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14-The

Sentinel

March 18, 1987

.....--Local Briefs:-----.

Racine .couple is indicted

Court (lccepts bond forfeitures
Six defendants forfeited bonds and a srvcnth wa s fined in th e
court or. Pomeroy Ma.v or Richard Seyler Tucsda;· night.
Forfeiting were VI ctor Counts, Syracuse, $51; Paul Goodnitc,
Letart, W.Va ., $47; Dallas A. Hi l l. Ra einc, $.'i1; P;wl Wilson.
Racine, $44, all posted on spef'ding charges; Lance Herman .
Middleport, $6:!, no operator' s licm se, and .John McKenzi£' ,
Pomeroy, $4:1, improper buc·king, Fined $210 and cos ts on
charges of assa ult and pett y theft wa s Robert Riffle. Pomeroy .

Accident yields citation
Three vehicles werP damaged and one· dri v&lt;'r wa s ci ted as 1he
result of two acciden ts In Pomerov Tut&gt;sdav .
PomC'roy PolicC' Silid (.1 V(IO 1rUV(' ]ing eC!s l on WC'St Main
Stre&lt;'t. about midnight and driVl'n bv lia r rv L. Barton,
Pomeroy , struck a Utilit y pole \\hen brakes on the vehirlr
locked. There wen• modera l e damage&gt;s.
At R:47 a.m . on Pleasrr's Restaurant parking lot, a truck
driven b~ Clift on MoiPs , Chrshi rr, baeked int o a parked car
owned by Richa rd A. Emer son, Columbu s. ThP rr wpn• lighl
damages to both vr hiciPs and Moles wu s ci ted on an improper
backing charge.

Middleport mayor fines seven
Thirteen dclcndant s for fcil &lt;•d bonds and seven ol hc'rs wprc
fined Tuesday night in the court of Middleport Ma yor F twl
Hoffman .
·
For feiting bonds wrrP Larry fl. . Crimm Sr .. Mason, W.Va ..
$450. driving whi iP intoxicated: Timothy s. Compson , Mason,
$4!\U driving while intnxir&lt;~ l e d : $:&gt;1 1. spc&lt;'din g, and $100,
possession ol' mari juan&lt;t: Richard Friley , Pomeroy, ~Ui .
disorderly m"nnc•r; Mi ldr ed I. Robinson, Middleport, $411:
Charles E . Ba tt en. Ma son, S~l ; Lori 11 . Chapman . Mason, $41:
.Joseph C. ()uivey, Pomeroy, $40; Doro thy T . Hill, Clin ton, Ky ..
$40: Cha r les H. At hey, .Jackson, Mo., $51; Chrislophc·r Pavne.
New llaven, W.Va., $4!\; Hf' rbert G. Slon&lt;·. Ga llipolis, $41: .Jerr'
D. Swar tz. Middlepor! . $4:!, &lt;~II postl'd on speeding charges';
,James W. Morris, Middleport , $:,o, foi lurr to have vehicle undl'l'
eon I rot.
Fined werP Mark A . ShPcl s. Ga llipolis, $19 and cos ts,
spPedi ng: Ra y mond f.ilchfirld , Syr&lt;tc·usr, $:ill and cos ts, drivi ng
undN suspension, und $17 and costs, speeding : Paul D.
Saunders, l.on g Rollom. and Ca rol A. Frelf'(' h, Campbell, $10
rach, running a rPrl light ; i\ nthon y Seylrr. Mason, $50 und costs
eaph on two co unt s of disorder! ; · manner, and $:ill and cos ts,
open con tainer: .l&lt;tnr B. l(a lc\ iff. Rrrdsvillc, and Stcve·n w.
Fife. Middleporl, rach $1!\ and cos ts. speed ing.

EMS unit.s' respond to nine call.~
Mr lgs County 1-:mPrgrn&lt;'., . Mrd icu I Services reports ninr ca lis
Tuesday : Middleport at 1:-ili ;t. m to Br(•e·h Street for Donald
Martin to VeiPrans MPmoriul Hospital; TuppNs Plains at :!: :!6
a.m. transported .lacki&lt;' Duvall 10 Camden·Ciil rk Memorial
Hospital: Rutland al 12: :,6 p.m. to Loop Roa d for Edith Sear irs
to Pl easa nt Valle;' Hospital ; Raf'i ne at 7:111 p.m. tran spor ted
Charles Beeg le to Holzer Medical Center: Middleport at 7:2:i
a.m. to Hartinger Parkw a;' for Ala Stewart who wa s treated but
not tran sported; Racine Firr DrpartmPnt at 4: 2'i p.m. to a
bru sh fire on Sm ith Ridge Road; Columbia Township Fit·e
Departmen t to a rhimne; · firr at the Mar~ Norrtin residence on
Township Road 7; Ru tland Fir e Department at 10: 14 p.m. to an
auto fire at Langsv ille.

Fugitive surrenders to .~heri.ff
Athens Mrntal Hra llh Center esca pr c' .Jimmi(• .Jude. charged
In M eigs County in January l~Rii with rape, turned himself in to
Meigs Count;· Sheriff Howard F1unk about 1: 40 a.m .
Wcdnrsduy mor ning.
•ludr has bern atlargr from thr Alhrns facility si nce Sept . !i .
He W&lt;ts In Al hrns b;· cour t order from Meigs Count y for
psyrhiatrk eva luation.
·
He will appear Thursday morning in Mr\gs C'oun tv Common
Pleas Court before Judge Charl es Knight.
·

Group urges

coxen 'Funeral Home of Point
Pleasant.

Karl fl..1·an Jordan , infant son
of Jam es Lester Jordan- and
Melissa ·Rollins Jordan ol Leon ,
W.Va .. died Sunday In the ·oh io
Sta te U niv~rs lt y Hospit al, Co·
lumbus, shortly after birth.
Survivors includP one brother .
J a m ~s .Jordan, Leon: maternal
grandparents. Mr. and Mrs.
MPivin Rollins of Leon: maternal
grcaf.grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. E unice Rollins of L&lt;'nn, and
Mrs. Margaret Stephens of Leon :
pat rr nal grandparen ts, Mr. and
Mrs. .James .Jordan Sr. of Mount
.\ It o, W.Va.; pa tf' rnal greal·
grandpa rpnt s. Mr . and Mr. Evere tt Shears of ParkPrsburg,
W.Va .. and Mrs. Myrtle Jordan
of Mount Alto.
He was preceded in dea th bv
his paterna l great ·grandfather,
Clyde .Jordan .
Graveside riles will be ob·
sPrved on Saturday at 11 a.m.
with the Rev . Homer Stc&gt;phens
officiating. Arrangements arr
under thr direction of th e Wil·

Joseph Hemsley
Joseph Hemsley. 82. Parker s·
burg, W.Va .. formerly. ol Syra·
cuse, died Monday at Ca mden·
Clark Hospital in Parkersburg.
He was born .Jan. 25, 1905, a son
of the late Joseph and Maggie
Hemsley .
·
Surviving are a son and
daughter · in·law , Larrv and
Sharon Hemsley of Ha.milton:
two grandsons, Travis and Trc·
vis Hem sley; a niece, Mary
Donna Davis , Minersville, and
two nephews, Jimmy Joe Hemsley and Rollle Hemsley , both of
Hemlock Grove.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded in death by his wife,
Emma, and two b~others, Rollle
and Douglas.
Services will be held at 2: 30
p.m. Thursday at the Franklin
Funeral Home in Parkersburg,
where friends may call after :;
p.m. on Wednes dav. Burial will
be in Parkersburg .·

An action b.1· Tom Rue. Middle·
port. against Cooper Chrysler·
Ply mouth-Dodge Inc., Middle•·
port. rt•questing damages for
alleged br each of contract. ha s
bern settled in Meigs Count y
Common Pl ras Court.
.ludg(' Charles Knight ha s
directed verdi('! in favor of the
dt,fendanl in a second cause of
uct ion which alleged consumer
fraud, an&lt;I in favor of the plaintiff
on lhr issue of damages, exrl ud·
ln g inl&lt;' rest.

Tu esday Admissions - Tho·
mas Parker . Pomerov: Alberta
Edwards, Reedsville: Il&lt;'ron
Paul Howery , Albany; Ma ry
Bonecut ter, Middleport : Charles
Lemley. Pomeroy : Hu g h
McPhail, Syracuse.
Tuesday Discharges - None.

Dam ages are lo be paid to lh£'
plaintiff in the amount of
$1:i,29:1.1xl. Th e court submittr d

South ('c•ntrul Ohio
Par tly cloud)' toni ght . wilh "
rhunc(' or showrrs and a low nPar
40. Mosll.v cloudy Thu rsda .v, with
hi ghs nc-ar :);,.

IN SEVERAL COLORS

DAR to meet
The Return .Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, Daught ers of the A mer·
lean Revo lution will mrrt Satu r·
da y, I;:llJ p.m .. at Heath Metho·
dist Church in Middleport.
The program, "A Belief th e
Expansion of the United Sta tes of
America E ncouraged Christian
Waldschmidt to Establish a
Home In the Nort hwes t Teni·
tory," will be givrn by Mrs.
Clydr J . Ingels, Waldschmidt
Housr Tru stee.

Presentation slated
A gospel film, "A Father, A
Son. A Three·Milr Run ," will be
present ed Sunday , 7::10 p.m., at
th e Moun t Her mon United
Brethren Church .
A free-will
offerbeing
for Thr
thl'
one·hOU
I' film will
taken.

INSURANCE
111 S.Cond St., ,_,.,

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Stall Writer
Just where an additiona l $6,625
'to Gallla -Melgs Community Ac·
lion Agency could bes I be pu I to
use was discussed Wednesday by
the Meigs County Commissioners and Sidney Edwards, dlrec·
tor' of Gallia·Meigs CAA.
The additional federal funding
through the Emergency Food
and Shelter Program m ay be
used for food or in CAA's HEAP
program to assist low income
hou seholds in paying heating
bills.
CAA still has comm odities in
the food program . so Edwards
felt the money would be most
beneficial in the HEAP program
where It could provide a "se~ond
helping hand" for 44 low-I ncome
M ~IKS' . pouscholds experiencing
difficulty paying-heating bills. If
the money Is not used In HEAP by
Sept . 15, It can then be trans·
!erred back to the emergency
food program .
Edwards said CAA ha s
handled more food and heat
cases this year than ever before.
The comm issioners approved
Edwards' suggestion to use the
money In HEAP.
Edwards, along with .Joan
Culp, apprised the commission·
ers of changes which may be
expected In the JTPA !Job
Training Program Acll summer
youth program .
The 10-week program will be
smaller this yea r in the Gallja·,
Meigs areas. due to nationwide
efforts to streamline the pro·
gram . Al so this year. remedial
education wlll be offered for th e
first time for JTPA participant s
ages 14-21. JTPA representati ves
are now vi siting schools through·
out the county explaining the
program.
Altogether In Meigs County,
JTPA amounts to abou t $300,000,
which Includes the summer pro·
gram, the educational program,
a program for older workers and
basic JTPA.
It Is the combined effort s of
CAA and the Pomeroy office of
the Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services which make JTPA
success ful In Meigs County . Culp
reported that In the past two
years, JTPA has met or exceeded all !Xlrformance goa ls In
the county, and expects to do the
same this year.
Edwards said he hopes It does
not become necessa ry for the
state to close Pomeroy 's OBES
office, but If that would happen,
JTPA services would somehow
still be provided.
The commissioners have rr·
celved a IN te r from Meigs
County Common Pl eas Judge
Charles Knight requesting the

As a March Special We Will Deduct SJ.OO AYd.
Off already low price son sales over 30 sq. yd.
992-7059

·@Jinaue lJTlnnr C!Intttrittg
STATE ROUTE t2&lt;t, lOX 4ll70
MINERSVILLE, OHIO 45771
(6t4J m-1ost

'

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

r;==========:;l
ID.OWNING CHIDS
MUlLEN MUSSER

SQ. YD.

Open Mon. thru Sat. 9:00 to 6:00

•ROTO-TILLERS •GARDEN SEEDERS
•BULK GARDEN SEED
•GRASS SEEDS •ONION SETS
•PACKAGED FLOWER and
VEGETABLE SEED

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1168

PICKENS HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.

PAT· HILL FORD INC.

or
*a

PUSH, PULL OR DRAG

That's the way we are at City Loan
Bank. Up front, fair, plain talking. So call
City Loan Bank. Get the money you need
today, without getting payments you'll regret
tomorrow

(!)
,.,._
LIHDI"

YES, YOU PUSH, PULL OR DRAG YOUR CAR INTO
PAT HILL FORD AND WE WILL GIVE YOU Sl,OOO OR
MORE T.ADE·IN VALUE ON ANY OF OUR FINE
LATE MODEL USED CARS.

Pat Hill F.ord Inc.

Pomeroy: 116 E. Main St., 992-217L

461 S. 3R.D

.

.

.MIDDLEPORT

~2196

•

chair man of the House Finance Committee, to
which the LBO report ed, said the Democrats, in
preparing a .substitu te budg et for the committee
nex t week, will split th~ difference In the
estimates of the LBO and the Office of Budget and
Management, whic h authored Celeste' s budge1.
"Between the two of them. we ought to be real
close (to the correct fi guret ," said Hinig.
Hinig said split ting the difference means
finding $150 million . He sa id tha t figure ma y be
even lower If th e Celes te administration can ba ck
up its projected savings in the area of health car e
costs.
Denn is Morga n, director of th e LBO, th e fiscal

hiring of an additiona l employee
in the Bureau of Support.
Knight stated in his letter that
it would be necessary for him "to
add an ad ditional employee of
the secretarial nature" to the
Bureau of Support, due to "the
advent of new laws affecting the
Bureau of Support and their
r elated requirements for a multi·
tude of forms and records to be
main ta in ted."
Kni ght plan s for former count.v
employee Donna Boyd to com·
mence work in the new position
on March .10. Although the hiring
of Boyd will requi re additional
funds in the judge' s budget , he
said he could see " no alternative
but to order the employment."
The commissioners' r esponse
to the letter wa s that before
ta kin g any action to find addl·
Ilona! money for lh~ position, the
judge should meet with them to
outline specifics in the job, such
1Coni inued on Page 81

3 Sectio ns. 16 Pages

26 Cents

A Multimedia In c. N ew spapef

lntersw te tel ephone call s and com mPrcial avia ·
lion fuel, proba bly wllllwv P to he kepi.
The chairman Indi cated cut s will be made In
cer tain areas In order to add monc.v to tllC' human
servlc&lt;'S outlay, whi ch includes we lfare bcnrflls ,
heal th r are for the indigent and child suppor l . lle
said the Democra ts also would l ike to add sam&lt;'

res ear ch arm of the General Assembly, sa id the
Cel es te adminlstral io n underes tim ated welfare
caseloads and health ca re co sts by $2:18 million
and overestimated revenues by $60 million.
"We've had differ ences lik e this before,"
shru gged William J. Shku r l i, direclorofthe OBM .
Shkurtl said the differ ence be tween th e tw o
agen cies' proj ections represents only 1.0 percent
of the total budget .
Hlnig said he expect s the money will be t·aised
without resorti ng to any nrw or lncn•ascd tax&lt;•s
b e~o nd those ca lled for by Celeste. But he also
said the taxes and fees recommended hv C'cleste ,
Including controversial taxes on cigarett es.

money for primar y and secondary sehool s, whiC'h
rrcelvc virtua!Jy no inrr('a SC' thr first Y(' ar under

the C&lt;•leste plan.
Morga n sa id th e I. BO pruj cf' ICd " sluggish"
grow th in lhr

eeono m~-,:

over the next tw o :vr;:H·s.

co mparrd with the OHM 's "modC&gt;r,JI C'"
prediction.

~ rowth

Arnericctn legio~

r

:

•

GIFf PRESENTED - Ellen Rought, president ol the Ladles
Auxiliary, presented Richard W. Russell, commander ol Drew
Webster Post 39, A!!.'er.i,!'.!l,nJ&amp;.glo'!, wlth .&lt;!.gllt l!I.Jl!.QJ!~Y. IIJII!l.!!!l: ••
auxiliary· at the annual post birthday party held Tuesday ni~:ht. A
dinner was sened to memhers and guests and !Wught and Russell
introduced guests, officer' and past presidents and comman ders.
A skit was presented by the auxiliary following the program.

LIFE ME~tBER - GeorKe Ncsselroad , !ell, post mcmht•r.•hlp
chairman, presented a life mc rnh~rHhlp to pr&lt;!Sf'tlt •·ornrnunder
JUchard W. Russell at the annuul hirthday party of Drew Wt•hsl&lt;!r
Post :19, llt'ld Tu••,duy night at the post home. Frank Vaughan wt"
named Legionnaire of the Year.

Arms deal panels get limited House approves hike
immunity for 2 top witnesses in U.S. speed limit
•

WASHINCTON 1UPIJ -With
a dea l complete on how to get
testimony from the two cent ral
figures in th e Iran-Cont ra sca n·
dal , congress ional investigators
expect action soon to force the
hand of another reluctant major
wit ness.
The selec t House and Senate
co mmittees investiga ting th e
scandal announced an arra ng~­
ment W&lt;'dnesday for seeking
limited immunity from prosecu·
tlon for Rear Adm. John Po index ·
ter and Lt. Co l. Oliver North, who
lost their Whit e House jobs In the
furor , and hear ing th eir publi c
tesllmony sometime after June
15.
At the same time. the Senate
panel voted to begin civil con·
tempt proceedings agai nst re·
tired Maj. Gen. Richard Secord
for refusing to gran! access to
Swiss bank accoun ts deemed
Important in te lling the full story
of the sal e of U.S . arm s to fra n
and the scheme to divert profit s
to the Nicaraguan Contra rebel s.
Lea der s of both panels also
announced their joint hearings
would beg in May 5 and sa id their
probes would focus on three
aspects - military aid to the ·
rebel s, the arms sa les, and the
question of "as signment of
responsibility."
The two \nvestiga llons virtu ·
ally will merge, both committee
chairmen added, and eventually

Repairs to damage discovered during a routine
Inspection last week at the Gallipolis Locks and
Dam will necessitate a three-week shutdown of
the main Jock, accordlnt:: to David Ba yard , public
affairs officer for the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers' Huntington District .
Bayard said the chamber was closed on March
14, and repair fleets arrived Monday morning.
Since then. delays In river traffic have cost
$97,800, Bayard said, adding he anticipates that
figure to Increase rapidly .
Wednesday morning's report from the facility
showed seven tows -with 29 lockages walling
upriver from the locks at Hogsett, and three tows
with 11 lockages walling downriver.
Bayard blamed the damage on old age.
"Gallipolis Is 50 year s old," he said. "It Is due for

• CommercW C~lr COf!lP&gt;Iny

":zJ.9'1 Annual Pm:cnCIIc Rile

Partly c~tonlght, with
a low nea;~;;~·s~nny Friday ,
with high' hetw••rn 55 and GO.
The probability of preclplta·
lion Is nt•ar zt•ro tonight and

ANGRY ACCUSATION Assistant Senate Republican
leader Alan Simp,on of Wyom·
lng accused White House
reporters of doing "a 'adlstlc
little disservice to your country" by a.~klng President
Reagan questions about Iran
lor the sqle purpose of "•li&lt;k·
lng It In his gazoo. " (UP I)
could even produce a single final
report later this year.
Both commit tees voted Wed·
nesday to grant Immunity to six
addtt lona I minor witnesses be·

l ieved involved in lhP Contra end
of th e sca ndal and thP monry
tra il - br inging lhP number of
those with lega l prot ection so far
to 10. No ne of them approaches
Poindexter or Nor th In
Importance.
Independent prosecu tor Law ·
renee Walsh asked the comm it ·
tees la st week 10 wall 90 days
ix'fore gr anting any immunity to
Poind exter, who resigned as
national security adviser whrn
the Cont ra di version schr mr was
revealed Nov. 25. or to North,
who was fired the same da y from
the National Sr c urit~· Council
staff.
Wal sh. looking in to crimina l
wrongdoing, feared an early
Immunity gra nt could damage
potential crimin al prosecu tions.
Limited immunit y protects a
witness from being prosecuted
on evidence provided under the
agreement.
It forces a witness to testify,
however. and both Poindexter
and North hav e frustrated lnves·
llgators at this point by Invoking
Fifth Amendment r ight s against
self·lncrlmlnatlon and refusing
to discuss th e scandal.
Under the agreement an·
nounced Wednesday , neit her
man will testify publicly until
after June 15 but co ngressional
Investigators will be able to
Interview Poindexter privately
alter May 2.

WASHINGTON tUP f ! Hou se members, by approv·
lng

l.l

m easure gra nting stat f"s

l hl' r ight to ra ise thr .~ peed
limit to lio mph on rura l
lnter slalr highway s, " wi ll
ha ve IJiood on their hands"
from :t, CiOO deat hs In fi ve
years. cr il\cs war n.
But suppo r ter s say tnr pub·
l lc is a clear winner in thr
217·206 vote Wednesday that
marked the first lime I he
House has approved a fas ter
sp&lt;•rd limll since th e oo mph
spred limit wa s enacted dur·
Ing 1h•• 197 ~ Arab oil embargo.
T h(' Sena te, spu rred by.
wrstern·stale lawmakers, ap·
proved ea riiN this year by'!
2· 10·1 margin a stal e·optlon fi:J
mph speed limit on rural
inlf' rsta tes. which compr ise
about 72 percent of the na·
lion's 42,50().mile lnlerstale
system 1hat lies outside urban·
!zed areas of at leas t 51J,Il00
people.
Because of a compromise
worked out In a co nferenn•
eommlt tee, the Senate mu st
vote' once again on th e mra surr, but II Is expected to pass
easily within a few days and
go 10 Presid ent fl.£&gt;3gan for his
signa ture.

The speed li mit Increase Is
par t of a fi vr ·.vear. SAA.fi
billion highwa y and mass
transit author ization bill thai

thr HousP pa ssc 'd hy an
overwhelm ing 407·17 margin
Wednesda y and lhal lhl' ~ ·
nair also Is exf)I'Ci ed 10 pu ss
('a sll y .
Thr package pr ov lde•s $70,7
bill ion for a var iety of federal
and local road and h r ld~r
pro)C&lt;'h, fu nds hi g hwa y
safel y prog r&lt;tm s and aulho·
r lws spending of $1 7.9 billion
for mass transit ovrr five
yr;.1rs. It al so providPs monev
for complrting l he nallon;s
lnll'rstatC' svs tr m bv fiscal
19!12.
.
.
Reag;m , who ; upport s thr
speed limil im: rcoJSI', ha ~
lh rca trnC'd to veto thr\ ov.-.ra l l
highway pa ckag e as a budgf'l
bu stf'r. flul with lhc spepd
limi t ls., u&lt;· df'(·idr d, both the
House and Senal r expect 10
must••r lhP l wo·thi rds maj or!·
tics n!'f.'dr d Ia OV('/'1' \dr I he '
prf"sld fln!' s Vi1 1() or thC1 undf'r'·
lying bill.
In d r bul i n ~ thr h l~ h w uv
pac kag e, mos t " ' the• att ention
and r motlon waJ-. ~ pr nt on tht'
sprrd lim it vn l&lt;'. Sl;clps cur ·
renly :Jrt' ;dlnwN! tc rul:-of'

l hr lr spl•e•cl iim lls but rl ., k
losing crl tlc;c l fr rl r ra l hl ~ h·
way doll;cr, II lh&lt;•y do.
" Tht' Amt' l' i(';J ppo pll" !-.un ·

won." 'a id Sr·n. Ste•vr Sv mm,.
R Jdah n, sponsor of I)H~ s t:ll r ·
opl! o n ln t'l'l':l "'' '·

Shutdown at Gallipolis L &amp; D expected to l~st 3 weeks

ON THE SPOT FINANCING
.SEE RICK TOLLIVER, J.R. PIERCE or PAT HILL

Member FDIC

en tine

Added funding will
aid HEAP program

DuPONT 'STAINMASTER CARPET

lh&lt;• !lOs C'a&lt;'h du .v. H'ilh O\'Prnigh1
lows brtwc•en :;;, and m

The probabilit;· of pt·ecipila ·
tlon is :«t perc&lt;'nl tonigh t and 211
perc&lt;'nl again Thursday .
Winds will diminish lo 10 to l o
mph tonight.
Ohio Extcnd&lt;•d Fort•ca•t
Friday throu~h Sunday
Fair Frida~ · . with ;:1 chance· of

399 so. ro.

SEVERAL PATTERNS OF VINYL

roJ in in th1· soul hf'rn pa r t or th('
!-;!atr S;JturdJ~· and a('I'OSS the'
sta tr on Sunda:-·. Highs will br In

Super Louo
I0-22-6-41-24-31

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 19, 1987

COLUMBUS (UP!i - Majority Democr.a tic
leaders and •fiscal experts In the Ohio House of
Representatives huddled In private today, looking
tor $150 'mllllon to balance the 1988·89 state budget
plan .
They Indicated the money will be realized
through spending cuts and transfers, and not
through additional taxes .
The budget revision was necessitated by a
report, delivered Wednesday by the Leg islalivP
Budget Office, tha t Gov. Richard F . Celeste's
proposed $22 billion ou flay Is underfunded by $298
million according to the latest economic
forecasts.
Rep. William E. Hinig, D-New Philadelphi a,

OUTDOOR CARPET &amp; GRASS

$3 98

756

....

Lawmakers scramble to balance state budget

992-2156

AT

Daily Numht•r

a1 y

Vol.36, No.222
·copyrighted 1987

~1~
·~
SUNNY

•

at

IF INTERESTED, PLEASE .CALL
THE DAILY SENTINEL

STARTING AT$

·Ohio Lottery

Reds bomb
Houston in
exhibition play
-Page 3

FOR LINCOLN HEIGH.TS
POMEROY

Ohio, area weather scene
'

-

According to_ Paul Gerard,
investigator for Meigs Counti
Prosecuting Attorney Frederic)(
Crow Ill, Mrs. Pridemore con sented to a search of the couple' S:
residence and property andd ~pu :
ties co nfiscated marijuana in.
pot s and in the ground an&lt;{
cul·marij uana co ncealed In var·
ious rooms of the house.
:
Cultivation of marijuana, a!t
charged In the indictment, is afourth·degree felony and carrieS:
a maximum possible penalty
18 months In prison and a fine up
10 $2 ,500.
.'
:
Arraignmen t will be in the next
few days in Meigs Coun ty Com;
mon Plea s Court before Judgq
Charles Knight .
..

CARRIER NEEDED

the issue of interest to an
eight -man j urv which found th e
plaintiff to be' en titled to Interest
of $2,112.46.
The suit stemmed from a sa l('s
agreem&lt;&gt;nt entered into bv Rue
and the defendant on Sept. 25,
19R5.
In oiher court matlrrs. a
foreclosure action has been filed
against Charles Humphreys, Mi·
ami, Fla ., rt al, by Diamond
Savings &amp; Loan , Findlay .
II rc 'strainlnt:: order ha s been
issued by the cour t agai nst fh('
defrndant in the case of Debra
Gal lag her Huffman aga in st
Brad.v M . Huffman.

pending lit igation.
Att ending the meeting were·
Superintendent Dan E . Morris:
Ass ista nt Superintendent .James
Ca rpent er: Treas urer .Jane
Wagner and board members ,
Snowden, Robert Barton, Larry
fl.u pr. Ri chard Vaughan and
Larry Powell.

At City Loan Bank, we tell you right up
front how low your monthly payments will be.
And along with your low payments, we give ·
you plenty
AMOUNT TERM ~Z,~~
of time to
repay, and
13,000 48 month s 97.64'
we don't ask
$4,000 48 month $130.19'
for one bit
$5,000 48 month $157.26"
ofcollateral.
$6,000 48month $188.72"
We'll
Otbcr omounl1 ond """'~so olllitabl&lt;.
even take
your application right over the phone. And
give you an answer fast, usually in just 24
hours.

Veterans Mt&gt;morial

Lawsuit is settled in court

l'hurrh is located In the Texas
Communit y , just off County
Road 82 on Wickham Road.
Everyone welco me.

!Cont inued from Page I t

discuss personnel, finances anrl
position applica nt s an&lt;J for an
appeal hearing of a &lt;'Ustodlan on
the board's iniPnl to consider
dismi ssa l. Both meet ings arr
expected to he rxrc ut ivr sr s·
slons . The board moved into
cxccu t ive session aI the close of
Tuesday night 's open session to

Infant JonJan

The Meigs County grand jury,
which met Tuesday in It s first
session of the January term,
returned an indictment charging
a Meigs County couplr with
cultivation of marijuana .
Rick and Cathy Pridemore. of
Sayre Hill Road, Racine, ur e
accused of cutlivating !growing
and/ or possess ing 1 ma r ijuana in
October 1981i.

\e

I

(

·t

renovation. It requires constant maintenance and
repa ir; something's alwa ys going."
The damage Involves an eye bar, the part oft he
hinge mechanism that holds the gateori and !halls
held In a rec~ssed lock wall by two metal braces
ex tending six feet Into the wall .
During last week's Inspection, It was discovered
that the upper brace was cracked, Bayard said.
"Upon removal of the eye bar and examination of
the mechanism. It was later noted that the lower
bra ce had structurally deteriorated to the point
where It will have to be completely removed to
Include chipping away the concret e which
anchors II to the lock wall," he added, describing
the process as similar to pulling out a tooth.
"A lot of those mechanisms have reached the

end of their useful life, " he said .
He added that much of th e11me required for th e
repair will be devoted to physica ll y chipping away
the co ncrete, and for newly set co ncrete to cure to
the proper load-beating strengt h to provide
anchorage for an SO-ton ga te.
During the shutdown of the main lock. the
300-foot long auxiliary lock will be used. Bayard
expressed hope that tow s will use extreme ca ution
when locking through because "an accident In the
auxiliary chamber would close the river down."
The locks were closed for repair last summer
because of an accident, and Bayard says
accidents are eommon during this time of year
because of high water and lhe difficulty of
navigation.

Constru c· llon Is scheduled In IJP~ in thi s tall on
the Corps ' $350 mill ion con stru cti on and rrn nva·
lion project . The plan calls for th r co nstruction of
a new 1.200·foot·by·I OIJ.Ioo t IOI' k and an auxlll arv
600·fOOI·by·llO·IOot Ch(lmhcr In a bypass ru n ~ !
adjacent to the current facllll y, as well as
rehabilitation of the 50·year·old dam.
The present lOCks at Galllpotis arc li(J(t an (t
feet long. Beca use modern tow s art· longer , the
dams create congested river 1raffle. The locks
also sll In a ix'nd , wh 'rr currents and
maneu veri ng problems contribute to a htgh rate
or acc ident s, according to the cor ps.
Bayard said the damage discovered l ast week
underscores the need for the long·awallcd
construction.
'

:mo

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~

~m~ m.....JL.....-~· r-T""'E2d · ~
~v

.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller ·

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The United Press Internatlonal, Inland Dally Press
Association and thC' American Newspaper Publishers Association.

Defiling our
When private corporations des·
troy land or pollute water, the
outcry deafens the ears.
Yet no matter how the federa l
government mist reats the envlr·
onment , its bureaucrats always
get another chance.
Let's hope there are limit s to
!his indulgence. If not, the glories
of the greater Yellowsto ne region
- including the park , seven
national forests and a few pr ivate
parcels -cou ld be a! risk.
A recent report by th e Wild erness Society documents the
da nger . Thisgroupmay not seem

•

Letters to the Editor

dollar spent on produclion. Tax ·
payers, naturally, make up the
difference.
Logging does n't make se nse at
high el eva tion s, wher e yield s are
low and buildin g roads is ex pen·
sivc. But the Forest Service
retreats behind its "multi -use "
mandate for public lands, or
solemnly sugges ls that the way
to save a forests is to r aze it.
At stake is " habitat
shields the grizzly bear,
wo lverine. bighorn sheep
other m agnificen t animals.

•

that
el k,
and
For·

•

•'- •

Memories of 'Pizzle'

our first encount er but a mos t
pleasurabl e one as you tol d m e
about yourself and Raci ne. We
were agreed that pa st events
should be recorded and were
working toward !hal goal. I had
completed a letter to you on the
day that I received word of your
. death, explaining that I would
see you about the end of May.
One of the fi rst Jhings I
remember aboul you is your
personalized aula license plat e.
Who can forget "DW 10"? In
response to my question . You
first acquired it in 1~.14 at a cost of
$5, reserving it each year with
1986 costing $.'10.
So you and Herma n Carson got
your basketball letter s a! Racine
High Sehool In 1925. Only one
man living had an elder one.
Maurice Lett In 1922.
How I wish I had been old
enough Jo watch you capture the
Ohio State straight pool shooti ng
championship in 1927. And what a
thrill It must have been for you in
that exhibition ma tch with th e
world champ.
I had forgotten hgow you ea me
by your nickname - " Pizzle."
One day. as you allowed a grou nd
balllo go through a drunk in !he
stands yelled, "Bo.v, he pizzled
that one." I was surprised to find
it in the di ctionary and om used a!
its meaning.
There is a say ing that " These
are I he I imes to try men's sou ls."
I mu st have been one of those
times for you. In your bookkeepIng class I had great difficulty
dist inguishi ng between a balance

sheet and a bed sheet. Debts and
credit s bickered constan tly as to
!heir proper place. M y boltom
linP usually came oul squiggled
and skewed. Your capacity for
absorbing punishm ent was
incredible.
I appreciate your tellin g m e
that I was one of your fa vori te
baseball players because I al ·
ways gave 100 percent. But you
gav&lt;' more. In 1936, ea rl y in m y
high school career, you could
have throw n up your hands in
despa ir at my bonehead base·
r unning errors. Such as failin g to
tag at third on a fly ball to the
outfield. But you sa id yourself
this boy needs help. The nexl day,
a! activily time, you took me with
an outfielder to the ball diamond
at old RHS . Placing me on third,
you fungoed 100 balls to the
outfield. And you say I scored
eac h time.
You will tell m e some fans
disagreed whet her you wer e a
first ba seman . I ca n still see that
sweeping and graceful follow through after catching the hall,
pivoting on a perfec t center of
gravit y, r eady to fire to any ba se.
II was here in my correspon·
dence that I asked you to stop me
If I got carried away . Pulling on
s0me of my wild throws from
second made me look good.
II was memorable watching
yo u sta ndin g on the basketball
cour t at !he foul line facing !he
opposit e basket and shooting
two-handed back over your head.
You would beam when occasionally one wou ld drop in.
Char ley Brown would ha ve
liked you. I liked you and I wlll
miss you.
Floyd Clark
6504 N.E . 9th
Portland, Ore . 97211

They want Lo know
WP would like to speak on
behalf of the Eastern JransiPr
stud ents who altcnd Meigs. We
would like Jo be notified about
trips, projrct s. and other aGJivi·
ties thul we should be in clud ed in
as Eastern studen ts. The.v ex pt'c t
us to gr·aduatr from their school,
but they do . not inl·lude us In
anything they do as a cl ass.

Som e of us wore told, by
friends at F:astern , about the
Junior/ Senior trip to Hio r.r·ande
lor vls il alion day . Thos&lt;' who
heJ rd abou t it brought pcrmis·
slon slips but w('re told. '"ThC'r c
Isn' t enough room on !he bu s for

the Meigss tudcnts Jo go. "
WI' wish to know about events
at Eas tern which should
include !he tra nsfer st udent s before lhese event s take place.
Not Jhr nigh! before the event.
but far enough In advance that
we ha vp a chancP to go.
Signed: Becky Bauer, Cynthia
Kauff, Tina Bissell, Melissa
Hensley, Laura Farley, Donna
Curtis, Traci New lun , William
Taylor. Mikkl Hupp, Jeff Parker,
Tom Parker, Ginger Hayman,
Charles Cleland, Raymond M y ers, Tony Hendrix, Rex Justi s,
Carla Edwards, Kelly L. Thomp·
son, Gina Gibbs, Janel Werry.
Ken Rltc hiP, Roger Ca rpenter.

Today in history
By Unilcd Pnoss International
Today Is Thur sday, Marc.II 19. th&lt;• 7Rt h day of1BR7 with 287 to follow .
The moon Is moving toward it s las t quarter.
Thf' mor~Jng sl ur s fir&lt;' Mrrcury, Venus and Sal urn.
The evC'nlng stars'"'' ' Mar·s and Jupiter.
Those born on thi s dat e arr under the sign of Pisces. They Include
African &lt;'xplorcr Da \"i rl l.i\"lngstone in 181l Marshal Wyatt Earp In
J84R, j uris! William .Jpn nlngs Aryan i n 181i0, Chief Jusllce Earl
Warren In IR91. actor Patr·ick McGoohan In 1928 (age 59t , au thor
Philip Roth in 193.1 I age 541. and ac tress Ursula Andress In 1936 1age
511 .
On Jhl s datr• in his tor)•:
fn·72f B.C ., acco r·dJng 10 the Rom an historian Ptolemy, Baby lonian
astro.nomhs not ed history's first recorded ecli pse- an eellpseof the
moon.
In 1917. the Supreme Court ruled that the Adamson Act was
conslltullonal. II provided for an rig ht -hour work day on America n
railroads. .
·
·

KISSIMMEE, Fla. tU PI) Eric Davis hit a three-run homer
to spark a nine-r un sixth inning
Wednesd ay that car r ied the
Cincinnati Reds to an ll·3 raul of
the Hou ston Astros in an exhlbl·
lion game.
The Reds sent 12 batters to the
plat e agai nst loser Rocky C'hll·
dres s and reliever Rafael Man·
Jalvo and collected four hits, four
.walks and benefitted from an
error to wipe out a 3-2 Houston
lead.
·
Cincinnati took a 1·0 lead In the
' first on singles by Barry Larkin,
Tracy Jones and Davis, but the
Astros got the run back in thei r
half of the inr\ing on a lwo-out
single by Terry Puhl and an RBI
triple by first baseman Dan
Driessen.
.
The Reds took a 2-1 lead In the
fourth on singles by Terry
Francona and Sa l Butera and
Ron Oester's sacrifice fly. Hou ston scored twic e in the fourth,
putting togeth er a walk to Puhl.
Driessen's doubl e, an RBI by
Alan Ashby and Jose Cruz 's
sacrifice fly.

parks'-----'--~-Vi_nc_en_tc_a_rro_ll

like the most evenhanded source,
but many of Its conclusions are
backed by Independent· ob·
serve r s, by fi sca l conservatives
tired of supporting wasteful
public policies and even by the
research arm of the Library of
Congress.
Logging is per haps the grea ·
tes t threa t to th e national forests
surrounding Yellowstone. It is
also the least defensible activity.
The timber harvest not only
degrades the environment , it
actually loses money an
average of 55 cents for each

"So far, so good- what's your next move going to be?"

tunately, accordi ng to a recent
study in Nature m agazine, only 4
percent or Yellowstone Park 's
or iginal m amm alia n species arr
extinct. But th at record could
quickly erod e. More than one·
four th of all species in Yosemite ,
Rocky Mountain . Mount Rainirr
and Bryce Ca nyo n parks are
gone, and most ca n neve r be
reintroduced.
The Forest Service isn't solely
to blame. It controls the area
around Yellowstone, but not the
park itself. That privilege goes tq
the Par k Service. an agency
whose whil e- knig ht image also
needs a seco nd look.
The first steps toward such a
reapprai sal wpre taken by A lston
Chase in hi s stinging 198B book,
'"Playing God in Yellowstone." A
rancher and writer !'rom Living·
stan, Mont., Chase spe nt years
bird -dogging Park Serv ic e
pol ic ies.
There is no t doubt, for exa m ·
pie, that the Park Service accid·
enl all y hastened the decline of
th e grizzly- and then attempted
to disguise th e tragedy.
"When I began resea rch in
Yellowstone in 1981," Chase
reca ll ed in a sp&lt;'CCh last fall in
B ig Sky , Mont., "the Park
Ser vice, in ils published litera·
lure, wa s claiming a g ri zz ly
population of 350a nd a black bear
population of 650. T he actual
number of grizz lies Pstimated by
it s own biologists, however, was
at that time under 200, and the
number of black bears.. . was
closer Jo 50. "
Americans enjoy an under·
standab le lovr affair with their
natural heritage. When searc h·
ing for its enemies, !he average
citiz~n habitually turns hi s gaze
toward priva te ent erprise.

Oh, give' us a home ___J_a_ck_·_A_n_d(_'r_8o_n_&amp;_· _J_().~_·ep_h_Sp_e_.a_r
WASHINGTON - Ever since
the heyday of the late Vyacheslav (Iron Pants ) Molotov, Amerl·
can diplomats have rarely been a
match for their Soviet opponents
at the negotiating !able. The
story of the two superpowers'
half-century of bargaining over
new embassies In their respec ·
live capitals is Instructive.
From the 1934 American am·
bassa dor's impossible dream of
duplicati ng Monticello on the
outskirts of Moscow, Slate Department officia ls have now
reached !he point where they'd
just like a new e mbassy building
sometime In the 20th century .
What they have, as we report ed
earli er, is an unfinished, crum ·
bling concrete shell loaded with
stal e·of ·lhe·art KGB electronic
bugs installed by Soviet construe·
lion workers. Though It may
neve r be fit for human habital ion
- even by the spartans of !he
ForE'ign Service - !he Moscow
emba ssy has already amassed a
cost overrun exc eeding $100
million.
The State Department cheerily
predicts occupation of the new
embassy by 1989. But congres·
slonal critics po int out that the
unllnished structure is now bei ng

checked over by National Burea u
or Standards experts. If they find
that Soviet workmanship Is
below par, the whole building
may have to be done over again
!rom scra tch .
Meanwhile, the Soviets are
put.ting the fini shing touches on
!heir spanking-new em ba ssy
building, hi gh on a hill above
Georgetown, overlooking most of
Was hington, D.C. Monticello it
ain't, but then, the Soviel s never
set their sights so quixotically
high. All !hey wanted was a
large, st rategica lly situated emba ssy compound ll'ilh a view of
the federa l city- and that !hey
got.
Whal exasperates congressional critics is th at this lopsided
situation wa s supposed to have
been rigorous ly guarded agai nst
by U.S. negotiators . "Reclproc·
tty " was the key word , but it
appeared lo lose somet hing In
translation.
A nine-page Stale Department
report m ade ava ll abl~ to Sen.
Edward Zorlnsky, D·Neb .. (and
examined by our associate
Lucette Lagnado!. sto utly pro·
claims that U.S. negotiators
Insisted on "paraiiPI, ' brick -forbrick' progress on construction

in Mo scow and Wa shington ."
This in sl stenre wa s supposed to
be the guiding light for embassy
construct ion wh en, after 35years
of haggling, the tw o governments
agreed on mutu all y acceptable
sites in 1969.
But here' s how reciproc it y
worked out i n practice :
-In 1970, the U .S. nego tiators
"began to back awa y from our
original pos ition, " and ag reed to
Jet Soviel workers and Sovirl
material be used for !he Moscow
embassy. M oney was the main
reason for this co ncession . " It
would have cost too much to
Import an 'army' of American
con stru ction workers, " the rc ·
port explains. Using Sov iet per sonne l has resuli ed in a cos!
o.v errun of more than $tOO million
so far .
In 1977, the Am eric ans ag re~d
to lett he Sovie ts begi n building a
school , clubhou se a nd apart ·
menl s on their Washin gton sliP
'Y '!n exchan ge for a new Ameri can school, 14 new apar lmenl s...
warehouse space and a nrw
dacha site." Two years laiN, the
Soviet buildings were co mpleted
and Jh e Americans still hadn't
wrung a construction agreement
oul of th e Kremlin bureaucr acy.

What teeDS say about
"Half?" I hea rd myself asking
as If my voice were disembodied
and belonging to my mother.
"Are you sure you mean half? I
mean, when I was in high school,
not even half of us dated ."
I was talking to high school
seniors to get the local angle on a
recent Planned Parenthood poll
or teenage sex uality, and l'd
really expecled to hear them say
the fl!(ures were high lor Springfield, Mo.
As I listened to their answers, I
was sure If I looked Into a mirror
I 'd see scaly, green skin and fin s
on m y hump.
But yes. these teenagers as·
sured me, !he nationwide poll of
1,000 teenagers Is accurate. Half
of all 17-year·olds are "sexuall y
active,"' which the poll defined
as having had sexuallntercoursP
at least one time . And yes, It Is
accurate for Springfield, a Mldw·
estern city of141.000 sma ck In !he
buckle of the Bible Belt.
The kids were equally adamant on other points In the Planned
Parent hood poll , points the
famlly·plannl ng agency hopes
will dispel the notion that teach ·
lng kids about contraception
causes them to have sex:
Not only are half of our
teenagers having sex before age
17. one-third of !hose who are
huvlng sex are doing so without
using any method of birth
control.
Many American teenagers are
grossly uneduca ted about birJh
control. The majority of their
Information about sex and con·
traceptlon comes from their
peers, not from parents or
educators. An alarming number
believe unreliable methods of

birth control , such as rhythm and
withdrawa l , are highly effec tive.
Th e Springfield teens also
echoed the poll findings about
why kids have sex wlthoul being
prepared: Some don't expect II to
happen to them so are unpre·
pared when It does. Some, like
th e children they still are In
many ways, don' t plan ahead
about anyt hing.
Others are simply afraid to
talk about sex and co ntracep llon
with !heir parent s or hl!(h -sc hool
counse lors. The Jeens say open,
two-way discussion Is rarely
encouraged from eit her port , and
they are scared to bring It up
them selves. Others are afraid to
go Jo clinic s to get contraceptives
for fear their confid entiality will
be betrayed.
. And many of the teenagers I
talked to, even those who sa id
they had decided to pos tpone sex
until they are older, wanted me to
carry the same message to the
adults I was writing to: Teenag·
ers are having sex, and pretend·
lng they aren't won't prevent
teen pregnancies . "Adulls have
to face the fact that it does
happen ," one girl told me,
practi cally spitting out the
words. It was a poignant indict ·
ment of the way we've been
preparing these youn g people to
deal wllh the barrage of sexua l
excitement they are exposed to In
our culture.
I asked the kids what they
would do, II t hey were parents
and school administrators, to
stop unwanted teen pregnancies.
Their suggestions lor admlnls·
trators ranged from creating a
more open atmosphere where

- By 1985, the Soviet embassy
building - cha ncery, consulate
were
and reception halls co mpleted (by American con·
traclorsl except for interior
fini shing work, now bei ng done
by Sovie t personnel. That w as the

sa me year construction was
halt ed on the Moscow embassy
after inspectors found elec tronic
bugs, leaks in the roof. gaps in
support i ng walls , cracks in the
exterior m or t ar a nd o th er
deficiencies.
UNDE R THE DOME: Apparen tl y it' s easy to be generous to
the hired help when you ' ve j ust
voted yourself a $12,000 -a-year
pay ra ise. House Speaker Jim
Wright , D-Tcxas, is doling out
$36 ,000 of taxpayers' money to
ease th e pain of replace m ent for
outgoing Hou se cler k Benjamin
Gulhrle.
Wright wanted hi s own man,
Donnald Anderson, in the $72,000
administrative job. which over·
sees ewrylhing from legisl ation
to locksmiths. But Guthrie, 64,
complained !hat ·even with hi s
$30,000 lump -sum rNirement
payment and his pensio n of
$50,000 to $60,000 a yea r , he was
going to be hard put to pay for hi s
child' s cducalion .

SeX._______S_ar_ah_0_1_J.er_. a_re_et

kids feel confident as king ques·
lions and talking about their
concerns, to act ually leaching
eth ics wllh the educa tion and
emphasizing th e va lu e of delay·
ing sex until teens ar c a little
mor~ m atu r e.
And the message for !he
parents? T al k to us . T ell us what
you think and how y ou feel about
things, bul edu ca te us. Show us
vou love us and bring up the
subject , beca.use we ' re afra id IQ.

bring it up with you.
I remembered how I wished
my parent s would tal k with me20
years ago and didn't fret so much
like Tyrannosa ur us Rex . But I
found th r fai lure of thi s gener a·
lion of parent s as disturbing as
the Pl anned Parenthood poll.
Weren't we the generation that
promi sed ou rselves we'd kee p
the lin es of communication open,
unlike our parPn1s did wl1h us?

VIEWS ACTION - St. Louis llrst baseman ,Jack Clark, left,
watches ll(;tion from dugout with teammate John Morris during
Wednesday's ex hibition game against the Chicago White Sox In St.
Petersbur!!", Fla. (UPI)

NBA results

Exhibition results
~a l lnnal

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~II

GAINESV ILLE, Fla. (UP l t Tomm y .John held t he Un ivers it y
of Florida to a run and two hit s in
four innings to lead the New York
Yankees to a 14-2 triumph.
New York, which amassed 16
hit s, r eceived three hi ts and
three RBI from Ron Ki tt le. Don
Mattingly, Dan Pasqua and
Willie Randolph had two hit s
apiece .
SCOTTSDALE. Ariz . t UP I t Jeffrey Leo nard and Robby
Thompson rach delive red an RBI
si ngl e in the bott om of the lOth
Inning to ra il) the Sa n Francisco
Ql ant s to a 2-1 victor)! over th e
California Angels .

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P hillir·s c iO.'&gt;I'cl thl' ir111 i11 g ·\'i t h &lt;t
r un scorin g fi(' ldt•J 's I' h o i · · ~ · b~
Crpg· C ro ss and '' b:t S('S lo;tdnl
\valk lo Sl'llu .

Wl t\ TER HAV EN, F la. iUPl i
- Kevin McRey nolds drove in
his lir st two runs of the spring
with a sin gle and a doubl e to help
the New York Mets beat !he
Boston Red Sox R-5.
It wa s th e seco nd of two
Grapefruit Leagu e games sc h ~·
du led between la st yrar's Wo r ld
SPries partici pants . The Red Sox
won 7-2 S:..~ turda y in Sl.
Petersburg .
Starter Si d JCrr.~andez ear ned
the ,·ictory in a four -inning effor t.
Boston sta rt er Bob Stanlev l ook
the loss, working J'i vc innin gs and
giving up four r uns.
MIAMI I UP I&gt; - A run · scor ing
sing le by Nelson Simm ons hlg hligh tPd a th ree · ru n eigh th Inning
and paced the Baltimore Or ioles
to" 6·4 v ictory over th0 Atlanta

_..I

;;;;,.,,,.,

·~·. •
1 l'l~&lt;"r HiH•r

-

Itt•·· 7

("i . nf :-l iiH·r ll r lcl ~t•· l'lntll)

There's a famDy feeUng at Ponderosa: ·

Braves.
Baltimore in f ield er R cx
Hudler suffered a torn ulnar
eo llaler a l ligament of the lc fl
thumb and will he out six to eig ht
week s. It was thr same injury
that Orioles ou tfielder MikP

•

!!A

~z =-=po=NDER=-=-os=-=-A~

?"7America's Favorite Store
C::ll

~

OPEN DAllY 10· 9
SUNDAY 1·6

-tire ~9 Pf«ct

ENDS SAT., MARCH 21, 1917

Main St.

Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

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

K l ~-"' hn ­

Nu1se,.., Stock And Bogged nems AvollobleOnly
In Sl01es With Gorden Cenlei. Lawn .And GOlden
11em1 Av01loble Only In larger K mort Simes

Our Reg. 8.97

6.97

8

It Grade Patented PoHed Ro.. lush
Lovely varlelles of patented polled rose
bush In assorted colors. Brightens any
yard. Reody to plant Shop nowl
1

~- ~ . ~·· w

\'11rt.: ( ,\1 . 1 ut 1-'1
Fla. I n l
( 'hl t'Uitll (1\I ,J ' "· ~1'11 \ 'nrt.: t ~l.tul Sl .
l'dt · r ~h lfr lt. t'la . 1n 1
l ~ tud!'fd :tl• • ,

"•· +IMI'I'o tiH,\'
l'llhhur ~:h

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ltan ~:n~

llurtfnrt1 :,, S\'

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l .n ui" I
Otl t'LIJ:n ti. Tnr un tu :1
Wlnnlp•·,; I. :'1\" • • ~~o ·••·rM·,\
ThuNI~~v·.

:t rm·,

(ianH"'

Mlnnt 'i'it~a 1111\n~ l u n . i ::l~ Jl.lll .

N\' l"litndt•l'i'i !LI ll l'trnll. i :: l ~ l).m .
lA.-. \n~t:t •lt "' a tl'hlladt•ltt hh~ i ::IJ p. m .
t :ttmunwn ltl f :lll(i11',\ ', ~: U p.m.

Transa&lt;'tions
flliSt•huJI
- ~l :n t• t•all'lwr Ko·\ In
fhwklr,- hi i' nnt~mdltlnrwtl rt·lt-~1' , :-ian
t' r:uwiM~• - .'it•nt plh• ht· r ~ -lonl'r·rlmun
111111 ( 'ulln \\ IU'd, lnlh-ldr•r \n~t:t• l 1-:st·u har
an d nnlflt•ldt'f' ,u~~n f1K·krl'll 10 11 ..
rnlnnr· h•:tl;"ll!' t•;uup; ~11\1 ' 11lll'lll'r Ka,\.1-' tml••nul hi" ur~~ · u mlltit l nal nll'lt'&gt;t'.

Wakeup to

SPRING
SAVINGS
LADlE}'

{ 'olh•~t• •

Turnnl u (1 '1-'J, j - .~ll(no• d tlllartt•rlmt •k
·I &lt;I lin ( 'll11Jll'nll tu II IIIUIH-~· f' lf( I'Ulll r:u·(,

Boy~

S('Ort'S

' Rn,- ~ Ul1 ln Jll~~:l• S. ·ho:tol ll ; t ~kd hWI
u. ·ttn .,.dll,\' ' ~ lto • ~~:konal TI!Urn ;tnwnl

Ht 'liU ih

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\t Kt•nl

n a~s

fl!· !'IIIJ(nallu" .ill,

t:U.~t

( 'I• · ~ ha11 .\:1

1\l f :mlun
:u. · tunlt·~·

11!1. \\ arrt•n \\o••!•·rn Ut ••

,\1 Tulo'()ll

'T" I " 'hllnwr :\i. fot :1-UIIIIu .il
ful ftn)okh.t\'O'II 71, I.RX In !(tuB .\:1
''' Hn)' lon
('In flak Hill~ 1.1. ['In \\alnttl IIII I~ ~ ~

I '!ul)
Jhmhnt 7:\ . C'ln l 'urt·•·ll t1

SPRING

{Ai:~
II THE
AM}

2e97

~~7

8·11" Hardy
Azaleas

8 3e97

Compact shrub with
flower clusters of
blossoms. Assorted.

Our
4.97

Bird Bath
Plastic molded
bi1d bath.

White. SAVE

97&lt;

1997our

Oe'corative , plastic
fo1 yard or garden.

Daisy Pinwheels

24.77
Ho..moblle• RMI
Reel cart convenlenny
slores garden hose
untangled: Sovlngsl

3.97~~;

57&lt;=•fler

JACKETS
AND

COATS

--

~

FOR JR.

and MISS·Y
ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

\'

Pinch -hiltf'r Mik• • I&lt;.:.L" Ir r and
.Joh n Hu ~s PI I sin gh' cl «!H :;1nd_\
St. CL:li H• 10 si'Oi't ' I \Y o ru ~ ; Tlw

'! ~~~ \.'!Itt '!-i6
II II'! '! li :! II
II II'! ~ ; --: '!~1 :1
II .'\li '!l .'o'!lUi

W;..,hlnK1un ( ,\1o. l - Namt•t1 Kt•n
K' t~nd)' hr•~d futllhllll o·ont·h.
J-'tKtih;dl

" HOW IS ORAL DOING WITH THE
FUND-RAISER? "

wa l kt•d Jlir·k Sd ur. J{unn Hr .'
nolds doublt•rl hom•• a run and
Chris .ramP~ ('lla ~(· d II' •rr •dit.1
with an fUl l sin gll' .

KElLER
BUSINESS SERVICE

t'lu.

,\ tnnll'l •al

Ci.I!T h•t\ \\'I'll tJ\'l'J' till' .'J/~· f Oo l
mark in ri ghl ·('t ·ntc r fh•ld . Losi ng pil('hl 'l' UIJaldo 1\l'!'(' di ;·l tlwn

Sirloin
Tips

CHANDLER, Ariz. I UP II Glenn Braggs, Greg Brock and
Ro b Deer hit home runs Jopower
the M ilwaukee BrPwPrs to a 10-4
roo t of the Chicago Cu bs .

SALE STARTS WED., MAICH 11,

flndnnatlll . JlnnMun 3
fit'\'l'llllld 1 1~~~ II. S.•ultk· I

Hairs ton befo re

WE ST PALM BJ-:,\C"H . Fl a .

TEMPE , Ariz. t UP It - Brook

ulit•r 10 Inn. I

Jr r r~·.'

Hun•s lrd of f thf' i nn in~ wi th a
d rive.~ int o a ~0- mpll wind th;lt .

li li~ '!.1:1 '!1111
Sill,\' IIi•• l)h t.. lnn
l.l :)I l !):, :1:11 '! t:l

\ ·1-:d

Dll ) '

walked

surrcndrring a t wo-run hornl'r to
Hulett and a so lo shot to
Williams .
Jor Cow\ry went fi\'t' in nin g!'i
iJild gavp up no runs on four hit s
to earn the v ictor~'-

IUP!r - Von Ha ves ignit ed a
slx·ru n righth il~nin~ •.v itll ~~
mammoth homl' rUn to spar k the
Philadelphia 1-'hillirs to an H(
triumph ovrr th&lt;' M ontrrul
Lxpos.

:li

:~o ·f'tJlr

..

LAKELAND. F l a. t U Pir
Tim Hulclt. K en William·s and
Russ Morman horneJ'rd in a
four-run fourth inni ng that
helped the Chicago White Sox
down the Detroit Tiger s C.-1
.Ja ck MorTis, the acp of rho
Tigers stalf, was thc,·ict im of thr
White Sox's fourth -innin g barr·age and took thr Joss . Thr
scoring brgan with Mor man' s
solo home run . Morrb thrn

Mlt""'Jiuluoo• lfl, ( 'hlf·llii:A tl'rrOI.t -1

mo~ ·-

1. 'I' l, _,_l i t'fO\
:1'! :111 111 71 :! II
·;, :Ml II Gil :! Ill
'!II :It I'! ti ~ :!fi:l
~'!I :1.1 !+ ~; :!611

· fat•

PHOENIX. Ariz . tUPJ t
Garry T~mpleton and Tony
Gwynn co llecl ed thret• hit s
apiece and John Kr·uk cr acked a
three-run hom er to lead San
Diego's 17-hit output and carry
the Padres to a 10-8 triumph ov~r
the Oakland A ·s.
Todd Simmons pitched Jwo
innings for the Padres to gain !he
victory Bill Krueger took the
loss.

Young suffered during I he second spr ing !raining gam e.

C ' hlc- i1~" ''"'·' '" ~':~. n1-tr 1111 :1

"
( 'hh- :l )l

. ~I\!
- ~~~t: t

. ..., rork
l'hiladt•lphl;a
Monlro •lll
t 'lnl'lnnaU

'l'tu·,.nn, ,\rtl .
l&gt;tlllu dt •lphi;t ,.,_ llmhlnn ill

llt•lroil

-~ I ll

I
fi

~,

Hh i!»illn

Sl . . ..... ...

I'd .

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,\(l11nla
San Ult' K"

tla.
Sl . l.nui" \ .-..

\\'&lt;ll•"' ( 'onfo-nnt·o•
l'atrk ll llhl~lun
:~. - l'liil.

n 1.

Jacoby and Dave Gallagher
accumulated fo~r hits apiece to
pa ce Cleveland's 20· hit attack
and power the Indians to a 14-4
triumph over t he Sea ttl e
M ar iner s.
Cleveland scor ed nine runs in
the second inning on nine hit s,
inc luding triples by Pat Tabler
and Gallagher. Seat tle sJartcr
Mike Morgan wa s charged w ith
all nine runs and cighl hils.
Ken Schrom pilched fi ve In·
nings for Cleveland, allowing two
runs on fiv e hil s. Both runs were
driven in by Ken Phe lps, who has
l1 RBI this spring.

( 'hl!'lL,liO (o\1, ) t i'S)I!, :oil . l ,mi\, HI t·a llt'd

llll!iton l'!fl. Mllwnulu·o· HI:.!
Phlladt·lpllill l 11!t. ,\tJ&gt;UJiil llli
f)t'flu•r 101, ("l, ., .,.,un d lllll
!\:o•\1 - lt •rst·~· 11 :1. IM rull II :.!
Hom4on 11 :1, l'lluo'flh: !U
J.,\ l.u k1 •r.'l Il l, l'luh 9i
Thursday '" l: umt'!&amp;
lndlunuut "'"""' \"nrk, ~: lll p.m.
N•11llh• at \\'a .. hin~nn , i : :llljun .
( 'hlt ·ll.llu at 1.,\ ( 'llppt•r ", lit : :JII p. m.
l'ul'lland al fi nlrtl-n Slu h •. 111 ::1111•-m .
IJull:a.o. 111 ~a•·ram• • nln, ln ::\0 p.m.

~ .\'J'IOS ,\1.

·

!-it . Lunl"
S;m Frand,.o·o

tuluntk lli\' L'ilnn

Philadlph

LA•a_cut•

ORLANDO, Fla . (UP!)- Tim
Laudner hit a three-run homer
Wednesday to power the Minneso ta Twins to a :.-2 ex hibition
victory over the Los Angeles
Dodgers.
Gary Gaetli led off thc lhird for
the Tw ins with a double into the
left -center gap and Tom Bru ·
nansky followed with a walk.
La udner then smacked a home
run to right field off Fernando
Valenzuela.
FORT MYERS, F l a. (UPli Gena P0tralli sin gled home Ceci l
Esp,v with two -o ul in the ninth
inning to give !he Texas Rangers
a 2· 1 victory ove r the Kansas Cit y
Roya ls.

Scoreboard ...

( 'I!•\ t•l:111d

Berry's World -

The Daily Sentinei_; Page- 3

Cincinnati bombs Astros; .Dodgers lose

... ..

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome Th('y should be less than :nl words.
long. AU leiters uresu bjC'C1 toed lUng and rrus1 bP signed w!lh name, address and
telephone number _ No unslgno:i letters wlll be p:bltshed. L('tters should be In
good taste, addressing- issues. not personalltlcs.

For Donald ·'Pizzle'' Wolfe,
who made m y life a I itt lc hrightN
this past yea r .
It was la st March that )' OU firs t
wrote to m e aft er reading my
letters in the Sentinel. II was not

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page- 2- The Daily Sentine,l
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Thursday. March 19, 1987

1606 1

*
1.97~~~

LA WNW ARE

6.97~~;

1-Lb.'

Ro-Pid~·

Water soluble Ra.PidGroe plant rood for
healtlly piantt.

......

4"11120' Lawn ldglng
HeavvdulylownedgIng In 20-ft. JOlt wHh

connectors. Savel

10'11%" Oorcltn H-

50'x'h" nylon relnfor·
ced garden hose. A
summertime muan

Rebate

40-Lb.' Top loll

40-lb.' top sol !lor pat·
ching and top dressIng lawns. Save newt

185 UPPER RIVER ROAD. GALLIPOLIS
'·

�. Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, March 19, 1987

St. John's Gonnan selected
Class A 'Player of the Year'
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Oh io iUPI I
Delphos St. John 's Tra ci Gorman, another in a long line of
outstanding Blue Jays, hea ds up
the 1987 Unlled Press in ternation al Class A girls all- Ohio
basketbaiil eam .
The 6-fool Gorman, who led Sr.
John 's to an 1R-2 reg ular season
record and into this week end 's
sla te tournament semi fi nals, averaged 21 point s and 9.orcbounds
and 2 asslsls per game. She shot
53 per cent from the fi eld and 7:!
percent from th e free throw lint&gt;.
She is joined on the all-Ohio
fir st team by Jenny Kapl eof New
Washington Buckev&lt;' Centra l
Kim Danner of Peebles, .Juli~
Cascaden of Bradford and Kathv
Mas t of Smithville.
·
"llhink il' s the facl she ca n do
everyt hing i f ca lled on," Delphos
Coach Jea n Weber sa id in describing Gorman, who played two
yea rs of var sit y basketball al
Van Wer t then tra nsferred to St.
.John's for her final two seasons.

Spiess named "A'
Coach-of-the-Year'
COLUM BUS. Ohio i UPI I Vainarcl Spiess, who led New
Washington Buckeye Centra l toa
19-1 r&lt;'gular season record , has
been selrclr d the 1987 Unit ed
Press Int ernatio nal gir ls Class A
coac h of th e yew.
Spiess , whose Buckett es finis hed second In thr final UP!
Board oll'oach es ratings behind
Peeblrs after lea ding mosl of the
season. received 11 of 32 vol es
cas t fr om coac hes from ac ross
the star e.
Peebles' Tom New man and
Paul Green off DeGraf f Ri ver·
side !led for second wi th si x vol es
each.
Don Winrod of Indian Vallry
Soul h and Cheryl Allhau s of
Pandora -Gilboa were only ot her
eoachrs lo receive more th an one
vote.

"She shoots wel l and rebounds
well and if necessary, we use her
against !he press," said Weber .
" If it 's not necessary, she st icks
to her role and lets th e others' do
thei r 's."
Gorman' s "role" bas ica lly is
to score Inside and rebound.·
"She's an excellent jumper for
a girl," sa id Weber, who co m·
pared her style of play to form er
Delphos star .lean ne Ar nzen, who
played for the Blur Jays in the
late 1970s and was an assistant
coach during the time Gorman
was at Van WC'rt .
" It 's Ju st her personali ty and
the wa y she goes about pracllcr.'' sa id Weber. " You never
see her without a smile."
Gorm;m alrea dy has signed to
pla y co llege basketball for Fran
Vall, the former St. John' sroach.
now al Bowling Green.
Th e 5-foor -9 Kaple. a thi rd
ream selection a year ago. Jed
Buckeye Cent ral to a 19-1 regu lar
season record, averaging 1ti
points per ga me for coach of I he
y·ear Val nard Spiess.

Severa l area high school play Press' All-Distri ct Boys Team in
the three class ificat ions ea rlier
lhis week.
In Class AAA, Gall ipolis' Gary
Harrison was selec ted First
Team and Di strict Player -of-theYear . Jim Osborne was named
Class AAA Distr ict Coac h-of-the
Year .
In Class AA, Meigs' ,J. R.
Kit chen was named Fir st Team.

NCAA play resumes tonight

Danner. 5-fool-3, led Peebles ro
a 20-0 regular season and the No.
1 Class A rating. She averaged
18.7 points per contes t.
Casc·aden was the highest
scorer on anv ott he three team s.
The 5-foot -6 senior averaged :16.3
point s per co nt es t .
Mas( at 5-foo t-6 and also a
senior. averaged 2:!.8 poin ts per
game.
Named to the second ream
were 6-foot -1 Hea ther Finfrock of
DeGraff Riverside: o-foot-o
Rox ie Zimmerly of Pandora Gilboa; .Hool -4. Teri Bick le of
Ohio Cily Liberty: 6-foot Karen
McGugin of Lucas: and 5-foo r- 10

Jennif~r

seniors. Crall of Jewei! -Scio . all
The 6-member thir d ream was
co mposed of KellyW eir oflndian
Valley Sout h; Lori Etzler of
Convoy Crestview: Cheryl Perozek of Newar k Ca tholic; Georgina Wilk inson of Ca nal Win chest er: L y nrl l r Rich er of
Pettisville; and Jill Schnilk ey of
Archbold . Wilkinson and Ri c her
are juniors. thP others are
seniors.

ATHENS -Although rem ainIng In the r ace until th e season's
fin al game. Ohio University's
women.'s baskelball tea m failed
to make the Mid-American Conference post -season tournament
and fi nished I he season 10-16 and
7-9 In the MAC.
"I don't think thi s rea m ever
rea lly put II all togeth er this
year." sa id Ohio head coach Amy
Pr ichard. who saw her team drop
Its last three ga mes, dashing any
hope for the tournament berth.
Despite not making the rourna·
menl, Prichard felt that !he
tea m 's defensive play and re·
bounding wer€' lhf' highlights.
"I was very pleased with our
overall defense, and I think for as
sma ll as we were !thought we did
an exceptional job rebounding,"
she said.
She added that she believes th e
Bobcats were the best defensive

TAMPA. Fla . tUPli - It
appears Nick Esasky's broken
wrist may have more Impact on
the Reds · pitchin g staff than at
first base, where Terry Fran rona was pressing Esasky for the
starting job.
Esasky was hi! on the right
wrist by a pitch thrown by Doug
Sisk of the New York Mels In a
game at St. Petersburg )Vlonday
night. He will be sidelined four to
six weeks.
Over the winter, Esasky 's
name was most often menlloned
when the subj ect of trades cam e
up Involving the Red ~. His Injury
severely crimps the Reds' options In obtaining a pitcher.
somethin g Gener al Manager Bill
Bergesch has said he may yet
attempt r6 do.
" It certainly reduces the posslblil ies !Of a trade\, because
now we're one man shy ," Bergesch sa id. "That doesn' t mean
we were going to trade Esasky.
But being a man shy cur s into
your maneuverability as far as
being able to make a deaL You
don't have as many people to

PAT HILL FORD INC.
PUSH, PULL OR .DRAG

Port smou th 's Patrick Tubbs wa s
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Kemper.
Team; Chr is Petro. Hannan
Trace, Second Team and Dave
Am burgey . Southern, Seco nd
Team. Pl ayer -of !he-Year was
Green's Brian Roach. Green's
Mike Hughes wa s named Coachof-lhP·YPar.

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brings you closer together.
"I think 1 can speak for the
4,000or so young men who got the
chance to pl ay for Woody , for the
numerous coaches who had the
chance to work for hlin and the
many coaches in th e Big Ten
Co nference who competed
against him .
"During the 28 years that he
coached, there's no question In
my mind he was the dominant
force , the greatest football coach
the co nference ever had.
"That's why you see so lillie of
the cheat ing In our co nference."
added Schembechler. " For 2B
yea rs, ladles and gentlemen . I(
you violated th e r ules, sooner or
later. you faced the old man."
OSU coach Ear l•• Bruce. who
rep laced Ha yes following thc
1978 season, also spoke.

LOSE WEIGHT fOREVER

~

TAMPA, Fla . !UP II- Cincln·
nati Reds pitcher Mario Solo,
who underwent arthroscopic
surgery on his r ight shilulder In
August, threw about 60 pllches
over three inn ings of a simulated
game Wednesday.
Cincinnati Manager Pete Rose
said Soto, who hasn't pll ched an
exhibition game yet this spring,
threw welL
"Every lime out , he has gollen
better," said Ro se, adding th at
he hopes to pitch Sorofor a couple
of innings ln a minor league
game Sa turday.
Meanwhile, th e Reds announced that hi ghly routed rookie
left -hander Norm Charit on wa s
scratched from roday's gamf'
aga inst Minnesota at Orlando,
F la.. because of stiffness In his
left elbow .
Charlton fractured the middle
finger on his IE'ft hand early In
training ca mp bu t overca me that
only to be hll by the elbow
problem . He has pitched just
three inn ings so far.

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and boss. He played and coached
under Ha yes at Miami Unlverslly in Ohio and later at Ohio
Stale.
"I did have the distinction of
playing for Woody, coac hing for
Woody and competing against
Woody over a 40-.year period ,"
sa id Schembechler.
"When I went to Michiga n. I
wondered how the old man would
take It . As it turned out .It was the
so-called 10-year war . F ier ce
compel lllon between two grea t
lnslilutlons.
/
"I've always felt thai compelitlon , as Intense as II was, actually
brought us closer together. !love
com pet ilion when you know yo ur
compellng against the best.
When you know you're dealing
with hones ty, no maller how stiff
th at compelllton gets, II just

Lonnie W. Moore, H.T.

MEMIEA

Soto throws
well during
simulated tilt

PARTS PLUS AUTOSTORES

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPII
Woody Hayes Wednesday wa s
remembered as a ·man of Int eg·'
rlty, a flercecompelitor and " the
greates t football coach" the Big
Ten Conference has ever seen.
Hayes, who died last week of a
heart atlaek at the age of 74, was
bid. a fln~l · farewell In Ohio
Stadium, where he coached the
Ohio State Buckeyes for 28 years.
An estimated 15,000 people at tended the memorial service.
Michigan coach- Bo Scbembechler was on e of sever'il ·
speakers who paid hom a~e to the
legendary Hayes.
Desplle a biller r iva lry during
the last 10 years of Hayps'
coaching car eer , Schembechler
said he maintained a deep
friendship wllh his former coach

HYPNOSIS

Esasky's Injury virtually guranrees F.rancona, a free agent ,
will be the Reds' starting first
baseman Opening Day. In !act ,
tha t may have been the case even
If Esasky was healthy.
· Esasky wa s5-for-19i .263J with
no home runs, four RBI and six
strikeouts In the six spring
training games he played.
" He wasn't doing .that good ."
manager Pete Rose said.
Francona, on the oth er hand .
was balling ·.:!04 (7-!or-231 enter·
Jng Wednesday's game agai nst
the Astros.
The injury to Esasky will have
other ramifications on the Reds'
roster . Eight-year minor league
vetera n Lloyd McClendon' s
chanees of making the ream ar e
now much stronger.
McClendon , like Esasky, hil s
wll h power (he led the American
Assocallon last yea r with 24
home runs ) and he can a1soserve
as the third-string catcher .

____. .

W.i ndy March ·sale

TUPPERS PL~I.NS FIFTH GRADE CAPTURES FlRST
PLACE ·- The Tuppers Plains Fifth Grade Bqsketballteam won
the Portland In•ltatlonal Tournament recently by beating Ripley
33-20; Pomeroy 37-23 and Salisbury 36-33. Leading sc~rer lor
Tuppers Plains was Randy Kaylor with 28 points. Wes Arbl!ugh
had :!4. Pat Newland and Robert Reed contributed 19 points apiece.
.Jamie Wilson had 10; Matt Bowen 5; and Paul VIneyard 1. The
team ~lso ·captured second place at the Eastern lnvltallonal
Tournament, losing to Pomeroy 41-31 In the the IItle till. Team
member. are: kneeling In front, lefrto right, Randy Kaylor, Pat
Newland, Paul Vineyard, Roy Reed and Nora Eastman; second
row, Wes Arbaugh, Matt Rowen, Robert Reed, Jamie Wilson and
Ronnie Robinson. Coaches, !ell to right, - Wes Arbaugh,
assistant, and Dennis Newland. Absent from picture - Michelle
Murphy, Matt Tackett and Buddy Kenney.

spare.' '

YES, YOU PUSH, PULL OR DRAG YOUR CAR INTO
PAT HILL FORD AND WE WILL GIVE YOU Sl,OOO OR
MORE TRADE-IN VALUE ON ANY OF OUR FINE
LATE MODEL USED CARS.

The Daily Sentiilei- Page-5

15,000 pay tribute · to Hayes

may !,ave
impact
on Reds

~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

learn In the MAC.
Another highlight for th e yea r
was the 'pl ay of freshma n Ann
Gilbert. who did not begin school
until Jan.uar y, but was able to
co ntr ibut e immed iately.
"Both Ann and freshman L eslie O'Brien got a ~ol of quality
playing tim e and th ey are going
to be ready to go nexl yea r,"
Prichard said .
She also singled out jun ior Kim
Walton. who wa s third In the
league in rebounding with 8.9 per
game . Walton came back thi s
season after seriously Injuring
her knee l ast February .
" 1 think Kim Walton making it
thro ugh th e year without furt her
Inj ury was impor tant , because
she was tentative at the start,''
Prichard said.
Two Lady Bobcats were honored with post-season recognition . Senior guard Pam Puille
wa s named to the second-tea m
All -MAC squad, while se nior
forward Nancy Evans received
an honorable men lion.
Evans led the team in scor ing
with 15.6 point s and brought her
career total to 1.065 with 406
points this season. Puilie was the
team's third -leading scorer wit h
10.6 points and also led the team
In steals, averaging 2.3 per

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

lnj~ry

By United Press International
·. and 8 assists against Purdue, will go agalnsl6·10
Somebody had better start taking .Florida . Syracuse center Rony Selkaly.
seriously or the Gators are liable to throw
Against No. 3 North Carolina. Notre Dame will
themselves a surprise party at New Orleans.
seek to employ one oft be oldest game strategies of
Unranked Florida. playing In Its llrsl NCAA
all - keep awayc
·
Tournament , has reached the round of 16 by
"We have to get lfsed to the fact that we're not
defeating N.C. ·State 82-70 .and then upsetting
going to see the ball all ihe time against Notre
Purdue 81&gt;-66. The Gators, 23-10, take on Syracuse
Dame," North ·carolina Coach Dean Smith said.
Thursday In an East Regional roundoll6 game at
Unranked Providence, 23-8, averaged 8.25
East Rutherford, N .•l. , followed by a matchup of
3-polnt lleld goals per game, m()Stin the nation.
North Carolina and Notre Dame.
No. 9 Alabama, 28-4, will be seeking Its 12th
In the S&lt;lutheast Regional semifinals at
straight. victory. Mter heating North Carolina
Louisvlll!', Ky., Providence takes on Alabama,
A&amp;T8S-7lin their tournament opener, the Tide hit
fo llowed by Georgetown against Kansas.
a school-record 73 percent from the f109r, 40 of 55,
In Friday's r egional semtllnals, DePaul plays
In a 101-76 rout of New Orleans.
Louisiana State and Indiana mee1s Duke In the
Danny Manning of Kansas, unranked at 25-10,
Midwest at Cincinnati, and Oklahoma laces Iowa
and Reggie Williams of Georgetown, 28-4 and No.
and Wyoming battles Nevada-LaS Vegas In the
4, present problems for Hoyas Coach John
West at Seattle.
Thompson and Jayhawks Coach Larry Brown,
Florida's 7-loot-2 freShman center, Dwayne respecllvely.
Schintzius. who lied career highs with 21 points

Evans top lady Bobcat scorer

Area players named
to AP's All-District
ers wet·e named to the Associa ted

Thursday, March 19, 1987

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Thi.ndly, March 19, 1987

March 19, 1987 -:

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7

Beat of the bend

Darst birthday
is observed

An efficient crew...
By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer
So many of you who have gone
the social sec,urity route
have encou
tered Lou
·vath, field
.
,
presentalive I
of Athens.
Lou writes a
regular column In The Daily
Sentinel to advise you of all of the
latest developments about social
security and I'm sure those of
you who have had a personal
contact realize that Lou wlli get
your problem worked out .
So - you can feel pretty sure
that Lou has played an active
role in the accomplishments of
the Athens Social Security office
which according to the latest
Chicago Social Security Region
workflow reports had the highest
production percentage figures in
that six state region .
Branch Manager Ed Peterson
said this means the 12 person
stall has operated at levels
nearly 40 percent higher than is
expected.
Annually, 12,500 people visit
the Athens office and another
37,500 conduct their business
over the telephone. The staff
processes 2,300 applications for
benefits each year, over 3200
Social Security number applica tions and alm9st 18,000 after
claims actions such as changes of
addresses and direct deposit
request s.
Peterson points oul !hat the
office also provides speakers for
organizations. rrainers for social
service agencies. as well as other
extensive public information ac.tlvitles . That Includes serving
· over 400 Meigs Counllans at the
Senior Citizens Cenler last year.
Almos't 14,000 Athens and
Meigs County residenls receive
social security or supplemental
security Income checks with a
monthly total payment of $4.8
mlliion. That's a pretty good
percentage of the combined
pppulatlon of the two counties .

... .a
', r=.·•.o
"'

a book Wednesday.

uses a pair of sunglasses
to shield his eyes while laking advantage of the
spring weather In South Carolina. Spring
olliclally begins Friday. (UPI)

BREAK TIME - llorllcuililrist Mike Lee, 30,
takes a break from his dulles of fertUizing and
trimming th e shurhhery and flowers on the South
CurolinaStatehouse grounds in Columbia, to read

Auxiliary
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Reg. &amp; King

I' HICE

IOO's

$92l Ctn.
$9 52 Ctn.

PLUS FilE
DISPOSAKE IUTAIIE LIGHnl '

Siu bsrr\b('n not dt.'!.lr ln .L! to pit~ · thcc arrl ('r may rC'm lt In advn nC&lt;' d irect lo

Th e Dal ly Sent lnrl on 11 :1. 1:i or 12 month

Crl.'dlt will br given carr terra ch

wc~ k .

No subscriptions by mall pcrm tned In
ar ros where homr c ar rier S£'rVICf' Is
ava ilabl e.

Mall

5 UJ I 5HER l 0H5E

Inside Mti&amp;Jt County
!3 Woeka ......................... ......... ll7.29

26 w..... .................................. $34.00

52 Weeks .................................. 100.56
Olltolde Melp County
13 W•ek• .................................. 118.20
26 W•eka ......... ,,......... ............ ,,135.10
52 Wc£'kS.... . ,... .... ............. ·,. .·. ·. $67.60

28'/o

1295
Reg. 17.95

Just tap the Play-bar lor Instant
24-hour weather infol Gives ad·
vance warning of bad weather.
#12·181 Battery extra

Ideal for working
couples! #12-1552

Save 149500 19:~oo

*500

Daisy-Wheel Printer
owP 230 by TandY" Save , 100

1o•t•·Foo1 otah svt••m

179501

Lunch menus
are announced

22~~00

Stereo! Wireless remote.
User lnstallilblal
Descrambler ready.

Desktop Trim-Fone·
.

ay Radio shack

Wireless Remote VHS VCR
Save '50 Model16 by Realistic

2a; 2888 29995
0

Reg.39.95
At this tow price buy twof Onetouch redial. Tone/pulse dialing'.
White, #43-518 . Brown, #43-519

Eastern
Monday : sloppy joe, french
fries , pear s, milk.
Tuesday : pizza . cheese stick s,
corn, applesauce, milk.
Wednesd ay : polish sau sage,
green beans. pineapple, cookie.
milk.
Thursday: chicken. bread. but ·
ter, mashed potatoes-gru vy, fr u·
lted jello, milk.
Friday : chees eburger, pea s,
pears, cake, milk.

Reg. 349· 95
Low .U sao Per Month •
Cable readyl Features easy-timor recording, and
14-day/4-event timer. 116-507 Romo11 balllrlto extra

40-Channel CB Slashed 40%
TRC-417 by Realistic Save ,
40

5915 9~

Don't drive "alone" I Gives' fast access to EmerChannet9 or
Info Channel 19. In·
Ctudlis mike and
. #21·1510

Store or Dealer Nearest You

"............t,,"',
.
..............

Most Major
Credit Cards
Accepted

..... tlnSII.IIMi.M . ..

.....,.11:11ttii:.MIIJM, .M,
,llt.KIII'TIONI
'"· ftl·tfll
• . Mill
,...,..,, 0 .

"''""" ""

O,..INI..... "IIt

------------,-----·--·---.. --·-----------~-·--·-;---

----- ~--

1--np
Change y~r oil filter
at le11t every 6000
milea to give you better
gu mileage and prolong

Limit 12

tnglnelill.

Your Choice

¢
10W40or
20W50
Motor Oils
Reg.1.19
Llmlt12

·~

•

Purolator

Purolator

Air Filters

Oil Filters

Rtg.4.39

Rtg.3.39

Llmlt2

Llmlt2

From

16.50

Perfection
High Teat
Clutch Discs

Reg.lrom 11.50

Fram

3.000FF

4.95

From

17.95

Rohrk
Car and Truck
Mlrrora

Perfection
High Teat
Clutch Assemblies

"-tt.lrom U5

Reg. from 22.85

2.000FF

5.000FF

Your Cholc. ,

3.99

1.58

Westley's
Sleche·Wite 20oz.

Turtle Wax
Super Hard Shell Wax

Rog. 2.29, #500

Liquid or Paste

Gumout Spray 13 oz.

#T-123, T·223
Reg.4.88

Gumout Pour 12 oz.

4.88 1110 prlco
- 2.00 mlr.'o rtblto

2.88 ~--your coat

2.88 allerrtbllo

Alter mfr.'artblto

Sondo Fiberglass
Repair Kit
Reg . 5.41#420

Reg . 1.99, #7518

turtle

1.a·a

wax"'

Rlslone

7.aa ~iLU.
8ondo Body Filler

Rog.2.88

1 Gallon

#I DO-OR

Reg. 1D.95, #265

....

' " •:

:

I

fGII
..
--·····

-- ·~ ·

~~-'"!.~

99¢
Bondo Spot Puttr
1.11 #107

Meigs
Monday: cheeseburger with
pickles, corn, fruit, milk.
Tuesday: fish sandwich, hash .
browns, fruit, milk. •
Wednesday: beef and ~oodles, ·
green beans, fruit, corn bread
and butter, milk .
Thursday: hot dog with sauce, ,
baked beans, cake, milk.
Friday : cooks' choice.

Do-lt
Yourself

Reg.1.09

Rog. 2.41, #7450
In accordance with the uni form lunch program in the
Eastern and M eigs Local School
Districts, the menus for the w eek
of March 23 are announced:

¢

·Piirolltor.

Motor Oil

Pat Imboden of Pomeroy was
among the first students to
graduate from the new nursing
assistant program of the Adult
Education Center of the Tri·
County Vocational School in
Nelsonville.
The 18-week program is designed to prepare students for
postlions In nursing homes •.hospttals and the home health area
tn their roles of being nurse
assistants.

1t seems · that in struction for
Meigs County y,oungpeople in the
arl s is a bit limited and I like to
pass on lnformalion when train Ing ts available within an area
close by in case you're interested.
So - the French Art Colony in
Gallipolis will be oflerlng spring
classes for Teen Thea Ire. Apr II 8
through Ma y 1.1, and Kids on
Stage. April 2 through Ma y 7.
Registr ation is open . The
charge Is $12 for teens for six

mo e y

·--...... -·-··'"·
·-Phur

Sabl c rlptlon~~

Cut

'3495 4~~:5

lllltJI~

with l he Ash Wednesday quiet
hour breakfa st. A l ily w ill be
placed in the sanctuary for
Ea ster and t ~ter ta ken to a
shut ln.
A l'hec k toward ul ilillcs wao
sf ntt o thce llu rcll cou nr tl. ll was
voted to SPrvr a ,Ju nf' wed ding
rcccpllon . Officer s and commi t·
.tee cha ir mrn gave rPpo r ts a nd a
thank you no te was read from
Gay Prrrin.
Follow ing 1he llrnrd lct ion.
M ar y StPwar l and .toy Russell
sr rvC"d rPfrrs hm f'n ts 10 thr 17
mrmbe r s. 1\ St . Pa t rick 's :"..-y
moti f wa s rar r ircl out in th e
ccnt C'r piccfl wh ich co nsi sted of
po tt ed shamrocks and pans!Ps.
Spir it til ler bookma1·ks we r e
given a ~ fa\!Qrs.

~

the standard
of performance

Did you catch the beautiful tee
skating In the world championship events held over lhe weekend In Cincinnati?
Nadine Goebel. Marlene Kuhn,
Chris Kuhn and Phyllis Newland
didn' t have to be satisfied with
the lelevlsion presentation. No
Sir! The four of them were there
in person having taken a bu s tour
to the Riverfront Stadium
feature .

No car stereo should be whhout one! 40-watt
booster, 7 band EO. Sure to sell fast! H12·1871

270fo0ff

A G.!. Joe I hem e was carri ed
out in the decorations and ca ke. A
fireman' s cake was also presented. Att ending the par ty were
his parents, Danny and Sherr!
Darsl, his brother . Cor ey, Bud
and Wanda V ining. Bonnie
Darst, Goldie Graham , Gertrude
Stivers, Bob Grimm and Timmy.
David Park, Ryan Jeffer s and
Shannon Smith . Sending gift s
were Terri, Charles and Ma II hew
Smith, Rita and Junior Smith,
Ernie and Lori Miller. and K ar en
Gr lmin.

You' ve done wel l - smiled for
month s, in fact. Now by the
power ves ted In me by The Big
Gr ouch, I hereby aulhorize a day
off - frown all day Friday. See
how far that gets you .

II!JMm•'r

A progr am on Lent was pt·e.sent ed by Dorothy Wood ard at a
m eeling of F r iendly Circ le. Trin It y Church, Tuesday eve nin g.
Th e meaning and pu r pose of
Le n! was explored, along wi lh
the significa nce of the S(lf'cia l
d ays of I he 40-day period bet wen
As h Wednesday and Eas ter . The
40 day per iod docs no t in clude th~
six Sundays. Eas ter may co me
as ea rly as M arch 22 or as late as
Apr il 25. she expl ained . Sc r ipture
fr om Ju hn. the offering dedi·
ca tcd by Mrs. Wooda rd . and
unison prayer co m p l£&gt;1r d the
prog r am .
Th e thou ght fo r th e day " to
love is to give" was by All ee
G l o boka r . pr es id c n.l. She
l hankcd all those who helped

Chr istopher Dou g Dars t ce lebrated his sixth birthd ay on Feb.
14 with a part y at his hom e.

Wednesdays, 4 to 5:30 p.m .. and
$10 for six cl asses for elem entary
age children who m eet from 4 to 5
p.m . on Thursdays. You can get
more info by contacting the
colony at 446-3834.
.
Incidentally, ballet and jazz
dance l essons will continue a t tne
colony beginning Apr il 11 until
Ma y 23 and thes e classes are held
on Saturday m ornings.

Hopefully, you will want lo join
the card shower for Estella
Deem who wlli observe her 93rd
birthday on March 21. The
address Is 40001 E . Shade Road.
'Reedsville, Ohio 45772.

Cut $50! Full duplex 300
modem. tone/pulse dialing'
phone. #26-1386

.

.

40°/o OFF

ONLY $3 39

Du lly ................................ :l~ Crn11'i

b~s l s.

AMITY· BILLFOLDS

oz.

cond l'l c1 s~ po~1.rg •' pal tl at Pomt'roy.

Ohi o

May be speci al order
1n some stores

Reg,
59.95

8' /•·Foot Dish Syalem

SPRAY COLOGNE
Volue

PRICE

4995

Backup battery extra

TABU

$9,50

HALF

$3~7

SO's

A 01\'Lo;lon of i\ lullln~ edl a. In c.

Modemfone" 100 by Tandy

Save s35

EXTRA STRENGTH

(u~ws 14 :t.960 )

f

Car Stereo Booster/Equalizer

E;~E=:=:=::=J

TYLENOL CAPLETS

The Dail y Sentinel

Reg. 599.00

Low At $20 ·
Per Month•
Shown wlttt optlontl CD ~11yer

COOKIES&amp;

•i

Stereo Rack System ~~s~~~~~:

!131 JAC~SON PIKE · RTJ!I WEST
Phone 446-4524

WHITMAN'S

149.95

Low As S20 Per Momh •
Hear the action as it happens!
Scan-delay catches call responses
lor police, fire and others. H20-106
Baneries. crystals extra

rrpor t.

PLATI N

.

3-DAY

A wrestling m all' h w itt be held
Apr il 4 al ~ p.m . al l h&lt;• Rac ine
Senior Hi gh School under sponsorship or I he Ftarim• Fi rem en's

tn•easur·r r'!-i

.

Our Electronics Savings
Spectacular Lasts Onry
Three Days-:-So Shop Todayl

Friendly Circle meets

OPEN 7 DAYS A W_EEK
Store houra: 8:30 o.m. to 8:00p.m. Mondoy ihto119h Friday,

8:30 o.m. to 6:00 P·!"· Soturdoy o~d 10:00 o.m. to 11:00 p.m. Sunday.
Sale Prices In effect M1rch 19 through M1rch 25, 1987.

209 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, Ohio

�•

Page-S:- • he Daily "Sentinel

.---Local Briefs:---,
License tax distribution noted
Ohio Motor Vehicle Registra r Michael J . McCullion reports
the February distribu t ion or license rax revenues totaling
$19,782,648.26 with Meigs County' s portion being $67.773.21.

Court' issues marriage licenses
Marriage licenses have been issued in Meigs County Probate
Court to Mitchell Todd Babic, 22. Columbus, a nd .Juanita Marie
Powell, 22. Raci ne: Michael R. Stewart, 29, Cheshire, and
Deborah A. Whit ely , 21, Cheshire: Malcolm Elswort h Gu inther
II, 21, Sy racuse, a nd Char lotte Lee Elkins, 17, Syracus£'.

Emerg~ncy unit.s answer 6 calL~
Six calls were answered bv local unit s Wednesday, the Mcig&gt;
·county Emergency Medicai Service reports.
·
AI 2:36 a.m .. Pomerov rook John Eblin r.·om Wyllis Hill to
Veterans Memor ial Hosp ita l; Syracuse at 7:04 a.m. took
Damon Ferrell fr om Sevent h Street to Veterans Memorial:
Pomeroy at 9: :n a.m. look Fr&lt;•da Cos to. West Main Street, to
Holzer Medical Cen ter; Middleport at 12:49 p.m., took Ron
Haught from Beech Stree t to Veterans Memoria l: Syracuse at
3:Q3 p.m. took Dessie Pa tt erson to Veterans Memorial and at
8:49 p.m. Rutland took Mary Gibson from Rutland to Holzer
Medical Centf'r.

DeMolay chapter slates car wash
The Meigs Order of DeMo lay will hold a ca r wash from 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m. SMurday at the Middleport Masonic Temple .

No fee charged for shelter use
. Me igs Countv Dog Wanjcn Wayne Roseberry wants to adv ise
local resident s that ther~ is "no fee" for pu tti ng a dog in th~
county dog shPiter.
Roseberry hopes th at when people become aware that there is
no lee. It will help eliminate abandonment ol unwanted dogs
along roadways. He said he picked up three abandoned dogs jus t
on Wedn esday.
But although there Is no charge to put a dog in the shelter.
there is a charge to get a dog out . Anyone wanting to retrieve
their own dog from lh~ shelter 's confines mu st pay a $4 reclaim
fee and $1.&gt;CI a day boarding fee.
Anyone wis hin g to ado pt a dog from th r shelt er must pay $!i
plus a $2 fer for a dog license.
.
Anyon&lt;· caug ht stea ling dogs from the shelter wrll be
prosecu ted to the full ex te nt of the law Roseberry says.
Hou rs at the dog shelter are 9 to 10 a. m. and 4 to:ip.m. Mond ay
lhrough Fridav. and 1 to 4 p.m. on Saturda,· a nd Sund ay. The
telephone numbl'r a t the shell er ts 992-:!779.
Roseber ry a lso reports he ha s add ed two more stolen dogs r.o
an rver·growing list of missing pets. Both dogs were taken thts
week . Authoril iPs a rc working to uncover what appears to be "a
.ring" of dog thieves operating wi thin MPigs a nd surrou ndin g
counri ~s. Roseberry adds.

Gospel sing set for Saturday
Bend Area Gosp&lt;' l Sing will be held Sa turdav, 7:.10 p.m .. a t the
Pirs t Church of God in New Haven, W.Va. Si ngtng groups wil l
inc lud e The Ki ng's Chi ldren. of Ashland. Ky., the Sin gin g
Re nnNs, of Orl ando, Fla .. and Hefl&lt;'ctions Trio. of New Haven.

Accord ends dispute
at Goodyear facility
APPLE GROVE, W.Va. - An
agreement has been reached t hut
has ended picketing by the
Tr i-State Buildin g a nd Construe·
tion Trades Cou ncil at the site of
a $50 million expansion project
~nd~rwa y at the Goodyear po·
lyes ter resin plant at Apple
Grove.
."We ar&lt;' pleased that th is
sit uation has bPen reso lved and
work can con tinur on this very
Import ant expansion, " David T.
Gowans, direct or or manufactur·
!ng services for Goodyea r, and
Doug Blankenship, business
manager and fin ancia l scc rf'lary
and treasurer of thr Tr i-State
Building and Cons tr uc tion
T.rades Co un cil. sa id today.
· Gowa"'- and Blankenship ere·
dlted Poi nt P leasan t Mayor
Jimmy .Joe Wedg e wit h helping
to bring lh&lt;' t wo sides together.
Details or Ihi' agrcrmcnt W&lt;'I'C
not released, but Wedge said
work at thrcon stru ction s itPwas

to resum&lt;' today .
Informational pick&lt;•ts wen t up
at the cons truction gat&lt;' to the
plant on March :1. Rlankenshlp

Added

!Continued from Page 11
as hou rs to be worked, full or
part-.time sa lary, and "just
where the m on~y tsgoing tocome
!rom."
Knigh t and Probate·.Juven ile
Judge Robert Buck have au thor·
. IIY to order the hiring of erh·
· pioyees, as well as emp loyee
salaries, with or without appro·
val ol the commissioners.
Robert Byer, director of Meigs
County Emergency Medica l Ser·
vices. was at the meeting to hear
tilds on a 1987 van to be used as·an
Invalid transport vehicle only,
not as an ambulance.
Bids were t·ecr ived from
Smllh-Nelson Motors. $12,3~4;
Pal Hill Ford. $J:l,495; and Jim
Cobb ChPvrolet, $12.535.61. Bycr .
will review the bids and make a
recommendation to the co mmis·
sloners nex t week.
Count y Engineer Phi l Robert s
reported that he , exp&lt;'cts the
county ·highwa y dep;mmr nt' s
union contract to be extendM by
the state beyond the March 31 ·
expiration, since a media tor has
nol been available to assist with
negotiations. ·

sa id at tho time the purpose was
to draw a ttention to a lleged
substand ard wages and the use of
ou t-of·state workers for the

Arthur D. Dilcher

· Admitted ~ Donald Strauss,
Racine; Eli While, Racine.
Discharged - Hugh McPhail.
Dennis Hart, Emma Searls,
Willie Maude Coats. Kenneth
Diddl e.
t

·co LUMBUS 1UPI1 -A Wor·
lhington woman who apparently
spentrwo weeks in her home with
the decomposing bodies of her
two childr en h.us been ind icted on
two counts of murder.
Lorene Smith, Indicted Wed·
nesday, will remain in a psychi·
at ric hospital for trea tment, sa id
Da'vid Johnson. ass istant Frank!In countv prosecut ing attorney.
Because Smit h had been com·
mitted earlier to . the Hardi ng
Hospital as men ially ill by a
proba le court judge. she ca nnot
be Immediatel y arrested on the
murder charges. said Johnson.
Instead of issu ing a warrant on
the ind ict ment, a detainer will be

Authorit ies must be nolifled II
Sm ith is to be released from the
hospital.
The indictment charges that
Smith, 32, purposely caused the
deaths of her sons Michael Arno,
5. and Jord~n Arm), 3. If
convicted , shG cou ld fa ce a
sentence or 15 years to life on
each charge.
Sm ith told. members of her
family that she put th e boys im,)
her car in a garage at her horn~,
on Christmas Da y and went t;l ·
take a bath. She said one of th
boys apparen tly start ed the ca 1r
engine and thetwodledofca rboh
monoxide poisoning. She said she
rried the to th eir beds.

member of Ash Street Freewill
Baptist Church, Middleporl.
Surviving are his wife, Vines sfa F. Herrmann, Columbus;
three sons and daughters-in·law,
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Herrmann and Mr. a nd Mrs. David
Herrmann, all of Pataskala; and
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Herrmann,
with the U.S. Army in West
Germany; a son, Craig Herrma nn, of Pataskala; twodaugh·
ters a nd sons·ln·law, Mrs. and
Mrs. Ivan Lee IVana I Case iii, of
Tusca n, Ariz., and Mr. and Mrs.
Chett (Ci ndy! We ailey, of Groveport: and two other daught ers,
Debra
Pate, of Plckerlnglon,
and · r~;;;;;;;;;;;,;~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Ni
na Herrmann
, of Reynolds-

Arthur Dwayne Dllcher, .18,
3530 Ora nge St., Lantana, Fla.,
formerly of Meigs Count y, died
Su nday at J .F.K. Hospital in
Lan tana.
A fisherman , Mr. Dilcher was
bor n Aug. 7, 1948, at West Palm
Beach, Fla., a so n of the late
Charles Henry a nd Arlie Jose·
phlne Brickies Dilcher.
Surviving are two sisters, Eva
Allmond; Lanta na, and Loraine
Robinson, Lake Worth, Fla .; two
brothers. Charles E. !Bill!
Dilcher. Lake Worth. and Denn is
Da le Dilcher, Riviera Beach,
Fla., and several. ni eces a nd
nephews.
Besides his paren ts, he was
preceded in dea th by an infant
brolher.
Graveside services will be held
at 1 p.m . Sa turday at the Riggs
Cemetery wilh Rev. John Evans
officiating. Frie nds rn a;· ca ll at
thr Ewing Funeral Home from
2·4 and 7·9 p.m. 'on Friday .

burg: 19 gran dchildren: one
great gra nd ch ild; a stepmother,
Ed ithHerrmann, of Middleport;
two brothers and sisters· in-law,
Mrs. a nd Mrs. Ro!and Her·
rmann. of Middleporl, and Mr.
and Mrs. Wendell Herrmann, or
Pataskal a; a bm ther, Dale Her ~
man, Middleport: three sis ters
and brothers·in ·law, Mr. a nd ·
Mrs. Ralph !Nina 1 Butcher and
Mr. and Mrs. Charles (Sherri)
Kitchen, a ll of Middlepor t: Mr.
and Mrs . David IAnitat Van·
Chaff, of Cora l Springs, Fla .; a
sister, Mrs. Margie Stone, of
Middleport: and severa l oth er
relatives and friends.
Services will be 2::10 p. m.
Sunday at Ash Street Freewill
Ba ptist Church with Rev. Leslie
Hayman offi ciatin g. Burial will
be in Meigs Memory Garden.
Friends may call at RawlingsCoa ts·Biower Funeral Home
from 7-9 p.m. on Friday, from 2·4
a nd 7-9 p.m . on Saturday a nd at
the church one hour prior to

Carrol E. Jferrmann
Carrol E. Herrmann, 56, of
Colum!Jus, formerly ol Middle
port. died Wednesday at Mou nt
Carmel Ho sp ital ·west in
Columbus.
Born Aug. 8, 19.10 in Meigs
son of Noel
County. he was
Herrmann, Middleport , a nd the
late·Mildred Mulford HNrma nn.
He worked as an electric ian for
30 years at the Electric Power &amp;
Equipment Co., Columbus. He
was a U.S. Air Force vetera n of
Wor ld War II: a member of
I. B.E . W. 683 , Colu mbu s: and a

a

°

CANDY CLASSES

THURDAY- FRIDAY- SATURDAY
MARCH 19 - 20 - 21
I 0 A.M. THRU 3 P.M.
EVERY HOUR ON THE HOUR
We hove o troined staff to assist you in
making Chotolate Cowered Cherries, Bon
Bans, !aster Eggs, Peanut Butter Eggs.
NICE SELE&lt;TION OF HOMEMADE CANDY
TO Fill YOUR EASTER BASKET
VERY REASONABlY PRICED

AMBROSIA BLOCK
CHOCOLATE S

l

Reo
•uo 16:

WHITE CHOCOLATE

$1,69 LB.

OHIO VALLEY BULK FOODS
514 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

992-6910

""
•.

We A111pt
Food Stamps

-

Super Lotto jackpot grows
Ticket sa les for the weekly
drawing totaled $6,046.705, with a
total prize payout of $R75,980.
Cullom Rot-Bed Machine
Model 7174

Ohio weather

Five built-in stitches • Wide
z1gzag st1tch for decorative
sewing • Built-in buttonholer
• Front drop-in bobbin and
automatiC bobbin winder stop

So uth Central Ohio
Partly cloudy tonight. wi th a
low near 3.1. Sunny Pl'iday , with
highs between 55 and 60.
The probability or prcclpila·
tion is near zero tonight and
F'riday.
·
Winds will be from the nor·
theas t a t five ro 10 mph top ight.
Ohio Extended Foreca.•t
Saturday through Monday
Pair Saturday, with a cha nce
of rain Su nday a nd Monday.
Highs will be mostly in the 50s
each day , with over night lows
between .15 and 40.

Community calendar/area happenings
THURSDAY
CHESTER - Shade River
Lodge 453, Chester. will meet
Thu rsday, 7 p.m., to work in the
FC and MM Degrees. Refreshments will be served.
POMEROY' - Meigs County
Chapt er Alcoholics Anonymous
will meel Thursday , 7 p.m., a tthe
Warner building on West Second
St., which houses th e Commun ity
Action Agency.
ROCK SPRINGS - Rock
Springs Better Health Club will
meet Thursday at th e home of
Helen Blackston.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Child Conserva tion League will
meet at 6:30p.m. Thursday with
a potluck dinn er. Husband 's
nigh! will be observed.
FRIDAY
CHESTER - Eas tern High
School Choru s will hold a bake
sale beginning at 10 a.m. Friday
at Gaul's Market in Chester.
CHESHIRE- Ches hire·Kyger
Elementary School Is sponsorin g
a dinn er and variety show this
Friday evening. Dinner serving
from 6 to 7:30. Variety show at
7:30.
GALLIPOLIS - The monthl y
meeting of Flame Fellowship
will be F riday, 6:30 p.m., at
Dale's Restaurant. in Ga llipo lis.
Speaker will be Harry Wingler,
or roolville.

RACINE - There will be a
hymn sing Frida y, slarting at 7
p.m ., at Fellowship Church in
Racine. Everyone welcome.
RUTLA ND- Rutland Church
of God is having a gospel sing

?~i4-FLORIST

Reg. S299.99

SALE

$18999

TO PlACE AN AD Ull 9U-21 ! f
MONDA\' thru FIIDU I A.fll to ~ P.M.
I A.M. Until NOON SAIUIDAV
UOSIO 5MAV

Model

6233

•E Kclusive 6-second threading
•Free arm for sewing cuffs
and sleeves
•Built-in buttonholer

SALE $299 99

Ullr•lock'

M•chlno Modei14UI4A
• Sews 3-lh read overk&gt;ck and

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THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
OOMMIBBION OF OHIO
BY: Nanoy L. Wolpe,
Baoretary
.

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flat lock stitch plus 4-thread
mock safely stitch • BIJilt·in sewing
tighrlo Accepts standard
sewing machine needles
• Singer-excluslve free
. arm and lay-In threading

• Stitch width and length
adj'ustmenl conlrols • Narrow
rot ed hem plate included.

Reg. S729.00 SALE

NOW ONLY

$200 Off

$529

LEGAL NOTICE
SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
FARMERS BANK AND
SAVINGS COMPANY,
221 Weat Second Street

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
PLAINTIFF
- VS .GEORGE STITT, at at.,
DEFENDANTS
Case Number 86-CV-261
As Sheriff of Meigs County, Ohio I herebY offer for

sale ot 10:00 A.M. on April
10, 1987, A.D., on tho front

steps of the Meigs County
Court House.
Pomeroy.

Ohio,

If you can't.get here when the
bridge closes, we mail prescriptions
anytime.

tlfo following de·

scribed real estate :
Situated in the Village of
Pomeroy. County of Meigs

and State of Ohio:
1 1 0 West Main

VILLAGE PHARMACY

Pomeroy
992- 2284

MIDDUPORT

Parcel No. 1: being commonly known as 130 State
Street and having been for·
marly owned by Irene Kelly,
Carl Ebenbach and Ernest

Eborobach.

Being lots Numbered 155

end 155·'A in Dabney's Ad dition to the Village of Pomeroy, Ohio.

REFERENCE DEEO : Vo -

lume 284, Page 253, Maigs
County Deed Records. This
Parcel
appraised
at

$3,300.00.

Parcel No. 2: being com monly known as 126 State
Street and having been for ·
marly owned by Clifford
Mung. et al., Gilbert Zwil ·
ling and Walter A. Zwilling,
and Margaret Mae Price and
William Price.

Super Anniversary

Baing Lots No. 169 and

Events In Bassett's 85 Year History! ·

168 in the C. W. Dabney's
Addition. to said Village of
Pomeroy, Ohio.

' REFERENCE DEED : Volume 279, Pege 969, Moig1

Look For Our Big Sale Circular
In Today's Paper!

County Deed Records . This
percel
appraised
at

$4,800.00.

Parcel No . 3: Baing commonty known as 662 Otborne Street and having
been formerly owned by
Clifford Icenhower. Richard

Eblin, Harry and Iva Carpe~ ­
ter and John and Jane Le1f ·

Open Friday Night Till 8 p.m.
Now Is The Time To Buy!

Interested pt.rt1es
wW be given a.n opportunity to be heard. Fur·
thor Information may be
obtained by oontaotlng
tho Comm18s1on.

2,d g1,.1

MASON FU

RE CO.

Mston, W. Va.

(304) 773·5592

•

RAC INE - Racine American
Legion Post 602. its Auxiliary and
family members will have a
birthd ay observance Sat urday at
7:30p.m. at the hall . There will
be entert ainment and refresh·
menls with each a uxi liary
member to take a sa lad.
.,
RA"tiNE -Racine Rail i\sso·

RUTLAND - Rutland Bible
Methodist Churc h will be in
revival Monday through Sunday.
March 29, at 7 p.m . each even ing.
Evange list wi ll be Rev. J.W.
Vess, of So uth Caro lina. Singer
will
Rev Raymo nd Rice, of
Byesville.
TUESDAY
M I DDLEPORT
The
Middlepor t-Pomeroy Area
Bra nch of the Americ,an Associa ·
t ion of University Women will
meet at 7 p.m . _T uesday at the
Middlepor t firehouse. There will
be a silent auc tion and a speaker.

Harrisonville OES has meeting
Initiatory wor k for Apri l was
announced by ,\vanelle George,
worthy matron. and Da na Hof·
fman, worthy patron, at las t
week' s meeting of Harrisonville
Ch·apter 255, Order of the Eastern
Star.
A practi ce session for the
ritualislic work was held at the
meeting. Pa st matrons and pa st
patrons were prcsenl t•d and
welcomed, along wit h Ruby

Diehl, 60 year member . Betty
Bishop, president of Distric t 25,
and Charles Kin g. grand aid to
depu ty of Dis trict 25 were recog.
nized, along with th ose having
had grand appontmen ts. It was
noted th at insp&lt;'clion will be held
on April .10
Refreshments. wrrr

served bY

Mr. and Mrs . Norman Will, Mrs .
Fra ncis You ng, an d Mrs. Norma
Lee.

zjX

49835 St. Rt. 124
Racine, Ohio 45 7 71

.

or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
8·13 lin

24 HR. SERVICE

3-17-tfn

&amp; Angels for Yards

and Graves.

Co111e In lid St~ Btlore
Vtu Bav.

3-17-1 MO.

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SELL
RIVERINE ANTIQUES
1124 East Main St.
Pomeroy
HOURS: Tue. -Wed.-Fri.
11 a.m. lo 1 p.m.
5undoy: 1 p.m.-7 p.m.
ly Chanu or Appointment

RUSS MOORE

992-2526

3·2·1 mo.

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.
EUGENE LONG
VINYl &amp; ALUMINUM
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Complete Gutter Work
Worked in home area
20 years
" Free Estimates''

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authoriztd John Deer&lt;,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Seuiee

'

20 · 25

It

Puli· Typa

Cnmper Ronsonnbly Pm:ud Ph
614 · 266 ·6622 .
.

~ (614) 446-7619

All Makes &amp; Models

Statues, Virgin Mary

Older

~

Bus.
949-2606 Home

JO'S
unLE RED BARN
St. Rt. 124, Syracuse
IIE·OPENS
MAICH 20
Pottery and Gifts.
Bird Baths, Outside
Yard Dolls, Jesus

TOP C ASH poid for '83 mode!
newer used cars Smith
Buick · Pontlac, 1911 Euurn
Ava . Gollipolis. Call 614 -446·
2282

and

c~: LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
LIJ Licensed Clinical Audiologist
:I:

949~3088

be

AATEB
1 O.O.ol 0·\ f.:V::'OI !I ~~-=Dt II · ~ ':r.IIIIIDI
10&lt;1,..

holt.

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Public Notice ·

Public Notice

" You Miss This Sale, You'll Miss One of the

SYRACUSE - Weekend revi ·
va l th rough Sa turday, 7 p.m.
eac h evening at the Firs t Church
of God in Syracuse with Terry
Barrett as eva ngelist.

are to bring a cov0red di~ h. table
service and tlrink .

614· 446 -3872

Compulerized Hearing Aid Selection
Cl Swim Molds - Interpreting Services

Tob11c co lot mont will p11y 40
cen t s 11 pound Ph 614 - 388
851-4

Tob&amp;c co pound&amp;ge Cat! 614
266· 1612 01446 1437 .
F!l! dirt WAf110d Cl'l!! 614· 742
2361

Flattened Alum. (a"'
26' lb.
Clean Sheet Cast Alum.
25' to 29 ' lb.
"1 COPPER ........... ....42 '
112 COPPER ............... 32'
Irony Aluminum
5 to 18' lb.
SCIPIO RECYCLING

Good lAte modo! used siiA(IO
chouper Tw o ro w co rn head
Al so nood onod !ned nrinrler
Both nw st b o 111 very goad
c Orldrtl o n ami •6asonubto p rice
Ph 614-493 2401 nr 11 busy
614 ·49 3 269 5
Buying thuly gold ~ il vtl r c om~ .
flllQS , jllWUir y. slorlmg Wtlll:t, o!d
coins. hu nu cunm1 c y. l op tlf l·
cos Ed Burkllll Bur tuu Shop.
2nd Ave Mttldlepofl , Oh 614 ·
992 3416

loc111ed 2 Mt . E. of P11gevitle

On Township Aoad 1f 14 2

614-992-3466

1-3.'86 tfc

Hmue o r lrrule• Ot11antl contract
Cull 614 ·742 2339 nflm 6.00

+ m.

''"
J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

ICUI OUT TOR FUTURE USE!

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Emplovmenl

Services

CUSTOM BUILT
GARAGES

"985-3561

11

POLE STYLE or
CONVENTIONAL

All Makec

•Washers •Dishwestlers
•Ranges
•R efrigerator s
•Dryers •Freeze rs

AVON

FREE ESTIMATES

111 smvtcrr station !lo
fliU&amp;go Must h/111 1! nHJchnnic o!
abililv S. ha ve good roteuuu:et
Wr1tn to Btu T 1721 Ca,ool the
Gll!!ipoll! Dttily Tribuno. 826
Th or d Av11 . Gn! lql o ll t, Oh

M an to work

3- 11 ·87·1 mo

4 ~ ttc

HUDNALL
&amp;

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

45B 31

PLUMBING HEATING
168 North le&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohio 4S7 60

- Addo ns and remodeling

SALES &amp; SERVICE

- Roofin g and gutter work
- Concrete work

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Hare

work

(F ree Estimates)

992 -6215 or 992 -7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
4·J5." 86·iC

1~141

NEEDED

WI!!

tUIIIl Snlltr '( &amp; tmitJ vru:;/'1!1011 &amp;
L1vo In RllsJ)Ond to Cun Mnn
agumunl m Oonvet !3031 771
7723 Cnllocl

Tour Gu+dll!l Duorland Rnsort
Plttnlltnl workinn candillon11
M a ny company !Jonel!ts. Man ·
ngoment po11i1ions IIVIIi!nblu.
8300· 6460 Bl· wllekhl' For ttl) ·
po int monl . c nll 614 - 2116· 6421 . .

• BUSINISS PHONE
....., - 1~141 992 · ~ll0
RISIDINCI PHONE

V. C. YOUNG Ill

ATTENDANT

Bnby!il l er noeded dnys .
Oidwo!l Pnrtnr School aruo Cnlt
614 3B8 9306

We Carry Fishirtg Supplies

- Plumbing and electritfl!

Sull Av o11 Mokel 40%

Call 6 14· 446 335 R

PH. 992-2772

PARTS and SERVICE

Help Want ed

992 .77!4
l'? ll 'lln

fl!lk for Ffl~t~kie

AIRLINES NOW HIRING f liyht .
Attond Bnl!l . Travel A(J61lll, Mn- •

.............
- ..,._.,_,
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·· - - -Illo_
_ , _- _.._
..

"Oj11•n lmilntPd - N('v~ r
Duplicntrd"

The Public Ut.llitlee CommJeelon or Ohio has set
tor public he&amp;rlng Case
No. 67-02-EL·EFC, to
review the fuel procurement
practices
a.nd
policies or Columbus a.nd
Southern Ohio Elootl'lc
Company, the operation
or Its Elootl'lo Fuel Component and related mat·
ters. This hearing Is
aoheduled to begin at
10:00 a .m. on March 23,
1967, at the o,ffloee ot the
Public Ut.lliiJea CommJsa!on, 160 East Broad
Street, Columbus, Ohio
43266-0573.

NE W HAVEN - Bend Area
Gosp&lt;'l Sing Saturday, 7:30p.m .
al Firs! Church of God tn New
Haven fea tur ing the Singtng
Ba nn ers, Orlando. Ky., the
King' s Children, Ashland, Kv ..
and the Reflections Trio, New
Haven.

MONDAY
POMEROY - Th e Ken Ams·
bary Chapt er of th e lzaak Walton
League wil l hold it s annua l whtte
elephant sale t his Monday even·
in g. The club will fur nish ham lor
Ihe 7 p.m. meal and all members

Wanted To Buy

We pay cnh lor late model c lean
used cars.
Jim Mink Chet,t .• Qldl tnc
Bi H Gene Johnson

ease • Combination on-off

power/sewing light salely
switch.
ONLY 3 IN STOCK

352 E. Main Sl., Pomeroy, 0~.
PH. 992-2644

LEGAL NOTICE

MIDDLEPORT- Return Jonathan Meigs Chapt er, Daughters
of the American Revolution will
meet Satu rday, 1: 30 p.m., at
Heat h Methodist Church i.n
Middleport.

SUNDA'Y
TEXAS COMMUUNITY - "A
Fat her, A So n, A Three-Mile
Run," will be present ed Su nd ay,
7&lt;10 p.m., at the Mt. Hermon
United Brethren Church. A free·
will offer in g will be taken.

G&amp;M TV
REPAIR

9

• Buill-in handle for carrying

Reg. S539.99

Meiga County's Oldaat FloriPt

POMEROY -Pomeroy Youth
League will hav e final sign·up
Saturday, at Elberlelds, from 10
a.m. to 1 p.m. $9 registration fee
and copy of birth certifica te
needed .

ela tion Is having sign-up Sal ur·
day, 10 a.m. to 12 noon , al
Southern Kindergarten. Registration $10.

·Business Services

Ph. (614) 843-5425
3-9.'87·2 ma. pd .

·~ • •o • •••

It's our main concerr) when filling
prescriptions and advising you about.
over-the-counter drugs. As your pharmacrsts,
you can rely on us. We're here to help .

Saturday, 6:.30 p.m . Everyone
welcome.

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

CALl COLLECT,

wtO&lt;OUCo• '"" o

Here's To Your Good H.ealth

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

• Retractable spool pin

construction.

Bids for the construct ion went
ou1 from Goodyear's Akron headquarters to both union and
non·unlon firm s, loca l plant
ma nager J .0 . Carver said earlier. and plant management
recommended contractors make
an effort to hire local people for
the work. There are, in fact,
some loca l people on the construction crews. accord in g to
Ca rver.
Phase I of th e expansion plan,
which was about 30 percent
co mplete whPn work was halted
by the pickets, Is slated for
completion in . .June. Phase 11 is
targeted lor completion in the
th ird qua rter of 1988.
Production at the existing
resin planI. which employs about
500 people, had not been affected
by the construction dispute.

19 , 1987

SATURDAY
RACINE - Southern Local
Board of Ed uca tion will meet in
special sessio n Satu rday, 8 a.m.,
in the, high sc hool cafeteria.

services.

CLEVELAND iUPII -Ohio's
Super Lotto jackpot will grow to
at leas t $10 mill ion next week
after the grand prize went
unclaimed in Wednesday night' s
draw ing.
A lott ery commission spokes·
man sa id no player picked all six
numbers drawn Wednesday ,
meaning the $7 million jackpot
will be carried over to nex t
week's gamP. The winning
numbers were 6, 10. 22, 24, 31 and
41.
There were l:i4 players who
picked five of the num bersto win
$638 each, while 8, 70o players
chose four of the numb~r s.
winning S46 apiece .
There were 135,426 tickets sold
with three ol the numbers. Those
tick ets are worth $3 each.

Thursday, March

Worthington w~~~~}?o~~~~~~·

Area deaths

All

Veterans Memorial

Thu~sd,ay, March 19. 1987

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

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ti - W•oO To Do

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the same, without incumbrance to the surface and all
ways and rights of way
along said mineral seam are
hereby reserved to V. B. Hortonand S. W. Pomaroy , their
heirs and assigns forever.

REFERENCE DEED : Vo-

lume 288 , Page 887 and Vo lume 290, Page 451 , Meigs
,County Deed Records.
This Parcel appraised at

96000.00.

Parcel No. 4 : being com monly. known as 541 West
Main Street and / or 541
West Front Street, located
near the Mason Bridge approach, having been form erly owned by John H.
Koehler, Sarah Koehler and
lawrence D . Hartinger.
All of lot102 in V. 8. Horton 's Addition to Coalport
now Pomerov. lvinq east of
the right of way for I.C.H.
No. 7, Section Pomeroy ,
and more fully described as
follows:
Beginning at the northeast
corner of said lot 1 02;
thence west along the north
line of said lot a distance of
about 66 feet to the east line
of Nid Highway No. 7;
thence south along said
highway to the south line of
said Lot 1 02 ; thence east
along the south line of said
lot about 47 feet to tho
southeast corner of said lot;
thence north along the east
tine of said Lot 102 a distance of about 66 feet1o the
place of beginning .

SAVE AND EXCEPT lrom

the above described premist~~, a strip ten feet· wide
off the southerly aide of uid
Lot No. 1 02, extending from
Front Street back to t.C .H.

No. 7.

ALSO all the adj .. cent real
estate bordering said lot
which wa1 owned by Sarah
A. Kohler at the time of her
decease.

REFERENCE DEED: Yo·
tume 132, Page 186. Vo·
tume 267. Page 779. Yo·
lume 288. Page 181 and Vo·
lume 290, Page 461, Meigs
County Deed Racordo .
This Parcel appraised at
2

Being South of Union
Avenue and East of the tram
5: being com·
road acro11 the ravine, In monlv known as 851 OsFnction 17, Section 2Q."' borne Street having been
Town1hlp 2, Rongo 13: be- formerty owned by Ricky
ginnng at the northwest Icenhower, Lillie M . Hauok
corner of Cathirine Rein· and Eunice Strau11, et al.,
hllrt'a lot; thence nonh 88 and Harvey Woodard.
deg . wast 86 feet: thence
The following premises
lOuth 71 deg, weot 80 feet to -wit : Being a part of Fracto a stone; thence south 3 tion No. 17. Section No . 2,
deg . west 160 feet: thence Town No . 2, and Rtnge No.
east to Catherine Reinh1rt'1 13, tying on tho welt branch
Southwest corner; thence
ol Sugor Run. deocrtbtd 11
nonh 1a dog. eoot 170 loot ,followe :
to the ptoce of beginntn~.
Beginning at the South
containing one-h•lf f'hJ Wttt corner of a lot of land
-.ere, more or leu .

$ P~~~jq~~

PH. 992-9949
Bob lorton, Owner
2-5--86-tfn

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

· -~·

=~·-=11----··
: :::':'!!.1-

EXCEPTING tho coal and deeded by V. B. Horton and
other. minerals in the pre- S. W. Pomeroy to Frederick
mises and tho right to mine Elberfeld by deed d91ed No-

vember 1, 1 869. at the
Southwesl corner of Ben·
jamin F. Biggs' lot , opposite
Catharine Reinhart's house;
thence North 86 dog . West
83 feet to a stake; thence
North 16 dog . East 98 feet
to th o center of the Run;
thence along the run South
80 deg . East 82 foot to Ben·
jamin F. Biggs' line; thence

South 16 deg. \Vest 90 feet
to the place of beginning .

EXCEPTING
therefrom
the coal and other minerals
underlying the aforesaid
premises and the right to
mine ttle same without incumbrance to the surface,
and all ways and rights of
way along any mineral seam
underlving said premi ses are
also hereby excepted from
this conveyance.
Being 1 the same premises
conveved to Christian Buck
by George Dav and wife bv
deed dated April 19, 1 876,
and recorded in Volum e No.
43. Page 589 of the Records
of Deeds in Meigs County,
Ohio .

REFERENCE DEEO : Vo lume 283, Page 697, Volume 286, Page 206and Vo·
lume 290, Page 461, Meigs
County Deed Recorda .
This parcel appraiaed at

$600.00.
Said real estate is to be
aold as individual ptrcels.
Sate of uid real estate to
be for not leu than two
thirds (213) the aforesaid
appraised value.
Said sale ia aubject to approval by the Common Pleas
Court, Me igs County. Ohio .
Howard E. Frank, Sheriff
of Meiga Count)!, Ohio
Appro&gt;Jed:
Fred W. Crow, Attorney for

FARMERS BANK AND
SAVINGS CO., PlaintiH.
(31 6, 12, 19, 3tc
Public Notice

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT.
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT OF
ACCOUNTS , PROBATE
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY.
OHIO '
Accounts end voUchers of
the following named fiduciarIes have been filed in the Probate Court, Meigs County,
Ohio, for approval and aetdement :
Eatate No . 24801 - Final
tnd Distributive Account of
Donald L Moore, Guardian
of Gerald A. Moore, a Minor.
Ettate No. 24698 - Fint ·
Account of Judith A . Clerk,

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND
POMEROY, OH.

.,

Public Notice

REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

190 MULBERRY AVE.

:::..':t:-·a-c:~.

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS

Public Notice
Guardian of Leanne S. Clark.
a M inor.

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAIR

and Distributive Accoun1 of
Billy l . Williamson, Admin istrator of the Estate of Edith
K, Williamson. Deceased .

Truck, auto, &amp;
hspvy equipment
repairs and welding .
(All makes &amp; models)

Estate No. 25372 - Final

Estate No. 26245 - Final

and Distributive Account ot
leona V. Cleland, Executrix
of the EstatG of Henry E. Cleland. Sr .. Deceased .
Estate No . 24999 - Partial Account of Richard E.
Jones. Executor of the Estate of Mann ing D. Webster.
Deceased .

RADIATOR
SERVICE

BISSELL
BUILDERS

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

PAT HILL FORD

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

ROBERT E. BUCK
JUDGE
Common Plea• Court,
Probate Division,
Meigs County , Ohio

13119 ftc
54 Misc . Merchandise

614-843-5248
RUSONABl! - R!IIAILE
8-20· '86 tfn

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Bashan Building

EVERY

SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
Factory Choke
I 2 Gauge Shotguns Only
10-B·tln

23 .
REPS NEEDED f or hU!dnr~u
accounts fulh1me . $fi0.000·
f80.000 . pari timo &amp; 12.000
118,000 No u lling, rnpeat
business. Set -,our own houn
Trainmy p10vidtld . C11 U 1· 61 2·
938· 6870 , M F, 8am t o 6pm
tcentrftl stendftrd time)

BISSELL

NER TAN S· PAIOR SERV ICE ·
c ould you uso an e• l rll 0100 00
or more, each month '! TJw Arm-,
Na1ionat Guard proVides ucel·
!tml ben efhs 11M good pny . Try
onH vunr w ith llll 304- 675 ·
3960 or 1 800· 642 361!)

SIDING CO.

)( Rnv lochnicinn lor local doc
tort oHic6 . Sunil rltiUIT\0 10 oo~
P 13, m Cfllll PI
P! eftSIIIll
Ro[J i&amp;tlll . 200 M11in St Pt
Pleasant , WV

New Homos Built

PH. 949-2860

Electronic Organs
Mobile service

We nro nnw ncceptmu applma ~
tion s lor tllshiers, E~o: p ~littn c ft
Wil h Jlubhc prelaned AI)JIIV i'l
V 11ughan11 Cnfd innl Mnr ch 16

•viNYl SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

or 949·2756

TVs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation
Service

Cu ll en! l11d8rnl tlu

Doy or Night
NO SUNDAY CAlLS
4·16·86-tln

'' Free Estimates' '

J.R.'s REPAIRS

605-687 60 00 Ext. R 9805 lor

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

or 949·2801
No Sunday Calls

lk. IOU·OI hp. lllt/11

PUiliC INYniD

24 HOUR TOWING
&amp; ROAD SERVICE
USED TIRES
&amp; BATTERIES

ACTION
TOWING
949·9070 or
949-2045

3·4-1 mo.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL- SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
10-S·tlc

3 Announc ements
!II

446 · 3131 10flm. to 5pm or
446 · 2200 alter ijpm ,
Racine Gun ShOot spons ored by
Alcina Gun Club. Every Sundnv.
b~tg l nntng a1 1:00 p m Factory
Chokfl, 12 gvage 1hot9uns
S ~ow

a1 Rutland Civic
Cllnter Ap ril4 . 8·00to6 .00p m
T111Jl e rental t6 .00 Adm t2 SO
For morn inf ormation or tab!ll
rental c1111 614· 74Z· 223J

Gun

4

op~~ning .

Certifind or

Etrolhtn

R111p 1tatory

time 61per ien cl)d rtHtul red E-c
11larv· lrlnya brmeflts Con tact
0 1111clm nl P eraonnui Pln1111tr11
Va!!e..,. Hoap itll! . VAII~;~y Drive,
Poin t Pt eaunl, W Va 26660.
304· 675. 43 40 E.E O.E

Announc ements

For Herbal lifa call Marla

lmmodift te
Cert ll1fld

ThuriiPV Te chlll tilln , 32 Iu s full

J. tJ .Ifn

Estate No. 24336 - Se-

cond Current Account of
Yvonne Dennis, Guardian of
Daniel Lee Buck Kuhn, aMinor .
Estate No . 25132 - Final
and Distributi\le Account of
linda V. Smith, Executrix of
the Estate of Alva Swick,
Deceesed.
Estate No . 26097 - Final
and Distributi&gt;JO Ac co unt of
Cindy Rothwell, E~~:ecutrix
of the EstatQ of Lawren ce 0 .
Hartinger , Deceased .
Unless exceptions are filed
theret o, said accounts will be
fdr hearing before said Court
on the 20th day of April,
1987, at which time said accounts witt be considered and
continued from day to day until finalty diapo~ed of.
Any person inter81ted may
file written exceptton• to aaid
accounts or to maners per·
taining to the execution of the
truat, not lets than frve days
prior to the date set for hearing.
.

GovarnmMI Johs $ 16 040 ·
$69.230 yr Now hidng C11 H

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Prim"

PH. 949-2893
John K. Benh
Owner I Mechanic
1·2-'11-l mo.

clulllict. CultOnter Stuvittt Uti· '
ln{ll Sal aries to 560K Entry ·
lnvfll poauion s Call 805 ·697·
6000 E• l A· 9806

Giveaway

Free mate Angor• H1m1ter t o
good home only Ph. 814· 448
1354.
Vt Cbow Dog, gDod watch dog .
loves k id• P~ . 814· 446- 7076
Sand roclu to give •way. C a ll
614- 992· 5073.

6 puppie• tn give IIWI'Iy 'h
S•moa,
El~ Hot~nd
C1!1

'I'

614· 985· 4421

ADMISSION A EP RESE NTA ·
TIVE OuturJtnn . nnergntic per ·
1on wtth go od c omm tmlcatlon
aki!!s , needttd t o dt~v elop 1nd
m11rke1 now area nur si ng f11c1U1y
E~tpe rlen ce ln public spuklng
and

b~tckurountl

in rBc rlllltlon IH

social work he!pfu! Po 1itlon
avflllable tmmlldift!elv Compe·
tivo salary and henellta ApJJiy In
eonlidM Cil w it h rntumfl, 111l 11try
his tory 11nd teh,renc ('l lrnm e·
di111e ly 10 Poml P!Basnnl Rllfl lt

!&amp;r . Ro• C.13 , Pt Ph , W. Ve

26560
Pno plo 10 dn!ivor COD ordftfS ,
mvll drllll 111Htl!y , h11vo trllrn ·
poriBI IOn . know thu Pt Pit
G11 1Upo!+1 l'lr8fl, 11pply In p&amp;rson
230 M1in St , P P . 9 .00 AM ·

6 00

PM

Ask

lor

Mr '

Wi11d11rh olt .

12

Situations
Wan ted

Nnod mat u re d•JPirndablll
womnn In hvll m thn rnnnth o l
Ap1 il 1 wr;tlk to lo o k ftft l) r 2
leflnflge c tulllran Hu~band &amp;
W1l1t mutt hn nut nt town I.I{IM1
c oo ~ +nll

&amp; ho u•owor~ Mu1t
CHr
Call IIIIV IIIlHJ fo'r
rntnrvfiJW. unnd pny, n11;11 ho rnfj

hiiVI!

Ph 61 4 446· 15147

6 lost and Found

Som11o no to I1V11In w11h duiAhlltd
middle ft!led w omen C11tt 61 4

367 7466

ORDER &amp; TAKE
FERTILIZER
NOW SAVE
MONEY ON
UREA
DAP
SUPER
PHOSPHATE
POTASH
IUY STRAIGHT OR
BlEND TO YOUI NEEDS

MGM FARM
CITY, INC.
POMEIIOY, OHIO

614-992-2181

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
VINYl &amp;
AlUMINUM SIDING
•tnsult~tlon

•Storm Ooora
•Storm Wl ndo~tn
•Replacement Windows
•NIIW Roofing

"F.U ESnMATES"

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992·2772

3-11-'17-1 mo.

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. 124, Pomoroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Trt11t11lulo•
PH. 992·5682
or 992·7121
6·17-tfc

FOUND ·

2 Urge

m•le b!llck

dog• Ph, 614 ·446 ·0924

•

15

f1ew1rd . For re1urn o r r8ddl1h
len ,.,,, old m•le C~ow Ph .

Schools
In stru ction

814 ·2&amp;8 ·9333 .
LOST very •m•U brown lemele
Beegle in vlclnlty Ctlettnut
Aldgt ·Tumblllon Run , RE·
WARD , O.nnls Roush, 304 ·

875·4045.
7

·· ·····

Retuun Now Southe1utam Au alneu Cottege Call 8 t 4 . 446.4361

.1 8 Wanted to Do

Yard Sale
Pom·a·rcl~'

· ········

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Pl1111 t C rstorns. Sept ic T~nkt,
fir metal
cutveru Ron Evins Entrupriuts,
Jltkson , Oh 614 ·286 · &amp;930 ,
cu!vflrll siR Ill AppfO\Ifld

W•nt 10 do b•bvslltlng In my
home. Have referanee1 .fenced
in yard . Ptl , 614· 4•46· 9665 or

446·4426

Thu,. Frl. 811. 1 /J mUn on Hysell
Run Ad. Tova. b•bv Item•.
womene cl olhu . t14· 892 ·
6275 .
1

Husb1nd end wUt, hou•nole•n ·
lng, ylrd worl1 . c•r • for t ld.Jiy

Point PleaS.IOt ltU, 304· 878 .

4A80

.

•

�Page 10-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

LAFF-A-DAY

rlnanGidl
21

Business
Opportunity

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sof11 1nd chaira priced from
8395 to 1995. Tables UO and
up to e125. Hide·• · beds •390
to t695 Recliners 1226 to
U76. Lamps $28 to eus.
Dil'!et1tl 1109 and up tn a496.
Wood tlble w·6 ch•ira t28!5 to
t795. Deak t100 up to 1375
Hutchn t400 and up Bunk
beds compl111e w-mattreues
$295 and up to e395 Baby beds
e1 10 &amp; t176. Mattreuesorbox
springs full or twin $63, firm
173, and 183 Queen sett U26,
Kmg 1360 4 dr~wer ch81t 886
Dretaerl 889 Gun ctbinett 8 ,
10, 12 gun. G•soreleC1rlcrenge
t376 Bilby manretse• 836 S.
146 Bed framu UO, e3o &amp;
Kmg frame UO Good selact1n
of bedroom swtas, metal ca·
binets, headboards $30 and up
to t65

I NOTICE I
do busmeu with p.aple yDu
know. and NOT to aend money

through the mail until you have
investigated the oftering

DELTA INCOMES. IN C AI 1
Box 441 -A, Slidell, Lo u•s•ane
70481 504-641 · 8871 .
Buain"' for sale, Tanning bed
bUIIIn811 In downtown Pomt
Pleasant Equipped with two
Klaftun Wolff tannmg bed•. Will

buameas

or

beds

Cnll

304 -676 -4072
Own your own $13.99 one pnce
designer shoe store A retail
price unbeliltvaDie for quality
shoes normally pr•ced hom G19

to

seo. Over 160 brand names

260 stvln. S14,800to 826,900
mvantary, traminiJ, fi•tures .

grand opening, can combme
with over 1.000 brands of
apparel. acceS&amp;ory, dancewear

aarobic, chlldrent shop

open 15 days

Mr

Can

Keenan

1305)696-8267

23

Professional
Services

Julia' I Per1onal Cart Home has
openmg tor elde,tv patients. 24
hour cere. family busineas since

J I'S

31

t 32

;;;;;;:;;::;:~;~=l~;:=;~:;-;~~==:1
Mobile Homes
for Sale

1978 Kirkwood 141170. recondi·
tion throughout. gas heM, 3 bdr. ·
2 baths, see to appreciate.
58950. Call 614· 448· 0175.

Homes for Sal11

3 bdr , 2 baths, gas heat, cental
air, 181138 mground pool. e~~:cel
lent ne1ghborhood near Holzer 1n
city schools 861.500 Call

814-446-3961 .
Must sell n&amp;Wiy remndeled 1 bdr
home near new sw1mm1ng pool·
Galllpolts Sacrifice pm:e
G1 8 ,900 Call 614· 446 2639.
What a B&amp;rgainl 2 story house
Remodeled , totally rewned, tn·
aulated, brand new hot water
h11ater 2 or 3 BA's low heating
bills. very n1ce lot . garegewtth 2
outbu1ld1ngs AU for only
$20.000 Or best offer Ph

814-245-9378
Dr Owner. 2.80 acres, 6 room
ttouse with old stona fireplace.
furnace . wood burner, built in
oven, range 3 Rental units ,
rented yetr round. Ntce tncome
$27.900 .00 And 2 .35 acrea 4
apu 6 Overnight or weekly
rooms all furnished plu a mobile
home lot w1th upt1c tank
$17,600 00 . US . 60 Motel.
McArthur, Ohio Ph 596 -5908

6 rcoms, bath and basement , 1n
Pomeroy. You can sttull thi1 one
Must sell Phone 614-992·

7462
For sale by ownflr. 2 story house
in Middleport overlooking park
30 yr guarnteed vinyle siding,
w ·w carpet. 11h bath, umque
woodwork. 614-992· 5126

34

Business
Buildings

Commercial build1ngs for lease
Downtown Pt Pleasant Stores.
oHices A-One Real Estate
Carol Yeager. Broker Call 304·
675·5106 .
FOR SAlE· 'Il 6000 SQUARE

FOOT MEOICALBUILDING . PT
CLINIC . 708 VIAND ST. PT
PlEASANT

FOR DETAILS .

CALL 306-847-3740.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Two Acres Land M-L ldully
located 1f1 m1 N. Porter Hwy
160 Cc Water, well. teptic,
fruit trees Hu 3bdr Mobile
Home. fuel oil ttnk, electric,
concrete run
awnings All
814.900 Land 810.900 Call

613·731 · 2107
59, 000 00 2'h Acres on Rio'
Centerpoint Rd 1 mile from Rio
Grande Clear level front ,
woods Ph , til4 · 448 ·3805after

6pm
For sale 12 5 acres e9600
Scip1o TWP .. Meig1 Co . Rt. 2.
Albany, Ohio Phona 898-6427
atler 6 ·00p m
Acre lots tor sate. UOOO. and
up Will hfllp financa. Call

House for sale 1n Middleport.
Movmg. must sell. Asking
818 ,000 Currantly rented

614-992-7481 , 614-992 -2386

614-895-3685

Free to use and 11ke care of.
Bonom l1nd on Hysell Run Ad

New Log Home and 7 acres on
Mile Hill Ad , Racine 3 bedroom, bath. b"emMt. garage.

Coli 61 4·992·381 6.

- - - - - - -- -lc-

forced air wood and coal fur·

nace 90 percent complete
A1h1ng 8&amp;0,000 S&amp;e Vonnie or
J1m Par1inger on Mile Hill Ad
Racme or call 614· 247·4292

or 614-992· 3643.

Sixteen 11cre1 in Rutland . Gas
well. very secluded. t1 1 .200.
Call614· 992· 3901 .
Ashton LuildiniJ loti, mob1le
homes permiued. Clyde Bowen .

J•. 304·676·2336.

Government homes fram $1
IU· repatr) Delinquent tlk prop·
arty . Repo11est1cna Call 805 ·
687-6000 E11t . GH .-9805 tor
eurrent repo list
Compl&amp;tely remodeled two btd·
room hou1e w1th ba1ement,
6011150 lot . 2312 Madison A \Ia
Would make eltcellent s tarter
home or rental property , Also. 1
new 1 atellite 1ys1em

021,500 00 304 -676 -5477
10:00 to 5.00 or after 8 00 PM
304-372·9970
House for sale or rent New
Haven. rent $150 00 monthly,
304 882·2664

8 room house with btt h, 3 or 4
bedroom, J barns 1 new vall
bern . re.ady for operat io n, to·
bacco allotment. 3,000 lba th is
year Ho1.11t has new heating
t ystem new carpet Will sell
with or witho ut equipment.
1986 MF traetor with all equip·
ment Much more •100.ooo.
304-876· 11861 '

~

"Come on, Blanche. Let's
take a walk in the park. I'll
carry the cane and revolver
- you carry the mace and
the police whistle!"

1959. 304-773-5873

Real Eslale

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

Rental s
41

Houses for Rent

3 bdr. r1nch. Rodney Village II .
UBS mo plus dep01it Aefetences required. Call Blackburn
Realty 8U-446-000B.
8 room hs on 60 acres at Eurella
8260 a month. 6 room hs. 76
acre farm -Mason County . Call

304· 676· 61 04.
3 bdr. h1 2 miles from HMC No
pets. $196 month. t100 dep·
0111. Call814-448-3617.
Nice 2 DR 1 112 blths, garage.
Three miles from Holren Rt
160. Ph. 614-446-2783 Day
time or 446-2861 Evenings.

44

Apartment
for Rent

Furntshed &amp;. unfurm1hed apts ,
• 160.00 and up, refetences Ph
304-876-7738 or 304 -876 6104 A·1 Real Estate
15 Court Slt&amp;et. 2 BR. 1 Y2
baths, w / w carpet, complete
mod11rn kitchen, gas heat. welt
insulated, wired tor phone &amp;
cable tv. lpactous. p1rking '"
rear, p1tio, $376 / mo plus
utilities, Deposit, References
req11irtd. No pets C•ll614·446·

4928 .
6 Coon Street, large 3 BR . 1Y,
batll, complete kitchen, gas
heat. park In rear, overlook city
park IlL river. 1260 / mo. plus
utilities, d~os1t, urterences reqUired No pe11. Great for 2/3
SIAQIH. Call 61 4·448·4926.

Sofa. cha1r. 2 end tables, 2
Iampi, coffee table Ph 614·

448-7683
60sq y1rd1 carpet with pad.
Ltght b&amp;ige. good condition Ph

814-446-2100
Sears floor model stereo for sale
Excellent condition Call 614·

992-3244.

13.0 cu . ft. Kelvinetor refr1gera·
tor. ell'tra good cond . t60 00.

304-675-4828

53

Antiques

Furnished Efficiency &amp;HiO
Utilltiet pd Single Share bath
807 2nd. Qalllpohs. Call 446·
4418 aher 7pm.

Rosewood Victorian square
grand piano for 111ie. Call 614 ·

740 2nd Ave , 1 BR , 1185,
Deposit reqo~red . Clll614· 446·
4222 between 9&amp;5 .

54 Misc . Merchandise

1 SR. ground floor apartment .
All utth1ia petd. Near McDo·
naldt Call 614-448·7026 .
New apartment· completely
lurn . Ref. &amp; Dep. 1 or 2 adults
only Call 814 ·446· 0338 .
Furn1shed eff1ciency . private
bath . t176 .00 Utihtles peid,
920 4th ave., G•lllpolls Ph
446-4416 aher 7pm
Spacious 2bdr. apt , C. A , water
paid Nur Pizza Hut, Gallipolis .
Ph 614-446-7025
Unfurnished 1 bedroom apt. l1ke
new thru out . Heel hlmi1hed .
ht floor private and quiet
1286 .00mo . C1ll 614-446·
4607 or 446·2602 .
..
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bl!droom lptnments at Village
Manor end Rlverstde Apert·
ments in Middleport. From
t215. Including utilities Call

814-992-7787 EOH
Large 2 bedroom apartment in
Middleport, washer ' and dry11r
hookup, partlalty furniltled. Pay
own ulilttin. t185 . per month
Call 814·992· 2381 days Of
814· 992· 2509 evenmgs.
2 bedroom epartment in New
H11ven , W.Va . Call 814· 992-

7481 •• 304-882-3681 .
APARTMENTS. mobile homes,
hou.a1. Pl . Ple•ant1nd Oalltpo·
lit 814-446-8221
Two bedroom furntshed apt New
Haven, 304-882-3267 or 304-

773-6024

992-6639

Callahan's Used T1re Shop Over
1.000tlt8S,I118S12, 13, 14, 15,
18. 16 6 8 miles out Rt 218
Call614·266·6251
PlastiC Cistern state approved.
pl11stic septiC tanks. plastiC
colvertt. metal culvert• RON
EVANS ENTERPRfSES. Jack·
son. Oh. 614·286· 6930.
2 hydraulic che~rs , excellent
cond•tion UO.OO each . 1 salon
hsir dryer $60.00 Call 614-4468621

DIGITAL
COMPUTER
Equipment for sale
j3) Digital 11·23 with RXSO
51 2KB 1nd TK25 161 VT100 (3)
LA 120 Printers. Under Digital
Serv1ce Agreement Call 614446-41,1 ~ ask tor JBckie or
Robert
New. leftover 1986 model
pools. Huge 15k24 foot swtm
area, 4 feet deep. Includes deck.
fence. filter &amp; warranty Finane·
ing arranged . ln1tallation avtileble Call 24 hours· 1 · 800·346-

0948.,

'

614·379-2607 .

2 bedroom 1pt. in Point Plea·
sant . Oepa1it required. Hud
accepted 448-2200 evening•

Pair of men• size 10 cloggmg
shoes Ph. 814· 246·6645 .

For rent Sleeping Rooms and
llgllt houae keepmg rooms. Park
Central Hotel. Call 614-448-

1 pr nice green drapes 144x92' ,
1pr white sheen 1441192'. 1
Cabbege Patch twm spread w1th
shsm.t HollyHobbytwinspread
with sham &amp; canopy 52 yds.
dtrk green carpaung Ph 614·

Room• for rent. d1y . week.
month Gallla Hotel Call 814·
448· 971 6. Rent as low 111 a120
month

7701

For Rant . Efficrency sleeping
roomt Call 304· 773-5861 .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Two bedroom houae, Mt Vernon A\lt • refrence~ and deposit
required 304· 876· 2661 .

Room and bo~td for working or
elderly periOfl , or sleeping room.

Textan roping saddle with e~~:tra
p1dded 111t. hcellent condi·
tion. Whirlpool u~rigllt freezer .
C•ll 614-448·9442

NEW AND

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

46 Space for Rant

2471 .

USED MOBILE

HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 Ml
WEST. GALLIPOLIS, AT 35
PHONE 614· 446· 7274
1986 Skyline 471110 t2400

Coli 614·446·0390
1 2x65 N111hua, 2 BR . larga bath.
' Must see &amp; m11lle ntfer Call

814·446-7687 .

3 bedroom unturmshed house
for rent Sacurity depoalt and
reteren ces required 814· 992·

2 bdr., all ut•lirin paid except
alec . lurn or unfurn , lee.
deposit required Convenient
loc1tion. Clll814· 441·8668 or
814·446· 4778
2 bdr fullyfurnishededolttonly,
util . paid . Call 614-448-4110.

1972 Cutle 14d5 witt. 1982
hpando 12JC20 Firnplace, can·
tral tlr. 2 baths, 2 ttortge
buildings. Mutt sell Ph 246·
&amp;884 after 5pm.
1976 Ftstl"tl 28R . 2 full beths.
m"ter b1throom with gtrden
tub and 1how otf to side. new
c:trpet, new vinyl , concrete
•teps. ondtt pinnin g. mttal
building. Set up on rented lot.
.Atklng price 18, 500.00. Ph.
11 4·245·9•72 aher 6pm .
1972 Elcont 1 2k60 2 btdroom,
furnlthtd . Ru.SV to move
t4900 OBO . 81 4-692· 3768
evenings or 614 -985 · 4227
week..,ds
1971 Mobile Home 1 21166lhrk·
wood. ptrtly rem odeled 304 ·

713-5173.

Furnlthed 2 bdr.. AC, be1utiful
rhter Vltw in K1n1uga. HUD
accepted Foster Mobile Home
Ptrk C1ll 814-448· 1602.
1 mile out of city limits on Rt.
588 Ph . IU-446-6483
7:---:----:-~:-:--:-:--~-::- ·lc2 btdroom fumlsh.cJ, 1 Child No
pets t150 per month. New
H•v•n 304-882·2488
2 bedroom traiiM, coupiH, 1
smell child. Locu•t Rd .. Fit. 1.
Po+nt Pleasant, 304 - 6715 - 107 ~
Mobile homes for rent stlrtlng
f175 .00 tnd up. 614 ·441·

0508.

1980 Windsor. 14JC70, 3 bed·
rooms, 1Yt baths. tottl tltctric,
air cond.. porch, mutt move.
Muat Sell, 112.000 .00 304-

44

Apartment
for Rent

1 Bedroom b•lc r..,t t178.00
plu1 eltclrlc. Al1o required 1
891-3048 .
t200.00 security dtPOth . CON·
1977 mobile home. 121180. all TACT · J•ckson £nat .. Dept. Ph
electric. 16,1500 00. 304·671· 448 · 3997 EqUII Housing
Opportunity,
2809.

Concrete bloclla all sizes yard or
delivery. Muon sand Gell•poll•
Blodt Co. 123% Pine St ..
Gall1pohs. Oh1o Call 814-448-

2783.
Btg 2 BR RustiC home built on
your lot $11.996 &amp; up C.sll
1 614-886· 7311
Building Trusses 22ft.. 24ft ..
26ft , 28ft .. 40ft .. S. soma new
bath tubs. 8&amp;8 Surplus Supply.
St. Rt 160 Porter, Ohio Ph.

56

Pets for Sale

Dragonwynd Cattery Kennel.
CFA Himalaynn, Persian and
Siamese kittens AKC Chow
puppies New Chow puppies.
Call614· 448·3844 after ?PM.
Grnom &amp; Supply ehop. Pet
grooming, ell styles , all breeds.
Jul1e Webb . Call 614-,446 ·
0231 .
Wanted AKC Reg•stertd Mima·
ture Oachsund tor stud serv1ce.

Ph . 614·682·6731 . .

AKC Reglnered red male Toy
Dachshund poppies . 6 weeks
old. Ftnl shots &amp;. wormed Ph

61 4-448-7920
Reg11tered labrador Retriever
pups. Yellows and blacks. Own
female and male Call evemngs

814-992-6181
AKC regtttered Yorkst.irn
Wormed and 11lot11 Ready tc go

57

Musical
Instruments

Kimball P•Bnc . A·1 condition .
8900. Cell 614-379-2774 or

814-379-2490.

Fm1Supplies
&amp; LIV CS!Ock
61 Farm Equipment
2010 John Oeare die1el tractorplows, disc 83950. New Idea
Dyne Bounce mower U96 ltte
mod1l 224T John Deere b1llf
t1 295. Hay wagon t300. Call

Miked hardwood alabs 812 . per
bundle Cont1 lning appro• 1 VJ
tons. FOB Ohio Palle"t Co.
Pomeroy. OhtG. Call 614· 992·

6461 .

CROSS &amp; SONS

U.S. 36 West, Jacllson, Ohto.
Mauey Ferguson. New Holltnd.
Bush Hog Saln &amp; Service. Over
40 used tractcrs to choo1e from
&amp; complete line of new &amp;' o1ed
equipment Largest •"ectlon-ln
s.e Oh1o.

JIM ' S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER . SA 36 W. Oolllpollo,
Ot. io. C1ll 614 -446-9777. eve.
61~ · 448 - 3692 . Up front tr•c·
tors with w•rrenty over 40 used
tractors, 1 000 tools .
Utility Bldg ; Spl: 30' K40'•9',
1818 Overhead door. Serv1ce
Door $6333 Erected . Iron
Horte Bldgs. 614-332-9746.
John Deere 3010 with !cadet
84,660 00. 12tl. tr1nspor1 diiC
8496.00. AC no till planter
e1 . 660.00. 3 Bottom Jot.n
Deere Plow t396 00 C11t 814-

Call614·286·6522
Late Model 180 Massey Fergu·
sonlrBctor 83.960 00 Number
12 Maney Ferguson Baler
t1 .15000. Ma~Bey Ferguson
H11y Relke UOO,OO. &amp;01 Ford
Mowing Machine $4&amp;0.00 Call

814· 288·6522.

1B'x48' Steel Bldg,·747 Th•rd
Avenue. 3 ph ..e power, 12 ft
overhead door. concrete floor .

Pit group hvlng room s uit. t300.
8 14·992·3937.

Gravely Tractor, electric sttrt,
B·IPeed wllh attachments Ph.

Coli 814·448· 2362.

Prom gown {shown In Seventeen). Sin 7 . plttef IbN e. pink.
white). Call 614-949-2481

Office Sptce tor Rent E11cellent
tor Anorneys. Accoontent . etc
Close to Court House. Csll
Winman Rul Est1te Agency.

814-446-3844.

614·446-4148.
6 Bottom Semi-mounted plows
1460.00 300 gallon sprayer
outfit U96 00. 6ft. pull-type
bo1h hog U60 .00. 8ft. rot1ry
p•cker euo 00 Ph 814·286·
6522

Spact for rent. trailer spsces, 1~::::::::::::::::::::J.;~:;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;:~
Locust Rd, At . 1, Point Pleaunt, ~
304·676· 1078.

SNA~U'M by Bruce Beattie

Merr: hamh se

SWAIN
Olive St., Gllllpoll•. New. u1td
Wood·COIIStOvet, 8 pc Wood lR
tulle t399. bunk be&gt;da t198,
recliners nsw &amp; uud bedroom
1olt••· wrlngtr wuhere , •
sho•. New llvingroom sultM
t199, ~599.

440·3159.

61 Farm Equipment

1

Autos for Sale

71

1978 Ford LTD·2 Good condl·
tlon. 1970 Chevelle. Malee offer
Call 614 · 446~8201 or 614·

02 ,860 00
6622.

446·8113 .

ll•m Ph. 614·288·

3! M•....,. Ferguson Dlnet
Trector-t2860 . New 6ft. Grader
Dllde a1?6. New Post Hole
D1gger U76 . Ph. 614-286·
S522
Field ready used farm machln·
ery. PTO manurespraadM, 2 row
corn pick•. wheat drill on
rubber, FOfd disk, wheal diskt,
other equipment. Ralph Howe.
App1l1chi1n Highway &amp;. Mayhew Rd. Jackson, OH C.ll

614-286-6944
Used A66 Ditch Wit~:h Trench•
and used 350Jonh Deere Oozer.
614- 694-7842 or 814-894-

6006.
Massey Ferguson 136, 1972 or
74 model, new Urn. in good
condition. phone 304-676-

2816.

1977 P01\tiac Grand Prl~~:. New
tirH, shocks, eJChM.~st. •ir, tilt,
cruite t600. Good second car.
C1ll 81 4·446-0491 after 8
1 976 Deuon 280 z. Good
shapa. Rlltonably priced. Call
614-2&amp;6-8313
72 Du1ter. Makegoodworkcar

$276. Coll81 4·388-9&amp;69.
1971 Dodge Oiplom11t.
a&amp;oo.oo. 1979 Suzuki 426,
oBOO 00. 304·676· 7603.
1980 Pontiac Bonneville
Brougham, power steering,
power braktl, AM -FM·CB radio.
tilt wh"l, 74.000 miles. e11cel·
lent condition, 304-875-3594
1fter 6 p.m.
1986 Gr1nd AM LE. 13.000
miles, one owner, garage kept

304-871-23S9.
Small double section disc and 18
inch single btlm plow $136.00
for 1!1, 304-895-3430.

....

c:;:

676·7421 .

675-1604.

62 Wanted to Buy

1979 Menu Chev. V· 6, IUtO,
PS , PB. AM ·FM radio ca1sette,
n .. rly new tires . 111king

2986.

1980 Oldt Dtha 88 Royale, V-8,
PB. PS. air, cruise. AM ·FM,
good cond, 304·675-1 028.

Duroc Boars Bred just like the
boars we tested at the Ohio
Testation that gained over 2.6
ibt. per day. Roger Bentley.
Sabina, OH. 51 3·&amp;84-2398.

2 Aiding Hortes &amp; 1 Pony bridle
&amp; Siddle. Ph . 814·245·5492
Pigs for ule f315 . 00, 7 wb old.
male and female, wormed, Cll·
uated end non -castrated. 304·

676-4689.
1 1 yrs Aqu11 Gelding, 304-876 ·

6169
Yorkth1re bo1r hog 2 1fi ve•• ald.
Produces large litters of pig1
a226 00. Alee's Pia Farm. 304·

468· 1583.

64

'

Hay &amp;. Grain

:~

446-0063
·lc1980 Prowler Bunkhouse
Sleeps 7 Self-cont1ined, 1if
conditioned. \lery good shape.
Very good price. Call 0 . Mayer

614-992-6964 16500.

,
1

11 ,800 00. 304-876-2649

1973 Chevrolet good work car,
bat offer. can be seen 198 N.
P1rt; Drive, 304·675-1682

72

about
his
soon-to-be·
released film , "Tin Men".

"

fJIIIJ M"A'S"H
Cl (() People's Court

l

'

'

1986 Trevel Tra1ler. Sleeps 6. :
tir, awning, •elf-contained. •
U1ed 1 month . Reuonable. Call

•

304-882 -2230
Shde in eamper, Mountaineer.
Sleeps l!i. Stove. rl!frigeret(lr,
sink, self-contained. Meke offer.

304-773·6397
1986 Fodire camper, 2B ft.
load&amp;d with utral. 304-676·

1423

Trucks for Sale

7:06
7:30

0

Motor Home. 1979 Dodge Holi · :
day Remblm 315,869 miles
Good condition 26 h . 304·676·

:t:D

A

G(e~AT UMPI[&lt;t=.

,,•

Serv1ces

MAl&lt;~

FEopLE: A~c Al-WAY.S:
I,

Home
Improvements

QU~SilONINCS
.•

-

,.

MY

H1y for 11\e. Call 814·949·

2870.
::-----:---:----:---:-·IC-

Hay for ute Squ1re bales.
t1 .26 e1ch. Ph. 985-3944 Or
985· 3907.

Dried shelled corn t4.50 plf

cwt. Ground 85.00 per cwt.
Groundwhh mol asset tS.76 per
cwt 304-458- 1031 .

65 Seed &amp; Fertilizer
DeK1Ib &amp; Kenworthy Seed
C.orn, W l 312 alfllft. Phont
304· 175·1508 after 7 p .m.

• \

WATERPROOFING '

ALLEY OOP

Unconditional lifetime gu•rantee. loc•l refarence• furn11hed .
Free ntlmates Call collect
1·614·237·0488, day or night.
Rogers Basemen~
Walerproofing.

1967 Chtyy plckup with 80
model motor. Good tirH. Good
shape. Call814·446·0492 aft•
6
1978 Ford Courltr pickup with
ctp. Ex. running cond. 4 cyl ..
naw tires, AM ·FM cauette.
lookl good. fiiiOO Can be seen
It 538 Jackson Pike, or Clll

big band ara; talks wrth
Woody Horman and Har·
old Russall. (60 min.)
fJIIIJ MOVIE

SWEEPER and Iewing machine
repair , parts. and suppUn . Pick
up and delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner , one half mile UR.
Georges Creek Rd . Call 814-

*

All types carpenter S. concrete
work: Interior, exterior, remodelmg, p1intmg, roofing, free
est1mate1. C1ll 614-445· 8174 ..

RINGLES "S SERVICE. tlpe·
r1enctd cllt'penter. electrlcitn,
mason, painter, roofing finclud·
lng hot tar application) 304-

1981 Dodge Rem Ch1rger
Uoots like Bl1zer) . Red 1nd
white, low miles. AM · FM
Cltlette r~io, power windows
and door lockt. cruiM, tilt, 414,
windshield sun vi1or. lighted
running bottds. Must sell, new
cit ordtfed , Clll614-742-2211
btforel5 .00 1nd 614·992·6764
1fler 5.00 and Ilk for Dave .

len in this tribute to JBZZ

EEK&amp; MEEK

·I OC1ST SE£ I.VIff ~ AIJ)

Lll&lt;£

graat Thelonius Monk (2
hrs.)
®Ill [21 Wizard Simon al·
tampts to protec1 e 12·

'TI-a£ 1llO (JNS 00

Fa&lt;llro ACCMPAIJ,' AIJD

I CA!J'r srARr A MiklES)
AID GE-T RICH ...

'wol~ girl' from an
unfeeling scientiSt and a
ruthless industrialist. (60
min .) (A)
(fi) Pevarotti in VIenna

year-old

MPf£ A ~OIJ lV
MAILcmR

1BJ MOVIE: 'The Sand Peb-

blu'
8:06 Cil MOVIE; 'The Loot Sun·
oet
8:30 8 Cil iD1 Roomloo PRE·
MIERE lin Stereo)
(!I Collage Baoketball:
1985 NCAA Flnol Four
Hlghllgnto Highlights of,
1he 1985 final lour college
baska1ball teams • George·

Tr a11 spurt at 11111
71

Autos for Sale

1 984 Dodge Colt Cl..n no rust

02,895.00 1982 Ch'"'Y Cit·
otlon PS. Pl . Air t1.495.00 Ph.
814-288·151122

896·3802
Galvtni1ed corrugated culvert.' •
t2.35 fl , up. All sizet. Fittings.
F1bflca1ion . Day mghtdellvery
within 160 miles . W11l not be

a.

MORTY MEEKLE
AND .WINTHROP - .·

1976 GMC Sierra Grtnde, 15.
75.000 mtltt. tappet' . Very nice.

Solid. 02,300. 304·676·5829
... 871-3938.
1982 D111un pickup. 4 cyl., 4
sp., 4 new tires. Bed liner. Clean
truck 304-871 -1394.

1;;;:::;:;::=;:::;:;;;;;:::
Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

Concrete fmlsh. parking lot•.
ba•ements - any size job Senior
Citizen Discount. 614· 986·

DO'rOL.l RbALLYBELIEVE
IN HOR06COFES~ IF
YOLJ DON'r...

4484.
Starka Tree and lawn Sarvice
Greener lawns that Ia Weed and
Pest Frae, liquid or grenduler
application-tree 1nd shrub too .
Stump rtmOVII anywh•e without lawn dam~ge. FOf complete
tr" and l1wn carec•ll304· 6762842 or 676-2903 .

0
1973 Ford 1 Ton Van. New tires ,
brakes . Transmiuion completety rebu ilt. Good running
vehicle t1 ,000.00 Ph. 814·
388-9960.

82

117i Jeep CJ-7. excellent con·
ditlon e1.500.00 Ph. 814· 446·

Cor. Fourth and Pint
Galtlpollt. Ohio
Pttone 114· 448·3888 or 814·

4841 .

11

I ~..,_r....J !,.M

H.

Plumbing

~

&amp; Heating

lff7 .. HlA ...

i
•

~

388-9850

town, Villanova. Memphis

'If YOLJ DO BEL IEVE IN
n-iEM, SEND .$2510
POOVE: 'tt:ILJR Go::J0 Fi'\ITH ."

9:00

-~~i?zL
'"~,Jl~"
A
'*

B5

;nJ., ll}) Collage B11kot·
ball Aeglonal coverage of
the NCAA tournament regional temif1nals Is fea tured. (2 hro.) (Live)

liD Myotary: Return of
Sherlock Holmos (CC) The

SHORE·· BUT IT
ONLY COSTS VE
A QUARTER

OUT OF BOUfoJOS,

PAW'?

General Hauling

destruction of six bu1t1 of

Napoleon Ia Iinked to an It·
alien vendetta . (80 min.)
9:30 II I]) ilJl Cheers (CCI (In
Stereo)
10:00 G I]) ilJl Bronx Zoo PRE·
MIERE Principal Joe Dan zig 's arrival at the urban

Benjamin Herrleon High
School it ma1 with tough
opposition and hll job is

1980 Dodge Van V100 . Auto,

1981 Dodge '"-ncer4-dr.. 6cyl ..
3·speed. lltand•d 1hlft on floor .
All factorv equipmtnt Runs

a2oo.oo Ph 814-388·

9950

1982 Dodge Dlplomllt, 1uto, air ,
AM, wire rims Cuh pric.
82.289.00. Johns Auto Saln,
Sui .ville Rd . Ollllpolls .
1978Chevylmpallt376. 1978
Plymouth Arrow 1350 1956

'

PS, Pl . 304-882-2418.

·

1979 CJ6 J"". Flboo'gl110 H.T.,

~-Radial tlr•. new rebullt360,
~~ HP anoint. t21!1i00. 1 980

King Clb b1t1un 4d.. New
12 .50 radials. roll bar whh
light•. sunroof •nd oth• extr11
t2&amp;00. 814·992·1551 lfltr
8:00pm
1983 Nlaun 4•4· Excllent
caf'dition . S speed. loaded, wH:h

tOJ&gt;9... t5200. 814-918-3833
'73 Chevy llezer. 327 1uto·
m1tic, r1lty whHit. t1 . ~00 . 00 ,

pllono 304-458· 1808.

74

Motorcycles

Dillard Water Servtce. Poolt.
Sistema. Wells. Delivery Any-.
tim a. Call 814-446-7404.
•

soon threatened by a law-

eurt. (60 min.) (In Slereo)
(I) 1987 Budwoloer Truok
and Trsotor Pull Champion·
ahlpl From New Orleans.
LA. (80 mln .l
IIl G (() 20/20 ICCI
Schaduled: a rapor1 on

J &amp; J W1ter Service. Si1terns.
wells. 1wlmmlng pools. Ph .

614-246-9281 .
R &amp; R Wtter Strv1ce Home
CISterns. we111. pools filled
Formerly James Boys Water
S1me r111e1 Call 304·675 ·

6370 .

people who suffer ·from
obteatlv.compulliva be-

Watt11rson ' s Water Hau I'1ng . '..',
renon1ble r•tes. Immediate
2.000 g11fon delivery, ci11erns. ·•
pocls. well. etc. call 304·6715·
2919 .

navior. (80 min.)

811 IIl Odd Couplo

(() MaoNoi~Lohrsr Newot&gt;
our
liD In tho Swing Tn ls program pays trlbutl to thl

House cot!, limestone, 1nd
gravel. Delivered 1 ton and up. •
Jim Lanier. 304·876 ·1247 or 1

1tara and aounda

875-7397

1981 Kttwa11kl CSR 260. EK·
ctllent cond. 1,000 actt~al mlln.

noo. Coli 814·448·4484

'

now "' 1888. noo.oo. 304·
4SI·1011.

76

Boats and
Motore for Sale

Upholstery
1

A '&amp; M Custom Couchft 1nd ' ;
Aaupholsttry. St. Rt. 7. Crown •
City. Oh. 814·2158 -1470, Eve ;

814· 448-3438 . Open dol~ 9 to ,

4:30, S1t 9 :30 to 1:30. Old &amp; •
new Uphotttred
.,..

•

21ft. Ctbln CruiMt' on 3 txle
trail•. t4100. or when fOil In
Witter ln Mty tiiDO. Ph.

441-1828 or 441·1339.

.. .

PEANUTS

381-8987.

87

Mowrey 's Uphal•t..,lng serving
trlc:ounty ar81 22 yea11. The bnt
In furniturl upholltering. Call
304 · 875 •41,54 for free
ntim1tn.

I

F I KE N

I!

.I

WR I T N y

I

t----,;1,;----=r-1"'T--'1.,..-11 )
"I'm glad to sae you worldng for
a change," lha mom said to the
. 1
. 1
. 1
. 1
.
girl. The girl smiled and said, "I'm
.__....__,____..._..__, "' not working for change, I'm get·

l--r-....:;, . ,r-'r::-,-i

~

IO

ling a - dollar."

~&lt;s-r,-,,-.,,-.,,-.,,ri

Co,plete the chuckle qvoted

.
.
"
.
.
.
by fdlmg in the mln•ng words
L...--1-..L-'-...L-..L....J you develop from step No 3 below

f9 PiiNI
NUMSEiED LEITERS IN
THESE SQUARES
f) uN7~i:e;e~N~~~E

1 1 1 1 1 1

LETTERS

YESIIIDAY'$ SCIAM.LE1S ANSWIIS
BultOII - Above - Uter - VIolin - BULLETIN
Here's aomelhlng lo lhlnk aboul department; Have you ever
eeen a TV stallon lnlerrupt a regularly-scheduled comm8rclal
lo bring you a BULLETIN?
NORTH

BRIDGE

us

! ·lt·!l

'A 9 7 5
t A J 54
+I( 8 2

James Jacoby
How should you play two spades?
Don't look at the East and West cards
- just count your sure winners. Here
you have five top tricks II you played
the hand traditionally, you would hope
for the black suits to divide reasonably. So you might w1n the heart ace,
duck a low spade, rulf the heart return
duck a low club. Now, when the
opponents continue hearts, you can
shed diamond losers from your hand.
Eventually you can win the diamond
ace and play the spade ace and a
spade. If spades are 3·3, you'll take
three spade tricks, the two red aces.
and then if clubs are also 3-3, three
club tricks. Those are poor odds, need·
ing both black suits to split.
Abetter approacn is to play for just
one suit dividing evenly, in this case
the opponents' neart su~t If it splits 4·
4, you can take eignt lr1cks by placmg
yoursell in the defenders' role. Wnen
you 're a defender, you_frequently try
to take tricks by rulfmg. In thls m·
stance you should scramble as many
tricks as possible by rufflng with little
trumps in your hand So win the heart
ace and ruff a heart, go to the diamond
ace and ruff another heart, get back to
[' dllmn'y With the club klng and try to

EAST

WEST

+KJ

+Q 10 8 7

'Q 10 6 2

'K J 8 3

+Js

+Q 10 97

tK

• Q 10 9 3 2

SOUTH
+A902

••

t876

+HI 3

.

Vulnerable North-South
Dealer North
Nortb

WHI

1+

I NT
Pass

Pass

Pass

,

Ea1t

Soatlt

Pass

2+

Pass
Pass

Opening lead: ' 2
rulf one more heart. If all that goes
smoothly, cash tne club ace and the
spade ace and make your contract.
When you play this way. your trump
losers and minor su1t losers will fall
together on the same tricks at the end
of the deal. Much better than lettln&amp;
the defenders take them separately
earlier.

of

the

ACROSS
1 Rascal
6 Golf word
9 Float
above
10 "I've Got
- in
Kalamazoo"
12 Italian
river
13 - ease
(gladden)
Ill Actor
Holbrook
16 Percentage
18 "Bells Ringing"
19 White
poplar
21 Hamilton
bill
22 Imitate
23 Wall
section
24 ~eager
27 Burt
Reynolds

42 Beast's
home
43 Horse or
common 44 Sought
election
45 Handle

DOWN
1 Former
Iranian
bigwig
2 Finale
In music
3 Spanish
province
4 Royal
nickname
II Rule
6 Imitation
jewelry
7 Mature
8 Drum roll

II Texas

25 Mountain
city
in Israel
14 Trend
26 Sharp
17 Mexican 27 Beat it!
tree
29 Contend
20 Thump
31 Stringent
23 Feed for 32 European
the
r1ver
computer 36 Vase handle
24 "The
37 Encounter
Avengers" 39
way of
hera
_4~1~~:
,.

film
28 Flavor
29 Fido's
doctor
30 Work unit
31 Shankar's
• Instrument
33 "Down
under"
bird
34 - Avlv
311 Orbiting
chimp

(1001)
38 Investigate
40 Air a
view
DAILY CRYJ"roQUOO'ES- Here's bow to work It:
- AXYD'L.BAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostropbes, tile length and fonnation of tile words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CIYPTOQUOTE
3·19

40s with special guest

cond. 1100 mi111.
1111 Vtrnat.a 111 ltreet bike.
mint cond, klw miluga, bought

I

P1tty Andrtwl entertain·

Formerly Ksn Whe1tons. Now ;
John 's Water Service. Same Prlcu. 1,000 or 2 .000 gill . •
nrvlce 304 -576-2248.
, -~

387·01141 .
1808 Ch-o IS 311, 1171
Y""lho XI 400. 1111 Hondo
250 ........ Coli 014·371·
2121

State, and St. John's.
(IJ ilJl ChHrl !CCI (In
Sterao)
I1J 700 Club
IIl Flohln' Hole 160 mtn .)
IJ) liiiil Colbys (CCI Pnil·
l&gt;p Colby reveal&amp; 1he se·

8

crets of hiJ double life,
while hie arrival cautes a
cOnfrontation between Ja ·
ton and Fram;:eaca . (60

Jk;

15 THAT ONE

446-4477

310 4-rrpeed, 61.000 mllot Ph .
814-446· 1,5 27

~ ,. ,, ~

"'IVL.l'RE WA5TIN.:::r 'rtlUR
MONEY6LJ66CI&lt;IBING
ro OLJR SERVICE: ...

BARNEY
CARTER'S PLUMBING
ANOHEAnNG

1981 Chevy 4114 :aA ton. m•oon,

1978 Gr.,-.tin , good running
condition. Georgia car. lcyl ..
auto . AC . t900.00 Ph. 814-

v00&lt;1

Rotary or cable tool llrdting.
Most well• completed umedey.
Pomp ••let and slf'VIee. 304-

undanold. 304-925· 5211
'64 Chl'll'y pickup with lntullled
topptr, 304· 875-3802.

sropH

Mualc of Jazz M11ter

Bill Cosby and Debbie AI·

2454.

1986 GMC Slttra Cla11lc 'Ia ton
pick up, with topper . Show room
condrtion 14.000 mllu .
S10,600. Contact John lyon I,
A11clne, Ohio 614·949-2933.

LOGFAN

Thelonlus Monk
WPBY .,,

Monk Ouzy Gillesp1e and
Herbie Hancock are among
the musicians JOmmg hosts

RON'S Telev1tlon Service .'
House calls lln RCA, Qua11r, "
GE Specilllng in Zenith. C1ll
304 -576- 2398 or 814 -446Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
removal. C•ll304· 676-1331

([) Jazz Groa1 Calobrete

I

([) Celebrating 1 Jan Me•
tar: Thtllonlouo Sphere

Tree a. stump removtl Chlin'
link fences. Stone. mulch. till
shades, shrubs, er1ti11. Dons
land1capes Pll. 814-446-9646.

614-448-8446.

(() Wondorlul World 01
Disney: Tna Snaggy DA
WPBY "'
(() MOVIE: 'The Snaggy
O.A.' Part I .
®News
liD MecNtii-Lehrar Naweh·
our
Ill ll}) 1D1 Wheel of Fortune
IBJ Berney MIller
CIJ Sanford end Son
Ill]) IIl Newlywed Game
fJIIIl Too Close lor Com·
fort
Cl (()Judge
® Wneol of Fortune
Ill ll}) 1D1 Jeopardy
@ Jefferoono
CIJ Honeymoonel'tl
Ill]) ilJl Colby Show (CC)
(In Stareol
(}) Daktarl
IIl Iii Cll Our World (CC)
Stories from the fall of
1946 include the return of
troops from World War II,
the Republican landslide in
tfle Congressional elections. and the end of ttle

448·0294.

1977 Ford 1 ton. V· B, 4 spd.,
runs good, a1 200. 1988 Chevy
pickup, good con d. Beat oHer.
Call 614-448·8201 or 614·
448-1113.

73

7:36
B:OO

Jur&gt;Gtllt:NT.

876 ·2088 •• 676· 7147
Large round btl" ofhey.t10.00
,eech. Will deliver Call614-4461062 1fter 5pm.

1911 Ottaun 200 IX t2718.
187 3 Plymowth U21. 104
Hondo Amrw t221. Ph. 814-

'

8:35 cil Andy Orlffl1h
7:00 II(}) PM Magazine
I1J Hordcoetle and McCormick
IIl En1ertalnmen1 Tonight
ETtalkt witn Danny DeVito

17' a.nner Camper e•ceHent ,
condition 81200 00 Ph. 61 4· 1

BASEMENT

'79 Buick Skylark, 6 cycle, a1r.

Livestock

IBJ WKRP In Clnclnneti

-----~

81

Now buying shell corn or ear
corn C11ll forlateetquotet River
City Farm Suppty, 814·446·

63

New theories into the sudden disappearance of the
dmosaur are explored .

,~

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

Dinoaaur

and 1M C01mlc Collection

,.:;:-.=====---'.

$1,250 00. 304-773-6876

288·8S22.

"I gol rich the easy way ... l 81arted the
world's largest chain of wishing wells."
•

[)) Knowzon1:

' 84CamtroZ28, l·tops.PS, PB,
low mlleeg1, 304-875·8382.
1981 Cheven:e, auto, 1ir, brand
new redill tirtt, nice clean
lntlftor. e~~:c running cond, 304·

PI, air. niiW tlr... . 4.810.00.
1981 Cemaro: Rally wheels. PI,
Pe, U ,tiO.OO flrm . Ph. 814-

GOOD USED APPUANCES

e~CARPMENT-

2316

White 16 hp a4 . 9150 00 .
MARCH ONLY Siders EQuip·
ment. Henderton. W va. 304-

1983 Pontloc Grond Prii:· PS.

VtUey Furniture, ntw • used.
IArgt Mellon of qualtty furnl·
ture . 1 Z18 hst•rn Ave •
O.lllpolit.

~AD

Auto parts for 1ale Redio, A
glase, and other part 1 for 1 91.'7;.':

Ohver 66 Tractor w1th mowing
machine 2 row olfver planter 6
new Idee manure spreader

814-378-2441 oft,.ltlm.

A-n. Gallipolis, OH.

we

TO
CLIM&amp; 'DOWN THAT
IF

EVENING
6:00 II I]H il Cl Cll ()J Ill ll})
IDI News
(}) Big Volley
(I) SportaCenter
IIIIIIJ Jefforoono
(() Square One TV (CC).
liD 3·2·1, Conteot (CC).
IBJ Facta of Lifo
6:05 CIJ Beverly Hlllblllleo
8:30 II (2} iD1 NBC News
(!I Collage Beokotball:
1987 NCAA Tournoment
Regional aemtl~nol.(2 nrs.)
!Live) ·
Cll G (() ABC News
IIIIIIJ Hogan's Heroes
(() Doctor W11o
ilD Ill il}) CBS News

------~~·;·•;·~·;-~~~~;~~~ ~;~~~~~~~~~ Cordoba.
304-n3·6661.
, -:·,
· ,.
, ..

Pl. AM·FM Canette. Low mllnga IXCI.. _.t condH:Ion Ph.

Sot. 814·448· 1191, 827 3•d.

Cmt Motol. 014-441-7391

~
f,Ulldl«'

1915 fOI'd F·280 4x4, V·B. P8.

County Appll1nce, Inc. Good
USed appllaACtl lnd lV sets.
Optn 8AM to IPM. Mon thru

INFI RMTIOII

Auto Parts

2220 •• 266-6877.

1914 Escort &amp;4.000 mil•.
AM -FM cauatte. • · •peed .
U ,IOO.OO ph. 114-371-2742.

lompo. Coli 114·

Wllhen. dry~n~. refr&amp;a•tlors.
r•nt•• · lklgg• Applltncu.
Upptr Alvtr Ad. blrlld1 Stone

l •11

1940 Dodge 81Jslnt11 Coupe.
All original. eJ~~clltent condition.
Need• 10m1 reptln. Ektra pllrts
Included . Sellin&amp; PriCI
t4,000.00 Ph. 814-3 8-8020.

AUCTION S. FURNITURE 62

3/1$/87 .

BUDGET Transmission•: U1ed&amp;'
Ffebulh. Atl types torque conver·
ters &amp; trlntttr ca1e1. Engtn•~
cvtrhaul kits. Allison Transmlt- 'f
sion Part1 8t CVC Joints. Gua-or,
ranteed. will deliver, oash &amp;f.t!
earry or Install CaM 614-379-~i.

Iuick Spoclll 1325.00 Ph.
814-448-3109.

51 Household Goods

0

Used &amp; Rebuilt Tran•misliOnl.
All internally inspected • gua·
ranteed. lns1atlation and pick-up
1vallable. Ph . 14·446·0966.

286-6622.
Ford Tr1ctor with bush hog ,
grader bltde. plows. disc, cultl·
vator &amp; draw bar. 12.600 00

'

&amp; Accessoriei

2 Ou11rter Horse Meresl326.00
eoch . Ph. 614·258·9384.

S1gn1 . Halt price! Save 66
percent. !I Fltshing arrow 11gn1
e2991 Lighted, non·•rrow t2891
UnUghted U491 Free letters!
See locally. 1-800-423-0183.
anytime.

COUNTAV MOBILE Home Park,
Route 33, North of Pomtlfoy.
'Aenttl tr1ilen Call 814 · 992·
7479 .

1972 tUngwood 121166. 2 bed·
room mcblll hom11 whh c1ntral 2 bedroom. S1nd Hill Road
eir. builtin wat btr. refrigerator , l -30
_ 4_·_•_7 _5·_3_8_3_4 ._ --:----:ttovl. dinnette. new carpet,
sitting Of'4 rented lot can be lift or Z bedroom mobile home. fur ·
moved. Priced t5 ,000 .00. 304 · nlshed, tZOO.OO Pill' month plua
ut illtiH, phone 304·87&amp;· e&amp;12.
773-8202.
1986 Holly Park, 3 bedrooms, 2
bllthl . 3041· 875-7298
.

304-876-7727

246 ·6121 .

614-286-8461 .

U .OOO.OO Investment Gemt 2
Diamond1. 1 Ruby Taking
82,600.00 lOll. Ph. 614· 446·
3806 after 6pm

4802

Building Materials
Block, brick, sewer pipes, win·
dews, lintels, etc Claude Win·
ters, Rio Gunde. 0 . C1ll 614·

614·446-6764.

446-0766 .

Sale or rent New Haven 3
bedrooms. 2 bathl, fireplace.
garage. 138,000 or 8275 00
month plus d11p0111 . 304-273·

55 Building Supplies

614-286-6522 .

0758

28R 6 mile1 out of Pt. Pleasant .
For information call 814. U6 -

304-676-4412,
8 ·30 Wrecker,
to 6 00.
boerd foot Walker
Mon thru Frr

eo.fadtemp
20 cubic ft freezer t175 AC
welder 1715 260 Yemah1 8226.
wetght bench wtth weights. Ph.
NCR Cash Register 10 department 2yrs old $200.00 Ph.

76

SIGNS . Half price! Save 56 per
cenl ll Flashing arrow tlgnl
•2991lighted. non-arrow a2891
Unlighted 82491 Free letteral
See locally. 1!800)423-0183,
anytime.
.....

304-675-4367
Sw1mm1ng Pools 5999. New
leftOVIIW 1986 model pools
Huge 15x24 foot swim 11rea. 4
feet deep. Includes deck. fence.
filter and wart'enty. Financing
arranged, mstBIIatton IIVaiiBble
C11ll 24 hours1 -800 345-0946

i

w

11 '

Television
Viewin8

motor . firtt clus cond , t
u.1oo.oo. 3D4 -n3-&amp;8B1 . '

304-773-6873

614-446·8772

For 1ale couch &amp; cha1r. Exc11llent
condition Green. 304- 675 1601

1978 Centennial Star Craft ski

2 hospit•l beds complete with
m&amp;iHreu . 2 hospit•l bbedl with·
oUt mattreiSes Gas cook ttova.

Rough lumber 8160.00 per
thouund by the bundle or 20C a

Movmg
mull
sell furniture.
BR SUite,
sofa,
coffee &amp; 3pc.
end
tablas Ph 814-446· 0388 or
246-6268 attar 4pm.

'

'd

boat, 1 S"h ft. 70 hp Mercury ~

Co11304-875-4631.

STOP·LOOK·SAVE

Good used portable &amp; tloor
model color TV's. Cell814-4461 149

Boats and
Motors for Sale

.

·'

The Daily

1985 AlnkerV-Haul, 1 ?Ohpl -0 , •
MtrCr1.111er engine. 18 h traifer ;
1nd ecceuor;.. 304·175-7127 l
liVening•.
l

Tony's Gun Repairs. hot reblue·
lng. Opan 9:00AM to 7:00PM .

Twin size beds with heldboard1.
frames. bok spring• and mattresses. $40.00 each, 304-8?8·
1091 .

Mollohan Furniture II Appllan·
cas. At . 1 North Gallipohs, Ohio
Ph. 814 -448-7444 6pc. Wood
lt\ling Room Suite 1!1399 .00

75

3 HG Beams, 44 rottr,
Directiof! Box, rot1r wire.
co·uel, AF tnter, oscilletor.
otl'ler misc. Best offer. IBM
tlectnc typewritlf. needs small
tfpalr. 8226 . 080 . Mount A•·
.Sio Clock, best offar. See et 308
N. Third St (grav apt . l
Middleport

Uted Furniture. wood table &amp; 2
benches, beds, dresser, wood
wardrobe 3 mile• out Bulavdle
Ad Open 9AM to 6PM. Mon
thru Sat . 614·446-0322

'

March 19, 987
KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®br

51 Household Goods

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH ING CO recommends that you

sell

Ohio

1

I/ES.MAAM,IMI\AKIN6
ALL TilE SA~P TI\APS ...

W~?WEU., MI' DOG IS
IN TilE FOREI6N LE610N,

SEiii,AND ~E WA5 LEADIN6
~IS TROOPS ACROSS T~E
DESERT TO FORT ZINVERNEUF,
SEE, Aj'lD...

lng wltn hor renditions of
'South Rampart Stroot Po rode' and the rousing 'Boogio Wooglo Buglo Boy' and
more. (80 min.)
()JI Newe
10:20 CIJ MDVI!: 'The War Lord' ,
10:30 (}) Bill Coebf lhoW
.IIJINNN· 1 1:00

I

Cil ([). Cll ®. il})
NIWI

Hordou1141 ond MoCormlak
(I) 1t80 NCAA Final Four
Hlghlltlhu Hlgh llgnu of
tne 1088 final lour totmo
Include Louiovlllo, Ouko,
Kan111
and Louisiana

IT

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CYT

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X S

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MRX

ZSCSFT,

X T Z Z M R X

Yetterda7'1 Cl')'ptoqoote: LET A FOOL HOLD HIS
TONGUE AND HE
SYRUS

WILL PASS FOR A SAGE. - PUBLIUS
,..

�12- The

Sentinel

Thursda

Ohio

March 19, 1

·Ohio looks at interest issue

Panel OKs limit on credit card interest rates

COLUMBUS 1UP II - Like bills d~signed to require retailers ,
credit unio ns. banks and other financial institutions to lower
interest rates on cred it cards have lawmakers curious about
similar legis lation In other states.
A House Financial Institutions subco mmittee Wednesday
d&lt;&gt;bated thn•e bills to base credit ·card int eresl rates on the
prime rat e. but made no moves to combine the measures or
advance them to the full comm iltee.
instead. subcommittee mem bers requested more informa·
lion on what olhcr slates are doing and the movement in Illinois
to withdra w stale money from banks that haven't lowered their
inlcrrsl rat es.
Th e bills differ on how many percPn tagc point s cred it ca rd
ra tes cou ld br above the prime rate, which issei by the Federal
Reser ve Board . One bill suggests the limit should be .1
percentage point s higher, another, 4 points higher, and the third
sa ys :; per centage points higher .
Each oft he bills says the max imum rate should be 18 percent.
It is now 25 percen I .
Rep. Paul .Jones. D·Ravenna, said some retail stores say even
though they charge as much as 21 percent. they are opera ting
their credit card serv ice at a loss. The retailer must cover
dcfauli and th e exJX'nSP of cards tha t are paid off every month,
.Jones said .
He said some retail representa tives have told him they only
conttinuc offering cards as a co nvenience for thf'ii' customer s.

types of loans," ·the group said In •
a
prepared statement.
.
·
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - A ·interest rates at 8 percentage
l.t also sa t'd card 1·ssuers have ·.
·
ld
House banking subcommittee, · Points above th e yte on oneincreased and Improved servi· ••
approving a bill to limit cr edit
year Treasury securities. If the
· ces, which adds 10 their costs. ~
limit were- In effe-ct now, the
Tile American Bankers Associ·
card .interest rates, .also wants
credit
card
interest
ce
iling
would
.
at
ion argued against th'e- bill at a
Ann unzio. however, asser ted, .:
credit card issuers to warn
be13.8
percent,
Annunzto
said.
hearing
before
the
vote.
"Anyone
who can't make a profit ·
cons umers more completely of
Rep.
Charles
Scltumer,
D·
"Administrative·
and
other
by
borrowing
money at ,• .g8 :
the conditions and costs of the
..
stressing
theneed
for
full
cos
ts
of
credit
card
credit
are
perce-nt
and
.
lending
at 13. ;
N.Y
cards.
disclosure of credit card terms, much highe-r than those- of other percent should find another line ·
The biii was urged by Chairtold the subcommittee of surveys
man F'rank Annunz io, D:lil. , who
: ; : : : : : : : : : : : :; :'
showing the typical consumer
was unable to persuade his
" believes, falsely, that all cr edit
subcommittee to approve a simca rd intere-s t rates are the same.
ilar measure last year. The new
Consumers think that VISA or
bill was approved Wednesday on
Master Card, not the individual
a 5-3 vote and now goes to the
•
banks, set the r ates."
Committee on Banking and Ur·
ban Affairs .
The bill sent to the committee
would req uire credit card issuers
Annu nzio argued Wednesday
to. disclose ' 'key credit card cost
thaI banks and other card issuers
informa tion - interest rate,
are making record profits by
annual fee and grace period- up
keeping interes t rates for the
front . at a time when consumer s
cards at around 18 percent while
can use that information to make
most other interest rates have
the market work," Schumer
dec lined sign i!lcantly over the
said.
past year.

By ROBERT SHE~ARD

His bill would cap crl!(llt card

Current law only requires
disclosure after the card i s
received by the Individual, he
explaine&lt;f.

Two teams
advance in
tournament

Ohio Lottt•ry•
Daily Numht•r

015

PICK-4

.-Page 3

r;::;;:;:;:;:;::;:;:;;;:;~o:f~w:o:r~k~.':'

3557

CARRIER NEEDED
FOR LINCOLN HEIGHTS
POMEROY

IF INTERESTED, PLEASE CALL
THE DAILY SENTINEL

•

at y

.

•

Vo1.36. lllo.223
Copyrighted 1987

•

enttne

Pomeroy- Middleport. ,Ohio. Friday, March 20, 1987

D -New Boston, worked in pri vate with House
Democra tic l eaders and fisca l experts trying to
whittle at least $100 million from Gov. Richard F .
Cel es te's $22 billion budget for 1988-89 to bring it
into bal ance.
Riffe reported sa tisfactory progress and said he
hopes to have ligures ready lor the Legislative
Service Comm ission late today. A reassembl ed
bud get is due back in the House Finance
Committ ee next Tuesda y.
Riffe said he will fashion the new spending plan
hallway between the income amoun ts proj ec ted
by the Legislative B~dgr t Office and th e state
Office of Budget and Management. Those two

agencies were $29R million apari.
He said he also would like to increase sp• •nding
lor primary and secondary edu cati on. and
perh aps co iieges and universities. by 2 percent
over the amou nt recomm ended by Ceb tr
Riffe sa id this co uld amoun t to $250 million 10
$300 million. bu,t 2 percent of the ba&lt;ir c•du cation
appropriation would be only $120 million ovN two
yea r s, and 2 percent of thr higher &lt;•du r ation ·
outlay would be S60 miiiion.
The instan t bin go bill. sponsored by Rep . Mark
A. Maione, D-Sout h Poin t. would apply to any
tax-exempt or ga nization already permit ted to
condu ct regular bingo games.

In in&lt;tant bingo, the part icipan ts purcila sr a
u.o:; unlly for ~0 cent s. rx·rl or scratch the
coverings off tho numbers "nd dctNmine if I hoy
arr a winnrr and whal th eir prizr is.
Ma ione said the game is popu lar al chari table
organiza tions in Ken tuck y and West Virginia. and
Ohio groups need a si milar drawi ng card.
flut R&lt;•p. Ronald D. Am &lt;lut z. H·Woostcr. an
opponent. s11id. " I don' t lil ink tile sta le should be

c;:~ rd.

cn&lt; ·ou r agi ng it ."

when th e Tower Commi ssion
By IRA R. ALLEN
WASHINGTON (UP! I - Pres- issued its report on th e contra\'·
ident Reagan, buffeted by the · ersy Feb. 26 did he recognize his
Iran-Contra scandal all winter, policy had "degenerated" into an
emerged in his news conference arms-for-hostages dea l - after
on the eve of spring flashing the months of denying Chat was the
verve and wit that cata pulted case.
"II I hadn't thought it wa s right
him to two cerms as president.
'Though he broke no new in the beginning. we would never
ground in the saga of how he have started that, " he said. " I
cam e to sell arms to Iran in still believe tha t if someone in my
exchange for American hostages fam iiy was kldna pped and I went
In Lebanon. the president r r· oul and hired someone that I
bounded al his 40th news confer· thought could get tha t person
ence- his first in four months- sa fely home, that would not be
: with ~n eagerness to take on ail engaging in ransom of the
: comers in the news media he victim .''
Nonetheless , Reagan sough t a
. partially blames lor thwarting
fresh
start lor the first day of
: the deal.
spring
today, assuring the nation
RC'agan. generally in co mhe
is
searching
for more accept a·
man~. as he responded to 32
bie
ways
of
freeing
th!' eight
. · questions in the34-minute nation·
captive
in Le·
Americans
still
• . ~ ally 'televised session Thursday
nlgltt, made perhaps his most banon. some held now lor two
significant sta tement by saying years.
he st ill believes in his Intentions . The president said he even
in selling weapons to "respon si· would be gra teful lor the help of
ble people" in a government his predecessor, 'Jimmy Ca rter
accused of sponsoring terrorism - the man he repeatedly at·
but , "I would not go down that tacked for an lnabllity to gain
prompt release of the :;2 Amerisame road again."
cans
held in Iran from 1979 to
Reagan reiterated that only.

CHILDREN'S
·DEPT.
Tops
Jackets
Outfits
Socks
Jeans
Dresses
Blouses
Sleepwear

DEPT.

Dresses
Blouses
Playtex
Devon
Jeans
Slacks
Socks

Jeans
Knit Shirts
Dress Slacks
Hanes
Underwear
Ties
Socks
Carhartt
Work Uniforms
Jackets

P~nties

Handbags

HOUSEWARES

NOTIONS

Dishes
Cookware
Flower Bulbs
Kitchen Gadgets
Small Appliances
Rubbermaid
Cleaning
Supplies

Hallmark
School Supplies
Candles,
Cameras
Film
Gift Items
Candy

Senate
•
cttes
•
maJor
•
wttness

Yarn
Sheets
Sweepers
Wallpaper
Drqperies
Blankets
Curtains
Bedspreads
Window Blinds

FLOOR COVERINGS,
TV'S AND MAJOR
APPLIANCES ARE NOT
INCLUDED IN THIS
SALE

STORE HOURS

.'

fltfllel4r
POIHI.W . O ~IO

POMEROY - 992·3671

larger schools.
Ohio University won first ,
Bowling Green Sta te University
was second , and Ohio State
placed third . Rio Gra nde's bat·
tallon defeated such teams as the
University of Cincinnati, the
University of Dayton. K!'nt State
and Xavier.
"The cadets learned .a lot and
will compete nex t year ." sa id
Capt. Thomas M . Carroll, assist·
ant professor of mliitary science.
•'•overall, the cadets who participated learned many valuable
small-unit leadership skills.
" Th ey learned about their own
abilities to perform during
stressful trai ning t'nvlronmenls
which elosely represented those
needed by the U.S. Army's elite
Ranger units," he concluded.

Safety director raps
speed limit ·increase

0

Monday thru Saturday

MEETING THE PRESS - President Rea~:an
laces n •portrrs in lht• East Room of tlw White
1980. Carter. who has in turn
criticized Reaga n Jn the current
crisis, is on a tour of the Midd le
East.

House Thursday lor the flrsl time in four month~.
(UPI )

The 76-yca r-old president generally won praise from politi·
clans in both parties l or his
perfo1·mance Thursday nigh!, in

stark co ntrast to hi s defensive
atlilu dc and lncomp lol c answ('l' s
at his last news con ference. Nov .
I ~I .

"14Jni•HII
••

C.MMQ[ CAIO

COLUMI-lUS 1UP I I - Rai s·
ing tho speed limit to 6!i mph
on t·ural sec t ions of inters tatt&gt;
highways could result in up to
50 more traffic dea ths each
· • y!'ar in Ohio. says William M .
: Denlhan. sta te highway safety
• director.
Denlhan said Thursday that
. from 1966 to 1974, before the 55
· mph speed limit was Imposed,
an averal'(e of 105 people a
year died in trallic accidents
on lnterslate highways in
· rural areas of Ohio.
Since 1974. the average has
been 57 deaths a year on the
· same sectiOns, he said.
Legislation giving states th e
option to Increase the 55 mph
speed limit is pending In
Congress,
State Sen. David Hobson,

R·Sprl ngfleid, has introdu ced
a bill which proposes to
make I lie speed· limit in·
creases automatic in Ohio if
the federa l legis lation
becomes law.
The federal proposal. while
not giving exact guidelines,
would aliow the higher speeds
on Interstate highways out·
side population centers of
50,000 or more.
Officials estimate that 900
miles of Ohio's 1,550-mlle
interstate system would be
eligible for the higher limit .
However. there Is some
uncertainty about how the
guidelines would affect inter·
states skirting mid·sl2ed cit·
ies. Also, the state Legislature
could impos e further
restrlctlons.

II'

'

On a simple voicr volt' Tilurs·
day, lhr• SPnate asked n frdera l
judge to hold Secord In civil
contt'm pt if he con tinuos to balk
at relea sing foreign bank records
hi' co ntrols. Tho Air Forcr
olliccr, now in private bu siness.
then could face an lndefinltr jail
term and da il.v fin es II he
co ntinues to n •sist
The• Senate acllnn w11s t hP most
significil nt dcvetopmpnt in the
Investiga tion on :.1 day In which
mos t attention wa &lt; focust'd on
President Reaga n's nationa lly
lr lrvls(ld new s conft•ren('(' . On
other fro nts :
-Vice Pr!'sidenl Georgf' Bush
lssur·d a sharp rrbut tal to a
published report th at quoted a
key Sa udi Arabian middleman In
the U.S. arms sales to I ran who
accu&lt;ed Bush of ra isi ng money
lot· tho Nica raguan Cont ra
rebels.

R'O TC unit ·places
in field competition

HOME FURNISHINGS

9:30 to 5:00

WASHI NGTON I UP I 1 - Tiw
fu ll weight ol the SPna lc i&lt;
pn~ssu!'ing rrti n~ d Maj . Crn .
Ric hard Secord. a major figure
in the lran ·C'on tra scan dal. to
reieasr secrPt bank rPt'ords th at
could h(•lp invrstiga l or s traee th t•
monPy trai l.

'

RIO GRANDE - The Rio
Gra nde College and Community
Colleg!' ROTC Depar tment''s
WAREAGLE Cadet Ba tt alion
placed fi!t h in a field of 13
competitors in the 1987 Ranger
Challenge Competition at the
University of Akron and Ra·
venna Army Arsenal.
Held the weekend of March 6-8,
the WAREAGLES won fi rst
place in the one·man rope bridge
competition and sec·ond place in
ihe M-16 rifle and M-60 machlm.•
gun assembly and disassembly
competition. Both w!'re timed
events.
· ·ThirtPen schools participated
iri thP challenl'(r competition. Rio
GrandP was the only extension
center competing. The re·
mainder were host institutions or

.

Bcforr pa ssing tile bil l. til e House inser ted an
anwndmcnt forb idding any cmp lo.vee of !he Oilio
Department of Liq uor Control to sell gambli ng
devices.

Reagan holds own
·with capitol media

Chairs
Mattresses
Bedrooms
Living Rooms
Dinettes
Clocks
Tables
Gun Cabinets

25 Cents

A M ul1 imediB In c. Nuwspaper

'

FURNITURE MEN'S &amp;BOVS'

3 Sec1ions, 22 Pages

Ohio Senate considers instant bingo measure
By LEE LEONARD
UPJ S!atehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS iUPI I - Legislation permitting
tax·exempt charitabl e organizations to conduct
instant bingo games has been forwarded to th e
Ohio Se nate by the s t at e House of
Representatives.
The measure, which applies to churches,
veterans' and !rat&lt;&gt;rnal organizations. educa ·
tional foundation s, service organizations or
volunteer firefighters and rescue organizations,
was approved on a 93-:l vote Thursday , shor tly
before the House joined the Senate in weekend
.adjournment.
· Meanwhile. House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr. ,

LBERFELOS

Clear ionight, wit h a low
ncar 35 . Mo~tly sunny Satur·
day, with highs ncar 60. The
prohahillty of prt•dpltation Is
nt •ar zero through Saturda~.

-Sources confirmed a report
th at former nationa l s&lt;&gt;curlty
adviser Rolx'rt McFar lane left
letters b&lt;'forc his su icide att r mpt
l as t month ackn owledgi ng his
failure to divu lge a Sau di o!!cr of
secret fundin g for the Con tras.
Taken with otht•r evidence sour·
ces say inves tiga tors have found,
the leiters confl ict with Saudi
Arabia' s denials that its roya l
family gave any aid lo tho rebels .

CADET BATrALION - Members of Rio
Grande's Army ROTC WAREAGLE ca det
battalion Include, from felt, ba ck row, C/ Cpl.
Curtis K . Proflill, C/Sgt. Jason P. Schwebach,
C/ PFC. Todd ,Jacohs and C/ PFC. Carl R. Angel;

front row from left, C/SFC Lisa Evans. CJCpJ.
'.
Michael ,J, Tlce, Cadet .Jeffrey II. Dennis and
C/h!Lt .'fhoma• A. ,Johnson. Not pictured wM
C/ LTC David Dunlap, alternate.

State wants to cut investment
in sulfur removal process
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLU MBUS iUPli - The
.stat e of Ohio wants to sca le down
its investment in a demonstra·
lion proj ec t of a Bow lin ~ Green
bu sinessman 's pat ented process
for removing sul!ur from coal.
The Technical Advisory Committee of the Ohio Coal Development Office voted 6·3 Thursday
against provldin ~ $1.8 million in
sta te funds for a pilot project of
Albert Calderon's process.
Committee members said
technicians who reviewed the
process cited too many unanswered queslions about how it
would work.
The commitlee. however, in·
structed David Berger. director
of the Coal Developent Of !Ice, to
negotiate with ~a l deron about a
state grant lor tesling the ·final
stage of his process - " hot gas
cl eanup."
The com mitt ee d irected

Berger to ask Calderon to share
equall y with the state th e portion
of r•xJX'nS!'S- about $2 mi llion not borne by the feder al govN n·
ment . Calderon wa s willing to
furnish $200,000 of his own money
l or testing the ent ire process.
Berger said the U.S. Depart·
ment of Energy has commllted
$8 million to lund demonstration
of the hot gas cl!'anup porllon of
Calderon's process .
Calderon approa ched the Gen·
erai Assembly three years ago
for help In developing his process, which separates high·
sulfu r coal into four products,
Including coal that will meet
national clean air standards
when burned by utilities and
heavy industry .
He said the proces s, in addition
to clean c6al, would produce
elemental sulfur, natural gas and
enough gaso!lnb to supply Ohio
and export to the Northeast .
Ohio voters adopted a $100

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

million bond issut• to fund rc·
sear ch projr•cts 10 take th e sulfur
out or coa l and m11k c Oh io coal
more· mark elabic.
Aerg er said Prcsicir:nt Reagan
Is asking for another $300 million
for coa l lechnolo{!y research in
1988, in additi on to the $50 million
originall y in his budget.
Jack Hollander . chairman or
tho advisory committee. said
tec hnical revlcw!'t's raisC'd ques·
tions about Calderon' s " consist·
ent lack of data" and "breezy
dismissa l of probtrms" in carry.
ing ou t the pilot project.
"The chemistry works, per iod, " said co mmittee member
Manol Guha . "Th ~ whole prob·
iem Is regeneration lol coa l
gas !. "
Richard J. Oehlberg . Solo n
industrial consultant and one of
the reviewers or the Ca lderon
prolects, said the Bowling Green
scient ist has changed his proeess
and the eng ln ~r in g may not
work.

I n a report urging the Senate to
act on th e Secord Issue. the st•lect
Senate panel ln vr.sliga tln g the
scandal sa id he t•efu sed Frb. 21i to
slf(n an order that wou ld waive
Swiss bank s&lt;•crccy laws to
release th•• twords. Invoking his
Filth. Amendmt•nt righ ts at:(ai nst
scl f-lncrlmlnallon in rduslng lo
co mply.
Secord told thr panel In a
statemen t. " Aft er &lt;'onsultiil lon
with my r ounsel, I havC' ut' &lt;'i&lt;h•d
to refu se to obl•l' the order or ;onv
substantially siml lur' order of the
com milt rr tllrr&lt;' lfnr: mr tn sign
thr consent dit·r cti ve."
Th e pant'i ' s rPport su id S&lt; ·o·ord
has "frustrul &lt;'d lht' (ommill&lt; '&lt;'i n
Its efforts to an swrr C' rl tlcul
questions r&lt;'luting tu th&lt;' flow ol
funds !r om I he sales of urms 10
Iran to thr· Ni c·arilguan resist·
cnce fo rccs ."
Secord' s rrfusul to sign the
documents and tho St•nat r r·onlcmpt vote· could &lt;t·t the swg r· lor
a court baltlr over wh ether Filth
Amendmrnt protr·ct ions aga inst
seif.lncrim Inat ion r·xtrnd to hank
record s.
The Towrr Commission's 1-'rb.
26 report on tho scanda l found
Secord con troiiPd foreign ltar\k
account s th rough wh ich profits
from the Iran arms sales IIOII'ed.
and it added !hut he had "c ruci al" Information sou~h t b.Y
investigators. ·

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