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'

Porneroy-Midd~port. Ohio

Page-1 0 - The Daily Sentinel

..---Local Briefs:-Two drivers ticketed by patrol
Two drivers were cited Monday for no seatbel1 by the
Ga ilia·Meigs Post or the Ohio Highway Patrol in a two-car
accident on Ohio 143.
Troopers said Richard E. Vaughan, 69, Pomeroy, was
northbound at 10 a.m., two-tenths of a mile north of0hlo7, when
he started to make a left turn. A northbound car behind him
driven by Donna J. Grate, 52, Pomeroy, started to pass
Vaughan and reportedly struck Vaughan's car in the left side.
Vaughan's car was moderately damaged and the Grate
vehicle was slightly damaged, the patrol said.

EMS units answer five calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports five calls
Monday ; Pomeroy at 4:23a.m. to East Mai n Street for Brad
Young to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at10: 12 a.m.
treated Richard Vaughan and Donna Grate at an auto accident
on Ohio 143; Racine at 10:19 a.m. to Broadway Street for Ben
Philson to Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at 7:24p.m. treated
Angela Harmon at an auto accident on Salem Street;
Middleport Fire DDepartment at 5:42 p.m. to a vehicle !Ire on
Turkey Run Road.

Church sponsors dinner Friday
Soup beans with ham dinners will be served Friday at Our
Lady of Loretta Chu rch, Tuppers Philns. Serving w!ll be from 4
to 7 p.m . and dinners will Include cole slaw, corn bread, tea or
co ffee. Adults $2.50. Children under 12, $1.50. Pie and cake
avai lable.

Fellowship sets Thursday meeting
Meigs County Church of Christ Women 's Fellowship will meet
Thurs\lay, 7:30p.m., at Bradford Church of Christ. Program on
ceramics will be presented by Katherine Evans.

Missionaries slated to speak
Rhond a and Ken Harless, missionaries from Mexico, w!ll be
guests at a specia l Sunday 7:30p.m. service at Hobson Church
of Christ in Christ ian Union.

Regan hanging tough
•
tn
arms controversy
advance. The president, In two
By HELEN THOMAS
interviews with the Tower board,
UPI White House Reporter
reportedly changed his story
WASHINGTO N (UPI)
from
McFarlane's version to
Hanging tough, Wlilte House
chief of staff Donald Regan Is Regan's after consulting with his
resisting overwhelming pressure chief of staff.
News reports persisted Mon·
to resign at this point unless he is
day
night that Regan, a 68-year·
asked directly by President
old
Marine
veteran whose tenac·
Reagan, aides say.
lty
Is
well
known,
Is now hanging
"That Is between Mr . Regan
In
only
until
the
To.wer
report Is
and the president, " an aide to the
chief of staff said Monday, noting Issued and absorbed - hoping
there had been no such request the president will clear him of
from Reagan. who has waved off any blame In a speech Reagan Is
all questions regarding his staff expected to make within a few
and operations with an adman· days of the commission report.
Rep. Dick Cheney, R-Wyo.,
lshment to walt for the Tower
said today that up to now he has
Commission report.
That report, from the preslden· "retrained from urging" Re·
tlal panelled by former Republi· gan's depar ture, " But It seems to
can Sen. JohnToweerofTexas, is me we've reac hed a point where
due Thursday- and the pressure he has to ask himself whether or
on Regan Is expected to escalate. not his continued presence
Thechiefofstaffis likely to draw serves the president or not and 11
sharp criticism in the panel's seems to m ~ that It's lncreas·
review of National Security ingly evident thai the conclusion
Council operations In the Iran· Is that he Is not and then he will ,
In fact, need to step down In the
Contra scandal.
Indeed, leaks ·and hlnls indl· near future."
Asked on the "CBS Morning
cate that none of the president's
News"
If "near future" means a
aides nor the president himself
matter
of days, Cheney, who
will escape criticism In the
served
as
President Ford's chief
, report. Herbert Hetu, the Tower
board's spokesman, told repor· of stall, said, "I think so. The key
ters Monday lhe document will thing to remember here Is It's not
a question of guilt or Innocence:
"name names."
'
'
of whose
Regan's role has drawn the ll's a basic' question
expendable.
And,
of
course,
the
most focus In his dispute with
form er national security adviser chief or staff Is expendable and
Rober! McFar lane about the president lsn'l."
whel her Reagan gave approval · The Washington Post reported
In August 1985 for the first today that Regan, at a meeting
shipmen t of U.S. arms to Iran he called Monday with the
president and top political advis·
from Israeli stockpiles.
In sworn testimony. Regan has ers, said he would decide about
said no such approval was given resigning after the Tower report
and McFarlane has maintained Is Issued. At the same meeting,
the shipment was authorized In Reagan was urged to acl swiftly
upon receiving the report to show
that he Is In command.
Many of Reagan's associates
and
his wife, Nancy, believe that
South Central Ohio
In
the
wake ol lhe Iran·Contra
Increasing cloudiness tonight ,
crisis
he
must Install a new White
with a low near 30. Mostly cloudy
House
manager
to revitalize the
Wednesday, with highs In the
battered administration for Its
upper 40s.
remaining
two years.
The probability of preelp lta·
Regan,
often
praised for his
lion is near zero lonlght and 20
management
of
Merrill
Lynch &amp;
percent Wed nesday.
Co.
before
joining
the
Reagan
Winds will be Ugh! and varia·
administration 1\S treasury se·
ble tonight
·
cretary,
has beer\ faulted for
Ohio E.tended Forecast
a
one-man show since he
running
Thursday through Saturday
came
to
the White House In
Fair Thursday, with a chance
Reagan's
second
term.
of rain Friday and Saturday .
A
source
said
Sunday that
Highs will range from the upper
30s to the upper 40s Thursday, Reagan, having defended his
and In lhe 40s Friday and chief of staff since the scandal
Saturday. Overnight lows will be broke In November , has reluc·
tantiy concluded that "Regan
between 25 and 35.
must go."

Ohio weather

Ferry service

IContlnu!lll from Page 1)

quick response from the highway
department.
Rogers said he needs commit·
men! on the service by Wednes·
day. If the service Is wan led, he
will forward a contract for
review and signing. The contract
would Involve Pomeroy, Mason
and Rogers, and would ensure
that no other ferry could operat e
between Pomeroy . and Mason
during the life ot the contract.
Rogers antlclp&lt;ltes fares at $2
per car to Include all passengers,
$1 for motorcycles and bicycles

and 50 cents for walking traffic.
Weight embargoes . for heavy
truck traffic, excepting emer·
gency vehicles and school buses,
Is being considered.
Rogers told Long earlier thai
he could have his ferry · In
Pomeroy by March 16, depend·
ing on how soon an operating
co ntract Is finalized.
Ohio Department of Transpor·
tallon officials have pinpointed
closure of the brlqge to March 9
or 16.

..

Tuesday. ~ebrua

Area deaths
Eloise S. Eardley

the New Haven United Melhodlst
Church and the Live Wire Class.
Eloise S. Eardley, 67, McCoy
Surviving are three daughters,
Avenue, E;asl Liverpool , fo r- Mrs. Jack (Banela) Hunter,
merly of Meigs Cou nt y, died Feb. l'lerkeley Springs, W.Va., Mrs.
5 In the East Liverpool Cit~ Harry (Sylvia ) Pahlstrom, Co·
Hospital following a lengthy lumbus, and Mrs . William
illness.
(Mary I Shirk, GulfBreeze,Fia.;
Mrs. Eardley was born at one daughter-In-law, Maxine
Urbana on June 14, 1919, a Miller, New Haven;. nine grand·
daughter of Edith King of Ches- children, 10 great-grandchildren
ter and the late Edward King. and one great-great-grandson. .
Services will be 11 a.m. Wed·
Formerly of Meigs County, she
graduated from Chester High nesday In the New Haven United
School In 1938.
Methodist Church with the Rev.
A homemaker, Mrs. Eardley Is John Campbell, the Rev. William
survived in addition lo her DeMoss and the Rev. Doyle
mother ,' by hH husband, Robert Payne officiating. Burial will be
V. Eardley Sr.; a daughter, Mary In Red Hill Cemetery, Red Hill,
Kathryn Oppy . Dayton; three W.Va. There will be no visitation.
sons, Robert V. Eardley Jr., The bo&lt;;Jy will lie In state one hour
Georgia: William Eardley, Lout· prior to services at the church.
In lieu of flowers, the family
siana, and Ronald Eardley,
Wellsville; two brothers . Cecil 0. suggests contributions to I he
King, Bidwell, and Charles F. New Haven United Methodist
King, Moundsville, W.Va.; five . Church or lhe New Haven LJ.
sisters, Inez Brehm, Island Lake, brary Fund.
Ill.; Geneva Leonard, Millwood,
Funeral arrangements are
W.Va.; Mabel King, Chester; under the direetion of the Fogle·
Lela Windon, Long Boltom, and song Funeral Home, Mason,
Donna WhlleofTampa , Fla. Five W.Va.
grandchildren and several nle·
ces and nephews also survive.
Besides her father, she was El ood E. Bo
preceded In death liy two broth·
W
wers
ers, Franklin and Babby Dale.
Elwood E. Bowers, 71, .34820
Services were held at 2 p.m.
State
Route 7, Pomeroy, a
Monday , Feb. 9, at the Martin
well·
known
retired Pomeroy busFuneral Home In Eas t Liverpool
inessman,
died
Monday evening
with the Rev . Jeffrey Mathews
St.
Joseph
Hospital
In Parkers·
at
officiating. Burial was in Colum·
burg
,
W.Va.
blana Memorial Park Cemelery.
Mr .. Bowers operated a res tau·
rant on East Main Street in
Infant Ban-en
Pomeroy for many years and In
hi!! retirement operated an ap·
Curtis L. Barrett, six-week-old plia nce repair shop at his Route 7
son of Keith Wayne and Nancy home.
Marlene Gibbs Barrett, Langs·
He was born April 26, 1915 In
ville, died Sunday at home.
Dayton, a son of Carrie Law He was born Jan. 9. 1987, In rence of Oakland, Calif. , and the
Point Pleasant.
late Ernest Bowers. He was
Surviving in addition to his reared in Pomeroy by the late
parents are a brother , Troy Jacob and Edith Ament.
Wayne Barrett, al home; mater·
Mr. Bowers was a member of
nal grandparents, Thomas and
the
Pomeroy Church of Christ,
Delores Gibbs, Hartford, W.Va.;
paternal grandparents, William where he served as a deacon. He
and Eva Anderson, Hartford ; was a veteran of World War II
greal-grandparenls, Ben and Do· and a member of the C.B. Radio
rothy Barrell, Langsville, Helen Club.
Surviving In addition to his
Anderson, Point Pl easant ,
mother
are his wife, Eileen;
W.Va., and Eloise Owens,
three daughters and sons-in-law.
Zanesville.
Janet
and Ed Venoy, Pomeroy;
Services will be Wednesday al
Shlrle'y
and David Bumgardner.
1:30 p.m. at Father's House
Middleport;
Peggy and Danny
Church, Hartford , wllh the Rev .
Brl
c
kles
.
Middleport ; a
Clyde Fields and the Rev . Sa ~
muel Anderson officiating. Bur'· dau ghter-In-law, Chris Whea·
ial will be In Graham Cemetery. lley, Logan; hal!·brothers, Ern·
Friends may call at the Fogle· est Bowers Jr., Kenneth Bowers
and Joseph Bowers; and half
song Funeral Home, Mason, sisters,
Ada Rowe, Carol Wolfe,
W.Va., from 7., p.m. Tuesda y.
Joyce Sauters, Sandra Baer,
Donna Bowers, Nedra Larvln,
Rev. A.B. Miller
Kay Profflll and Karen Haines.
· Ten grandchildren, live great·
The Rev . Achsah B. Miller, 92, grandchildren and several nieNew Haven , W.Va., died Monday ces and nephews also survive.
at home.
Besides his father, he was
Born Oct . 22,1894. in Summers- preceded in death by a son,
ville, W.Va. , she was the daVgh- Danny Bowers, and a daughler,
ter of the late Albert and Orilla Sue Annelle Bowers.
O'Dell McClung.
Services will be 1 p.m. Thurs·
She was preceded in death by day at the Ewing Funeral Home
her husband. the Rev . Ha rry with Mr. Don Seevers officiating.
Miller, and lwo sons, Paul and Burial will be in Miles Cemetery,
Harry L. Miller.
Ru tland. Friends may call at the
She was a relired United funeral home from 2·4 and 7-9
Melhodlst minister, a member of p.m. Wednesday.

Moslem gunmen Withdraw
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI\ Hundreds of Druze Moslem gun·
men withdrew from wesl Beirut
today and pro-Iranian militia· ·
men burned down their barracks
rather than hand it over to Syrian
troops who entered the capital to
halt bloody fighting in the Mas·
lem seetor.
Members of !he fundamental·
ist Shiite Moslem Hezbollah
group set fire to their Fathallah
barracks In the Basta neighbor·
hood , and local commander Hajj
Mustafa said his men were
reacting against lhe Syrian
deployment.
An estimated 7,000 Syrian
lroops have closed at least 54
mllllla strongholds across west
Beirut since their deployment
Monday.
Hezbollah was excluded from
negotiallons that led to the
Syrian lnlerventlon In fightin g
between the Shiite Amal militia
and leftist forces led by I he Druze
Progressive Socialist Party . Hez·
boilah leaders have condemned
the Syrian moves, saying they
cleared lhe way for a U.S-backed
Israeli attack on Lebanon.
Po lice sources have specu Ia ted
that some of the 28 Westerners
taken hostages In Lebanon al
some point had been held at the
Fathallah barracks. Those cap·
lives Include eight Americans.
Hezbollah, or the Party of God.
has repeatedly denied holding
any Wester n hostages. The main
bases for Amal and Hezbollah
are In the clty!l-southern suburbs
and Syrians have not yet ven·
tured Into them.
Reporters who toured the city
said Syrian soldiers, backed by
two T-54 tanks, replaced 300
Druze Progressive Socialist
Party militiamen outside the
Soviet Embassy. Oth.er units
prepared to deploy around the
abandoned U.S. Embassy annex

on the Beirut waterfront .
Th e Druze militiamen headed
to ca mps east of the capital in the
Shouf mountains, firing mac hine
guns and rocket-propelled gre·
nades Into the air as they passed
a Syrian army checkpoint at
Khalde. 9 miles south of Beirut,
the reporters said.
The Syrians earlier look over
key mllllla slronghoids, lnciud·
lng the 40-story Murr Tower- a
Shiite Amal fortress- and Jal El
Bahr , an unfinished high-rise
building which Druze militiamen
used as their main base In west
Beirut.
Brig. Gen. Ghazi Kenaan, head
or Syrian ar my intelligence in
Lebanon, said late Monday that
the Syrian force will shut down
militia oftlces after the militia·
men are evacuated and their
weapons confiscated.

Ill,

KEBUI
BUSINESS SERVICE
611 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

PHONE

614-992·7270
you would care to
,m••t a CPA an~ talk
aD•DU1 what they can
do for your company
- call us. We would
be happy to visit with
no obligation to you.

•'

24, 198

Village receives&gt;IContl~uedfrom Page 1:

'

....

village could use the value of land ordinance as recommended by '~
.involved as well as things like the Ohio Department' of Natural :
volunteer labor to count on its 50 Resources , necessary so that ;
percent share, Borda stated. flood Insurance can be purchased.
'
Title of land, however, on by resident s.
Cab
I
e
issue
ariseS
,
,
:
which Improvements are made
Council Presidenl Dewey Hor·;
mus1 be vested In . !he United
ton
agai n voiced complaints,
States an~ then all lands required
Cable Communications ,
against
for operation arid maintenance of
Inc.
for
replacing a Columbu~l
the area are leased to tile
station
on
channel6 with the QVC~
non-federal sponsor, such · as .
m
e
r
c
h
a
n d I s e s e II I n g•
Middleport VIllage, on a long·
'
'
term basts . The opera tion arid · program ming.
He commended Councilman:
Maintenance becomes the re·
Gilmore
for making arrange- '
sponslbllity of the town and the
ments
for
subscribers to secure:
area must be available for public
converlors
so that they can again:
use.
Columbus station cin,•
receive
lhe
Dredging discouraged
·
Borda was discouraging to their sets.
The
company
sent
a
vaq
from
;
Middleport officials as to the
possibility of dredging, under a which convertors were. to 'be ··
corps program, taking place at dis tributed from the Foodland j
the present marina, to clear the parking lot two days last week.:
channel of slit so that the facility However, the company ran out of·•
convertors ·on 'the first day. ;
could be used by power boals.
The present emphasis In boat Gilmore said lliat names were'
launching facilities Is now !hat taken and the subscribers V{iiC
they be built on the main stem, get the convertors at a later lime. :
Mayor Hoffman said thai a '
the. Ohio River In this Instance,
Is still planned with a '
meeting
while the emphasis when the
marina was built was conslruc· cable television teehnlcalan to ,
lion of the facilities along tribu· discuss alternatives the village •
!aries and not on the main stem . might have In replacing services
Borda suggested that Middle· for cable television as provided
port offlcli!IS send along a letter by Consolidated
of interest to the corps along wllh Communications.
At the suggestion gf Council·
a preliminary design af what the
man
James Clatworthy, co uncil
I own has In mind for projects.
passed
a resolution naming .
Councilman Bob Gilmore said
Meigs
High
School basketball ,
he has difficulty with the corps'
Kllchen
as Its first
player
J.R.
original Involvement In the pres·
ent marina as a boat launching goodwill ambassador to Holland, ,
.
facility and the present policy of Belglm and Germany .
The
resolution
congra
tulates
:
not providing any help In dred g·
Kitchen
for
being
named
to
the:
lng the water so that the facility .
All-Star team which will be ·
can be used lor power boats.
making
the trip to play basket · .
Borda said that the cost of
dredging at the marina has been bali In April. Clatworthy pointed ·
estimated at $125,000 In 1977, and oul that Kitchen will have to ra ise .
attoday's prices, would probably $1,595 to make the trip and sa id ,
that anyone wishing to help can ·
cost about $200,000.
contacl
Fenton Taylor al Meigs:
Council gave I he third reading
to an ordinance for lhe sale of a High School or Mrs. Pat Kitchen. :
Upon the recommendation of
lot near lhe Gllberl Service
Councilmen
Sallerfleld and Wli· .'
Station below Middleport and
adopted the ordinance. The first liam Walters, l1 was agreed to
reading was given to a flood pian proceed on the tnstallallon of a
new street light at the corner of.
Sixth Avenue and Williams '
Street. Present for the meeting in ·
addition to the five council :
members and Mayor Hoffman;
was Clerk Jon Buck.
TOLEDO (UPI) - Alton Coleman and Debra Brown, who
authorities believe were responsible for killing eight people
during a three-month crime
spree, will nol face I rial on their
Toledo charges, officials said.
A Lucas County Common
Pleas judge agreed Monday to
dismissed all four aggravated
murder charges against Aiton
Coleman and Debra Brown.
Judge Robert Christiansen approved a prosecutor's motion
dismissing the murder charges
and an aggravated l)urglary
charge thai slem from the July
You just won't find a
1984, slaying of a Toledo woman
I
better value for your in·
and her daughter.
Prosecutor Anthony Pizza said
surance premium dollar
the two already face four death
than a Homeowners
penalty sentences and that pro·
policy from the State
ceedlng with the Toledo cases
would nol accomplish anything
Auto Companies. As an
further. ·
independent agency re·
"There's no advanlage of alpresenting Slate Aulo,
lowing lhe case logo forward. 11
will only delay Imposition of lhe
we offer lruly outstand·
other penalties ," Pizza said.
ing protecbon packages
The Toledo charges were refor hOuses, apartments
tained as a backup to olher Ohio
and condominium
charges : Coleman was convicted...,..;:~
for the murders of Marlene
Waiters of Norwood and Toney
Story of Cincinnati, Pizza said.

Ohio judge
drops charges

Veterans Memorial
Monday Admissions - Robert
Durst, Portland; Dora Smith,
Pomeroy .
·
Monday Discharges - Flora
Gibson, Middleport; Clara
Young, Racine; Belva Fisher,
Racine; Avis Frecker. Racine.

-

State Auto
ln..,_

........

Write yourself
a loan or a line.
Our Equity Money SeJVice gives you two great ways
to get cash. You can borrow a one-time amount with
a fixed repayment schedule, or set up a revolving
line of cre~it- the choice is yours.
So if you're looking for the best borrowing
·
bargain, unlock the cash value of the equity you've
built up in your home. Ask about an Equity Money
SeJVice line or loan {lt your nearest BANK ONE
•
office, or call us at 992-2133 or at
1-800-824-6954.

--

BANKE.ONE.
,..!Mo uw.
""' 1/toWMd

&amp;.\HIC Ot;l, A1~l"' l, fiCA
AI~ OfltCI ~ ,I)IC

Ohio LoUt&gt;r)'

Rio mentor·
named coach
of the year
-Page 3

'

Daily Number
733
PICK-4

2945

•

at y

Vol. 36, l\lo. 206
.Copyrighted 1987

Partly cloudy tonight, wllh
a low helween 30 and 35.
Mostly cloudy Thursday, wllh
high$ between 110 and 55. The
probability of precipitation I•
near zero through Thursday.

en tine

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, February 25, 1987

2 Sections. 14 Pag es

26 Cenu

A Multimedia Inc. New spaper

Reagan optimistic as report's release looms
WASHINGTON (UP!) :._ Wi th a report faulting
his conduct of the Iran arms affair just a day
away, President Reagan's mood Is "upbeat and
determined," his chief spokesman says.
Reagan has tried to stay silent on all aspects of
I he Iran arms-Contra aid scandal unttr after the
detailed' report by his special Tower Commission
Is released Thursday and has said liltle even
regarding his own frame of mind.
But without being asked Tuesday, chief
spokesman Marlin Fitzwater tried to erase any
impression left last week by news reports that
Nancy Reagan had taken over the scheduling of
her husband to keep him from overexertion.
"There ltave been no restrictions (on his

' schedule) for acouple weeks now ... particula rly
from the first lady," Fitzwater said. "The
president Is In excellent health."
Laler, asserting the pres ident's worst political
crisis "takes up very little of our lime In the dally
affairs of the White House," Fitzwater said: "The
president's mood Is very high, upbeat and
determined .... I think I he president Is In a very
·. good mood."
Reagan for weeks has waved off questions
about the Iran-Contra scandal on grou nds that the
· panel he appointed under fo rmer Sen. John
Tower, R·Texas, will answer many of them. But
he came close to a cruclai one Tuesday when he
suggested he simply cannot remember il he gave

Cruise missile test renews
faith in key defense weapon
VANCOUVER, British Colum·
bla (UP II - The reputation of
the U.S. air-launched cruise
missile program , tarnished by
past failures, was given a boost
with the suceessful completion of
,a 1,500-miie test flight across
northwestern Canada.
But in Ca nada, queslions re·
main regarding the propr iety of
testing a key weapon of the U.S.
Strategic Air Command 's arse·
nal on Canadian soil.
Tuesday, an Air Force B-52
bomber launched one of the
20·foo1-long missiles high over
the Beaufort Sea, north of 1he
Arctic Circle.
At 500 mph, the ra dar-evas ive
missile zigzagged along a 1,500·
·mile corridor for four hours
1&gt;!1fore parachutln ~..to a soft
landing at ' the Prhnrose Lake
test range on lhe Alberta·
Saskalchewan border .
It was the seventh test of the

cigar-shaped weapon over Cana·
dian territory In the past three
years and the first since las!
winler, when the c'rash of two
missiles caused a public outcry
loud enough to force lhe Cana·
dian governmenlto suspend U.S .
tesl righls .
"We're very pleased with the
success of this mission," said
Maj . Fred,Harrop, an Air Force
spokesman. "Last , year, lhe
missile's reputation was · de·
famed unjustly. The miss ile's
accuracy is uncanny.
''If you' can imagine It as a
football, we can put 11 through
goal posts," Harrop said. "The
problems last year were not with
th~ missile. They were human
mistakes."
111 ~~.B,'l. __CJlll&lt;tda signed a
five-year treaty allowing six
tests each winter. That treaty
wilt soon be extended for another
five years despite opinion polls

showing mosl Canadians oppose
lhe tests .
Every cruise test provoked
demonslratlons across Canada
by church and labor groups.
Even the opposition Liberal
Party, In power when the 1983
test treat y wa s signed, has called
for the suspension of the tests.
The protes ts drawing the most
attention have been the highly
publicized stunts by the Green·
peace environmental group.
This year, a handful of Green·
peac.e protes ters snowshoed sev·
eral miles Into the test range,
hoping to disru pt the test as the
cruise mlssle landed. After hik·
lng overnightlnlo the wilderness,
the protesters failed to locate the
landing area.
Duri~Jt
previou s p rO I£~ls.
Greenpeace has atte mpted to
blockade the tesl ran ge and catch
the low-flying missiles wllh a
giant net. Those attempts also
failed .

prior approval in August 1985 for the firs!
shipment of U.S. arms to Iran from Israeli
stockpiles.
Asked if he was upset with reports his memory
Is faulty on such a major foreign policy point.
Reagan respo~ded to journalists at a picture·
taking session with black economists In the
Cabinet Room :
"I'd like to ask one q,uestlon of everybody.
Everybody that can remember whal they were
doing on August SUi of 1985, raise your hand."
When rro one did, he said, "I think It 's possible to
forget. Nobody' s raised any hands."
Questions about Reagan' s recollection have
centered on reports that he gave conflicling

U.S. Cruise missile launch

answers on the prior approva l question in two
Interviews with the Tower Commission, fir st
saying he did give an OK and la ter saying he did
not.
Sou rces told United Press International early
today that Reagan followed up those confl icting
responses with a letter 10 the Tower board las t
week , and The Wash ington Post said he wrote that
he " honestly had no reco llectio n" of when he
approved the arms deal "and may have al lowed
myself lo be lnllu enccd by the reco llection of
others."
Fllzwaler dismissed as "ou lrageous" and
" nonsense" any suggesllo n Reagan . 76, Is losing
his memory .
•North Pole

Pickets
protest
at mine
in Gallia

I

Arctic~n

1

Missio paraclliMS loa soli
tanding at thel'tllllo £II
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LltltTttllllnge.

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Edmonton.

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UNITED STATES

LAUNCH CARRIED OUT - A U.S. Air Force 8 ·52 homber
launched an unarmed U.S. Cruise missile Tuesday on a 1,1!00-mlle
journey across Canada's frozen northwest, despite efforts nl
Grecnpeacc proteslers to scuttle the tesl flight. ( UPI)

State·may need more money
to aid highway bond revenue
COLUMBUS !UP! l
A
member of the committee hear·
lng a resolution to sell $1.8 billion
worth of bonds to repair and
replace highwa ys, bridges and
other parts of the infrastructure
concluded that !he resolution
may need to be supplemenled by
the proceeds from lucky loltery
numl;lers.
"Looks to me like we've got to
have somebody hit !he lotlery,"
said Sen. Ben Gaeth, R·Defiance,
after an environmental engineer
testified before the Senate High·
ways, Transportation and Local
Government Committee Tues·
da y on drinking and waste water
needs.
The resolution would place an
Issue on the November ballot to
amend the Ohio Constltulion lo
allow the stat e to tssue$1 .8 billion
In general obJ.Igallon bonds : If
voters approve the amendmenl,

up to $180 mHlion In bonds could
Other witnesses agreed that
be Iss ued each year for 10 years. the need Is greater than what
The bonds would be tax exempt. could be addressed by the bond
The money would be used lo money .
provide matching funds forcoun·
The problem of deteriorating
lies, townships and cities to build highways and bridges In dlsre·
or Improve highways, bridges, pair Isn't going to go away In 10
water lreatmenl systems and years. said John Callahan. dlrec·
other facilities.
tor of legislative affairs for the
George Haggand, chairman of Ohio Contraclors Associa tion .
the Ohio Environmental Protec· "Bul llhe resolution) Is a good
tion Agency's Infras tructu re way to address It today ,"
Task Force , laid the committee
Representatives of the Ohio
that the task force 's study shows Municipal League and the Ohio
Ohio wHI need an es timated $9 County Commissioners Associa ·
billion over the next10 to15years lion also spoke In favor of lhe
to meet toda y's standards ol resolution.
waste water and drinking water
Columbus real estate devel·
treatment.
oper Jim Rya n told I he commit ·
Haggand said the estlmale tee 'he opposes the resolution
does not include money for solid because Its current language
and hazardous waste manage- does not restrict the use of the
ment, and he said Ohio cannot bond money to exclus ively public
rely on lhe federal government projects.
for much assistance.

Lawmakers seeking funds
for Ohio job service
WASHINGTON t UP! ) - Ohio congressmen are hopeful
Congress will appropriate money to cover a shortfa ll In funding
for the Ohio Bu rea u of Employment Services, bul help may not
be available before some OBES offices are closed.
The congressmen met Tuesday will! Gov. Richard Celes te
and sta te legislators to discuss the problem and wha t can be
done on I he federa l level.
Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, D·Ohio, said he Is optimistic
Congress will add $103 million to a supplement appropriallon
bill, The money would take care of Ohio and oth er states that
also are crimped by funding shortages.
Ohio needs about $15 million. co ngressmen said.
"The prospects of getting lhe problem solved before offlc&lt;'
closings are grim because offices are going to be closed next
week," Metzenbaum sa id.
Reps. Bob McEwen, R·Ohlo, and Donald Pease. 0 -0hlo, said
the meeting also discussed the possiblllly of changi ng program
formulas . There have been complaints that Ohio Is being doubly
hurt beca use It faces office closures but alsogets'only 70percen1
or the money col lected for assistance to jobless workers.
Metzenbaum said the money could be taken !rom a $1 billion
surplus In a fund for admlnlslratlon or unemployment
programs.
"It lOBES opera tions) really Is what it (the money) ought to
be used for, " Metzenbaum said.

VI NTON - A lempo rary restraining order issued Tuesday by
Gallla County Common Pleas
Judge Donald Andrew Cox has
restricted Informational picket ·
lng by United Mine Workers of
America members at the en·
trance to the Merco Mining Co.
facilit y near VI nton.
The mine has been the site of a
picket line since Monday .
r Htr Parsons, president of
UMW ' Local 1957 at Raccoon
Min e No. :1 of the Meigs Mines
complex. said it was his under·
standi ng that the picket line was
up protesllng layoffs at the
non ·union mine.
Parsons said It 's been reported
that the layoffs were ordered
because some of 21 employees
working underground at Merco
sought UMW representation lor
pay and safety concerns al the
mine. Approximalely 12 employees working In I he mine were
furlou ghed F rlday.
Members of Locals 1957,1886a1
Meigs Mine No. 2 and 1890 at
Meigs Nine No. 1 have been on
the line lo show support for I he
employees. Parsons said.
Attorneys for Merco, based in
Moxahala , Ohio, flied motions
for an injunction and a temper·
ary restraining order Tuesday .
The latter motion was granted by
Cox.
Merco attornrys charged thai
the picket s ha ve allegedly
blocked the mine . entra nce on
Sherman Hartsook Road In »un·
tlngton Township and "threatened. In tim idated . harassed qnd
coerced" people entering and
leaving lhe mine. according to
lhe motion.
Cox 's order has directed
pickets to erase any threatening
ac tivity and ha s limit ed picket ·
log to more I han two a t the mine
entrance.
"The only reason we' re therrls
for an Informational picket, "
Parsons said. " We're not thcrr to
ICant lnucd on Pa ge 14 1

North files lawsuit
to stop special counsel

Racine water operator
will need certification

WASHINGTON IUPI) - lnde·
pendent federa l prosecutor Lawrence Walsh Is committed to a
court baltle with Lt. Col. Oliver
North, vowing to fight a lawsuit
by the fired White House aide
that would slop Walsh's criminal
Investigation of the Iran-Contra
scandal.
North's defense tactic, tiled
Tuesday at U.S. Distr lcl Court in
Washington, argues t11e law ·
under which Walsh was ap·
pointed Is unconstitutional because separation of government
powers gives the president sole
authorlly to appoint proseeutors
In cases Involving offenses
against the United States.

Racine VIllage Council learned
In a Monday recessed session of a
requirement from the Ohio Envlronmenlal Protective Agency
t~al starting In 1988, a certified
operator must be in charge at the
village waier sys~m .
Council members learned or
the req uirement from an EPA
letter regarding a reeent lnspec·
lion of the village water works.
Glenn Rizer Is to lake the test
tor certification In June.

The suit asks the court to enjoin
Walsh from continuing his crlml·
nal Inquiry and to stop Attorney
General Edwin Meese from
aiding the Independent counsel's
office. Both Walsh and Meese
were named as defendants.
In a siatement TUesday, Walsh

defended the law's constitution·
alit!' and said he would fight
North In court
"The Independent counsel sta·
tute has received exte~slve and
careful study and we are satls·
fled of Its constitutionality ,"
Walsh said. "We shall, of course,
oppose the action."
Walsh was ~ppolnted by a
special three·judge federal court
created under the 1978 Ethics In
Government Act, a law passed In
the aftermath of ~he Watergate
scandal. Brendan Sullivan, an
attorney for North from the
prom,lnenl Wa~hington law firm
of Williams &amp; Connolly, argued in
court papers that only preslden·
tlal appointees may prosecute
offenses against the United
States.
Philip Lacovara, a former
Watergate proseeutor, said In an
Interview North's lawsuit has
merit because It t.s "based on
some constitutional principles
that are quite well· established."

SUIIIECI' OF SPECULATION ...!. Fawn Ball, rip&amp;, former
aecreiary lo Ll. Col. Oliver Norlh, ud her attoraey, Plato
Cacherls, spoke wltll reporters Tuetday Ia WulllnjJioa. Hall hu
become the subjed of •peculation Ia coanedlon wllh her alle1ed
role in the Iran-Contra affatr. (UP I)

A bill from the sheriff' s depart·
men! regarding jail fees for a
prisoner In February 1986, has
been reeelved and was 41acua~
by council. The village clerk has
been authorized to contact the
state auditor's office to deter·
m!M how to pay Ilie 1986 bill wUh
1987 funds .
The Shrine Club Park Board
met reeently to plan the roof and
lighting lor the park stage.
Estimates for materials al-e less
than $500. The committee plans
•

to pay for thr matt• rla ls wl rll

u

SOOO donat ion for the park fro m

lh&lt;' Dave Dilc•s charity golf
tou: nam unt. The park board is
cou.1tlng on vo lu nteer carpcnt tn
to help with thl' project.
Dat es tor free summer •haws
at the park wrrr a lso set fol'tw lrc
a month, beginning In Ma y.
Street Commissio ner Rizer r·r ·
ported that thr c·ytlnder on lhc·
backhoe has been rf'palred. Rc
pairs were also made to two
ca tch basins, and when the
wealher clea rs. Rizer plan s 10
repair a. ca tch basin on Main
Street across from the bus
garaae.
In other action , council au tho·
rlzl!d purchase or two tires for the
~ cruiter, and discussed
.,. IMw clen-11p. A committee of
COIIIICII members was organized
to c1nvass the village and make a
list of locations thai need to be
cleaned up.
Tbe next council meeting wilt
be Monday, March 2, at 7 p.m. ·
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·~-~-ne_sda_v~_:_·~-~---'2-~~.·,~..

The Daily Sentinel-

Paga-2-The Ollily SeutiMII

LOmmentary ___________. ;. ;. _____
The ·Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Stay 'off the dole _______Vin--"-ce_nt_C_arr___
oll

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publllher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The Un ited Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the America n Newspaper Publishers Association .
lE'ITERS OF OPlN ION ar (l weiCOJll('. They stloold lK' less than :m' words
long. Alll£'1tersaresubject toedlllng and IT'll sf bPsij:ned with name, address and
telephon e number . No uns\g nOO lettl:'fs will be publbhed. L ett ers should b(' In
good last£', addrPSslng Issues, not per sC11alltles.

: The Lighter Side

With lot s of heart · but little
wisdom. federal' lawmakers are
trying their hand at curing
a nother social ilL
Already this year, they've
approved $50 million In aid for
the home less. and that was just
an appetizer. Some legislators
are pushing a $500 million pack·
age of emergency assistance,
signallin g a full -scale assault on
the problem .
It would be unfortunate if they
succeeded.
Even If homeless ness were
growing as' fast as some soc ial
activists claim, It generally
remains manageable at the local
level. In fact, it Is already being
handled there, by busy if befeaguered coa litions of public and
priva te agencies. F ederal .Inter·
ventlon would distort or under-

inlne these efforts - and along · containing tens of thou sa nds of
predictable lines.
empty apartments , and yet a city
For starters, private Initiative that spends up to $37,000 a year to
and control of programs would house a single homeless family .
diminish, even through private
Why should the rest of the
groups - especially churches country underwrite s uch willful
have often led the wa~ serving waste?
the homeless:
Why, for that matter, sl)ould
Much wvrse, federal aid would citizens of such c ities as Por·
reward cit ies whose policies tl~nd , San Antonio and Minnea·
actually promote homeless ness polls, which, the U.S. Conference
or whose response to It has been of Mayors reports, have met
utterly Inept.
their local demand for she lter, be
New York Cll y is .a perfect double- taxed to care for the
example on both counts. This Is a homeless In places where a
city whose housing shorta ge i~ similar commitment has fail ed
aggravated by rental regulations to jell?
more suited to Eastern E urope, a
A final rea son to keep ' the
city that hs squeezed so many federal government from subsid landlords out of business that its Izing shelters: Among some
Department of Housing Preser- groups, federal support for the
vation and Development owns homel ess Is seen as the spearthousands of vacant buildings head of a wider campaign lo

Resolved: to give
up on moderation
Ry lli CK WEST
WASHINGTON iUP l i - Reso lutions to ~:o to a diel usual!)• are
amo n~: lhr fi rst Nrw Year's vows to fall bv the wavs idr.
Perhaps it was in recog nllion of th ai fac i. or Jhr iacl Ihal Na l iona l
Nutrlllon Month Is co ming up in Marrh, thai promp1rd the
Agr icu lture Department to prPpa re a sri of dlr tar)· guid e lines.
Anyway , it's a fue l thai , accordin g 10 lhP department. "mort• 1hari
. one-fourth of America n adult s arc overweighI."
However. vou mav no l bl' in thr mood for lrcl ures vou s hould have
• been giving .\'Ourself Ia &lt;~ mon th when ever.vonr 11·as passing
" high-ca lorie, low -nutrir nl " food .
· Such as fruit ca ke a nd bonbons left OVI'r from Chi·is tmas.
Probablv .vou should kn ow tha t amo ng the foo ds classed as
"h lgh·ca lorir, low-nulrit'nl" in th•· guid elines arr fat s, oils a nd
sw!'els. I'm !r iling ;·ou anywa .v. II m ay be a fact th at too n\urh suga r
will make you plmpi)·.
What evN Jhr casr. lh•· drparlmrnl says that "cream and sugar on
your cereal, fat · ladrn IOpplngs in your baked pol ato and r i"h sa ut'l's
on .vour V&lt;'grtablrs" are tough on your diet.
Al so m ·oid food high in cholrs trrol. the lrv&lt;'i of whic h fo r " ma nv
AmPrican s is undPs lrablv high," it adds.
·
If yo u must gC'I high, .vou' r~ supposed ro do it on illegal dru gs, I
guess. For thr gu idrlinrs warn r ha 1 " if )' OU drink alcoholic brv&lt;:'rages,
do so in mod&lt;:'r&lt;ll ion."
What l like are blurbs for cookbooks and "'rrclse parlors
sugges ting we can a ll somehow be hea lthv if we wa lch our weight a nd
hat wr rat.
-I've' bern walching my wright c losrl.v fnr a number of )'Oa rs and it
( " reps goi ng up and up . Keepi ng an eye on a bu lgi ng wa is lline
certain ly is no guarant ~e thai you willlosP wPig ht .
Thl' sa m!' probabl.v is trur of diNs. WciiChing what )' OU eat Is nor
!'nough, b;· ll srlf. Ind eed, jus I th l' opposi te rna )· be a fa ('l.
Mis s ing your mouth is a sun' sig n of not paying a tt ention ro what
you raJ. and miss ing your mouth ofl r n l'nough Is on!' wa)' 10 Jake off
thl' pounds you may havl' put on by hill ing II .
Thl' dr partml'nl also Jrlls us th ai "alro hollr bevl'ragrs, takl'n in
inodr ration, appea r ro ra us&lt;' no harm in norma l. hl'alth.v
non-prl'gnant ad ult s."
ltakf' that to m ra n WP nt1 fld to watch wha t wr drink as wd l as wha t
wv !'at. And ma yhr whal wr smokl'. as welL
Cll'arly , missi ng ;•our moulh with an alcoholic br\ ' N&lt;~gr Is a sign
you havv a drinking problrm.
Moreover·, thl' depanmvn1 says "hl'avy drinkers, a nd rspl'clail)'
those who also s mokr r lgarelll's. may drvl'lop nutritiona l drflcll'ncrs
a nd mon' s(•rlous dls ~asrs , such as cir r hos is of th&lt;' llvrr a nd certain
typos of ca nce r."
That piece of advlcr· may 11(' a lr ifir red unda nr . Cancer &lt;~rlkr'
man y bodily organs but it is difflcull 10 imaglnr a ease of cirrhosis
thai doE's n'J In vo lve th e llvl'r. It rna)· hPip prr1·r nt unwanted

howPvrr.

Thl' nrx l limr you llghl up , wa rr h thr clgare'l te burn alii hi' wa;· lo
thl' fiil l'r lip. Watching what ) 'OU smoke likPwist' ma y kr&lt;'p ) 'OU from
lighting up a cigar b)· misla kP.

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Letter to the Editor

'

Setting the facts straight

·.•

W L Pt1 . GB

-II H .7-15
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16 39 .!tl
13 .u ,!41

&amp;!;ton

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Blm~ ,.,..,__.._,.., ~d'"""
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.pr C'~ n a nC'lfls.

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NA.TIONM. BASKETBALL !\SSOC.
By United Pr~~ l•t ernaUonaJ
Ea~ tern fonferau:e
Allianllc Dlvlrdon
Phlla

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

NBA resulis

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Crooksville ousts SQuthwestem·, 68-56

He may save
WASHINGTON -The arc hbi ·
shop of Ca nt erbury, Robert Run·
cle, has been communlcalilng by
letter with a prominent Shiite
Mos lem clergyman since pro·
Iranian terrorists kidnapped
Terry Walle, the Anglican
Church envoy who Is negotialing
for the release or hostages .
The Moslem cleric, Sheik Mo·
hammed Hussein Fadlallah, admit ted In handwritt en messages
that he has seen Waite s ince he
wa s " detained" on Jan . 20 in
Wes t &amp;lrut , according to our
sources. Fadlallah and the arch bishop have been writing to each
other about Ihe fate of Runcle's
envoy, Walle.
Waite was credited with a
major role in the release of three
Amer ican hostages, a nd had
returned to &amp;olrut for hi s fift h
negotiating sess ion . Hi s objec·
live was to win the release of
Associated Press corres ponde nt
Terry Anderson and Thomas
Sut herla nd , dean of agricult ure
at the America n University of
Beirut .
Despite his long expe rience,
Walle dropped his guard on the
night of Jan. 20. He had met lwice
with members of the Isla m ic

waile ___

Jihad, his pro· frania n kid·
nappers , a nd was to meet them
again that night.
But at their request, Waite had
lefl his bodyguards from the
Druze militia. And the Lebanese
Shiit e who was to have accom pa nied him, former hea lth minister Adnan Mrowe. couldn' t make
it.
According to our sources.
Mrowe was summoned to the
hospit al for an emergencyCaesa·
rea n delivery. He begged Waite
to stay wlih him , but Walle was
a nxious to go to the meeting with
the ter roris ts. As he had done
before, Waite left a note stating
that If he were taken hostage
there should be no negotiation s
undertaken for his release.
Whe n it became apparent that
Waite was indeed a hostagl',
Runcle began writing officials in
Lebanon, Syria and Iran for he lp
In fr eeing hi s emissary . He got a
written response fr om Fadlallah,
who had met with Waileonly four
days before th e e nvo y'i
abdu ction.
Who Is Fadlallah? He is the
highest·ranklng Shiite religious
figure In Lebanon a nd the spirit ·

re-inflate fundlng ·for the whole
panoply of anti-poverty programs. The goal is Implicit In the
dubious explanations for homeless ness, which include high
unemployment, a growing rift
belween rich and poor, and
decreased funding for lowincome housing and welfare (as
well as more legitimate reasons,
such as the release of the
chronically menta lly ill) .
Unfor tunat ely, lhe current
growth in homelessness can't be
explained so easily . .
Unemployment, for example,
has hovered around 7 percent for
over six years; cuts In federal
housing budgets primarily reduce future construction, not the
number of people now assisted;
and Congress' own Joint Budget
Commit tee released a study last
year that failed to find a
significant increase in the con·
cent ration of wea lth.
True, welfare benefits have
shrunk when adjusted for lnfl a·
tlon. Even so, tod ay's package 0f
income supports remains more
generous I han It was during the
1960s, when homelesseness failed
to riv et the public a ttention. ·
You might as well argtie . in
favor of less tan gible reasons for
homelessness, such as smaller,
fragm ented families or a dimin·
lshed sense of community among
America ns. Or maybe the mere
ex'i slence of shelters attract s
people who in the past made
other desperate arrangement s.
Shelt er opera tors brislle at the
notion that supply generaies
demand, bul to say so orily
recognizes that people down on
their lu ck respond lo economic
incentives no less eagerly than
Ihe rest of us.

uall eader of Hezbollah t Par ty of Fadlallah at a crucial plann ing
GodJ. U.S. Int ellige nce repor ts session in Dam ascus three days
blam e Hezbollah for mapy bomb· before the bombings, and cqnlngs that have taken scores of clud es that he is clos.e to Hussein
American lives and say th e group _Mus sav l, Hezbollah's chief terhas been active In Ametican ror ist in Lebanon. In fact , some
hos tage-taking.
inlelligence sources believe tlial
Fadlallah's admission to the Fadlallah is Mussavl's boss.
archbishop that he has seen Fadlallah has consistently de·
Waite s ince the abduction con- nied any part In the bombings or
fir ms that Waite is being held by kldnapplngs .
.
pro-Iranian Shiites. Fadlallah
The shadowy sheik has been
could be th~ key to Waite's .asked by Ihe United States In the
releas~ .
past to Intercede fo r Americans
Though not Iranian , Fadla lla h held by Shiites. Now the archbi·
Is consid ered Te hran's man in shop' of Ca nterbury has turned' to
Lebanon. He has a large portrait
Fadlallah fo r help.
of the Ayatolla h Kh ome lnlln his
MISERY'S COMPANY: Tile
home a nd has been a guest In
Slat e Department's burea u cr~t s
Tehran of the Khomei ni regime. are takin g what co nsolation they
Fadlallah is widely believed to ca n from the realization that they
hav e played a significa nt role in
aren't the only ones who hlld
the October 198:1 bombing of the trouble wit h ihe Soviets over
U.S. Marine barracks at the l'mbassy cons tr uctions. Th e
Beirut airport. whic h killed 241 Swedes lel th e Soviets move into
Marines. The night before, he
their new di gs in Stockholm long
reportedly blessed the two truck
before cb mpll'llon of the Swedish
drivers who were goi n ~ to blow Em bassy In Moscow. " The
up the Marine barracks and the Swedes, lacking any leverage to
French paratroop headq uarters prevent Soviet construction de·
nearby. thus guara nteei ng the lays, then faced co ntinued dlffl ·
sui cide bo mbers a place In cult y getting Soviet cooperation
paradise.
on embassy co nstruction, " : a
U.S. Intelligence al so places State Depar'tment report' not e~.

My wife was almos t an inside
Ihe eas t by big coal companies .
trader once.
You and I know. Mr. Spezza,
It was some yea rs back (how
that 60 percent of these homes
rnany, she Insists I keep strictly
arr still occupied by the owners
between ourselves 1 when she
or rented to someone else. The
wa s employed a t a Midwes t
res t were so ld outright to the coa l research faci lit y th en under
compa ny an d most are beln)( · contract toto develop an interest·
rented py employees. We travel lng new product. Technical peothese roads every day and I have
ple around the shop were sayi ng
yet to see one of the bi g cracks
it had the look of a rea l money
that open up and swa llow the
maker, that the then -unknown ·
houses .
compa ny's stock m ight turn o~t
I have the grea tes t respect for
to be a once- ln·a·llfl'time Invest·
farmers . I thank them every day
ment opportunity.
when I ea t a meal. But In the
She didn't take the advice,
same token you should thank the being heavily Into U.S. savings
coa l miners when you turn on bonds or somethin g at the time.
your light sw itch. Maybe you So she missed out on the chance
should change your name to
to get In on the very beginning of
FARM 1Forever Against Regu·
a business succes s story that has
lar Mining) .
added a new word to the English
I do not fight AEP's battles . I language. You knbw - the one
fjght every da y for the UMWA
meaning copying mac hine.
a nd the lives of the best e nergy
· Anyway, her mistake (fo r
You are clos e on your percen- resource In this country, our coa l
which I have not yel fully
tage on longwalls operating In miners. Thank you!
for~Jiven her, although we didn' t
this country. Actually there are
Gene C. Oiler
meet
until several years after)
12 percent longwa ll mines oper·
Locall886 comes · to mind with the Insider .
· attng In this coun try, mostly In
UMWA
trading scandal now shaking
WaiiStreet. · '
'
·
,
The merger manta and corpo:
rate takeovers 9! the past few
By United Pres. International
' years have seemed to me mostly
•.
Tod av Is Wednr:;day, Feb. 25, the5iith day of 1987with 309 to follow . a shell game that ~dds nothing to'
The moon Is moving toward It s new pha'se.
the natlon's · real weallh or the
The morning stars are W nus and Sat urn .
economy's productlvlly. Even
The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and J upit er.
'
most shareholders remain on the
Thosl' born on this day are under thl' sign of Pisces. They Include outside of the deals.
French painter Pierre Renoir In ls,l1, Ita lian operatic tenor E nrico
The action II all for the benefit
Caruso In 1873, s tatesman .John Foster Dulles in 1888, actor Jim of the lew big dealers and their
Backus In 1913 (age 74), tennis player Bobby Riggs In 1918 (age 69), parasitic platoons of brokers and
•
a nd &amp;oa tie George Harrison In 1943 tage44) .
attorneys. But such Immensely
profitable benefit that it atiracts
.;
On this da te In history:
the best and brightest from lhe
:•
In 1888, Pres ldenl Andrew Johnson was Impeached lor vio lation of
·: -th&lt;' Tenure of Office Act. He wa s acquittl'd of the charges the most pres tigious law and bust:
nes s schools with the promise
• ·following May.
In res ponsl' to M.E . Spezza·s
recent stalement in area
newspa pers:
I do not want to get Into thl'
little game of writing leit ers ba ck
and forth, but I feel your letter
needs to be answered.
You are right. Mr. Spezza. you
have heard from me for four
years. so It won 't hurt to hear
from me onl' more tlmr .
You feel the publ ic is being
deceived. I agree. But not by the
UMWA . Let's get ihl' fa c ts
straight. We have mined under 2:1
homes to date. Out of23 homes, 19
have been sett led with and no
lawyers were Involved. Three
have been assisted by lawyers,
' and of course there Is your $6.4
' million lawsuit that will come up
sometime In 1987. This Is a ll
public record .

..

:· ~ Today i~ history

l

that, with a ny luck at all, th ey abo ut the very rea l happenings
will be rolling In money after a on Wall Street.
few years.
Well , not rea lly my m'ind. It's
Many. of these whi z kids start , rea lly my wife's Idea, but I have
work fresh out of school a t annual no compun ction in appropriating
sa laries approaching the pre- it. Nor need there br a ny
Reagan na tional debt. They put consldera llon of a payoff. in
down roots on Manhattan's Eas l su itcases or even brown paper
Side In apartmenl s thai set th em bags. As I see it , aft er l hP
back In monthly upkl'('p · more opportunity back then fo r me to
money than most America ns see
In a n entire year.
Martin A. Siegel, the cent er of
the Inside scandal at the mo·
men! , was a 'l eader o( this pack.
E merging from Harvard Busi·
ness School with· Us highest
honors, he rose rapidly 'through
the high-priced ranks of Wa ll
Streel's top firms . At 38. he was
taking In a cou~le million a year
-legally.
"Up unlll today," a n acqualn·
lance observed, according to a
New York Times acco urit . " he
was considered by just about
everyone as the aii·Amerlcan
kid ."
.
What changed mind~ was the
revelation that Siegel was the
source of Illegal InformatiOn that
enabled arbitrageur Ivan Boesky
to make Illegal fortunes . Siegel
took his payoffs In suitcases
stuffed with cash. This allAmerican kid ; who, as II turned
out, a lso chealed on hl ~ , income
lax, hhas ended up !Inking on
confederates. Several haye been
arrested and the certainly on the
Street Is that there will be more.
I didn't see "Amerfka, " the
hallucinatory TV account of the
takeover oJ a demoralized United
"I think It 's time for us
States by th.e Soviet Union. But It
Anonymous."
comes to rnind that television' s
Imagining has something to say

t~

t'l'-l!

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27 !!II
22 J3

Mllwauluo
Allant a
fhlcaj{o
lndlan ~t

Clrn lnd

.821
.111

21,1,
:11,1

.$19
.It!

Kit.

10
.100 15

W#stern Co nferl!nCE'
Da11a&gt;t

Utah

HOU!~IOn

..

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6
... t!J 12

:n

:n

Goldl'n Stl

27 :SO ...14 16

29 .4S2 15'/t

Phoenix
!2 3J A!IO ~
LA C llpper11
9 4~ . m 31 V!
'I'H'IIdll)' '~ He1ult11
Detroit 100, New Jene,r 112
Portland 122, NeW \'ork IDI
Chlcalfjo liS, t\UiUJbl 103

I '!fl. .. dlanQ 1U
8acram1•nln lit, San Antonio 10£
Mlhr~tukel'

Elyria\\' ,I, Ob e rlin Flrel&amp;ndM :1-'
Frtmont St Joe -18. Elmwood -14
Gree•fleld Sf, Athen~ :II
ILin su lAkota 1!, Rl\'erdall'tfl
Key"'one 33, Oberlin 31
IUn ~man Bad.:er :10, A11ht Harbor fl
Urn• CC'nl Cll lh .n, Ke nton f1
Mlll'prrUa 110, (;lyde !il
Root~lown 10, Cl" Oranf(t' to
S~t•d Ptrk.IDN Z , Co llin" We~~ ter n

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f.tmpi'N• II

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63 2'tl Zfll
:ii 20! 003
50 ~ I&amp; '!21

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Pt :&gt;~.

6F GA

~ fl 81 1911 ~13
26 211 i st 2:1 1 ~5
23 'n 10 ~ 2112 HS
23 e9 9 .55 tt.1 2~ :1

2fi

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Sl . l..o..

Chl r a

To rot

2:1 32 '

32 209

!i m)·tht• Divbion
:m Ill $ 111 2113

Ed m

:n 6

7~

:m

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Wnn

31

fl ~tr)·

:15 2rl :t 72 210 Z'!'l

226 'lOll

b An
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VntH
I!J 36 II " \!113 H'l
"
1'ut&gt;Mda)"" R&lt;'ljult"
NY Ranl[t'l'l'i 6, Rulfatlo 3
Qtll'bn• 5. Mln lll'tiob -1
Pltlsburdl ~. Edmonton!
\\'MNhlnjttnn 5, Drtroil 'l
!&gt;it. l.oul!i :1, Nl ' l!ila ndl'n 1:
('lllltllry ~ . VaUk'OUW'r 0
" 'lnni!M"It ~. Lo~ An~tt&gt;lf'!oll
Y.' ~dnt·Miu,y'li Guml'!o
Edmonlon at Ntw olf!l'lif'J , ":': U p.m .
!'1.1' Ranjtrl'!lal Toronlo, 7::1~ p.m.
Roston ul Har tford. 7:35p.m .
Mont relli at Chlt• ~t~~o. II: :n p.m .

Boys scores
Bo)' NOhio Hl ~h &amp;:hool Rll.~kt• lhlloll
'l'u l'!ldll)"li Kt&gt;!!uK11
Rt&gt;~lllr Snl.'io n

Brya n':'"', b jtl'flon

J ~ fft'f'l'On ~. Pnr~

"'I

5:1
Oltawu Hllli'i '7t, Fe»~lorlllSI \\'e n 6A
Sy lvani a Northvlt•w til. Tol f entral

,.

...Tol

Uhbe~·

1113. Sy lnnlll Svuthvk•w

" Wnp llkoM a !U , ¥-t•nt on 5.'
T o ul'llltm ~ nts

fl lllois t\,\r\
i\kr Nonh16. i\kr But·ht t&gt;l Mi

&amp;lrht•rt on 93. Norton 414
fin t: ldrr ~ . (' In Hull:h t~ 511
Cln Oak Hllll'i .til, Mt Hu .llhy :J.'i

('In Prlnt•r tun IU, Syt• amor~• i5 (:!oil
f in Turpin -Ill, fin " 'rslrrn Hill;; tf
Col F.a."tmoor $11. " 'r,;aprvlllr S "'
Frankll• HilliS. Gll hiUINI-1:!
t.odl ( 'low rlf'id H. Nordonlu 46
Tidlmaadlwil. Sl- •
lhdl;worth 11:!, N Koyullon :1~
K'arrt'n Hardhll{ 13. Kll\'t'n1114 -1:1
Wlll'rt·n ~\·U It•II I, Cit• Bf'nt•dh1 h.w 1111

K'i'til Rran c• h 71. Hn••land li.1
fhot.Mi r\,\

fnl

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6'.!. \\'tliltlt11 5:!

Da,· ·h•fft•r.-o n GII.

E:. t n n 6~

lo' •ir Ot&gt;ld Un ioniJ, Lh·klnlt VlllSO
Ham ll tun &amp;din S-1. l'linlon .'WlU&gt;Jok'

"

...

.lnnlllhan i\ l~·r II, Madl~ on Ptldm; i4
t..•aviU!ohorJI l..aBrnl' lilt, Chllmplon
Ml'l~·rmott

Lawhorn
'87 Coach
of Year

Mlll'y ~

A

Fo!ilorla St Wl'ndeiln

Norlhwi'MI 70. Pl't•hlf'S

.~ount Gii l':tdH

Mar k! nF.1.-tn-I!J
Nallunal 'l't'all&amp;ll. 1.111 k· Mi1Ulli51
l'liorlh l lnh1 n ll'l . 8111: \\'ainu\ :11

Po 11 ,.mnu tiiM' H . PlkMnn tl (nO
Hitf~ti'Wood 7.1, TIJ!U' llf aWib Valli.~
Sh• •ridan 'It, llt•mlot•k Mlll•·r II
Tlpp flly IIJ, Indian Lllkt • l.i
Urhanllllli, Sprlnll: Northw;'!o tl' rn 5:!
C'l ~oW~r~ A
f'.11dl! .13, llll' kl')' l ' Soulh Ill
l 't•nl ••rhur.: 3!1, .\t i~rlon ( 'at h 31

~ 1.

MOUNT VERNON. Ohi·o
(UP!)- All en Walker of Walsh
College has been picked as the
playe r of the year in th e MidOhio Confer ence and J oh n La ·
whorn of league cha mpion R io
Gra nde was named the coac h of
the year.
Walker . a 6·4 senior from
Ca nton, had a scor in g aver age of
16.4polnt s pergameand grabbed ·
an average of 12.4 rebounds.
Rio Grande. which won th e
league champio nship with an 11-]
record and was 25· 7 overall. ha d
two players named to the a ll·
conference team. Joe Verhoff
wa s nam ed for the third time and
Mike Smith was chosen la st year.
Also na med to the flr ., t lea rn
were junior Rex Adam s of
Malone Co llege and senior Tom
Clark of Mount Vernon .
Chosen to the second loa m
were juniors Mi ke Freema n a nd
Don Simer ly of Cedarville Col·
lebe, junior Ron Rlttenger of Rio
Gra nde, sophomore Skibo Sims
of Tiffin Universi ty a nd fres h·
man Shawn Gamb le of Wal sh
College.

Woodmol't'

10
Hllhop SS. Hicluivllh• 311
Hn~"-'t' ll

Loudon SO, GitlsoniNrK 2"l

Kalida 59, P atrlt:k Ht nr y 511
Lt't~pl c ~3, ColumhuMGrO\'f ~

Um a rrrry "lV, Arlln.:ton U

&amp; &amp;K 201 !fU

M' L T

Lun~

65, Plymouth S8
Ma dt•lr• ~. Cln Mar iemont II
r.tan~Ot•ld P~eler~ IIi, Hyt•wmorl&gt; Mo·

hawk

'"

North Hultlmoft. Sol, M1•Comh 3i
Ort• ,;on~trltdt l3, Swunton U

Pllrb'IIY 38, Mln111rr ll
Prill~\'lll t• It, Evt•rlf1't'III.W
Rlplt•)' il. fin l..andmukt:t:
Ro!i!iiOrd l3, OIM'I(O l l
SiinduMicy St Mury
Nt&gt;~ London fi
~I H1•nr)l ~I . Marion Lo1•ul :1:1

.r:.

G iris ratings

l.)'nl·hhllr.: fiii.V 69 , " ' Lid hllm $,\
N1•w Ko..lon !i'!. (•ortJon Wulh fla.v 5-I

6. Ea~ t ( 'lf'VI'Iand S huw t I!). I l
~7
7. fin MI. Notrt• Dumt• II,._ !I
11l
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n
fl. fin l'rll~:cto n I 11·3)
H
lll.Tul l 'l'nlra l Catholic- t I!J. I J
10
St't'U nd lt•n : II . Kc ttl'rlnR l'' lllrmunt (I)
3&amp;: 12. l&gt;lldn r)' 37: 1:t. M a n~ lh&gt;ld M-nlnr
I&amp;; U. Uppl'f' 1\rtln~tton 12; U. (tk'J
\\'anaw Rlvrr Vl~w and Liln cl!ll&lt;lrr. II
t•at•h: 11. !\II' ) flnt•innu&amp;l M c ,\u~ 11 nd
fhllikolhf' , II o.!ilt'h: Ill. fn lumhu r. So uth
7: 2'11 . ('o lumhu ~ !lionhland l .
I '"" 1 I

Tram

I. " '1'!11 Hol mt'" I U l fl0- 01.
2. "i'll!ivUit• W (~ Ill
3. Tlpp (Uy ( 3) ( HH I
t \ 'lc•llll Ma lhfMr. !11 1'!0-0 )
l . " 't&gt; lll•.-ton (~ 01
6. Pomwny MPilt'l (H- OI

7. Gf'rmlllllown

Pnlnll'i
~liD

:!Oil
17:!
1011
!li
"3

Valii'~VIt•wiiH 'l0- 0 1

1111

II. Bcoluk \l'H IBran l' h (I J (1:0-fll
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! . 1.im111 Balh cIt- I 1
81
llt,flll l lalil!l Mlli' KI!II't'l.t.a Il l I 'lO--t) .
!~
St'~-ond li•n : 11. ~ truthrno ill 3.1: 1'.! .
R)e&gt;YUir Mc&gt;dowhrook 11; 13. \l. l' s t
Mur.klnpm 3~: 1-1. Kot·k)' Rlvr r Lut hi'--

No
Shl'l'wood F:tirvit'W ~: IIi.
H111mllton Ro10,. 1:1: li . Hlr l Sprln1·
flo•ld
Krntnn Rldltl' and WIU'rl'lt fh11111pion, 1:1
' ' ~M' h : lt. f ,\Pt: 12: \!0 . ttk•l I olumhu"
R1•ady a nd Nort h Um a SOuth RIUl~·. II
l'at'h.
\\'!'ti t 't!l: l l .

Trum
P oi nl10
t. Pt•t•N..,. tlZ l 11:0-n,
'!1-1
'l. Budu•\'1' ft•ntrJI (li ) (Ill- I )
1:0:1
:1. Df(ir~ ff Rh'~rsldl' HI (2(1..n)
116
1. lndllan Vall"~ south t 11 1 111- ·! l
l:t..!
.\, Ka lida ( IJ. Il
Utll
6. DrlphoN~U . ,Jflhn'l&lt; tl) 11 11--'!1
IINI
i . M:id.f'lown F1•nwh•k ( l'i·!i
K11
~ - Jl~andllr~ ·GIIbolll ( I ~ I l

&amp;:1

!1 . Zauu'!&gt;oiv\llro Rn!ircTan" 1li ·:IJ

.jll
:!7
St•tond It'D : II . \ 'l'hat/IIP!o :,!fi: 1'!.
Rutklllll Ill: U. Man !il\l•ld ." it. Pt • ll'r'~ ii:
1-1. N••w11rk faihtl lk 1~ : 1 ~ . Norch ,\d am~
13: ·II, Dian vill i' II : 17. fo nvo)' fr1'10 tvlrw
ID..It"'l'ti·Si.·lo {li-:h

Ill: Ill. Franklin t'urllll' ·•· (frl'l' n !t; 19.
l lniotn II: 'M. (Ill') Marlon l..u1·al IUld
Ml~~l!iiiiUWll V llilr,, •, 7 l'lll 'h.

Ill
1!1

19 _. !Ui
16 - 6X

Girl~ Ohio Hl •h St•hctol &amp;.~ krtball
'1\i•·~d ii.Y'" Teut~~~~ml• nl

Kt•J&lt;Utl ll
AAft
,\ kr t:a~ t 13. r\kr St \ 'lni ·l'nl tl
ftllloi~&gt;

Rl•a\ t•r HI't'k 311. ( ' l a)' IIUI N'nrt hmont

••C'J•I\tl'rvill!'.\1. Ko•l r\ltt•r 11
•.

WL
Hannlln Tr11tP .............. 1 ~ ~
North Galtla .. ...... .. ....... l:t 6
Southern .. .................... 12 K

aftrrnoon. Monday

·

Mr mbrr : Unirrd Prrs!'l Intrrnatlonal.
In lan d Da ll.v Prf'!ls M soclat ion a nd I h£'

Ohio Nrw .~ papr r A !lsoclal lon. Nat lona l
Advrr l is ln ~ Rcprcs(&gt;Oia t iVfl , Bran ham
NPw spapM· Sal !'!i . 7.13 Th ird Avf'nur .
Nrw Yo r k. Nf'w Yor k 10017.

POSTMASTER: Se-nd acl clrN~s ~han'~

R .

• Pnc-es mclude spOOal oplions and ru\lrJm
lra t u~ (Full namr feature exira)
Th 1~

111~1 f'fl~ llllil~

special pnre opplies to V~lad 1 um nn );~

only. IOK &amp; l4K gold ava1lable at ~1glw r
pnces. Ask o~bout ou1 coiJPge tJad~ · in
op liOn

ll"'•&gt;flro trpror• M&lt;~ v

VALI\DIUM

II I'll' '·

&amp;~

~J'etielers

212 E . Main, Pomeroy
Offered ~xclusively by R. jOHNS, LTD .

MOUNT VE KNOS. Ohl(J 11 PI!
- Mt•mhl•r ;; ul lht• All Mld-OMn f'onh•r·
r n tl' fl rs1111 nd ~•·l"Ond ll •a m.~ :
Fi rst T(' a/11
r\ll l'n \h.Jkrr, \ht ~h ('o ll1•~·. t\ut·
ton,.'\r, l)..j , li. ~ PPK. I ~. I N'hoUildl'i.
-lile Vt•rholl , ((lo C&gt;raudt• t'nl·
11-.Ct•. Kalida. ~r, 6- 1, 21. !1 pp~. 111..1
n•huu nd~ .

Mlk1• Sm it h, Rio t : r :tnlh• rol·
lt' lii(', f amhrld,~:•·· , r , fl.:t. Ill . ~ p p~: . :t.H
· n ·hound;; .

Rn ,\d ams, ,\ hilnn. • Collt•f.:' '· \\' 11 ·
lard , jr , &amp;.~. lti. l JIPK· ln.:t t('hou ndJo .
Ton1 Clatrk, Mount VrrrHJn,

Man~llrl d.

11r , !i-11, 17.1 ppJ:, ~. 7 rt •hound ...
Sfi"Ond T~·am
Mlki&gt; fr...-nutn , ( 'edarvlh•. fhlll lt•;;·
ton, M',Va., jr, 6-~. 111.1 ppll;. 3. I r1'1111 und ~ .
Sh•w n Gam hl t•. " 'al."&gt;h C'olll'ltl'. M :1n ~ ·
lh•ld, lr. &amp;--1, 11.!1 pph . .t.a rrhound;;. ,
Don SlmCTiy, t".• du vlllr ( 'ollr • ~J:r'.
Dl'lrnlt, tf, 6-!1, la.fi PPit• ll.:i ri•huundJo .
Ron Hlttl'n ,;f' r, Riu Gran d,•. fhlltl·
t·OIIM'. j r , 6-6. 17.9 ppl{, ti.:i N' tlojlnd&gt;o.
Skttlo Slm!&gt;oi , Tiffin. ,\kron, :&lt;&gt;(1, tt-l. l ij ."!
PPII · ).I rl'llOUnd,,
( 'n,u ·h uf tht• \ ' t•ar : .Juhn l.a whurn. IUn

Grandt• .

Pla.1'1'r 11! th l' \ 'l'ur : ,\ll; •n " ':11111·r.
\\'llish.

NISSAII SENTRA
America's best selling import in its class- and we 're
dealing!
Basfd on R L

Pol~

ne ll' Cill regJS/tdiiOmi llllu Sept 1986

Transactions
RaM• hall
flnl•innatl - Outli 1• i dr • r~ Tra( ·,v .I ll hi''
und J ...n f&gt;arl'l a and s hnrl ~ tn1• Rurr .~
l .urltln :tJ:rl•••d tn l· fl'lll' t1inii".Jtb .
('ll'n\and - SIJ{nNt pJtc ·h1•r Sl'Otl
Ba liN to a l · )'l' ar t•unlrJI't.
IMroll - lnlll•ldf'r Uarrr ll l:: van~
Ultrt"•d In 14 l·yt•lll' t·o ntr ad .
Mlhuuki•t• - ~ l 1t n1•d llr ~t hiL~I' man

Nt•lolo' \'nrk tALl - SIJ;nt'tl pllt·h,-r Roh

PF PA
1339 1273
1166 11M2
IW 1!57

Oook Hill ....................... 12 H 1265 116M
Knft' Creek............... .... 9 11 1042 Jltl9
Ea.Hiern . ......................... x 12 1303 12HO
1157

(C hw• A ToumamentH )
(' roc*~JvUie

Eas lc rn

8H Soulhwt!!llern S6
ToniA:ht '" "lUll~ :

AI Mt·l~
vs. Kner Creek, 7 p.m.

Southern VN . Trimble, 8:45p.m.

Thui'Mi ay

At South Point
H.-nnan Trace vt~ . Ironton St. Jo e, 1:30
p.m.
Frldl&amp;)'
1~1

T'""""har)' und l 'id( ·hl' r 1'11\ll.umhardliu

I·

~·••Jlf l 'nnlral'l ~ .
N1•w \ 'or k cXI.) -

)o!J,;m•d n t e h(' r
Harry L)'Ont&gt;. uullit•l dl' r ll T••rry Rlo.-kl' r
Wid Mari'UMl.awtun und lnU t• ldri'JI Kl'lth
,'WIJIH and 7.o lln ~anJ : h t•J, to I· )'1':11'
c·lllll r atd- .

1335

X·Finillhed 8eiUOO,
1'\lrsday'!'l rettull

(UH P S li ~960J

th rough Frlt l a~. IU Cou rt S1.. Po ·
nwrov. Ohio. bv lhf' Ohi o V;.~I I P~' Pub·
lishl n'g Cnm pti nv Mlllllmi'd la. Inr..
Pomf'l' OV, Oh ln4~769. Ph. 99'1·2151i !;('.
rood r l :i~~ po~laj:!r pal&lt;l il l Pomt'l·~ .

lhl'

Of W.lt I'&gt; lllllfH 1'11&lt; •

, fllhn~ o n.

Srmm ... Vall&lt;r ..... ...... ... ~ 16 tOO ltl5

i\ Division of Multimedi a. Inc·.

PLATI N

Three great R. /ohn s ring
styles to choose from!

Minlll'!lllll ll - A~tr•·•·d t u a l' o ni~J I'l ~o~o• il:h
pllt ·hrr l ..l'ti Strilk ('t',
Mont N·ul - Sl,~~;n••d utllltym an " 'allat ·••

SVAC Standings

lii -Southw~lrrn ............... ~ 1:1

The Daily Sentinel

THURSDAY~ ~

20 thru

.Jim t\ ddud .

(OVERALL I

Ohio.

I '~

'lO

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1!1117 Un ltrd Prt'!&lt;Jo lnt t'rnatlonul Ohi o
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Farmln«ton ~3. Mc Donald :II\
Fl&amp;yC'IIt&gt; ~~ . Ed I{Prlon .5I

Adam.\ Dlvb lon

Rum

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.Jii, BIII 'JI'W'I 311
Ill, Van Wl'rl 311
Upper Santfu!iky .j3, ColoN'! (' ruwlord

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2:1 :11 5 H 2106 a&amp;

til ~ II
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[)p lpho~ S tJohn~ iO, Lln~..-ola..,IPYI S~

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23 211 10 :16 u-1 :m
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Della U, W~WIIeGn -'1

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Cortland Lilkevlew 61, Llherty ~I

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Blulflnn M. Uheri)' Henion 33
Bolldn11 ~. Ru!l~ la 1-1
8rilltolvUIP 61, K'oodrldll:t' 5'
DelpOO..Jtlf('l'.!iOn M. Ohio Cit y :Ill

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Hrtlr

ro nc! udf'd

( 'IWOK .''i\'11 .1.1': I ill'! I - 'fnm Go!'ismMn ,
i-11· 1·1: ll:111 Sd wo l~·)' . 1\.. 1· 20: (;rf'lt Willi·
am;;, :t-!J.Ii: 1\ a 1'1111 'I' a}' lur: Chris Hufl} ,
11 ·~·20: l ~t nny .l :arrl'lt. I-Ii·'.!: lhu'•' Willi·
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sou·rmn:sTEit~' tr,iil - Antly 1t1tl~·
luJ), :t. t-11: .J u .. t .r Uurl1 "'nn . 6- 1·1:1: Onn

C)f' Lutheran W 511, Mrdlna Hlpland S7
Copley $t, Middlefield Cardlnll.l t2

Vienna MatiW'W119't, mrard -1 ~
Wyomlnt'JI.I, Ell11l Clinton S:i

NI\TION.U HOCKE\' LEA6U E
Y.'ah-,; c:onlere nl'e
Palrit' k Dld'llon

n

South weslern

1986-87 campaign with an 8·1:1
reco rd. Croo ksvi lle wil l now tak &lt;'
on North Gai lia in a s ~ co nd ro und
con lest a t 7:30 p.m.
· in th r

Me igs gym
Box scor t' :

ToiDeVIIh6n82, Holland Sprl n~39
Tol Macomtler .J.t, Tol Woodward U

.

NHL results

B~Nn

Lemon MonriM' 49

Shl'l~

fh·vl'l.llfld at Ot-t roil, 1:30 p.m.
Sat·ramrnlo at Dalll&amp;.!i, K:3t p.m .
Phol'nl!lat Li\ Lltkl'l'!'l, 1&amp;:30 p.m .

PrtMb
Nw .Jr

'~

No rill Culon49, Grren.o;burjl: Grel!n -II
Wchfteld Revel'!' 5!, Hud11on .til
Sidney 53, C:.ret-n\'UII'ft
To I Central 66, Orrson CI;cy -Ill

"

D1•nver I:U, Hnulllon 105
Utah 1:U. S.•aillo.! lOS
1.r\ U. kel'!l !1'7, Plloenl'l 93
t'iednellday'N Gaml'!i
Portland a.t Bo.;lon. 7:31 p.m.

\\'Nhn

Mlddlet-n

Cl• Sl Unulll SO, Cln CAPE .j3

~5

Sealtk&gt;

211

"

31 23 .514

Paclllc Dh• ~lon
U 13 .Nf 35 21 .625 71,:1

rhilu
N\' 1111
Nl'R

MuMUion Ja cbon 52, Ma1111 M'Mh

Clafts AA
AKhl Ed~f'Wood !10 , Pymat•nlnl{ Val :n
Bryan 5!, PIWidln~t~ll

19 36 .U5 18 1,1
IH 36 .:W 11'

LA Lak en~
Portland

Fairmont~. Wllmlnxtoa:W
Madl~on 12. Mayneld U

k et

W L P et. GB
35 19 .6411 29
21

Dt&gt;nver
~ an !\ntnnl
Sal:ramnt

Defiance 51, LlmaShawnel' SA
&amp;!dlab Northi'T, Mutor43
F ln41 a,- &amp;3, Celina -'4

Three Highlander s fin ished In
double fi gures, led by Da n
Patri ck's 18 marker s. .lusty
Burleso n tossed in U ancl Andy
Hai stop chi pp&lt;'d in wilh IJ . Davr
Mers hon adcl £'d eig ht for th e
losers.

Tol W11Mmer7~. AnU10 nyWayne 3'7

Mldwt!lt Divltilon

Giris scores
marry a Woman of Mea ns, she
owes ml' a f least thi s now. ·
Anyway. th e Idea Is that (he
surviya l of a free America
found ed on free e nterprise Js. In
greater peril internally from the
opera lors on Wa ll Street than it Is
ever lik ely to be from lhr type of
ex ter nal lhr eat Imaged :In
"Amerlka ."

Berry's World

J

It

·111,1

Central Dl\olslon
:{6 17 . 679 -

Df!troll

Ja_c_k_A_nd_e_rs_o_n_&amp;_D_a_le_V&lt;_a_n_A_tt_a

On aii-Americans _ _ _ _ _ _ _Do_n_Gr~a//

•

WMhngtn
Ne~o~· York •
New JuK)'

-

defeat Tu esda y night in the
opening round of the 1987 Class A
SecUonal bas ketball tou r na ment
at Meigs Hi gh SchooL
The Ceramics led 34·21 a l
halfllme and &gt;2·37 goin g inlo thr
final stanza.
Three Crooksv ille players fin ·
Ished In double figu re&gt; in scoring.
Dan Schooley and Chr is Duff)'
had 20 apiece. Tom Goss man
ch ipped In wit h 14 .

Crooksv ille jumped out In front
14·9 after one period, then went
on to hand. Southwestern a 68-56

Cln A.ntler10t138. Cln MeNic•l• 33
Cln Seton~. Cia Wet'-' aHII bl. ,
Co lumbl~ II, Olm1led Fall&amp; U lot I
.D•y Pat~on 57, Mland11hur~~: U

Melli" I

North Galli• vs. Cr001kvUte, 7:30.
. Saturd•y
At South Polnl

FriUikllft Funact Green vt1. Symmes
V•lley al 8 p.m.
i\.1 Melp '

Wlnnert' of Wedn el!lday•il KllmCH meet iii
7; 30. Two wlnners advuce lo Chillicothe

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�Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'·'

,fi~

'"

Wednesday, February 25, 1987

'l.i:Y

~

Rio Grande College 125-7) will
face TH!In University Thursday
at 7: 30p.m. at the Paul R. Lyne
Center In first-round action of
men's Nationa l Association of
Interco ll egiate Athletics District
22 Tournament .
Prior to winning the MOC
crown last week, RioGrandewon
the Bevo Francis Class ic for the
fifth year In a row. The Redmen
a lso won the Wilmington Invita ·
tiona I and , for the fi rs t time, the
Cata wba (N .C .! 7 UP Class ic.
"II was a grea t season," said
this year's MOC Coac h of the
Year. John Lawhorn, who has

Is just what It was. A season. Now
it's a whole new gam e. Sudden
death time."
Rio Grande was victorious In
the last two games against the
Dragons. On Jan. 20 the Redmen
beat Tiffin 97-80 at the Lyne
Center and won 76-72 In Tiffin
Ohio on Feb. 10. Tiffin defeated
Rio 105-83 in the opening round of
the . Muskl ngum Tournament
Nov. 22.
"I t will be a ba nging ball
game; very physical, " Lawhorn
sai d. "We really looked s harp
tonight (Tuesday) In practice.
We gave them Monday off, will

~~nc~0n~~;.:~l~~g::~:.i~.~~~~~~~

Reds sign
three more
prospe~ts
TAMPA , Fla. iUPii - The
Cinci nnati Reds' list of uns igned
players was reduced to six
T uesday as outfielders Tracy
Jones and Leo Garcia a nd
s hortstop Barry Larkin agreed to
one-year contracts.
Terms of th e d ea ls were not
disclosed.
"You don' t have much bar·
gai ning powe r when you on ly
wen t to bat 86 ti mes, but the Reds

STREAK ENDS -Temple's Derrick Brantley jumps in vain to
relrcive a pass as Wes t Vir~inia's Darrell Pinckney (left) covers
during Atlantic 10 college game in McGonigle Hall In Philadelphia
Tuesday night. The Mountaineers upset the Owls, 64-61, snappin g
th e nation' s longest winning s treak . 1UPI)

Mountaineers end
;Owls streak 64-61
'

By DAVID E. NATHAN
UPI Sports Writer
Wes t Virg inia s hut dow n Nat e
13 iackwe il of Temple Tuesda y
plghl , and that he lped to snap Ihe
pat ion' s longes t active winn ing
streak.
· J .J . Craw l s hadowed Bl ac k·
well in the MountaincN s ' box and-one defen se an d lim it ed
Te mple 's leading scorer 10 just 8
poin ts - 12 fewer than hi s
average -

us West Vi rginia

downed its Atlanl ic 10 rivals 64·
61.
" I didn't take Bla ckwe ll a ll by
myself. " Craw l said. " l had a lot
of help. I lhink tha t did it."
Temp le madt' onl y 11 of its ~ 5
second -half s hots · a nd fin ished
with 38 perce nl accuracy for the
game . Blackwe ll was J of 8 from
Ihe floor and had just 2 assis ts.
"Anytime you beat a good
tea m like Temple . you have to b&lt;'
pleased and we definit ely are
pleased." Wes l Vi rginia Coach
Gale Ca tlet t sa id . "Our defense
was terrific a ll ni ght. "
The loss broke Temple's 15·
game winning s treak a nd ended
the Ow ls' 33-game unbeaten
strea k a t McGonigle Ha ll In
Philadelphia .
The Ow ls had an un characler·
is llca lly poor shooting night fro m
:!- poin t rang&lt;'. Mike Vreeswyk
and Howard Eva ns combined to
make jus t 6 of 28 of their J"polnt
att emot s .
" f jus t felt Howle and Mike
could have s hot the ball bet ter,"
Temp le Coach J ohn Cha ney said.
"You can't fire the ba ll Inside
when they ' re pac king it In and we
couldn 't free Na te ."
Craw l also hu r t Temple with
his shooting, hitti ng a n off.
bal ance ju mper with one second
rema ining on the 45· second shot
clock to break a 55· 55 tie with 53
seconds to play and gave West
Virg inia th e lead for good.
Temple tu rned the ball over
when Darrin Pea rsall could not
handle a Blac kwell pass. and
Herbie Brooks sank 2 free throws
with 28 seco nds 10 play for West
Virginia .
Tyron Shaw had Hi poin ts for

College

Wes t Virginia. 21 ·6 overall a nd
15·3 in lhc Allanlic 10, while
Brooks had 15 a nd Craw l 10.
Vreeswyk led the Owls, 28-J a nd
17-1, with 18 poi nt s while Eva ns
had 15 an d Tim Perry 14.
In other top ga mes , No. 7
Georgetown ripped Boston Col·
l!'gc 79-65. Iowa Sta te surp rised
No. 14 Oklahoma 86·84 and
Missouri downed Kansas Stare
80-75.
fl t . Bos ton, Reggie Williams
scored 25 point s and Pe r ry
Mc Do na ld added 18 to lead
Georgetow n past Bos ton College.
AI Ames, Iowa, Tom Sc hafer
hll a s hort jumper as time
exp ired to lift Iowa State over
Ok la homa .
At Manhattan. Kan ., Lee Co·
ward m ade a ~- point shot wllh
1: 4:l to p lay to break the ga m e's
fina l lie and lift Missouri into
flt·st place in the Big Eight wit h a
victory over Kansas Sta le .
Elsewhere, Army topped La·
Sa lle 68-59, Navy clobbered Rich·
mond 84-66. Hart ford beat Col·
ga le 60-54, Princeton edged Penn
63·59, Rutgers sto pped St. J o·
seph's 83-76, Drake defeated
Creig ht on 67-61 a nd Wichita State
downed Chicago State 78· 67.

were
ir ." insaid
who
batted fa.349
1986,Jon
hises,rook
ie
season. ·'They have been good to
me throughout my career.
·
"My ma in concern is playing
ba ll. " he sa id. " Making money Is
second ."
J ones suffered a pulled ham st·
ri ng in May, a nd he did not p lay
aga in aft er tearing tendons In his
wrist in July.
He suffered the wri st injury
playing firs t base, and enter in g
s pring trai nin g he was co nsi·
dered a ca ndidate fort he sta rting
firs t base job. Bu t manager P e te
Rose has scuttled those ideas,
say ing th at Jones will be the
team 's fou rth outfielder.
"There are too man y things I
can do to have me strictly at first
base," Jo nes sai d. " With m y
hyper temperament, it 's bes t not
to have me over there where I
could hurt somebody."
All bu t six players have a l·
ready reported to camp, a nd
Ihose six are due to rPport today .
At Tuesday's workout, 11
pitchers threw UO minutes of
balling practice for the first time
this spring.
Outfielder Dave Parker, w ho
arrived at ca mp ea rly , sa id the
pitc hers are ahead of the bailers
at this point , and they should be.
' ' I've got sore hands but it feels
good getting the baseball mus·
cles loosened up," 'Parke r said.
''G ive me a week and I' ll ca tch up
with them."

MOC Standings
(Final ....

~··)

MOC

lod~y

have a good practice
and
tomorrow we'll be ready ." ·
" I'm 11 kl d 10
..
whor
c e
death, La·
team n ~.aid of his second-seeded
wlnn. Iff wrh wlnMwf pi~ :h~
0
. er
~ a one· as.
game m our living room. We
~~~k~ ht~rd ~II season to be in
Th~ ~~d~~
13 2 1 h
this year 7nte ~ ~ ~~~'
agams
opLan~nts.
.
winn~ orn satd ,lhe keys I?
g Thursday s game are.
Con tinued on page 5

l

I

17 12 .586

1

11 12 .5H6

Ccdar\' lll r ................. .G

~

16 9 .640

Ohio [}()minlcan·z ....... 5 9
Urbana· z............... .. ... 5 9
1\tt. Vernon 1'\:az.-z ...... 2 12

fl 22 .211
11 19 .375
:1 2.1 .Ill

.

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W1'th Fr1'es

z-Due to an in f'li~ l bl e playrr, MV NC
fo rn•d lo forfell Its fir~ eight

~· ~L"

.

••••ttttlllttttttttlltlltt

Urbana.
Monday's result:
Dcfhance 87 Urhnna j9
Tu esday ' s re.o; ult
Wilmln~on 91 Ohio Dominican ~2
Thursday's games:
Tilfln at Rlo Grund l'

POMEROY, OH. .

~

Sl 69
I

rr;;;;;;~===~~~========~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

.game average, wa s ~hosen to' the

OUR BUSINESS BEGINS
WITH FILLING YOUR
PRESCRIPTIONS.

-~~~~is1~i~t r~~a.":t 1 ~~~ ~rh ~~:~~

school classmate Joe Verhoff of

Rio Grande College. The two are
from Kalida .
The 6·5 ·ouMonte, from Pent·
water, Mic h.,. carried a 27. 1
scoring average and grabbed an
average of 9.1 rebounds a game.
Coaches of the NAJA teams In
the district voted for the top
players, with 10 being named
all-district.
Also on the team are· seniors
Mike Smit h of Rio Grande, Allen
Walker of Walsh College, juniors
:Dennis Bostelman of Defiance
"College, Rex Adams of Malone
·College, and Mike Freeman a nd
Don Simerly of Cedarville Col·
lege; sophomore Aaron Roth of
Findlay Collebe and freshman
Shawn Gamble of Wa lsh Co1Iege.

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.,~ ,.,rt,. S l. 111 Northw!HMI71

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'"Our Prkf'!l fT!on 't
deA
!eatedw Ob erlin N68-53. M .
into Thu rhsda~ .. nighl's gah~he •. T.' ~e at wo h~earmn ds wefrctheticdfr·,-'"·.·r'
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Kenyo n tra iled -25·20 al the half.
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with 16 points. scored a ll four
regulation. With 52 seconds re· with a s hot from the key, se lling
Ke nyon points in · the fin al
mainiqg, Woos ter 's Rob Peter· Ihe stage for Morris's ga mr ·
overtime.
son hit a three· pointer to tie the win ning s hot.
3221.Jarlwln Avenue
Potnl Plea&lt;anl
r-=-=~~~:_:_:_:_.=_:.__:.:_:::.:_::_:..:_:_:_::::::___ _ _ _ _ _ _ __::::_::_::.:_:::_:.::._=:::.::.~~~:::_--.=::,:::~=--------~::=::=:::-::::::-::-=:-===~~;o;;...,f
f The Nort h CoasttAthletlcd Co nh·
erence 1ournamen opene w11
a fl ourish Tuesday night as
Kenyon nipped Woos ter in tr iple
overtime to gain a berth against
league champion Ohio Wes leya n
in the second round .
In other fir sHound games
Tuesday night , Denison notched
a n 81·71 win over Case Western

10.3 rebounds.
Aaron Roth, Findlay Co ~
lege, Sandusi&lt;y, sl&gt;, 5-10, 11.0

BASKETS

Fr.nkJ in 76, ln d-RE'7S
llll nol~ Coli. 1(4, MtuMurraY ll3

luwu Si . 1!6, Okllahom11.llol
Mur lon ll, Bfotlwtlll1
Mm1M111rll'IO. KanMII st. 'n
Moody "lble Ji ll, NIIM t4

SEIMCE

ga me at o2 -52.

legt&gt;, Wlllar~, jr, &amp;-5, 16:1 ppg,

99¢

$}19

SELECTED GROUP

ALL FOOTWEAR

The Lords take a 13·13 record

fian ce Colle~e. Deshler, jr,
6-6, 24.8 ppg, 10.2 reboonds.
Rc. Adams, Malone Col·

R.C.

MEN'S OR LADIES'

2.5°/o OFF

Reserve. and Alleg heny 1Pa.1

I

rebounds.

AnllJ' li)l, L.uSiillo• !ill
fla ii!'O Oil &amp;4 . t\ rn lll'r~ lG

l'hllu . l' harm lll')' Kl. 84•11Hf C'oll. 3 ~
l' ly m nuth St. ;1-4, l iMa""" Ro:t~~ lon II!
l'flt !ld!im Sl. lll, s a. Luwn-n~ · r39
Prln&lt; ·~· l o n t;J, r~· nn l!l

---·---------~-~~
EWINO'S RADIATOR

Kenyon nips Wooster in,overtime in Ohio play
By United Press International

4

versu s ODC," according to La·
whorn : Second Tea m All MOC
performer Ron Rl ttln ger, a 6·7
junior forwa rd who lea ds the
team in field goa l percentage;
a nd First Tram All MOC forward
and MOC scoring leader 121. 5
ppg) Joe Ver hoff, a 6·4 senior
co-captain with Smith .

12.4 rebound•
,Jo e
Verhofl,
Rlo
Grande College,.Kallda, .r,
6·1, 21.9 ppg, 10.5 rebounds.
Sm llh ,
Rl o
Mik e
Grande
Co llege, Cam·
bridge, sr, &amp;-3, IH.2 ppg, 3.6

Reg. 111'

675-4340

In double figures his las t three
ga mes, F'irst Tea m All MOC and
District 22 performer Mike
Smith. a 6-3 senior guard who
scored 50 to tal poin ts In two
outings agai nst Ohio Dominica n
this yea r; 6-7 junior cen ter Duug
Fogt, who " had a s trong pe rfor·
m a nce at bot h ends of the fl oor

lege, Canton, sr, 6-4, 16.'4 ppg,

FANTASTIK
All Purpose
Cleaner

\lhanv St. 79. 1'1Mhltur.: h Sl. ~ I
A lh· .: l~·n,· ~. Olwrlln M
1\nwrkanlnl'l ;n. tb~tUltptlnn liti

llh;wa t ' nll . 11, On Mi nl il St . •'1:1
l .n~o~ o•ll "II .~~ . Ctl nnrl'I I&lt; ·Ut hG
Mt•rrh m&amp;d l 711, Bo•nt iP)' 69
:"'f'w \ ' ur~ l J. 1K, Sk ldmor r U
N'•·"' ll illllpsh lrt• foil. 79. Qul nnlph1!'611
1\0o rtlt ,\ d•uns Sl. il2, RrldlfPWIIIt•r St . '7tl

sey, 6-0 sophomore guard Skibo
Sims, 6-6 sophomore center
James Norman, 6-5 sophomore
forward Ge ne Williams a nd 6·5
fr es hman forwaar d Ty ro ne
Tr bovich.
Rio's proba ble s tarters includ e
o-11 sop homore point guard An·
thony R ay more. who has scored

Randy Korlokra•, Find·
lay College, Kalida, sr, &amp;-3,
%8.1 ppg, I 1.9 rebounds
Pele DuMonte, Blufllon Col·

MAXI
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1

Rostnn C11ll . 6.\
HMm lll"n i :J, lt lc·tl Tl'c•h 6S
ll ttrtlorO till, f~l l «tU I' l l

Co ntrol the tempo of th e game.
have a strong tra nsition ga me,
have movement off the ball , be
quick and sha rp, contro l thr
boards and have no ment al
mis ta kes.
Th e probable star ling lineup
for seve nth -seeded T iffi n is 5·9
sophomore guard Scott Mor ris·

cantlnurdfrom page

chosen by the coaches:

STAYFREE

L------::::=::::------'-G;;;·;.;£;;...;;;;list 1139"

f i i 'O f lf t~ o wn 19,

ppb, 5.0 rebounds.
Don Simerly, Cedarville
College, ·Detroit, jr, &amp;-9, 13-6
ppg, M rebounds. ·
Coach ol the Year: Dan
Pelers, Walsh College, 21·9.
Most Valuable Player:
Randy Kori&lt;Jkrax, Findlay
College.

6-5, 27.t ppg, 1.1 rebounds.
Allen Walker, Walllh Col·

•Deodorant

foa!il Guard Ill , C ' on~t~• c · l k nt C'nll. 67
t :U !'ih•ru ('nnn. tifi , H .l . ('oil. ;\,\

lege, Mansfield, fr, 6-4, 14.9

Redmen host Tiffin Thursday ...

lege, Pentwaler1 Mich. , s r,

•Regular
•Super

;~cores
..:u ~ ·

Mike Freeman, Ce darvlle,

Charleston, W.Va., jr, &amp;-2, t8.4
ppg, 3.4 rebounds.
Shawn Gamble, Walsh Col·

assistant coach. Second row - Rob ,Jackson, Marc Gothard,
Gerald Clay, Doug Fogt, Ron Rlttlnger, ,John Lam bcke, Sieve
Cluxlon, Ray Singleton and Ralph Hadley, trainer. Rio Grande
finished regular season play wllh a 25-7 reco rd . Inside the MOC,
Rio linlshed 11·3. Th e Redmen will battle Tiffin at Rio Grande on
Thursday at 7: 30 p.m. In first round ph1y of the 1987 Dis trict 22
NAIA post-season tournament.

MOltNT VERNON, Ohio
( UPI) ,;_ The 198&amp;-87 Ni\IA
District 22 AI~ District team as

12's

Don't Take A Chance.

ppg, U rebounds.

RIO GRANDE I986-87 MOC CAGE CHAMPIONS- Members ol
the I986-87 Mid-Ohio Conference champion Rio Grande CoUege
Redmen basketball team are, first row, left to right: Earl Thomas,
Kevin Purcell and John Lawhorn, coaches; Anthony Raymore;
Jlmniy Kearns, Joe Verhofl, Mike Smith, Joe Whle, Randy Combs,
Bob Londamood, Jon Cubertson, manager; Doug McFarland,

.

$!99

59~

I

'JOE VERHOFF

MOUNT VERNON, Ohio
(UP I) - •P ete DuMonte, a senior
from Bluffton College, Is a .
member of the NAIA District 22
All-District teain for the lourth
year and RaQdy Kortokrax of
Findlay College was named the
most valfiable player In the
district lor the second year In a
row.
·
Dan Peters o(Walsh College,
whose team finished 21-9 and is
the third seed g~lng Into ,the
Dis trlct 22 tournament , is the
coach of the year.
Kortokrax, who led the district
In scor ing with a 28.1 point -per·

PH. 992-2556

Wr

~JO

Smith, Verhoff picked
First Team District 22

.--.••••~

ao+

Malon~P at Wal sh
Defiance al Cedarv ill e

\

MIKE SMITH

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY
VALLEY
"At the End of ·the Pom~roy-Mason Bridge

victori es. 1\mon~ thOSt&gt; were tw o ,;lclorles
O\'Cr Ohio Dominican and anoth('r against

I

i

'

CHUCK WAGON STEAK

7

, r

»-+ + ____.. + 0 0

~~~.~~\~~~: : :: : : :! ! f: ~ ~i~ -~
Malon('... ... ............ ... 10 4

.

r----,;_-------.l------------

OVER!U.L

Tlllln .. ...... .. ........... .... 1

,. . .

The DaNy

Ohio

25, 1987

Rio Gran~e faces Tiffin Thursday night!

,,

I

'

By JOE ILLUZZI

UPI Sports Writer
The way St. Louis Cardinals
• Manager Whitey Herzog as·
sessed his team the first day of
: full-squad workouts, you would
; think he was talking about the
· 1962 Mets, considered to be oneol
: the. worst teams to play In the
• major leagues.
• " We've got more question
: marks than any team In history,''
~ Herzog said Tuesday.
· Herzog said some of the
. lnjurles t'hat contributed to the
•Cardinals' 79-82 record last sea·
: son are a concern to him.
· First baseman Jack Clark, the
:club's top power hitter and RBI
man, suffered a thumb Injury
that limited him to 65 games , and
1985 Most Valuable Player Willie
McGee played on a bad knee that
required off· season surgery.
• The pitching staff also had Its
share of Injuries. John Tudor,
who has won 34 games tn two
~· seasons for th!! Cardinals,
•. missed the last threeweekso!the
. 1986 season with shoulder
··problems.
•
,', Jeff Lahti, a right -handed
reliever who missed virtually ail
'o f last S!!ason with shoulder
:Problems, has been set back by a
broken Jell foot suffered In an
accident at his home last month.
X-rays will be taken Thursday to
determine when he can begin
workouts.
Ken Dayley, a left-handed
rel(ever. Is recovering from
elbow surgery, and right· handed
' rellever Ray Soft has a sore
e lbow.

"

Kings

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Regular and
Menthol

Mlr's. suggested pricmg based on lull-&gt;rice bta nds.

SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Quitting Smoking
Now Greatly Reduces SerioOs Risks to Your Health.

Kings: lD mg "Ia( .0.8 mg nlcoline- ,
lDD's: t2 mg "tar:' 0 9 mg nicotine av p81Cigatette by FTC melhod.
;
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'

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Your Independently Owned
Low Priced Supermarket .

By The Bend

SAV.E .ON -OUR .
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FOODLAND BRANDS

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SALE!!

Self-esteem program presented •
to do It your own way asiong as It
doesn't h4rt anyon~ else, its
allrlght to question 'shouids' and
'shoul()nots', ll' s fine just to be
you .
In her intrOductory rem arks,
Oltverltalked about the lmpor,
tance of feeling good about
yourself. She spoke about the
many masks which we hid
behind, afraid thai others will see
weaknesses and fears, and not be
able lo understand and accept

:neat of the bend

i.Many moons ago ...
• • By BOB HOEFLICH
.• •
Sentinel Slall Wrller
Many, many 'moons ago In
; town called
· Pomeroy. there
:•. was a heavy re.' talning wall run·
: ·nlng two miles
·, along Ihe river.
. :'It certainly
isn't lhere now
: - perhaps, Ihe lown saw too
, many floods. At any ralethls was
·a century ago and here's what an
. old, ol~. newspaper clipping
• belonging lo Edison Hobstetter
had to say about the wall:
• : " A slip on !he river shore atthe
, mouth of Nay!ors Run has
:started some talk about: the
:.danger to the. Hocking Valley
!railroad ) and the street car
lines The slip is only of an
accumulation of river sill for
many years and has nothing to do
with the original river bank. This
is protected by a heavy retaining
·wall erected there by Ihe dlrec·
.lj(m of the lale Austin W. Vorhes,
, when the Belt Line was con-structed some 30 years ago.
"Mr. Vorhes, then a leading
figure in the City Council, dl·
,rected the building·of a retaining
l"all from the Hocking Valley
-freight depot to the Charter Oak
' mine •in the upper end of tow n,
more than two miles in length ,
, Which is slill standing·and which
:has protected the town all these
"years, for $60.000 and which
: would cosl $600,000 now to
· construct.
: "The Belt Line was sold to the
: Hocking Valley for more than
1enou!(h to pay the cost and lhe
:town has the benefit of the wall.
,.In some places lhalwallls301o40
• feel high. It rests on a solid
: foundation and will remain for
:generations, a fitting monument
to the man who built well 'and
: wis~ly, Austin W. Vorhes who
; was heartily criticized for spend·
· lng so much money In the work."
~ I. for one, never heard of the
• Belt Line and apparently, the
. wall did not stand for "genera·
;Hans" as predicted.

a

Large
·Eggs

HOLLY FARMS GRADE 'A'

SUPERIOR

Mixed

Mount.ain Brand

Fryer Parts

Bologna

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Catsup

32 oz.
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FOOD LAND

Spread
Margarine. :o~i
IN OIL or WATER

Chicken-Of-The-Sea

Tuna

6.5 oz.
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limit 2 with S10.00 or More
Additional Punhase

SNUGGLE

•ASST. COLORS •DESIGNER

Fabric Softener

Bounty Towels

64 OZ. BTL.

89
SNUGGLE SHEETS
40 d.

$1 89

·· A copy of a newspaper relating
the celebration details lor the
opening of the Pomeroy-Mason
,Bridge on. Nov. 12, 1928 sllll has
~not materialized - although a
,number of other souveniors of Ihe

Bi-RITE

e

JUMBO ROLL

•

•CHOCOLATE •VANILLA

Ice
(rea

,event have .

Incidentally, two people. Sarah
Roush and Bernice Young Bal·
;ley, have asked to see lhe old
copy If It materializes. At on,p -.J
:ume, a few years hack, someone
'lo_aned me the 1928 edition- but
Uapparently has made the trip or
:has been misplaced .

'h '
GAL. ·

··· In Mason County, W.Va ., the
:adult family care homes pro:
.. ;gram Is being expanded.
· The program Is designed to
offer care, support and supervl·
,slon to elder ly or disabled adults
who need a home and for whom
JIO other appropriate alternative
)s available. The Department of
•Human Services Is seeking spon·
.sors Interested - In provl!llng
;)lomes for these folks In a family
oenvironment. For further lnfor·
.mat ion, Mason residents should
~ all 529-6281.

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FOODLAND

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SALTINES

LAUNDRY

II

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AJAX DETERGENT

2· :.~. 99( ~
With Coupon ond ~10.00 Aclditionol Purchose
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FOOIII \'ill "I PHI t 01 I'O'i
•WHITE •ASSORTED WHITE CLOUD

W.HITE POTATOES

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~ ~~glb.
UMIT 1

89 (. I

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Pkg.

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With Coupon ond 110.00 Additional Purchast
thru Ftb. 21, 1917
~:..;~:.·;;;:.;

I1"
I

With Coupon 'and •10.00 AdditionGI Purcha ..
~~~

I
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89&lt;

With Coupon and 110.00 Additional Pur&lt;ho11
uup"n Good thru hll. 21, 1917

MICROWAVE GIVE-AWAY

INtRY BLANK
.
Name ........................."''"".................................................. 1
•
Address
II •••
~

ooot! llllto ooootUtllloooooooooouoooooo oooooootUOOtflo ~ooooooo oooooooooooo

f'

Phone ................................;.............................................. 1
DIAWING SATUIDAY, FEI. 21, 1987

1

I &lt;:ontest Rules: Mull be 18 yeare ofage to enter. One entry per vi" 1
L-~:_!!c:_~~~~c!l..!~~.!'~i.2."-~.!~'l!l!!l~_P!!~~~~j

St11mp1 Accepted • Not

for

Errors

Wednesday, February 25. 1987

Page- 7

By CHARLENE HOEFLtCH
, • ., , Sentlnei .Stalf, Writer "
, ,, . I m Me and I m, Glad • a
Program on. sell-esteem was
; presented by Cindy Oliveri,
;.Meigs County Extension Agent,
&gt;Hom,e Economics,asapartofthe
year s emphasis on feeling better
abou_t yourself.
Oliveri pointed ~ut that it's o.k
:to be different, It ,s o.k. to risk
, lookmg foolish, II s o.k. lo be
original and different. it alright

FOODLAND ·

The Daily ·Sentinel

, Evelyn Clark, Columbus, for·
mer ly of Racine, celebrated her
?f1h birthda y recently at the Jai
t:Ai Reslauranlin Columbus and
received a large cake decoraied
with roses and a numlli&gt;r of gifts
on the occasion.
On hand to help with the
celebration were a friend ,
)-leather Fancalrgla. her sis ters ,
Betty Krider and Anna Cleland,
and her brother and sister-In·
law, David and Dianne Circle
and their daughter, Laura .
I'm really a dummy . I thought
automobile dealers co urted the
potential customer. However,
after the questionnaire l re·
celved In the mall, I'm beginning
to wonder. Perhaps, you, too,
received one - and the parllcu·
lar vehicles Involved aren't even
sold In Meigs County.
Belween me and thee. I'd llk,e
to know Ihe salary of the business
executive who dreamed up the
questionnaire - and I wonder if
• ~or she really thought people-

especially people liKe me would take time and energy to fill
It oul since It, as . far as I'm
concerned, Invades th.e area of
privacy .
The questionnaire not only
asks for my preferences on
various automobile features but
also wants to know my age
bracket, marital status, education , occupation, residence,
(whether I rent or own and how
long I've lived at the present
location), the number of dependents and their age brackets, the
bracket of our total household
Income and concludes asking If I
own a video cassette recorder
and a personal home computer
and if so, "What brand?''.
Overall, lhe quesllons give me
Ihe impression that lam trying to
gel inlo the country club and if
lhe answers aren't Impressive
enough, I'm just not going to
make II.
·
Needless to say, that's another
form which fs going to hit file 13
hut only after I have some fun
with II. Frankly, I feel that 1 can
buy a car anywhe~e if I can
afford it -and probably even if I
can 't afford It- without spilling
over details which I feel are
personal. I can live without one of
these vehicles - and on top of
that I nev~r wanted lo belong to
t~e country club.
Mary Kay says that you can' t
change the past but you can
certainly ruin the present by
gelling loo disturbed about the
fulure. Right on, Mary Ka y ~ You
keep smiling.

The 48·story Transa mer lca Py ·
ramld. at 853 feet, is the ta llest
buildin g In San Fra ncisco.

the real person, and be critical.
She spoke of the tendencies of
some to be critical of self, to put
too much importance on what
people think. to be afraid to take
a risk because of Ihe pote ntia l for
failure - all signals of low
sell-esteem or a low self-concept .
Babies are not born with
sell-esteem, she said. It Is a
learned behavior from par.ents ,
peers. and teachers. The values
which Oliveri listed as stimulating self-esteem include being
treated with respect, parental
attention and warmth, listening,
laughing and loving, and provld·
ing a sense of challenge with
limitations .
Using two buckets, one bright
and shiny , high in self-esteem
and confidence, and the other
rusty and dirty, discouraged and
low In self-esteem, Oliveri compared th e traits .
She said that those with high
self-esteem are dacceptlng with
the ability to accept praise and
criticism, are assertive, ca n
stand up for themselves but arc
also considerate of others, confident with an ability to ask for
help, but faith in thei r own
decisions, creative. have a willingness to explore alter nat ivs;
healthy, since a positive se lfesteem increases chances lor
health both physical and mental;
an optimist. a sense of humor.
and one with positive relationships wllh those around them.
· Those with low self-esteem.
she said, tend to be agresslve and
demanding without considering
others, conceiled and feeling
lhey have more rights than
others, a conformer. giving in to
others too eas il y, fearful of new
things , people, and life in general, insecure and feeling unloved , indifferent , withdrawn
and not caring, pessimistic and

Vatica n Cit y takes up J08. 7
acres In Rome. Ita ly.

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Feels Better...
Looks Better...
Has All The
Comforts Of...
FOOT THRILLS~
By CLINIC
FOOf THRILLS"' h ~s it all
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and flexible leather uppers, th e
beautiful detailing and tradi·
lional styling and the extensive
ranges of sizes and widths that
assun&gt; you of a perfect fit . Foar
THRILts&lt;lL no other shoe has it
all .
BLACK

TO BE A WINNER- "It's okay to be dlfferj'nt", says Cindy
Oliveri, Meigs County Extension 1\genl, home economics. Oliveri
presented a program on developing llclter sdl·eslecm entitled
"I'm Me and I'm OK" for Meigs women .
alwys expecting 1he worst. d&lt;' - others withou t crl lil'izing or
pendant. submissive, . allowi ng judging. of accep tin g .voursrlf. of
ot hers to make de&lt;·islons. and choosig va lues wise ! ~ · and com·
ha ving unreal expect at ions, pcnsa tin g fo r th i n g~ you don't do
somellmes too high, and some- well by t•x plorlng othN areas,
times too low.
and of always looking to
Going back to the bucket s. shr . st rength s.
stressed the importance of proShe stressed tht' importnnce of
tecti ng and feed in g yo ur setting goa ls, and workin g on
" bur ke.!." If it's not in good those goals, step by step and
shape, work on trying to und er- feeling good as progress is bel ng
stand yourself and ot hers. be made. The need for reaffl'rmlng
hon es t with yourself and your person al goa ls - "I am going to
feelings and don"t keep th em be~ome an optimist" - of
bottled up but share them with building on,,abilities. of being
the people In your life. She spoke yo urse lf and accepting of the fac t
of the importance of listening to that It 's fine to be different.

Esther Circle of church has meeting
Th e group sang "Lovr Lift ed
Me" to open the mrr l ing and then

Plans for send ing a box to
Barone College a nd a gift to the
scholarshi p student were made
at a meeting of the Esther Circle
of the Racine First Baptis t
Church held at the .home of
Lillian Ha yman.

NAVY

WHIT E

Charmer

I =:::-:::::-=-::::~:----

i EOOTTHRJLLS.
'-=

-

CHAPMAN
.NextSHOES
To Elberfelds

In 1728 . Vitus B&lt;ring proved tha t
Asw and Arncnca were separated by

in Pomeroy

sa illng lhrough .1 strait . now known as

the Bering Strait.

gave t he Lord 's Prayer. Sue
Li ghtfoot had devotions. Florence Adams gave tht• program on
"Love Your Neighbor." No ndus
Gibbs had the closing prayer.

1ll,

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MARGARINE .QUAU.m... 2;s 1.05 CABBAGE ........... )e....... 19&lt;
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PROCESSED CHEES ......... sI

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GARLIC BREAD .............. J.~u S1.49
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PLUS, GET CHRYSLER'S NEW
7/70 PROTECTION PLAN

ON EYMY .W.1987 AMaKAN~MJ W Ate TRUCK ~

• 7 yeors/70,000 miles, whichever comes first, on engine ond powertroin .
• 7 years/100,000 miles, whichever comes first, ogoinst euler body ru st-through .
See limited warranty at dealer. Rcntridion 1 apply

S&amp; US 'IODAY FOR ALL KltDS OF SUPER SAVINGS!

COOPER

Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge
399 So. 3rd

·

99 2•6421

Middleport

• Financing lor qualified retail buyen through Chrysler Credit Corporatio n on new dealer stock. Other rates
ore available as length of contract increase•. Dealer CQntribution may affect final price. See dealer for
datoil1. • •Ca1h bock to retail buyers and lessee• on new dealer stock. Offers exclude all Vista Wagon•
and any Colt• with Special Value Packages.

PINEAPPLE .....................SM .... 99&lt;
16 OZ. THANK· YOU
.
CHERRIES .......................SM S1.39
42 OZ. SHOWBOAT
PORK &amp; BEANS .............JM S1. 1S
15 OZ. STOKELY ·
SLICED CARROTS ........ 2 CANS s1. 19
16 oz• .
CREAMORA-....................m. S2.39
12 OZ. KELLOGG'S
SPECIAL ~ ......................lA\ S2.19
10 OZ. YEIY FINE
FRUIT DRINKS ................. 2 FOR 69&lt;
100 U. 3 01. DIXIE
BATHROOM CUPS .......... rm S1.09
JUMO
BOUNTY TOWELS .......... 1-Aij•••• 99&lt;
15 Ol.AIMOUI
BEEF
..........JM Sl ~29

•
'(

I

$

\

\

..,
\

�· Ohio

1987 .
•

·Starlings bombarded with noise
SPRINGFIELD Ohio (UP!)_
City officials hope' the noise of78
recordings ·ot starlings In dis tress combined with loud blasts
that sound like gunshots will
'

drive an estimated 20,000 of the that fly Into the downtown area.
pests out of town.
.
If noise falls to dislodge the
The noisemakers are timed to starlings, the city -will try. pyrogo off at 6 p.m. a nd continue for technics next, wllh the. tlrped
&lt;\bout 45 minutes as thousands of release of shell crackers that
starlings fly into Springfield explode In the air, said Daryl
from farmfleldswherethe¥ feed Weber. Springfield nuisance
•·
during theday.
· abatement officer.
"We have to catch ·them en
Carsner said Springfield has
By United PreSJ International
route," said Marsha Carsner, ·had a large flock of starlings
President Reagan, during a - program coordina tor tor the since 1983, but . the problem
· meeting with .black economists Downtown Springfield Associa· Increased this winter because
and co mmun ity leaders. re· tlon . ·•once roosted, they will not mild weather meant many birds
spondlng to reports that he could move."
did not migrate out of the area.
not reca ll whet her he gave prior
Carsner said the noise, from
Citizens have complained
approval to the ·first shipment of cassette tapes a nd propane ex· about droppings and noise from
ploders that let off loud blast s the flock. "The sound that they
arms to Iran through Israel :
'.'Everybody that · can re- like gunshots. must be staged for create when they first come into
. member what they were doing on at -least three consecutive even· roost Is definitely out of Alfred

~

'

'

•

•

.

...

August
or 1985,
raise your
hand. I 8th
think
It's 'possible
to
forget. Nobody's raised any
hands. " - - - - The all-time record number of
Gram my awards Is 26 since 1958
received by conductor Sir Georg
Solti, who won this ye;tr for Best
Classical Orchestral Recording,
'
the various member churches . with the Chicago Symphony
are asked to attend lhe planning Orches tra for "Lizst: A Faust
Symphony. "
session'.

~

~

,

WEDNESDAY
·:MIDDLEPORT - Public dis~ter service meeting Wednes·
day, 7: 30p.m., at the Middleport
American Legion hall. Speakers
wjll be Richard Lockhart, Deputy Director of Disaster Services
o!Ohio, Charles Legar Sr., Meigs
County director of disaster servl·
cis; and Robert Byer, Meigs
E;.mergency Medical Services
director. ·
'•

"'-POMEROY
Wildwood
Garden Club meets 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday, home of Doris
Grueser.
•

•HOBSQN - Mi ssionary nig ht
will be · observed Wednesday.
7, 30 p.m., Hobson Church of
Christ In Chris tian Union. The
Rev. Odell Manley will be
speaker. The Rev. Thereon Dur·
h~m. pas tor, in vites the public.

beans with ham ·dinner will be
served Friday, from 4 to 7 p.m .,
at Our Lady of Loretta Church,
Tuppers
Plains.
Dinners
include cole
slaw. corn
bread. will
tea
or coffee. Adults $2.5!J. Children
under 12 $1.50. Pie a nd cake
available.

SUNDAY
HOBSON - Rhonda and Ken
Harless, missionaries from Mex·
leo, will speak at a special
Sunday 7:30 p.m. service a t
Hobson Church of Chr is t In
Christia n Union. Public invited.

TH URSD-AY
REEDSVILLE - Riverview
Garden &lt;;lub will mee t Thursday
evening, 7:30 p.m. at the home of
Mrs. Ronald Cowdery . Mrs.
Debbie Pickens will have the
program.
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta.
Beta chapter. Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet Thursday,
7;30 p.m., at Grace Episcopal
Church parish house.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport'
Youth League organizational
meeting will be-held Thursday, 7
p, m., at village hall.
. RACINE - Raclne.Amerlca n
Legion Auxilary will n\eet at 7:30
p,m. Thursday at the hall.
•HARRISONVILLE - Scipio
Senior Citizens are to meet at the
~lplo Fire House for their
regular monthly meeting Thurs·
ctay, 7 p.m. Ml!mbers are to take
r~res hm e nts to the meeting.
' BRADBURY - Meigs Count y
Church of Christ Women's Fel·
lowshlp will meet Thursday, 7:30
p;rn .. at Bradford Church of
Christ. Program on ceramics
will be presented by Kat her ine
Eyans.
FRIDAY
..POMEROY - square dance
F'tlday. 8·11 p.m .. sponsored by
the Senior Cit lzens Square Da nce
CCub, at the cent er. Music Is by
~~ Ohio River Bend Boys and
thOse a ttendin g are to bring
snacks ror the s nack table.

..

: MIDDLE PORT - Evangeline
¢.hapter, Order of the Eastern
Star, will ha ve a public soup
dlnner, ll a.m.-6:30p.m. Friday,
In the basement of the Masonic
T-emple; eat In or take out.
: TUPP ERS PLAINS- A soup

CORN MEAL ...............................~. 35C lb.
CREAM Of RYE ............................ 35&lt; lb.
SEASONING FLOUR·..................... sse 111.

- FRANKLIN , Tenn. tUPII -

a .city referendum on whet her to
annex a 300-acre piece of prop·
erty flew 4,500 miles across the
Atlantic to cast his ballot.
It took Bunn T. Phillips justtwo
minutes to Identity himself and
vote on the question Tuesday. but
the six bored election workers
overseeing the referendum were
obliged under state law to man
the polls lor 10 hours.
· " I am just a voter exercising
my right," said Phillips, who
Interrupted a business trip in
Britain and flew to Franklin to
cast his ballot.
Phillips Is the only registered
:voter living on a 298-acre estate
owned by lnvestorll~rold Pierce
'- who Is also Phillips's boss.
i?lerce asked the city to annex the

.,

.
w

OFFER
.
GOOD
ALL
WEEK

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

PRICES EFFE

THRU SAT., FEB. 28, 1987 .

Limit
20
Coupons
MIXED

Fryer Parts ••.••• ~••.• 49&lt;

INCLUDES PARTS AND LABOR FOR MOST GM CARS
(UP TO 5 QTS. OF GM OIL)

'·

WE HA~E THE KEYS TO A8EnER DEAL
992-2174

Chuck Roast ••••••••

SYRACUSE - An organlza·
tion a! meeting for Syracuse
Summer Youth League will be
held Mond ay, 6:30 p.m .', In the
sixth grade room or Syracuse
Elementary. Interes ted parents
are urged to attend.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Orange
Township Turstees will meet In
regular session Monday, 7 p.m.,
at the home of Dorothy Calaway,
township clerk.

.

property so it can be developed.
State election laws require the
polls remain open and fully
staffed a minimum of 10 hours In
a ny election. regardless of the
number of eligible voters.
Election officers took books,
ma gazines and playing cards to
ward olf boredom. The one-man
referendum cost the city about

•

"'0

1"1

c

-~
z

SLICED

Beef L-iver ••••••••••••••
LB.

.

'

1-o-·- -----·

~

•·

•.
,

Apples ••••••••••~~.!~... Sl 09
DAIRY LANE

2°/o Milk •••••••. :!L• $129
HANGING ROCK EXTRA LARGE

Eggs •••••••••••••• ~~••• S9&lt;

Holly Perry. Realtor

"It's as true today as it's always
been. Families prefer natural gas in their
homes. Gas heat gives the warmth that
makes the whole house comfortable,
no matter how cold it gets outside. It's
reliable, too. A gas furnace hardly ever
needs service, which means real cost
savings compared to other systems.
And with today's lower gas costs, the
savings are even greater. If the home ·
has other gas apPliances-like water

BANQUET

heater and range-so much the better.
So when I'm asked about the features
of a home, I'm always glad when I can
say It ,has gas heat and appliances.
The people almost always are, too:•

Argo Peas ....~!~!•. 3/ Sl Fried Chicken.~!~:~x. $2 49
JIFFY CORN

Natural gas can add comfort, convenience and value to your home.
Just ask realtors like Holly Amy.
and the families in gas-equipped
homes.

DAIRY LANE

Muffin Mix •••••••• 5/$1 Ice Cream •••••••••••• $119
8.5

$800.

The vote was counted by the
five·member Williamson County
Election Commission on Tues·
day a nd the panel must meet
again Friday to certify the
results.
Inciden tally, Phillips voted
"yes" on th e annexation
question.
"It probably look about 15
seconds to count the vote,'' said
Vot e r Registr ar De bbie
McMillan.

a

·--·----

09
Ground ·Beef •• ~••••• Sl

Lenten breakfast
POMEROY - The annual
Len ten Breakfast. sponsored by
the ladles of Trinity Congregational Church in Pomeroy, will be
held Wednesday, March 4, 7:45
a.m . The church Is located at the
corner of Lynn and Second Sts.
Ladies and ministers of churches
In the area are Invited to attend.
Reservations are to be made by
Monday to Genevieve Minehart,
a t 992·2383, or Marie Hauck, . at
992·3222.
Prayer day
POMEROY - A planning
session fo r the World Day of
Prayer to be observed on March 6
a t 7:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Chu rch will be
held Friday at 1:30 p.m. at the
Met hodist Church. Key women of

•
!l
c

PKG

POMEROY- Pomeroy Youth
League will hold an organizational meeting at the home or
Jack Stanley on Monday at 2·p.m.
Anyone Interested In coaching a
ball team Is urged to a ttend. For
further Informat ion. call992-5067
evenings afte r 5 p.m.
SYRACUSE - Sutton Tow n·
ship Trustees will meet Monday,
7:30 p.m., at the Syracuse
Municipal Building.

...

LB.

LB.

"IT'S EASIER TO SELL AHOME WHEN
IT HAS MORE BENEFITS PEOPLE UKE.~.
UKE'THE'COMFORT AND SAVING'S
OF GAS HEAT AND APPLIANCES~'

;•
c

LEG QUARTERS

12

POMEROY

USDA CHOICE BONELESS
MONDAY
RUTLAND - Beginning Mon· .
day, Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church wi ll be In revival with
Evangelist Ri ck Weaver. Servi·
c-es' will s tart 7 p.m. nightly.

·----·--

Chicken •••••••••••••L:.••• 49(
ARMOUR
oz
W.1·ener·s•••••••••••••••••
BULK
$139
Chopped Ham ••••••
1/4

SMITH-NELSO'N.
OTORS

500 EAST MAIN

A small-time election ·
The only ptrso~ e ligible to vote In

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

•
,

S1595

; RUTLA ND Rutland
Friendly Garden Club meets
Wednesday at the home of
Margaret Edwards. The Rev .
William Middleswa rth will show
slldes of flowers.
·POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will serve the canteen at
the Red Cross Bloodmobile at the
Senior Cit izens Center. 1-5:30
p.:m . Wednesday. ·

limit Quantities

OIL FILTER,
OIL CHANGE
AND LUBE

r;;;===================;;;=il

SATURDAY
RUTLAND - Rutland Fire
Depa rtment a nd Auxiliary's
family fun night will be held at
the !Ire house Satu rday begin·
ning wit h a 6:30 p.m . potluck
dinner.

We Reserve The Right To

GM AUTHORIZED

•

Community calendar/area happenings

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 9

•.

fJI~n;gs;;be;f;o;re;;a;!f;ec;t~ln~g;t;h;e;b;lr;d;s;;~H~it~ch~e~c~k~
o .';'~W~e~be~r~·s~a~ld~.iiiiiiiiit

Tonya Ingels, Andrea Theiss, Queen Cheryl,
Mayla Yoacham and Robin Stout. Escorts, were,
left to right, Andy Baer, John Amos, Jamie
Anderson, Mike Kincaid and Chad Diddle.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

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

'

Quo"e of the day

· HOLIDAY QUEEN - Eighth grader Cheryl
Pape, center, relgned, as queen over Southern
Junior High School's Christmas Dance. In the
queen's court were, from Jell to right In front,

Wednesday, February 25. 1987

·. NORTHERN

TOILET TISSUE
4 ROLL
PKG

COLUMBIA GAS

89C

limit 1 Ptr Cust11110r

• Good Only At Powell's 5upor Market
. Offtr Good Thru Sat.; Fob. 21, 1917
•

.I

oz.

117 GAL.

•

: CHEER DETERGENT·

L147 oz.

••
•
•

FLAVORITE SUGAR

sS79

limit 1 Ptr (usiDIIIOf
Good Only At Powell'• Super Market
Olftr Good Thru Sat., Fall. 28, 1981

5 LB.
BAG

$:129

MAXWELL HOUSE

••
: 3 LB.

CAN

limit I Ptr Cutlomtr

•
•

••

Good Only AI Powoll's SuiNr Marko!
O!ler Good Thru Sat., Fall. 21, 1987

$549

Umit I Ptr (ustomtr
God Only At Powell's Suptr Market
GOO&lt;! Th!U Sat., lab. 28. 1987

~· ·· UIItr

••• •

'•

t""

~

&gt;

...

= "'...=
=:
0
a
t""

l:"l
C"'l

~

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0

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'2

•The total value of the dou·
ble coupon may not exceed
$1 .00
•Any manufacturer's cou·
pon greater than 61 C will be
redeemed at lace value
only.
•Only one manufacturer's
coupon per item .
•The total value of the dou·
ble manufacturer's coupon
cannot exceed th e purchase
price of the item . Money
will hot be refunded .
•This offer does no t apply to
Powell's Super Vatu Cou pons, free cou pons. or any
co mpetitor's coupo ns.
•Thia offer excludes ciga·
rettes. or any other items
prohibited by law .

COFFEE

•

0
0

&lt;
&gt;

•Offer is only good for product on hand . No Rain·
checks .
•There is a limit of 20 cou·
pons you may redeem .
•

•

�....

r
Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

Scientists
following
burnout
of star

Pomeroy-Middlepcilt, Ohio

TORONTO fUPI) Sate!!!tes
and telescopes throughout the
southern hemisphere today
tracked the brilliant burnout of a
dying star, a supernova believed
to be the brightest fn 383 years
that was discovered accidentally
by a Canadian astronomer In
Chile.
Astronomers said Tuesday the
celest,lal find by Ian She!Jon of
the Un!verslly of Toronto's Las
Campanas observatory In northcentral Chile will help scientists

tile far reaches olthe universe. ·
"It's a massive star - more
ma.ss!ve than the sun - which
has exploded," said Robert Garrison, an assoc!ated!rectoro!the·
observatory.
The Harvard-Smithsonian
Center for Astrophysics and
several astronomers confirmed
the . find, classifying It as a
supernova although "there was a
slight element of doubt," satd
Brian Marsden of the Institute In
Cambridge, Mass.

Wedneaclay, February 26, 1987

Wednesday, February 26, 1$87- ';

He said sate!Utes and. tele,
scopes throughout the southern
hemisphere were tracking the ·
astral phenomenon.
Shelton spotted the supernova,
a star that exploded 15(),000years
ago but whose light can just now
be seen on Earth, late Monday,
Garrison said.

The supernov~ Is the brightest
and nearest since one documented In ·1604 by Johannes
Kepler and Gallleo, Garrison
said. He said II Is hundreds of
billions times br!ghier than the
sun and expanding every second
by a distance equatto the Earth's
diameter.

"We've been walling for this
kind o! event to happen. It's
much overdue. This Is thed!scovery of the century," he said.

The supernova, seen only In the
southern hemisphere, was d!scovered by Shelton as be walked out
of the mountaintop observatory

and saw something unusual In ·•
the sky. He turned a telescope on : ·.
the mysterious light and realized . •
what he found ; Garrison sal.d.
"All Indications are that Ills a :
supernova," said Marsden:· ;
"Most astronomers whO ex-· ·•
pressed an opinion today expressed the opinion that It's a
supernova. ' '
~ :.
The star was 150,000 light-· •
years away from Earth, which
means It exploded 150,000 years.
ago.

~::::::::::::::::::::::~m~e~a~su~r~e~d~!s~m~n~c:e:s~fr~o~m~E~ar~t~h~to~--------------------------------------------------------------~--------~-----------------------,,, ,

·capsized
boat crew
• •
awaiting
rescue try

.

The Daily Sentinel-Page 11

Pomeroy-Middlepcilt, Ohio

.
the lifeboats throughout the nigh t
but late Tuesday lost sight of the
other craft, Uhlenhopp said .
The condition of the 19 crew
members was not known .
" If they're not Injured, they' re
pre tt y sev e re ly wea th er beaten, " Uhlenhopp said.
The crew reported winds of up
to 75 mph and seas as high of 50
feet when they abandoned ship
Tuesday morning.
Uhlenhopp said a Coast Guard
transport C-130 plane that located the Balsa 24 Tuesday

By DON MULLEN
waves cresting as high as 40 feet the Z!m Miami, were on their
United .Press International
early today would make at· way to join the rescue effort and
Nineteen crew members from . tempts to rescue the crew of the were to arrive later In the day.
The 19 crew members from thP
a fishing boat that capsized In fishing boat dangerous. Coast
Balsa
24, a 190-foot f!sh!rig boat
50-foot seas during a fierce North Guard spokesman Dennis Uh!enwith Ph!!!pp!ne registry, abanAt!ant!.c storm clung to lifeboats hopp said.
early today waiting for a rescue • "It's raining, It's windy and It's . doned the crippled vessel Tuesship, the Coast Guard said.
nasty." he said. "The conditions day about 460 miles south of
The storm also battered two are Jar far from Ideal (for a Newfoundland and 1,150 miles
east of New York. The crew
other ships, smashing windows . rescue) ."
and sweeping cargo containers
A Panamanian ship, the 600- clambered aboard a lifeboat and
overboard, but Coast · Guard foot Frias!, was expected to life raft dropped from a Navy
officials said the worst appeared arrive In the area by daybreak to plane.
Coast Guard and Navy planes
to be over for those vessels.
efforts to pick up the
Winds of up to 35 mph and
he said. A Soviet vessel, kept visual contact wilh one of
Aa.d!E•r, and an Israel! ve~;sel

reported It had ·"turned turtle"
and was close to sinking. He
described the storm as a "dire
endangerment of human life."
Meanwhile, the Coas t Guard
said the worst appeared to be
over for two other ships that
encoun tered problems In the
storm.
·
· The crew of tht' U.S. container
ship ExporJ Pa triot had reported
Tuesday that waves smashed
through windows and that· electronic equipment was getting
wet.

..•'',. '

\''! ~
• ~ I

'

See The Difference
ur.Cost Cutter
•
r1ces. akel

~.

~.

'•' '

.

TOPLA(E AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
· 8 A.M. Until NOON SATURDAY
. CLOSED SUNDAY
POLICIES
•Ach outskte Meigs, G1lli1 or M11on countin must be prepold.
•Receive 1.60 discount for ads ptid in advance.
•Free edl - Glvetway and Found adt under 15 words will be
run 3 diVI at no charge.
•Price of ld for til capital letter• i1 double price of ad con ...,
•7 point nne lype only uud .
•sentinel ia not responalble for errors after fir1t day. (Check
for errofl first day ad runs in paperl. Call before 2:00p.m.
dtY tfter publiclflon to make correction.
•Ads lhlt mu1t be paid in edvanca are:
Happy Ads
Card of Thanks
In Memoriam
Vard Salet

Mmtmi(D lltll NLII:r
Each o! theM ad~ertiH&lt;I items it reouin1d 10 be retdil~ ~~~lib~ lor tMt in eech
Krog!l Store ewctPt u s pec;iticafly ooMd in lhil &amp;d . If WI do run ou1 ol an
a!Ntrt~ ite'm, we w~l offer VOIJ ~.aur choice ol 1 t~rlblll it~ , ...,htfl
•~•illble, reUecting thi! nme wv1ngt o• a r1 111 chtc~ whiCh will entll .. rou to

purcheM the edvertiHd it~m 11 tl'le advflrtiMd price wlth•n 30 dltYI . Only' one
vendor coupon wll be accected per item purchtsed.

COPYRIGHT 1987 , THE ICROGEfl CO. ITEMS AND
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY , FEB . 22. THROUGH

SATURDAY, FEB . 28. 1981. "~POIEROr AIID GltUPOliS
!TOllS.
WE RESERVE TME RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.

WI CIAO!! WIICOMI

-

---

•A clauifi~ lldvertisement placed in The Daily Sentinelfucept - cltstlfled display, BusinMs Card and legll notictsl
will also ;ppeer In the Pt. Plea11nt Re9l1ter and lhe Gallipolis Otlly Tribune, reaching over 18.000 hum•.

NONE SOlD TO DEA LERS ,

-

~~11111111111 I 1111'111

RATES
1 OAYI

30AYI
IDAYI
10 DAYI
1 MONTH

0

,.. Tllonlll
2-ln-.v

D-11 WOIIDI 11-:II .WOIIDI 21-:11 WORDI
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7-VrH- 11oM lo •-•1
1-l'litlllc - • AuOIIon
t-w..... toluy

u-uawt

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FEDERAL
FOOD STAMPS

.................r

]/ 11 1 jill II t]ll II

'I Ill

71 - Autootorlolo

71-·-·-.. .
n-1'rualletorlarle

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n-v-••wo·s

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77-Autollepolr

13-1-oo
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71-Can_.

11 llflsoiiAIINinlotlon
11-llllllo, TV. Cl llepolr
17-MII. . .IOUt
11-W..... TaDo

171-A"'" a....

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Clouified page• cover the
following telephone exchange•...

iII ,I

,\

4-_..,

Rete~ .,.fO" GDnHCUtiv• run1, b.ok• r.ap • " wllbe ch.,.al
.., ......, . . .ntlldl.

Golllo County

I 'I .

....,.

a Motor HOIMI

,J

·2-NMHI\I•

··-~

.s1-luflolo

I

•
amer1can

PASTEURIZED PROCESS
CHEESE FOOD
.

Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE TO:

VILLAGE OF POMEROY.
BE IT ORDAINED BY THE
COUNCIL OF THE VILLAGE
OF POMEROY, STATE OF
OHIO:
SECTION 1: Thot Columbuo ond Southern Ohio Electric Company, 1 corporation
organized under the laws of
the State of Ohio, itt succet·
10r8 and 111igns, fhereinefter called "Compony"l is
hereby grontodthorlght. pri·
vileg'it. franchisl end euthor·
ity to ecquire, conltruct,
maintain and operate In,
above, under. aero•• and
along tho o1reett. otleyt.
thoroughfare•. brldgea and
public places, •• the ume
now exiat or may hereafter
be told out, in tho Vitlogo of
Pomeroy. Sto11 of Ohio,
therolnoflor coiled 1ho "Municipellty"), linea for the
trenami11lon and dittribu·
tion of electric energy, either
by means of overhaed or un·
derground conductora, with
oil nocosoa,.Y or dllirobluppurtononcound opptiancos.
including oloc1rlc tubototions. lor tho purpooo of
•upptving otectrlc onorgv to
oold Municlpollty ond 1holn·
hobltanll thereof ond peroono or corporotlono beyond
th 1 tt k 1 the f f h
m
roo or oot,
powor or tny other purpou
or purpoaOt for which otoc·
tric energy It now or may
hereafter be uoed.
SECTION 2: The Com-

Ll"'' Roger LoVe. ploaso

lake notice that Koren Ei!Mn
Love hu filed a complaint for
divorce, in tho Meigt County
Court of Common Pion. Pomen&gt;'(. Ohio tC11e No. 88DR-1131. The loot known oddrMI of Ll"'' Roger Love woo
Box 31488 Bowlol Rood.
Ooxtor. Ohio 45728 ond that
hit llddreM ill currently unknown. Tho ptotnttlf
o
divorce, CUIIody ol Su"'"'
Love, en e'!df'd of the real es·
tate, and a feir division of of
~ ond aui9nmont of
doblo. Lorry Roger love It required to IMWM" the com·
plolnt within 28 diVI offer·tho
!all publication, by oorvice of
on • - upon tho Melga'
County Common Pleu Court

"'*'

..
Chilled

Polar Pak
Ice Cream
%-Gallon

Sun Gold
Orange Juice

Clerk.
11121. 2B:·t214. 11, 18,26

Springdale
2% Milk

8tc

Public Notice

Gallon

%-Gallon

OROINA.NCE NO. 669
GRANTING FRANCHISE
TO COLUMBUS
ANO
SOUTHERN OHIO ELECTRIC COMPANY TO CONSTRUCT, MAINTAIN AND
OPERATE LINES AND AP'
PURTENANCES AND AP·
PLIANCES FOR CON DUCnNG
ELECTRICITY
IN, OVER , UNOER AND
THROUGH THE STREETS.
AVENUES, ALLEYS ANO
PUBLIC PLACES OF THE

..

$ 18

'

.' .

B

Kroger Homogenized Milk Gal ••. $1.79'

Non Returnable Bottle

Cost Cutter
White Bread
16-oz. Loaf

BigK
Soft Drinks

.'

Spotlight
Bean Coffee

.
'.
'l.'
''

AUCTION
FRIDAY NIGHT - 6:30 P.M.
located at Rutland, Ohio

''

3-lb. Bag

At Rutland American Legion lldg.
Thomasville Recliner chair 1 tools, produce and
some IJ!OCeries; large trucKload of new items.
Consianments are Welcome

'

•'

2-Liter

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

NOTE: This Friday Night, FEB. 27
$50.00 CASH GIVEN AWAY
(Also whoever wins the $50.00 cash aets all the
items they buy tliat ni&amp;ht FREE also.)
·
DON'T MISS IT!
AUCTIONEER : LON NEAL-614-367-7101
NOTE: AUCTION, SAT.. FEB. 28 at 1:00 P.M.
AT 406 22nd St., Pt. Pleasant. WV
- C'omplete Household of Furniture
Extra Nice-85% of all items 4-6 months old
(Extra clean sale)

Spotlight Bean Coffaa1·1b. Bag•.. $1.89

---NOTE: AUCTION. SAT.. MAR. 14 -

Individually Wrapped Slices
Kroger

~:=~~- . . . . .··-- ggc

LISTING: Cars, Trucks. Office Items, elc.
AUCTIONEER: LON NEAL

We ere NOW booking Auction• for houaehold. 11t1te,
and term auctions for thi•apring - Call now to set the
DATE you wonll

Fresh "Sliver Platter"

Kroger
Cottage Cheese

Red Seedless
Grapes

24-oz.

Pound

AUCTION
February 28. 1987
Sa1urday, 1 p.m.

Assorted
Pork Chops

••

.: i

Pound

'

;'

$ 38

•

CSold As Packages
_Of 10-lba. Or Morel

•

Rib Center Chops

(

.,

•

•.

Go Krogering
''

I

..

At t1.981b.

.

10:00 A.M.

w. Ve. StettSurplus located Charles Ave., Dunbar, WV

••
''

.,

Located: 406 22nd St., Point Plellaant. W. Va .
Goi!WICI'OSS Hendenon BridJIII keep on main draaaoirt up.
lllrqh Ppint Pleasant to Dairy Queen tum left on 22nd

1

Stnet. Slle s1ntilht ihead - watch f01 signs.

RNtOn for ttltlng It owner Is moving out of 11111 and mull
otll N folowing II IUC1lon.
11ott: a olll•lot!Gwq list ~on~ 4-S morrt11s old - Em Clolrt Soft!
RCA 25'' contde color TV. (matc~ng oouch and chaf.beige &amp;trown COlo&lt;).
Ugh! trown 2rocl&lt;er recline~&gt;, 5~ book shelf, 5piece match[ng coffl!e wlh
end tJUes. 4wood &amp;Q-ass lamps.
room top table. eltra rO:e t.,
swivel chairs with woodgrain table top table wlh 6dlain. wood'""'~ aJior
hutttl. 4x6 ft whll-not shelf,.Westingtcuse etectri: r.,&amp;e wlh a!llli!uous
cleaning ""'"· 2door metal utiily ca~net. eltra rice 3piece beltGOm set

""'" stem

will 0rge &lt;l'essor oilh chest oilh new box spring~ .,d ma!tress with bel( on
wood will Q-IS! and carvings. 3tWin !ize beds with Q-IS! i'&lt;ad~Joo'ds .,d
new box springs and mattress. 3matr:hing chesl3 -IIJI sire. 2 half soes,
older coda' Chest motcfling Westinghouse WISher, 2YOMS dd and dryer, I
'fl1ll dd, lwin bed with mllching chest with lf!llching student des~ weial1l
bench will ft weights with ber weilhts. swing set with 3swings with tllider
and slide, new 10 speed bille. electri: ll'Jsll """"wilh 100ft d cord.Othe!
items are too numerM to mentkln. Not too many !m!llems. ., bo on time!
Not Respoftl1~ For Acddl!&lt;nr• Or Lou Of Proprrtv

OWNIII: .... '"" - . , LOti NMt. 114-31?·7101. Ua. 311-17
T!JIMI: c.h or';; wd a.dl
filii[: 1,. 11M t.r Mill ... •llfllhrlllh II lll!iltlo 181 . . _ . . 111 t.

Pub! ic Notice

Public Notice

pony oholt fully lndtmnily
and uve herml111 the Mun-

lclpotity from ony ond olt
damages, c01t1 and Ill·
penNI of every kind DCCI·
oionod by the ooto negligence of the Company in eJl·
orcitlng any of Itt rlghto. privilegn, franchin; end obli·
gati~n• under thl1 Ordi·
nance.

SECTION 3: Whenever
tho Company shall btgln tho
erection or ln;tallation of
any of ;uch llnft or eq"'!Pment it 1hall leave the
ttreets. alleys end other
public ptocu whore tuch
work 111done in at good condition or rep;ir •• they were
before ;uch work wes com·
me need.
SECTION 4: Tho rlghto,
privitogot tnd. frtnchiHI
horeby grented llholt not be
effective prior to acceptance
of this Ordlnence by the
Company and ahall termi·
no11 on October 20. 201 1.
SECTION 5: Whtntver In
this Ordinance the Munici·
p11itv. or Compenv ia re·
f1rred to, such reference
shall be dHmed to Include
the reapectivt auccusor or
ouign of elthtr. ond otl
rightt, prlvltoget, fronchioet
and obligations herein con·
t•ined shall bind and inure to
the benefit of such respec·
tivl auccHIOr or uaign, in
which ovonttho predocuoor
of such aucc1110r or 111lgn
ia diveated of 1llsuch righta,
privileges, franchiHI or ob-ligationa, whether 10 eK·
prnMd or not.
SECTION II: The tormt
and provisions Of thla Ordi·
nance are joint end 18v8ral.
and the lnvllidity of any part
moll not offoct tho volidity
of tho remoindtr of the Ordi·
nan~ .

Real Eatata General

TEAFORDm
Real Estate

L.J::!

""'101
218 E. 2nd St.
Phone
1 ·(8141·992-33211

NEW LISTING - One tloor,
7 rms., bath, drilled well,
range, refrigerator. basemen! &amp; garage, natural gas
F.A. turnace &amp; small stream.
Only $12.000.
RUTlAND - Modern 3 BR
ranch, swim. pool. satellite
dish, elec. B.B. heat, woodburner. range, refrigerator,
dishwasher. dbl. carport. 2
baths, sundeck &amp; tg. yard.
Just $49,500.
POIIEROY - lg. modern
brick near the hosprtal.
Equipped kitchen, cenlralair
&amp;heat, 2 woodburning fireplaces, eKira I~ family rm.,
dbl. garag~ 2\1, baths, 2 palios. lull basement &amp; I~
landscaped lol.
NEAR KROGER'S - 9 rm.
duple•, gas furnace, modern kitchen, garage, carport, carpeting, lg. yard &amp;
view ot nver.
RACINE - Ne1t to school
with 2 level lots. 4 BRs, balh,
gas furance. family rm.
ahoul !8119, kitchen about
1h22, living rm. about
24•25, lg. porch, Jlllio &amp;
garaae. Only $27,500.
PEACH fOlK - 13 acres or
so on Rt. 33 tour tone.AU minerals, some woods, some
cleared. Only $8,500.
46 ACRES - Near Tuppers
Plains &amp;Shade River on IOod
school bus ~ravel road. Some
bides.. electric &amp; sprina.
CUliFIED APPRAISALS

H2·3325

~ftll :

H&lt;ltl',ltlq

Ho·o~rlqtt.ttl •· l '•

SECTION
7: effect
Thlt Ordl·
nance
ahall take
from
and after the earliest period
otlowod by low.
Patted 1hla 8th doy of October, 19B8.
ATTEST: Jono Welton
Bruce Reed,
President of Council
APPROVED:
Rich1rd Seyler, Mayor
121 2&amp;, 1tc

54 Mise. Merchandise

II~=======::;r-----------....,;,--.1...-------~t.=======::;

J.R.'s REPAIRS
TVs, Antennas
Satellite Salts
Installation
Service
Electronic Organs
Mobile service

FOR SALE

Business

100ft.

Middleport
Zone-Commercial

Services

Call 992-3005

614-843-5248

Charlie Sarg_e nt's
CHRISTMAS ·
TREE FARM at
Alfred, Oh., 4 mi.
W. of Tuppers
Plains on St. Rt.

681.

Agood opportunity lor
an ambitious family .
Priced on intpoction.
Call for Appointment

985-41

or 992-ll167

Rt. 124,

101
E. Main

POMEROY,O.
992-2259

NEW LISTING- POMEROY
- Very clean I ~ story
home, carpeting, paneling,
new bath and built-in
kitchen, living room, den,
part finished basement as a
rec. room with bar. I ~
balhs, workshop and storage building. S19,500.00.
RACINE- Here Is a nice l 1h
slory home with up to lour
bedrooms, full basement,
wood burning fireplace, patio,
garage, and in excellenl con·
ditoo, wrth equipped kitchen.
Now $39,900.00.
RUTlAND - Here is a nice
10 yr. old ranch tupe home
wrth 3 bedrooms. balh. garage on a level lot. ManJ new
tealures. Want $36,500.00.
IIIDDLEPOIT - I ~ story
home with 3 bedrooms, dining room, enclosed lront
porch. central air and a
large fenced yard on a
corner tot $28.900.00.
RUTlAND - Nice 10 year
old brick ranch home in a
good localion. Over I acre
and 3 bedrooms. 2 baths.
lull basement, large patio,
e~~uipped kitchen and many
other nice fealures.
IIIDOLEPOIT- Appro1. 12
acres of woodland plus a seven room brick home. 4 bed·
rooms, FAFD heal plus wood·
burner. Enclosed porch. Pri·
vocy! $27,000.00.
Htnry E. Clti11M1,' Jr.

992·5191

Jean Truuetl ..... !14!1- 21160
Oot11t Tumtl ..... !192·5697
Office ................ 992· 2259

2-5-17-1 mo.

Pomtroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

lllu Tremllttl..

PH. 992·5682
ar 992·7121

RACINE

EAGLES &lt;1111 - POMUOY, OM.
THUll.,! PM- II

CUSTOM IUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At R1o1onabl• Prien"

FIRE DEPT.
Bashon Building

EVERY

PH. 949·2801
or 949-2860

SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
Factory Choke
12 Gaug• Shotguns Only

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-16-86-tln

.RADIATOR
SERVICE

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPHO QUEEN lAUNDRY
*GIBSON REFRIGEUIOR
•SATilltTE SAlES &amp; SERVICE

We can repair and re·
core radtators and
heater cores. We can

also acid boil and rod

- Addon1 '"d remodeling
- Roofing and vuuer work
- Concr.te work
- Plumbing 1nd lle clrl c al
work
{Free Estimttea)

W1 N"J ~ fill Tl•t

out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

Sh~

Tec.. lelu

t•

PAT HILL FORD

D•tr

V. C. YOUNG Ill

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHESTER- 985-3307
4/t/tln

992-2196

Middleport, Ohio
1-1 3 -tfc

6-17-tfc

BINGO

BISSELL
BUILDERS

GUN SHOOT

10·1-tln

Roger Hysell
Garage ·

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy,, Ohio

4 - 1 ~.' 86- l c

ICUT OUT FOR fUTURE USEI

EAGLE RIDGE
Truck. auto, 8o
heavy equipment
repain and welding .
(All moklt lo modoltl

161 North ltcootl
Middloport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Carry Fl.hing Supplln

Pay Your Coble 8o
Phone Bltlt Hero
1 IIIIINISS PtiONI
16141 992-65!0
IIIIOINCI PtiONI

''Frte Ettimltet''

PH. 949-2860
or 949·2801
It Sunday Cllh
3-lt-tfn

•Wethere •Dishwaahera
•R1nge1

•Aefrigeraton

Jahn K. lanh
Owner/Mechanic
1-2-'IJ.J

!11RI!tn

.... · - lullt

985-3561
All Meht

PH. 949-2893
or 949-2756

16141 t9H7l4

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

AUTO REPAIR

PLUMIING &amp; HEATING

"VINYl SIDING
"ALUMINUM SIDING
"ILOWN IN
INSULAnON

100ft.

Hartinger Parkway

REASONAIU - REIIAIL£
8-20-'86 Hn

FOI SALE

X

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

•Dryert •FrteJers

PARTS and SERVICE
~ ~

MO.

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SEIVICE
U. S. RT. 50 lAST
GUYSVIlll, OHIO
Authorizt4 ltiHo D•ro.
Now HolltM, '""' Hog
form Equl,...nt
Dtlltr

REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

.SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND
190 MULIERRY AVE.

POMEIOY, ON.

PH. 992·9949

lob larlon, Owntr
2-5--16-tfn

Ftr• E41l,•••t
P•rt• &amp; Servlee
1-3-'16 tfc

10-1-tfc

llr

Announ t: t: 11t 1: nl s
3 Announcement•

QUILTING
LESSONS

~

-

Computerizad Htarilll Aid Selecti~
Swim Molds • lnttrpretina Selvices

"All yau '11114 Ia knaw
to llllke your own quHts
and fill prou•"
Lnsans start

~ LISA M. KOCH. M.S.
~ Ucensed Clinical Audioloeist

MliCH 16 &amp; 17

!

lot' - t iltftrmatltot calh

614-992-7537

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 12l3
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
1·13 tin
'•

Aaetna Oun Shoot spontot.cf by
Rt~ne Gun Club. Every &amp;undty.
btglnnln9 at 1:00 p.m. Flctory
Chake. 12 eu-e• shotgunt.

4

Giveaway

FrM firewood on the iround
behind 1ht alrpart. Call 114.

441·8131 .

ml~~;ld

ho....

bfHd male
Call ., ..

�'

..

•

Page- 12- The Daily Sentinel
4

Giveaway

3 adult male

eeu

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

LAFF·A-DAY

and 1 male

~

knte n to g•ve away Ca ll 614·
985-3884

6

Lost and Found

Found· .,tcimty o f Safford School

FOUND

Call 614-446-

30 acre ftrm htl good home.
large blrn and lerge pnnd. South
W11tern School Di•trh:t Ph.
e14· 24&amp;-9248

Sm all whttndog 1n tha

0 J Wh11 a Rd
446 6297 or 446-8198
vtcm•ty o f

LOST

C.nll

34

Gallipolis area Bluatick

female \'lflth collar and n8mplate·
vary shy If seen please call

Business
Buildings

Commtrclal build1ng1 for leata
Downtown P'l Pleaunt. Store~.
oHtces A-One Rut Eltate
Carol Yeeger. Broker Cell 304875-6108.

614 -142 31 41 aventngs Co llect Reward
Found

Farms for Sale

32 acres 4 miles outlide chy
limits. Cozy 7 room. 1 ttorv
home Populer Addlaon echool
diltrlct. Fitttlng pond. bam • out
building• Cell McGutre Realtor
Co .. 1402 Fourth Ave. Hunting·
ton, WV 215701 or call304·529·
6033.

FOU ND· M1xed bread brown
puppy wearing brown collar

Ad and 141
4977

33

black end wh•te mala

puppy m Bradbury Call 6 14-

992-5066
lost Blac k male Cocker Span1el
m M o rn ing Star area Family pat
Lost S11turday

Ca ll 614-949-

2328

9

·Wanted To Buy

We pay ces h fo, late model clesn
used cars
J1m Mink Chev -Oids Inc
Bill Ge ne John1on
614 446 -3672
TOP CA SH patd for '8 3 model
and newer used cars Smith

Bu•ck-Ponhac

1911

Eastern

Ave , Galll pol ts Call 614-446
2282
Top pn ces pa td fo r stand mtl
t1mber call after Spm Ph 614446· 7624
Wantod to buy Truck top por tn
fir 1 979 Plymouth Arrow Also 2
~oo rs Call614-742· 2260
WAN TED TO BUY - Engtneand
eutomat1c tran smtss1o n lor
198 2 F1rUbtrd Phone 304 675
3698
I

Employment
Services
Help Wanted

Wa nted Rhythm Player or Steele
q;mtRr Player neo ded fo r Coun
f(V Bnnd Prcfor arloasl 25 to 40
'I t old Pref~r so meone who
t mg, , needed tmmed•atly Call
f14 -245-9316
)
TOUR GUIDES
OEERLANO RESORT - Pleasant
~orkmg cond tttons Many comeny benef1ts Management po·
tflont avatleble $300 S460
•-weekly . For appo mtment,
,86-642 1. as k tor Frankie

~

~ETAIL

SEC URITY In local
jtore St ore De tecttve sta n at
t3 65 per hou r. Train1 ng ProQram S. Equtpmen t In cluded
$end background tnformat ton
w1th Phone No To Ftshars Btg
Whool 47. 113 5 US 23 So uth
!peiAwlre, Ohio 43015 ATTN
,. tke Fronckowtak D L P M No
P,hrme cell s please
IM MEDIATE
Fu ll ttmo pos1tion1 Ouahfled
Mont11l Retardatton Professional
eertitted QMRP or ellgablelo be
cert:lftecl 8acholou deg ree re·
guired Profered areal of ma1or,
Soctal Work. Edu catto n, Ther•peutic Recreatton, Rehabtltll·
11on Counseling Send Resume
to: P 0 Bo• 744 Athens, Ohio
4570 1 or cell 614 593 8074
between 1 to 4pm M-F
SOCIAL WORK ER
Immediate full -t1me polttton
mult poneu a minimum nf a
BSW from an accredited schnol
of Soclel Work 1yr1 uperience
'" a health cMe setttng, and
compute r skillt are preferred
Send resume 10 P 0 Bo~t 744,
Athens Ohio 46701 Or Call
614-69 3-8074
Wan ted OCCliSIOn BI babyt iHOr
lor 8 mo old and 5 yr. old Call
614 38 8 9783
REPS NEEDED
For bu!llness accounts FuiiTtmo, S60,000-S80 000-PartTtm e $ 1 2 000· $18 ,000· No
Sell ing, repeat business . Set
your own hours Trainmg pmvided Call 1 612-938 6870.
M·F, Sam to 5pm (Central
Stan dArd Ttmol
Would l1ke to have a aettled
mtdd lo a~od l11dy to movo tn wltll
me Modern ho me I am able
bod ted w1dow Salary for ligh t
house work I wtll call you Send
name. address and phone
nu mber c/ o Galhpolts Dally
Trt bun n B()Jt: T-1010. 826 Thtrd
Avenue Gall tpolis, OH 45631
Help Wan ted
, Nood 8 Good People
No flxp ormnco necessary Must
be 11v1111 able fm immodune employment Hours· 1PMto 10PM
Call Thursday or Frtdey lOAM
to 4PM for peraonal interview
614-446 ·61 46
AVON Sell AVon-Mako 40•..;c
Cell 614-446-3368
- - - - - - - - -lcG OV E R NMENT JOB S
516,040-559 ,230 yr Now Hir·
lng Call 806-6137 ·6000 Ext
R-9 805 for cutrent federal h1t
Apphcat1ons bemg acce pted tor
London Pool Mena~:~or . Send
fel ume, co mp lete with refer
ence to Ctork JAni ce Lawson,
VIllage of Syracu1e Syracuse.
Oh10 45779 Deadline for apply·
mg March 1 1987
E•perlenced aeamatreue1
wan ted Work at home on piece
wo rk Central Ohio doll maker
need 1 ap pro• 10 sewer•
Average pay 16.50 per Rag Doll
including bod le• and cloth e•
Mu1t be wtlhng towork26 houn
or more PM woek . Reliable,
quality cont ctoul mdrvlduell
only Mutt tend s,ample of your
work to M1u Prissy's, 7696
Bell{llre Ave Dublin Ohio
43017 We will return For
det11ils call Barby Roberti 1 ·
889-1397

36

"It's time to go now, Senator."

t 11

;;::;;:;;;;~~==-r;:;~:;;:~::-:;::;;;:;:=~
Help Wanted

IMMEDIATE . Help wanted, full
ttme , Obstetn cal Charge A N
poattton 'avatlable Labor and
delivery experience requtred.
excellent frmge benefit1 and
sta rtmg SBiary Contact pMSOn·
nel dept at Pleasant Vallev
Hospital for more tnformattQn.
Eqwal opponun1ty , eff1rmttive
Aetton protective employees

12

Situations
Wanted

Loo kmg for re1t home for your
love ono1 Large room wtth beth,
hot meals, tv. BIICtru $400 00 .
S600 00 Ph 614·256 -6609
Home care Have room for
olderly lady tn my home State
Ucon1od 1600 per · month
Home cooking, loving care Call
814 742-2292

15

· Schools
lnstruc1ion

Homes for Sale

2 houMa at Hobson One 4
rooms and bath, batement One
6 rooma and bath large lot.
garage Both fOf 819,000 See
Marvtn or Juanita Little or call
614·992·9986 daya.

Buick 6 cylindur engme, rebuilt
less than 20.000 miles tn Buiclt
Skyhawk Body good. frame Is
bad Sell complete $500 Ball
614-992-2839
Completely remodeled 2 bed·
rooms. basement, 11\/erything
new . 2312 Mad11on Ave ..
$21,500 00 304-675-6477 Of'
304· 372-9970
3 bedroom rancher, Meadowland E1tates fbehmd armory)
corner lot, vinyl ttding. heat
pump with centrsl air. large
kitchen tncl stove. refrtgerator.
d1shwa1her, laundry room. lou
mora. Mtd 40 's, cell 304·676·
7127 evenmg&amp; or 676-1185

Retratn Now Sout heastorn 8ul·
mess College. Ca ll 61 4· 446·

4367

18

Wanted to Do

ttoute basement, carport, New
Haven. 304-882 ·2564
Anxlout to 1ellll Reduced pncell
3 bedroom, Z full betlla. built-in
kit&lt;lhen, central air. barn, pond,
8 % acre1, At 2 North Point
Pleaaent Pat and Butch Greenlee. 304·676-28B6

Rooftng, Paint ing, 1mell plumbmg end carpetry joba Reatanablf1, Free Estamate1 Ph 304·
576-2961 .

By owntK, 1 1h 1tory term house.
2 car garage. barn. 30 acres 1n
leon, 304-468-1071

Want to do babvs•ttmg '" my
home Ca11614i J88·8114.

House tn Chiton, $6,600 00.
phone 304·882·3663

Will ta_ke care of elderly pmaons
tn thetr home 20 Years erpertence Call614-446 -2590
W1ll do baby stn ing tn my home
per hour, dave only.
304-676 -7360
.

$1 00

Financial
21

Business
Opportunity

! NOTIC E I
THE OHIO VAlLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO recommend• thai you
do buttnell wtth people you
know , and NOT to 111nd money
through the mail until you have
tnve111g ared the offertng.

EARN 20
On $6,000.00 in leu than a
year. Local Buslneu Man w1nt1
one investor only. Repayment
ns1ured by 3rd party for detail•
tnqulre· BOIIC T-1003 Care Of
Galllpol11 Dally Tnbune, 825
Third Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio
46 631

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

14x70 Fleetwood 3 bdr , 2 full
baths, totalelec ltkenew. pnce
negotltble Cell 1fter 4 week·
daya. any.time weekende 614388-8633.
NEW AND 'USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL"S DUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES , 4 Ml
WEST. GALUPOLIS. RT 36.
PHONE 614· 446·7274
1 4x70 Fleetwood 3 Bdr , 2 full
bat hi, total elec Like new prtce
negotiable Call after 4 waHdavs, anyttmeweek~and• 614·
388-8633.
14x70 Fleetwood. 2 Bdr , 2 lull
baths. total alec Price negoti•
ble C1tl after 4 weekdayt,
anyttme weekendt. 614-388·
8633
1971 Commodore 12d5, 2
Bdr. partly furnished. wood
burning ttove Ph 814-3889804
1972 2 bedroom Mobile Home
S5,500.00 Ph 614·446· 4841

Own your o wn Jeen
Sportawoar ladie• apparol ,
chlldrena-meternity, lerge sb:e1,
pettte, dancewur-aerobic or
acceuoriu store, Jordache,
Ch ic, Lee, Levt, ll:od. Gitana.
Men1, Calvin Kletn , Sergio Valente, Evan Picone, Uz Claiborne. Member• Only. Ga1ollne.
Healtht&amp;IIC over 1000 othera
$14,800 to $26,900 Inventory.
tratnlng, fl•turea, grand opening
etc Can open 15 day1. Mr
Loughlin 812 888-•228

19B1 Oakbrook 14x70, LR
expando, 3BR, 2 bath, woodburner, AC 812,500 or best
offer. Muat sell ctll 614· 379·
2587

Own your own 113 99 one pnce
destgner 1hoe store. A reta1l
price unbelievable for quahty
alloe1 normally priced lrom f19
to 160. Over 160 brand namn
250stylu •14,800tot28. 900
Inventory, training, flxturel ,
grand opentng Can combine
with over 1,000 br.ndl of
apparel, acceuory. dancewe.,.
aerobic. children• 1hop. Can
open 16 day• Mr Loughlin
i81218B8 4228

Mun.ell 1974 Govenor 14x70.
3 BR . 1'h bath, underplnr~~ng
Call 614-388· 9665 or 388·
8192 .
"· ·

23

Professional
Services

P1ano &amp; organ Io no n• . Mary
Lucas Call 614-446-97B7 or
614· 446-4426

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

3 bodrooms clo1e to town 2
bath1 fireplace. central ~lr,
range &amp; oven City School• Ph
614-245-9248

9·vr brick r~n c h , 3 Bdr .. 2 bath•.
full ba1ement , 2-car attlched
gar•"'' lleat pump-central alr.
full spplianced kitchen . C1ty
School• Call 245-9548

Route 36. We n of Ho lrer. 3
m1le1 3 BR . ting l e gar~ge. utility
rm . 1 bath, nice v•rd. Call
614· 448· 1368.
3 8R Wlnd1or mobile home:
Awntngs Plu1 2 acre1 , 12 fruit
tre•. county water, 1eptlc, lda1l
tocltton 'I• milaN . Poner-Hwy.
160 .14.900. Coli 613-731 ·
21 07 Cln"tl.

AVO N. no urvice chJ rg e, open
teHito rles . phone 30 4 -676 ·
1429.

&amp; famllv rm .• apacloul kitchen.

2 ltory, 4 BA'. 3'11 bath, lg living
full ba1ement . awlmmlng pool,
Buckeye fireplace, ttovt, oil
heat, low budgat Call614·448·
7080 .
Two bedroom hou1e, hvin9
room, dlnln9 room. kitchen,
btth. full be1ement, double car
gnage on approxlm•t•lv 1 2
acre. on Ro•e Hill. Pom•ov.
Owner mu1t 1ell. Aea•onable
offttt will be comlidered. Phon a:
8U-578-2513

19;8 Na1hua 12x66, 2 bdr ..
large bath , very good cond
e&amp;600 or belt offer. Call 614·
U6-7e87
Double wide 24x62 new Wtn·
dowa. new counter tops. new
carpftl Ph. 814-266-9393

1 Ox85 Kropf Eldo,.do. 2 bed·
room1, laundry, 911 heat. ra"ed
ceiling wi'tt 1ky llgtttt. underpin·
ning, 101id oak interior Mutt aee
to appreciate. ExceUent condi·
tlon. U600. Ctll ISU· 992·
2763.
1 980 Liberty 2 bedroom. ell
electric, furnlahed -t77BO. Will
contldlf' t,.de. C1ll 814-9927479
'91 Commodore. 141146. Ukt
new lived In only 8 montht,
payofl Phone 304 -882 -36&amp;4.
K &amp; K Mobile Hom•. Inc, new
•nd used homes ataning 11
f4.400.00 1nd up. 304-8753000
Very nlce1981 Patriot 14x70. 2
br, 1 'IJ bath. 101120 porch,
underpinning M1lton Rou1h
304·896-3378
1980 Windtor. 1411C70. 3 bed·
room1. 1 VJ baths. total eltctrlc,
atr cond. porch. mu1t move,
sn.ooo oa 304-B9&amp;· 304B,
896 -3583.

&amp;

Acreage

lot for •ale. 1 1cre plut. New
Pomeroy Rt. 7. Call 814· 992·
5732 o· 814· 992 -7671
-A-oh_t_o_n _ bu- ll_d.:.ln;.g:__lo; 1..:.
1.--m-o_b_olo
homes permitted, Clyde Bowen.
Jr 304·676-2336

6 roomt 11nd bath tn Pomeroy
wtth basement and ftreplace No
reason1ble offer refuted Muat
tell Ptlone 61 4-992· 7462

Fer sale or rent, 4 bedroom

The Army Nat lo n11l Guard needs
both non-prior and prior military
servtce indtvlduall , Join now for
a part-time JOb with lull time
benef it1 Edl!catlonll moMey
8VBIIAbln 304 676· 3960 Or 1·
800-642-3819

IMM EOIATE full tim e operating
room technicisn posit ton Ia
available for qualified individual.
Expcrfo nced applicants only ,
uAcell ent frlnge beneftt packag11.
Tho1o dusirlng more lnformat i&lt;J n
plee,_u contat:lt the peraonne4
office a\ Plea1ant Valley Ho1pi·
ta l, 304-876-4340. equal op·
portunlty , affirmative actio n
protect}ve employer

31

Lots

Rentals

44,

Houses for Rent

3 bdr. ranch, Rodney Village 11.
$2815 mo plul depottt Reteren·
cas requtred Cell Blackburn
Realty 614· 446-000B
8 room hs on 60 acres at Eureka
$200 1 month 8 room hs 76
acre farm-Mason County Cell
304-876-6104

~2:-8~R='.-o-n--:VI_n_e_S_t_l_n_1_ow-n.-A~I
new carpet, d11hweeher. refngerator atovo Call 61 4·446·
1119
Beautiful 3 bedroom hou1e ln
Svracuae Full kttchen, large
lawn. Contact daya 814-992·
6298 or nlghte 614-667· 3785.
In Mtddleport. 2 bedroom house
1200 per month plus utilittes
Reference• and aecurlty daposh
required No peu Kitchen stove
furn11hed. C1ll 614· 992·5018.
2 etory, 7 room houae for rent in
Oanvtlle. Ohio 1 V2 bath Cell
814-742-2347
House in Cheater, 6 roomt 1nd
bath Close to ac:hool *180 per
month plut depoait Call 614·
986-4300 and 614-992· 7262.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rant

2 bdr , &amp;II utdittM paid OIICept
elec:: , furn or unfum , sac
depoatt required. Convenient
locatton. Cell 614-446-856'8 or
814-448-4778
2 bdr fullyfurnllhedadulteonlv.
uttl patd Call614·446· 4110
In Eureka IIICCellent ehape 2 Bdr
wtth up1ndo. Ruponeible
adults only. No pot1 t225mo
Depotit required Ph 614-2465883
3 BR home. water &amp; ltlth
furn"ad Vmtoneree. f176 / mo ,
e10010ep. 2 children . C1ll
614· 398· 9686.
2 bedroom mobile home for rent
Adult• only Call 814· 992·
2698
1986 Mobtle Home 141170. on
St . Rt 143. $230, gutnciuded
Call 814-992·6449
Mobile Home for rent near
Chethire Call 814-387-714B
3 bedroom. furntshed. wa1her
and dryer, awning, air $210. per
month •100 deposit Call
814-992-7479
K &amp; K Mobile Home1. 2 and 3
bedroom mobile home1, 304·
675· 3000.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE

Apartment
for Rant

Apartment
for Rant

2 BR, 16 Court St C1rpeted

Kitchtn furn $350-mo nth Plu1
utilit1et, depotil. Cell814-446·
4925.
1 Bedroom baeic rent 8178 00
plus alectrlc Also requited a
$200.00 ttcurity depoelt. CON TACT Jeck1on E1ta1e1 Dept. Ph
448 -3897 EqUII HoUitng
Opportunity.
2 Bedroom 1pt nice carpttmg,
water paid. waaher &amp; dryer
hook-up, ltova, refrig furnl1hed
avatllble Jan 1, 1987 Ph.
614·448· 7025.
Furn11hed &amp; unfurni1hed apts .
1160 00 and up. reference• Ph
304· 875· 7738 or 304-876 6104 A·1 Real E1t1te

0
0

72

.....
Household Goods

Room• for rent, day week.
month G1lha Hotel Call 614446-9715 Rent allow as &amp;120
month

46

Space for Rent

Ofhce Space for Rent Excellent
tor Attornev1. Account1nt, etc.
Close to Court House Call
Wiseman Real Ettate Agency.
814-446-3644
Three room offtca. DTW Gelhpo·
ht. newly remodeled $300 00 e
month. includes ell utthll• Ph.
814·446·1647
18'•48 ' Steel Bldg -747 Third
Avenue 3 phase power. 12 ft.
overhead door, concrete floor
Cell 614-448-2382.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
Rental treiiMs Call 114-992·
7479

47

Wanted to Rent

House m country, praler Leon.
Arbuckle area. Rea1onable rent.
Will fl• up II neeeaury 304·
676 -6362

Merchandise

Whlrlpoolwathtf 175 Kenmore
Washer $86. Mayttg wringer
Wllher •815. Aafrigeretor fro•t·
free •&amp;15! Aefrigerelor tide by
•ide •915 Electric range 30 ~neh
t96. Electric flnge 38 inch 1115.
Ge• range 30 inch •eli. Dryer·
Kenmore t95. Skaggs Appliancea. Upper River Rd .. 814-446·
7398.
Good u1ad portable and floor
model color t\l's Ph 814· 446·
1149
Early Amertcan, cream. brown,
gold and orange, couch and
chatr, ume as new Early
American Zanhh contole 1tereo
AM-FM radio Phpne 304· 713·
5007

54

Misc. Merchandise

61

w.o .. :

201 0 John Deere dieael triiCtor·
plows. di1c t3950 New Idee
Dyne Bounce mower •495 Ute
model 22U John Deere baler
$1296 Hey wagon $300 Call
614·286·6622
CROSS~

SONS

U S 35 Wut, Jackson. Oh1o

814-265-5451
Ma••ev Fergu1on, New Holland,
Bu1h Hog Seles &amp; Service Over
40 uted tractors to choo1e from
It complete \Ina of new &amp; used
equtpment. Ltngo1t aelect1on m
S.E Ottio
JIM "S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER SA 35 W Gellipolia,
Ohto Call 814· 446-9777 , eve
614-446· 3692 Up fronl tree·
ton wtth warranty over 40 used
tractors. 1 DOD toni•

74

M otorcyclas

1986 Yamaha Trt-Z. 250 and YZ
250 Ellceilent conditiOn Call
614-448-9710 after 6pm
1983 Honda V·45 Magna. e•cel·
lent condltton. \lery low mtleege .
wtttl extraa Ph. 614·367·0683

Pla1t1c clltem 111te approved,
pl11tic 1epttc tanks, plaStic
culvert•, met•l culverts. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jack·
son. Oh 614-286 ·&amp;930

180 Mau1e Fergueon • Dteaal
Tractor 2300hrs $3,960.00
6ft . Pull Type Bush Hog
8450 00. 300 gel :prayer with
20ft: boom• $295 00 Ph 2B6·
6622.

16"1:! ft Gla1tron Sk1 Boat 1977
Mercury 176 tiP recently rebu tit.
13800 814-992 5437 after 5
pm

OP Multi·Potltion We1ght Bench
With leg curl plu1 1 101bs of
wetghtl. Like new t80.00 Cell
614-448-1808 tnytime
D1vltone landtcaplng. Pink &amp;
White Doawooda, Flowering
Crabtraes. Sttede Treea end
Confart. Can be planted now for
this lprtng. Ph. 614-2158-1427

Whttt Farm Tractors. Best Prtce
Ar~a . Stdera Equtpment Co.
Henderson. W. Ve. 304-6757421

m

Wanted to Buy

tli! .IM

Boats and
Motors for Sale

Household Goods

SWAIN '
AUCTION ~ FURNITURE 12
Olive St., Gellipoll1. New &amp; used
wC?Dd·coal stovH, I pc wood lR
autta t398, bunk bed1 •199
rechnar• new &amp; used bedroon\
11,1itaa, wringer wuher.. &amp;
shoa New hvlngroom suite•
8199-1599. llmpe. c.n 614·
446-3159.
County Appliance, Inc Good
used appliancet tnd TV 1811
Open BAM to 6PM . Mon thru
Se1 614-446-1699. 627 3rd.
Ava G.alllpohe. OH.
Valley Furniture. new &amp; u•ed.
Large 1ect1on of qutlity furniture 1218 Eastern Ave

Galhpoll•

.•

GOOD USEO APPLIANCES
Wa1hert, dryera. refrigerator~.
rangt• Sk1gga Apphance 1
Ua?per River Rd. beside Ston~
Crest Motel. 814· 448-7398

Sofas 1nd chain priced from
f395 to 1895. Tables tiSO and
up to $125. Hida· a·beda $390
to t595 Recllnett· t226 to
·~76 Lampe •21 to •126 .
Dinettes 1109 1nd up to f495 .
Wood teble w-6 chair• 1286 to
8796 Oa1h ,t 100 uP to U76
Hutch18 $400 and up. Bunk
bed1 complete w-mattrea...
•295 and up to t395. Baby beds
.110&amp; 1175. MattrHII8orboiiC
1pring1 full or twin •83. firm
*73, and U3 Queen "'s U26.
Kmg $360 4 drawer ehetl ta&amp;
OrHatrl t89. Gun cabinet• 8 ,
10. 12 gun. Gat oralectricrange
f376 . B1by mehre••• US &amp;
•45. Bed tramH e2o no &amp;
King frame UO. Good' stleetln
of bedroom 1ultes. metal cabtnets, hetdboard• no and up
to f86 .

18 ft . UtiNty Trailer, duel axle,
solid floor. Call 814·388-9802
Fuel Otl Tank holds 1 00 gellon oil
076.00 Ph. 814-448· 2491 ond
1&amp;1\lem•nge.
Wood1plitter
90cc •1 00
4426

•&amp;oo ,

Kawuakl
Cell 61 4- 448·

CtoH out ule on 1981 Wttite
~lng mach1ne-equipped to
Ztg-ug, monogram, over cnt,
mend. h.mming, male• button
hole1, darn•. nw• on buttan•
and more Thete machint8 are
new with a 10 yr werr1nty.
Suggnettd price 1e f329.815
now only '98.96. Call814-386·
41536 for free dltiN'tfY .
Cto•e out ule on 1988 White
tewlng m•chlne-equipped to
lig-11g, monogram, over caat,
mend. htmmingfo.fldtemp
Milled hlfdwood alllbt. t12. per
bundle. Containing •pprox 1,h
tont. FOB Ohio Pallet Co
PomOfoy. Ohio Coll614-9928461 .
12 f1 utillltt dlth . AM remote
control. Good •t new. Call
evantngs 614-992-6181 Mul1

....

FlrtwGod for ule t 30, big
pick-up lold, delivered. C1ll
614· 742·3194 or 814· 742·
2076.
17 h Conseuion Trallor
U&amp;OO CeiiiU-992-7830
Very lerge gymn,.tlc cuthlon for
Hit. Durable CO'Itr . Atking t715
Call 814·982·3200 or 114·
982-3824, eak for Rev. BakM.

Mtn"a dltmond ring, ~111 13 3
dlemonda, .18 c1ra1, 14 K. gold
Recent appraiaal medt wtth
repl1cement Vllue ut et
U89.96. .lhkmg 1300 Call
814· 912· 3200 or 114-992·
3124, a1k lor Rev S.ket
ttor•g• building New.
Stwmlll and eewmlll part1 for
Nle Coli 114-247-3281

••n

Uaecl Furniture: wood t1bfe &amp; 2
banch11, bed1, dretltr, wood
Tony" a Oun Repain. hot reblu•
wardroba 3 mil• out Bulaville ing. Open 8;00 AM to 7 .00 PM .
Rd Open 9AM to &amp;PM. Man
Call 304-1715-4831 .
Furm1hed apartment. next door th s 1 614 4 4 6 0
to librtry. One profHitonaledult l --r"_;.
e ...:_--·.:.:..:.·_:::3:2:2·:..__
HerbaHta Independent Diet Call
STOP-LOOK-SAVE
only. Parking. C.ll 814-446·
me for product. Mon-Fri. 9·3.
0338
Mollohan Fumitur• It Applian·
Gloria Grete 304-882-3162
cat, fU. 7 North GtlllpoliJ, Ohio
01kwood Apt. 1 bedroom unit, P.h . 814·448-7444. lpc Wood
Bauett IOta. IOYHHt. chair,
nove 6 refrigerator furniahed
Uv1ng Room Suite t399 00.
green floral. King wood·coM
No pets. Call 614-446-2056
burner, 4 yr11 old, Hldam u1ed,
afler &amp;pm.
Lewn mower. t40 W•lnut co304-871-8932 ah• • :30
lored etereo. f46. Blond drBII•
Garage ' apaftment furnl1hed with mirror. t26. keroHnt '
Chief Wood, wood bumtr 1nd
$1 76 00 plus electricity Secur- heater. f46 . Twin 1ired box
load of wood. I 1 &amp;0 00. 304·
•tv depotlt required Adultl only spring•, UO Call 114-448·
576-2704.
Cell 814-446·6298.
2025.
Model 84 Wineh•ter Clatlc
30· 30 f450 . 20" Humelhe
Xl-12 chain HW t10D. Cell
11
304-773-5303.
'

SNAFU by Bruce Beattie

65

1983 N11hua witt! e11p1ndo, 3
bedroomt, central air, many
utral, will tall with or without
land. 304-876-5828 bftlween
6:00 and 10:00 PM
REPOSSESIONI I Pay jutt whit
11 owed. nice ct.. n 121186, 2
bedroom, til electric mobile
home, ;un reconditioned. Mod·
Mt amount down, balance f1·
naneed In monthly payments--·
Ukt rent. only vou are buying
vour own hom all Wt wi" d,tlvtr
to tltlonable locetk)n at no
additlonM ch•ge II purch•td
thlt WHit: Phone 304-8715·
1121 between 9:00 AM -5:00
PM .

Building Supplies

t·a

"That elk we've been tracking lor the lui
law yean never migrated this way before."

63

Livestock

Ro"tltered Quarter Horse born
6-17-88 Grullo. good bloodline
Ph 814-379-2143.
Standtng At Stud AQHA Pelemino Stallion. 16.1 hand1. Reglltered M1res $100. 614-9492455 evaningt.

64

Hay

&amp;

Grain

76

71

Autos for Sale

1984 Dodge AriH, auto air
Calh price e2 ,799. 00, Johna
Auto S1l". 8ulev1ttt Rd.
1885 Old1 Cutlan, AM· FM
Cauete, V-8, black E•cellent
conditinn Ph 814-245-5841
after 4pm
1980 Ford Mu1t1ng, 4 cyl ..
auto 11400 Good co ndition
Call 614·446-7679 or 614448· 9621.
19'74 Dodge Challenger Over
600 In motor New C1m, 4
barrel! t1Jbur1tor. held era, 4
new tire•. on keyatonH with air
lhockl. Netds 10me bodY, work
noo oo Coii&amp;14·388· 918B.
1881 Z-28 C.maro, red &amp; blac..
lnt!ll'ior PS, PI, eir, tilt wh"l,
crul1e. AM-FM CIUittt. Ph.
814-388·9802
1980 Chevette. Nelda carb
rtbuilt. 1360. Call 614-4480227

Concrete bloclla allelrea y1rd or
dtllvtry M11on und. Gtllipolls
Block Co . 123Y.t Pint St ..
Ooftlpollo. Ohio Coli 114· 441·
2713.

1970 Chevrolet Monte Carlo
body good. new p•inl 1976
Chtvorohrt C•price, good condi·
11on. Cell 114-892-6722 lftor
8 ·00 IVtnll'tfll.

&amp;6

1874 Ooc;tge Special Edition. 4
door. low milttge. good condl·
tlon. f1200. C1ll 814-9921131 .
'73 Nova, 33,000 mil .. 8 cyl
A,P,S. 4 door, 11cond 'owner:
gr-blk top. •1 .950.00. 304·
675·5384.

Groom and Suppty Shop· Pet
Grooming . All bre•dt ... AII
styl... Julie Webb. C•ll 114·
441·0231 .

1976 Bulcto RB11•1 noo.oo
Phon• 304 ·875· 1818 ...... r
6·00 PM

Shephenl puppiN. no p1per1,
304-675-eeos.

cond. 304· 176-3341 or 1755185.

ns.oo

'78 Chewol" K· fi Bluer. good

.t

Po f~You;&gt;

.

Cil Bring ' Em Back

Alive
Perfect Stran·
gera iCCI larry makes a
confeaston to Jenntfer when
helears tha1 he, Balki, Jennifer and Mary Anne are hope·
le~sty snowed tn al tha1r re·

(]J

U•ed auto pan1 Chrytler and ·~
Chevy Call614-247-3281 ~ ·

Services

of2

CD College llatketball:
. Kontucky at Georgia 12
hrs )
(]J
MocNell-lehrer
Newohour
[JJJ DIDl New Mike Ham·

'

-------- '
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
.
Uncondittonal lifattme guaran·· ·.
tee local refertnces furntthed ·
FrH eellmatea. C1ll collect ·
1-614-237· 0488, dey or night, :
Rogers Be1 emon t
Walerproofing
•
SWEEPER and sewing machltie ·
repair, partl, and suppltll PicN'
up 1nd delivery, Davia Vacuum 1
Cleaner. one half mtle up '1
Georges Creek Ad Call 614· ' 1
446-0294
'.

mer Hammer helps a pa.r of
young private eyes handle a

case 1nvolvmg extortton at·
tempts made aga1nst a fa·
mous apparel dos1gner (60
mtn ~J

EEK &amp; MEEK
BEUE.VE. ME.... LIF£

I~~

FAST CHEC!iXJT LAIVE. IS
NElJ£R IX)LL "~PE-S£ D*S

'

RON'S Televilton Servtce
Houle call• on RCA . Qua:c~r, :
GE . Speclallng m Zeni1h Call ·
304 -578-2398 or 814-448- .
2464.

•(]J lill

1

Pl..tAsc sL&lt;JN

READ

upcti\IING SIGN

,J. .~t .J. J. J.,;_,

1HAN~ ~ou­

'''.•'"*•

'/ou 11-M

~E$1.4\E SPf~D

SAKES
AUVE!!

FLIE'S !!
10:00

Unforeseen
danger

NORTH

1·11-n

us

.64
• J

10"

+Q 10 7, 2

By J1mea Jacoby

.J•...
EAST

It's easy enough lor you, as declar· WEST
tJ913
er, to work out your campaign to
108 32
987
make your contract. But along the • Q. 2
tAK84
way, you should lake care 10 remove +AKJ S
+uat
any possible stumbling blocks. Making
SOUTH
lour spades looked easy, even with the
tA K Q 10 7 U
unforeseen bad trump split Jus t
.A
KQS
trump lhe small losing heart in dumt75
my, giving up a trump trick and two
diamond tricks. And that is just what
Vulnerable : Both
today's naive declarer set out to do He
Dealer South
trumped the opening club lead, played
one high trump, and then played A·K
Nortl11 Eut
w..t
and a low heart. West came m with the
nine of spade•, played a diamond to
2t
Pau
Pass
East's k1ng and happily trumped an·
2 NT Pau
Pus
other heart wi1h his spade lack. And
!NT Pus
the defenders still had the diamond
Pass
PHI
Pus
ace for the setting trick.
Of course, 1t's bad luck that Wesl
Opemng lead: K
had only two hearts. but there was shU
no excuse for declarer setting himse lf .
He certainly cannot avoid the loss of a K of hearts and try to rull a hetrt. U
trump trick and two diamonds But he Wes t ruffs, it will be with his natural
needn't rush to trump the third heart. trump trick, and there will be no WIJ
Instead declarer should first go about fo r him to give the lead to East to pi
disrupting the defenders· communica- ano1her ruff.
tion, just in case ol a bad break In the A new book by JameB J~coby aDd IJJI
heart suit. Let declarer lead a dia · father, the/ate Oswald Jacoby, u IIOW'
mond. Alter winning whatever the de· available at bookstores. It u "hcoby
lender returns, let him lead another on Card Games, " published by Pblrw
d1amond Now 11 is safe to play the A· Books.

•·..

p,,.

+

ACROSS
45 lmp rovt•
I Ra.imnnrlJ ,

see Jane.

SeeDk.lt

6 Avcragt•
9 t'augu•·d

~'rPd

3 Point

or

Vi£'W

. 13 Cravt'

4 Perc h

16 lluwnmM
Sl numh~r
16
cert ain
hnndiWtlrk
18 NiRhl

nu

•

t:Nlfun•
19 Re&lt;IU in•
21 Howard
nr nuttlry

tts protests and thousands
of people JOin together to
march from Selma. Al 10
Montgomery. 1he movemen I becomes d1vided . (60
mml
[JJJ
IDl Magnum. P.l. A

23Quw
24 S wo rds .

Yesterday'• Aflower

~ F'ornwr
6 ('ovt•n:mt

23 Group uf 32 "South
families
Paclflc"'

7 In tl11•

24 Ampl• ·
hero
past
25 Vwtnry 33 A&lt;-tre"'
8 Daydream
•ymlxol
~1. .lame.
11 ConSP,·ratt· 26 Orel(nn 34 Tendency
140asic
dly
36 '- ar~
prindple
27 t'1lm
called .. "
17 Lofty
length
39 Negative
muunuun
29 Fluidity 41 Pierre'8
-r,;A-1"';;;'i:;.;sfi
ta:;.;n.;t::-~unit .,...._ _..::

man
27 Naval
fort'&lt;'

28 t:radkatr
29 llrown k1w1
30 Ahso·nl
31 Up-and-up
35 NiRe rlan
38Shea

h-+--+--

athlctt•
37 Wa ll (f'r.)
38l;thyan

d ty
40 Aromati•
hrrh
42 llrllish
symbol
43 llt' IRhL•
In ttw twws
44 "llaw ynu

D Cil

(]I) St. Eloewhero
(CCI A 1hnlled Fiacus in1er·

f

- wool'! "

w-..

DAILY CRYPTOQllarES- Here'a hoor to wort It:

1111

AXYDLBAAXR
~LONGFELLOW

One letter stands lor another. In this sample A illlled
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letLen
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are ali
hlnll. Each day the code letters sre differe nt.

CRYPTOQUOTE
2-25

mrn t
()]) Newowotch

I K

@ Newo
MOVIE :

"r

nfway

becomes more organtzed 1n

10:0S (]J

2 Wuudy

10 Along
In yt•ar!'i
12 Shade

a

anc1e1ane.

DOWN
I Slltd1

~~

e

' Coptaln

E N II S

lJ K R X

Blood'
10:30 CIJ American Snoplhotl

-

eCDINNNtiWI

A K X

A IIII W

(J K R

NHnxs

SK

QKH " WW

I'll
I' II

f)(;

X liO

N~

YX I• Sn .

()]) Gotto M.... Thie Jollr·

nov: s - Honev 1n thl
Rock A profile of live
women who fanned o elng.

PEANUTS

Upholstery

\

James Jacoby

22 Drv1lkln

a

Watterson '• Water Hauling :
reatonable rates. immed tat e ·
2,000 gallon dalivery, eiuerns '
pools well etc call 304 576: ·
2919
I
•

'

Mowrey'• Uphol1terln" serving ~
trl coun!vare• 22 year•. Thebett :
In furnn ure uphol1taring Ca ll
30• · 876 - 4164 for ' tre e :
eatimates

IIIIIII

BRIDGE

who has been impregnated
wtth his sperm, while Walt·
phall hopes to comf0&lt;1 a
fnend whose son 1s diag·
nosed aa diabetic (60 m1n I
(]J
(]J lllrborl
Speclol ICCI Barbaro Wol·
ten tnterviawa Bette Mldler,
Michael Douglas and Patrick
Duffy, 160 mln .l
(lJ Odd Couple
(I) Konowhl County on
the Une
(jJ
llll Equalizer A 13·
year-old girl, running eway
!tom her baullng perents.
get• caught up '" 1he world
of child pornography (60

'

'

I'
I

speclallll to operate on hla dog. Later, the specllllat
summoned the snlat 10 palnl hla FJIONT OOOR.

fares in the caae of a woman

.•.

R &amp; M Custom Couche• and:'
Reuphol1tery. St Rt. 7 Crown· \
Ctty. Oh 814·266 -14;0 Eve .
614-446-3438. Open daliv 9 tO ;
4 30. Sat 9.30 to 1 30 Old &amp; •
new Uph os tared
,~

l!TT!RS

II"

I'
I

YESTEIDAY'S SCIUI-liiS ANSWEIS

® Hogon'o Heroeo

Dillard Water Servtce PoolS
Sltterns. Wells Delive1y Any;\.:
time Call 6 14-446-7404
~

87

r1 1I2

GirOir - Proud - Al'ool - Orient - FRONT DOOR
The llmoua altlat called lor the tlnoat ear, noaa ond thraat

hrs.} live.

General Hauling ·:
'

House coal. Hmeetone. and :
O~lvel De h\l&amp;red 1 ton 11nd up •
Jtm Lanter , 304-67&amp;. 1247 or 1
676-7397
.

Comple•e lho chuck le quoted
by ft flmg tn the mtsstng words
you deve lop from :Uep No. 3 Wlow.

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

6 u~~R~rra~N~~~~

College Botlk.-1:
Syrecuoe 11 St. John"o (2

I

Water hauling, Formerly Ken :
Whaetona now John' l Waler•j
Service Same prt col, phon8 ,
~Oit- 576 · 29 1 9 or 576 2464

e

IIJ

HOW TIME

TATER ·

See Dick.

'

Stereo

'
:

j

--.L...-L.-...-..1-.-.L
. ...J

rettred New York detec11ve
htres Magnum 10 help t11m

·

James Boya Water Servtce Al1o 1
pools filled. Call 614 -256-1 141
or 614 446-1175 or 614·446·"
7911

Ie

I

l1nd the miss1ng son of longlost friends . (60 mln.l
9 :30 D Cil (jJ) Tortellio In

MERCY

LOOKV·· A BODACIOUS

. FER

.

The tailor meuurad lhe rMn'l
walatllne. "Dt1r me," the mill
slghld. ··a tree with the SUM Clr·

DELATE
l--rii5:-TI....::..,;I6,:...;1....::.,1-1

a

,t ,j~· •i ,w L.;. ,.

BARNEY

'

I

r---------, cumference would be muc"--~

Eyoo on tho Prize:
~merlca'o
Civil Rlghto
V11ii, 1964-1985 Even
though ci vil rtghts leadership

WEIRD KIDS IN THIS
NEIEiHBORHOOD.

ALL·DAY SUCKER

CARTER"&amp;
PLUMBING
'
AND 1HEATING
Cor Four'lh •nd Pine
Gallipolil, Ohto
Phone 814-448 -3888 or 614~
446 4477

I

;..:.,I

~
•
:
I I I I

about Adem and Oex meets
a former g~rlfnend on a bust·

WE'VE. q0T SCME RIOALLY

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

,.#.

C1J

neS&amp; 1rip (60 mon )

~.AND

.A"~......

1

1-1---..:.G...:O;....:.U...:V--=;E~~

Science
MOVIE: 'Tick ..•Tick·
.. Tick .. .'
8 :30 (]J8(1)Heldofth1Cieu
(CCI
9:00 • Cil (II) Glmmt • Brllk
Nell ia shocked when Sam
tells her tha1 she plano to
drop out of coNego and
move tn with her new boy·
fnend Part 1 of 2, In Stereo
(1)700 Club
(]J D CIJ Oynooty (CCI Tho
Carringtons rush to ftnd a
heart donor lor Krystina, a
man from Alexts' past ar·
nves with shocktng news
8 :05

MPRTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Fetty Tree Trimmmg, etump
remove! C1ll 304-675· 1331 .
AINGLES 'S SERVICE . expenenced carpenter. electrician ,
!fili on. painter. rooting (l ncludmg hot tar appl &gt;eatlon} 304875· 2088 or 675· 7147.

~-

lill Dlocovor: The World of

All types carpenter &amp; concrete
work· Interior, extertor, rerJIO·
dellng, p1inting, roo fi ng. free
a.ltmetel. Call 614· 446·6174.

B5

CIJ

e

~a~,----~H~o-m_a____~-~

82

a

mote mountatn cabtn Part 2

1986 Ford Thunderbird. one Rotary or cable tool drilling
owntr, mu•• sell. Cal1814· 246· Moe• welit completed umeday:·
Pump 11181 and service. 3049234.
896· 3802
1984 Ford E1cor1 Wagon, AT,
PS, and air $2,850 00 Ptt StarkJ Tree and Lawn Servtce.
Hedgu , l hrubl. bushu
28e·6622
trimmed, land1capmg, 1tump
1986 Plymouth Dutter . 6- 1nd l..f removal. 304-676• :·
tplled, AC. 17,000 miles, nice 2842 or 678 2903
clean car Ph . 814· 379-2721

1970 Ch...,elle-Mull Sell Ask·
lng 82800 May eontlder trldt.
Coii614· 446-B201 .

Pets for Sale

WHAT CAN

mm ) In Stereo.

Mullina Home lmpro\lementl.
Vmyl &amp; Alum . Stdtng &amp; Soffit
Free estimatas !W1Ih11m Mulltnsl
Ph. 814·398-9821

Tr a n s p o rt ~ 110n

Notre Dame 11 DaPoul (2
hrs )
7:36 (]J Honeymooner•
8 :00 D Cil (]I) Hlghwey to
Heaven (CCI Jona1han tnes
to help a successful TV an·
chormlln whose coca1ne
addtctlon is threatemng his
family and his career (60

Used GM transmt1110ns All
Internally mspected &amp; guar&amp;ntood Alao Ford &amp; Chrysler. Call
614 448-0988

Want to trtde large round balot
of hay lor cattle Ph 814· 48·
1062

Hay for ule, T A. Wiltiemson,
304-676· 2686

tiMPi/IIESS.•

of

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Room addition1, electrical. roofing, aiding, plumbtng E11cellent
refManeu Call 814· 367· 0412.

Dried shelled corn •4 60 per
cwt Ground $6 00 per cwt.
Ground whh moiiUH a5 76 per
cwt 304· 468· 1031 .

.
·
·
.

(]JJudge
(}II Wheel of Fortune

D IDl llli Jeopardy
lD College llaoketbell:

~I..UfBi~P

Urge round be lea of hay, 810.00
each Wtll deliver Cell814·446·
1062 1fter 6pm.

Building M1terlalt
Block, brick, ltw., pipBI, win·
dowt, llntltt, etc. Clauda Wlnttrl, Rio Grenda, 0 . Call 114245-5121

Dregonwynd CtttM'; Kennel .
CFA Himllaytn. hnl•n and
Slam.. kittens. AKC Chow
puppltl. Call 114· 441-384•
.tter 7PM.

'88 ''Holly Park", 14x80, 3
bedroomt, 2 batht, 304-87&amp;·
7298.

Now buymg shell corn or ear
corn. Call forlate•tquotea Rtvor
City Farm Supply. 814 -4462995

e
Game
e
CD Too Ctooe folo Com·
• folot

THf-

/

8 hp new " Troy Btlt" roto tiller,
30.. 896· 3866

62

Newton'• Apple (CCI
Astronaut Jeff Hoffman
ducribta his voyage aboard
the apace shuttle .
lD WKRP In Cincinnati
CIJ AM'( Griffith
G Cil PM M~lne
Cil Hlt'dcutte end McCor·
mlck
IIJ College Bnketbell:
Provtdonce va. Seton Hill
From Madison Square Gar·
den. NY (2 hrs. . 30 min I
LIVe
CIJ Entertainmont Tonight
A look at the 29th Annual
Grammy Awards
eCDM'A'S'H
• (]J p_.... Court
(I) MOVIE: 'Monkey'o Un·
cit' Part 2
[JJJ New•
lill
MocNell -lehrer
Newehour
eiDJ (]I) Wheel of Fortune
lD Berney Miller
(]J S..folod end Son
Cil (]J New Newlywed

0
75

477 New Holland 7ft. Hay Om a.
like naw lor $2,600.00 Vermeer Round Baler 4x&amp;ft bolas.
used 1 IO&amp;IOn Call e14-3889832

7 :06
7 :30

1993 Yamahe VZ 80. OIIC coniJ.
8600 00 Se e at 2508112 Madi· .
1on or call John 304-875-6497 ~

1976 3600 Ford Tractor with
plows 85,260.00 New Holland
Hay Baler e796 00. MF Reka
0396 00 Cell 614-286· 6622

Beby crib wittt mattre11 excellent condition Ph. 11514-2469110.

8:36
7 :00

'86 Toyota. 4 whet~l dri\le, oxtla :
cab. loaded. S veer transforable .
warranty, $9,600 00 304-882::"' ..
3780 or 304· 773-5858

C•llahan's U1ed nre Shop Over
1 . 000t~ras , atJet 12, 13, 14, 16.
lllli. 16.6 8 milea out At 218
Cell 614·268·8251

SS Ruger Rephlwk 41 M1g.
Atldng noo.oo Ph. 814· 388·
9924.

~-

• .k ·:,..:1.
1986 Yamaha MOTO 4· 22&amp;. ~"
li. LIV I:S tllc k
,dual actton trlntmtulon with ?
reveru. Low u1age, excellent ,.,#
Farm Equipment · condttlon S1.750 00 Ph 614·
446·8977.
!

r( 1yl

I

illJ

'&gt;

$_

be·

PRUOG
t--,.:....:11 1~1 l

e(I) Doctor Who
()1\ a (jJ) CBS Newe

.....

1!

11

a

,•

Improvements

51

'fbll."

t~e

low ro form four si mp le words

8 :oo • m (]J a ciHJJJ e!Dl llll
Newa
CIJ Big Volley
IIJ Mudo Spor11Look
CD J e l l - •
(]J Squore One TV (CCI
illJ Secret City
@ Fecte of Ufe
8:0&amp; (]J Beverly Hlllbllllee
8 :30 G CIJI]II NBC Newe
1IJ SjiortaCenter
(]J 8 (]J ABC Newe
CD Hagen'• Heroee

'79 Che\ly Luv. 4 wheel drwe: li(· ; :
cond. good ahape. 304· 87&amp;'\- ~
3478
'
; '..;.

Vans 8t 4

0 fou
Rearrange lett•rs of
r scrombltd word•

EVENING

~~

;;;:~;:==~~~;;~ -·

814-446 -8221 .

For rent Sleeping Room• and
light hou1e keeping rooms Park
Cenir•l Hotel C1ll 614-4480766

Trucks for Sal a

••••
....

2/25/87

AL\TTL~;

1981 Mazde Truck. no rust ·"""
t2. 160.00 Ph. 286·8622.
• ""'
:7~~--.:..:..:..:.:__.:.;.:__~ ~'
1972 Ford good condilt~n ~~
e&amp;26.00 Ph. 814-388·9119-:,." " 1'

~:u~::.~E~re~a~~~~:~:~~:! f~~~~~~;i~~=~~=====~~~~g~
73
61
Fmn Sup pli es
Furnished Rooms

IW'PV :i!N6'5

----------'-': ~:

1 bedroom furnltf'lld apt. in
Middleport. All utllttl• paid.
1210 month plut depoait. Un·
fu rnl1hed t 200 814· 892 ·
6783

Two bedroom apt. phone 304·
676-264Bor 676· &amp;783

OF WATEI: ~HIU::

'79 Mercury 302. V-Beuto, nftw
raidel. 1950 00 '78 Olde
Omega 250, 6 cyl. auto, good
coM, 1860.00 304-578-2192:

"

The Daily Sentinei- Page-13
-· .

Television
Viewing

HAJ:RY'.•. I WILL. ~If,\!::. A

1977 Volksw•gen Dasher, 4 cYI, .:
4epetd. 71.000mtiel. realgolld
care. 304·676· 3641 .

6 room unfurnished apartmarit.
Call 814-992·543• or 304-882-2868.

Two bedroom furnlthed apt New
Haven, 304-882-3287 or 304·
773-5024

BORN LOSER
1M FRietP'HA~ -)f-

1977 F1reb1rd, ~od cond, one ·:
owner, covered. not driven for 2 .
yurs , 100 , 000 mil d s ~· ·
•1 .000.00. afler 6.00, 304~ •
676-3781
•

2 BR. 1pt Syrtcuae U 35
monttt plua utilltln. Deposit
required . 614·992·15732 ~r
814· 992·7671 .

u,

Autos for Sal~•. ;

•

POfl18I'OY-Midd...........
"'r"~... Ohio .

W&amp;dnelday, February 26, 1987
.' .

'77 Chevy Nov.,, 8 cyl, auto, PS, ,;
P8 . AM·FM, Keystone Magi , ~
redial tiret. 304-882-2826. .;. ~

2 bedroom. furnlahed or unfur·
ntlhed apartment on SpringA\Ie.
Large patio. C811614· 912-1888
afler 8·00 p.m

1977 Mobile home, 12•60. ell
electric. e8,600 00 304· 678·
2809

1978 Camtron, 12•&amp;0 mobile
hom1, totel elte. 2 Mdrooml,
tile cond, mlkt Offll', 304-87&amp;·
2218orl71· 2531 takforRI~ .

71

Grecloua living. 1 '• nd 2 bed·
room apartmMta at Village
Manor and Riverside Aplrtmentt In Middleport From
t216 Including utllltlll Call
814-992·7787. EOH .

lAYNE "S FURNITURE

44

®by

2 bedroom riVer vltw epartment
Equipped kitchen, trllh ptdcup
Ideal tor 2 par1iM to •h•e
expencu C1ll 814· 992-8539.

45
41

Wednesday, February 25, 19871

11

YIJFII .I

~l

f: II Q . -

1! W II II

&lt;; K X

Y01torday'o Cryptoquoto' IT ISN'T H&lt;oW Ml 'C'H YOU
KNOW, IIUT

rn

WtiAT YOU GET I)ONE TIIAT TilE WORU&gt;

REWAIUJS AND REMEMBf:RS. - D&lt;)NALI I I.AIRil

Cil Hordcalde lllld McCormick

eCDM'A'I'H
(I) In the F- of Terror·
1om: PIOIWtil. o F.... loa.t'f Poneliltt dlscuu •
poooiblo attock et the fie·
lionel olr~ of Metropolis

r.

XKKI.HUIIWS

ing ensemble lhlt bl&lt;!ndt
music and ooclll concerno.
(60 mtn.J
e m (]J •
&lt;It • flZ illl

:oo Newt

II

in an Imaginary wootein U S.

ci1y. (60 min.I

11 :30

1BIIton;'-a (]) TOftleht Show
Tonlghl"' gueo1 It the En·

glilll vOCII group tho Klng "s
Singera. 161) min .lln Steroo

CD~

i

WkRP In ClonciCIIIilllwWitillltltl
(l) Tul
CIJ ABC Newt Nltlllli11
(CC).
lit (91 Magnum, P .l.

M·

(]]) William 0r111t
Tllllbtezer 11om t~~~louth

�...

Page- 14- The Daily Sentinel

Wedne-y, FebOJiiV 25, 1987 •

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

,...---Local Briefs:-- Panel considers p~oduct liability ·action
EMS responds to four calls
Meigs Count y Emerge ncy Med ical Services reports fo ur ca lls
Tuesday; Pom eroy at 8:35 a .m. to Ohio 7 for Helen Miller to
Veterans Memoria l Hos pita l; Midd lepor t at 1:43 p.m . to
Stonewoods Apartment s for Da no Longs treth to Veter a ns
Mem orial Hospital; Raci ne a t 1:37 p.m. to Mile Hill Roa d for
Ella Sc hultz to Vetera ns Mem oria l Hos pita l; Tuppers Plains at
3:26 p.m. tra nsported Tony Jo nes to St. Joseph Hospit al.

Racine OES plans practice
Rac in e Chapt er 134, Order of Easte rn Star . will practice
Sund ay, 2 p. m .. lor star point s and co nduc tresses , a nd at 3 p.m .
lor a ll officers. The regular sta ted meeting will be 7:30 p.m.
Mo nday . ·tnitiation wi ll be he ld and chapter dresses are to be
wor n. Refr eshments wi ll be sPrved.

Chester 'PTO to m eet Monday
Ches ter Element ary PTO will meet Monday, 7 p.m .. at the
school. Child care wil l be provided. Re!reshmenl s will be
served.

Meigs couple files lawsuit
La rry E. a nd Nancy Cummin s, of Rac ine. have filed a n ac tion
In Me igs County Common Pleas aga inst F lson's -Wes tern Corp ..
Vancouver. Brll ish Columbia , Canada, a nd Bu r ton Flower a nd
Garden Inc. , Burton, Oh io, request ing judgment of $76,500.
Pl a intiffs a llege tha t as a direct res ult of us ing a growing
med ium. m anufact ured by F iso n's-Wes tern and distributed by
Bu r ton Flower and Ga rden. during latter 1984 and early 198.'i.
the major ity of 90,000 peppers, 60,000 tomat oes, 10,000
cucumbers a nd 16,000 mlxedJ lowers which were pla nted In the
mix ture did not develop properly. Pla intiffs reques t lhe
judgment and a trial by jury.
In other matters. a reques t for shock probat ion for Lester
Wise has been den ied by the court , a nd a n action by Ho me
Na tional Ba nk aga inst Sa ndy Creek Lumber Inc .. et ai, has been
dis missed. .

Area woman seek s divorce
Jua nit a R. Holcomb , Pome roy, has filed for di vorce in Me igs
Count y Common Pleas Court from Do nald L. Holcomb,
Windha m.
Valerie J. Imboden has bee n gran ted a di vo rce from Timothy
F. Imbode n and res tored to her ma iden ·name of Je ffers.
Rita J . J enkins a nd George Mi chae l Jenkins have been ·
gra nt ed a dissolution of their marriage.

Court issue.~ marriage licenses
Ma rriage licenses have been issued in Me igs County Probate
Co urt to Mar ion F ra nk Dav is , 22. Raci ne. and PeggySueSmlth.
21, Rac ine: Char les And rew F ields, 21. Hart ford. W.Va., a nd
Christena Ca ro l Goodwi n. 33, Hartford, W.Va.

Six forfeit bond in village court
Six defenda nt s forf(•ited bo nds and a S&lt;'Venth was fin ed In the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Ric hard Seyler Tuesd ay night.
F orfeiting were Ernest L. Da mewood. Syracuse, $51 : Mar k
D. Williams , Norwa lk , $65; Roger D. Wa ms ley . Middlepor t, $49,
a ll posted on speeding charges; Ja ck Jenkins, Ewin gton, $63,
ex pired plates; Clyde Shingler, Lancas ter , $43, assured c lear
dis ta nce; Mark Hal ey , M) ddleport, $6:1, fl cllclous plates.
Fined $6.1 a nd costs on a n ex pired plates c harge was Ter ry L.
Bell. Raci ne.

Court accepts bond forfeitures
Nineteen defenda nt s forfei ted bo nds In the cou rt of
Middlepor t Ma yor F red Hoffm an Tuesday night , pos ted on
speeding charges. _
T hey a re Robert A. Casey, Ga llipolis, $42; Peggy S.
Mc Da niel. Cheshire. $41: Mic hael Beva n. Bidwell, $43; John H.
Pie rotti. Gallipolis. $4 i ; Ric ky J . Smith , Cheshire. $40; Leanna
J. Niber t. Ches hire. $47; Connie L. Ba iley. Middleport, $41 ;
Glenn K. Roush. Pomeroy. $43: Go ld ie A. Rous h, He mloc k
Grove. $43; Karen He lms. Ga llipolis. $42; Arthu r J . Har t,
Ga llipolis. $41; Aud if' D. Barry, Ga llipolis, $41 ; Lanny R.
Je nkins, Middleport . $40; Susa n R. Waugh. Po in t P leasa nt . $40;
Howard W. Brewer Jr ., Ha rtford. $40; David L. Va nce,
· Middleport , $41 ; Gregory La udermllt , Middlepor t, $41; Scott A.
Ei chinger . Pomeroy. $40; Ro bert G. Roush, Middl eport , $45.
Others forfe it ing bonds were Rickey E . Lunsford , Pome roy,
$200. drivin g wh lir under suspension, a nd $41, speeding; Hazel
E. Sprague, Middlepor t, $40. slop sign vio la tion; Bus ter Haning,
Middleport . $100. disorderly manner; Leonard E. Koe nig,
Pomeroy, $50, failure to yie ld the right of way.
F ined In th e court were Ke nda l Lemley , $50 a nd costs. drivi ng
whil e und er suspens ion, a nd $10 and costs. passing In a
no-pass in g zone; Curtis Bra ley. Middleport. $25. diso rde rl y ·
co ndu ct.

Appeals court session slated
Jud ge La wrence Grey. At hens. pres iding judge of the Fourth
Dist rict Court of Appea ls. a nnounced that e ight cases are
scheduled to be heard next Wednesday when the cou rt con venes
In Meigs Count y.
In addition to J udge Grey. the co urt Is cornpr ls~ of J udge
Homer E. Abele of McAr thur and J udge Ear l Stephenson,
Port smouth . The co urt reviews al l cases hea rd or tried In lower
courts In which a decisio n Is being a p pea l~ . These cases may
have been tried In common pleas. proba te or juvenile,
municipa l or count y cour ts and may be either civil or cr imin al
cases .
Meigs cases sc hedu led for hearing are State versus Tay lor:
Kl e in versus Kay 's Bea ut y Shop: Ewing Funeral Home vers us
Stoecker : Barnhouse versu s Rollins Accept a nce Corp.; Sta te
vers us Phelps, a nd Sayre versus Renner.

'

:. Ohio, area weather scene
•
.
,
:
•

'

Friday through Sunday
A cha nce of ra in In the south ern
pa rt of the s tate Friday and
sta tew ide on Sa turday, with a
chance of rain or snow Sunday.
Highs will ra nge fr om 45 to 55
frid ay and Saturday, dropping
Into the 30s Sunday. Overnight
lows will range from the upper
Winds will be light and· from 20s to the middle 30s F r iday and
Sa turday mornings, fa lling Into
the e ast tonight.
.the 20s early Sunday.
Ohio Extended l"orecast

South Central Ohio
Par tly cloudy toni ght , with a
tow between 30 and 35. Mostly
cloudy Thursday, with highs
between 50 and 55.
The probability of preclplta·
lion Is nea r zero through
Thursday.

;

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Repo!1er
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Re pre~e ntatlves of drug, chemical,
auto and soap manufacturing
compa nies urged an Ohio House
committee Tuesday to provide
them with strong protection
aga ins t excessive lawsuit s Involvin g t heir products.
Meanw hile, the Ohio Alliance
for Civ il J ustice, representing a
variety of business groups , m ade
pla ns to Int roduce Its own product lia bil ity bill in the Se nate,
where the next battleground will
be.
•
The House Civil and Commercial Law Committee opened
hea rings on a bill limiting lawsuit s aga in st defective products,
similar to a proposa l •vhlch
passed last year as par t of a n
overall · clvll justice and insurance r e form package.
That section was singled out by
Gov. Ri chard F . Ce les te as the
reason he vetoed the e ntire
package In December.
The clvll justic e and insura nce
reform s have been re- passed by
the Ho use this year . bu t the
product llablllty section was left
b e hind lo r s epar ate
consideration .
House Speaker Verna l G. Ri ffe
Jr .. D-New Bost on, sa id he hopes
the product liability bill will clear

the House sometime In Ma rch
a nd catch up with the rest of the
package In the Senate.
A special Senate committee Is
being assembled to study the
entire package, Including the bill
being offer ed in be half of the
business group by Sen. Robert R.
Cupp, R-Lima.
Cupp said his blll wjll codi fy
ex is ting common law theories on
product liability, but will not
address the problem of environme ntal torts. such a ~ d amages
from hazardous was te dis posal.
" One of the most critical areas
of concern to the business community has been the liability for
products sold, " Andrew Doehret,
director of Ia bor relations and
s taff counsel for the Ohio
Chamber of Commerce. told the
House committee.
Doehrel said the prolife ration
of class action lawsuits and
excesslye damage awards , along
with a "su it syndrome existing In
the public mind, " have m a de It
impossible fo r ma nufacturers to
predict the ir exposure.
" We need to balance the
pla ying field In our court system, " said Doehre l.
Je fftey W. Hutson , representing the Ohio Association of Civil
Trial Attor neys , w~lch defends
che mical a nd automobile manu-

facturers. said the re iS a "perception that th is w hole tort
system Is running a m ok."
Instead of the ma nufactu rer
assuming s trict lia bilit y lor It s
products, he said, ther e should be
a llowances for misuse of the
produc t and a certa in assumption or r isk on the par t of the

Ea rl A. Smith. 68. 250 Union
Ave .. Pomeroy, died Monday In
Holze r Medical Center following
an exte nded Illness. He was a
retired Ironworker with Loca l
1787 a t Par kersbu rg. W.Va.
Born June 25. 1918. in Pomeroy. he was a son of the late
Edward and Freda Belle Smith.

Ohio Lottery

Southern, KC
advance in
tournament
-Page 3

Geoffrey Smith of the Pharrna- ·
ceutlcal Manufacturers Assocla- ·
tion. Was hington. said excessive
punitive damages are· a dete r· ·
re nt to' research ~n'll develop-ment . Punit ive dama ges are
assessed agains t a company fo r
pun ishment rather than lor compensating a victim for Injuries.

Daily Numher

000
Supt&gt;r Louo
32-33-21 -35-42-2:{

•

owner.

at y

PICTURE FOR POSTCARD CONTEST
NAME _________________________

Vol.36. No.207

PHONE NO. _____________________
SEND ALONG. WITH SUBMITIED PICTURE TO:
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce
Courthouse, 2nd Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
992-50.05

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

PRATT'S BEAUTY SALON
Pre-Spring
Special

ba nd, Ca rl R . Russell. In 1970;
three ·s isters, Bessie Ha rt , Hazel
Hill and He len Beyer s: a nd two
brot hers. E merson and E rnes t
Gi ddings.
Services will be 1 p.m . T hursday at Deca tu·r United Methodis t
Church with Rev. Don Kochersperger offi cia ting. Callin g hou rs
will be We dnesdaji , 2-4 a nd 7-9
p.m. at Whit e·E lhridge Funeral
Home. 125 Lee St., Belpre, a nd a t
th e church one hour pr ior to the
service. Bu r ial will be in Deca tur
Cemetery .

MARCH 3-APRIL 14

PERMS

20°/o Off
Y &amp; WEDNESDAY

CUTS &amp; STYLES

SSSO

PRATT'S BEAUTY SALON

By BOB HOEFLICH
Athe ns Counties.
Senilnel Staff Writer
Obtain ed und er fede ra l forfe i·
For the first time In southeast - lure s tatutes, the wa rra nt r e- ·
ern Ohio, real estate belonging to sui ted from a pending cr imin al
a Meigs County res ident was case in Meigs Coun ty in which
seized by law enforcement agen- Ca in. 35, is charged with cultivacies Wednesday a fternoon as the tion of m arijuana. The forfe iture
result of the m an 's all eged is a civil proceedin g sepa rate
activity in the cultiva tion of from th e cr iminal case a nd Is not
marijuana.
depe ndent upon th e out come of
Yesterday afte rnoon several th e criminal case. according to
law enforcement a gencies com- Gerard.
bined for ces to converge upon the
The wa rra nt ser ved Wednesproperty of David Paul Ca in, day prov ided for th e seiz ure of
located on Goose Creek Ro ad , In the house a nd real estate of Ca in,
Scipio Township, to serve the app roxim ately 100 acres. a nd a
federal seizure l'{a rrant. Th e 1980 truck at the sa me location.
warrant was Issued by U.S. Agent s conducted a complete
Magistrate Mark R. Abel in the inventory of the property, whi ch
U.S. Dis trict Court for the m ay not be sold. tra nsferred or
Southern District of Ohio, Eas t- cha nged duri ng the pendency of
ern Division.
the for fe iture process.
The warra nt was obtained bv
Th e P lymouth truc k was transth e Federa l Bureau oflnv estlga- ported to a sec ure facility but
tion. through its Cincinn at i, Co- Ca in and his wife a re permitted
lumbus and At hens off ices. Ser v- to rema in on !he property un til
ing the warrant was Robert M. the fin a l forfei ture is ordered.
Mayer. res ident agent of the FBI Under the occu pancy agreem ent
Athens ' office. along-with agen ts with th e F BI, Cain agrees to
of the Ohio Bureau of Crimina l main ta in the prope rty In it s .
identlflcat)on and Investigation. present condition. pay all normal
Paul Gerard , special investiga - expenses of ownership a nd protor for Meigs Prosecuting Attor- v ide ins ura nce.
ney Fred W. Crow III, a nd
On Tuesday of this week, a
s everal deputies fr om the she- four-wheeler confiscated a t the
r iffs' department s. In Meigs and time of t he ra lcl on the Cain fa rm

By Nt\NC\' YOACIIAM
Si•nlln"l Sluff Writer
1\cco rdi ng tot hf' Ia tes t not Iflea'ion to the Ml'igs Coun ty Commls slo no ·rs, Ihe Rurkr•yt• J oint
Coun ty Srlf-ln .&lt; ura ncc program
will be In e ffec t as early as March
:t. Howcw r, Md gs Count y will
not br re01dy to par tic ipa te at thai

.

One hunc!red thirty units of
blood was received at Wedn esday's visit of the Amer ican Red
Cross . Bloodmobile to Meigs
· County.
Of the total 44 unit s were given
In appreciation !or blood re-

-

t inw.

Tht' sc·lf·insura ncf• program,
the fi rst ont• to beco me effecti ve
in t hr stall•, will provide liability
coverage to partic ipa ting countit's at a lowrr cost t han conven-

FOUR-WIIEELER- Mark Boyd, Brian Bissell
and .Iimmer Souls by, left lo right, depull es of
Meigs Sheriff lloward Frank, are pictured with a
four-wheele r, which was taken to a security
s helter-by the Bureau of Criminal Investigation In
con.iuncllon with a property seizure a ction againsl
a nd held in th e cust od y o[ Meigs
Sher iff Howard F ra nk was
picked up and transported to a
securf' faci lity by two represen. tal lves of the Bu reau of Crimin al
[nvestigation.
Accordin g to GNa rd. the seizure war ra nt wa s se rved without
inc ide nt.
" We ,approached Mr . Ca in who
was out side upon our ar r iva l.
identi fied ourselves. presented
him with a copy of the wa r ra nt
and secured the house. Ca in was

celved: Joseph Ha ll and David
Wolfe became five gallon donors
a nd other mult iple ga llon donors
were Helen Blacks ton, David
Kin g a nll Paul A. Rice, four
gallons: Don A. Cullums. Joan
Ward. Loretta A. Brow n. Coy E.

INSTRUCTION - Ron Ash, local manager of
Ohio Power Co., wu at the Pomeroy Elementary
School with his "electric city." During his classes
with students held in the auditorium Ash

advised of his right to consult
with counsel and was pe rmitt ed
to call his attorney who soon
ca me to the Ca in residence."
Gera rd sa id.
Th e federal for feiture process
has been used extensively In
oth er areas . in Ohio a nd elsewhere . bu t Wednesday's act ion
was the first ti me lor it to be
invoked in southeas ter n Ohio.
Gerard sa id the fo rfeitu re yesterday was only the first of many
which will fo ll ow.

" We inte nd to make it vf'ry
expensive to grow po t in MPigs
County. We wil l pursue a ll
possible sanctio ns. cr imina lly,
with rl nes and pri son SC' n1C'nCf'!'i.

a nd civi lly with fo rfeiture of
property," r;Nat'd com mented .
Once the fi na l forleitu re is
ma de. lht• Ca in pro perty will br
offered lor sa le at pu blic auction.
T he proceeds of the sair, less 10
percent .whic h goes to the FB I.
wi ll be divided among law
rco nti nuPd on Page 121

Nitz, a nd J a nel M. Duffy, one
ga llon donors.
First time donors at the bloodmobile were Johnnie L. Evan s.
Ri chard C. Randolph. Tom
The iss, RogerS . Cla r k, La ura S.
Hawley, Na ncy Mulle n, .Geri

demons trated and discussed with the young
people s afety In handling electricity In numerous
s ituations.

Pamela Millcr . l-Ie len E.
Wa lt on, She lly Fox, Shirley
Blackston. Clarence fl . King,
Frzler . Iva Sisso n. Joa n Mor ris.
Law rpnce Lem!Py, Ph y ll is M.
Ma r y Warner. Louise Fra nk , a nd
Bea rhs. Roger C. Gau l. RoiX'rt
Ra nda ll Simpson.
W.
Vaughn . Geri Wa lto n, f: ilora
Dr. Ja mes Witherell a nd Dr.
R.
P att erso n, /lnlt&lt;o .1. .Jeffers,
Wilma Ma nsfiel d were the docGloria K. Klocs. .Joan Ward.
tors lor the bloodmobile a nd
.J os~ph C. Hall. Al bPrt E. Pa rke r.
nurses vol unteeri ng their time
Loretta A. Brown. Lloyd F .
Included Beu la h Ward, Carol
Blackwood, Ca roly n A. Chai'IPs,
Adams, E mm a Ada ms. Mary
K..J&lt;orvis, J on P. KarsehDluna
Jane Ta lbo tt. Lenora Leifhei t
nlk,
Ray
mond Jewe ll. Les ll t• .J .
a nd Naomi London.
Ha ndling cler ica l du ties were · Sheets. Coy E . Nltz, Gerald
Rought. Barbara Riggs;
Peggy Harr is, .Ja n Sheets. Alice
Penny L. Brinker, Harold W.
Wolfe, Jea n Nease. Phyll is
Brin
ker. Phy llis Ma y, Faye F .
Bearhs, and J ea nette Radford.
Retired Sen lor Volunteer Pro- Cli fford, Frederick R. Thom tJ·
gra m workers assisting at the so n, .Jo nas E . Cook. Ga ry /1 .
Ph illips. Steph en R. Ha rt en ba ch,
bl oodm obile were Virgin ia Buc h·
a nan, Marion Ebersbac h. Do- Joyce M. Ha ll , O;ovld M Kin g,
Pa tri cia .1. Barton .. loan Morri&gt;.
ro thy Long. Erma Roush. Lula
Paul L. Landa krt', Wi ll iam Rad Hampton. E mma Clatworthy,
Ri chard a nd Mace! Ba r ton . .Jes· ford. Ja net Duffy. Pau l /1 . Rice,
sic Curtis, .Jac k a nd J oa n Sorde n. La ura Proudfoot, Oona ld R.
Florence Ric hards. Ber nad ine Smith, Br ill Ki ng, Ril l Quickrl.
Me ier . Fvelyn Gil more and a nd David J . Koblenl 1..
Long Bot tom: He nry F . Bahr,
Esther Harden.
Va
nessa M. Sidwell. Laura H;ow
T hf' ca nteen was served by
Icy, and Bruce Hawley.
me m ber s of the Precept or Beta
Hem lock GrovP: Don /1 . Cui
Beta Cha pter of Beta Sigm a Phi.
Dona tions and s upport lor the turns . .Jac k R. Welker.
Reedsvi lle: Richard BDJ"tun .
blood program came from Dairy
Syracuse:
.James R. Hi ll.
Quee n Brazier , Quali ty Print
Shop, Th e Da lly Se nti nel. Ath ens Daria N. T homas .
Ches ter: Clarcncr C. Wolfe .J r.
Messenger a nd the Senior Citi Bidwell: Mary K. Searl.';,
ze ns Center.
Do nors by commun ities were Rob in Payne .
Syracuse: Ka thy Cu mm ings,
as fo ll ows:
David
Lawso n . T eresa·
Pomeroy: Jackie M. Hildebra nd , Pa me la K. Hoffm an. Drummer.
The Pl a ins: .Jo hn F . .Kerr .Jr.
Thomas B. Har t, Brend a S.
Mason. W.Va .: Di ana .Johnson .
Cunn ingham. Ke lly R. Gin!h cr.
Ri ck L. McK ni ght, Le nora J. Bria n E . .Johnso n.
Coolville: Roberta .J . P·aulcy .
Mc Kn ight , Fonna K. Culiums,
New Haven: Mar la N. Roush,
Debra D. Mora, Steven D . Cra ig.
Da n E . Follrod, Susa nn a Heck. Ronn ie Roush.
Langsvi lle: Patric ia A. MorRoger Cla r k. De bora h L.
cCo ntl nucd on Page 121
Grueser.

tiomo l insu ra nce pla ns . Meigs
Coun t.v has been In vo lved In the
groundwork for th e se lf-

insurancr program for many
mont hs.
The co mmissio ners re port thai
Mr igs County wil l beco me an
actlvr pnr ti clpa nt In th e selfins ura nt&lt;' pla n as soo n as a ll
"oun ty officeholders a nd dcpartmr nt hoods have bre n briefed
abou t the program .
Ml'igs County l' ngi n!!l'r Phil
Hober t.&lt; reportl'd tha t co ntra ct
nrgotla tlo ns at th f' co unty hiRhway

(j (lp~l r tmr n t

"&lt;.~r•'

at an

lmpassp' · and a m edia tor Is
bc•ing ca lll'd in to assist the
negotla t ion process. Thr next
nrgot iu tlon meeti ng, whic h is not
cxpectrd lor two to thrrc weeks,
wil l be cu ll ed IJ;· the• mediator .
·The' highway drpa rtrn r nt's union
con t r:~ c t cxplrrs midn ight Ma rch

:n.

/1 th umbnai l sketch of Blul'
Cross of C&lt;' n lr:~ l Oh io's /l dvaC'arP Hra lth Mai ntalna ncr Orga niza t ion was p rrsl'nt ~ to the
board b,v Mica Bu nt' .
1\dvaCan.' . which is ow ned by
Rl ur ('ross an d Holzer Clinic
In c .. con tracts with hPa lth care
providers to makp rou tine hPallh
c·arp lrs s cost ly lo program
pa rtici pants. /ldvaCarr's prim ary heal th ca re provi der Is
1-lolzrr Clin ic and it s br anches.
1-lowrvrr. if Hoizl'r refers a n
lldvaCan· partil'ipunt to another
hmlth ea re facilit y, the par llcl·
pant would sti li be covrr~ .
/l lthough /ldvaCare l.s ow ned
by 11iue Cros s. th&lt;' two program s
an• ra ted st•parate i.l' and a
pa rticipa nt may not have both
pla ns. Rl ur Cross has opera ted
similar li MO programs tn Frank·
lin and Li cking Cou nties for eight
years , Ba ne said. AdvaCa re was
two a nd one-hal f y('ars In development shr a dded.
Th e commissio ners said they
wou ld have to review AdvaCare
brochures bc lorr fin a ncia l
quotes on the• program co uld be
acreptecl.
Blur Cross hea lth coverage lor
thr. count y highway drpart mPnl
and drpur tml'n t of huma n srrv iCI'S wa s ilroug ht to thr board's
attention hy /I ian Gorii' Wskl. thr
count y ' s Blu(· Cros~ rC'pl'l'SI'nla ·

tlve .

Cowrag~

lor lht• two
d~p;ortm~n" ~xplro Apt·!I 1.
Acco rding 10 Gorlcwskl. r;o trs
wi ll be go in ~ up I'• lll 'l't'\' nl un less
the count;· u, ,., " $11. 1 ~1 n ·lund
which it h;" !'liming . to suppn·"
lhu lntn\rt."'t ·. Harr•!'t wllllnr ·r('l:ts('
7.7percc ntilth l'refundi s useli;os
an oflsl't . II tho • Blur Cross
pollclr-s ;ore not rr- nrw•·•l. Co((on!lnuf'tl nn

l' a~Z• ·

121

Merco resumes mining operations; court order amended

Tuesday Admissions - Joyce
Leo na rd . VInt on; Milton Gary,
Rac ine: Kathy Sue Hetzer.
Reedsvill e; Florence Rey nolds,
Middle port; Da na Longstreth,
Middle port; E lla Schultz, Racine; J a net Venoy, Pomeroy;
Paul Sea rles. Ches hire.
Tuesday Discha rges - Lois Hubba rd .

(Conil nued fr om P age 1)
harm a nyone."
The picket has been m onitored
regularly' si nce Monday by the
Gallla County Sh e riff' s
Department.
E fforts to r each Merco management or its attorneys lor
comme nt this morning were
unsuccessful.

David Paul Cain, Scipio Township, as the r&lt;•s ult of
an alleged mariju a na cultivation cha r ge. A lrou:k
and the real estate of Ca in were seized W••dn••s day
In the first such action involving r eal es tat e in
Southeastern Ohio .

collects 130 pints during Meigs stop

Blanl'ht' Russell

Veterans Memorial

2 6 Cent1

County
readies
• •
to JOin
program

-Bio~dmobil~

Bla nche Russell. 92. Route 1.
Li ltle Hockin g, died Mond ay
even ing at Pa r k View Nurs in g
Ce nte r , Pa rkersbu rg, W.Va.
A homemak er, Mrs . Ru ssell
was a daught er of the late George
an d Flora Ru ssell Giddings. She
was a lifelong m ember of Deca tu r United Met hodis t Church
and th e Un ited MPthod ls t
Wom e n.
Surv ivors Inc lude a sis ter-I nlaw. Mary Gidd ings. of Li ttle
Hockin g. and several nieces and
nephews.
Bes ides her parents , she was
preceded In dea th by her hu s-

2 Sect ions, 12 Pages

Authorities
.seize man's
real estate
'

PICTURE CONTEST __: The Pomeroy Area Chamber of
Commerce Is sponsoring a' 'picture lor an area postcard contes t."
Subjects of pictures should be the courthouse or a Pomeroy village
scene. Two pictures will be selected and a $50 savings bond will be
awarded the winners. Deadline for entries Is March 15 and the
chamber will not he responslhle for lost pictures nor will pictures
he returned. Photos are to b e in color.

Rain likely tonight, with a
low In the upper 30s. Occa·
si onal rain and windy Friday,
with hi gh' near 50. Th e
probability of preci pitation Is
60 percent ton ight and 80
percent Friday.

A M ult imedi a In c. New spap er

ADDRESS --------------------~-

Surviving are hi s wile. Newaza
Hudnall Smi th; a so n, Char les
Smith of Myrlle Beach, S.C.; a
da ught er. Ethe l Lou ise BurchCALL FOR APPOINTMENT
field of F lorida; three stepd augh- Dale F. Sayre
ters, Ll nda Freema n of Pomeroy , Mr s. Everell (Donna I Hall
Da le F. Sayre. 40, Ha rtford,
of Sunbury, a nd Mrs . To m W.Va .. died Tu esday in Buc khan80 RACE SY.
MIDDLEPORT
tJ ud y) .Jackson of Columbu s; 2.1 non. W.Va.
I
•
992-3751
gra ndchildren and 20 greatArrangement s will be anBEV BISHOP, STYLIST-MAXINE MEDLEY, OWNER
gra ndc hildren; fou r sis ters. Mrs.
nounced la ter by Fog leson g
Bill lAnna) Beckel of Columbus.
Fu nera l Ho me. Mason. W.Va.
Mrs. Don (Marie ) Amos or
La ncas ter, Mrs. Ver non (El helt r------------1------------------~-----­
Col!ma n of Sa n Diego, Ca lif., a nd
Elsie Smith of Lanc as ter : a
stepmother. Freda Mae Smith of
Pomeroy; two half-brot hers, Edwin Smith of Po meroy, and
Lew is Smith of Chester .He was preceded In dea th by
two brot hers a nd a s iste r.
He was a membe r of the
Methodis t Church. a 47-year
member of the Pomeroy F raternal Order or Eagles . Ancien t
Accepted Scott ish Rile, Vu lley of
Columbu s, Bos worth Council 46,
Roya l a nd Select Ma sons, Ohio
Valley Command er y 24 . Knight s
Templ ar of Pomeroy, Po meroy
Chapte r 80, Royal Arc h Masons,
and Shade River Lodge 4&gt;3.
Chester, Free and Accept ed
Masons.
Serv ices will be 1 p .m.~_ Thursday In Cre m eens t ·uneral
Chape l. Ga llipolis. with .th e Rev .
Will ia m Curfm an offlclallng.
Buria l will be In Gravel Hill
Cem etery. Cheshire. Friends
may ca ll at th e c hapel from 2-4
and 7-9 p.m. fliday. _
Masonic se rvices will be held
In the c hapel at 7:30 tonight.

Pickets protest

en tine

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February 26, 1987

. Copyrighted 1987

Area deaths
Earl A. Smith

''

I

."
""

CROW'S
FAMILY RESTAURANT
992 5434

PH.

"

Featuring K1ntucky Frild Chicbn

POM£IOY, OJI.

· VINTON - All was appa rently quie t on the
Informational picket line establis hed a t the Merco
Mining Co. site near Vinton thi s morning as
operations at the mine were renewed.
Mine owner Junior Merco said coal fr om the
fa cility would be tra nsported this morning.
The Ga llla County Sheriff' s Department reported no Incidents at the mine's entrance on
Sherman Hartsook Road overnight.
Reports of gunfire around the m1ne were made
lo the she riff's department Tuesday night , but
!hose repor ts could not be verified by deputies .
Loss of power to thl!j_ mine Wednesda y limited
operations. Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative
reported that a tire on a truck used by a two-man
crew contracted by BREC to repair a meter at the
mine was punctured.
Th e meter had reportedly been dam aged
sometime Tuesday night or ea rly Wednesday,

accordin g to BREC s taff assis tant Leslie Young.
"I believe I' m In Vietnam ," Me rco sa id this
morning. " This surely Isn't the United States."
Merco a lleged that families of employees a t the
m ine have been threa tened, a nd the sheriff' s
departme nt did receive a report overnight or
threa ts being ma de to the family of a ma n
employed at the min e.
" I can pr ote ct this mine, but I can't protectthe lr
homes," Mer co sa id .
The Inform ational picket was established
Monday to prates t layoffs at the mine. The layoffs
reportedly were In res ponse to a move by some
employees to seek re presentation by the Un ited
Mine Worker s of America. The employees sought
representation du e to pay and safety concerns.
Merco said the layoffs Involved employees of a
· second shift tha t wa s put In operation. He said he
told employees that II the s hllt wasn't working

out , It would be dropped.
Me r co said tha t sa fety a t the mine, repor ted as
one of the m ain reasons why the employees
wa nted representation. Isn' t a probl em at the
mine.
Ter ry Hil l, the m ine's genera l superintende nt,
sa id the mine has won district sa fe ty awards In
1985 a nd 1986 from an organnlza tlon of feder al.
business, pri va te, union and non-union groups .
" We have every safe ty award." Merco sai d.
"The pla ques are ou t her e."
Merco has been operating a m ine at Sher m an
Hartsook Road for the past two years a nd has had
only one lost-time accident. T hat accident
occurred last Septem ber a nd ha ppened above
ground , when an employee Injured hIs thumb. Hill
sa id .
When both s hift s were In effect, a pp roximately
40-45 people were employed by Merco. Since the

•

Ia yolf. t hPre '"" n1ow 2o fli'Opll · workIng t h&lt;'t'l·. HIll
sa id .
The plckclllnr• wus rstubli &gt;ht'd with the h ~ l p of
UMW locals employed tly tho • Ml•lgs M int·~
compi&lt;'X . Merco charged the pick &lt;'I s Tuesday
wit h blocki ng th e entran ce to the mine und
harassing cmploycPs. /1 'temporary fi'Stralnlng
order li miti ng pic·kets wa s l&gt;,ucd T uesda.v by
Ga llla Count y Commo n Pleas .lu dgp Dona ld
An drew Cox.
Th e order was amended Wednesday to o·estrlct
any "grouping. congregating or loite r ing" with in
300 feet of the m ine entrance and barr ing anv
gatheri ngs or parki ng or vehicles wit hin i!i fl'l'l of
any access to the mi ne.
Cliff Parsons, pres ident of UMW Loca ll 957 a t
Raccoon Mine No. :Jo said the "only reason w~· r!'
there Is for a n Infor ma tional p lck~t. Wr'rc not
there to harm anyone."

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