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Pomeroy-. Middleport, Ohio .

· el

This
''Your Athletic
SHoe Headquarters''

•

eek's
8a·m.es
Vol. 36. No.186
.Copyrighted 1987

NEEDS

•

l

'

..DOWNING-CHILDS
MULlEN, MUSSER
INSURANCE

SOUTHERN
BOYS' BASKETBALL
Jan. 30-North Gallio .......... Away
Jan. 31-:-Miller ...................... Away

GIRLS' BASKETBALL
Jan. 29-North Gallia ........... Home

EASTERN

111 SECOND AVE.
POMEROY

BOYS' BASKETBALL

CALL 992-3381 or

Jan. 30-Kyger Creek ............ Home
Feb. 6-Southwestern ........... Away

992-2342

GIRLS' BASKETBALL

1·

· PH. 992~66 M .
308 E. MAI'N
· POMEROY,.·OH.
'

'

·EWING
FUNERAL
.
HOME

BOYS SCHEDULE

.

"DIGNITY AND ,
~ERV,CE ALWAYS" ·
Ben' H. Ewing•Diredor

~

i'

'·

Jan.30-Kyger Creek ............. Away
Feb. 2-Meigs ......................... Home

.

Meigs

Southern

BOYS BASKnBALl

BOYS BASKETBALL

PH. 992-2121

Eastern
BOYS BASKETBALL

Jan. 30-North Gallia ................ Away
Jan. 31-Miller ...... ... .. .............. Away
Feb. 6-Hanilan Trace .. ........... ... Away
Feb . 7-Federal Hockin2.. ......... Home
Feb. 13-Southwestern ............. Home
Feb. 17-Ravenswood .. ...... ....... Home
Feb. 20-Symmes Valley ...... ...... Away

Jan. 30- Kyger CreeL ............. Home
Feb. 6-Southwestern ................ Away
Feb. 7-0PEN :........ .. :.............. Home
Feb. 13-Symmes Valley ...... ..... Home
Feb. 17-Federal Hocking ......... Home
Feb. 20-0ak Hill ...................... Away

108 MUlBERRY AVE.
POMEROY, OH.

GIRLS SCHEDULE

"HOME BANK

[

Meigs
GIRLS BASKETBALL

Southern
GIRLS BASKETBALL

•

Eastern
GIRLS BASKETBALL
'

'

SYRACUSE OFFICE
992-6333
RACINE OFFICE
949-2210

'

1~0·ATS .

HOME PEOPLE"

.

'

RAWLINGS

FOR

MEMBER FDIC

Jan . 29-Aiexander .................. Home
Feb. 2- Eastern ................. .. ..... Away
Feb. 5-Wellston ...................... Home
Feb. 9-Federal Hocking ........... Home
Feb. 14-Southern.... .. ............... Away

Jan . 29 - Nort~ Gallia ............... Home
Feb. 5-Hannan Trace ............... Home
Feb. 9-Symmes Valley ........ ..... Home
Feb. 12-Southwestern ...... .. ...... Away
Feb . 14- Meigs ............ ,.... ....... Home

Jan. 30-Kyger Creek ................ Away
Feb. 2- Meigs .......... ................ Home
Feb. 5-Southwestern ..... ... ....... Home
Feb. 9-0ak Hill. .. .................... Home
Feb. 12-Symmes Valley ............ Away
Feb. 14-Federal Hocking .. ........ Away

BlOWER
FUNERAL ·

··HoME
.,

·· . · Blle,BLOWER

'

''$.,r16B

.
Plut
....
.

' At1trrtlo11 to Dttsll"
992-5141
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

'

"A GliAl PLACE
fOI IIEAIFAST

LUNCH J 'DINID
' Featuring

**

Crllissant Stuffed Ballld
Potstan Taco S.ll4s
telld Bar
* Rt~llet Cre41m * .

*

. ,DininG • C1rry Out •
Drhfe..ThRI

WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pres· has pursued since taking office In
ldenl Reagan, acknowledging 1981, with an added emphasis this
mistakes an~ accepting res pons I· year on making the nation more
blllty In the Iran arms scandal, competitive .In the global
nevertheless says his only "rna· marketplace.
jar regret" Is that \he gamble
As anticipated, however, his
failed to open political channels
and free American hostages In comments on the Iran·Contra
controversy broke no new ground
Lebanon.
Reagan, In his first public and repeated his previous stated
appearance since his prostate view that "serious mistakes"
surgery this month, delivered his were made. He did not specify
sixth State of the Union address what mistakes or who made
to a joint session of Congress them, but vowed: "We will get to
Tuesday night, appearing fit and the bottom of this and I will take
overwhelmed by the warm ova· whatever action is called for."
Two Watergate·style commit·
lions he received at the beglnnfng
tees
created by Congress and an
and the end of the nationally
Independent federal prosecutor
televised speech.
are now Investigating the foreign
It was an address viewed as
politically cruclaHo a president policy scandal.
Reagan dispensed with the
mired In his worsl crisis and
facing an oppositiOn·led Con· scandal early In his address,
gress, yet Reagan glossed over defending his 1985·86 policy lnltl·
the scandal, Insisting the goals of atlve by saying:
"Though we have made much
his secrel arms sales to Iran
were worthy and avoiding men· · progress, I have one major
tlon of any profits diverted to the regret. I .took a risk with regard
to our action In Iran . It did not
Nicaraguan Contra rebels.
Instead, he warned lawmakers work and for that I assume full
assembled· In a packed House respons lbll!ty.
"The goals were worthy. I do
chamber - and his nationwide
television audience - that the not believe It was wrong to try to
counlry musl not become olr establish contacts with a country
sessed with "debating the past." of strategic Importance .. . and
Many of the policy goals certainly It was not wrong to lry
Reagan presented lo the 100th to secure freedom for our citizens
. congress echoed the agenda he held In barbaric captlvlly.

hike proposed

COLUMBUS IUPII - State Rep.· Frederick H. Deering,
D·Monroevllle, says Ohio needs to raise Its 12-Cents per gallon
tax on gasoline to offset losses In federal funds and keep state
highway construction projects rolling.
Deering made his comments Tuesday following Gov. Richard
F. Celeste's "State of the State" address. The governor said he
will not propose any Increases In personal or corporate Income
'taxes, or the state sales lax, but he lefl open the possibility cia
gas tax hike.
Celeste also proposed that the state take over maintenance
costs of bridges carrying state roads through municipalities.
Counties currently are responsible for such maintenance.
"I think there will be some (gasoline) revenue Increase
proposed,·' said Deering, who conceded he has been workln!( on
the proposal lor several months and has support from most of
the highway and local government lobby groups.
Deering declined to specify an exact amount of a tax Increase,
but he was believed to be thinking of 4 cents per gallon . He said
he wants to provide local governments with one penny of the
tax. Local governments take 25 percent of the state tax under a
distribution formula .
Deering said House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr., D·New
Boston, would decide whether or nol the gas tax should be
raised ."Riffe sald .lf It Is proposed, the House " would lake a
serious look at 11. Jusl give us the reasons that It should be
done," he said.
·
Deering is a merflber of the lax·wrlling Ways and Means
Committee and Is chairman of the General Section of the House
Finance Committee. which will begin considering the Ohio
Department of Transportation budget In April. The tax likely
would be part of that bill.

BRUCE FISftER

POWELL'S

*daest
Great Hambur1ers
Beef on a .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, January 28. 1987

-~ Gas ·~ax
Jan. 27-Aiexander ..... ;..~.. ........ Away
Jan. 31-Pomt Pleasant .. .. .. .. ... Home
Feb. 3-Warren ........................ Home
Feb. 6-Wellston ....................... .Away
Feb . 13-Federal Hocking .......... Away

enttne
2 SecUons, 16 Pages

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Reagan regrets deal
for hostages failed

Jan. 29-Aiexander................ Home
Feb. 2-Eastern ..................... Away

•

Partly cloudy tonight, with
a low In the .low 20s. Cloudy
Thursday, with u chance of
rain and hlgl.- In the low 40s.
he probability of preclpltallon
Is 20 percent tonight and 40
percent Thur•day .

•

at y

'

GIRLS' BASKETBALL

,

PICK-4
2913

•

Jan. 27 -Alexander ............... Away
Jan. 31-Pt. Pleasant ............ Hame

·TAKE . CARE OF
I • . ALL YOU!t .
·INSURANCE

Daily Number
.
567

over Spartans .
-Page 3

BOYS' BASKETBALL

. WE WILL

•

post VICtory

MEIGS

.'

Ohio Lottery

Marauders

298 SECOND.ST.

PQMEROY. OH.
STORE HOURS:.
MON.· SAt
I A.M.-10 P.M.

SUNDAY ·
10 A.M.-l 0 P.M.
'.

"But we did not achieve what · 1 og'.l"
we wished, and serious mistakes
were made In trying to do so."
Administration officials have
blamed the Contra funding diver·
slon scheme on Natlonal Security
Council staffer Lt. Col. Oliver
North , whom the president fired
Nov. 25 but later described as
"an American hero."
Reagan had been urged by
some Republican leaders to use
Tuesday's speech to apologize
for the affair, but he did not.
White House chief of slaff Donald
Regan confirmed reports that
the president was not about to
budge, and told reporters, "I
don't _t hink you're going to get
him to."
Pointing to the While House
basement, where the NSC has Its
It's somellmes difficult to
offices, Regan added. "The mls·
get
through Pomeroy's busl·
takes were made' down there."
ness
section these days The president began his 35on foot or by vehicle.
either
mlnute speech nollng the ap·
While work has resumed on
proachlng bicentennial .of the
tearing down the Meigs Inn, a
Constitution and the presence of
wall
·stlll stands. at the front
the new House speaker, Demo·
apparently
creating a danger
crat Jim Wright of Texas, who
for
those
walking In the
introduced him.
middle
block
on East Main, ll!i
Reagan was Interrupted al·
seen In the photo at right. The
most 40 times by applause that
sidewalk Is cluttered with
Included several standing ova·
bricks and debris from the
lions - led by Republican
razing
oileratlons so far and
loyalists when he defended the
the
sidewalk
area In front of
Iran policy and by Democrats
the
operation
Is blocked off, .
when he said: "The federal
making It nece)lsary lor pedes·
deficit Is outrageous."
trlans to walk out In the street.
Acknowledging the new Demo·
Meanllnie,
the sll·eetln the Is
cr atlc majority In the Senale,
being
dug
up as Fishel Co.
Reagan said he was confident
continues
digging
trenches lor
"harmony and good will" would
Installation
of
cable
for Gen·
prevail In moving the nation
eral Telephone Co . ~ with one·
ahead and that the new Congress
way traffic prevailing most of
"will make history. " For the first
the
lime during the normal
time since 1981, the Democrats
work
day.
control both House and Senate.

Families pay tribute to Challenger crew:
F

A~ON,

Va. iUPI) the Challenger
se ~ ga~he~l~g today to re7t:em r 1• e a len pioneers on
e 11 rst anniversary of the
shuttle disaster, say t~.e astro·
nauts fie~ not for aimless
adventure but for their country .
Family .members .traveled to
the nallon s capital to join NASA
Administrator James Fletcher
and othei:_ Iop agency officials In
brief aft ernoon service at an
Army chapel near Arlington
National Cemetery to pay tribute
to the seven ~rew members klll~d
Jan. 28, 1986, In space history s
worst disaster.
Killed that cold day were
~.huttl~ commander Francis
Dick Scobee. co· pilot Michael
Smith, astronauts Ellison Onlz uka, Ronald McNair and Judith
Resnlk, satellite engineer Gre·
~~~le:at~f

Me

gory Jarvis, and Christa
Au ·
llffe, the New Hampshire school·
teacher who became the first
"ordinary citizen" to fly In a
shuttle.
President Reagan planned to
deli ver a !O·mlnute address later
In the day to employees of the
National Aeronautics and Space
Administration, whose morale
was severely shaken In the
aft ermath of the tragedy.
. At the Kennedy Space Center
at Cape Canaveral, Fla., where a
bitter cold wa ve served as a
harsh reminder of the frl!(ld day
one year ago when Challenf(e r
was launched, workers stood ~)'
to lower lla,gs to half staff at 11:38
a. m. EST, the time the shuttle
took off on It s doomed 73-second
flight.
And al NASA ·field centers

a/

nationwide, space agency emScobee unci Smi th arr burled
ployees and contractors pl anned ArllnJ&lt;ton, as ,.,.., astronaut. '
to observe 73 seconds of silence In VIrgil "G us" Grissom and Roger'
memory .o t\hl' Challenger crew, Chaffee. killed 20 yea rs ~go
who gave their lives In ·· the Tuesday a hoa rd lh&lt;'lr Apollo 1
purs uit of knowledge and to open moonshlp In n launch pa d fire
the highest frontier.
Ihat also cla imed lhr life of
"They risked their lives not fo r astronaut Edward Whi te.
the sake of aimless adv&lt;' ntu rr,
NASA dcl lbi'ra telv avoided a
but fo r the nation that gav&lt;' th em
opportunity and for lhc space form al public r:l'remony to mark
frontier, which was an extension the anniversary In a con sc l ou ~
of It s sp irit ," relallvr.s or thr •·ffort lo put thr past lo rrs t and to
crew wrote In an open Ieifer 10 locus on th r fu ture.
NonNhelrss. for many space
Ihe Amer ican public rr leasrd
agency employees thP m!•morles
Tuesday.
" If Ihey wrrr ali ve and co uld of Challenger' s fri ghtening des·
speak IO all America ns." thr Iruct ion 9 miles above th r Atlan·
letter added, " wr believe lh•• tl r Ocea n and Ihe pa lnfu l ln vcs tl·
Challenger crrw would sa .v this: gal lon thai followl:'d remain
·Do not rea r ri sk. Only If wr ca n loday.
"Not a day ~oes by Ihal I don' t
accept our problems as cha llenges can today's drea ms 1)('- lhlnk abo ul Challcngl:'r." sa id
one offi cial.
come tomorrow's realities .,..

Celeste promotes pioneering
spirit- on low-growth budget
•

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPil - Gov .
Richard F. Celeste says Ohio can
keep Its pioneering splrll alive on
a low· growth budget and move to
new frontiers In job creation,
education, human services dellv·
ery ~tnd local government ald.
The governor, In his annual
"State of the State" address, said
Tuesday he will propose no
Increases In major taxes and that
stale spending growth will be
l'lmlted Io less than 1 percent this
coming year.
But Celeste, speaking to a join I
session of the General Assembly
and on stalfwide lelevlslon, said
much can be done withOut
spending money . ·
• "Self discipline doesn't mean
standing still," he said. "It
means making tough choices and
setting clear priorities. It means
Inventing ·new ways to use
.existing resources, and above
all, cooperating In the same
spirit that raised barns, built
churches· and schools, and ·
brought In harvests lor earlier
generations of Ohioans."
1---- -- _ ._... _

The, 38-mlnute speech, more · companies conducting vital
sparsely attended and less heart· research.
Outlining his plans for 1987 and
lly applauded than earlier Ce·
beyond,
Celeste could not reSist
leste efforts , neverlheless
taking
a
poke at Congress and
brought the governor a harvest of ·
President
Reagan.
compliments about his purpose·
"Two hundred years and still
ful delivery.
Republicans, while praising pioneering, " Celeste said, refer·
the governor . for curbing state ring to the bicentennial of .the
expenses, said they want to see Northwest Ordinance. "That
the costs of his new Initiatives must be the spirit with which we
face the challenges of 1987 and
before passing judgment.
William J. Shkurll, director of beyond.
"We cannot count on anyone
the Office of Budget and Manage·
else
to do li for us," he said.
ment, said state .spending will
"Certainly
nol Washington,
Increase by only about $100
D.C."
million after July l on a $10.3
Celeste credited the General
billion •annual budgeI.
Celeste promised to revise the Assembly with helping him make
Local Government Fund, giving "remarkable progress" for Ohio •
communities a $35 million one- during the last lour years In
attracting Industries, building
time Increase In state ald.
The governor also said the · highways, creating technology
state will take responsibility for centers, burning Ohio coal
maintaining bridges on slate cleanly, g~lillng national recog·
hll(hwavs Inside munlclpalltiE!$. nltlon for Ohio's educallon sys·
In education, he proposed tern, ·and Improving mental
Edison Technology Fellowships health care.
"Working together, we have
- two-year programs for posl·
graduate and post·doctoral slu· turned our state around, " said
dents to keep the brlghtesl Ihe governor, repeating a theme
(Continued on Page 12)
students at Ohio's centers or

CONGRATULATIONS TO THE GOVERNOR
-Gov. Richard Celeele, cenler, Ia conll'alulated
by Houee Speaker Vern Rifle Jr ,, left, u Senate

..

Preeldent Paul Glllmor, rtrht, applauded at the :
coaclualon of Cel•te'a State of the state addreroM ·;
to the leplature Tuesday; (UP I)
I

. •.•

·...

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO TilE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~

m

I f=l

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
. PAT WHITEHI':AD
Assl~tant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A.MEMBER ol Thr&gt; Un ited Press Int ernatio nal. Inland Dally Press
A ssoc-iation an d lhP American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF' OPINIO:--J ar£' WC'ICO mC' . The y should be Jess than 300 words
long. Alii I' I t('rs a rf&gt; su flj f'e ! 1o rd i tin g and mu sl be s lgn Ed w lth namE', add ress and
1&lt;'l C&gt;p hone numbN . No unslg nrd l e11C'rs will he publl ~hcd Lrm('r s should 1)(1 in
good la st (', addrrs si n_c Jssut-s, not prrsma li t iPs

The Lighter Side

It's a .long way
frQm Watergate

l'n r so glad I'm no longer a
DWF looking for TLC from a
DWM.
Translated, that means a DI vorce White Female looking for
Tender Loving Care from a
Divorced White Male.
Tt.is shorthand is used by some
of today's singles to advertise
th emselves to each other in the
classified ads of magazines and
news papers. They pay as much
as $23 a line (New York magazine's rate) and average a t least
six lines to say things such as:
"Beautiful tall social worker, 28,
seeks evolved male. Please no
polyesters or neanderthals. Blophoto a must."
In the early 1970s, when I was
divorced. no se lf-res pecting
woman or man would dream of
trumpeting their att ributes and
invillng responses from

.- -::::.
WHITE

By DICK WEST
WASHI NGTON i UP i t - Some members of Congress and the
~dminis lration arc quick to argue that the troubles currently
besetting President Reag~n with respect to Iran and Nicaragua do
not amount to another Waterga te. r agree.
·
They say all the fishin g, not to say floundering, I hat pundits are
doing to find a nam~ for the Iran-Nicaragua affair. or case, or scandal
tchoosr one I shows ag;lin how lu cky the pres ident is.
I don' t know what odds Reaga n ma y have overcome as a man but
· the fa ct th at th e Midd lr East and Central America are on different
· contin ent s probabl y is fortunate from the sta ndpoint of a chief

1'\-IE SESi AmOACI-\ "TO THIS
I~A\II-CON1'AA MES$ IS iO f'I?PL.'Y
THE 1~\Clt:LE -up TI-IEORY

I'

HOUSE '
A117E5

strangers. ·
But a funny thing happened on
the way to the '80s. Personals
became de rlgueur ln looking lor
Mr. (or Ms .) Right. In short :
Singles bars are out; classlfleds
are ln.
Alter receiving 75 responses
from an ad, one woman concluded: "We all know the bar
scene stinks. You stand there llke
a piece of meat. People put out
cigarettes on your blouse . People
who speak to you look around not
paying attention. You go home,
ask yourself, 'Why did l do thls?'
Then·you take a Valium and cry
yourself to sleep."
Classified ads, on the other
hand, give lookers some control
over the situation, enable Ihem to
define What they want and assure
confidentiality through coded
box numbers.

~
~

-....

\31T BY Brf, AS "THE FA(15 A'30UT

F'RE'SIVEN11AL. IN\'OLVEMENT
COME OU1 OF iHE VA~IOUS
IN'IE?II6AiiONS."

7

PXCCUt ive.

The disclosu &lt;e of secret arms sa les to Iran - Reagan ha s been
accused of bei ng willing to trade weapons for hostages held in
Lebanon -originally was dubbed "lra ngate."
However, lhal was before the revelation th at some of the profits
may have been se n!. contrary of congressional decree, to forces
seeking to overthrow the Sandanisla gover nment in Nicaragua.
Nor docs calling il "Cant ragale" in honor of the Nicaraguan
opposition stand alon e either. Thai designatio n over looks the fact that
. the money supposedl y came !rain CIA bank accounts In Switzerland.
Ailhough a couple of former While House officials who served
Reagan exe rcised 1heir cons tit uional right against sell-lncrlminal ion
to avoid telling congressional co mmittees wha t they knew, there was
no clea r-cut burglar&gt;·· such as occu r red at I he Watergate Hotel.
Ne ither is thr lran-Nicaraguan dea l as understandable as the
Watergate cover-up, for which President Richard Nixon subsequently resigned .
We all rcmembet' how forme t· Sen. Boward Baker. R-Tenn., then a
member of the Senate Watl•rgat e commltl ec, characterized that
· Inqui ry .
. He implied that thl' c·ommillce could in vestiga te until it turned blue
· in the face hu t unl ess il esta blis hed "w hat the president knew and
: when he kn ow it." I h&lt;' Sen at c wa s sl ill preoccupied w il h a seco nd· rate
: crime.
Last month, al a hr iefing ilv n coup le of members of the House
· Int el lige nce Committe&lt;&gt;, one of the groups before which Adm. J ohn
Poindex ter &lt;1 nd Lt . Col. Oliver No rth "took the fifth." one of th em said
it now depended on "wha t the president knew and when he forgot it."
That shows how muC'h things have changed s ince Watergate.
ncagan and Nix on ma y belong to the sa me political party, but the
sim lllarity ends thrr·r
For one th ing, Reagan is oldrr than Nixo n. To imply that Reaga n
was born hrfm·c the Fifth Amendm ent to the Constllutlon was
adnptC'd may be ovPrdo in g thr age issue a hit. however.
We are celcbrat ing the Constitution's biceni Pnnial this year and Inc
fi rs t 10 amen dm ents. which were cal led the Bill of Right s, were
: ratlfi('(l fo ur of fiv P .\ ·c•e~rs later .
Not c•vcn Rf'agan is that o ld.
Furl h(' rmor&lt;'. neil tw r I ran nor Nicaragua has I hC" samr numlx'r of

· s)•ilables as the Watrrgatc Hotel. So lei' s have no more comparisons,
·. PI L'HS(' .

~Letter
,•

to the Editor

The

.~pirit

of sharing

T lw S;1 J\·a tio n i\rm.v w is hPs to
: tha nk ;Il l t ho:-. C' who hf'lpcd to

·l'un l rilllllf' to makinJZ th0ir
: l'hr\~tma s 0ffo rt :. surc r ss .
:Thos £' who r;rn g tht· llrll s &lt;-tl thf'

Christ ma s krtt Irs. a ncl t hosr II' ho
-dnnalrcl monfl,\' i n rhl' kr lllf's. h,\ '
mail ;tnd otiH' I' m0 ;1 n ~ .

Thr•rP \\' l~ n· m ;-~ n ~· \'Ol unt r(' f' ~
who ran l'tT &lt; Ind ~. wa~ hrrl t o~· s.
dressr·tl doll s. pa ckf'd ha ..,kr ts.
:Thank:-. to thf' m ornrl ·\&lt;'lf' cl ub
and lllf'i r hrl ]lf'I'S !111 11 1~· s tlnd
~ 11w rs whn gavf' tn,\'~. and tlw

:man!' othrr lw!pc•r:-. too numrr·
·ous 1n r.:nrn tion.
· Through all thP!-.4 ' IH·I p('l .'- ~'4'

11·rrr abll' to give 210 rood
ba s k~t s .
toys to around :;:;o
children. 11:. gilts to Pinecrest
Nur&lt;ing Home. Gal lipolis. Ohio.
99 gi ll&lt; to Pomeroy Health Carr
C&lt;'nt rr. -16 gi ll s to Vetl'ran s
MPmorial Hospital , 12 gi ft s to thr
cot1ntv infirmary. 12 gilts to
threr &lt;mali nu rsi ng homes and
onr gi ll to the Meigs Coun ty .Ja it.
1\. total of around 1,0J9 proplr
wcrr helpect. Without the pybllc' s
he)P wr could not havr donr thls.
, .'
Thanks.
Dnra Wining
Pomeroy

\-JE ARE §EEiNG LI GHT
AT END oF TUNNEL.
~ooN WE HAVE GLoRtoU~

,.

. PEACE WrfH HoNOR
IN AF6HANii'!TAN.

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DECLARE VrCToR"'
AI&lt;D &amp;KEDADDLE .

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An Indication of their popularity among the country's approximat ely 30 million singles ln the
300 ads a week In New York's
Vlllage Voice and the "Only
Hearts " ads that run five days a
week In theChlcagoTrlbune. The
Washingtonian has _se veral
pages of personals every week. A
national magazine called "Intra," which specializes in topics
of interest to singles, boasts 40
page"s of classllleds per Issue.
In addition, there are at least
th ree books wlth guidelines on
how 10 write an ad about
yourself. Authorities say the
most successful ads, "indicate a
quivering sensibility or a rakish,
humorous personality, perhaps
wlth a naughty hint of life In the
fast lane."
Never mind what the authorities say. l just read the "Strictly

-

Personals" In New York magazine and was appalled at the
braggadocio and superficiality.
Can you believe this• .
"Down-to-ea rth pilot, sensitive, clever, attractive, owns one
p,alr designer jeans. three pairs
Levis, seeks exceptionally at tractive, bright, slender woman
who like small planes... and
heavy co ntact with goregous
green eyes."
I think that guy's an airhead'
· Here's another that gave me
pause: "Thls Week's Special: A
one-time olfer, t hls being the first
and last time I'm making myself
available for a sensitive, attractive, s lender, fun -loving
female."
Certain words, by the way, are
overworked In the ads: "attractive~"

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

ALBANY - With all live
starters scoring in double figures, Meigs used a blistering
29-.polnt second quarter to notch a
78-70 win over Alexander here
Tuesday that returned the Mar!luders back on top all alone ln
the TVC standings.
Co upl ed wlth · FederalHockl.ng's stunning double overtime 52-50 win ovE?r Vinton
County last night, the Marauders, now 14-2 overall and 13-1ln
the conference, have a decided
edge with only two league games
remaining (at Wellston and at ·
Federal-Hocking). Vinton
County fell to 10-2 with their loss
while Alexander dropped to 8-6
overall and 7-5 (n I he TVC.

Coach Mlck Childs' Marauders, who are presently ranked
14th In the late5t, AP class AA
state ratings, came from a 20-17
deficit ,bY outscoring the Spartans 29-121n the second period for
a commanding 46-32 halftime .
edge. Meigs had led by as many
as 18 at 46--28.
But pesky Alexander, always
knowns as a tough team to beat in
Albany, rallied ln the second half
and closed' to within 73-70 ln .the
final minute before Marauder
free thro.w shooting took over.
J. R. Kitchen led the Marauders with 23 points as the6-1 senior
guard's shooting eye seems to
have returned to top form. Brent
Bissell chipped with 17 plus 12

rebounds 11) another flne performance while Mike Bartrum
scored 12 and matched Bissell
wlth 12 rebounds.
Huey Eason pltcheilln with his
season-high wilh 12 and guard
Donnie Becker continued hls
steady all-around play with 11.
Scrappy 6-0 senior Joe McLain
grabbed· game scoring honors
with a brilliant 29 point, 12
. rebound performance. Denton
Guthrie added 13 for the Spartans, whose leading scorer, Mike
Chapman, was held In check with
only five points.
"Eason really did a good job of
guarding Chapman. He overplayed on the right hand side
while ln a man- to-man, then we

favored ·• hls side when we
switched to a 2-:1 ~one,' said
Meigs Coach Ghllds.
The Marauder first year menlor added. "I didn't think we
played bad, but Alexander just
fought and clawed to get back in
lt. Ou r klds kept good composure
down the stretch."
The Marauders hlt on 32 or 65
from the !leld (49pefcen1) andl4
of 24 free throws (58 per cenll .
Alexander settled lor 26 of 56 (46
per cent) from the fi eld and 18 or
27 (67 per cent) at the loul 'llne.
'The Marauders had a slight
35-34 re!Jounding edge and _com-

mined H turnovers ~iO A'lexand -

er's 1:! as both team s played well
with the fast pace.
Coach Ru s t~· Bookman' s M&lt;'igs
reserves had proba bt)· I hr lr
finest gaml' of t hr year wi th a big
44 -:13 win ovrr th r Lilllr
Sparw ns.
The win lifted thP l.ittlr Ma rauders to a command ln ~ IPacl in
t:w TV(' rl"~E'rvr racr a!-. M r i .c:.~

goes to 11 .:1in the TVC comp" rod
to seeond place il.i&lt;'x"ndN '&gt; H--1.
MPlg~ rom claim at lras t ;:~ slwrr
of 'the TVC resrn•f' croll'n ll'ith
onr morr TV C' win . Mf'igs'
reser ves a t'! ' 11 · ~ ovl'l'all.

Hannan Trace still top SVAC
team after win ·over Eastern

"sensitive," "slim,"

"smart," "handsome," "tal ented,'' "fun-loving," "successful." And one phrase always
appears: " Photo please."
Women advertisers, I noted,
are equally conceited: "SmashIng redhead- savvy, sa ne, slim
and graceful, wlth fine sense of
humor, healthy outlook, early
40s, seeks accomplished, attractive man." And - "Spicy,
smashing widow seeks solvent.
Jewish sports'man ."
Thls makes me wonder how I
would have Inventoried myself
when I was on I he singles scene.
Would I have sent out 10-year-old
photos and ca lled myself "an
intelligent , witty woman of substance"? Or would I have been
honest , admitting that I'm often
s tubb orn ·a nd cranky, have
flabby thighs and a weakness lor
stray dogs?
What if I had advertised for a
ta ll , blond millionaire ln good
physical shape? Then I might
never met balding Blll, who slls
up wllh me when I can't sleep.
washes dishes and worries III get
home late.
I have no quarrel wllh trying
almost any new method of
me&lt;&gt;ting people. We all know that
every DF and DM Is faced with
the problem.

By JIM WEIDEMOYER
• Tribune Staff Writer
MERCERVILLE - On paper,
the Hannan Trace boys basketball squad does not appear to be
the best team in the Southern
Valley Athletic Conference; but
un til somebody proves otherwise, someone will have a tough
time telling them that .
The Wildcats, conti nuin g to
play unselfish basketball; rolled
to their ninth straight conference
victory Tuesday ni ght with 75-65
conquest of Eastern.
With the team's confidence
. building alter each game. Hannan Trace Coach Mike Jenkins
feels his .sq uad has made themselves the top team in the league.
"We're not the best tea m in the
conference, because there are a
lot of strong teams ," Jenkins
sald after .his squad improved Its
league-leading record to 9-1, 10-4
overall. "But because we keep
winning, we have made ourselves the team to beat." ·
Eight of Hannan Trace's nine
roster players scored, three in
double figures, Tuesday night , as
the Wildcats slow ly turned a
close game into a brea ther, and

Share of profits _____Ja_c_k_A_nd~e_r.~_nn_&amp;_·_n_al_('-~_an_A_t_ta
WASHI NGTON - Millions of
The arrangement would help to These were clandestine opera - should not necessarily be exdoll ars in profits on the Iran/con- ex plain the Israelis' crucial role tion s th at Casey didn 't have
pected to coincide wlth those of
in th e arms-for-hostages deal. congressional approval to the Unlled States.
tra arms deal are unaccounted
for- and so me of the money wa s
Their e nthusiasm reportedly conduct.
" Massad ls responsible lor
di verted to Massa d, the Israeli
kepi the dubious scheme alive
Sources close to North, who foreign Intelligence collection,
Intelligence service, according to
when so me U.S. officials began to was !ired from the National political action and counterterget cold feet.
our sources.
Security Council staff because of rorism ." the secret report states.
Congressional Inves ti ga tor s
In fairnes s to the Isra elis. they the alleged diversion of funds to "The principal function of Masare try ing to find out if some of
have for years provided intelli- the contras, ·told us that North sad ls .to conduct agent opera the profit made from overcharg- gence of Incalculable value to the held the view that profits result - lions against th e Arab nations
ing Ira n wound up going to the
CIA . Massad's most important ing from overcharging Iran for and their official representatives
Nica raguan contra s and. if so.
information has been on the the U.S. weapons didn't belong to · and Installations throughout the
whether this diversion was legal.
Soviet Union, where the Israeli the federal government. The world, particularly in Wes tern
But what the investigators
secret service ha s' a network of deals were made overseas, the Europe and th e United States : ...
don 't know is that , during the
agents whose access and " take" money was put In a Swiss bank,
" M~ssad Is also charged with·
secret di sc ussions with the Israe- the CIA can 't· begin to mat ch.
and the Pentagon and CIA were Inciting disturbances calculated
lis over the arms sa le, it was
One source . who was close to paid back '\'.hat th e arms cost to create mutual distrust among
und erstood by all concerned that
Lt. CoL Oliver North and was them . Anything else was up for the Arabs and to draw Western
some of the profits would go to part of' the arm s-lor-hostages grabs in North's opinion. accord- sympathy away from the Arab
Massad lor its undercover opera- opera tion, said lt was understood , ing to the sources.
cause. and monitoring and counlion s in Europe and the Midd le by North and others that some of
"We knew the middlemen teracting Arab propaganda and
East. Pa rt of the intelligence the profit swouldgot oMo;sad. In would probably get rich on this." detecting and countering Arab
"lake" from these secre tl y -.!qct. an intimate of CIA Director a North associa te told us. " But as terrorism. In the area of counterlund&lt;'ll opera tions was to be William Casey said he and Casey long as our objectives on the terrorism. at limes the Israelis
discus sed th a t undt'rstandlng hosta ges and conta cts wllh Iran - have carried the fight to Arab
shared with the CIA.
"The Israelis always nerd early las t year.
ian leaders were mel. we would terrorists.•·
cas h. and especially Mossad, "
Casey went along wlth th e be happy."
.
.," ... Massad's overriding function ,
A classified and revea ling,CIA Of ..eour-se, ...[$..·'·'protec tion of thl!:.......
explained one source familiar secret diversion of money to
with thr arms deals. "They need
Massad. the sou rce explained , " portrait" of Massad explains state of Israel," as the CIA
fat Swiss accounts to pay off because ln the past Massad has the role of I his most respected of document notes - but as the
informant s and run their intelli - underta ken delica te Intelligence spy orga ni za tions - and also Whlle House gunrunners appargencr nrtwork ."
jobs
lor the CIA on r~ que st . makes clear why lis Interests ently forgot.
.

.

How sweet it isn.,t _________D_o_n_G_raf:..:,_f
"The U.S. government-struck another blow the other day lor unrest in
our Central American and Caribbean
back yard."
That is a recycled lead sentence,
but it is as accurate today as it was
when I wrote it three years ago.
Washington has again cut the quota
for sugar imports. This year, foreign
suppliers lo the American market
will be limited to some I million tons,
down from 1.7 million in 1986.
To be fair, the Department of Agriculture had no choice in decreeing the
cut. It is mandated under a support
program adopted by Congress in 1981
that sels limits on sugar imports
based upon domestic production the more sugar American producers
send lo market, the less !rom loreign
growers is allowed into the country.
The original intent was to stabilize
a highly volatile commodity market.
By controlling supply, a boom-andbust cycle has been eliminated.
But the effect has been an artificially high price - about 21 cents a
pound compared to 5 cents on the
world market - that American consumers musl pay for pure sugar. This
also affects the cost the many products that contain sugar.
The program has proved a windfall
for the very few at the expense of the
many.
In addition to harming American
consumers, the · support program
· could have a devastating effect on the
sugar-growing nations to our south,
which should be our primary suppliers - bul which too often find themselves virtually shut out of their most
important market.
These are the very countries which
the Reagan ~dmlnistration's Carlbbe-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Meigs'"' back on top in race ·after 78-70 win over Spartans

Advertising for love -----~-R_us-=-ty_B_raw_n_

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

~ ~ r-T""'L.....__-,- I r-T""C:! d
~v

Wednesday, January 28, 1987

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio •
Wednesday, January 28. 1987

That reminder !rom Heritage is a
an Basin Initiative, pushed through breath until it is taken. And there's
surefire candidate for recycling - reCongress in 1983. is supposed to assist more:
via "more liberal access to the U.S.
"Economic problems often lead to peatedly, judging by the American record in dealing with countries with
market to spur their economic political problems."
fragile economies.
development."
Those words are recycled, from a
recent release by the Heritage Foundation on the sugar quota. Once again
r lind myself in essential agreement
with unflinchingly conservative Heri·
tage. The foundation makes the further point that the shrunken sugar
quotas "have certainly. not heloed but
have added to the problems of their
(Caribbean basin countries') fragile
economic and social systems."
The counterargument has been advanced that these countries also benelit from the high support price. My
previous comment on the subject
prompted a rebuttal letter !rom the
Sugar Information Bureau, the American producing industry's Washington
lobby. It claimed that, because of the
support program, the Caribbean basin
'
• 'I
countries receive a higher price for
.'
lhe sugar they sell in this cobnlry and
that this more than compensates for
•'
the limits on how much they can sell.
·••
So it might appear. But closer examination suggests a deeper and dis.'
torting impact on the economies of
••
the coun(ries in question . They have
been encouraged to gamble on a high·
•
stakes American market that, when i1
•
•
.,.,
doesn 't pay off, leaves them with huge
and undlsposable surpluses. Mills
close, unemployment rises and the li·
•I
nancia I problems of the region
~:-~
~r~
...._,
'!•
worsen.
i' lte7 lh NEA In(
, ••
Heritage thinks the administration
and Congress should begin phasing
"Let's play 'Col. North ' for a while and NOT
'
out the present support program and
SAY
ANYTHING."
import restrictions.
••I
Good advice, but don't hold your

Berry's World

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I hen

into a rout.
Eastern, 6-9 overall and 4-6 In
the league, trailed 16-14 after one
period, but the outside shooting
of Wildcats Scott Rankin and
Chris Petro, mixed wlth the
inside post play of Rick Swain,
pushed the visiting Eagles to a
36-28 deficit at th&lt;' hall.
Rankin, a 6-loot-1 junior, captured game- high scoring honors ·
wlth 21 points. Petro and Swain,
both 6-2 juniors, bucketed 17 and
16.
After trading a pair of baskets
in the third quarter, Hannan
Trace ran o!llO straight points to
take a 50-32lead at the3 : 52 mark.
In the following slx minutes, the
Wildcats sco red two points to
Eastern's every one, amassing a
68-44 advantage wlth just under
six minutes remain ing in the
game.
Eastern outscored Hannan
Trace 21-7 in the frantic linalllve
minu tes to close the gap to 10.
Junior Jeff · Caldwell led the
Eagles with 20 points. Senior Ed
Collins and junior ·Mark Griffin
scored 15 apiec&lt;&gt;. .
"We played hard," Eagle
Coach Dennis E ichinger said.

"We had problems with Hannan
Trace's defense and keeping up
with .their offense. They have a
lot of mov ement.
"We live and die bv the
jumpshot , because · we · can't
rebound very well offensively .
Hannan Trace blocks out very
well and we had a lot of problems
getting any rebounds. They
(Hannan Trace! had too many
second shots."
The Wildcat s outrebounded
Eas tern 50-33. Tim Brumfield, a
5-11 sophomore. led the charge
·underneath with 10 rebound s.
Petro a.nd slx-foot junior Richard
Stitt collected nine each.
In the reserve con test precl'd·
lng the varsity gam&lt;&gt;. Hannan
Trace downed Eastern 38-26.
The Wildcats next play Friday
at Oak Hlll, while Eastern hosts
Kyger Creek.
Ei\STERN t6Si - Culdwett ~20 l-~ 20;
follins 5-15 5-5 15; Dun~t J•.a 0.0 2; Grl llln
7· 11 1·2 15: Hendrbl IH Z· U: Martin 3-H-t
fi: Tripp ().J 1-21: Nolionl-56-02; Wll!oion
t-t tl-0 2. TOTALS 2&amp;-IIG 13-22 63.

HANNi\N TRACE !151 - Bn&lt;mfleld 2·3

0.0 4: Rankin 9-IM 3-5 2'1; Sw~in .9 4-6 Jti:
Petro •12 5-H I7; SUU 3-10 t-4 H; .lonl'!' 1-2
3-5 3; .Jf!!nklns 1·3 O·U; Cremeen,. 0.06- 10;
·htrrell o-o ~-:12. TOTAL.'it 2K-57 19 2.J. 75.
B)'

quarters:

·

Ea.l•m ..................... l4 14 13 22- tiS
Hannan Tracr ... ..... ... l6 2tl 25 14 - 73

Rio o-utlasts Panthers, 85-79
COLUMBUS - Senior guard
Mike Smith scored 21 of his 25
points in the second half Tuesday
night to propel Rio Grande
.College past Ohio Dominican
85-79 for a Mid-Ohio Conference
victory.
.
The viciory was the 12th in a
row lor the !£ague-leading
Redm en.
Rio Grande, 21-4 overall and 7-0
in the MOC, held a 14-point
advantage early In the second
half and almost allowed the
Panthers back Into the game by
connecting on only live of nlne
free-throw attempts in lhe' Ialler
stages.
Joe Verhoff, last week 's MOC
player of the week , supported
Smith's offensive a tta c~ with 23

points.
"We like to go to those people
(Vehoff and Smith) ln key game
situations," Redmen Coach John
Lawhorn said.
The Red men were 36-of-70
from the lleld (51.4 percent).
Smith was 10-ol-16 (62.5 percent) .
Ohio Dominican hit on 31 of 13
field -goa l attempts (42.5
percenli .
Rio Grande dominated underneath the basket, collecting 43
rebounds to ODU's 33. Led by
Verhoff's 18 rebounds, th&lt;&gt; R&lt;&gt;d·
men pulled ln 15 offensive
rebounds.
.
Ohlo Dominican was led offensively by Brian Harvey wlth 21
points and Johnnie Walters wit h
16.

Highlanders top OVCS 66-61
• Forced Into a starting rote,
Southwestern High School sopho.'
more guard Dave Mershon responded Tuesday. night with 20
· · · .. "polntlno"lead ·the-Highlanders .to ...
a 66-61 victory over visiting Ohio
Valley Christia n School.
With senior starting guard
Ricky Halslop deciding not to
finistlthe season wlth the team,
Mershon was forced to start the
second game of his career
Tuesday night. Senior forward
Sean Colley has also decided not
to finish the season wlth the
team .
Minus those two r&lt;&gt;gulars, the
Highlanders held a slim 8-7lead
alter one period and grabbed a
26-22 advantage at the hall.
Behind the scoring of Matt
Pearson. wh0 fl n Ished Ihe game
with 20 points, the Defenders
rallied to wlthln 39-36 entering
the final period.
An up-tempo final qu ar ter led
to both tea ms scoring more than

24 points before the final buzzer
sou nded:
Supporting Mershon oftensively were seniors Justy Burleson, .. who . scored.. l5 points, .ant:!
Danny Patrick, I3. The lwo
front court players led the charge
underneat h, as the Highlanders
collected 50 rebounds. Patrick
hauled In 18 and Burleson 15.
In the reserve contest precedlng the varsity game, Southwestern defeated the Defenders.
The Highlanders • .8-7 overall
and 4-6 In the Southern Valley
Athletic Conference, next play
when they travel to Symmes
Valley Friday night .
OHIO \ ' ALLEY CIIRL~TIAN tfli p,.,.,
.. 7-11-20: Bt.vtn, 11-2-2; Pultmon
2-11-4: KrMIIIIHIK: Wttk .... ~H: .fohn.on
Hi. TOTAL~ 2t-t9-6t.
SOUTHWESTERN (661 - A.

~l-K; Burt.. on s-:r-rs:

Hat•lop

Patrkk' :1-7-13:

Bryant :1-2-~ Mmhon Hill; Hively 1-tl-2.
TOTAL'S 22-22-111.

By quiU1ero:
Ohto "aJ Chr" ·ll~~n
7 t• t • •• 61
Sourhw .. tern.......... .... l! tH 13 :n- 88
•

p

......

•

•

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Rio Grande .will look to extend
square off against MOC foe
Malone.
RIO GRANDE (115) - SmNh 10- l-2~
K-f.H6; Raymore
3+7; ollldL"'OII 1-0·2: K~arJL'i

1-tl-2. TOTALS 36-l~KS.
ll~t.rvey

OHIO DOMINICAN {i9) -

'

lMAR.T.

.,.,.

SCHEDUlED MAINlENANCEAl REGUlAR liMES

HUEY EASON

The Daily Sentinel
IUSPS ll ~ ROO I
J\ 01\'lo;lon Of Multlmedl ol. ln1·.
Published ('\•rry aftern oon. M on&lt;l• •~·
lh rou~ h Frida,\', Il l Cou rT ST.. P4l·
me&gt;r~ . Ohio. h~· lhr Ohln Vall~· Pub·
l l.~h\ nj:!

Lompan_v , Mull lmf'&lt;Ua . ln r ..
Pomt:'rm·. Ohlo4!l7fi9, Ph . 99~ · 2 1 !i •i. Sl"·

t'()nd rl :iss po!'&gt;laJ:!f' p&lt;thl at Pom rrov,
Ohi o.

531 JACI&lt;SON PIKE · RT 35 WEST
Phone 446-4524

BARGAIN HAT!NHS SATURDAY &amp;

SU NDAY • All SEATS 12.50
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY 12.10

ENGINE
TUNE-UP

JANUARY 23 lhru 29
FRIDAY th ru THURSDAY:

Mf'mhrr: Un it('(\ Pr f'S~ l nl f'l'n:JIIonnl.
In !&lt;J nd Da II v Prf' .~S Assodatlon a ncl I hf'

$2195 $2495

Oh io Nr•ws(l&lt;tpror A ssrX'ial ion . Ni! l hm;tl
Advrrllsln~

RC'pr€'Sf'01at lv t•. ,Ar :cnham

Nrw~paprr

Salf'S. 7,1:{ Th!rc!

6·cylin&lt;kll

Awm.Jc• .

POSTMA."TER : ~nd addfl""~ r·h a n g~
to Thr Oallv Sf'nlmrl. Ill Cnul't St. .
Pomr'rny. Oh.lo ~!l71i!l.

:n.

llalhlm e s(:ore: Rio Grande
Ohio
Domlnlc.'UII 3t Thre('-polnt goab1 : Rio
Grande 1·2 (Smith), Ohio Dominican ..._13
{Harvi'Y 3. HooYer). Kehound.'i : Rln
Grande ~3 (Vnllotf IM) , OhioDomlnlc~un !U

Wallei'H 91 .

North Gallia girls
upset SV, 51-44
WILLOW WOOD Jane
Campbell scored 19 points Tues- ·
day night ,to lead the North Gallla
High School girls basketball
team to a 51-44 upset of prevlously !lPst-plafe d In the South·
. ern. Valley Athletic Conference
Symm&lt;&gt;S Valley.
North Gallia, 3-11 overall and
3- 7 In the league, used a strong
fourth quarter to comeback and
hand Symmes Valley only Its
second loss of the season.
Symmes Valley , whose only
other loss came at the hands of
Oak Hlll, was tie with Oak Hill ror
first place In the conference
en tering the contest,
Ahead lJ-4 after one period ,
North Gallla led 25-22 at halftime
and found Itself lralllng 36-34
h fl
d
enter1ng t e na 1 per 1o ·
Rachel Borden added 13 points
for North Callla and Rita Cordell
chipped ln within 11.
Becky Fu ller and Brooke
Smith led Symm&lt;'S Valley wllh 11
and 10 points.

IMPORTANT
NOTIC'
E
·
TO
DOG OWNERS
OF MEIGS _COUNTY
Owners are responsible for seeing that their dogs
.are li&lt;ensed each year. Beginning February 1,
1987, the Meigs County Dog Warden will begin
chicking dogs for tags. Owners of dogs not having
tags will be cited to court and subltct to fine. Final
day to purchase dog tags with_out penalty is
.
JANUARY 30, 1987~

8-c~llnnet

P11ce 1nctude.s: [For eng1ne.s 'Nith

ctemonic Ignition!

SUBSCRIPTIO N R.\TE!&lt;
By Carrier or Mol or R&lt;lu«•
Onf' WPC'k .................................. $1 .2:1

o Install Mopar/(hamplon

spark plugs

. ........... S~i4.1
... $ti rd)(}

Ont• Mo nt h .. .'.
Onr Yrar . .. .

o AdJuSt idle speed

• Set timing
•Inspect emissions comrol system
Stilndard ignttion
vci11Cies equipped w11h
greater than 2-bbl carburetors.

SINGLE COP\'
PRICE
Dail.v ................. ................ :!5 Crn l s

:~H

(.f.

STAYING IN
TUNE IS

'l

bosls. rr'r clll will br g-lwn ra rrlf'r f'Ul'h

.

Rrsrr vcs ·Mrigs -1·1. AIPxander

SAVE

Tuckl'l' 6-IH2; Hawley 4- 1·9: B. Wu.lt""'

Walters 7-2-16; Hoo\'er 6-0-13;

TOTAL'S 3~!1-19.

r\LEXANnEJt (70) - ,Jay
Ma r 1in 4- l-!l . .Joe Me L1 in ~- 11 - 2~.
Denton Gu thrie ~, .:J.J:l. Mike
Chapman 2·1·'· Doug Kl'iter
;,.o.w. flill Whillntch 1·2-4. Ri r h"rd Carroll 0·11·11, Scoll Staldl'r
0·0-0. TO'l't\1.~ 210-tX-711.
lly quarter"'
Mclgs .......... l7 2~ Ito lR - 7R
Alex.md&lt;'r ... 20 12 Ito 22 - 70

G.lf AIIIC

Subsrrlbrrs no1drslrlnf.! 1o p:~~· 1hr ear·
rlrr mav rrmll in adv:1n rr dl rrPI t tl
Th1• Da iiv Sflnl ln fll on a :t, tl or 12 mon1 h

9-D-~ 1:

SCO I'I' :

7K.

:u

Verhoii9-G-~ RltUn~:er
Fo,~tt

Box

MEIGS (7XI - J . R. Kitchen
10.:1-2:1. Donn ie B••eker :j-1-11.
Mik&lt;•llartrum lo-0-12. Brent Bls&lt;&lt;'ii.J. ~I - 1 7. II uev Ea so n G-0-12, Bill
Bro th ers 11-11·0: Phil King 1-1-.1,
Scali Will iams 11·0·11, SII' Vt'
Musser 0-0-11, Chr is Smit h 0-0-0,
Scali Pow&lt;'li ll 0-0. TOTALS :12 - 1~

Nrw Yo rk. Nf'w York 111111 7.

its win ning streak Salurday,
when it travels to Canton to

t-2-10;

.tocy Snyder's J:l points paced
th P MHS r rsNvcs while Scott
Neig ler enjo_vrd his seasonal
high with !~ . Ton)· Dicken and
Dennis .Jarvis Ird Alexa nd t'r wlth
12 rac h.

sliqhlly hlqhec

Good thru 2/1 ~ . Olhtr Mt digh lly higher .

COOPER

WC'I'k .

No subscrlplions h~· mall pt"rm! Tit'd In
arroa s whPrr homr c arr ll'r . . r n •ln' I"
avai! Hhl C'.

Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge
395 So. 3rd, Middleport

Mall Su~t·rlplionJO
IMidt· MriR!'I County
U Wl'l'kS .....
.. .................. ~ 1 7 . 2!1
21i Wl'l'kS.. ..... ... .... .
. ~1&lt;1 . 1Hl

992·6421

HOURS : Mon .-Fri. 8 -6

Sot. 8-4

.12 Wflrks ................................ ~ti . !iii

Out!'dd1•

M f' l~

m. mo~r liHr~.:l

C'uunty
........ SllUII

U Wrf'ks

\\'1'1'~.... ......
.., $.1!i.lll
'i~ \\ i • " k ~ ........................... ~ 7 . 1;11

26

MOONLIGHT MADNESS

THURSDAY 6· 10 P.M.
WRANGLER JEANS
LADIES' FLEECEWEAR
REG. 512.99

STIRRUP PANTS
IN

BLACK &amp; WHitE

SIZES SM·IL

20°/ooFF

SALE

$9 88

MEN'S, WOMEN'S &amp; JRS.
RACK LADIES' LONG SLEEVED

OVERSIZED SWEATSHIRTS
REG. S11.99

SALE

GIRLS' &amp; BOYS'

Jackets &amp; Coats
REDUCED

50-75°/o
LADIES'

WINTER
COAlS
1/2PRICE

sass

BLOUSES
REDUCED

MEIGS

JACKETS

M..OON, WOOl WITH GOLD

KNiT TllM

REG. '62.99

SALE

$48 99

50· 75°/o
LADIES FLANNEL &amp;
BRUSHED NYLON

PJ's &amp; GOWNS
1/2 PRICE
MEN'S ORLON

LADIES'

sox

SOCKS

66C

ASSORTED COlORS - SIZE 10-13

WHitE WitH PASTEl TIIM
SIZE 9·11

RUGS
SALE $988

PILLOWS

SIZI 30150-ASSOmD COIOIS

ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPOU

STANDAID SIZE

::~,

SALE

$4 44

�Page- 4 - The Daily Sentinel

_Wednesday, January 28, 1987

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio .

Wednesday, January 28, 1987 .

Pomeroy
erchants -Assoe iati·on
7 P 'Til11 .PM

Thursday, Jan. 29
•

HAP MAN

DON'T
MISS

MOONLIGHT
MADNESS

SALE

Moonlight
Madness

25°/o

THURSDAY, JAN. 29th
7 P.M. to 11:00 P.M•.

OFF

ONE LARGE GROUP

DRESS SHOES

ONE LARGE ·
GROUP

ENTIRE .
STOCK

FLATS &amp; CASUALS

DRESS
SHOES

Values up to 540

THURSDAY

\\'
BMon ............ ............. :ll
r hlhutelp hiu. .... ..... ... : ... '!-1
\\'u hln Jtton ... .............. 21
Jl.it•l'· Vor k .................... J:I
Nt•l'' ·l r r ~ t'Y ................. 11
( 'r nlral

L Pl'l . GB
II .7lll JM .m 1
'!ll · .51'! flh
'!9 ,;\It IK
:lfl .211K I!H 1

lll\'l ~ l o n

Atl an l a ........................ 21
Dr lrnll ......... ............ .. :Ji
Mllwa ukt'4' .... ............. .. 27
Ch.lt 'llfi:O ....... ....... ..... ... 21

U ,, J9
1:\ .,H
IK .6110
1!1 . U ~
lndl anu ....................... oo 2t . ~'l6
C'k&gt;vrll• d .................... lti ~ .:111 1

I

t
l• 1
1•,.{
11 1.1

\\'&amp;"'TERS ('OSt'EHt:Nn:
Mldl't'f'S I Jl1, ;.Jo n
\\' 1. Pt·t. (; R
IJ :.Il~., ......................... 'a! I!J .S:!I ( 'lalt ......................... .... 21 Jj .5115 ~
ll ou:o.&amp;un ............... :....... t l ~ .li 6 1•.1
~ n.Hr .. .. .................... J!I 2-1 .Ut
II
SUI'r!UIII'nlu ........ ......... H 27 :1-11 1:!
Sun ,\nt onto ....... .......... l:l ~ .110 1 ~ ' t
r ae-lilt- Dh·l.o.lun
I,!\ I A krr ~ ....... ..... ..... .. :t:l H .~ J&gt;ort h u.d ................... !!) I ~ .5!1 1 11
Srallh•... ......... ........... t! I ~ . ~1') 10• 1
Golden St atr .. .... ..... ..... ta_'! I . ~t.l 11
rh ot'fli~ .. .. ...... ......... ,... JH '!.'i . ~1 9 ~ ~ · - ·
LA£' llpp ('l'!i,_................. S :Jfi 1!'2 '!"; I ;

1\tt'N dllY' s Rf-•ults
f'ttll wlclp hl ll IOK. Nrw York 111:1
,\II ant a 11-1, Tndl anu !Ill
Boston 105, fhkUKO !1'1
\\'w; hln~~;ton Il K. Da tl ao. m
San .&lt;\ntonlo 1111, Ue l roit m
Ut ah !J2, ll 011ston1U1
Saer~mwnto lUI, Nt•w ·" '"''')' 11 .5
LA Lakrn; 107, r ortlwuiiOO
Milwuukf&gt;t• 119, Ciul den !&gt;il alt• 11 3
\\'t•dn t-s\la,v's G:um&gt;N
( ' h h-aj~:o 1&amp;1 Bo~hm. f ::l ltp.m.
( ' h'\' t•land 1&amp;1 Phil adt•lphiiL ~: :w p.m.
(:oldt!n St!'IP :.&amp;1 Ptuw n l~ . rt::IIJ p.m.
f'oit'" ' ·IPr Nt-, 111 LA f ll p p ('l'~. 111 ::10 p.m.
I.A l.:.t. kt-~ 1LI Sl•ut tl••, 10 ::18 p.m.
Thu rsda..v 's c:a ml'!i
1\ tl lUit :.&amp;Ill fll'\' I'IMd, nlRht
\\'w;hl ngton ut Dt•lr olt, nl ,;hl
Mll..,.·uukrP Ill lluustun, nl ~ ltl
Oall ll!&gt;i at IJt&gt; n\' c-r, nl.: ht
f'ort !und 1111 ( ltah. n l~o: ht
Sa n ,\nl onlo at Sul· rauu• nlt~. ni ~:"tf

.

IIIII 161
16! II'!

(' AMPBELL CONJiERENCE ~
Norr~ Dh'lslon
l\' L T f&gt;t!O. GFGA.
Mlnn ('!Oota ............... 'lt 21 5 -19 IH" 111
IJ Mr olt .................... 1:0 t l ll -l1i 1~1 1 69
St. Lou(j; ....... .. ......... IH %~ II U 166 1116
Toront•1 ............. ...... 19 ~ 5 U 1711 1tlll
('h l~ aR0 ....... .. ........ .. 11tti 1 11 m211~
Sm,,·tht• 01 \'lslnn
F..dmo nton ............... :1:1 II 3 69 ~5 1 1~
"' l n n l p e ~~; ................. 'l7 111 3 S9 m no
f tda:IUJ' ................... 'n t! I » WII J94
Lo~ Angt•l eo ............. 21 t~ 6 -lll ~ 8 'ttl~
\'ant:uuvr r ....... ..... ... l :\~ ti :16 166'rol

,,,

'f'll •'!&gt;lda.,v'"' Re~ u lt~
()u t&gt;hl'~ -1. Ha rt lord 2''PIIIsbur,;h 7. Wu~tJ!tjghm 5
Wlnnlpt~,; t. N\' I !O i andf&gt;r~ 2,iol l
·""· Lou~ 2, MMilr n J 1 t
Edmo nton~ . \iant'I!Un r -1 (ot'
\\'r dn t!!id ll.)' '!i t&gt;umt..,

Phll adplphla W Buffulo, 1: :13 p.m.
Wa. hln.- on al lh•t r o11. , :3S p.m.
Wln nlpl'll al J'I.'Y Ra o gt&gt;n;. ~: OS p.m. ' ~·
Torr)nto lll ( ' hh ·a ~ . K: ~ p.m.
Van l"G U\Ier at E dm onton, ·11: l5 p.m.
N••w -l t•rM•y at Lu.~ Angdt'!'&gt;. 10: ~ p.m.
Th u nod~ ' s Gumt'!i

.Ha rtfor d at B ~ t on. n l~tti
PHI!ihUr( h al Phlladl'lphi L Olft hl
Twonto"' St. Louis. nl ( ht
Mlnn e-;olll al C' ~t i Jtary , nl 11 ht

Transactions
RA."'EB,\LL
f 'lndnnlltl - Sla: n•od flr sl hw.Pmllll
Nlt-k t:~ a.~q- to a 1-ye ur t1lntr!ld .
D Ptr nU - Ohll, lnt•d oulfit•ldt•r Terry
llu r pt•r un d mi no r lt-ll(lll' ouiAI'Ick-r
f'n•ddl•• 'l'lhU r clo fr om ,\JI~~r~l a for
pltt ·h er ~ ltundy O'Nrld und f hut:k Ca f)':
mn flt•ldt•r&gt;. ·1o1m Gruhh an d Put Sht•rl dllll
u,~;rt• o • d tu l·yt•ar t-unt rud~ .
K u n !ia~ flty - A nnount:·~ d l hilL pllt •ht•r
Murk Ciulllt:J:a h tLoo; lllltf t~ · d to a onr--Vt'llf
o·ontrad ; ~ ignrd uutflt•ldt •r ~ lary Th urOlwt to 11 unt" )' t'ar &lt;'G ntra_t•l.
t'h 11adt•1p hl a - Slp;nPd o ulfMtll'r ~
&lt;iary Rt•du , and Mill Thompson to 1-,vt•ar
n mlraebi.
'l'ul t•do til.) - Num••tll.ron Ro iH · rt ~
f'O U .E GE
IInhart - Nu m. •d IJkk Tay lor looth;tll
t 'lilll ' h.

NHL Standings
\\'/\I.E"! ('0!'\' 1-'ERJ.:S('E
l'ut r h-k 01\' foilon
\\' I. T l&gt;ts. ~· ·· l :i\
l'h lludt·lr hla ........... :t! 1:1 I ~ JOlt 1:\ti
N'\ ' l s l ~wd• ~ r~ .......... il t l ~ ii:t li7 169
\\' •hln~o n ........... ~ ll t l 1 n
I Ii~ It\~
N'\' ltnnr;t•n; .......... 19 '!2 II ~ ti 19K I!IX
...... ........ 19'!2 K

~ti

Nt•11· -ll·rst'' ..... .. ..... to '!.'i 5 .1.1
,\d um ~

~~
j.t

1111111
1 ~:1 '!:!II

ll lvb1on
Mn nt rt•u.l ................ 23 ~2 j 57 1~!1 li!l
llart furd ..............: ... ~ .i i H ~ ;.l:i JH:t lfi2
Rnstun ..................... 2.1 I ~ ~ .i ~ 111 0 l ii:l

r· tt udt•l - NunH.! d .lark Oan M~ U» skt·
an t loolludl t:ru.. ·h.
Rt\,"1 K.ETD,UI.
Goldt•n Shllt• - At·t' l\' lltt•d lur~o~ :~rd
P un ~ !'l hor1 lrom lnj tm•d 11~ 1 : pl_ao: l'd
lurwa rd f h rl:o~ \\'wo hbll rn 1111 dl sa hh •d 11~1.
t 'OOTBt\ LL
£'iodnnllt l - N)lnh•d M1 kt• Sh wk
s prduJ h •an1"' • -oa~ h.
1'\• •w O r h • l&amp;li-~ - \\'al\·t•d runnln.t:' hark
\\-' ~t,'' "'' Wl1~ 11n IUl d nl 1nqu1shl'd IlK' r 1~th l
tu dt• ltm~ l vi: t•lld (' ~aNt ')' .\ hr rlll.
\\'~ llln,l(l un Narm·d Oan llt·nnlnK
W'~l&gt;.l~anl oftt•ns l\'l' t'IHU'h: w;s h:nl'd ol·
lcnNtv t• mw:h 1-:mmltl Thoma.o; to tht•
dt•lr n,;t•.

6.,0 1t tTIM&gt;I n ( Ohio ) ~U- 3 1 ............. - ·
7.•Tt•r M'Y flty Sl ~tt' I I H I .. , ............... ..
~ . fa l ~all• Slan~ l...u r. ( 1 :1- ~ ) ...... ........ ..
.!1. Soulht•IIIILt•rn MPM. ( 1:!--01....... ... ..... .
Jl), Ki ng' ~ l I'LI. l t 1 2- ~l ................. ........ ..
11 . Wl st'O n ~ l n- ~' hH t&gt; Wall•r [l:t-31 ... ....... ..

£'0LUM8US. Ohl" t UPI ) - Thl~
~ttk' ~o~ Un ltf'tl Pr ~s l ntr r nallunul Ohio
llllh Sehoo! Hua rd of C' o~~.~.; ht ~' .- lrho
hlltlkf'lhal l raU n ~ (w it h OrM · phk'l' v ott •~o
Wid won-- lost l'l't'ords In pan•nllwM1'1 I:

1'!. r"nl n• cKy. ) (I H) ..... ........... . ....... ..

1:1. Franlr.llniiMa rl'lhllll (l'll-1( 11-t ) .... .
U. NuutN'Ih (N.\'. ) CI3-3J .................... .
U . f lllrk (Maf'iN,) t lf-2'1 ...................... ..
Ill. Emor~· &amp; llr n ry ( '\lu.) (I t-:1 ) ....... .. ..
11. H opr i M I~h. l i i !J-3 1 ......... ..
I ll. Nor th P~~ork (Ill.) i l-1-l) ........... ..
Ill. ( 'hit' a&amp;~ 1111.) CI :Z..'!I ....... ..... ........ .. ..
•tO. Ainhrnl (MuM . ) 111· 1) ..... ..
lllrl lll&amp;m llton CN .\ ',) (9-:1 ) .............. ..

CLA.~ s.UA
Point ~

Tt'lllll

1. Cant on l'ol t: Ki nl~· (12 ) tll-0) ........ '!3~
2. flnd nul l Sci on (Ill ( IHf ........ , .• t:JI

:t.

AkronR ~ hl el (\l)

(14-0l .............. J!I:t
~ - [~tst Ctl'vrland Shaw ( If tll- 11 .... 16:1
) . r~t rm a Holy Namt' ( H- Ill ...... .. .... IIHi
l:i. ftarll&lt;l'l'lon ( I ~ I ) ....... .. .. .......... .. ..... ffi
7. fin Prlno·rto n 11-&amp;--\ll ...................... tn
~. ('I n MI. Notrr Damt· tl iH l ... ......... til

!1. Tot frn trsl l'ul hu lh- ( I I 113-l t ....... so
10. Fln dl a:.· 121 tl-1--0 ) ................ .. ....... 12
~• ·&lt;'O ndl fn : II. K• 'lt l•rl n ~tFu lrmo nl :10:
l't. Wan;IIW RIHr Vh•w tl: 13. Sidn ey 2.'1:
U . C'olumhus Sout h '!0: 15. Tol edo
V.'hltmt&gt; r 11; 16. Dll)' lon l' altrrsttn 1.1; 17.
t:ucll d 12: Ill (tlr l t: lyrl u lln dSprl ngl'lt&gt;l d
!;oulh, II l'at'h: 00. (tlr) l.an nl'&gt;tt•r tUi d
Up pt..- 1\rll ngt on, 10 I'IU'h.
('LA."i!'l AA
Tt•wn
l 'n lnl ~
I. ¥1' t~t lloJm • ~ l t:H I IIi-Ill .
.. .. :1~
'!. ¥1' t • ll~\' lll t•l l' (11;.0) ....
. ... \!.i ii
• 3. 1'1pp f it ,\· tl ) I 1 :~ I ) ..........
...... tO.l
-1. \ 'lr nnaMalh• •" '" ( l l (1 ·1· 11) , ..... ItS
5. (Jt&gt;rmiUII0\\'0 Val Vh •w 11-l- 111
111
ti. \\'ellln(lun t l-1--11) ....... ....... .. .... .. I itt'
7. Rot-Icy R ln~ r Lut h ¥1' ~ 1 I U-1) .... .. .. ~
K. \\'~1 ~IU!O itln ~m tH-·1) ... .. ........ 1~
9. Beloit \\'t•sl H r~n l' h ('!I t i ~ UI .... .. .. 111
Ill. Strut ht•n; 111 II :J..t ) ........... ........ .... 11-.'i
St&gt;t1 1n d lr n; II. l.lm u Ba th n 12.
POIIUTIJ.\' ~l t• i j['!'l Il l 13; \:1. ( ' a.~ lllll a
M ar gart'l l ~ I I I :19; 1 ~ . 8 .Y"" \' Il1 t• ~ll•adtJw ·
1.-oolr. ~ 2 : 1 ~. Utlt·a :t9; 16. Spr 1nr.:flt•ld

Knl nn Hl dMt' ~; 11. lla m1llun R u~~ ( II
t:l; 1 ~ . \tl11.1n•n ( 'h:.t.m plon ~I; 1!1. ll h•1Oak
Hurhor an !I ('APE. Hl t·~· h .

fi.,\.'IS ,\
l' n in t ~

Tram

I II l ( 1 ~· 111 ..... , ... I!tO
'! . l'••f' hll'.~ 111 ! 11· 11) ........... .. .......... r'i;l
:1. Indi an Vttl Srtuth I II 116- 11 .......... 111
I . RUt·k r,·t·

II . Nrwa r k fut l\ol k ( 11· 11...

.. ... .... ...i l
9. l'u ndllra ·t:l1 ho u 1 II U l ·lf) . .. .. .. ... Aa
18. Zan ~"'VIIIi • n0~t'4·ran• (1 t · lf .. .. .... X I
St•t·ond lt•tt: II . \io· r~allh'!o 26: 12.

Bradlor d li : 1:1. ( tit•) !'\'firt h Adam ~ and
f n ·~ t vif'l'· . IG ; · ~dt U . tcl•• l
Ui• Gr llll Kl\'er~ ld • · I I ) ~d l\-1ans llt•ld ~~
Pt•h..-' !&gt;, 1.5 t•twh; 1&lt;. Unlot u II; HI. lilt•I
Franklin t· urnal' t' Gn•t•n und ll ll ll up. j
1'111'11 : ':JI, (t h•J M11.rlu n l.on U and Y••llol'
Spr lnK!' . 6 cm·.h.
( ·11n t 11~

NlAA Division Ill
Ratings

Women
ML"SION . Ka n. tlJI'I l - 11u • N( '&lt;\ .o\
II. w o mt&gt;n'~ -hwok;&gt;l httll poll
r d f'iUil'd Tu t.,.d a,v . w ith rl't·orct.. l lu'oua:h ·
·Ian. ~ti. :~nd Hltln~~: 1•olnl"';
Olvklon II
1'1 ~
Dlvl~lo n

•

1. C'11l l'oly·l' omnnQ 117-11 IKI ......... II!U
II :J. Il ..... 1.......... 1l ()
:1. Sou tJ.-w.t Ml,;,.,ourl st . (]8-~ 1 ..... .. l ~ll
~ - M ou nt !i t. Ma ry ·_
,. t Md ) ti:L- If ...... 1:17
~- N • • hra.~ka· Omllh ll ~~ ~ ~ ). ..
.. .... 1:1~
~ . ll t • lt u St . ! MI ~,.. )

PASTA

6. Wr l~~:ht Stull' (Ohio) I IH I ......... l it
i . I' IH't' (N .\ ', ) I 11-:IJ ..........
.. .. I I ~
II. Nt&gt;w 1111\ll'n tf'on n. ) i ll ·\!) .. ....... . 11 0

H. ~ o i'Ch Dll ktJ IIl Slat t• (l~ -t 1 .. .
...!lU
10. !Ia m pton ( \ 'a. J 1 1 ~ 0 ....
...MS
11 . i\,lhll.ll.' ' st att- cr; ... J !I ~ O f .. .. ..... i!l
1 ~. M't&gt;lil TPil "-" St . ( 1 ;~ :11 ... .
......... 111
1:1. St. A n~•~lm ( ll- 11................... ~ 1
11 . l~k•• Sup1•rlor St. (M k h. ) J l$-21 ... 30
13. Hor ldtt ln l••rnalltlntll ( I t;- ~ ) .......... n
16 . 1'11t ~h u rg·-ltl hn ,.,lo~~o· n il'n' 11:1-21 ... t:l
17. Bt•nlky J :\&gt;l llll~.) (I :J- 11............ .... :U
1 ~. 1'111 Sla(l• lA"' A nil••]..,. ( I'Hi) ......... t!t
19. C'!•n h-;11 Mi sl'ourl Slal t• ( If. I I ........ ~1
211 . Cian no n I P 11.. I (I l-l) ...................... I
ll h• l St . ( 'luod St. !Min n.) I ll ·lil l.. .

Kluski Noodles ............ S1.65
Fine Noodles ............... $1.05
Med. Noodles .............. $1.02
Brood Noodles ............ $1.05
Lg . Stuffing Shells ...... $1.15
Med. Macaroni Shells ...... 70'
Sm. Macaroni Shells ....... 70'
Elbow Macaroni .............. 68'
Rigatoni .......................... 75 '
Rotini Spirals .................. 75 '

NCAA Division· Ill
Women
MI SSIOI'I: . K11. n. t\ '1' 11 - Tlw N( ' \,\
Ill wom t•n's h Wok• • C h~JI Jtoll
r• •l • ·~~ • · d 1\l!.., du.,, ·. v.·ieh rt'l'ortlt- thr tJurth
,Jan. t 6:
DI\·M un Ill
I. 1111-.1 JMI,.s.J I IIi- 11........... ... .
11 1\· l ~ln n

Special This Week

2. t: ll 1~1 hl't lfn..,.· n I U ·ll l ... ....... .

WEDNESDAY, JAN. 21- MONDAY, FEB. 2

:1. K• •an 11'\ ..1.) ll f. t )
1. St•rant un ( l' u. 1 t l l-- 11 ................. ..
~-

('Ont·Ord lu I 1\tlnn. f ( U-:1) ...

Quick Oats &amp; Rolled Oats....................................

~.

l'onutna-l'll'l.t'r Jfall l.l l l l-- t l ...... .. .
....... . .
~ - rup ll itl l l)l•l•t • t 1 ~· 1 r ... ....... ...... ..... ..
!1. Sl. .lohn F l!ihi•r I\' .'\' .1 112- ~I .... ..
ln. \\ hot'(l n~ ln· S I !'\ + 'n ~ l'nlntJ I'!· IJ .. ..

2 PAIR $35

rl ' l' l 1 - Th t• ~T,\,\
f)Jvls lon' lll m t • n · ~ ha, kt•t hll ll !IIlii rt •
l••a-.t•d 'llH -s du~· wllh rl't'Ofd' t hr uu ~: h
-ian. ~'6.
Dl\l&gt;; lun Ill
I. l ' n! ~ d • Ull ~1. (!\' . \ '.) ( 16-0 1........ .
:!. l ':tl\'ln (•\ lld t ) I I~ · IJ ,,, ............ ..
:&amp;. Od' IIUII' IInti. ) I l l · tl .......... .
( 1 ~- ll

...... ..

1·! . ,\lh•Kht•ny U'a -1 I t :~ ~ ~ ...... ... ... ..
l :t.Ko•·kror d ( Ill . I ( 111-0f ..... .. ....... ..
II. ,\lm:~ l l\111-h. l l l·l·t' ....... .. ...... ,,
U. Slon.l Drunk 1~ . \' . ) 111- I J .. .... ..
1 ~ . Sa 1t• m .' !tall· I ~t u ~- . 1 ! II · II ...
t&lt;. ('pn Jn • t Ky . J ( 1 ~ · 1 1 ....
111. Snu llw r n ~'luint • t lil· :l ).......
I!I. St. Nu r ht•rt J WI~t·. l I 111·:1) .
(llt•) l.ura!i l ln\\~J I IU· :t ) ......

Ohio Valley Bulk Foods
514

SOFT SPOTS

THURSDAY

MOONLIGHT.SALE
•

S2QOO

NOW
OR
PRS.
GROUP OF LADIES' AND MEN'S FURLINED

MORGAN QUINN AND WEYENBERG BOOTS

1/2 PRICE
GROUP OF MEN'S &amp; BOYS'
..

12 PRICE

1

JAN. 29
Pomeroy
Merchants
A.ssociation

THURSDAY NIGHT 7 P.M.-11 P.M.
ALL WINTER SALE STOCK
ORIGINALLY 1f2 PRICE

S12°0PR. 2

1 GROUP

•

CHILDREN'S SHOES

$10PAIR

DINGO BOOTS
1/2 PRICE ·

MARGUERITE SHOES
MIDDLE SHOE STOlE IN THE MIDDLE BLOCK

Moonlight Madness
THURSDAY, JAN. 29

KANGAROOS

By Nike, lips, Converse

300/o OFF
1/2 PRICE
.
E,lg Shoppe'l Spe~lsl/1 S 00
1 LARGE TABLE TO S45 ................ !.~~~ 5

:

MISSY

SWEATERS

SWEATSHIRT TOPS
AND PANTS

Reg. Sl6 Ta S36

Reg. 130.00 to 140.00

1/2 PRIC
FLANNEL

GOOD SELECTION
Regular Sizes Plus Big and Talis
Reg. Prices S14.95 to S22.95

AND

Buy what you need ond save.

REDUCED
"full

'"''irP •alnn "

ft2·U20

,

.

' M• tof, 01.

HOURS: MON .·SAT . 9:00 TO 9:00
CALL FOR AN APPOINTM ENT

Trudy Mersholl. Mory Pow, u, Llr luclt, Mila Aeymond
, · (S~II

20°/0

ing

1/
Recliners ................ 2 PRICE

BRAS

PERFECT SlEEPER

6.50 '

WINTER JACKETS
Our entire stock including leathers f.or
this sale. Reg. ·s29.9S to 5139.95

. MISSY &amp; JUNIOR

WINTER APPAREL

60°/o OFF

CHENILLE
BEDSPREADS

Again

light

THURSDAY, JAN. 29th
7 P.M.-11 P.M.·

GROUP Of

t

SUPER

POMEROY

$

HALLMARK
VALENTINES

Dan's Is

Clark's Jewelry

WORK SHIRTS

Thursday Sale-7 to 11

DESIGNER BOUTIQUE

INEW HRS.
.'. Mon.· Sat.
9:00-5

PULLOVERS, SWEATER
VESTS and JACKET
SWEATERS

SPECIAL RACK OF SLACKS, BLOUSES,
SWEATERS

STOCK

I 11 II. I•• St.

NOTHING HELD
BACK
OUR MADNESS
IS YOUR
HAPPINESS

TO ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Long Sleeves, S, M, L, XL
Reg. Prices 512.95 to 532.95

FOR OUR
SPRING

7:00-10:00

CHAPMAN'S SHOES

KNIT SHIRTS

MAKE ROOM

HOURS
ONLY

WOMEN'S &amp; CHILDREN'S SHOES &amp; TENNIS SHOES

7 P.M.-11 P.M.

ENTIRE STOCK
DRASTICALLY
REDUCED TO

20°/o
THREE

TENNIS SHOES

1 GROUP BOYS'

•

MEN

Wt Accept
Food Stamps

EVERYTHING
REDUCED

GROUP

JUNIO
SPORTSWEAR

GROUP OF CHILDREN'S

992-6910

MOONLIGHT MADNESS

1 GROUP OF

TENNIS SHOES·
1/2 PRICE

EAST MAIN

POMEROY

Stride Rite, Hush Puppies
Young Set

212 E. M1in, Pomeroy

40&lt; lb.

j _ .\ . ('a r o ll na -f. rt • f'n ~ hor u d :J. ~ J

S20

ONLY

lb. Lg. Bow Noodles .......... S1.15 lb.
lb. Alphabet Macaroni ....... $1.05 lb.
lb. Spaghetti .......................... 70' lb.
lb. Lasagna......................... $1 .00 lb.
lb. Rainbow Ratini ............. $1.65 lb.
lb. Spinach Noodles ........... S1.89 lb.
lb. Whole Wheat Noodles ... $1 .40 lb.
lb. Whole Wheat Shells ...'.. $1.4S lb.
lb. Whole Wheat Spaghelli.... $1.50 lb.
lb. Whole Wheat Lasagno ... $1.60 lb.

ll . ltur h r~h· r (S .Y .I (1 :!- :l f ............. .

li. ~ n .

1. Nt•hr a.-.kn \\• ·-.h·,, ·an

"'''"'''"n

NCAA Division II

ft~ n tnt l

~ . lltol pho~ St. ,lflhn's 1 1 ~- rt 1 ........... 1~0
.l . KJ~ 1 1d it i i HI .........
.. ........ .. 7!'1
6. :\11ddlt&gt;l.fll''n Frnwkk (1 :!-- IL.......... lirl
7. ·lt·\\'•&gt;tt·Sd o ilH ) ..........
. ........ 31\

ML~SI O:'\' .

1\tt•!'dtl.,l" !t Ro;n Rr~ ut t ~
A.lir Nur1h Sl. Stnw 7ii
Akr .lit \ ' lnt.'t'nl 1'1. Alir G11rfl••ld l ti
i\kr lluhan , ~ t .uubo v Uh • I\ IJ Ul ntl~ tt-l
1\ nU'II II 'jt, lk•tht&gt;l Tllit • ):1
1\m hw~l MS. t'aln· lt~ i:l
A.nnu i 4. ~l dnt '\' 1-'lll l rl u~' n 8:1 t tut f
A~hl11.hll l a 15. As ht St ·lohn~ 1)1 (ul )
A.stll11.hulw 1-~d,;t • wood 1'l. M ll d l ~n n 88
1\~1 . t"lh •h IS. 1t'oilR[l!o HuY•"' ).1
A.\on l.llkt • u Ruy \' llht~t•• ~ ~~
&amp;rht-rlon 100, NOrdll niMIll
Bell hrook 511, frtlu-,·Uir M
Bt ·rnt• Unlun Ill. lh•mUttln Twp liti

2 PAIRS $25

Values up ta SSO

7-11

By Unlt r d r rf!N 'I lntt1'n allon~ ,
EA.STERN CONto' f:Ht.:NfE
Atlant h: Uh· ~lo n

l 'i tl~ lmr g h

Sl sPR.

FLATS &amp; CASUALS

Qurhf-r .................... lt25 7
Rulfllln ............ ........ 14 2'11 II

H.S. Girls Ratings

Krl~l o l 31. Lurd,;lt,\1'11 :1!1
Rrook'ly n 140, C u ,\'~th u1a Ill" ¥1
1\U(' ko•)'l' \' ~~ - lh ldlt'PIIrt :.1
( ' li n !~ " 'ln t·h. ~,, !tllllt•f" II'IFI ,l fi ,
C'11 n Hn lt . ti.1. l ndllllfl lllll~ Ch F .'on
( '11 rl., lo • Ill. l.o•l,t lllllln .W
f'urrollt nn i l l nlt•nht11' rtl..itk••l:!
f'l•n tr\ I Ill. Cl".\' lon Norllmuont :PI
l"h n1rln •" ~ II " 19. St~lo n \II
t'hardnn U T" l n ~ hm' 1 ~ :1 __
Ot•·~~tJl t 'll}: t • ~-:. W II.~Ot ' t WV !~I IG
l 'hlll lt-uthl· l l. l.anl'l!hlt 'r 1!1
nn t: ldl •r ti6. '-' In
11 11 1~ ·' '!
nn &lt;:n•t•nhlll" ~7. N ( 'oll t' ll:o- 11111 Ill
Cl n l.llSilll t• Ill. ('I n M'IChr o11 II
f in Lot·kland *I, l.attdm ltrk ·lti
( 'In l' u rt•t•ll 1t f in Alii• · ~ ~ I

H.S. Basketball

S. \\'l dr nt1' !Pat. I \I HI .... ... ..

Scoreboard ...
NBA Standings

The Daily .Sentinei- Page- 5

Pomeroy...:...Middleport. Ohio

UNBELIEVEABLE MARKDOWNS
GIRLS' LEVI

UKE LAST YEAR
Dan's Will Have
S3, SS, S7) S9, &amp; Sll Rocks
STUDENT

LEE JEANS

$1199
Reg. '20.99

Sizes 7 to 14 - Reg . 114.99
99
I /3 OFF -

75°/o

$9

150 PR. GIRLS BASIC
LEE &amp; LEVI JEANS
Sizas 4 to 14 (not oil sizotl
..... 11.99
to '18.00

SAVINGS
UP TO

DENIM SKIRTS

NOW

$899

BOYS' LEE JEANS
~ ••

1-7

119. •u.so
!Itt 1-14
log. '11.10

$1099
$1299

1 LOT MEN 'S

LEE JEANS

Sl199

MEN'S

I LOT JR. &amp; MISSY

ALL MEN'S

LADIE.S &amp; CHILDREN'S

SPORT SHIRTS

LADIES' JEANS
LEE &amp; LEVI $1399

IN'SULATED BOOTS

SNOW BOOTS

30°/o OFF

30°/o OFF

S, M.

t;' XL anil 3XL

T-in and Full Sbes

SPECIAL GROUP
Reg. Sl3.95. to S29.95

Reg. $22.99 Spreads ....... Sale Sl3.50
REg. 524.99 Spreads ........ Sale SIS.SO
S26.99
........ Sale SI7.SO

1/2 PRICE

SORRY NO LAYAWAY

no North Second

THIS SALE

�Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

•••
Wednesday, January 28. 1982-·

Pomeroy- Middleport,
.
.Ohio

~~nesday, January

TALKING TRAINING - .Jim Vennari, Cininnali Reds Scout
from Meigs County, discussed upcoming spring training with
pitcher Tom Browning during the Red' Caravan stopover in
Huntington, W.Va., Tuesday afternoon. Pitchers and catchers
report to Tampa, Fla., Fe~ . 20 io hegin training.

Reds ·infield set
according to Pete
By RICK VANSANT
- On playing for the San
CINC INNA TI i UP II - "The Fra ncisco Gian ts in blustery,
infield is prrltv murhsrt. it' s just oft en-chilly Ca ndl es llck Park :
a mattrrofwho'sgolngtoplay," "Trade a guy to Frisco and it' s
explai ns Cincinn ati Reds man- like go ing to Alcalraz. II cannot
ager Pete Rose, carryi ng on In he fun going to the ballpark in
the bes t managerial slrange- Stl n Franslsco unless you're an
spc•ak traditions of Casey Stengel eskimo and there are nor roo
a nd Yogi Berra .
· .many eskimos In the Nal ional
Like Slengcl-esr 1" Line up League."
alph abetically by hei ght" 1 or
-On slick-fiPidin g Craig Net ·
Yogi-isms 1" 11 ain 't over till it's ties: · "He could play third base
ovrr" i, Rose uses co lorful. blunt with a pair of pliers."
and sometimes unu sual phrases
- On former Dodger Ted
as he ex plains his job and Power : "Ted missed out on
thought s.
c hampions hip s with th e
Rose's brow-furrowing decla- Dodgers. They won before he got
ration abou t tht' Rrds' infield there and after lfe lefl . I wonder
si tu ation going into spring train- whal thai means'~"
ing was onP Of numC'rous int rigu- Aller declaring second base·
ing and ofte n amu sing slate· man Ron Oester's job safe: "The
m cnls mc1dr on a Cin CinnatI
reason Oeslcr doesn't have to
l{eds' publicily trip this week.
worry Is becausP Barry (Lar kin )
-On las t season's slow star! : doesn' l like lo play second and
··we went almost fi ve wC'eks into Kurt iSiillwrll l can' !. So who
the season with flvC' guys nol else is going to play second ?"
hilling their weight and none of
- Rose, who won't he eligible
Ihem were fa I guys."
lo play until Ma y 15, was quick to
- On lhe potential of Eri c pick up on an lmpreclsequesUon.
Da vis: "We've onl y seen a small Q: "AI'e you going into this
pimple of wh at he &lt;·an do."
seaso n wllh lhe notion thai you
- On his decis ion 10 have cou ld be lhe starling first basetobacco-chrwing coac· h Tommy man?" A: " No, we'd hav,e Ia
Helms sil nexr lo him in lh(, forfeit &lt;oo many games ."
dugout : "I'll prob;1bly have
- On the probable return of
ca ncer of th r feel hy the timet he Danny Driessen : " He's an unu sst\ason's ovrr fr om Helms spil - ual guy. He ran (Tony) Perez out
ling !obacco on my shoes."
of ClncinnaiJ . He ran (.Johnny!
-On who will pla y firs t base:
Bench oul of Cinci nn ati. I went 10
" 11 lhC' seaso n slarled lomo rrow , Mont real and he ran me out of
Nick 1Esasky1 would br the firs t !here. And now he's coming
baseman, bu t it' s too damn cold back, so it oug hlto he interesllng
to start the se:1son tomor row. so lo sec whul happens."
wr rf'ally don' t know ."

native hit a solld .279 from the left with Larltln holding a slight
side o! the plate last season, put advantage.
At first base. Oesler said he has
struggled with a .197 average
from the right side. Collectively no idea who would anchor th~·
he hit .258.
position.
"I'll admll that I didn't work as
"We've got some many people
hard on my right-handed hilling that can play first base. {Dave I
as I shof!ld have. But when the Parker can play II and so can .
learns we faced would throw fiv e · Nick Esasky and Tracy Jones. ,
or six rlght -handers at us at a And who knows II may even li&gt;:
lime, I got In the habit of taking Davey (Concepcion ). "
·
balling practice from only· the
Reds General Manager Bill ·
left side."
Bergesch, also traveling with the"
Oes'ler said he started working caravan, announced the signing
on his right-handed hitt ing in the of Esasky to a one-year contract ',
laller pari of last season, hilling Tuesday morning.
.
.327 over the last 16 .games, and
"If the season would start ,
has devoted himself during the tomorrow," Bergesch said . ::
offseason to improving his right· "Nick Esasky would he my :·
handed stroke.
starting fir st baseman. But that •·
The Reds as a whole have doesn'tmeanwewon'ttradehlrn ;
experienced players returning at later 'on."
:
every position and are posed with
The terms of Esasky's contract :·
question marks as to who wlll were not disclosed. The agree- •,
play shortstop and first base.
ment leaves the Reds with relief ·•
Oester rates second-year pitcher Ted Power as the - lone ~
shortstops Barry Lark In and ,..::sa::l~a::,rv::..,::a::,rb::i::.tr:,.:a~l:::io::;n_::::~--:===;'
Kurt Stillwell practically even.

Oester survives another off-season By GENE CAilDES
UPI Sports Writer
' COLUMBUS, Ohio tUP i i In what has become as common
as snow and cold weather in
Ci ncinnati, il looks like Reds
second baseman Ron Oester
has survived yet another winter
of trade rumo rs.
"Every year," said Oes ter, in
Columbus for a stop with the
Reds ' med ia caravan . "I just
think they need somet hing lo
write about.
"ll 's ~ood in a way," co nlinu ed
Oester, a switchhiller who
struggled from the right side of
the plate last season but still hi I
.258 overall with 8 home runs and
44 runs balled in while remaining
one of slickest fielding second
basemen In baseball.
" I don't like hear ing u:· he
added, "hecause I'm from Cincinnati and I want to slay there.
But, at leas I you know Ihat other
tea ms arelnleres led lnyou. Your
name won't come up In trade
talks If th ey aren't. But, I don ' t
want to leave Cincinnat i."
And, if man ager Pete Rose has
anything 10 say, Oesler, one of
five Cl ncinnali natives playing
for the Reds, won 't be leaving Ihe
Queen City.
"That's what he (Rose) said,"
Oester enthused. "ll 's good to
have Pete have confidence In
you. I never really thoughllhaii
would he leaving In the first
place, but Ihal helped me our.
"As far as the rumors go, you
never know what to believe. The
last four or fiv e yea rs, there have
always been rumors of me being
traded and I'm still here. So, I
think I must be doing something
right.
" I play as hard as I can every
day and I think Pet e likes that.
I'll go out there every day If he
·
asks rn~ to."
Allhough Oesrer prefers not Ia

alibi, il was that do-or-die atti tude thai contributed to hi&gt; poor
performance ( .197) balling rlgh·
Ihand ed in 1986.
"I had problems last year
hilling from Ihe right side," said
Oesler. "My left shoulder and my
left knee were hurling. In fact,
the whole left side of my ,body
was hurting. I think il was from
diving lfor ground balls). But
I'm not one to make excuses .
"I'm 100 percent now. I've
worked hard this winter to gel
back In shape. The main thing
was I d idn't work as hard on
righthand hitting last year as I
should have. We'd have lour or
five straight rlghlhanded
pitc.hers facing us and I'd hit
leflhanded. So, I wouldn't work
on my right handed hilling. II was
my own fault.

"I had a lillie trouble swinging
hecause of my shoulder, but I
think I brought it on myself
because I dldn' I take extra
balling practice. I know I can hit
righthanded because the year
before I hll .280."

MIZWAY
TAVERN
Rt. 7 &amp; 143
Just Outside Pomeroy

The Daily Sentinel Page 7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·Kansas humbles. Iowa St~te for .· 44th straight home win

Oester feels -slow· start in '87 very slim ·-~
of experience under our helts, " .
By \JIM WEIDEMOYER .
he said, ' 'and I think it won'ttake
Tribune Stall Writer
HUNTINGTON, W.Va . -The us as long to'gel and begl_n to play
·
likeilhood of the Cincinnati Reds well together.
"I
think
we've
got
a solid ball
starting off the 19S7 major league
baSeball season In the same club with a good defense. We
horrendous manner In which have some power, some pitching
they hegan 1986 is very slim. and lots of defense and speed. 1
according lo veteran second think we have what 11 takes."
But 10 Improve on a second
baseman Ron Qesler.
" I had never·secn anythingllke straight second-place Nati0nal
that hefore, " Oesler said during League West finish, the Reds will
the team's caravan vis !I Tuesday need 10 beat the all five division
morning. "It was more Ihan just opponents , not just four.
"You know, Houston was good,
a couple of guys in a slump. We
but
they weren't thai good. Sure
had 16 or 17 guys In hitting
they had a good pilchlng stall,
slumps ballin'g under .200.
"I just can't see that happening but 11 wasn' t thai great," the
again, probably ever," he added. 6-foot-2, 195-pounder said. "For
Unable to pinpoint exactly . some reason, we just couldn't
what ted Ia the ~eds: losing 19 of heal them. Just like the year
their first 25 games: Oester said before, when we couldn 't beat the
he doesn' t see a slow start Dodgers."
Oesler said he himself has
unfolding as a likely possibllily
for upcoming season, which worked very hard during the
opens April 6 al Riverfront taller stages of last season and
over the winter to improve.
Stadium against Montreal.
The switch-hilling CincinnMi
"We all hav e al least one year

28, 1987

KEILEI Ill, CPA

KElLER
BUSINESS SERVICE
618 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

PHONE

614-992-7270
If you would care to
meet a CPA and talk
about what they can
do for your company
- call us. We would
be happy to visit with
no obligation to you.

By DAVID E. NATHAN
,
UPI Sports Writer
Larry Brown, \l'hO has resigned from three coaching jobs
In' the last nine years, has a good
reason lo remain coach of
Kansas- Danny Manning.
The 6- fool -11 junior forward
scored 23 points and gra bhed 7
rebounds Tuesday night to help
lhe 20th-ranked Jayhawks win
Iheir 44th stra ight game at Allen
Ft.eld House, a 72-48 rout of Iowa
State.
.
.
Desplle iosmg three senior
sfarlers - Greg Dreiling, Ron
Kellogg and Calvin Thompson-

from last year's Final Four
team, the Jayhawks are 14-5
overall and 5-1 In the Big Eight
this season
"I think ;.,e're getting hetter"
Manning said. " We still have 'a
lot Ia work on but we're culling
down on the lather) team' s
seco nd shols. ll 'sllttle lhings llke
Ihat that make the difference."
Iowa State Coac h Johnny Orr
said Ihe difference against the
Cyclones was Manning. ·
"Th e irnportant guy was a guy
named Manning," Orr said.
"When he's in there, he makes
the other guys look good ."

Resume Big 10 play
By Ri\NDY MINKOFF
UPI Sports Writer
Indiana has a chance Ia brea k the logjam In the Big Ten
Conference this week when the Hoosiers return home to face
Illinois and.Purdue.
The Hoosiers, Purdue and Iowa are lied wlth6-1 records as the
. . league race reaches the halfway point. Indiana has played five
&lt;. of Its Ilrsl seven games on the road and has the schedule
; ' advantage the rest of the season. Both Purdue and Iowa have
~: road tests this week while Illinois, alone In fourth place, Is also
,, on the road for a pair of games .
::;·: · Indiana hosts Illinois Wednesday, then meets Intrastate rival
; Purdue on Saturday.
~
Iowa, which lost for the first lime Ihis season against Ohio
,.. State, goes on Ihe road Thursday to face Michigan State while
~:Othe Bollermakers visit the Buckeyes the same night. In lhe
~~ ·ofher Big Ten game Thursday, Minnesota is at Michigan.
;; · "Before Iowa lost al home, I thought one or two losses might
); win Ihe league. Indiana has yet to lose al home and that may .b~.
:- the key, " said Purdue coach Gene Keady. "Three or four losses
t~•"• m1g
. . ht do 1't . "
. ~: Indiana rebou.~.~~~~~ fr,Qm .~Jo~~ l~JQ\\:~ . to ~~.t . Minnesota. The
: ; Hoosiers rely on the outside scoring of Steve Alford and Keith
~· Smart.

tj;

Bullllinl coach Lou Henson said stopping Alford isn'llheonly
·:~. thing a visiting club has 10 be concerned about going lo Indiana.
~~
"It's just not stopping Alford, although he's a great player and
~; a great shooter," sa id Henson, whose team is in fourth place in
~ · the league at 5-2. "They ares hooting 58 perceniirom the fie ld as
;;; a team and thai must be about the beslln the nalion."

DISC JOCKEY
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
NIGHT 9 to 1

"'

..

.

$V
.. AC Standings
•'•
.

•

Kansas had scoring runs of 14
and 12 points In the first half 10
grab a 36-20 halftime lead.'
Manning scored 9 points In the
game's first 5 minutes.
Mark Turgeon and Chris Piper
each added 12 points for the
Jay hawks. Jeff Grayer seated 26 :
to pace the Cyclones.
In other games, No. 7 Temple
routM Rutgers 76-5l;, No. 8
DePaul cruised past Weher Stale
7().51, No. 9 Oklahoma whipped
Colorado 87-62, No. 18 Sr. John's
stopped VIllanova 61· 58 and
Notre Dame downed Dayton

66-55.
pohils 10 lead Okla homa past
AI Philadelphia, Mike Vrees- Colo rado. which Is winl ess In the
wyk scored 22 points and Tim · Big Eighl. Wilh Colorado ahead
Perry added 14 to lead Temple J7.16 midway through lh ~ fi rs !
past Rutgers. The Owls are half, Dave Sieger connected on a
undefeatM In the Atlantic 10.• tr io of 3-point shols to help
Eric Riggins scored 21 points 10 Oklahoma outscore the Buffaloes
lead Rutgers.
24-10 Ihe rest of 1he half.
AI Rosemont, Ill., Dallas CoAI New York , Willie Glass hit
megys scored 16 points and Rod success ive baskets in the final 94
Strickland added 14 to spark seco nds Ia help St . .John 's to a Big
DePaul over Weber State. The East victory over Vltlanov;J.
Blue De mons never led by fewer Villanova had ra llied from a
Ihan 12 points in Ihe second half. ?-point defi cit to tie the sco re.
At Boulder, Colo.. Darryl
AI South Bend, Ind.. Notre
Kennedy scored agame- high 21 Dame held Dayton wllhoul a

basket for the firs! six minutes of
the seco nd half. and Donald
Royal and Mark Stevenso n eac h
scored 17 point s to lead the Irish.
Elsew here, Army dOwned
Fordh a m 81-73. Co nnect le u t
slipped 'by BaSion CoiiC'ge 66-60,
Sl. .Joseph' s edged Pennsy lvania
83-81. Fairfield topp~d Yale86-81
in overtime. Ha rtford bea r Maine
81-75, Si ena de fpated New Hamps hir ~ 70-5!1, Davidso n &lt;'dged Fur man 68-60, Texas Tech lopped
Midw estern

No r I hem

Sta l l"

tl~H1 1

Co lora do

and

shadC'd

Denver ()().{i.'1.

Notre _D ame trips Dayton., 66 to 55
By United Press International

Dayton managed only rwo free
throws and a basket in Its fir st
eight second-haff possessions.
"Notre Dame came 'our and
played us Iough and managed to
shut us down," said Flyer coach
Don Donoher. "Thai really
swung the momenrum for !he

Nqtre Dame center Gary Voce
put on his best performance of
the season. grabbing 12 rebounds
and pumping In 14 points 10
power the Irish to a 66-55 victory
over lhe Dayton Flyers at South
Bend, Ind. , Tuesday night.
Irish."
"Coach (Digger) Phelps has
Twice Dayton m{de sevenallowed me lo lake a lot more point runs at Notre Dame.
shots, " Voce said. "I have a big closing the gap to four point s,
des ire to score off Ihe offensive 48-44 at the 9: 5:l mark, and 57· 55
rebound."
at Ihe 4:02 mark , but the Irish
Voce's showing Is the res ull of regrouped both times .
close coaching by former Notre
"We were close enough 10
Dame standout and now assist - move ahead al several limes and
ani coach John Shumate. who were never really au I of Ihe
spent eight years in the NBA, ga me," Dono her said. "We blew
Phelps· said.
some opportunities and I ha t ca n
"I thought Gary Voce ca me of really hurt in a game like Ihis
age tonight, " he ssld. "Because . one."
he is a junior he has responded · ' After drawing to within two.
well Ia Shumate's · teaching, Ihe Flyers did nol score again.
which has made him a better
"They were able 10 dominate
player. "
us in every way thai cou nted and
The 10-5lrish and the 7-9 Flyers shut us down. Thai' s what won
played a close first half. with Ihe game for them," Donohcr
Noire Dame building a 32- 29 said.
halftime lead . All he start of the
Donald Royal and Mark Stev second hat! however, the Iris h enson scored 17 points eac h for
ran off 10 points before Ihe Fly_ers the Irish, while Anthony Grant
could gel a baskel.
had 14 points and Noland Robin-

so n added 12 gam Ps for lhr•
Flyers.
E lsewhere Tu esda)' ni ght,
Wals h nipped CC'darville. 7-1-7:!:
Malone rdgl'd Mount Vernon
Nazarene, 84 - 8~ in overtime; Rio
Grande bear Ohio Domini ca n.
85-79; Tiffin defeal ed Urba na.
82-67; and Defia nce downed
Manchesrcr i I nd.i. 92- ti9 .
Walsh kepi th e Mid -Ohi o Conference rac e lighl. eo ming fr om
behind 10 edge Cedarville. Wal ' h
is 6-1 in the league, behind Rio
Grande, a winner of all sev~ n of
It s league games .
Rio Grande is 21-4 ovc&gt;rall. th~
only Ohio team with as man y
win s.

Irs 20 ga mes, Brion Harvey had
2.1, .l ohnn y Wal!crs Hi , ·Doug
Hoover 13 and Rand y Tucker ti.
AI Defiance. Dennis Boslct·

man led th e Yellow Ja ckets wllh
26 points in It s win over Manches·
ter. Kirk SPemann had 17 and
Ter ry Morman 11;. For Mancheslr r, Jer e Eaton led lh ~ wav with
18. lotlowed llv Joe Nada line with
16 and Tnl Ryzewskl wi th 1o.

Esasky si1-rns ('Ontrac·t
CINC INNATI I UP II - Clnrln na ti R('d:-. rlrst bas(' man Nick

Esasky, wh o had filed for salarv
arbi tra tio n In casr hr cou!dn :t

rrac h flnan C'l;tl tr rms this sPa·
so n, sig ned a on£Lvra r ro ntrar t

Cedarv ille led :ts-:n all he half. wllh lhl' clu b Tuesda y
but Walsh ralli ed In lhe second
E:sasky. who madt• $272,:.00 last
half. wllh Shawn Ga mble and ~'Par . had sough t -s:tl5;000 in
Allen Walker eac h finishing with ar bit ra tion while !hr.• Reds had
20 potnls. Cedarville's Mike offered $272.:&gt;1KI aga in. Although
ro n! ract wrms wrrr not dis·
Freeman had 19.
In the Rlo-ODC game, eac h closed, Esask)' and t h~ Red.,
team had four players In doubl e presum abl y agr f'rd on a co m·
ligures. Mike Smith paced lhe promls~ belwr&lt;'n $272,:~XI and
victors wllh 25. fol lowed by J oe $:t.1o. mo.
Verhoff wllh 2:1, Ron Rlltlngcr
R1•ds' mana J.:"C'I' Pr tr Hosf' sa id
wllh 16 and Anthony Raymore . this wrrk I hal Esasky will go info
sprin g tra!nin ~ as th f' club' s top
with 10.
For ODC. winn ers of just two of eandidall· to Sli.lrl a t fir st ha sr.

'

•

(OVERALL 1
W L PF PA

NorthGalllu .................... IO :t
Hannan Tra\'f' ................. IO !i
Soulht&gt;rn ...... ................. .... K ~
Oak HIII ............................K 6

7:i5 642
97:1 H9t
Kif
11()2

616
19K

Soulhwt•slern ...: ... ...... ........ K ; K~2 H61
Ea~tern ...................... ....... 6 9 !1!&gt;1 960

Presenting Carnation and Contadinas

KJKI'I' f'rt•t'k ................. .. ... 6 9 7M2 K5S

Symme; Valley .... ...... ....... 2 II

(C'ONFERENCE!

6~0

MOS

WL I'F PA
611 5K6
2 621&lt; 5:tt

Hannan Trat·f' ................... 9 I

North Gallla ...................... i

SoulhL'I'n .... .......... ... ..... .. ... 6 3 5!t6 411
Oaklflll ........ .. ... .... ........... 5 ~ 606 5!11

Easlorn ........ .. .................. A 6 661 6il!l
Soulh\I."L"Sil'rn ............... .. ....~ 6 1:19 !i99
Kner frt•ek ..... .............. ...:t 7 191 515
Symmeo Vu.lh'Y ................. fl 9 t-15 m

1'ut-s4ay'Jj resttlt!'l

Ouk Hill 6)1, South Wrbder 4K
Southwt'Sirrn 66. Ohio V~ Chrblllan 61
Han nun Trace 75, Ea!'ilern a fi5

symmf'!&lt;l Valley 79, llannan (W.Va.) 541
Friday' H tamt~
Hannan Traer at Oak Hill
Southwt"Stern ul Symmt~ Vallt.')'
Suuthrrn at North Galli a
Kygl't' C'rl'ek at EWih~rn

Win OOE OF 300 Quasar. miCROWAVES.
It's easy! To enter, just fill out this official
entry form and mail it to us. Or see the Microwave Giveaway
display at participatjng stores.

Saturda~ 's ~~::anw

Symm('lo&lt;

Vall•1'

at

North

Gallha

(m akt'Up)

Resent' ar.ctlon

(fONn:RENI'EI

W L PF PA

Soulhtrn ... ........................ K I 416 :150
North Gullla ................... ... 7 2 fli:l :161

"'

'

Hannan

Trat ~t• .......... .. .......7

3 :172 3:J.I

Oak 11111 .......................... .. 5 . 1

:m

301

Easl••rn .................. .. .... .... &gt; 5 109 .fl2
SoulhM'tostrrn .............. .... ... :l 7 :w• -101
KyKt&gt;t (' rl.'t•k ................ ...... 2 K MK -102
·"ymmeoo Vallt')' ................. 1 K :111. :ml
Tut"Sduy'H rf'!&lt;llllt
ll:annan Tnu-c :Ul. Eusl&lt;'rn :!G

Local bowling
SKYLINE LANES
· MONDAY NIGHT MEN'S
Ht\NDICAP LEAGUE
Slandlnp for 1·12-8'7

Team
W
SparkiC' Supply ..... , .................... 14
Rutlond FurnlturP ...... .... ........... 14
Flrrslon£' of Middleport ......... .. .. 14
M cG ul rC'~..

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

C&amp;J Aura Pa rts .................. ......

L
2

2
2

tO

6

9

7

Trt-County Sports Shop.. ............ 9 7
M&amp;M ME.'dl cal Equ ipment. ......... · 8
8
Jrnklns Concret P..... .. ................ A ll
f!'lappC'rTrucklng ....................... 6 10
;Tol£1r Insurance........................ 6 10
€1:'n lral Tru st Bank .................... 6 10
Mason Furnltur(' ... ..... .... ...... ..... 3 13
fo.t oOSC' Lod.ll;(' :1731 ...................... 3 13
:,Propks Bank ....... ..................... 2 14

1984 BUICK leSABRE LIMITED 2 DR.
V-8, auto ., air, AM/FM / Cassette, power windows, power door

locks. power seats and more.

VERY SHARP............

$

195 0

;. Rutl and Furn1turC' won six polnl.~ from
,Peopl('s Bank . 5.'V! hV M. GratP and C.
HC'nson was r h" high' st'fi('s for kulland.
'5.14 by C. Barn"s was lh&lt;' hi.ll:h total for
Peopl('s .
.
,. Toler Insurance won six point s from
Mason Furniture. C. Wist&gt; w111159l was thE'
)liJilh bowler. for Tolrrs .•1. Gratr with 629
was lop bowl&lt;'r tor Mason.
, Spt~rk l r Supply won six polnrs from
M&amp;M MPdlral Equipmen t. fi12 by D. H&lt;tnl'r
was thf' hiR:h sl'r!PS for Sparklf' 650 Dy B.
.Tillis was thC' lop S&lt;'fil'S for M&amp;M .
, Firf'stonr won six poi nts from Jenkins
ConcrE'fe. H. Cla1worth y with 572 It'd !hi:'
' 'M!ddlcpOrl Boyfi.' ' H. SaundNS wiTh 593
~ ('ld th t" hl~h srrl('s for Jrnklns.
Tri-Count.v Sporls &amp; Napp!'r Truckln~:
!It'd wllh four points api£&gt;CP. 'T'ri ·Counl y
was JC'd by R. Elliott with 548. C. Nupprr
Wi th 612 hC'Id the hl ~ h serlrs ror Napprr

~-

•.•1..

\•·

...,

.

'~:/.'

•....
'&gt;'·

Trucking.

• MC'Gulres -.. ·on eig ht points from Moosr
todgr. T.l. Joni'S s ubbln~ for Rex led th P
McGuirE' t••am with 5111. F. Caslo wllh 466
~as hlj;!:h bowlrr for th e Moos&lt;'.
Cl'nlral Trusl Bank won slx pqlnu from
G&amp;J Aulo Pa rts. G. Rl'ynolds wllh 580was
p i~h bowlf'r for Central Trus t. M. Ft&gt;r~ ·
son wi th 598 held lhf' high seri&lt;'S for G&amp;J .

J.D. STORY

ED BARTElS

JIMMY DEEM

IRIAN
HOUDASHELT

Smith-Nelson Motors

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-2174
WE HAVE THE KEY TO A BETTER DEAL
••

:SW 1-rirls triumph
•

AT

500 East Main Street

•'

; Th e Southwestern Juni or High
j!irls baskelb"ll team defea ted
North Gallla 24·5 Monda y evenlng fo r their lh~rd win In nine
~ l ar ls. ·
; Lisa Hail led Ihe winners with
U6 points. Missy Williams added
tour. Petrie and Yost had two
apiece for rhc Lilli&lt;' Plrares.
.' Southwestern's . next game Is
:rhursday, al Symmes VaUey .

Kings &amp; 100's

Regular and Menthol .
SURGEON GE~ERAL'S WARNING: Ouittmg Smoking
New Greatly Reduces Serious· Risks to Your Health.

'
Mlrs suggesled p11e&gt;ng bas•d on lull·puce brands

Kmgs 10 mg "laC 0 8 mg n&gt;eol!ne IDO's 12 mg " Ia( 0 9mg nrcol!neav perc&gt;gareue by FIC method

�-~

Page-S-The Daily Sentinel
EASTMAN~$
.

'

'

...

Wednesday. January 28, 1_~&amp;:7

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

-..
Wednesday. January 28. 1987

Beat of the bend

.... Your Independently Owned, Low Priced Supermarket
"

-Runn~ng_

'

Name _____~--~----~--~-

By BOB HOEFLICH

Address_,- -----:-------..,.---

Pomeroy residents can look for
present mayor,
'Richard Seyler,
to run for reelection to his post.
Mayor. Seyler
entered the pol·
ltlcal field for
the first
·less . than four years .ago to
bec.ome Pomeroy's mayor. I'm
sure he's had uncountable tel~
·Phone calls and contacts through
his first term - a lot of
headaches which he could probably could live very nicely
without.
He earlier vowed he would not
run again. However, he does
·have a petition of candidacy out
from the board of elections office
and I feel pretty safe In saying
that It's going to be flled before
the Feb. 19 deadline.
Mayor Seyler says a lot of
projects are underway - and
there Is a lot of positive progress
- and he hates to give up the
mayor's post to someone who
might be unfamiliar with operations of the town and lhe overall
planning.
So - look for Seyler to file for
reelection.

Phone--,---------------------

AMANA

Contest Rules: Must be 18 years of age to
enter. One entry per visit. No
mechanical reproduction of
entry blanks permitted.

MICROWAVE!!!
STOP BY AND ENTER TODAY!

VIe Appreciate Vour Patronagef
8 Pack

Co~tan

DIET RITE
CHERRY RC

R. C. Cola

IONEI!SS

Chuck
Roast

$15~ FRESH
LEAN

Ground Chuclcl.................
-LBS •.OR MORE

$149

6 Pack

La.

12 Oz. Cam

FOODLAND

Tavern Hams

White Bread

2°/o Milk

$oz.

r

LB.

'A' MEDIUM

TENDER BEST

HOLLY FARMS MIXED

Stew Beef

Fryer Parts

1112 Doz. Eggs

59&lt;

99&lt;

LB.

SLICED

RIB

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S1 49

GRADE

LB.

END

$1 59

lB.

16

Plastic
Gallon

LOAVES

$

18Ct.

White
Potatoes

Saltines

~~~-

$. 59'

U. S. NO. 1

NABISCO PREMIUM

Pork Roast

LB.

$169

FOODLAND

Full Half
'
lb. $ 89

•

Since Ihe deadline for stories In
the upcoming volume II of the .
Meigs County History Is drawing
very near- Feb. 15 - let me run
the deal past you again so that
you might decide to submit your
history for the publication. It's
sure to be a long time before
anolher book Is forthcoming so
ll" s almost a case of write now or
forev er hold you peace.
Here's the situation: All !ami·
lies of Meigs Counly and,_ former
· Meigs Co~nty families are In·
vlted lo submit their family
history for the publication. Stories up lo 500 words and one
plclure will be prlnled free of
charge In the second volume.
Your story when subm ltted
should be typewritten and double
spaced on 8\Sxll bond paper. The
picture you ·select for use should
be black and white. Color is
permitted. but It felt that black
and white will reproduce better

19

10 LB.
BAG

All PURPOSE

89&lt;

Of course, many of you will
want to attend a banquet set for
Feb. 16 to pay tribute to Charles
.Chancey, long-time Meigs High
football coach.
.
Charlie has been a positive
Influence on young people for
many years and deserves lhe
recognition to be provided
.through the banquet, sponsored
by the Middleport-Pomeroy Ro-.
lary Club.
Tickets at $5 each went on sale
Tuesday al the Rutland Department Store, Powell's Supver·
Valu In Pomeroy, the Western
•' Alito Store In Mlddlepo,i:t and at ..
~· the Mel~lgh SCI!ool . .;,- •
•• .
.The banquet will be held In the
Meigs High SchOol Auditorium .
Got the date ok? That's Monday,
Feb. 16.

$159

SUPERIOR BONELESS

$ 69
$199

Additianor
Quart.ities

DIET RITE, CHERRY RC
RC COLA

.

WHITE POTATOES ...................~.~.~~: .....

Harold Cooper, : was elected staff using the word processing
Presldento!theOhloValleyArea capabilities of the new
· !or the book. In order Ia help Libraries (OVAL) Board iJi Di· equipment.
The r~port addressed how the
you In any way pOssible with your rectors during Its monthly.meet·
lng
Thursday,
Jan
.
15.
Cooper
Llbrarywaslmplemenllngoneof
story, members of the Meigs
County Pioneer and Historical represents the Pike CountY Pu~ the new "Standards for Public
Library Service In Ohio," provldSociety are at the Meigs Museum lie Library Board.
Harold
Felton,
!rom
the
Herlng
the public an opporlunlty 10
every Saturday from 1 to 4 p.m. ·
bert
Wescoat
Memorial
Library
make
recommendations on !mSo all you have to do Is stop by lor
In McArthur, was elected Vice- proving public library service.
an assist.
President. Barbara Martindale. The Library has a suggesllon
How many of you .remember from the Pickaway County Dis- box; the library director answers
the "Moon River" radio program
trict Public Library In Circle- all suggestions by posting the
on radio station WLW In Clnclnville, was elected Secretary.
suggestions and written renatl a numl)er of years ago?
Shirley Fischer, OVAL Dlrec· sponses on a bulletin board In the
Quite a few, I suspect - and . .tor, reported that computers, Library. During the first monlh
wasn't it something! However,
modums, monitors, printers, and 98 percent of the suggestions
Pomeroy .Postmaster Jim
software had been purc)lased for were for more materials Soulsby Is searching for the the 11 member libraries. An books, jl'lagazlnes, videos, com-·
monologue (hat the deep-voiced
Initial tralniug session had been pulers. The suggestions were
announcer used at the beglnnln!! held and the computers dlslrlb· positive with a few humorou s
and end of the late night pro- uted. A plan for future training Is comments.
gram. He remembers quite a bit being developed. The computers
A year-to -date report on
of It but does have a few gaps 1n were purchased from 1985 and OVAL's Books-by-Mall Program
the Jines. Any help oul there?
1986 Ohio State funds received by and Bookmobile , Service was
OVAL from the State Library.
provided the Board . Use of Ihe
What other people think of us
Roxie Underwood demon - Books-by-Mall Program was up
would be a minor matter if we strated the Jackson City Public 15.55 percenlln 1986 over 1985 fo r
only realized .that actually they Library's use of their computer a total circulation of 188,914
seldom do. You keep smiling by distributing a report to the Items. The busiest month was
anyway,
Board produced by the library February with the heaviest use In
. . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . . . : . - - - - - - - , Scioto County.
Use of the Bookmobile Service
was up 2.27 percent In 1986 over
1985 for a total circulation of
70,910. The busiest month was
July with the heavlesl use In
Lawrence County.
The Board approved the 1987

· I told you .- It Is a frustrating
tlmeof the year. Isn' t there some
way we could skip January?
Barbara Mullen broughl ln
another set of lost keys found In
Pomeroy Tuesday. These are
General Motors keys and per·
haps, a door key Is on the key ring
Barbara brought ln. There's a
Cobb Motor Co. fob on the ring
. too.
Meantime, we haven't located
the owner of keys brought Into
The Dally Sentinel office last
week - they are for a Datsun.
If you think either set Is yours
-do drop by. ·

Limit One With $1 0.00 or More
Additional Purchase

$399

OVAL·directors meet, report on progress

again...

Sentillel Staff Writer.

Yellow.
59&lt;
,. -- . •
59&lt; 4 Varieties
. .
Cake Mix ...........~~·!.:!·.~:!....
Elbo-Macaroni .... !.~~~:~......
Toaster Pops ••••••• !!;:~·
(hoc. • Vanilla RTS
9 9 ( lodited or Plain
( Chicken
·
26 Ol.
Salt
9 '
Stuffing : Mix .......
Frostl'ng ............

.................................. 2

~~·!.:!·.~~~....

21bs.
: . 48&lt; lottorChickon
YeIIow P ope or~..............
~
Dog Food~·...........1.~.o:~.'~~......._.... 29&lt;
Butter· Natural- 10.5 or.
$129
·
Microwave Popcorn....... .
Pancake . f!'ix .......
15 OJ. can
B
•
P 1nto eans ....................
C
B

at L1 er .•............~ ••,......
'tt

'th T'lssue

.

32 01 jar
9 9 (
.9 (" Salad Dress'l·n g ................
Hamburger
·.

10ibbao

88&lt; D'lll Ch'lpS

4rallplog.

65&lt;

~
'lk
Ml
...........~t.~-~·.·.....

a

2

................. .. 35&lt;

Filled

16· ••. •••

Toma oes ••••••••••.•••••••••••••
t

Now You Can·
\.

!.~~•.~~:':...

$69~

32o&gt;.iar

•

99&lt;

ags

.
~
Raisin Bran .........

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

You

1•

!~.:!·......
42

01

9

t

s&lt;;
!::;....... 2 · ··

·

7
9
............ ~;

Shreddtd
Mozzarella
Cheese 6 oz.

#.

!.~b;~!..... ~ B ( LaDundtry
t .
· . 42oi.L-, $12·~.
e ergen
...
~
Syrup ....... ?~.:~.!~'; ...
S&lt; · concentrattd
....................... 99 ~

Grap·e Jelly .........

Bags

uoc~.

49&lt;

7(

. ONE STOP

A Lot ·

.

~~:!.~!~·

$149 Vanilla, Chocolate
· Ins-tant Pudding ...

A

$135

ff

Gelatin ................:.:~·........ 25~;
~

Qul'ck · 0"'ts
u ....................... 9 9 (
9

''·

64 " 111·
I Ju1ce
· ....................

39&lt; A pp e

~~~::~......

6 5 (

f'lt
100Ct
49~1
o
ee 1 ers ........... .-......
~
·
Coffee Creamer ......
..9 9
(

2FOroors:ted . Fiakes Cere
·· al •••• $159 Rtd·Rasp'!'rryorStrawberry

·······••·•··· ······•·
.
Paper Towels
••II . 2Foll8-9&lt; Sweet
T
h B
............
$ . 1 --2 5 Sandwl'ch
20
ras

..... ~.

69&lt;

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

Scalloped or
6
5·5 or.
grat1'n
Potatoes
u
..........

•

~~.:!·.......

Fabric Softener •••
·
·
Fabrl•c' Softener
iu Ol.
99
. • ............. .

,:

Dinner guest
Miss Edna Carman of Carman
Road, Pomeroy, was the recenl·
dinner guests . of Anna· Cornell
and Miss Mercedes Condon. Also
attending was Carolyn' Jeffers of
.Minersville. The dinner marked
the birthday of Miss Carman.

agreement wllh the State 1..1·
brary of Ohio. OVAL, an Area
Library Service Organl~atlon,
will receive $375.681. In stale
funds . This represents $9.683.
less than the State Library Boa rd
approved In December . The
revision res ulted In cutbacks
sought by the Ohio Office of
Budget and Management on
state funds In slate ·agencies.
However, If the Ohio Office of
Budget and Management releases the fund s, Ihe Stale
Library Board Is prepared lo :
make the $9,683. ava ilable to
OVAL.
OVAL's total budgel for 19871s .
$886.341. with lhe state prov iding
42 percent· ($375,6811. Ihe Federal
governm ent prov iding 46 percent
($408,528). and the member II ·
brarles providing 12 percent
($102,132) .
The Milton Bank of Wellston
was designated as lhe public
depository of active a nd Int erim
deposlls of OVAL . This deslgna ·
lion is for a 2 year period, March
1, 1987. through February 28,
1989. TheMIIIonBankls.also. Ihe
current deposl!ory.
Patricia Holter, repre se nt s the
Meigs Counly Library on the
OVAL Board of Tr uslees.
Established In 1973 as the first
slate-funded regional public II ·
brary agency In Ohio, loday
OVAL administers through local

WE'RE
·oPEN
FOR YOU

ARMACY

Not,. • ,....., kif

DISHWASHING
LIQUID

DETERGENT
FAMILY SIZE
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Reg. '8"

VASELINE
INTENSIVE CARE

LOTION 1s oz.

IIDBER F.D.I.C.

-.w.va.

Point"

o~W.Vo. .

-

171H121

773-11114 -

_

Pt"""' l,,.,

DAWN

TIDE

''The Better Bank"
2212 Jodclan .......

TOOL

1111t " - - " f h e . to l11111t au..tthH

Peoples Bank

.....,._

MAKE IT ARULE...
USE WANT ADS, ~ ·,
ARANDV '

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I' •

'

Margery Miller has completed
her basic training wit h th e U.S.
Army at Fort .J ackson, S.C .. and
par ticipated in graduation exe r·
clses over the weekend.
Att endin g were Mr. and Mrs.
Bradv Huffm an and Ma rv Van
Meter. Middleport. Mllle.r will
remai n at the base for anot her
seven .weeks for adv anced lndl·
vidual trainin g.

OPEN 7 DAYS AWEEK!

Includes Lobby.
Installment Loan Department.
Drive-In And Walk-UP
¥~,:\1

Graduate named
j
rom training

AU STORES

F·RI,D AY'S
UNTIL
7 P.M.
.. , ,, -Window·-'··

public libraries a var ie ty of
programs designed to Improve
and extend services to local:
residents.
.
OVAL Is made up of public ,
libraries In the Ohio counties of
Athens, Hocki ng, Jackson . Lawrenee, Meigs, Plckaway, Pike,
Ross, Sclolo and VInton. The'
OVAL Board of Trustees, which.
cons ists of one trustee from each
member public library board, ,
delermlnes policy, controls II·
nances, and makes final decl· :
slons on what services will be ·
offered.
·

OUR BUSINESS BEGINS
WITH FILLING YOUR
PRESCRIPTIONS.

lith Strlll
...... W. Va.
112·2135

Sl

WITH FREE VASELINE

RADIANT PORTABLE HEATER
•1 tteet- 850 WIUI (2900 BTUII
•I natant radiant ribbon element

•On/ oft rocket' awl1ch

•S•fetv tlp·O'ller switch

•Desert Tan

•1 20 volt / 80 cycle AC
•U .L. Lis1ed
•10W' H ll 16 W' W• 8'.1." 0
•&amp; .&amp; Lbo.

·

LIP THERAPY

799

ISO WAJTS- 24JOO BTU's
Modol !6H2S .

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
Is Pleased To Welcome
Danny R. Westmoreland, D.O.

SOL

Dr. Danny Westmoreland Is originally from Coltilgeville. He completed x-ray school at Baylor University,
.fort Sam, Houston, Texas while in the U.S. Atmy. His
undergraduate training was obtained from Alderson·

VASELINE -

SHAVE
CREAM

INTENSIVE
CARE
LOTION

REGULAR OR MENTHOL
11 ounces

6 ounce size

69~

·Columbia grange ·
meeting held
A donallon was made to the
Melg County Senior citizens
· program when Columbia Grange
2435 met recently at the hall.
A d lscusslon on legislation was
held and two members will
attend the Legislative Confer' ence at Friendly Hills Grange
Camp on Salurday.
Ellzabelh Jordan, women's
activities chairman, announced
that the national grange sewing
contest will be held al th.e
Pomona meellng In March. The
quota lor each Grange Is 10
entries, and members were
urged to parllclpate.
·
For roll can members re·
sponded with their thoughts on·
the New Year and somelhlng
they would like lo see happen.
Readings, songs and a contest
were also Included In the program conducted by Arthur Cra~
tree, lecturer. ·

The Daily Sentinei- Page-9:

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

99~

Reg. '111
MAGNOLIA
POCKET PACK

FACIAL

.,

TISSUES
Pocket and
Purse Si~e
Broaddus College, Philippi, West VIrginia. He went
on to receive his Doctor of Osteopathy degree from
the West VIrginia School of Osteopathic· Medicine,
Le'Msbwg. West VIrginia. He received his Internship
certificate from Metropolitan General Hospital,
Pinellas Park, Ronda.
Dr. Westmoreland now resides In Mason with his
wife. Teka and three children: Chris. age 10, Tamra,
age 7, and l'atrick, age 9 months. The Westmoreland
Family care Center will be a full practice. Including
minor surgeries and minor emergencies and exdud·
lng obstetrics.
·
• The Westmoreland Family Care Center Is located
In Mason, West VIrginia with alike hours Monday
through Friday. from 9:00 a.m. to S:OO p.m. Appoint·
ments may be made by ~llng 773-5333.

Dd ~~!..~~-~!~!1~

YJ.
'

"We treat you like family."

-'-

PACKS FOR

29(

LUCKY LEAF

APPLE
, JUICE
32 oz. ounce size

59~

Introducing

II

Ames Glucometer
Blood Glucose Meter #SS20

s15000

.$ 7Suuant&amp;rl

S75

PlUS 125
DAD!-IN

TO a.! Dt!IOUHI 101 IINDIIG IN
YOUIIIIIINIIIOOI GIU&lt;OIIIIIfll

KRAFT
DRESSINGS
FRENCH OR
CATALINA FRENCH
8 ounce size

79~
'

R•&amp;·. 11"
~

'f ••

•

�Page- 10- The Daily Sentinel

·Pomeroy-, Middleport, Ohio

E: ~~~~~M-~--Y~·~J~a_n~~~~26:·~1~9~8~7--------------------------~P~o~m~e:ro~y~M::id~d:le~~~·~O~h:io:_______________~----------T~re~D~a~il~v;S:e:nt~in~e~I::P~~e::1~1

~:Carpenter

.., .. Mr. and Mrs . Dwaine Jordan ter, and Dorothy Bolen, Dexter.
Metta Fisher who rec ently
~- and Sarah spent a · vacation
,.,. recently with relativs and friend s suffered a broken leg and has on
;! In North Caro.ltna and Florida. a cast, Is confined to Room i24 at
:; They v (slted their sag and the Pomeroy Heath Care Center,
,., daughter-In-law, Mr. and. Mrs. .26759 Rock Springs Road, Pome..... Keith Jordan, Monroe, N.C., then roy. Cards may be sent ·to her
""' joined a family gathering at the there.
Joan Wooten, Long Beach,
:' home of her parents, Mr. and
Calif.
recently visited her par::: Mrs. William Culwell, Satsuma,
ents,
Mr. and Mrs. Donald
.. Fla. and were there for several
., days. They also visited Mr. and Wooten and other relatives . Mr.
:: Mrs. Tom Spurlock, former and Mrs. Danny Vorys, Colum., Meigs County residents, at Me.l - bus, joined them lor a family
gathering.
~ rose, Fla. heforereturnlnghome.
Frances Young, Harrisonville,
.. Spurlock, who has been quite Ill ,
was
the Monday guest of Freda
: Is. repor tedly improving.
;
Eugene Holliday, Char leston, Smith .
Teresa Steipincko!f and daugh·
•• W.Va. was the recent guest of his
ter, Teresa Schmidt. Blane Lake,
.., aunt, Oma Starkey .
:'
Freda Smith entertained last Saskatchewan, Canada, have
: Sunday afternoon In observance been here for a visit with their
:: of the birthday of Kenny Bolen. mother and grandmother .
"' Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Wanda Oxley. and other area
·
.,- Kenny Bolen and children. Mr. relativPs.
:Z. and Mrs. William Stou.t, Car pen-

We Reserve The Right To
Limit Quantities

STORE HOURS
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

·oFFER

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
THRU SAT., JAN. 31, 1987

·GOOD
ALL
WEEK

U.S.D.A. CHOICE,

Chuck Roast •• ;~ ••••

$

,,
.,

Limit
20

~

Coupons

11 9

;•
c:

$ 29
Lunch Meats •••••••• 1-

FLAVORITE

LB.

..."'
~
;•

HOMEMADE

Pork Sausage ~~ •••• Sl 09

COLUMBIA

·
Bacon ••••••••••••••••••••
12 OZ. PKG.

EA WHOLE

••
••
.

"·
•

••
•
•

.

•

VI

s9(

1"1

g

·~

z

Laurel Cliff happenings

"
Holiday acllvities were dis:: cussed at the recent meeting of
':: the Laurel Cli ff Free Methodist
. ~ Church Women 's Fellowship
•·• held at the home of Wand a Eblin.
..
Members pr epa red frui t
: baskets. gave gifts of money to
:-. those living at the Meigs County
;:.j Infirmary, and went caroling.
., Scripture from Luke 2: 13-20 was
;~ given by Brenda Haggy and Jean
::; Wright had prayer. I va Powell

~ Pageant

plans announced

~~
The 1987 All America n Miss
:.. Pageant for West Virginia will be
;; held Sunday. April 19 in the
~: Grand Ballroom of the Charl es" ton Marriott. The pageant is open
~ to girl s, ages th ree to 19. and
:: ~o ntes t ants from all over the
:; Mountain State are expected to
, participate.
:, Applications may be obtained
~ by writing 1987 All Amer ican
:; Mi ss. 603 Schrader Ave. , Wheel·

.,

~

&lt;

for juveniles in Athens which wilt
also serve Meigs County youth.
:; was made by the Forest Run
" ' United Methodist Women· during

-1

$

LB

A donation to Slna Cnra. home

:l:

199
Boneless Ham .~ ••••

::
Mary Nease
presided at
the
:;:: meeting
with olfflcers
giving

SUP~RIOR FRANKIE

l..,

Wieners ••••••••••••••••

: a recent meeting held at the
.. home of Sandi Hawley.

$

.their reports and 16 sick and
shutin calls being r eported. A
~ .call to prayer and self-denial was
~ the· prog'ram using the !heme•

12 OZ. PKG.

..
"Women,Equallty,andDevelop• ment
" and was presented by the
leader, Kathlet!n Scotl. She be·
:;: gan by reading two poems.
:;; "AnotherYearisDawning",and
"" "The Changing Year." There
:: were readings by members and

=

VALU BRAND SLICED

Bulk Bacon .••• !~ ..... 89(

;: unison prayers. Each year the
t: offering Is divided In half with
part going to mission projects In
"' the United States, and the other
::; half for other counlries.
~
Also once every four year s,
:: hal f of the tota·l amount goes for
.. missionary pension funds and
.. deaconess appreciation service.
The 2:1rd Psalm was recited by
the group. and va rious other

r:

.

¥

Tomatoes •..•••• !~ ..... 49( •
·
o
$ s9
0
BR~UGHTON •

1
Large Eggs ••••• :~~-•••• S9&lt;
(.
. .
69
P'•zza·•••••••••••••••••••••
2°/o ·Milk ••••.••• ::;...

&lt;
&gt;
r"'

~ -

&gt;
o:l
r"'

0

~

0

2 '

Bounty Towels •••••
DOVE LIQUID

69(
Detergent •••••••••••••
22

SURF DETERGENT

$3 99.
j

limil 1 Per Custolllll'
Good Only At Powell's Super Valu
Prim !ffectiwo Thru Sat. l•. 31, 1917

•

•The total value of the dou ·
ble coupon may not exceed

$1.00
•Any manufacturer's cou·
pon greater than 61 ¢will be
redeemed at face value
only.

MR,•. P'S

JUMBO ROLL

oz.

9.5

oz.

BORDEN'S PAIL

Ice (ream .'••••• :.~~ •• $2
FlAVORITE SUGAR

INSTANT CO.FFEE

...·-··-·

Good

•

~$359
limit '1 Por Culltmor
At "'•••"' •

-

Sl 39

• SLB. BAG
:·
0 •

limit I Por Customer
Good Only At Powell's Suptr Valu ..
Prkts llfectivt Thru Sat. Jan. 31, 1917

'

I

•The total ·value of the dou·
ble manufacturer's coupon
cannot exceed the purchase
price of the item. Money
will not be refunded.

1

99·

MAXWELL

BOZ.

•Only one manufacturer's ·
coupon per item.

•

• FOLGER'S COFFEE
3 LB. CAN

$639

Umit 1 Por CurtGood Only At Powell's s - Valu
Prkor llfoctivo Thru Sat. )..,, 3,t, 1917

I

POMEROY ~ Wildwood
Gard.en Club meets Wednesday ,
7:30 p.m .• at the home of Sandi
Hawley .

WEDNESDAY
LONG BOTTOM- A communIty meeting will be held Wednes-

. •This offer does not apply to
. Powell'• Super Valu Couponl. free coupons, or any
· competitor's coupons.
•This offer excludes cigarettes. or any othar items
~ prohibited by law.

'I
· •Offer is only good for pro·
· duct on hand . No Rain·
check1.
•There is a limit of 20 l:Ou·
poni-you may redeem.
·

day, 7:30 p.m., at the Long
Bottom Community Building.

-----

THlJRSDAY
SHADE- A clean-up meeting
will be held Thursday. 7 p.m., for
Shade River Lodge 453, Chester.
Practice will follow the clean-up.

FRIDAY
HARTFORD, W.Va . -A sw
ria l three-day merling. open to
the public. will be held HI the
Chu rch of Christ in Clor isliHn
Union, Hartford. W.Va ., b~gin ·
ning Frida)• and conti nu ing
through Sund ay . at 7 p.m. rac h

evening. FecJ tu rcd
MIDDLEPORT - Women's
Association of th e Middleport
First Presbyterian Church will
meet at 7: 30 Thursday night at
the church . Group II will have the
program, and Group I members
will be hos tesses.

s in ~ (·r s

on

Friday will be Voices of Love:
Sa tu rday. Mike and Wanda
Thompson: Sunda)' . Char ity
Si nger s.
RUTLAND - Thrrr will br a
weekend mee ting at f\ut lan d
Bible Methodi st Church llPgin·

Paul Hauber Is recuperating
from by-pass surgery which he
underwent In late December at
Mount Carmel West, Columbu s.
He anticipates r esuming normal
activities In two. months.
Millard Ball is a resident of the
Extended Care faci lity. Veterans
Memorial Hospital. His grand·
son, Timmy Ball, is living in his
home now.
Judy Holter remains ill and
hospitalized at St. Joseph Hospital, in .Parkersburg, W. Va . due to
kidney problems. She anticipates
being released from the hospital
this week. Among her recent
vis itors have been Ada Bissell
and Mae McPeek.
Mary Andrews has rNurned
from a holiday visit in Columbus,
Reynoldsburg an Westerville.
with h er chi ldr en and
grandchldren.
Leota Ferrell and son, Keith.
Medway, were recent visitors of

SATlJRDA \ '

SHADE - Th(' annual lnspec' ion of Shade Rl vrr Lodge 453wlll
hr hr td 7::10 p. m: Sat urday ._
Dinnrr will bC' ser ved it I 6 p.m.
SUSHi\ Y

HUTI.AI\:0 - Rutland Freell'ill Raptis! Chu rC h wi ll ha ve
fami11· nig hl at 7 p.m. Sunda;·.

her sister s, Mar McPeek and
Ada Bissell.
Mr. and Mr. Don Bona r and
daughter . Granville, wer e the
recent visito rs of his cousin, Mae
McPeek.
Michael Bis sell. Pomeroy, visited his mother and brother.
Ada and Krnn cth Bi ssel l
recently.
Esther Bukey wa s the guest of
her daughter . Na ncy Kreisel and

Testerman birth
A daughter, Christine Renee,
was born to Joseph and Robin
Humphrey Tes terman, Ma riett a. Jan . 13 al M ariett a Memorial Hospit al. Grandparen ts arr
Charles and VIv ian Humphrey.
Reedsville. and Joseph T. and
Mabel Tes terman of Lvnco,
W.Va . Her great-grand falher is
Benjamin F. Buckley.

fam ily Clrc trvi l lr. Shr ah n v isited rPcrn tl )' wllh hr r sis tr•r .
E lra nor Wing r tt , Sy rcJ r US(' .
Mr . and Mrs . .10(' Rrb&lt;.' CC&lt;I a nd
family ,

Co lum bu ~.

paren t.&lt;, Mr. an d
Hensley an d Dick.

\·isit rcl hn

.J ohn

~1 r.,

Communi! .\ ' rC'sidcnt~ with nrw
babies inclu dr Pa igf' Han' man
W in0brr nnf' r . r1 so n, 1\dnm "i\lP r .

and Pa t! )' Edward s Havm:&gt;n, "
new dau ghiPr, .J enn ifer.
T ammv :ood Jeff Cow derv
· havr bou ght a housr in Rct·d~ ­

Shirl(•_\· Wr lls, · \d1 ili· i1 Is hf'in g
\ ';tC: I tf'd .

Doroo h.l ' Wri t, is l'isiting her
(i; tug tll (' r,

in Flo rida .
and .l uan it a Wells
W•·rr f'\'f' l1 ing guPs ts Mr . and
H;~r t wra

S l &lt;~rll(' .v

or

Mrs. Dron .1· ('ongn . 11:Jci or.
Holiday' guPs l s of Mr. and M rs.
!-I nward L 1wn·ncr and family'
W(·rP

Mr. ; uld Mr s. Francis
;1nd d;tu ght Pr. Racinr:

Manu r l ~

Mr. and Mrs . Ro iJI'r-t (;i ll&gt;'splr
un d d;IUghtt ·r. DP Wilt ~ Run ; Mr. '
"'"' Mr, . Tim Wol fP and family,

v illr a nd arC' tr m pora r il ,. "';w in g

Sti\'C' r sv illr . and Mr . &lt;tnd Mrs.

w ith her par ents, Fr .o nh :on cl

John Hrnilro·soo. P&lt;lrtl;ond.

lfThere

Is A Quesdon • • •

Weber birth being announced
Mr. and Mrs. David Weber. Weber, Reedsville .
Reedsville, are announcing th e
Great -grandparents are Mr.
birth of their first child, a and Mrs. Oscar Weber, Long
daughter.MorganNicole Weber. Bottom.a ndMrs. MarleKrleger,
The Infant wa s born Jan. 9 at
Dayton.
Camden Clark Hospital, Par- r----------~
kersburg. She weighed seven
pounds. 10 ounces. and wa s 20
Inches long.
Maternal
are,
Mr.
and Mrs.grandparents
Vaughn Taylor
Dayton, and paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Denver .

rt=====================:::;;-1
SEE us FOR

ALL
Y.OUR HARDWARE
N
M
A D·PLU BING
NEEDS

IDOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE
11 .1 Second St., Po1111roy

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

Don't Take A Chance.

EMERGENCY
CARE CENTER

lAM! llllllllijM
L~r(l(t ar Pillnanl V r 'IIJ~ r-fOipi!JI, Pori! Pit-.,

675-4340

.

.PICKENS HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.

'

CONVICTION OF ·PERSONS
WHO ROBBED MY STORE
ON
FRI~A y I JAN~

ning Frida)' and con tinuing
through Sunday . 7 p.m. ('ach
nigh t, with Rev. Coy McGi nnis
from Port smouth, preaching and
singing.

I.nng Bottom community happenings

FOR
INFORMATION LEADING
TO THE ARRE,ST AND

""'

~

RUTLAND Rutland
Friendly Gardeners meets Wednesday, 7: 30p.m .• at thehor'neof
Margie Davis. The program will
be by Jpan Stewart on making
containers from junk.

-z

c:

r")

WEDNESDAY

s1,000 REWARD!

~

~

d
If
translations were rea · An o ering was taken. Lillian Napper
gave the closing reading. "Teac h
Us Plow to Live." Refreshments
wereserved tot hosea ttend.mg bY
Mrs. Hawley and Faye Wiggins.
co-hostess.

Calendar/ happenings

...
s...
...

GRADE A

oz.

ing, W.Va. 26003.
Judging Is based on natural
beauty, poise and personality in
three events. An optional photogenic competition Is also offered
In the four age divisions of the
pageant. Sta te winners will rcccive entry fee into the national
con test, lodging at the Disneyland hotel, a crown, hand tailored
sash, wlnner'·s trophy, a bouquet
of roses and a bicycle.

F
R
~ orest
un UMW meets

Chicken .......... ;~ ••••• 49&lt;

147

had a reading. The friendship
basket was won by Brenda
Haggy.
·
A layetle shower was held from
Vicki Bell. wife of the pastor, and
her Infant daughter, Patricia.
Among those att ending were
Mrs. Betty Martin. mother of
Mrs. Bell.
Refreshments were provid ed
by Donna Gilmore and Kay
Clark.
·

u.

, C-Z-CARVE SUPERIOR

'••·

area .notes

23, 1987

AT
APPROXIMATELY 9:10P.M •
CALL MIKE MARNHOUT, 304-675-1155

moonli ht

wv

�Page-· 12- The Daily Sentinel

•
Wednesday, January 28, 198~·

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, January 28; 1987

Local Briefs:-- Deficit budget vexes ·GOP lawmakers
Long co-sponsors reform bill
State Sen. Jan Michael Long, D-Circl eville, has co-sponsored
the Ohio Drug Abuse Reform Act of 1987 with State Sen. Michael
Whi te, D-Cieveland.
Long said the bill will "a ttack a drug problem wh ich has
become epidemic in our society."
The bill will create the crim inal offense of "causing the death
of another by illegal drugs, " punishable by life Imprisonment. It
wi ll increase penalties lor "aggravated trafficking of drugs" to
include mandatory minimum sentencing of 10 years of
incarceration for first offPnders. It will also increase penalties
from 25 to 35 yea rs in prison for drug dealers who traffic drugs
within 1,000 feet of school grounds.
The bill will also alloca ll' funds to the Ohio Highway Patrol lor
drug abuse awareness programs.
"With sti ffer penalties and drug awareness programs,
hopefully we will begin the tong and difficult task of eradicating
drug abuse from our society," Long said . " And I hope tha t the
state Sena te ca n put politics aside in order to stop this deadly
business of drug abuse."
The bill, S.B. 36, will be referred to the Jud iciary Commi ttee,
of which Long is a member.

County receives license tax money
Meigs County will receive $Ci7,516. 74 as it s share of the
December 1986 dis tr ibufion of license tax revenues totaling
statewide $16,844,371. 91, Sta te Registrar Michael J. McC uilion
announces.

COLUMBUS IUPIJ - Some
Republicans accused Gov. Richard F . Celeste of "Sidestepping
the need for restraint in the state
budget, 'but · ot her members,
including · some Republicans,
were more relaxed about the
governor's Sta te of the State
address.
Follow ing Celeste's 35-minute
speech before a joint session of
the Ohio General Assembly Tuesday, Rep. Robert Netz ley , RLaura, said the state faces a "sad
sil ua I ion" because of increases
in spending levels under Celeste.
Net zley sa id t he budget Celeste
will present next week will be
entirely different from his
speech because it will re fl ect a
spending deficit. He said he
wrote to Celes te last week urging
him to explain the deficit in his
speech.
In the letter. Netz ley complained specifically abou t a $176
million negative balance In the
general revenue fund as of Dec.
31, and asked how Cel este cou ld
raise salar ies las t week and
co ntinue keep up with automatic

Area deaths

Recorder outlines fee receipts
Total receipts in fees for the office of Mei gs County Recorder
Emmogene HolstPin Congo for 1986 totaled $45,618.96.
The 1986 total was down from 1985 receipts for the recorder 's
office. These totaled $48,545.50.
Making up the tota l receipt s for 1986 wer(•; recordings
incl uding deeds, mor tgages, leases, etc.. a total of 2,889
documents, $33.562; filing papers-financing sta tements. $972;
I.R. S., liens, etc., $!i, 109; ca ncellations -mortgage releases,
term inations, liens releases, etc. , $1,662; search lee for
information requests plus additional fees, $501; su ndries-cop ies
and certified copies. $4,784.96.
The 1986 receipt s were paid monthly into the co unty fund ,

Three fined in Pomeroy court

-

.

Three defendant s were fined and six others forfeited bonds in
the court of Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler Tuesday night .
Fi ned were Edd ie Lee Patrick. Middleport, $313 and cos ts,
destruction of property; $63 and costs. no oper ator's license,
and $375 and cos ts, driving under the influence: Richard Poulin
Jr., Middleport, $46 and costs, speeding, and William Lavenda r.
Pomeroy, $50 and costs, no financial responsibility. an d $63 and
cos ts, fa ilu re to control ve hic le.
For fei tin g bonds were Shir ley Friend , Pomeroy, S43. illegal
turn; Pau l McKinney , Point Pl easan t. W.Va., $63, opera ting
under suspension, and $63, failure to transfer license plates;
Johnson Scott , Middleport, $43, l eft of center, and $43, assured
clear distance; Edward Bell. Point Pleasant, $45; Sandra West.
Reedsville, and Dwight Logan Jr .. Middleport, $44, all posted on
speeding charges.
·

spending increases such as those
already Inclu ded in various labor
contracts.
Rep. WilliSm Hinlg, D·New
Philadelphia, however, said he
doesn't expect any surprises in
Celeste's budget. "It think it will
be pretty much in line wi tb what
we thought weweregoingtohave
to do~ "
Few of the members had more
to say abou t a tax increase.
" I don't expect we are going to
see new taxes," said Senate
Presiden t Paul Gi llmor, R -Port
Clin ton, who finished second in .
the race for the Republican
gubernatorial nomination last
spring. "I did not find much at all
to disagree with·. He's proposing
things we've done and things that
were part of th e Gilimor
campa ign."
Gillmor said he liked Celes te's
·idea to expan d state education
grants to single parents and the
Idea of giving a boost totaJ!,ng $35
million to local governments,
effective one yea r only.
"The concept is good," Glilmor
said. "We do not know in what

Wilmer Reynolds
Word of 1he death of Wilm~r
Reynolds of Hebron. IlL, afl er
several months' illness, has been
received b~ Mrs. Ca rt Moore of
Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Reynolds visi ted
over the years wit h Mrs. Moore

and her late husband. Mrs.
Rey nolds is the former Lily
Wi ckh am. a cousin of Mrs.
Moore, and her mo ther and
father were the l ate Mr. and Mrs.
Curl Wickham, former Meigs
Count y res idents. Mr. and Mrs.
Rey nolds las t visited in Pomeroy
in the fail of 1986.

Emergency units log 8 Tuesday runs
Melgs County Emergency
Medical Services repcrts eight
calls Tijesday .
Middleport at 9:18 a.m. to
Meigs. Hi gh School for Robbi0
Clonch to Vetera ns Memorial
Hospit al; Pomeroy at 9:19a.m.
to Pomeroy Health Care Center
for Metta Fisher to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Raci ne at
11:05 a.m. to Dew itt 's Ru n for
Charles Powell who was treated
but not transpor ted;
Rutland at 11:12 a.m. to New
Lima Road for Juanita Lambert
to Holzer Medical Center; Raci ne at 1:48 p.m. transported
Linda Harman to Vel era ns MemoriaJ ·Hospital ; Scipio Township
Fire Departm ent was called at

2:53 p.m. to Ohio 681 where a
garbage tr uck was on !ire;
Albany Fire Department assited; Racine at 5:42p.m. to Mile
Hili Road for Melissa Francis to
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Middleport at i : 27 p.m . to 190 N .
Second for Willi0 Maude Coates
to Veterans Memorial HospitaL

Veterans Memorial
Tues day Ad missions - Metta
Fisher, Pomeroy; Eva Upton,
Reedsvi lle; Mae Ketc hka,
Pomeroy.
Tuesday Discharge,., - Kenneth Lawson, Debbie Halley,
Raymo nd Lambert. Carr ie
Roush, Be tty Kearn, Helen
Jeffers .

manner he wants to do that. A
possiblilty Is an increase in the
highway user tax."
. House Speaker Vern Riffe,
D-New Boston, praised the
agenda and Celes te's position on
taxes.
"I think it's a good agenda." he
said. " He talked about education
and tie talked about jobs." Riffe
said he agreed with the idea that
there wlll be no increases in
corporate, personal or sales tax.
"1 think he (spoke) about what
he accomplished In the las t four
years and what h·e would like to
see In the next four years," Rille
said. "And thai' s the role of a
gover nor."
Senate Minority Leader Harry
Meshel, D-Youngstown, said he
thought the speech was " solid "

and "did not promise beyond the
m eans of the state budget."
Meshel said Cel este was not
reneging on a campaign pledge
by saying the. state wlll not be
abl e to reduce the student share
of a college education. Celeste
had .promised to lower th at cost
to 32 percent.

In a reciprocal action by the
State of Ohio and Jennifer L.
Hawk against ·Mar k Harold
Hawk, th e court has found the
defendanl in arrears in child
support payments of $2,583 .33. A
wage withholding is to be issued
and 'the defendant is to submit to
the cpurt a plan for repayment.

Square dance planned
TheGra ndeSquaresofG aliipo- ·
lis will have a western styl e
dance on Saturday, from 8 to 11
p.m., at ttie Moose Hall, located
just pa st Krodel Park on Route 2,
north of Poin t Pleasant, W.Va.
The ca ller will be Ed Clark.

RBVisud Code, provides for
entry by the State of Ohio.
its agents. employees. and
contractors to do the necessary work to abate the dan ger to the public health. sa·
fety, and general welfare
when the owner cannot be
located by posting notice on
the premises and ad\lertislng
once in a newspaper of ge·
neral circulation in the area
in which the property lies .

DR-63), The lasl known adBox 31466 Bowles Rood.

Dexter, Ohio 467~6 and that
his address is currently unknown. The plaintiff seeks a
divorce, custody of Susan
l'ove, an award of the real estate, end a fair division of of
property and assign!Tient of
d8bts. Larry RoQer love is required to answer the com. plaint within 28 days after the
last publication, by service of
an answer upon the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court

NOW THEREFORE, having

.

PUBLIC NOTICE
A public inspection of the
Southern· Local School Dis-

lricl's

1987· 88

Public Notice

1987 at the Southern High
School during the regul~r
meeting
of
the Sc hool
Board .
Dannie E. Hill, Treasurer
Southern local
School Distri ct
P. 0 , Bo. 176
Racine. Ohio 45771

I LB. KRAFT

PARKAY

1513.37 of 1he Ohio Revised

MARGARIN.E.... WIMifAl"791
OHIO COLBY

LONGHORN
CHEESE ................. ~. S1.97
S·lO 4x4 Pickup

1987
S-10 4X4
.'

'

AS LOW AS

$199°

0
PEl MO.

KRAFT 12 OZ. PKG. 12 SLICE
PROCESSED

PIMENTO CHEESE ..... S1.89

5 LB. BAG MARSH

RED

GRAPEFRUIT ......~1.1&lt;1. S2.29
HEAD LEnUCE .......,Ho..69'

2. Columbus. Ohio 43224;
ATTENTtON : Michael Smllh,
Telephone number (614j265t086.
11128 1tc

WHEREAS, lhe own• of
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
. MEIGS !JNDERGROUND
#1 RECLAMATION
PROJECT
FISHER SITE
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

PUBLIC NOTICE

otll RECLAMATION

Revised Code. pro\lides fo r
e ntry by the State of Ohio.
its agents. employees. and
contractors to do the neces·
sary work to abate the dan-.
ger to the public health. safety. and general welfare
when the owner cannot ba
located by posting notice on
the premitesand advertising
once in a newspaper of general circulation in the area
in which the property 1ies.

PROJECT
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
To Whom It May Concern :
The State of Ohio , acting

by and lhrough lhe Oeparlment of Natural Resources .
Divis ion of Reclamation ,
wishes to under1ake a reel a·
mation project which will
eliminate access to under·
ground mineral resources
now available throUgh mine
opening(s) located near the
intersection of Township

NOW THEREFORE, having

made

r88liOOBble afforll to ~­
cate and obtein voluntary consent from the mineral owner
prior'to entry upon tile p~
erty, 1he SIBle of Ohio, acling

• ' The apparent owner of the
·. mineral re's ources to which
:! the opening(s) provides ac . ' cess is Bertha A. and Elmer
• . E. Vining aa record ad in Vo -

by

Road 199 and Dark Hollow
Road in Section 8, Town·
ship 2 , Range 1 3, Salisbury
Township. Meigs County,

Ohio.

ond lhrough lhe Depa!f-

The apparent owner of the
mineral reaourcea to which
the opening(s) provides access is . Homer Dyke as recorded in Volume 1 15, Page
9. dead records of Meigs
County. Ohio . The abandoned opening(s) are t he result of past underground
mining conducted at the
Dyke Mine, abandoned in

mont of Natural Rasouroes.
Division of Reclamatkm. ita

agenla.

employ~.

and con-

tractors. shall eliminate access
to the underground minlll'al resources underlying lhe PlOP'
erty indonlified ab&lt;Ne lhrough
closure of the opening, there-

' 11uma 100, Pege 272. deed

:' records of Meigs County,
·' Ohio. The abandoned .open: ing(s) are the result of past
. 1underground mining con,..:ducted at the Excesior or
·5Roland Mine, abandoned in

by protBCiing lhe public
heallh. oafety. end general
welfare from the advtne effects of past coal mining prac-

' •1903.
' WHEREAS. lhe opening(s)

and
WHEREAS, lhe S1a10 of
Ohio, Depar1ment of Natural
Resources. Ohtision of Recla·
mation. pursuant to Section

"SUUTRACT" WOSE TBH~GS
'
~- : ~~ GATHERirJG DUST,
-~ -~ 'ADD" DOLlARS
_TO YOUR POCKET
'
WITH A
Clf\SSIFIED AD

!&amp;13.37 of lhe Ohio Revised

Code wishes to eliminate ac·
cess to ttiB underground mi·
naral respurces through tfle

closure of lhe oponing(s)

mentioned abo\le in order to

proiOCI the public hoailh, sofeiV. and general welfare from
the adverse effects of part
coal mining practices; and

WHEREAS, 1he owner of

••

Real Estata General

•

TEAFORDm

'

992-2156

'

8 01. BANQUU 01 MORTON FROZEN

POT PIES .....................J.foJ S1.29

Real Estate

I

•

11

Help Wanted

5 01. BANQUU 01 MORTON

CO

IN THE BAG ........liM.. 99&lt;

BECOME A DAILY SENTINEL
CARRIER. ROUTES AVAILABLE.
SYRACUSE AND MIDDLEP.ORT

1OJ{• 01. CAMPBELL'S

Ohio weather

S.10 Pfckup

°0MO.
S-1 0 2 WHEEL DRIVE AS LOW AS $13'.·3,EI
NO MONEY DOWN, TO QUALIFIED BUYERS
WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY and FRIDAY ONLY!
Jim Cobb Chevrolet-Oids-(adillac
308 E. Main St.

loum Mon.-Wed.·Frl. 8:30·8:80 P.M.
Tues.-Thurs. 8:30·5:00 P.M.
Sat. 9·4 P.ll; Closed Sunday

Pomeroy, OH.

TOMATO SOUP ............. 1SJn~ .. 79.&lt;
15 01. GENEIAL MILLS
CHEERIOS .......................~M S2.39.
29 01. O'SAGE
PEACHES ........................SM S1.09
1-, 01. DEL MONTE
.
$
SWEET PEAS ............... itSM\ ·1. 19
.17 01. DEL MONTE
WHOLE KERNEL CORN 1SM\ S1.19
16 01. DEL MONTE WHOU
GREEN BEANS ............ itSM\ S1. 19
16 01. SUIFINE WIIOU
WHITE POTATOES .......itSM\ S1.09
8 01. TASTEIS CHOICE
INST. COFFEE .................
m. S7.69
20 01. 1S a. WYURS , .
.
BEEF
BOULLON. CUBES ...m..... 89&lt;
15 '14 01. ARMOUR
SLOPPY JOE ...~.............. SM S1.29
4 lOLL ·PIG. Wlll1l CLOUD .
TOILET TISSUE ......ftii~.n~A&lt;t... S1.3'9

MUST BE AT LEAST 11 YEARS OlD

CALL 992-2156

THE DAILY SENTINEL
. 54 Misc. Merchandise

" _____;;;;;;;;;;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..___.,
•

ALUMINUM. SHEETS
... FOR SALE
-

.

SIZE 23X30X007

ONLY

25(

EACH

USES FOR· ALUMINUM SHEETS RANGE
FROM ROOFING DOG HOUSES TO
MAKING HAMMERED LA.
SHADES.
'

.

L..J:!
REALlOt

Z18 E. 2nd St.
· Phone
1-(6141·992-3326

EARN EXTRA CASH

_____,

·CAN BE PURCHASED DAILY AT THE
DAILY SENTINEL TIL 3 P.M.
.._....;;;;.;;;.;..;..,

heallh. safelY. and general

w'8tfare from the adverso ef.
facts of past ·coal mining practices . Such entry shall begin on

or aboul March 1, 1987 and

shall continue until the necestary work to abate the danger

is completed.
For further information, in·
eluding copies of the Findings

required by Seelion 1513.37
(E) (1] of lhe Ohio Revised

Code, contact the Department
of Natural Resources. Division
of Reclamation. 1856 Fount·
ain $quare Court, Building H·

2. Columbus, Ohio 43224;
ATTENTION: Michael Smllh,
1;etephone number (6141 2651085.
(ti2811c

The apparent owner of the
mineral reiources to which the
opening(a) provides accen is
George· Schwegman as reconlocl In Volume 100. PIIJ&amp;
·1-93, deed recorda of Meigs

- - - - - - - - - 1 pat

underground mining re-

cords for which are unavaila-

PUBLIC NOTICE
MEIGS UNDERGROUND
#1 RECLAMATION
PROJECT
HICKS SITE
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
To Whom It May Concern :
The State of Ohio , acting
by and through the Depart·
ment of Natural Resources.
Division of Reclamation,
wishes to undertake a reel a·
metion project which will
eliminate access to underground mineral resources

Public Notice

protect th e public hualth, t.~
faty, and general welfare from
the adverse effects of patt
coal mining practices; and
WHEREAS . the own8f of
the mineral resources to which
the opaning(s) provide access
cannot be located; and

ment ol Natural Resources.
Division ol Redamadon, its
agents, employ68S, and contractOI'I, shan eliminate acceu
to the underg round mineral resources undflf1ying the property indentified above through
closure of th e opening, thereby
protfKrtillg the publ ic
health. safety. and ger~eral
weliare from the ad\l erse ef.
facts of past coal mining practices . Such entry shall begin on
or about March 1, 1987 end
shall continue until the naoes sary wor1c to abate thr danger
is completed
For further iriformation. including copies of the Findings

ble.

WHEREAS, lhe opening]o)

mentioned poses ·a n extreme
danger to nearby residents:

and

WHEREAS, the State of

Ohio, Department of Natural
Resources. Division of Recla-

WHEREAS ,
Seclion
1513.37 (E) (1) of the Ohio
RtWised Cod e. provides for
entry by the State of Ohio .
ita agents, employees. and
contractors to do the neces sary work to abate the dan ·
ger to the public health, sa fety , and general welfare
when the owner cannot be
located by posting notice on
the premises and ad\lertising
once in a newspaper of ge ·
neral c irculation in the area
in which the property lies .

mation, pursuant to Section

NOW THEREFORE. having

15t 3.37 of lhe Ohio Revised
Coda withes to eliminate ac-

made reasonable etfons to lo·
cate and obtain voluntary con·
sent from the mineral owner
prior to entry upon the propM1y. the State of Ohio, act ing
by and through the Depart-

cess to the underground mi·
neral resources through the
closure of the openinglsl
mentioned above in order to

RIVERINE ANTIQUES
1124 East Main St.
Pomeroy ·
HOURS: Tue.-Wed .. Jri.
11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Sunday: 1 p.m.-7 p.m.
ly (h..,u or Appoinlmenl

Large Truckload of
Nothing But Groceries
Hundreds of Items to

1· 14· 1mo.

NEW LISTING - 6 yr old '
one floor 3 BR home in Rutland. swimming pool, salellite dish, elec. BB heat wilh
woodburner &amp; lireplace. 2
-full balhs, range, relrigerator. dishwasher. ca rpeting &amp;
sundeck. $49,500.
MODERN - 211 balhs, 3
BRs. central air &amp; heat,
range, relrigeralor, disposal,
carpeting, lg. famili rm. with
lireplace, full basement, 2
car garage, 2 pal ios and
land scaped lot. $130,000.
66 ACRES - All minerals
about 2 miles west of Rut1
land rn Section 25.
POMEROY - 9 rm . 2 story
with 2 apts., modern kitchen,
natural gas, f.A. furnace. carpeting, garage, carporl and 2
lots near Kroger's.
MODERN - 3BRs, lg formal
dining. dbl. oven range, ~rch
kitchen, gas FA furnace,
$49.00 budget insulated, dbl.
carport, swim. pool and privacy in Middleport One floor
plan. $67,500. . ,
46 ACRES - On Owl Hollow
1 Rd. in Orange Township.
Some old bldgs. Minerals,
trees &amp; bo"om land. 2 good
spots lor !railers or houses.
TIOUILE SELLING!
CALL BIUCE 992-3325

H Oil'. 111 q
'·

Hr·.tdqtt.ltt,_.r•,

REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND
PH. 992-9949

614-367-7101
NOTE ; We are now
booking Estate, Farm ,
House Sales for Spring

POMEROY, OH.
Bob Barton, Owner
12-30-86-1 mo.

- WE"'---~-.
ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
'•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA

•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATaUTE SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Hen Afull

Tlt~~t

Sh~ Ttthlelh

Real Estate Ganeral

·

o• D•lf

WANTED:

Top mont)' for tomt modelt of
Zenith, Ph il[o, Atwaltr ltnt.

614-992-~023

PH. (3041 882·2220

1· 13·'17· 1 "''·

POMEROY - In town but
secl uded. ApproXImalely 12
acres of woods. House
need s some work. Priced to
sell at $9,800.00.
POMEROY - large two story
home wrih eight rooms, including the large fin ~hed room on
the ~de, which could be
lurned mto a garage or workshop 3-4 bedrooms, lull basement. aluminum siding w~h
blown in insulation. Nice klcation near Pomeroy elemenlary.
$27,003.00
MORN INt STAR ROAD
Here is a ~autilul ranch Iype
home with alull basement, W.
F.BP.. on acre o( land, w~h
plenl'{ of rxtras. Counlry set·
ting in a g eat n~ghborhood'
NOW $53.'100.00.
KINGSBURY ROAD - Ap·
proximatell 143 acre horse
farm . House needs repa11,
barn horse corral, free gas to
house, 3oil &amp;gas wells available lor purchase, lnol producing at present time/. All mi·
nerais. Ask or delai s on the
wells. PRICE REOUCED. MAKE
OFFER $47;500.00.
Henry E. Clll1nd. Jt.
. 992·&amp;191
Jean Trumll ..... 949-2660
Dottie Turner ..... 992·5692
Olflct................ 992·2259

A.U3

t\Jf!'

Bashan Building

BISSEll
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES ~ GARAGES

CARPENTER
SERVI.CE

- Addont 1nd rtmodtllng
- Roofing end gutter wor~
- Concrete work
- Plumbing tnd etectrlc:tt
wor~

(F'" Ellimaltli

V. C. YOUNG In
992-6215 or 992-7314
· Pomeroy, Ohio
4-15-'86-tc
·---~;::..~

p.1~1.

ptro&lt;;t•rll

()I ,'H~

Ill lVII I'

fu

nl "•'• If y1ru H!l' lll l hiii)PV
I&lt;.

or

949-2860
Day or Night

1111

rn ;1rrr;rqr· ilfld busr

;urd d'H' t

PH. 949-2801
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-16 -'86 rtn

no,.,... whtt:h

or1u• rn lor
iUh''' ,. (),,,, vr·,rt wd!con
Wily 1" Torrn

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

VI lilY V&lt; HI 1/w p-

'',&lt;I t, ,. ltiH

WoiY

302 WP~i Unton , "'lhl'n~

factory Choke
12 Gougt Shotgtou Only
10-8-tfn

$5

Ph . 194-1848
OFF With Th" Ad
I 26 I mo

GINGERBREAD
HOUSE
PRE-SCHOOL
Middleport, Ohio

16141 992-7328

Roger Hysell
Garage

SANDY'S
AUTO SALES
Automotive Repair
I S.rvitt

em

OFFE RS ENRI CHING
lEARNIN G EXPERI ENCES
FO R CHILDR EN 3 TO 6
YE AR S OF AGE

'Open Enrottment
Thru The Veer

Rt . 124, Pomtroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

IUNIUPS lo TIANlMIISIDNS

992-7403 Apt.

Alu Trancmisslon
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

!1. R1. 33, Pomtroy, OH.

ow Open

POME~ov;o.
992·2259

PALM READ!A &amp; ADVI!OA
l n\11'

YOUNG'S

·E. Mainl._

LADY RACHELS
T1111~

CHESTER-985- 3307
4/1/rtn

. TV &amp; APPLIANCE

BEECH STREET - POMEROY
- Eli mmate mainlenance
wrth this brick ranch house. 3
bedrooms. 11h baths, lireplace, basement. garage, on
approximately I acre of land.
New roo!. large nice living
room, modern kitchen and
bath. $35,000.00.

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

We'll Sail You A
Used Car or Fix
Y ciur Old One
1-7.'87-1 mo.

RIDENOUR

SYRACUSE - Single lloor
plan. new e1terior paint, 7
rooms, laundry and bath ,
detached 2 car garage. City
water and sewage, lruit
trees, flower beds. shrubs,
garden space. .29 acre.
Must See' $49,900.00.

1085.
28 ,.,

(1 ]

An1 Brond Name ... Boughf
Belort IHO

GUN SHOOT

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS

LOCATED ol
Rutland, Ohio
in the

AUCTIONEER: Lon Neal

2, Columbus, Ohio 43224;
ATTENTION : Michael Smilh,
·Telephone number (6141265 ·

" At Reo10noble Prices "

190 MULBERRY AVE.

Rutland American
legion Building

Section 1513.37

Code. contact the Departmont
of Natural Resou rce!, Divi3ton
of Reclamatton. 1865 Fount ·
ain Square Cour1 , Building H -

OLD RADIOS WANTED

COMMERCIAL
RESIDENTIAL

Choose From - Don't
Miss tift

jiN CATE MEACHANOISEI

by

(E) (1) of the Ohio R8\li!led

Business Services

MILLS ELECTRIC

992-2526

Public Sate
&amp; Auction

SPECIAL
GROCERY AUCTION
JAN. 31, 1987
FRI: NITE 7:00 PM

required

~========;t----~---...J~--------1--------­
ANTIQUES
BUY OR SELL

I=--=-., ~~=---c-B

'
now available through
mine
opening(s) located On the
west aide of Nye Avenue in
the Village of Pomeroy, Ohio
County, Ohio.

- - - - - - - - - 1 County, Ohio. Theabandooed
Public Notice
oponlng(s) io/are lhe ....,11 of

RUSS MOORE

mentioned poses an eKtreme
danger to nearby residents;

shall continua until the neces·
sary wortl to abate the dafl98'

:and

erl\l indeniWied
abovethelhrough
sources
under1ying
propclosure of the opening, thereby prolacling lhe publil:

1903.
WHEREAS. lhe openingjs)

lices. Such enlry shalt begin on
or aboUI March 1, 1987 end

; mentioned poses an extreme
'danger to nearby residents;

ment of Natural Resources,
OivisiOO of Reclamation. its
agents. employees, and con·
tractors. shall eliminate access
to the undEH'ground mineral re-

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

WHEREAS.
Seclion
1513.37 lEt (11 of lhe Ohio

by and lhrough lhe Deparl-

BAKING
POTATOES ...........Mii S1 .89

of Natural Resources, Division
of Reclamation, 1865 Fount·
ain Square Court Building H·

the mineral resources to wtlich
the oponing(s) provide access
cannot be located; and

To Whom It May Concern:
' The State of Ohio, acting

10 LB . IDAHO

required by Section 1513.37
(Ei (1] of lha Ohio Revised
Code, conlaellhe Deparlmenl

Code wishes to eliminate access to the underground mineral resburces through the
closure of the openinglsl
mentioned above in order to
protect the pllblic health, safety, and general welfare from
the adverse effects of past
coal mining practices; and

(1)28,hc

•lt•~o~ i11nrd funf'r ml
urrunJremt"nl. ju 11t .-all
or \'i11it

BOILED HAM .............}UCJP.lt. 2. l9
ECKIIGE
CHOPPEDHAM LOAF ........11. S1.39
HOMEMADE HAM SALAD .11..... 89'&lt;
SUPUIOI
BREA·KFAST HAM .............11. S1. 99
LOAF LUNCHEON MEAT ...11. S1. 99
SUPEIIOR ·
BIG RED BOLOGNA ........»..... 99&lt;

is completed.
For further information, including copies of th8 Findings

WHEREAS, lhe Slale of
Ohio, Department of Natural
Resources, Division of Reqlamation, pursuant to Section

will be held on February 15.

Tu "'"'d a htoautlfull y

$

Public Notice

budget

he aring; notice; submission
to the Countv Auditor under
Ohio revised law 6706 .30

'

REMEMBER
WITH FLOWERS .

12.39 SHREDDED

by and lhrough lhe Depart-

CtASS~FlED HDS

Public Notice

Divorces filed

made reasonable efforts to kl·
cilte and obtain voluntary con·
sent from the mineral owner
prior to entry upon the property. thu State of Ohio, acting

Readt11e

Cieri&lt;.
(1] 21. 28; 121 4, 11 ' 18, 25
&amp;lc

ment of Natural Resources,
. l;)ivision of Reclamation,
, ·wishes to undertake a recla O: mation project which will
' ~ fliminate access to under: • ground mineral resources
~ ~ now available through mine
'"'tOIH!Iningla) located along·
• Fisher Street in the Village of
:· Pomeroy in Fraction 18.
1 Section 14, Township 2,

SMIYIIFIELD

Still, said the governor. there
will be opportunit ies to:
-Fund a supercomputer linking universities and industries.
and a high· technology atomsmasher if the federa l governmen! chooses to locate it in a
four-county centra l Ohio area:
-sel up a steel and manufacturing futures fund to encourage
steel and ot her basic i ndustries to
modernize;

•

WHEREAS.
Seclion
1513.37 tEl (1] oflhe Ohio

: Range 13.

from hi s 1986 re ·elec t ion
: ca mpaign.
"Unlike 21 ot her states which
last year had to raise taxes or
slash spending, we have been
able to lower taxes gradually for
the benefit of all our citizens." he
said.
Cel este did not mention It, but
the reduced revenue in take is one
of the reasons his proposed
budget. which com es out Feb. 2,
will be tess than 1 percent more
than this year's.

PHONE 992-2156

Public Notice
the mineral resources to which
the opening(s) provide acCSBs
cannot be located; and

dresS of larry Roger Love was

Marriage licenses have been
issued in Meigs County Probate '
Cour t to Kenneth Jacob Coen, 29,
Albany, and Chery l Christine
Wri ght , 37, Albany; Lawrence
Eric Cundiff, 24. Racine, and
Debbie Marie Eynon, 24. Racine.

(Continued from Pag~ 11

South Centra l Ohio
Par tly cloudy tonight, with a
low· In the low 20s. Cloudy
Thursday, with a chance or rain
and highs In the low 40s.
.The probability of preciplta ·
tion is 20 percent tonight and 40
percent Thursday.
.
!
Winds will be from the southwest at 10 to 15 mph tonight.
Ohio Extended Forecast
Friday through Sunday
A chance of rain or snow
Friday, with a chance of snow
Saturday and Sunday. Highs
mainly will be In the 30s Friday
·and Saturday ·and ranging from
:25 to 35 Sunday . Over night lows
will be in the20sfarly Friday and
In the leens Saturday and Sunday
mor nings.

NOTICE TO :
larry Roger love. please
take notice that Karen Eileen
love has filed a complaint fbr
divorce. in the Meigs County
Coun of Common Pleas. Pomeroy, Ohio (Case No. 86-

Marriage licenses

, At the l'equcst of the pl aintiff, a
new appraismenr and order of
sal e has been ordered in a
foreclosure action by Farmers
Bank &amp; Savings Co. against
Hlllard Conley.
Dismissed were the cases of
Raymond E. Maxson against
Frances B . Maxson. and M ax E . r.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

Read U1e Best Se-Her

- · P~blic Notice

Hill, et al, against Conso!ldated
Rail Corp.

Divorce act ions have been filed
in M eigs County Common Pleas
Court by Violet G. Sa tterfield,
Reedsville, from Will iam A.
Sa t terfield, Reedsville, and by
Gwen D. Husk, Middleport, from
Jam es E. Husk, Bidwell.
Granted a dissolution of mar·
riage were Debra L ynn Estep
and James Ear l Es tep.

13

Or Write Dailly Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

"I would hope the public would
be properly informed of what ta x
reductio ns have cost the state,':
he said, r eferring to a personal
income tax reduction imple·
mented during the first Celeste
administration .
William B. Cou lt er. chancellor
of the Ohio Board. of Regents,
said the student' s share has
dropped from 47 percent when
Celeste took office to 36 percent.

:Celeste·

-emphasize marketing pro·
grams and support a center for
agricultu ra l innovation;
-create a mlni·loan program
for small businesses and es tablish a small business rou ndtable
wit h regular meetings bet ween
small business r&lt;' present atlves
and key state department
directors;
-set a sta tPwidc sta ndard for
what every ch ild should achieve
by third grade;
•
-expand the Passpcrt program - alteratives to nursing
home care for elderly - to 50
percent of I he stat e by 1990, and
expand workfare- relief I'CC!plcnts working for their benefitsto 29 count ies.

The Daily Sentinel

State, woman win judgment
A judgment of $11,812.50 has
been awarded the Ohio Deparment of Welfare and Nancy E.
Aelker , in a reciprocal act19n for
child support in M eigs County
Common Pleas Cour t against
Char les Ray Aeiker.

The

Ohio

•

6· 11 -tf c

G&amp;M TV
REPAIR
4U3S St.
124

. MAIN STREET
PIZZA

Rt.
Radnt, Olio 45771

222 E. Main, 'omeroy

PH. 992-2228

949-3088 Bus.
949-2606 Home
All Makes &amp;

4 P.M. 'Til11 P.M.
Sunday thru Thursday
Friday &amp; Saturday
4 P.M. 'Tit t :30 A.M.

OPEN TUESDAY,
WEDN!IDU &amp; THURSDAY
9 AM to 11 :30 AM and
12.30 PM fo 3 PM

Coli Administrator Mrs.
Shirin. J. Nuggud. MEd.
1-7-' 81-1 mo.

Ntw locaTion:
161 North Sound
Middltporf, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

w, C• ITV Fl11'tlng Suppti M
Your Cable &amp;
Billa Here
IUStNfll PlfONf
(6141 "1-6!$0
R!IIDfHCI PHONE

Models
24 HR. SERVICE

PilUS, SUBS

PIZZA BREAD

1·2.' 87-1 mo •

(6141 99l· IIS4

1-12-1 - ·
r- --~-------,

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Autherind lohn D•ro,
Ntw Hollond, lush Hag
Farm Equipment
Dooltr

F~tlll Equiplllt~~t ·

,,,.. &amp;

s.,.1..

1·3- '16 He

"VINYL SIDING
"ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULADON

BISSRL
SIDING CO.

RAOIATOR

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

SER~ICE

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

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING
•lnaul at ion
•Storm Door s
•Storm Windows
•Rep ~aca ment Wi ndows
•Naw Roofing

PAT HILL FORD

"FIIIISTIMA'IIS"

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

992 -2196

1·19.'87-1 mo.

Middleport, Ohio
1 -13-tfc

1cuT ouTJouurutlf usn

J.R.'s REPAIRS

KEN'S

TYs, Antennas

APPLIANCE

Satellte Sales

SERVICE

Installation
Service

New Homes luilt

915·3561
Allllillk"

Electronic Organs

"Free Eatimet•"

•Wuhlro •Dlshwtohlro

Mobile service

PH. 949-2101
or '949·2160
No Sunday Calls

•

111114".

SHAIPENING
SE.IVICE
Clrcultr Stwo

Saw Chein
Planer nlvet

•R=~~g:~:oro

EXCAVATING
COMPANY
•All Typtt of
Exctvttlng

Knhln

·~ndoctplng

GIAVELY
TIAUOI SALES
204C..-St.
, ......,, Olllt

PH.' 992·2975

1· 15-' 87-1 mo.

614-843 -5248
IIUSONAILE • R£UAIL£
,1.---...:,8·;,::20::,;,.',:16:,.11:::n:J

FILL DIRT
10-S-tl c

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAIR
Truck, auto. &amp;
heavy oquipmenl
repairs and w elding .
IAII makes &amp; models)

PH. 949·2893
or 949-2756
John K. Btnh
Owner I Mechanic

.-

1· 2·'11·1 mo.

MEIGS

Drill 81to
Chi....

'

•Drytro •Frotztro
PARTS end SERVICE
4-~tlc

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

•BIHmlntl

•Sewage Sylteme
•W•ttr • Gu Un••
•W•ttr Well Drilling
•Trucking

Call: 742·2407

1-16.'17·1 mo.

e,

z

-

a:

Co~uterized Htlilring Air Selection
Swim Molds - Interpreting Services ,

-~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
% Licensed Clinical Audiolo&amp;ist

-z (6141446.
·7619
417 Second

or (614) 992·6601
Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis. Qhio 45631
1·13 !In

�!

Page- 14- The

Daily Sentinel

-~i£~M-MlN_.~y)!,~J~anRu_a~~~2-8~,~1~9-B_7__________~--~----------~P~~~~--~Y:_M~i~dd~l~~·~rt~.~Oih-~~~~----,-----:=:=:=~;:::~~;::D;a:il~y;S:en;t~in:e:t:P:a:g::e!:

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
44

•
;__-1--+--t-\ .

61 Household Goods

Apartment
for Rant

•

2 Bedroom tpt .

Gallipolis. OH PH . 614-448·

water peid. wllher 6

out for low prices on furniture &amp;
appliances. 6 piece wood living
room group, U99.

available Jan 1.

614-446-7026.

Announcements

1987 Ph

.

Furnished &amp; unfurnished epts ,
8150.00 and up. references Ph

Fumialutd apartment. next door

•

Ra cme Gun Shoot sponsored by
Ra cme Gun Club Every Sunday,
begmmng at 1 00 p.m Factory
Choke. 12 guage shotguns

to,llbrarv. One professional adult

only.' Parking. Call 614· 446·

0338.

}

Piano lessons for beginners Call
for appo1ntment Taught by
college graduate 1$14 949

Furniatled apt 919 Second.
Gallipolis e150 Utilit1t1a pd.
Single male, shara bath 446·
4416 aftet" 7pm.
·

New Art Classes Tu esday and
Thur1d11y for adults and Satur·
dey tor under age 16. CAll
614·949 -3060 for more mfor·
ma11on . G"!atanteed. you ' ll
learn
~

Deluu downtown., apartment·
newly redecorated 2 bdr apt
w1th full insulation. completfl
kitchen, washer· dryer, 11r cond
sundec'lt Call 614· 446·4383·
dav•. 614·446·0139 even1ngs
• weekends .

lc-

3060
- - - - - - - - ·lc-

-~------· lc -

Prec•ous Memories Studio Specleli:res in ponrait s Quality work
guarnteed Call 614 -949 -3060
for appointm ent Reasonable
pr~ ces

Grandparents wh o don't get to
1ee the~r grandchildren call this
number 1-304 -675 -5687 Art ie
M He1s

4

Giveaway

· , One yellow and wh1te adult
, female cat Two tabby kittens
, Caii446-215B
Small br eed pUpp1es, 6wks old
' Caii614 · 3BB·8180
, Patr of Albmo
614·446 ·1364.

gerbsls

Call

"What's the problem this
time, Monica - the generation gap, or the gender gap?"

L..----------.,------------1
r

11

Sears Kenmore d11hwufler tor
parlt, 304 ·675 -4413

Be part of the number One
Beauty Companv w1th AVON .
't'ou earn IS you learn Call
Manlvn Weaver , 304 -882 ·
2646
Someone to clean 9 .00·12 00
mormngs two or tflrea times a
week. call 304 -676 -21!135
Babvs1tter in our home tor 2
children ages 6 yr and 15 ·mo,
New Hav&amp;n, week dav•. 304·
882 ·3674 af1er 4 ·00 PM

, Lost 1n Cora Mill area On e hght
. colored female Cockflr ~Palllfll
· Onn female puppy - Black Lab
1 mill Call aher 7 614 -379 ·
. 2128
Lo st light tan male lhaso apso
Vic 2nd Ave , Pin e Brown
co llar &amp; flea collar. 12 year s old
Children ' s pat -name l enny
Ploasfl call 614 -446 -1671 or
446 2596

Lon · 3 dogs. 1 Doberman, 1
Collie, and 1 small m l ~ad breed.
Call 61 4· 742 · 2786. Chustv
· Ward
, Found . Pekinese blacll 11nd
brown No collar. FoundJ11n 27
near Sacred H11art Chureh Call
' t!i14 992 -7396

Situations
Wanted

W1ll do word proceumg 1M mv
home Ca11614·448·8135.

614 446·3672
TOP CASH paid for '83 model
an d newer used ears Smith
Buick·Pontiac. 1911 Eastern
Ave , Gall1pol1s Call 614 -446 -

2282
Wsnted to buy- pool table Call
614 -266 -6635.

Oakwood Apta Modern 1 bdr
apt Security deposit, reference
No pels. Single person pre·
lerred Located between Galli·
poll• &amp; Holur. Call 614·446·
2066 after 6 PM .

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Just buill 2 bdr duplex
Equipped kitcken E11tra nice
Securitv deposit &amp; reference
required Nopets Caii814 -U&amp;-

NEW ANO USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY

1260

MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST. GALLIPOLIS. AT 36.

Schools
Instruction

R111rain Now Soutfleast11rn Bu•·
iness Collflge Call 814-448 -

9340

Silver Springs, Flor~da 1980
141170 On 1 acre with chained
hnked lance. 12x30 1creened
patio 614· 742 -2464.

LPN wants to do private duty 2
veau uperiance in hospital, 2
years e11perience privata duty

Call 814-446 8398

.Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH ·
lNG CO reco mmends lhat vou
do bu1mM1 with people you
know . and NOT to ~end monev
through the mall until vou have
investigated thlt oHermg

Good money weekly. Procening
mad information . Rush seltaddreuad stamped envelope·
Terry Lee. 131 - A Eureka Slar
Rt . Gallipolis, Ohio 46631

Employ ment
Services

-

23

AVON ·Wow!l Make b19 buc1t1
No processing c h~rge . Call
814· 446· 3358

Professional
Services

Plano &amp; organ ieuone. Marv
Luca1. Call 61 4 · 446· 9787 or

614·446-4426.

A11on. Free Bu1c K1t . Jan
28·feb 28. Stltrt now Earn
elltrl dollars. Call 614 446

Guitar tenons

Need babvsltter Mature respon
sibllt person Bidwell ar fla only
Call 814 · 388· 9862

Stark• Tree and lawn Strvh:e
He dgu , shrub1 , bushel
1rlmmed. landscaping, 1tump
and laaf removal , 304· 676·
2B42 Of 578 -2010

2166. 446-4682.

6436.

Del'ttal t4yg11n11t and dental
a1111tant . Send tvped wr itten
resume to 206 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohic Good POSitiOn

Call 614 -388-

Real Estate

Pleasant. Very clean and mea.
H81 wastier and drver hook-up.
Adult• only. No pets. Phone

1983. 14M70 trailer. call after

304-675 -1400

1972 Community 121152, 2
bedroom, partiallv furnished, 2
air conditions. awning N1ce &amp;
Clean. 304· 675-7669

46

:':u·~·~~•:ll:••:ln~g~·-------­ . JcGOVERNMENT JOBS

e11,040 -t69. 230 yr. Now H1r·
in(l Call 806· 887·6000 ht.
A·9105 for current federal ll1t.
AirHne job• e17 , 747 . 10
te3,469. per year. Now hirmgl
Call Job Line q;18.469 -3635
El!t. A· 1385 D tor Into 24
hours.
BabysiHer needed in my ho mt
One~ year old. 6· 6 dav• a week ..
Must h1ve own car. Call 614·

742·2060.
SomiOne to live on my home 6
tUvs • wHk Monday · Fridav.

114-742·2060

CHRIBTM.S BILLS PILING UP)
Tha Army NatiOI"'II Guard may
hiVe the solutiOtt Monthtv pav
ct\ectr. for part tlmt work. Join

now. 304·171·3910 •• 1·BOO·
142-3119.
AVON, no ••!"ice charge. open
· terrltorltt. phone 304 - 675 -

.

31

Homes for Saljl

1 m ile west of Rodnt¥·Rt 35. 3
bdr , brick mat. frH, 2 ca1 gsr.
heated workshop, chain Unk
fence flit cond Call 614· 24&amp;·

9258
Beneficial h•• accepted volun·
tery rtpottelllon of a house In
Addison. Ohio. 3 bdr , kitchen.
bath. a1tic, dining area, &amp;
i n-bsument garage. Priced
below market value &amp; negotla·
ble Contaet Duane Clstworthy
at Beneficial of Ohio 814 -446 -

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms end
light hou1e keepmg rooms Park
Central Hotel Call 614 -446 -

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

0756

Rooms for rent, day. week .
month. Gallla Hotel . Call 614·
448-9716. Rent as low 81 81 20
month.

A1flton bu1ldmg lots, mobtle
home• permilt&amp;d. Clyde Bowen.
Jr 304-676-2338.

46 Space for Rent

Rentals

OHiee Space tor Rent E ~cellen1
for Auornev1. Accountant, etc
Close to Court House. Call
Wiseman Real Esate Agency.

Houses for Rent

614-446·3644.

Deluxe 2 BR house, 842 First
Avenue, Gallipolis. oft ltreet
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
pat"km.g. no pets. reference~. _- Route 33 , North of Pomeroy.
dep011t . Call 614 ·268· 1529
Rantel trailers Call 1!114 -992·

7479.

3 bdr . raneh , Rodney Village II.
t285 mo plu1 deposit References reqwed. Call 614 -446-

Space for Rent · Trailflr spaces
Locust Ad At 1 . Point Pleasant

0008

304-676·1076.

Nice 3 BR kouse. 8360 plus
uttlltea &amp; sac deposit Call
814 · 446 · 9280 after 6 II
w11ekenda.

Merchandise

Furnished houu Located 736-R
Th1rd Ave Gallipolis. • 136
month S76 depotlt. Call 448·
3870 or 446·1340

51 Hou5ehold Goods

Small. 2 BR hou11. fenced In
front yard, t 200 permo Utilities
not included. Call 614· 968·

Full size bad, complete. A11ung

4160.

•so. Call&amp;14-446-9993

At 160 Mulberry Ave . Pom•ov.
Available Feb 11t Rea1onable
rent, houu need• work Call
614· 992· 6791 after 6 :00.

Sears Kenmore. electnc. cop·
pertone ltOve 860 Call 614·

Langsv1111 are~ . Oepo11t re·
qulted. Call 814· 742·2641
Will rent with option to buy or
land Contracl 3 BR , brick home
In Baum Addition F1mily room
w ith fir8f)lace. in full buement
1 aere with patio end grill.
Eastern 1eh0ol diltriC1. Available
Immediately Terms are negotit·
ble. Call 614· 986·4196 or Col·
teet 614 ·687 ·53B8 .

EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jaok·

son, Oh 614·286 -6930

367-7114.

Firewood for sale Hardwood
Large pickup toad. 835 Call
614 · 446· 9266 or 614 -446·

1437

.

Tree &amp; Stump removal. slana, fill
dirt, firewood pickup $46 ,
Dump $95 Heap vouchers.
Don's Landscapes Call 614-

448 -9646.

Craftsman -New. never u1ed . 3
spd , drill pren. 10 inctl vat1ab1e
speed band saw 7'6 mch table
saw &amp; accenories, asking 8 350.
Pa1d over S700 or trade for
good 3 ton a1r conditioner for
furnace or good shower stall S.
commode or what·have-you
Call 614 ·446· 2746
1989 Ford, V-8 pickup truck,
runs good Bottle (181 furnaee tor
trailor, good cond. Call 614-

388-8473

40 gallon gas water heater, like
new . Price negotiable. Ca11614·

446·9346

Mob1le tlome frames, 66 h . long.
Includes whael1 &amp; allies French
City Mobile Homes Call 614 -

446-9340

Mlwed hardwood .slabs 812 per
bundle Containing appro11 1'11
tons FOB Oh1o· Pallet Co.
Pomerov. Ohio. Call 614-992·
6461 .
F~rewood for sale. 835 . per load;
6 loads, 1$1 60. Delivered and
stacked. Call 814 -949 -2501
after 6 00 p m

One 300 amp: AC ·DC welder.
Brand new One 6000 waH
alternator. 10 Horse Brake end
Slraton. bran~ new ' electric
start. Pipe dyel, tlall through 2
inchel with wricflet flandlfl Pipe
taps lrom quarter inch to three
quarters and half ineh Write to
Box 178, Pomeroy, Ohio Leave
phone number and address
For sale· Firewood. Poplar slabs
$6 00 per bundle; Oak slab1
S10.00 Pflr bundle. Sawmill
Countv Road 19. Peach Fork Rd.
Phon11 614·992 -6922 at 12.30

446-3142

p.m

USED FURNITURE . Sofa. e11cel
lent eondltlon, eoffeetable, •olid
meple corner cabinet. Corbin &amp;
Snvder Furniture, 9615 Seeand
Ave. Gallipolis . 614-44&amp;-1171

Tonv ' s Gun R'apairs, hot reblueing. Open 9·00 AM to 7 ·00 PM
Call 304 -675-4631

P1cken1 Used Furniture Good
quality used furniture O(&gt;en 9 to
6 or call for appomtment.
304-875-6483 or 6?6 -USO.

676·6461

White GE wuher, S100 00
304· 676· 3615 after 6.00.
SWAIN

AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62

42 Mobile Homes

Plastic c11tem •tete approved.
plastic sept1c tanks, plastic
culverts metal culvort1 . RON

A.pls. tor rent m Racma 2 to 3
bedroom Call Cleland Realtv.

•

676·6384.

1976 Olds Cutlass. good shape,
stereo 19 mch color TV , 304·

HUNTERS Cartlartts. Lea1es,
Collars, Feed. Name Plates.
Caps. lightl IN1teltte Dealers).
ln1ulated 8ools. House ot Gifls.
407 Siath St. Point Pleasant
Surplus Denim, Army, Rental
clothing . Copv of this ad wotttl
10 per cent oft on hned denim
jaeketl, Carhal1 clothing, !Dacron 1n1ul ated Coveralls
126 00 ). Sam Somerville' s.
East· Ravan•wood, Junction Old
At. 21 , Independence Ro1d. Fri.
Set. Sun. 12.00· 8 00 PM . 304 -

1.1

3 BR mobile home. llf'ge yard,
city school 314 3td St. Ka ·
naug•. Caii614·U6· 7473.

54 Misc. Merchandise
Wicker 1et - 2 chairs, large table,
two small tables. large metal
clothes closet w11h mttror. 304·

676-4616

Nice 2 bedroom Mobile Home,
Roush Lane On nice 1pot In
..
Chethlre. 304 -773-5828

55 Building Supplies
Bu1ldmg Materials
Block, bnck. sewer p1pes, wm dows. lintels. etc Claude Win·
ten, Rio Grande. 0 Call 814 -

246·5121 .

Concrete block• all1izes yard or
delivll!ry. Muon sand Gallipoh•
Block Co , 1231f;~ Pine St .
GatllpDiis. Oh10 Call 614-446·
Buildmg Supplies. Closeouts·
Buyouts· Surplu• 1114 ' 118'11~"
Yellow pme rough sawed T 1 -11
sidmg. 510.99 ea 26 pc. up
89.99 !2!4'x8'x:W' Yellow pine
rough saw11d T 1-11 siding
$5 99 aa. 25 pe up 84 99• ! 3)
4'x8'11lfi." Tl!aG plvwood ,
810.96 ea (4) 4'1110'xlA" plv·
wood. 816.95 ea. (6)4 ' ~~:8 ' x lf4 '
Luan plywood. 86.99 ea 161
4' x8' 111 wood paneling. Wood·
grains &amp; pr~nts $7.96 ea .
Second1 $6 .99. 171 Masonite.
MaJhte planks 16" wtde 96"
long panehng. T&amp;G . Seconds
81 .50 ea (8) 4'x8' Marlite bath
panel embosaed 1n 4" x4" bloek
n 96 and &amp;8 95 ea. (9) 4 ' 118'
Foil faced foam insulation board.
(1
h " thlek 84.99 ea) !~ " -86 . 99)
(1 "· 86 69) (1 0)48'' Vanity w1ttl
marble top 8179.96. (11) 30"
Vanttv with marble lop 579.95.
(1 2) 6 piece high gloss tub
enclosure kit 829.95 11 3) 5"
tempered glass sliding tub
doora, aluminum finith. $49.94
or $39.96 with purchase of tub
p4) S1ng!e door mad cab
plastic box, stainleu steel
frame 819 96 ea (15) 1 and 2
p~ece •iberglass tub and shower
combination CoiOfs &amp; wh1te.
8129.95 to S199.96 ea. 5
percent d1scount on 2 piece •
up. 1161 4 p1ece solid oak towel
bar sat. t19 . 95 . (171 Prefinished
oak bruce lloormg 3A " Jt2 W '
Random langtha t1 .95sq ft 10
c t.n up 81 .75 sq . h . 20 sq h
pr. c.t .n. {18) Prehung steel
msulated doors $69.96 ea (19)
Pine 'panel doon t39 95 to
859 .95 B. grades (20) Double
sidelight entrance doors 'h glass
v, panel 8299 .96 ea. 1211 6'
Double entrance doon, y, glatt
'h panel 8349 95. (~21 Pretlung
1ntenor doon. finished &amp; unfmlstled. Choice sizes. $34.96 ea.
(23) Wood !. plastic shutters
from 31" to 80" $9 96 to
$26.96 pr. (24) all wood serllftft
doors
812 95 es (26)
11J• '' II36' 'x80 ' ' white storm
doors, insulated foam f1lled
S89 96 (26) Countertop plast1c
80 ce'nta sq. ft (27) V1nyl s1dmg
trtm 6 colors 112' J channel
IJ1 1 .50! 11
1n1ide corner
83 .001 110' ouUtdlt corner
$4 .00) (28) 12 " ~t12 " plain
white ceilmg tile 26 cent• ea or
64 piece ctn $18 50 . (29)
24" 1148" aeoust1cal emboued
fire re1fstant ceiling panels
$2 35 ea (301 Closeout whtte
catting gnds !12: mam tee $1 .50
ea I (4 ' tee 60 cen11 ea.} Penri' l
Warehouse. Well1ton . Oh1o.
614·384-3645. Open 8 -6. 6
days.

o·

Pole Buildings by Quality
Bu1ldefl Worksflop1, carporu.
animal lhelters, gafages. Free
e111mates Phone 614 - 384 ·

6762

56

Pets for Sale

Oragonwvnd Cattery Kennel
CFA Himalayan. Pers1an and
Siamese ki1ten1. AKC Chow
pupptes New Himm1es &amp; Per
s1an1 Call 814-446· 3844 after

7PM

AKC Registered German She·
pherd pups 10 wkl old S50
each Call 614· 446·0373
Miniature Pinsch8r puppies
AKC Registered red , black &amp; tan
Had shots. wormed. ta1ls cut
Call614·423· 8071 .
6 mcnth old reglstnred , male
l..Boperd Ker and Mountain Ker
croued, 304-B95-3683

Fmn S11ppli r.s
('; L tvt~ o luck

2766
.:...._-- -.....,---·IC-

3 bedroom. unturni1Md . 'No
pets . New Haven. W.V. Call

Government hom'et from t1 . (u
repair), Delinquent t111 property.
Repoue1~on1 Call 806·687·
6000 E11t. QH· 980&amp; for current
repo llat.

3 bHroom mobile home for rent
near Chnhlre. Call 614· 367·

U S. 31 W8tt. Jackson. Ohio.

304·882·24&amp;0.

614·2Be·8522.

CROSS. SONS

7148.

K &amp; K Mobile Hom•. 2 and 3
' bedroom mobil• hom•. 304·

2 br, kheh.n1 bathroom, with
laundry room . living room &amp;
dining room, all eltcl Approx. 7
mllea from Pt . PI on Rt 82. 2
trects approlC. 1 ecremortorl...
overlooking Kanawha River.
e4o.ooo. c.n 304· &amp;75· &amp;440
between 8:30 and 4:30.

2 bedroom trailer, couples, 1
amlll child Locutt Rd. At 1, Pt.

614·281·1451.

MIIMY f•rguson. New Holland.
lull't Hog Sal• • Barvice. Qv.

4088 .

1030 Can d1esel with cab. 6
bouom plows, $4950. 4 rowAC
no ttll plantar, $1500. 12 foot
wheel disc, 8600. 3600 Ford
tractor, low hrs. with 516 late
model Ford mowing mach1ne.
$6460. No. 3 Mf bailor, $660.
Pull type rake, t476. Call
Cub uae,or, flail mower, plow,
grader blade Call 614·379·

2639

White Farm Tractors, Best Price
m Area, Siders Equ1pment Co,
Henderson. W. Va. 304·676·

7421 .

MOTOR CAR BROKERS. St.
Rt 180 Nol1h of Holzer Hosp,
Gallipoli1. Ohio, 614 -446-6592
or 446-4522 . See us for all your
livestock and hone tratlerneeds
Alt.o. 1n stock neat flat beds for
ptckups and ton trucks, P &amp; H
sprmg bumpers.

"Look at all those towels Jn there just
begging to be stolanl"

College Beokotball:
Georgetown at Providence
(2 hrs.) Live.
()) En1ortolnmonl Tonight

I])

62

Now buymg shell corn or ear
corn . Call lor latest Quotes R1ver
City Ferm Supply, 614·446·

2986.

992·6568

1976 Honda Civic Sadan Good
runmng conditiOn Great gat
mileege t400 Call 614 -949·
2021 aher 4 00 p m.

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

1876 lnternat1onall Seout, 4114,
304-882-3237 after 5:00 PM

9718

Charolais bull Commg 2 vear
old Call614·367·0242
Regtstered Murray Grev Bull.
Calved 12-20· 80, out of Wad ·
fOonga Ace. Proven· brother of
National Grand Champion .
Phone 614 - 98&amp;~ 3506

Hay &amp; Grain

and
Mark help a g•oup of teen·

teachers,

?eFo~!

THE?IR I'J&amp;Xi.

of their sen1or prom . (60
min .) In Stereo.

(1) Bring 'Em Bock Alive

([)Ill Cll Pel'fecl S1rangers
(CC) Amaleur psychialrist
Lerrv attempts to discover

Clean m1~ted hav. never wet.
$1 ,25 a bale. Call 614 -446 ·

4063.

Transportation
Autos for Sale

1984 Ford Escort wagon. 41pd .
air. AM -FM . Cash pr~ce 1$2999.
Johns's Auto Sales. Bulaville
Rd , Gallipolis
'
1986 Chrvster Lebaron. 4 dr ,
futo , a1r, 44,000 m1les Call

614-379-2726

1984 Dodge Omm, 4 dr., 5 spd.,
sunroof 60.000 m1les Cell

614-379-2726

1980 Audi 5000 . 4 dr , 5 spd ,
diesel PS, PB AM -FM cassette
sunroof. AC , e11. cond 64500
or Best offer Call 614 ·446·

0333

1978 Ford Thunderbird, loaded ,
e11.c cond ms1de &amp; out , one
owner. Call 614 · 388 · 8613
Btwn 8 AM &amp; 5 PM
1980 Trans-Am; new V-8 en gme, no ru1t. 9•inside, 8 out11de.
Auto . PS / PR, air, stereo, CB .
not hct-rodded . well maintained Asking 84900 or belt
offer or trade for 4 to ~
passenger 4 wheel drive, 69 to
73 muttang conver1ibleorwhat·
have· vou Call 614-446-2745 .
1976 Lincoln Mark IV Designer
Edition , new engine, complete
new interior, exhaust, tires
brakltS. elternalor, battery, PS .
pump, control module. water
pump. etc No ruit A1king
12.000 Best offer or trade for 4
or 6 piSIIf'lger, 4 wheal dnve, or
what -have· you. 3 appr1isal1 of
car for 83200 before paint
scratched by v•ndals. Nothing
today. will pull camper as wall or
in classic comfort. Call 614 -

448-2746

1984 Ch...,y Chevette. 4 spd ,
AM / FM / tapa, wire rims, ceth
price e2 199. Joh1'1's Auto Sales.
Bulaville Ad , Gallipolis, OH.
1973 fotd F-1 00 ptckup truck .
240 6 eye .• 3 lpeed standard ,
1981 Volklwagon Rabbit L, fuel
lnjeytkm, 5-speed, loaded! Low
millage., Call 614-448 -3143
day: or&amp;14-U8-2252 evening

der. (60 m1n)
lfl) Gonerallon a1 Risk
(j]) MOVIE: 'Tho Odd Cou·
pie'
8;05 ill MOVIE; 'Tho Hangman'
8:30 (])Ill (I) Head of tho Class
ICC) Samuels blames Cha•·
lie when Mana quits the
academic team after fall ·
ing for the capta1n o.. nval
school's team .

EEK &amp; MEEK

Home
Improvements

9;00

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

HE.'S lkl 111AT .
C'lffl&lt;ULT N?£ ...

,

leaves her jealous twsband
and moves in with Nell In

KID...

(1) 700 Club
I]) Collage

Basketball;
Memphis Slate ot Louis·
villa (2 hrs.) L1ve.
([) 0 ([) Oynosly (CCI
Krystlefears that Blake has
fallen in love with AIBJC 15.
Amanda mysteriously di·
sappears and Clay and
Steven clash over Sammy

446 - 02~4

All types carpenter &amp; concrete
work· Interior 81tterior, remO·
deling, painting , roofmg. tr8e
e1t1mates Call614-446· 6114.
RON ' S Televi Sion Serv1ce .
Hou se call• ·on RCA. Quazar1
GE Spec1almg m Zenith Call
304 · 576 -2398 or 614 -446 .

'--------...J,· •...a

Jo (60 min.)

()) illl Eyes on tho Prlre·
America's Civil Rights
Years 1964.1985 (CC) qe-

• I

ARE YOtJ REALLY
GOING W :JTCf'
A B!Jl.LY~

segregatlon in the South is.
the focus of thiS episode

THATS

(60 min .)
.
® CB II2i MOVIE; 'Broken

RIGHT.

Vowa•

•

24~ .

.,....,...

.. .,.., .

John Doe No. 8 returns as
a best·selling author and

Fettv Trfla Trimming, 11ump
removal Call 304 -675 -1331 '
RINGLES ' S SERVICE , upe;
r~enced C.lrpentar, electriCian,
mason. painter, roofmg imclud·
ing hot tar applicatiOn) 304
676· 2088 or 675·7147.
Ra'tarv or cable tool drilling,
Most well• completed same day,
Pump salfll and servic&amp; 304·

696-3602

82

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

..

D

I]) il]l Tonelli&amp; PRE·
MIERE In Stereo
9;60 (I) MOVIE: 'Tho Corav
Trea1men1'
10:00 IJ Cil il]l Sl. Eloowh"'e
(CC) Craig sees •ad who~

9:30

Libby Westphal! drops o
bombshell on Or

Gr1ffin .

(60 min.)
(I) Q ()) Arthur Holley's
Hotel ICC) As Dove hits

BARNEY

rock bottom. ,.Megan can·
not bear to tell him she' s
pregnant. while a career
woman must choose be·
tween two suitors
{60

LOOKS LIKE
iH' PAR1Y'S IN

SNUFFY !! I GOT
A RAIDIN' PARTY
OUT HERE

TllAR,5HERIFF

;nJJ Odd Couple
()) Gonero11on 11 Risk
lfl) Nowswatch
IDJ News
10;30 (1) American Snapshots
1'.11 ffi INN News
II]) Elhlcs on T•lol
,1
(I)
IIl liD II2I

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
...
Cor Fourth and Pme
Gallipoh1. Ohio
Phon e 614 ·446 -3888 or 614.
446· 4477

:oo u m a
illJ

scrambled words

to form four simple wo•·ds.\

I
L-..1-1-l...l.......1__.I.....Jl
BROAL

~---,;.:...H. :.r,...:..r-rr_;r~~ ~_.·

m

' NOOROC
1--.1,;6....:,.1..:....;1,;.7....:;1,....;:...,.1---l G)

Comple1e tfl e

L--J.-...1..__J.--..1.1-..J..--1

by fi lling in the mis5 mg words

I

basketball teams · Louis·

villa, UCLA, Purdu&amp; and
Iowa.

atffiM'A'S'H
()) In lho FoM of Terror·
1om: lncldonl In tho Modi·

D1Uard Watei S:erv1ce · Pools!
Sistern1. Wells . Delivery An yJ
t1me Call 814 -446 -7404
•

•

terranHn

Watt erson ' s Water Hauhng;
reasonabl e rates, 1mmadiltte
2.000 gallon dehverv . cis1ern1 '
pools. wall. et c call 304 ·576!

2919

Coal and limestone deliverv

. .

304·675-3190.

87

.

~ I, M~ NAME IS LINUS ...
I SIT HE~E IN THE
DESK IN FRONT OF YOU..

Upholstery

7214.

tlon. Coli S14-982-3703.

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER. SA 35 W. Oolllpollo,
Ohio. Colll14·441·1n7.....
114-441-3112. Up foont t•oc·

1871 Mollbu·-Ciuolc; 57.000

new Upllottered

...... 304-575·2290.

ton wtlh werranty over 40 udd
tr.ators, 1000 tools.

mH-. 12,100.00. Coli 304171-1449.

Mowr~: s Upholstering llf"'ing
trl eounty aru 21 ~•ra. The be~t
kt furn1ture upt'tolstermg. Call
304 · 676 · 4154 for free
tlttmates.

4.30. Sol 9·30 to 1.30 Old

PEANUTS

fo
•
.

I'Ve 13EEN SITTING
~ERE ALL YEAR .

AAUGUl

you d e~ e lop

. RED LETTER S I
e PR INT NUMBE

~

8

IN THE SE SQUARE S

UN SCRAMBLE LETTERS
Fm ANSWER

I

2

chuckle Quoted

from slep No 3 below

•

3

I

I I IA I I I I I

YESTERDAY'S SCIAM·LETS ANSW(IS
Meadow - Rouse - Decoy - Entice - SECOND
Famous quote by a famous coach : "Winning Isn't
everything, but It beats anything that comes In SECOND."

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

Giving away
the store

•Q3

By James Jacoby

+AJI0 5 4

NORTH

1·11·87

+9 7S 2

tJ9

Bnght-eyed readers will not1ce that
East-West can make four or hve diamonds, so why are we watching South
struggle in three hearts' Perhaps East
should have doubled one no-trump at
his first opportunity. That would have
been for takeout, but East was reluctant to make that call with only II
high-card points, fearing that partner
might just pass the double It was different at the lwtrheart level. East had
support for all unbid SUitS, and smce
he had already passed once dunng the
auction, West would not play him for
havmg a blockbuster hand Sure
enough. that was the ca se. West re·
membered that East had not doubled
at his first chane&lt;! to do so. so he sim '
ply dec1ded to defend against three
hearts.
.
The West defense added play error
to biddmg misjudgment. After East
had taken the first diamond tnck and
West the second, West played a low
spade. That gave declarer an easy
nine tricks. Could something be done ?
West should know that his partner
does not have A-K of spades. since he
d1d not play the king after winning the
diamond ace at trick one. But East can
easily have the club queen. West
should lay down the club king after
taking the diamond kmg. If declarer
then plays a spade toward his king be·
lore drawmg trumps, East takes the

•..

EAST

WEST
• Q 83
• tO 8 7 6
t K 10 6 3

+A J 6 4

tA7 5 42
+Q9 6 2

+ K8

SOUTH
+K 10

.AKJ9 5 42
tQ8
• 73

Vulnerable· Ne1Lher
Dealer. South
Wesl

Norlb

Easl

Pass
Pass

I NT
Pa~'

Pa"
Dbl
Pass

Pass

Pass

Openmg lead·

+3

ace and plays queen and a club to pro.
mote the setting trump trick in West's
hand. If declarer draws trumps, he
will have no way to gel back to dummy to play toward his spade king, so
the defenders will sel the contract
with two spade tricks.

A new book by James Jacoby and his
father, the late Oswald Jacoby, Is now
avmlable at bor/kstorcs It is "Jacoby
on Card Games," publisher/ by Pharos

Books.
· llri1'4EWSPAPER ENTERPRISI AIBN

~a•"•,t
by
ACROSS

DOWN

1 lnsr nion

t Ailll ard shol
2 Tolcrall'
3 Wantlcrcr
4 Nlghl

murk
6 Sht&gt; shPep
9 Overhead
t 0 Territory

12 .Joan

Panelists

dis·

cull a llclional hijacking.
(80 mln.l
(J) Honoy_moonoro
11 ;30 8 I]) llJl Tonlghl Show
Gueat ,hOit Jay Lena wei·
comes -gomo·lhow hosl Pat
Sojak. Krlo Krl11offars9n
and maguine . publisher
Malcolm Forbes. 180 min.)
In Stereo.
(!) SporiiiCenler
(I) WKRP In Cincinnati

•mT
..I
al)) ABC N-s Nlghtllno

hr fore

5 WIJOtl

gourmf' t
wi thout "~"
6 l);..,h
13 Prolir
7 Palllrl
IS Poem
Ye~tterday's An8wer
8 Initiate
16 My (F'r.)
II
Widen
25 Con.
3:i f'lppill
18 Gu1do"s
14 Church
Vlfl('lfl)l
product
note
law
26 Go orr
34 We&lt;· •
19 Coun
tho diet 86 CU . ,JrH"'s
magician 17 ".Jnhnny
- Note" 27 An•:e.&lt;lry
chro11icler
21 ~curri ed
29 Spanish 39 "Winter·"
22 Colorado 20 Entice
23 Shade
" unde~
set" role
Indian
23 IJnrothy's 24 l,luench 32 llreathln~ 41 llr1tish acLOr
dog
l':""""r,~..,.,.-,,...

24 Musical
work

27 Camhr1r-,
e.g

28 Songwriter·~

subject

29 Metal
30 One·s years
31 Uncut
3~ Greek ghost

36 "To Helen"

h-.+-++-

poeL

37 Recline
38 Adversary
40 Out of
the way

42 Extremity
49 Granted

44 Sock pan
45 Corundum

DAILV CRVPTOQlJOTES-- Here'• how 1o won II:

NIWI

mlck
(!) 1980 Final Four High·
llghto Highlighta of the
1980 linaf lou• collage

7911

Our psychology instructor felt
like she only had a spoon to con·
sume all flf the "ocean ol
knowledge .'.' One student
quipped that he only - a - ."

I I" I Is .-

1121

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

I]) H'erdoostlo and McCor·

Jam es Boy s Water Sflrvice. Al~o
pools fillad Call&amp;14 -256 114 ~
or 614 -446- 1116 or 614 - 448«~

I

THOMAS JOSEPH

Stereo .

SWEEPER and sewmg machine
rflpeir, part1, and supplies Pick
up and delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner . one halt mile up
Gt~orgM Creek Ad
Call 614·

FTM General Contracting 1 3yrl
e11perience Roofmg &amp; Con·
struct1on Ph. 614· 388·9308
Free estimates 10% off during
the hohdaya offer 1111pire1 Jan
16, 1987.

D Cil il]l Gimmo a Break

(CC) L1111e Joey Iaiit in love
w11h Maggi&amp; when she

AtJ
Ovt.RBa::IDJ

Unconditional l1fet1me guaran.
tee local references furn1stled
frfle estimates Call eallect
1·614· 237·048B, day or n1ght,
Rogers 8asament
Waterproofing

1976 fntern1tlon•l 8u1 . 66
Plllengers. Standtrd transml•·
1lon In very good condltiOfl. Can
be used •• church bua or be
converted 'Into cam.,.,. Call
6114· 992· 3187 or 1114· 317·

181.8 Mercury Coug• XR 7, tow

the apparent suic1de of a
movie se~~: symbol when her
friend cla,ms it was mur·

Serv1ces

House eo at Delivered 1 10n and
up Jim tinier. 304 -675·1247
or 675· 7397.
t •,
1

ICtual miiN. AC. Pl. PS. bucket

Auburn al Louisiana State
12 hrs.)
([] MacNaii·Lehro&lt; Nowsh·
our,
® CB 1I2i New Mike Ham·
mer Hammer mvesttgates

•

1978 Ford Elhe. Good coitdi·
tion. tUOO. Call 614· 986·

4418.

..

ALLEY OOP

bout

@) (1) College Basketball:

Budget uansmi1s1ons used &amp;
rebuilt all types Torque conver·
ten &amp; transfer cases Eagine
over haul kits. Alhson Transmit lin p•rt• and eve Jomt• • M~i ­
mum 30 day to hfet1me war·
ranty . W1ll dehver. cash and
earry or install . Call 614·3J.~:

81

Call

the roo1 of Balki 's
with imsomnia.

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

2220

Jonathan

agars deal with the trauma

SPC:AI&lt;C:~.

13ft aluminum boat With 5 1h
HP motor end oars Excellent
condition t400 614 -949 ·
2021 after 4:00p.m

1052.

71

~roge

12ft V·bottom boat &amp; 7 HP Sea
Kmg motor. 8400 / pe~r Cell

Large round bales of hay for sale
S10 00 each Ph 614· 446·

614·388·8641 .

7:36
8:00

I'VE HE'AA£&gt;
THAT ONE:'

)ocu;:i'(

Boats and
Moto'r s for Sale

Mon1ter of Strawberry
Cove' Part 1
®News
II]) MocNaii-Lehrer Newsh·
our
IIIII2i 1Bi Wheal of Fortune
1DJ Barney Miller Part 2.
ill Sanfo•d and Son
.IJ I]) 1Il Now Newlywed
Game
f1l (1) Too Close for Com·
fort
Ill Cll Judge
® Whoa! of Fonuno
II2i (j]) Jaoplrdy
(j]) Jaffersons
ill Honoymoonero
D Cil il]l Highwoy to
Heaven (CC) When they
take jobs as high school

m

FRANK AND

'86. S10 truck. 4 wheel drive,
Y· 6, PS, PB, AM·FM C&amp;ll&amp;tte.
18,000 m1le1. S7.000.00. After
5:00 call 304-676· 8643 .

Livestock

Baled hav. S1 .10 bale

7;06
7;30

1982 Ford 350. steel llatbed
36,000 miles. 400 motor. 4 ·
1peed. $6600 Can see at
A 1hland 01t m Minersville 814,
992 -6900 Ask for Bill

76

Hols1e1n cow-thud calf commg
H11avy milker Call 614 -388 -

64

f1l ffi M'A'S'H
Ill IIl People's Court
()) MOVIE: 'Tho Strenge

814-246·9241 .

Wanted to Buy

63

Actor Dennis Hopper talks
about h1s film. " Hoos1ers" .

1984 F-1!10 Ford, 300. 8 cyl .
J. speed 00 C Chaneey. 614-

75

Q I]) ()) 0 ([) l!D·CB II2i
il]l News
(1) Big Volley
l!l Mazda SportaLook
fll
Joffortlons
([] Square One TV
II]) Secret Clly
[!) Facto of Lifo
CIJ Beverly Hlllbllllea
1J I]) IBi NBC News
l!l SportoCento•
IIl Q ())ABC Newa
f1l ffi Hogan'a Heron
()) Doc10r Who
lJ] CB II2i CBS News
II]) Newlon's Apple (CC)
(j]) WKRP In Cincinnati
ill Andy Griffith
1J I]) PM Magazine
mlok

379-2268.

73

O four

LAIKAL

(]) Hardcastle end McCor·

1974 66 passenger school bua;
E•c. Cond. Auto. trans., with all
1eats. $1600, 080 . Call 614·

A &amp; M Custom Coucttes and
~upholslary, St Rt. 7, Crown
Crtv. Oh. 81\C-268·1470, Eve.
&amp;1•· 448· 3438. Open dally 9 to

S.E. Ohio.

PI-t. 304·175·1071.

- - - - - - --,---,-=

1184 ChiVY Ca~elilf . P8, PS.
redia . 41,000 miiM, good eondl·

40 used 1raolor• to choose from
&amp; oompllll:e tine of Mw &amp; us-'
equipm.nt. largnt sttectlon In

&amp;71-3000.

2 bedroom mobile home on
Alttlilnd Upton Road, f12tii .OO
month plu1 utilities, 304 -6711·

UTILITY BLDG SPECIAL
27'a38'119'EAVE with sliding
door &amp; serv1ce door &amp;4,288 00
erected.
Iron Horse Buildings Ph 614-

1·286-6622 .

2010 John Deere dltstltreC10r·
plows. d11c e3960. NeVI Idea
byne Bounce mower U96. Late
model 22•1 John O..e btler
e1286 Hey wqon UOO . Call

3· 4 bedroom house near school
•nd hospital. Priced to ull.
U3.000 Call814·992·1010,

61 ·farm Equipment

332-9746

61 Farm Equipment

9346.

'8:35
7:00

~1==========:;~:::::::::::·====~ =~-----------~9241.

0400. Coli 304·675·1661 .

t110 per monttl. t160 deposit
12111&amp;0 furnillled plus utllltlet
Raccoon Rd . Call 614·446·

Trucks for Sale

1979 112 ton 4x4 Chevy, 19'13
34 ton Crew Cab Chevv. 1976
Chevy BelAir Call 614·2415·'

SNAFUTM by Bruce Beattie

--~....~

- IF THAT INDIAN
THINK? I DON'T
KNOW-

197B GMC dump ' truck . : C.ll
614-256-6243

· Olive St. . Gallipolis. New &amp; used
w;ood·ccalltov.es. 6 pe wood LA
for Rent
suite 1399, bunk beds t199.
57
Musical
rechnefl new • used bedroom
suites. wringer washen &amp;
Instruments
2 bdr .. all utilities ptld e11cept
shoes. New llvlngroom 1u1te1
elac., turn. or unfurn. nc.
t199 -$699 . lamps. Call 614·
273·6656.
depos1t requtred . Convenient
448 -3169
Guitar inuruction by Art Casey
location. Call 614·448·8668 or ~~~;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:::;:::;;;:.l::::::::::::====~
for beginnmg to advanced gut·
814-446-4778.
~
tarl Call61•· •48· 9782.askfor
Kevin .
2 bdr. fully furnlshedadulu onlv.
utll paid Call 814 -446 -4110.

-....

6;06
6:30

'

.

'86 Mercurv LynM , AM ·FM ste·
rao, 2 door, $4,000.00. Good
cond. 304·676· 5929

72

__,___:;_~ ldllod by CLAY R. POIUN
~-.......- ,
Rtorrango ltnors of
low

m

'73 Nova, 33,000 miles, 6 cvl.
A.P,S, 4 door. second owner,
gr·blk top, S1 .950 00 304-

2783

Wall furnace, S30. 7 alum.num
storm wmdow1. S30 Earlv Ford
front a11le With drums &amp; 4 spoke
wheals. $46 1968 Ford p1ckup
Wmdsflield VG 16 Call 614·

On8 bedroom apartment tn Pomt

I

-~~•:i:lob:l:•_l:
o•_•~h:•_n~ght~p:a~
rson

•
-lc AIRLINES NOW HIRING . Flight
Attendatltl, Agents, Machanic1,
Customet' S&amp;rvlce Salaries to
•soK . EntrY 18\lel po11tlons. Call
806-687· 8000 E11t . A-9805 for

Wa1hers, dryers, refrigerators,
ranges Skaggs Appliances,
Upper River Ad beside Stone
Crest Motel 614·446· 7398.

25 inch diagonal Zenith system 3
TV, e11 cond Teknika TV remote
control Playpan·uud once. Call
614 -446· 7307

APARTMENTS, mobile homes.
houtea. Pt Plea11ntand Gall1po·
l11 614: 446· 8221 .

1980 Parkwood, 141170, unfur·
ni1hed. 3 bedrooms. 2 porches.
underpenning included ,
t9,600.00. Must be moved .
304·676 ·7788110am· 9pm).

Z bedroom home for rent in

Help Wanted

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed room apartments at Village
Manor and Riverside Apart ments in Middleport From
8215 Including utilit1e1 Call

2 bedroom apartment for rant in
Bradbury. 1'h bath Celt 614·
992 -3312, Dolly Woods

2 bedroom mob1le home Good
condit1on. must aell $3500 Call

41

Valley Furruture. new &amp; · used.
Large sectton of qualitv furniture 1216 Eutern Ave ,
Gallipolis.

Callah&amp;n 's Used Tir&amp; Shop Over
1,000 tires. S11e112 . 13, 14, 15,
16. 16 6 8 m1les out Rt. 218
Call 614· 256 -6251 .

614·992·2269.

6·00. 304·773·6983

F1nancia l

Countv Appliance, Inc Good
used appliances .and TV sets
Open BAM to 6PM Mon lhru
Sat 614·446·1699, 627 3rd
Ave Gallipolis, OH

Furnished, Newlv decorated, 1
BR, larg11 enclosed porch ,
8200 / month Adults . Sec
Dep , Ref'• Call 614 -446 -

614·992·7787 EOH

614-742 -3100
Want ed to do· Paintmg. Call

New Sears refr~gerator &amp; 1tove
Must seU Call614· 446·8886

54 Misc. Merchandise

2 bedroom nver vtew apartment
Equ1pped kitchen, trash pickup.
Ideal for 2 part1es to share
e~tpencet. Call 614· 992-6539 .

1976 Pennhouse trailer for sale.
Call 814· 992-8189

614·256-6786.

&amp;30 and up

2 BR , 11 Court St., Carpeted,
K1tchen turn S360/ month. plus
ut111t1es; Oepo1it . Call 614·446·

2236 446-2681

141170 Fleetwood 3 Bdr , 2 full
bath1, total alec. Like new. pr1 ce
negottable. Call after 4 weekday•. anytime week10nd1 614-

4367

18 Wanted to Do

bmet1,
to
S 65.headboards

6:00

5·oo

a.

4926

1981 Oakbrook, 14x70 with
71112 e11pando. 3 BR , 2 battt1,
woodburner, e• cond French
C1ty Brokerage. Call 614 -446·

15

Own your own jean· IPOrtswear .
ladlu apparel , chl1drens·
maternity, large 11zes. petite.
Buying da1ly gold, 11tver_coin•. dancewear·aerobi c or acce11o·
ring1, tewetrv. sterling ware, old 1181 store Jordechlt. Cflic. Lea.
coms. large currency Top pri - Lev1, lzod. Gtlano. Gue11. Calvin
ce• Ed. Burkett Barber Shop, Klein. Sarg10 V11lenta, Evan
2nd Ave M1ddleport, Oh. 614· Picone, Li1 Claiborne, Members
992 -3476
Only , Gasoline. Healthte• over
1000 othtn s 14.800 to
8UVING RAW FURS! Gmser)_9. S26 .900 inventory, training,
Yellow Root. beef and deer• fi•tures, grand opening rtc . Can
hides. Also l tlllng trapping open 16days. Mr Keenan(306)
1upphes. Wheat lltea. N1te lite• 678·3639.
Lut dav 10 buy furl Feb. 7th
Hours 1 00 ·9 :00. Closed Wed Own your own Jflln ·
G11orga.Bucklev 614· 664·4761 Spon.1wear, Ladles Apparel .
Chitdreni · Muernity , Large
Buving junk ean. Call 61 4-992· Sizes . Petite , Oancewear ·
6648 after 6 ·00 pm.
Aerobi c or acceasorle1 store.
Jordache, Chic. Lee, L11vi. lzod.
Stand1ng timber AI Tromm, Gltano, Guess. Calvin Klein.
61 4·742· 2328.
Slfglo Valente. Even P1cone. Liz
Claiborne. Memben Only Guohne. Healthte11 over 1000 olh ·
er1 t 14,800 to t28,900 lnventorv. lrainlng, fbture1. grand
opening. ete. Can open 15 dav•
Mr. Loughlin (812)888· 6666

. 1428.

32

1971 New Moon Mobile Home121148, on Smokey-Roe Rd , Off
Blessing Rd, Northup 83,000.

Old 400 series Mercury, 40· 60
HP outbtuud motors. oparableor
tor parts . Call 614 -446· 7372

11

House Gallipolis Ferry Urge
kitchen, large bath, 3 bedrooms.
familv room, living room &amp; utility
on 1 8 acre 304· 675·2284

388·8633.

21

We pay cash for late model claan
used carl
J1m Mink Chev .-Oid• lnc
Bill Gtmtl John son

Homes for Sale

dav

Found: January 27th m Poma·
roy, sat of keys Claim at The
, Sentinel otfice

Wanted To Buy

31

PHONE 614· 446 -7274 .

12

ork Wanted. paintmg, 1ome
repain . S4 00 hour ,' La1lie
Hughes, 304 -676-2120 mgtlt or

6 Lost and Found

:9

Help Wanted

2 room. furni1hed. up1tair1 apt
clean, no pets. Adult1. Ut1htie1
furnisfled Ref. &amp; dep required
call814 -448-1619
Modern 1 bedroom apapment
Call614· 446·0390

Small mare pony to giOJa away
Has befln foundered Must go!
· Caii614·992 ·6B55

:
,
·
·
·
:

304-676-7738 or 304-67&amp;5104 A-1 Real Estate

•

3 Announcements

Sofu and ckaira priced from
t396 to 8996 Tables t50 and
up to 8126. H1de· a·bed• 8390
to 8696 Recliners t225 to
8376 Limps 828 to t12&amp; . ·
Dmettes $109 and up to t496 .
Wood teble W·6 chatrs e285 to
8796 . Desk t100 up to $376
Hutche1 f400 and up Bunk
bedt complete w · mattrea1e1
8296 and up to *396 . Baby bedl
t110&amp; t176 MattrHtetorboll
springs full or twin t83. f~rm
i73, and $83 Oualft sets 8226.
King 8360 4drawerchestvt66.
Dressers S89 Gun cabinets 8,
10. 12 gun Gaaorelectricr•nge
8376 8abv maure11H 136
S46. S.d framet 820. flO II
King frame $60. Good selactin
of bedroom suitas. metal ca -

'~!:~~, S~\\ci\)A-ftt.trs· ::::

EVENING

1980. Z28, 350 V-8. T-top, auto
trans. PS, PB, mag wheelt. nfl'ii
t~r ... etc 304-876-6392 aher

tlook·up. 1tove. refrlg. furnished

1

1/28/87

4:

'77 Cemet"o RS 306 engine,
•peed trans, PS. PB AC neadt·
oompressor. phone 304· 678·•
2078 between 4:00 end 6:00
PM .
,,

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

dryer

1

2696.

7444. Why pay more7 Check us

n1ce carpeting.

'$0WHAH... YA
w.o&amp;'LY V.OW'T

1968 Pontiac GTO, good condi~·
tion . 81 , 600 . 00 304 -882 ..'

Mollohan Furnttttre. Rt , 7 Nortf't

1 Bedroom basic rent $176.00
plus electric Also required a
1200 OO t eeurltvdaposlt CON ,
TACT Jackton Estates Dept Ph
4•18 · 3997 Equel Hous ing
,, Opportuni1V

Television
vIewing

·:BoRN LosE==.;R,__

Autos for Sale

71

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Urry Wright

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
lor lhe thrH L'1, X for lhe two O's, etc. Single lettei'B,"
apoetrophea, lhe length and fonnaUon of lhe words are all
hinta. Each day lhe code leltei'B are dlllerent.
CIYPTOQUIYI'E
1·28

cuv

T 0 V

BSMHFEV O

cuv

XR

c uv

CU V

YR S '' M

LJ BJF' O .

U VHF
Xll

U V .J M G

KB M

F'
S V V Q U· V M
Y..terda1'1 Cryptoqaou: THERE CAN BE NO
HAPPINESS IF THE TIIINGS WF. BELIEVE IN ARE
IJIF'FF.RENT FROM TifE TIIINGS WE llO - FREYA
STARK

ill (9 Mognum, P.l.

lfl) Ean of Oaclcllnwl

.1]]1 Adclefty (70 min.)
11:&amp;0 I)) Portrait of Amerloo ; Ml·
ohlgan 180 min.)
12:00 I]) Burns &amp; Allon
(!) World Cu~ Skiing:
fi'MIIyle Champlono~lpt

From Brackenridge, CO.
(A).
([) Jefferaona
lll ffi Rewhldo
0 I)) Tafla of lho un...

pl011d

00 SCTV
12;30 8 I]) (l1J Ltlo Night With
Devld Lonormon 160 min.)
In ~11roo.
•I

�............

Page-16- The Oaily Sentinel

Nicaragua
releases
Ohioan
from :jail

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

MANAGUA, Nicaragua (UP!)
,;_ Nicaragua said It decided to
grant the release of imprisoned
A merlcan spy suspect Sam Hall
without trial for fear his "mental
instability" could lead him to
attempt suicide.
The self-proclaimed counterterrorist was to be turned over to
family lawyer Gary Froelich
today and flown from Nicaragua
aboard a commerlcal .airliner,
Deputy Foreign Minister Javier
Chamorro said.

Wednesday, January 28.1

"Today we w11J proceed to turn
He said Hall, an Olympic likely through Miami.
over Sam Hall to his. family diving medalist and brother of
Hall, a self-styled counterterrepesentative so that he ·can be Rep. Tony Hall, D-Ohlo, spent rorist whose.disdain for commu·
transfetred to the United Tuesday night "under the cus, nlsrn has driven him to the
States," Chamorro told repor- tody of tlie Sandtnlsta govern- bat!leftelds of 'Chad and Le·
ters on Tuesday.
ment" before his release tOday. banon, was captured Dec. 12 in a
Chamorro said Hall, a reco- Nicaragua first announced Mon- restricted area 'of Punta Huete
vered drug user ahd alcoholic day it would free Hall.
air base, 12 miles north of
who once shot himself and was
Hall was to leave Nicaragua Managua. He allegedly was
hospitalized for mental illness, today aboard an Aero Nica flight carrylpg secret Information and
would be freed without trial · to San Jose, Costa Rica,: at 6:30 maps stuffed in his socks.
because his "mentally instabil- a.m. (7: 30a.m. EST) ,-and then
President Daniel Ortega had
ity" could lead to a suicide fly to the United States, most said , Hall would be tried In a
attempt.

1[:1

People's Tttbunal, a, ,~~~~~~~~
court that sentenced ·A
Eugene Hasenfus to 30 ub''"·'·•• ·
jail for helping to supply Nlc~.aj{~!Sf
guan rebels. Nicaragua
doned Hasenlus and he returrle
to his . home In Marinette, Wls,; •
Dec. 17.
.
:J
Congresslon\V investigators fa ·
mlllar with !tall said he wa&lt;t
linked to a n"twork Involved i ,
Illegal military aid to the Nlcar guan rebels, called Contras. •{
.,

,,.
,,

Each of rhese advertised items is required to be

e·

•, Jl'

readily~·.~.~

ava~able for ·sale in each Kroger Store, except as~:~

specifically noted in this ad. If we do run out of an • .1,

ad'W'ertised item, we will offer you your choiCe of a ,:·~

comparabkt item, when available, reflecting the same •·..
savinQs or a rairtcheck which will entitle you lo purchase ;.:
the, advertised item at the advertised price within 3b
days. Only one vendor coupon will be accepted per item ·~:
purchased.
' ~~

&lt;

.

Vo1.36, No.t87

..,...•.

WE RESERVE THE RIG\iT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES . .! •
NONE SOLD TO DEALERS .
~~

out routine road malntalnance,
By NANCY Y~ACHAM
·In particular, ditching and reSentinel Stall Writer
Through June, the Meigs placing culvert piping. The highCounty Highway Department way department contends that
and. General Telephone Co. of cable lines are not burled as
Ohio will be Involved in a trial deeply as cailed for in GTE'sown
·
program to help eliminate prob- specifications.
Although GTE does not have as
lems between GTE and the
highway department. The exper- great a problem in Meigs County
imental agreement was made In as In other counties, Forrest
Wednesday's Meigs County Com- Turner, engineering supervisor
for GTE's Athens office, told
missioners' meeting.
GTE is upset because highway commissioners that any cuts· in
the cable are expensive to the
workers sometimes cut telein addition to being a
company,
phone cable lines when carrying

..
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....

...,..

-~

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~

....
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'•

.,
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~,

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......

•
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l'

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..
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•..(.:
... :!

. .,;-..,
·····""~
.· - '

4····

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)

BUY ONE

BUY ONE

12-CT. PACKAGE

'

BUY ONE

BUY ONE
1-LB. BAG

Dinner
Rolls

superintendent, pointed out that
sometimes multiflora rose and
honeysuckle grow over the pedestels, making them difficult to
see.
Both Bates and Warner agreed
that the highway department
should not have to call GTE
before conducting r.outlne malntalnance work, and various methods to draw attention to the
pedestels were discussed.
· However, It was finally decided that for the next few
months, the highway department

disserv ice for leie'phone
customers.
Gary Bates, manager of Pot)'le·
roy 's GTE olllce, stated that his
main concern is damage to
" pedestels," which are access
points from which telephone
company workers repair burled
cable. "When you see a pedestel," Bates said, "we've got
wires there, definitely." Bales
asked if highway workers
couldn't be more careful as they
work around pedestels.
Ted Warner, county highway
'

wilt contact GTE at the fi rst of
each month, with a list of roads
where work will likely take place
during that month' s time. Then if
Bates feels cable in those areas
are not burled deeply enough, he
can- take steps to correct the
situation, or at least have his men
on the scene or near the area
when road work is taking place.
In addition, the telephone com·
pany. will no longer walt for
approval ·from the county when
laying new cable. GTE will
proceed with laying the cable,

2 Sectlono. 12 Pogtl 26 Conto
A Multlmodio Inc. Nowopopor

.

.

By NA.NCY YOACIIAM
Sentinel Stall Writer
What happens If you forgeJ
to brush your teeth before you
go to school?
If you're a student at Portland Elementary in the South· ·
ern Local School District, you
brush alter you get to school.
In fact, you brush your teeth
twice ·at school - in the
morning and right after lunch.
For several - years now,
schools in Southern District
have been· involved In a
weekly flourlde program• .in
which students, with permission from parents, swish their
mouths with a flourlde rinse.
This year, In an effort to
zone in even more on dental
health, Portland Elementary
students, and teachers, are
brushing twice a day, in
' addflion ' to the weekly
swishing.
Mickey Hoback, principal
at Portland, rewrts that child·

ren there have been quite
receptive to the idea of brush·
lng their teeth at school, and
foUpw their progress on lndl·
vidual charts.
The brushing program began just after the first of the
year, and toothbrushes in
containers were purchased by
Portland's PTO. Each student
keeps the brush at his or her
desk, along with toothpaste
from home.
At the onset of the program,
Joyce Thoren , R.N., spoke to
sludents. about proper brushing techniques.
Dental lips are also sent
home to parents In the school's
weekly newsletter.
And since February Is National Denial Health Month ,
s{X'clal speakers, Including
Dr. Margie Lawson, of Ra·
cine, will be visiting the school
lo fu rthur emphaslw the importance of dental health.

and then · submit a let• er of
notification to th~ county. along
with a copy of plans describing
cable location and depth.
Turner explained that after the
phone company applies to the
Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio to install new cable. PUCO
then allows 30 days in which lo
complete the project . Turner
said that about half of those :10
days are lost in procedures lha t
follow the PUCO approval. With
just a few days left, contrac tors
(Continued on Page 12)

Reform
backers
collide
over bill

Portland students
brush off decay

.....,

.... .. "'t

IN THE PASTRY SHOPPE

enttne

at y

Agreement to end problems with GTE cable

.,:._

~,

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, January 29, 1987

Copyrighted 1987

COPYRIGHT 1987 - THE KROGER CO . ITEMS ANa ·:~
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, JAN . 25, THROUGH ' , •
SATURDAY, JAN . 3t , t987 , IN POIEROI"Da.~IPOliS : :
STOlES.

Super Lotto

•

.,

'"~

Rain likely tonight, wllb a
low near 40. Cloudy Friday,
with a chance of rain and rala
chanJinlf to snow In the
afternoon, with temperatures
falling to the mid 308.

25-28-26-17+8

.~

ADVERnSED ITEM POUCV

Daily Nu,mber
429

-Page 3

..
.....,.

.

Ohio Lottery

·Ohio State
faces Purdue
cagers tonight

....

COLUMBUS (UPIJ - Consumer advocate Ralph Nader·
blastect.Ohlo's civil justice and
Insurance reform proposal Wednesday , saying It is making a
"conventenl scapegoat" out of
trial attorneys while doing nolhlng to regulate a highly profit a·
ble lnsurancP industry .

'!jjh

Af••

*\JI

i'

(

r.!

•

i

~

BRUSH·BRUSII·BRUSH - Jusll~ Mlddleswart, left, prefers a lillie more toothpaste on
hls brush than his fellow second grade classmate, Amy Rizer. But whether Its a lot of
toothpaste or just a little, students at Portland Elementary are learning thai dental health
should be an tmporlaniP.art of their e-.ryday activities.
,-- ··:.
dental heal lh encourages rrg.
lland tea ching staff ar~ anxHoback says she and the
ular d~nt a l checkups.
Ious to see if the focus on
other members of the Par-

But .James K. Coyne, representing a coalition of Ohio bus!·
ness groups, called Nader
"phony" and "arrogant." He
said the liability insurance crisis
has been caused lly "the 'narrow
economic ~reC'd ol a small' group
of trial altorn~ _vs."

Both Nader and Coyne lest lflt'd
before the Ohio Hous~ Insurance
Commlllre, whleh Is tuklng I!.'S·
tlmonv on 1hr samr rlvll juslkc
and ' tnsuran c ~ reform bill
adopted last Novrmbl&gt;r hul vr·
1o~d I he follow ing month by r:ov .
Richard F. C~ l estr .
in th~ talks .
jeopardy."
"Ohio legislators have bt'Cn
The membership also ap- 'gl\'Cn a second chance to avoid an
Those concerns prompted lhe
UMW to call a special convent ion proved a requesl by Trumka IO Ill -advised and unwarranl ed relast October to consider its llfl the $70 million cap off the sponse 10 I he propaganda , falslfl options'and strategy as It headl'd union's strike fund, which is rallon and strong-armC'd lobby;
for 1987 contract talks. The finan ced by'a V i percenl assess· tng of lh~ property-casualty.
union's current contract expires men! on 'each min&lt;' worker's lnsurancP Industry ," said Nader.:
Jan. 31 , 1988 and negotiations for paychecks.
Trumka said he hoped to reach
a new pact are expected to start
"While House Bill I will do ·
a
settlrmenl "w ithout a single nothing to guarantee reasonablewithin the next few months.
With roughly one-third of the day of lost time." But h(' added ness of Insurance (premiums 1 :
UMW's 150,000 members out of that his union needed all the for businesses and consumers, It ·
work, the special conve ntion leverage It could muster In will severely restrict tMrlghtsof
adopted a proposal instructing sq uaring off with the huge Innocent victims and subjret
union negotiators to make jo~ multln atl'o nal co nglomerat es Important human rights now
opportunity and economic secur- that now dominate the coal afforded Ohio citizens to , a
ity the UMW's primary objective ' indu stry.
political process highly vulnera·
ble to factors of . power ' and
money ...
·'
" I find the rhetoric of attorneys
like Ralph Nader so phony," said
Coyne, the president of the
American Tort Reform Association. "They 're only interes ted in ·
victims that can make attorneys .
rich."
" He's fighting only for 1he
pocketbook rights of the lrlal
lawyers," said Coyne.
Coyne, who was rcprescnlin~ ·
the Ohio Alliance for Cll'il
Justice, a coalition of , major
business assoclallons, said "a ·
runaway civil justice sy~ wm '' ·
has driven up lht' cost of liability.:
Insurance.
"It's llll~atlon that's drlvtn~
this system, and il's the grc1•d o(
those ltvlng off I he systl'm that's
ruining it," said C'oy nl'.

UMW readies selective strike strategy
BUY ONE

BUY ONE
y,. GALLON CTN . KROGER
' I LIMIT 2 PLEASEJ

Natural Flavor
Ice Cream
· UMW Prelldent
Richard Tnunka

WASHINGTON !UP!) - Unl·
ted Mine Workers President
Richard Trumka says his union
Is fattening !ts strike lund and
honing a "selective strike" strategy for 'upcomlng national contract talks that already appear
tinged by distrust.
Trumka, speaking before the
Industrial Relations Research
Association Wednesday, said his
membership fell threatened not
only by the depressed condition
of the coal industry, but by
overtly anti-union activities on
the part of coal operators.
, Trumka charged that many
coal companies increasingly

play a "s hell game" in which
they set up subsidiaries to evade
contracts requiring unionized
labor. He also accused them of
openly defyi ng arbitration decl·
sions and refusing to pay re·
qulred retirement and health
benefits.
"In our industry, there is real
distrust of each other," Trumka
said in a luncheon speech.
"Our conclusion is that they
don't like the (United Mine
Workers) and that they want to
do away with the mine workers,"
he said. "I think our membership
believes their existence is In

..

Committee sets ·dates
'for health screening
BUY ONE
12-CT. PACKAGE

24-0Z. JAR VLASIC

Freezer Pleezer
Ice Milk Bars

California
Broccoli . . . . . . .·

Bunch

DOUBLE

BUY ONE
Kosher or·Zesty
Snack Chunk Pickles

manufacture's

COUPONS

This week· your manufactured products "cent_s off" coupons are worth double at Kroger.
Limited to manufactured products coupons worth up to and including 50¢ Off . Coupons wonh
more than 50¢ are redeemed at face value only. Limit one coupon lor each product purchased
Limit one coffee coupon . No beer. wine or·cigarette coupons will be double .- Not valid on Ire~
coupons, Kroger coupons-or retail food store coupons. The amount refunded cannot e~ceed
the price of the item. You must purchase product in $izes specified on the coupon. This offer
aP,plies only to manufactured' products "cents off" coupons for items we carry. To. assure
product availability lor all our cultomel'1, only one coupon per shopping family , will be doubled
on any brand item during each store visit,

By CIIARLENE IIOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer
Dates for the comprehensive
multiphasic health scree'l-lng
clinic for Meigs Countlans was
setlor' May 17, 18 and 19 and May
23 at the Meigs Multipurpose
Building on Mulberry Heights.
Meeting Wednesday at the
Senior Citizens Center, the plan:nlng committee, composed of
personnel of the Meigs County
Council on Aging and the Meigs
:county Health Department, cosponsors, along with other health
professionals, detailed plans lor
the health scr~enlng program.
Plans call for the screening to
include complete blood work as
well urinalysis and h~moccult
testing, dental evaluation, tuber-culosis test, needed Inoculations
· (tetanus ln.cluded), glaucoma
•and eye disease checks, and
:hearing tests. Professionals are
being secured to carry out every
phase of the screening.
In addition, the committee Is
working to secure the services of
Jane Denbow of the Southeast
Ohio Lung Association so that
pulmonary lung capacity checks
can be made, as well as getting a
couple of podiatrists. There will
also be educatlomil exhibits by
the Cancer Society, the Heart
Association, Planned Parenthood, and Mental Health, and
Information on children's clinic
at the.,Health Depar!meilt and

-L

,

.,.

•

•k

i~

- - · - ·

breast examinations and pap
tests available throughou't the
year.
Arrangements were also made
lor employing a part-lime coordinator, either a registered nurse
or ~omeone with a medical
background, to handle some. of
the scheduling and screening
services, as well as to follow up
on any problems detected In the
examining process . The coordlnatl!r will be employed for ·a
nine-week period, May 18 to July
17.
The clinic will operate from 9
a. m. to 5 p.m. ori the firs t three
days, from 1 to 8 p.m. on the
fourth day, May 23. If more than
the anticipated 500 persons make
appointments to go through the
screening, then plans call _for
continuation of the program on
May 25. Scheduling of appoint·
ments will begin about a month
before the screening pro'gram: . '
As In previous years, Income
will determine whether or not a
patient pays for any of the
services. Those who fall under
the HEAP Income guidelines·
($8,040 In a hoUBehold of one;
$10,860 In a ·household of two;
$13,6110 In a household of three;
$16,500 In a household of tour;
and $19,3:1Jl in a household o!tlve)
will not be charged for any oft he
services.
Others wlll pay between $17
and $19 depending on charges for
.·'

'

.

MULTIPHASIC HEALTH SCREENING
TEAM -May 17, 18, 19and 23havebeeilsetasthe
dates fpr a comprehensive health screening
program at the Meigs Mulllpurpotte Building on
Mulberry Heights; The most anyooe wlll pay. for
the complete range of servlce8 Including
examlnatlorw by professionals who will volunteer
their time and extensive laboratory- work
-- performed at cost llguretl will be between Sl7 and
Sl9. Dr. Jaml!ll Witherell, not pictured, Is the
medical advisor for the program. Reviewing
. ·~r.

~

\:!:

details or the program here are committee
members, Scott Lucas, admlnllttrator, Vetera111&lt; ·
Memorial llospllal; Susav Oliver, volunteer
coordinator, Linda Friend, hell)th coordinator,
Senior Citizens Center; Ginny KJJiln, R.N., lleallh
Department; Joan Tewbbary, county tuberculo·
sis nul'l!e; Jon Jacobs, llealth Department, ~~eated
lellto right, and standing, Norma.Torretl, R.~ .•
Health Department, and Eleanor Thomas,
executive director, Meigs County Council on
Aging.

small cost only because county
department's levy funds.
funding
is going Into the proAs pointed out by Norma
gram,
the
professionals are
Torres. R.N., health department
volunteering
their
services, and
supervl~r of nurses. if an
'
t
he
blood
work
and
other Ia bora·
Individual were to purchase all of
the services available through tory tests are being secured at an
the clinic. paying for the profes- actual cost figure.
Susan Oliver noted thalli takes
sionals and the lab tetts,lt would
more
than 100 non-professional
cost between $450 and $500. [t can
to move the partie!·
volunteers
he offered through the multi·
(Continued on Page 12)
phasic screening
at the
' .
. program
..

laboratory work. The profession·
als, doctors, nurses and other
specialists, volunteer their
·services,
II Is anticipated that the
program will cost about $10,000
over the payments made by thOse
going th~ough , the clinic. That
amount, according to Jon Jacobs, health department admlnlst£ator, will come !rom thar

.

I

.

•

I

Nader said Florida adopl&lt;'&lt;l
tort reform in 1986. He sa ld since
then. there have bel'n 277 fllln~s
with the statt• for premiums and
175 of thosl' fllln~s show no
savings, Of t)losPcompanles that
offered savl n~s. no rC'ductlons
were more than 10 perccnl, h~
said .
But Coyne said the Florida law
was an unfair test. because it
contains ·a four-year "sunset"
provision, and Insurance companies cannol predict tHeir risks
under those terms.
Nader told the committee that
instead-of makln~ limitations on
plaintiffs in lawsuits, the leglsla·
tlon should strengthen lhe hand
of the Ohio Department of
Innsurance In reguialil)g lrisurlince companlE'!!, which he sild
have made $79 billion In protlls ·
over the last 10 years.
ll~--.:..-1

..... ------=-~-

I

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