his campaign, th~ party's national convention
In Atlantd July 18-21. Some
probably on Thursday.
cast fractional votes.
delegates
Of the 81 Democratic delegates
at stake in Wisconsin, Dukak!s
tontinued on page 8
'

Neel res~gns PC po~t; Bogel successor
There has been a shake-up in the
leadership of a Louisville, Ky.,
company that has filed a construction permit with the state of West
Virginia to build at least 20 hazardous waste incinerators on a I ,000acre site in Mason County.
PyroChcm, Inc., announced
today the appoinuncnt of Thomas
A. Bogel as president and chief
operating orticer. Bogel suceeds
James N. Nee!, who has resigned to
return to private law practi ce, according to a company press release.
Neel also resigned from : the
company's board of directors, the
press release stated.
"I lhink Jim Necl was probably
one of the biggest problems wilh
PyroChem (Inc.) as far as his
creditability," said Paul Washington
of !he Mason Association for a
Clean Environment, a local group
formed to oppose hazardous waste
incineralion with the company.
Washington said MACE will now
. check out the background of the
new CEO, however, lhe grpup still
remains committed to oppose in·
cineration.

"It (1he new appointment)
doesn't change overall incineration
concerns - it doesn' t make any
difference who's running it."
Jimmy Joe Wedge, former Poinl
Plcasant mayor and local liaison for
PyroChem, Inc., was reported to be
in Louisville lhis morn ing "for
meetings." R. Kenton Sheline,
president of the. Mason County
Comn\ission, which on a 2- 1 vote,
signed a siting agr~ent wilh ,
PyroChem, Inc., in or,der to realize
profiiS from the Mason County inc
cinerator venture, had no comment
today.
According to the press relcuse,
until las! month, Bogel was presi·
dent of Chemical and Industrial
Engineering, Inc., of Louisville. He
founded that company in 1983 and
built C&amp;IE into one of Kentucky's
largest engineering firms, the press
release stated.
Prior 10 being associated wilh
C&amp;IE, Bogel was manager of 1cch·
nical
services
for ·Bechtel
Petroleum, inc.'s regional office.
Bagel is a civil engineering
graduate of the University of Texas.

He also holds a mas ter's of business administration di'Wee from the
University of Chicago. He is a
registered profess ional engineer
and is married to Terry Bogel. They
have four children llll!l live in
Louisville.
In a Jan. 14, _1988 lcucr to stockholders. Neel predicted lhis yeai
would be "a great year." for Pyro·
Chern, Inc., and gave an upbeat
repon of . the company's acti¥ities
in Kentucky, where lhe company is
attempling 10 build a hazardous
waste incinerator in Louisa, and in
West Virginia where application
has been made to the state for the
Mason County site.
Neel. in that letter. told company
stockholders lhat he expected the
Mason County site would be per- .
miucd lhis year.
Jerome Cibrik, hydrogeologist
for the West Virginia Dcparuncnt of
Natural
Resources, hazardous
waste division, and one of several
people working on PyroChcm,
Inc.'s application in Charleston,
said the application process is still
in the preliminary swges. "We arc

Nine fined incPomeroy court
J:'l¥ defendants were lined Ttjesday nl&amp;h! In the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler.
They Include H. Kathryn Schultzman, Pomeroy, $60 and
costs, speeding; Edgar Atkins, Pomeroy, $48 and costs,
speeding: Ashley Crosswl)lte, Route 1, Bidwell, $63 and costs, .
' driving under suspension and $47 and costs, speedtn,g; lJonald
Stelr}metz, Pomeroy, $113 and costs, disorderly manner;
James. L. VanMeter, Clifton, W. Va., $83 and costs, no
operator's license; $63, e1&lt;pired tags and $375 and costs, driving
while Intoxicated; Richard Poulin , Jr., Middleport, $83 and
costs·, !allure to display license plates: $63 and costs, driving
under suspen~ton; Thomas Roach, Pomeroy, driving while
lnt¢xlcated, $375 all(l costs, $43 and costs, left of center: Mark
Heltmire, Pomeroy , and Terry Watson, Pomeroy, $113 and
costs, Intoxication.
Forfetilng bonds were David Kesterson, Grandview, Va. , $49;
Tommy Gilkey, Malta, $62; Deanna Apllng, Columbus, $47;
Carl A. S!ommaeart, MI . Pleasant, Dl, $48; . Ronald
McCullough, Utica, Mich., $48; Mark Warner, Pomeroy, $42;
Kenneth Whlw. $49; Theresa Mitchell, Spencer, W. Va., $52;
Cynthia Wheeler, Dexter, $46; Donald Price, Cheshire, $48;
Beatrice Wood, Rutland, $48; Lawrence BaUey, Pomeroy, $48,
speediJII; Larry Powell, Racine, $43, assured dear distance:
QUILT TOP IN A DAY - Aa a apeclal luad
John Sumner, Marion, $63, expired plates and $63, traffic light
ralebl1
pnJect lor tile Rook Sprlnp Granp,
violation; Timothy COnard, Mason, W. Va., $43, stop sign
••nn:r
Kabl
coaducted a "quilt top Ia a day"
violation; Edgar (l.bbott, Pomeroy, $43, stop sip violation:
worbbop
a&amp;.the
Bock Sprlnp United Methodlal
Melba Jones; Roage, Mich., $63, expired plates; Jon Dillard,
, ,.,~unrch Tuelday. Tile women Involved bad earlier
COntinued on page 8
met wllll Mra. Kuhl to aet lutructlona on c1ttln1

out the material• to be uaed In creatine tbe raU
fence patten, aDd &amp;Ilea ~peal yeo~terday puttlncll
to1ether, Here Cath:r RIIP eewa on her quilt top.
Dlaplayed to the back Ia a completed sample of the
paltern created by the women.

THOMAS A. ROGEL
still waiting for additional inform a, tion," Cibrik said, adding an ·'environmental analysis on the applica tion is yet to be completed.
That analysis, he said, will look at
the background of the owner and
operator in hazardous waste
management.
"A prelimi nary decision (on the
application) cou ld come anywhere
from two to three monlhs to seven
or eight month s," lhc DNR official
said.
Neel told stockholders in his
January lcuer that he had inv~s lc¢
$1.4 million in both lhe Kentucky
and West Virginia applications.
However, in an in terview wilh
the Point Plcasanr Register, Ncel
said the company had spent more
than twice that amount by Decem.
her in lhe Mason Counly applica·
· tion alone.
" ...we're puuing $140 million in
this job, of ·which we've already
expended about $3 million," Nee!
told The Register.
In the leuer to stockholders, Nee!
said he expected then lhat consult·
·ants contracts would be let and
work would be completed in that
regard in Wes1 Virginia within 90
days (pr lhe end of March).
Nee! told lhe stockholders that
financing was needed for both the
Kentucky and the West Virginia
projects. He asked them to be
patient, noting , "A new study _in·
dicates it takes a minimum of seven
years to site and acquire a construction permit for a new hazardous
waste trealment facilily in the
United States."

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