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.

Page-14-The Daily,Sentinel

-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-

Wednesday, April 22, 1987

.----Local .Briefs:-__, Meigs Local Board renews· contracts
Card party, luncheon .scheduled

A public card party and luncheo n wilt be held at the Grace
Episcopal Parish House, East Main Street, Pomeroy, begi nnin g
at12: ,10 p.m. Thursday.

· without pay for several. days of ·
work missed in Aprll'a nd Rufus
Browning was also granted medical leave wUhout pay for the
remainder or the school year.
The contracts of teachers Gina

A hit-skip accident at the interspe tlon or sta te rou tes 124 and 7
late Monday nigh t in which the corner of the Roedel build ing
was )&lt;nocked off is under lnv est i~ation by Pomeroy Pulice.
The Pomeroy landm ark building now occupil'd by Kingsbury
Mobile Homes was s lru&lt;·k as an 18 wheel tractor·lrailer
traveling wes t on Route 124 madt• a right bo nd turn ont o Rout e7.
A residen t saw the ael'ident and repor ted It to po lice at 11 : Uo
p.m.

One-car accident injures three
A one-car acciden t in Olive Tow nsh ip at 4::10 p.m. Tuesday
injured the driver and her 1wo passengers. according to thf'
Callia-Melgs Post of the State Highway PatroL
Christina K. Bissell, 17, Long Bottom, was driving east on
Ohio 681 when she los t control of her car , left the rig ht side of the
road and stopped In a di tc h.
.
She and her two passengers, Lorena r . Rissr ll , 17, Alban y,
and Rcbecra Bauer, Hi, Long Bottom , were ta ken to Veteran s
Memorial Hospital , where they were treated for minor injuries
and rel eased.

John A. Hayes

.

Joh n A. Ha yes. 82, died Wednesday at his home in Chester.
A ,retired coat miner and
farmer, Mr. Hayes was born
April21, l9051nAthens Count y,a
son of the late Emerson ~ nd
Pear l Tall Hayes. He wa s a
member of the Eagle Ridge
Communit y Church and · a 49.
year member of the Modern
Woodmen of American, Alfred
Camp 10900.
Surviving are his wife, Elizabt&gt;th Frederick Hayes; a daugh·
ter and son-in-law, Est her and
Scottie Smith, Chester, and two
grandchildren.
Bes ides his parent s he wa s
preceded in dea th by infant twin
s is ters .

·

SNv ires will be held at 1 p.m.

Eastern Board OKs new contracts
girls' basketball coach: Kim
Gomldl, seventh grade adv isor,
and sCott Wolfe, &lt;&gt;ighth grade
advisor.
Other eo nlrat' t ~ in volvi ng starr
and federal monies not renewed
were David Chadwell, Tille li
tutor: ,Jud y Wolfe, Ma rgaret
Ca uthorne, disadvantaged pupil
· program;. and .Joa n Sf'llers,
ass istant half-time treasur·,r.
Resignations accepl &lt;'d wen•
Carolyn Tripp, chrer leadc·r advi
sor; Scott Wolfe, yearbook advi·
sor; Don F.lchl ngcr. f'o-hcad
football coach; arid .Joe Hailey,
student council advisor.
Other i\ctlon
Several flelci trips W&lt;'rr approved by th e bourd. All fifth
graders In the district wi ll
participate In the Soli and Water
Conservation E'leld Day at the
Michael Farm on Ma y 24. Also
approved was a field trip for the
Chester Elementary stuclcnts to
visit Fo•·ked Run Statt• Park on
May 8.

to participate In sport s ~ nd other
aeti vilies with I he on ly cxc·cption
per wining to practices.
[~V l'n

though i.l S!UI.J(•fll 'dO('S OOI

me&lt;'t ;il l grade· rc·q uirements . thc'
student ma y eonlinu&lt;' praetiring
as long as no leagiJ{' or sto te

rvt&gt;nl s are M'heduled du ring the
penalt y grading period. During
thP pPnall y prrlod, student s are
Jo br munllurcd weekl y so a
dPtf'rmination ca n be rnadr as to

whet her appropriate gracl&lt; ·s are
bPi ng maintained to permit the
student

to

re sum e

par ticipation.
Also dlsc ussrd at the mt·rting
wa s a policy for the promotion
and rr tr n1ion of r lrmeon 1a ry and

program s

Ohio weather
South Central Ohio
Mostly cloudy· tonight with a
chance of showers or thunderstorms. L.ows will ra nge between
oo and 60.

Marauders,

premium of $663.60. Assistant
Superintendent James Carpenter explained the radiO insurance
coverage to board members.
·
A field trip for three Meigs·
Local VICA students, to attend
the &amp;tate VICA conference as
contestant s, April 24-25 , was
approved. The board approved
new by-laws for th e COCSEOVEC progra m of which the
district Is a part. The reports of
Treasurer Jane Wag'ner were
approved.
Near the opening of the meet·
lng, the 'board moved into an
approxima tely Jo-minute executive session with an out-of-county
attorney to discuss possible
litigat ion .

Eastern

Tuesday Admissions- Bertha
Righthouse, Pomeroy ; Mark
Oiler , Pomeroy: Michael Epple.
Middleport.
TueSday Discharges - Eliza b('th Horak. Mary Bonecutter.
Martha Haggerty .

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resolu tion.
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St: nlry.

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SEll PRICED

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TAVERN

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INGELS FurnitOre &amp; Jewelry Inc.

$2.00 Cover Charge
Must Be 21

&amp;IDDII'IOU ,

)Credit lormrl

992·2635

Daily stock prices
(i\s of 10::10 11. m .)
Provided hy
Bryce and Mark Sr,Jit h
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Lot'Wi
Firm
l'rlcl'
Am Ek•c'lrl c POWN ............. 28~
AT&amp;T .. .. ..... ....... ...... .......... 24 1&gt;,
Ashland Oil ........................ Iii' ,
Bob Evans Farms .............. 2riY,
Channing Shoppc's ....... ...... 2fi"1
Federal Mogul ................. .4 2" ,
GoodyPur T&amp;R ... ............... .. .111
Beck's lne......... .......... .. ...... ·! '·,
Limited lnr .... ................. .. .-12 1 ,
Multimedi a Inc·............. ..... .. o4
Rax Restauran1s .................. :) :1.1

· Robbins &amp; M)•ers .... ...... ...... 1P 1
Shonr•y' s Inc .......................... :ltl
Wendy 's Inti. .... ...... ........ II' '
Worthington lnd ....... .... ....... J ~I' ~

Pomeroy Flower Shop
I 06 Butternut Ave.
Pomeroy, Ohio
992·2039 or 992-5721

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95

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Fifty years ago, Ruth Swanson began baking extra ·
batches of her delicious oatmeal cookies. Thday, Archway
is America's favorite. Still baked and delivered fresh by
people who care about quality. Thanks, Ruth .

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last pick-up week

W liNG IPECIAL

........

This Is the final week for
free pick-up of trash by the
Middleport Street
Department.
Pick-up In the fourth ward Is
now being made and no
further pick-ups will be made.
Any additional hauling done
by the village will be charged
at $20 per load.

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Home Style Cookies
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'

·,

Community Corner, Page 8

42~2-1-41-9-24

.Mostly cloudy tonight with a
lows near 50. Mostly sunny
Friday with a high Jn the mid
60s. The probability of preclpl·
tatlon Is 70 percent today fllld
near zero tonight and Friday.

•

enttne

addition, the litter program has
close associations with other
county departments such as the
Health Department, tlie Division
of Wildlife and the Department of
Human Services. Chlldrens' Ser·
vices has even become Involved
in some circumstances Powell
says.
Although the litter program
may not spend grant money to
clean up dump sites on private
properties, Powell says private
clean ups can be arranged with
the property owner' making a
monetary donation to the litter
program . The property owner
benefits In two ways, Powell
explains. The mess Is cleaned up
and the donation Is tax deductible
as a charity.
Although last year's program
operated on a $76,425 grant
through the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources, when In-kind
(dona ted 1 services were . In·
eluded, the program amounted to
nearly a quart~r of a million
(Continued on Page 12)

2 Sactions: 12 Pages

25 Cents

Before, during
and after
A portion of the hillside aiong Manuel Road In Letart
Township was for years an unaltractlve, unneccessay and
unacceptable Illegal dump site. This eyesore was eliminated
last year through the efforts of the Meigs County Office of Utter
Control and other volunteers, People living on and near Manuel
Road are now keeping an eye out for lllesal dumpers In order to
prevent !he same thing f.rom .happening again. Illegal dump
sites along the Flood Road between Pomeroy and Middleport,
as well as 56 other dump sites, were also cleaned up last year by
the county's IIIIer program. Additional dump site clean ups are
~cheduled for later this year.

'

Residents
awaiting
·
R
.
·
.
•
aclne
~~~~Ac~~o~~~!w~d~!!~?a Council' :
stud;es
v; ll'
l
.c ean•up
matters

Sentinel Staff Wrlfer
The fate of the Tuppers Plains
Sewage Project will likely be
decided within the next two or
three weeks.
The 'Meigs C:ounty Comm!ssloners announced Wednesday
they &amp;ave been notified by the
engineers, John Da,vld Jones &amp;
Associates , Columbus, that a
public hearing on the project
should be scheduled as soon as
possll!le.
Tuppers Plains residents Lind·sey Lyons, Lamar Lyons and
Mary Jane Talbott were at
meeting for an update on the
status of the proposed proJect .
The commissioners told them
that representatives from the
Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency, as well as the engineers,
would be at the public hearing to
explain the project as It now
stands . "We just don't know a lot
ol answers," said Commissioner
Ri chard Jones .
An EPA ban on building In
Tuppers Plains has been In effect
since the late 1970s. Tbe ban
originated In 1972 but was not
enforced until about1977 or 1978,
according to Jones.
11 was then thai the county
applied to EPA lor funds to
alleviate the serious sewage
problems within the community.
As a result, EPA awarded a
$281,000 grant to cover 85 percent
of the costs to Improve Individual
sewagesystems within thedeslgnated problem areas, with lndl·
vidual property owners paying
for the remaining 15 percent of
the cosls. Estimated costs to
upgrade each Individual system
were based on the severity of the
problems Involved, · with the
enUre project estimated at
S400,000.
It appeared In late spring of
1985 that the project was nearly
ready to go to construction.
However, concerns were raised
when 11 was learned that users on

DON'T LITTER- And when you see Utter- pick It up and throw
It away. Everyone at the Melp County Office of Utter Control Is
gearing up for Clean Up Ohio Week, April 2ll through May 2,
Including this fellow here, who always doet1 his part to keep the .
county lltter·free. Another part of his job Is to viAit elementary
schools to teach Meigs County's younptel'!l that "litter Is
unBEARable." Anyone Interested In having him visit a school
should contact the Melp' Utter Control office at 992-8380.

Meeting _to address outages
Three area legislators and the
public will meet May 4 In
Lawrence County with representatives of Buckeye Rural Elect ric Cooperative Inc. and the
Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio to find ways of averting
power outage problems that
plagued BREC's coverage area
·
earlier this month.
The meeting will be held at
Chesapeake West Elementary
School, beginning at 6:30 p.m.
Legislators participating In the
meeting are Slate Sen. Jan
Michael Long, D-Circleville;
State Rep. Jolynn Boster, D·
Gallipolis; and State Rep. Mark
Malone, D·South Point.
"The purpose of this meeting Is

not to point the !Inger at anybne,''
Long said. "We simply want to
come to an acceptable solution to
avert this problem In the future.''
Long met with the PUCO
earlier this month after his office
received around 80 to 100 calls
from southern Ohio residents
beset with problems with the
outage caused by the heavy
snowfall of April 3-4 .
Acknowledging the continuous
work of BREC employees during
the outage, Long blamed "lack of
communication and contingency
planning'' as two maJor problems In the outage.
Questions about the meeting
can be directed to Long's Columbus office at 466-8156, according
to Long aide Scott Elisar.·

pay a $5.44 monthly rate to fund
regular Inspections o! the systerns by the health department.
About !50 families are Included
In the designated problem areas.
Some households In those areas
have fewer sewage problems
than others, and In some Ins tances, no problems at all. Hence,
the dissatisfaction over the mandatory monthly rate.
Petitions against the monthly
rate were circulated among the
affected households and for·
warded to EPA .
The project has been In Umbo
since then , until Wednesday's
announcement that the public
meeting was forthcoming.
The proposed project Is report·
edly the first of lis kind In which
grant money will be use(l to
upgrade the present sewage
systems of property owners.
If the government funding Is
rejected by the residents In·
volved, they will then have to
bear full financial responslbllty
lor correcting their own lndlvld·
ual systems.
The ban on building will not be
lifted until all the sewage prob·
terns are rectified.
Phil Roberts, co unty engineer,
reported that he will be sending
village maps, which he has
received from the Ohio Department of Transix&gt;rtatlon, to the
mayors of Racine, Syracuse,
Rutland, Middleport and Pomeroy, for updating. The updating
will be Included on the new
county map now being planned.
A representative from a Cloclnnati bonding company had
been expected at yesterday's
meeting but failed to appear. Tile
sale of municipal bonds to fund
an on-going county road paving
project was to have been
discussed .
On behalf of the Sutton Town·
ship Trustees who could nor be
present for the meeting, the
(Continued on Page 12)

Kindergarten, 1st grade e~~:tollment s~hedule listed

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

.._______.____________... ---------------- ..J

A curious woman

PICK-4
2240
SuperLouo

. A Multimedia Inc. ·Newspaper

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
According to statistlcs from
around the state, Meigs County's
. litter control program at the end
of last year was generating nine
times the activity ·of any other
litter program In Ohio.
So good were last year's litter
'conntrol efforts In the county,
says Steve Powell, program
manager, that the State Office of
.Litter Prevention and Recycling
sent Larry Cooper. district coordinator, to the county to verify
the amount of progress being
made.
And much progress has been
made.
Powell reports that at the end
oflast year, 58 dump sites around
the county had been eliminated,
280 miles of roadsides cleaned,
2,373 30-gallon bags of · trash
picked up and 225 dump truck
' loads of trash deposited at the
county landfill. Welghtwlse, all
that garbage amounted to 1,212
tons.
Of the 58 dump sites eliminated, "38 were actually cleaned
up by litter control personnel.
The other 20 were cleaned up by
the people· who caused the
problems," Powell says. Illegal
·-d.~mp sl!es are always searced
- for evidence of who Is dumping.
Powell says Litter· Enforcement Officer Dan Levingston
prefers not to take a strong arm
approach with offenders, opting
Instead to .politely ask them to
clean up the mess they've made.
However, of last year's 20 offenders, three became beligerenl
with Levingston and were cited
to court. Of the three, one was
fined $500 and 10 days In jail.
"In cases like this, people end
up paying the fine, possibly going
to Iall and still have to clean up
the mess," comments Powell.
In addlt ton to dump sites
identified by Levingston during
regular road patrol, the litter
program relies primarily on
complaints from county residents. Altogether, 69 complaints
were called In to Powell's office
last year. All but 11 of those 69
sites were eliminated last year.
The remaining 11 will be included
In this year's dump site clean
ups.
Bernard Gilkey. litter collec·
tion supervisor, has not yet
started this year's dump site
clean-ups, reports Powell, but
roadside clean-up has been underway since March 1.
And why has Meigs County's
litter program bee n so
successful?
Powell feels It's because of
support from o!!lclals at the
township and village levels, as
well as the county level. In

1 9 "010\GO'A I.
HE GA'T.
SrA( [ ·SA\'1'\G

Picture Tube ror green color und

140

Litter ·Control
•
earns praise
.from state

•-u-11

tuning with 122 cable channels.
• Zenith Chromacolor Con trast

Daily Number .

at. Y

Vol.38. No.247
Copyrighted t 987

AU Feature:

•

Sports. PaC)e 4

Ohio Lottery

•

&lt;:::::7 , •••u"""

·
SOPHimCATED, CONTEMPORARY,
COLOR TV

Leagues wrapup

•

~.....-~~

Veterans Memorial

poE

baseball wins
-Page 3

BUY NOW AND SAVE I

Charlie Lilly
Friday &amp; Saturday
Night
April 24 &amp; 25

Send the FTD® Le t,terbox
Bouquet or Rud V ~se
Senetarics Week starrs April 20.
Ju st ca ll or visit us today.

adopted by the board . Accoi'Ciing
to the policy , student s must meet
all grade rt'quln·mPnls In ot·der

Friday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with Rev. Carl Hi cks
officiating. Burial will be In
Chester .Cemetery . .friends may
call at the funeral home from 7-9
this evening and from 2-4 and 7-9
p.m. Thursday.

junior high st udent s.
this year or go for a new levy with
The calendar for the school a mileage change.
vear. 1987-88. was adopted.
The beard moved into execul'las"es will begin on Aug. 25 with tive sesssion to discuss personnel
the last da y of school in 1988 to be and budget matters. Special
· May 27. M·arch ~ 1 was approved meeting was set for April 29 for
us a ca lamity day . A leave of budget and personnel discussion ,
absence wa s approved for an with the regular meeting to be
clemcnlary teacher. April 6 held May 26 .at 7:30.
through May :n.
At te nding were board
No ac tion was ta ken on a members. Roger Ga ul, .lim
reques t from an adjolnin~ !anti Sm ith, Kathy Manirke. Susie
ow nr·r for a line fence. A bill wa s Heines, .Jim Caldwell. Superinapproved for payment of $481.9o tendent Ric hard Roberts, Eloise
to the Warehou se Tire of Athens. Bosfon, treasurer; Dan Apling,
Board members also discussed Ca thy .Johnson, and Donald Shu e.
finances and whether to asked principles, and Grace Weber,
for renewal of a now existing levy hmd
which will expire at the end of .------------'1

2 ways
. tothank
your secretary a bunch.

wu s

work and since the two teachers
ha ve now resi,gned. Tilli• ·and
Tillis will be given top consldera'tion to be for the positions to be
filled.
Approved by the board w~re an
F'HA trip, April 23-25, to Columbus for 10 student s to attend the
FHA state convention and a trip
by Becky Bauer, a Meigs High
School Office Education student.
to attend the Ohio Qffice Equca tlon Association National Leadership Conference ln Des Moines.
Iowa, May 6-10.
A rsolutlon was passed amend·
lng Insurance premiums for bus
radios. Instead of $4 per radio,
the premiums will be $4 per $100
cost for the radios making a

tContinu&lt;·d from Page 11

,-------------------------j

The policy on uradcmlc C'ligiblllty for par lldp utlon In I'Xt ra c urrl eular

r eg ula r

Tillis and Saundra Ti)lls, who
have been teaching for teachers
who have been on leave, were not
r~newed. However, Superintend·
ent Dan E. Morris pointed out
that this Is no reflection on their

Area deaths

Accident under investigation

_t_Co_ni_in_ued_f_ro_m_Pa_g_e1_
1-

•

r

Meigs Local Superintendent
Dan E. Morris has announced a
schedule !or parents· of Ihe
district w!shln&amp;to register their
children for klnde,raarten and as
new enrollees In the first grade,
'those who did not attend klnderaarten in the dlltrlct.
AI the Pomeroy Elementary
Scbool on Monday, May 4,
ldudet aarten aae students are to
be n!atatered from 9 to 11: 30 a.m.
aad from 12 noon tot p.m. This 11
for atudentJ from the Pomeroy ~

. and Salisbury areas.
On May 5, registration will
take place at the Rutllnd Elementary School for students of
the Harrtsonvllle, Salem Center
and Rutlar_ld areas, Registration
wlll be from 8 to 11:30 a.m. and
from 12 1100n to 2:30 p.m.
On Wednesday. May 6, reets·
tratton will lake place at the
Middleport Elementary School
for students from Bradbury and
Mlddlepori, Houra wt11 be from 8
to 11:30a.m.,aadfrom12 noon to

2:30p.m.
Any child whose fifth birthday
falls on or before Sept. 30, 1987
may be reg!Jtered to attend
kindergarten next fall and any .
child whose sixth birthday falls
on or before Sept 30, this year,
may be reglalered for the first.
Parents are to prov.lde a record
of their chJ.Id' s Immunization.
Tile required Immunization Includes 4 OPT; 3 poUo sabin; a
meas~et, Rubeola; 1 Rubella,

German measles; a mumps, all
a!ler the first bl!illday, and a
recent TB skin test taken wllh!n
one year before entering ~ehool.
Tile child's birth certificate also
Is to be taken to the registration.
Morris urges all parenlll expecting .to have their children
enrolled In the fall as kindergarten students or new first
grade enrolles are urged to
register their children Ill the
•ap!IOinted times and placet!.

't
I

.

Any questions concerning lhe
registration may be directed to
the prlncpal's office of the
respective school Including: Harrisonville Elementary, Greg
McCall, 742-~; Middleport
Elementary, Don Hanning, 9923387; Pomeroy Elementary, _
John Lisle, 992-2710; Rutland
Elementary, Greg McCall, 7422666; Salem Center, Charles
'Holliday, 742.-3113; Salisbury Elementary,'Wendy Halar, 992-3&gt;104.
'

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11

~e

1

,

The majority ol Items on
Monday night 's Racine Village Cou ncil agenda ton·
cerned village clea n-up.
Council issued a reminder to
residents that next Wednesday and Thu rsday (April
29-30), the _village truck will
haul Items free lor residents
that clea n their lots and yards.
The Items must be 'placed at
the curb and council stressed
thai the free service Is for
residents who clean lots and
yards, not basements and
garages.
Council discussed the pur·
chase of trash container~
being offered by th e County
Office of Litter at a cost of $50
each an,d the labor . The litter
office would furnish $70 of
additional materialS per
co ntainer.
Council also discussed tree
trimming needs wit hin tho
village and made plans to find
someone with the equipment
and know -how to properly
trim the village's trees .
Council President Frank .
Cleland reported that he had
received complaints from res·
!den ts In regard to dlrtblkes
being driven on private property. Council .1 ald the offended,
residents would have to sign
court complaints.
Cleland 'al so reported that
the Greenwood Cemetery
Trustees recently purchased
pressure-treated posts and
will be Installing a fence to
prevent people from driving
Into the burial area of the
cemetery .
In other .matters; council
approved a request to block as
section of VIne and Fourth
streets for a May blke-a-thon,
and discussed Insurance for
firemen that will be due In
June and will ask llremen to
select the coverage range they
wish.
Council adjourned until 7
p.m. Monday, May 4.

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�The Daily Sentinel-Page-3

Commentary
Th.e Daily Sentinel

Sam

ll 1 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
PEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA

•

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~m~ ~L-~·~d·~

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.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant' Publl•her/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMB ER of The United Press Int ernationa l, Inland Dally Press
· Associa tion and the Am~rlcan Newspaper Publishers Association .
L ETTERS OF OPTN ION arC' welrorY'I(' They !ttould be less than 300 words
long. All letters ar c subj('{l toed Iling and rTJJSf bf! slgnut with name, address and
t~lephonc number . No W1 Sign00 l etters wiJI be p1:blb;, hcrJ . letters should be In

goocH aH te, a ddrf'Sslng Issues, not

Page-2-.The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, April 23, 1987

..

Being a journalist mea ns never
having to say you're sorry.
It means never acknowledg·
ing, for example. that your
profession brought pressure to
b&lt;'ar on the Reagan administration that resulted in thearm s·for·
hostages fiasco .
It means never a dmitting that
the coverage of the space shut·
tie's fli ght del ays - or, more
precisely, the tone of the cover·
age - may have helped goad
NASA officials Into lhe raterul
decision to launch Challenger in
freezing weather.
For someone like ABC's Sa m
Donaldson , as revealed In hi s

new book " Hold On, Mr. Presl· presidents put their pants qn one
dent! ," being a journalist appar- · leg at a time.
ently means not even thinking
Still , Donaldson 's use of cliche
about such things .
is not as depressing sa hi s
Donaldson's book should be blinkered conception of hi s pro·
read only by those In a penite ntial ression. He descr ibes journalism
mood. !Is prose Is that unlns · as lill ie more than an atlemptlo
pi red. Still, the error! does reveal prod officials into explaining
what sort of person a powerruJ their policies, a ll !he while on
network prerers for Its premier guard for a lie.
White House beat. The answer: a
This is fine so far as it goo&gt;s.
man o f s urpri sing se lf · Journalists should Indeed prod
absor ption and p ro fessinal officials, and Donaldson is bett er
complacency.
at the task than mo st of us. Yet
Donaldson is not merely unre- Donaldson seems to believe that
flecllve. He Is the Intellectual if the public-only appreciated the
equivalent of a belch. In a typical role of the press as he defines it,
insight. he assures ,us tha t dis trust of th e media would

~rsonalltles .

•

•

Washington Window
J

:Secular humanism,.
surging hormones
By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor
: WASHINGTON tUPI1 - Pres ident Reagan, we an' told , thi.nks
- ~ ·val u e- frrt• " t•dur atlon may be to blame for the Ma rin es who
'allegedly lei Huss la n spies Int o the U.S. E mbassy in Moscow in return
for sex with Ru ss ian women. ,
: As Reagan rx tllalned his theory, the Soviet Psplonagc roup may be
)caccable lo the fa ilure of American sc hools in recent yea r s to teach
•the difference between right and wrong.
' ' Fashi onab le as it may be to bash Ihe sc hools for everyth ing that
goes wrong In our soc letv , this Is one case Ihal can't r!'asonablv be
blamed on libera l educ a l ion policies. The probl em h er~ Is much more
likel y to have hecn s urging hormones r a ther than secular humanism.
: Th l' s lluat ion, after all, Is not exact ly new. Som e might dat e it back
·to Samso n's ('ncounter with Oelllah, a nd the president himsel f ought
; to rPmember the bedroom exp loit s of Mat a Harl during World War 1,
when he wa s a boy . The point Is thai the link b&lt;'twcen sex a nd
espionage didn't s tart wllh permissive education and can't reallY b&lt;'
blamed on the libe ra ls.
·.
:: Nor Is there very convi ncin g cvldenee thai whal might be ra iled
::·vaiUP·packPd" ed uca tion will keep strapping young mrn from
Joslng the ir heads when co nfron ted by fh e opportunity for easy sex.
. A case In point from oecupicd ,Japa n just a ft e r World War II : a
· 19-year-old soldi er. th e produ ct of a strict home and old -fashioned
:.schooling, sa l through an Army V('nereal disease training film
-·s howing In th e most cllnleal details the resu lts of sex without
: preca utions. went to town on his first weekend pass and returned with
;.-what developed Int o a rag ing dos e of gonorr he&lt;J.
"Didn ' I you sre th e fi lm '1 " hr was a s ked . "Didn ·I you SE'&lt;' the box of
~ondom s In th e orde rly room when you picked up your pass''"
.. "No." hr replied. " I c losed my eyes when thai picture started and
did n't open 'em 'Ill I go llo town. "
• Thf:l Mosrow casr. was morf' serious 1we arl? told som E' Russians
· probably di ed as a res ull of whal tht' KGR agen ts found in the
:embassy! . but th o point Is si milar - II probably will take more than
s lt•r n warnings to kPep young peop le from niaklng mistakes.
.parllrularly about s!'X.
· That is not to say. howeve r. 111&lt;11 Ihe problem ca n be simply so lved
by keeping lonely, sing!&lt;• Marin(•s out of tomplalion' s wa y.
· r o r rxampiP. th r proposa l to &lt;.Jss lgn only married Marines to
:,r mba ss&gt;· gua rd dut .v serms to be based on Ihe s haky premise that
· marri ed men can' t br lrrl astra y. Don't bet tho plans for the scr rrl
·:wl'apon on it .
; Perilou s &lt;IIHI lmpi'I'IP&lt;'I as lh!' wor ld is. II st•('ms prudent to fi nd
effertivr ways to tig htr n up securi ty al l'mbassics.
. Tlw publici I.\' give n the Moscow rase. which has dPep ly chagrined
;md embarrassed lhr proud Marin e Corps, probabl.v wi ll havr a
hrarlng !'ffrcl on that organization, hut II seems clea r the Sta te
Jkpartmen&lt; has some reformi ng to do as wrll.
Thr Idea of !raving )oungstcrs , Marint•s or not. appa•·rnlly in so le
rhar,ae of ~~ s srnsl ti vP a pJa ef' as a U.S. embassy at any tlmt' serms 10
br a dangt•rous ·pra ct lrr. Thr Sta ir Department does have ils own
s&lt;•curl ly fOJ'C&lt;' and mavbe il ought lobe on dut y too during the lon g
cold Mos rnw nigh" .

.4NOTK~R ~16N Of G()RRr~

&lt;WNNe s&amp;

·
di sappear . 1
If only that were so. In ract.
many people share a more valid
criiique of the press. They resen t
its preening arrogance. l(s ritual
denials of obvious bias, its
refusal to glance back and
ac knowledge the occas ion al Iand
sometimes Inevitable) wreckage
it leaves behind .
How often does a major media
outlet admit more than routine
fac tual errors 1 How often does a
network or newspaper declare
that the emphasis or interpret a·
tion of an entire sto ry was
incorrect ?
Predictably, one result or this
attitude is a blindness to the
media 's own role in policies that
go sour.
Before last fall' s arms-for·
hostages revela tion s, for exam·
pie, the press p('rmitted itself to
b&lt;' used in a campaign led by the
wife of hostage Jeremy Levin to
pressure the Reagan administration into ('Scala ling it s effort s to
free th e captives. Story aftN
story le ft the ' Impress ion of
•
official lnsensitivitv.
Similarly with the space shu tlie. Far from sympathizing with
NASA 's difficulties in kee ping
pace with an ambit ious launch
schedu le. the media applied
subtle pressur~ on the agency to
perform . On the evening of
Challenger's last flight delay , for
exa mple, both ABC and CBS le(l
off broadcasts in a dNislv(' tone.
Observed Petter J ennings :
"Once again a flawless liftoff
proved too much of a challenge
for Cha lle ngcr."
Said Dan Rather : "'l[et
anolhN costly, red·faces·a ll·
around space shulllc launch
delay ."

Pacemaker .or 'time homb? Ander.mn &amp; ]o8eph Spear
WASHINGTON - In 1985,
a ft ('r a thro&gt;e-year Investigation.
a s pec ial Senate committee
Issued a report titl ed "Pacem akers Revisited: A Saga of Benign
Neglect." Our own recent inves- •
liga tion shows thai both the saga
and the neglect co ntinu('. · ·
The most startling discovery
our reporter Lisa Sylvester made
was that there Is no way that
someonedependlng on one of the
sometimes life-sustaining dev J.
ces ca n be sureofbeingnotlfled If
his or her pacemaker has txoen
reca lled by th e manuracturer as
potentially defective. Neil her the
manufacturer. the physician nor
the federal government Is legally
bound to wa r n pacemaker pa·
lien Is that they could be wearing
a dea dly devlr('.
Manufa cturers are ex pected to
notify the doctors a nd hospit a ls
who bought the devices when a
model Is being recalled as
defective - but they 're not
required Ia.
Physicians are expected to
notify their patients - but
th ey're not required to.
And the Food and Drug Admin·
lstratlon. which regulates the
mulllbllllon·dollar Industry, Isn't
even expected to notify· the

people most concerned when a
potentially deadly defect is disco ·
vered . It's not FDA policy.
"The system doesn't work th at
way." a n FDA spokesma n explained. "FDA doesn ' t get
Involved ."
A recall -notification "system"
tha t holds nobody responsible is
obviously foredoomed to failu re .
But if proof were needed, It was
dramatically provided a , lew
month s ago by Charles Stein of
Orlando, Fla .. who runs a non·
profit watchdog group called
P acemaker Recall Datil Bank.
Stein's efforts were written up
las t November In the American
Association of Retired Persons'
magazine. The results of this
publicity were astonishing- and
alarming .
Stein's ornre was Inundated
with mall rrom pacemaker pa·
tients. Some of their pacemakers
had been recalled by the manu facturer as lon g as rour years
ago. None of the patients had
been notUied that th eir pacemak ·
ers were even suspected of being
defective.
Two · thous and of those who
wrote Stein were wearing a
pacemaker or lead (t he wire
connecting the device to the

hea r II Ihat had been th e subj ('C!
of a Class One Recall . The FDA's
definition of such a recall is "a
situa tion In which there is a
r('asonab le probability that the
use of, or exposure to. a viol at iv('
product will cause serious, ad ·
v('rse health conseq uences o•·
do&gt;ath ."
Stein received about 5,000
additional lett ers from patients
implanted wilh pa cema ker leads
th at had been ci ted at a 1984
congress ional heari ng for having
been Investigated as pot entially
dangNOUS.
David Duarte of FDA's Center
for Devices and Radiologi ca l
H('alth said II is up to the
manufacturer to notify physi·
cla ns and hospitals of a recall.
but there is no law requ iring the
physician to pass Ihe word a long
to th e patient. Asked about th is,
Duarte said. "Well . it's hi s
pat lent."
"It just wouldn't be logica l and
humane to contact th e patients,"
said Jim Merritt or the FDA 's
r('call branch . There is " no real
requirement " th at doctors let
their patients know , he said. The
FDA, he added, "tries to hold the
firms responsible for 100 per·
cen t" notification of doctors and

. hos pitals when th e a gency learns
or a Class One Recall of
pacemakers.
But th e FDA is evidently
wi lling to settle for less. ln 1985 ,
when Cordis Corp. or .Miami
ordered 28,831 pacE'makers re·
called, the company sent out
5, 197 notices lo doctors and got
bark a 79 percent response. "The
FDA was satisfi ed," a Cordis
spokes ma n said, "a nd agreed we
had go ne out of our way to notiry
Ihe physicians."
MONEY &amp; THE MOB: As if
federal ba nking officials don't
have eno ugh on their pl ates, a
Justice Department source told
us thai · organized crlm(' Is
making a determined effort to
lake over ba nks and savings-and·
loan associations. This ha s al·
ready led to an ex plos ion in
financial in stitution fraud cases
- 7;000 prosecutions In 1984.
involving loses of $328 million.
Losses due to fraud are expected
to reach $3 billion in 1987, and
abo ut eight out ofiOcases Involve
in siders. The FBI has neve r seen
so many ban ks and thrifts go
under because of ties to mobs·
lcrs . Mor(' people are being
ass igned to these cases by the
burea u.

Winking, at impropriety ____R_ob_er_tW_a_llc.:.._&gt;n;

•

:T oday in history
lly l lnlh•d Pres• lnh•rnational
Today Is Thurs&lt;la.v . ilprll 2 ~ . the 1nth da y of 1987 with 2o21o foll ow..
The moon Is mm·ing tow;n·d Its nrw phase.
The morning st;~rs m·r Mercury. Venus, Jupiter ;u1d Sarurn.
Thr evPnlng stu r is Mars .
ThoSt' born on this nut~ art• under the sign of Tau rus. The)' lnrlude
English pla ywright Wi lliam ShakCSPf"~l 'l'. probably bornonthisdate,
: in loti4: .lames Bue hanun. t:&gt;t h president or the United St ut~s . In li91 :
· Hus s lan romposC'r Sr rgri Prokofiev In 1891: novelist Vladimir
Nu bokov In 1R99 1age 8R 1: ur &lt;ress:dlplomat Sh lrley Temp II:' Blark In
:1928 1agr 191: s lnJ!Cr Ro)' Or biso n In 19:l6 1age 511: actors Lee Majors
) n 1940 1age~)) and Herve Vlllechaize In 1943 (age 441 : and actrrsses
Sandra [)(or in 1942 (age 4:&gt;1 and Valet'le Bertlnelll'ln J900 (age 27) .
• On this dal e In history :
:. In 1898, the U.S. government a sked ror 125,000 volunteers .to fight
agai nst Spain In Cuba .
.
' In 1941. at an America Flt·st rally In New York City, aviator Charles
. Llndtxorgh said "It Is obvious thai E ngland Is losing the war."
·:undb&lt;'rgh was impressed with Hitler's Germany and opposed U.S. ·
} ntry Into World War II.
:· In 1965. more than 200 U.S. planes struck ~or th Vietnam In one o!
•'th(' heaviest raids of the VINnam War.
: In 1985, former Sen. Sam Ervin died at age 88. The North Carolina
: Democrat directed the Senate Watergate investigation that led to
President Rfrhard Nixon's resignation.

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_,.,.

By Scott Wolfe
rightfleld line, Jeremy Barb&lt;'r hit
field for hts third RBI of the night,
EAST MEIGS - The high· a loop single, anB sophomore
the score now 5·1.
flying Eastern Eagles exploded Mike Martin ripper a two-run
Southern threat ened In full
for four runs In the second Inning. single up the middle ror a 2-0EHS
force In the fourth Inning as
then came through with several lead.
Shawn Cunningham led orr with a
single, Kenny Turley had a:
clutch defensive perrormances
Mar k Griffin laid down a
t
t
·'
1
h
111
b
.j If c ld
broken
bat bases
single.after
John
Riffle,
enrou e o secur ng a ard·fought perfect sacr ce unt , e
a ·
loaded the
reaching
5·3 SVAC. triumph over the weU .hit a single, Ed Col11ns on an error. In · that stretcli
Southern Tor nadoes here Wed· delivered a n RBI si ngle, and Jerr
nesday at Eastern.
Johnson ended things with an
Collins picked one runner art
Eastern Is now 9-3 overall and RBI double . the score now 4·0.
base ,
5-2 inside the SVAC, while South·
Southern scored once in tlie top
Todd Lisle ripped an RBI
er n Is 6·3 and •lso 5·2 In the SVAC . of the third as Todd Lisle s ingled
si ngle. Shawn Arnott reached on
as both losses came to Eastern. · and went to second on an error in an error 10 again load the bases,
and Barry McCoy forced home &lt;i
. Although Eastern's offense the outfie ld . Barry McCoy co l·
was exp losive in the ea rly In· lee ted his seco n&lt;l single, and Lis le
run with a walk, the score nO)IC
5
nlngs, its defense pulled orr came home on a fielder's chOice
·3· '
several game-saving plays In by Chris Stout.
Southern threatened l:!oth In the
Eastern gained an Insurance
fifth and s ixth Innin g, however,
back of hur ler Ed Collins. The
the ir hopes were eliminated wllh
Jeff Johnson-Bryan Durst-Mike run In the third by putting the
Martin 4·6·3 double play comb!· lirst two men In scoring position . a quick turn or the double play by
1
Eastern.
nat on twice (and nearly a third Horner singled, Jere.my Barber
In the seventh Barry McCoy
lime) had Southern's number doubled, a nd Mike Martin
with two or more men on base.
s lammed a sacrifice fly to
Continued on page 4
Also a game-saving catch. by ,...:;.::::;:::.:.:::..:..::=:.;;.;==...:.;:..;.;:;::...:.___....;.._;___:._.;.____

Donal~son 's h~bris ____v._inc_en_t_Ca_rr_ou

'/

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•
Eagles stop SHS In
SVAC tilt

WA'SHINGTON (NEAl-Once
again. a co ngressional et hics
committee has chosen Ia exc use
the questionable conduct of a
wayward politician rather than
enforce reasonable standards of
Integrity on Capi tol Hill.
After a 14-month lnvestlgalion ,
the House Comm ittee on Stand ·
ards of Official Conduct r('cently
rejected allegations that Rep.
Fernand St Germain, D·R.I..
acted wrongly In using his public
olflce to aid business executives
who In turn hel ped him amass
million s of dollars .
. Sl G~rmaln thus joins a long
line of legislators who Initially
faced serious charges~~ abusing
their public trust but · subse·
quently were exonerated by the
House panel or the Senate Select
Committee on Ethics.
The solo ns' reluctance to ag·
gresslvely Inves tigate the Illegal
or unethical activities of their
colleagues contrasts with their
seemingly Insatiable appetite for
prob&lt;'s of everybody from corpo·
rate executives and labor leaders
to federal judges and ril emb&lt;'rs of
the White House starr.
The ethics committees, established In the 1960s. have become
notorious for b&lt;'lng loath to
pursue charges of misconduct,
for the secrecy with which they
conduct their Investigations, and
for their unwillingness to Insist
upon tough sanctions even tn
cases of blatant violations of laws
or ethics codes.
They have established a patt·
ern of postponing their probes In
cases where the Justice Depart·
ment is conducting a similar
Investigation, ostensibly bec~use
the department Is often unwilling
to share evidence or witnesses.

But the delay also a llows the
committees to aba ndon their
Investigations If the Justice De·
partment decides not to seek
formal criminal charges - a
practice that conveniently blurs
the lmportani distinction be·
tween criminal misconduct and
unethical behavior.
Similarly, the commltte('s
hav(' come to specialize In
Issuing advisory opinions re·
quested by legislators to jusrlfy
the dubious actions they are
considering - and to protect
them against future suggestions
of unethical conduct.
The ethics committees a lmost
never Initiate an fnvesrlgation
unless a legislator has been
accused of wrongdoing by a n
outside source, usually a newsgat hering organization . (In St
Germain's case virt ually all or
the Incriminating mat eria l was
gathered. lnvestiga ted and dis·
closed by the Wall Street Journal
b&lt;'fore the co mmitt ee became
Involved. i
Even when the news media
publicizes possible wrongdoing,
the ethics committees ofren
engage ln. self-serving action or
opt for a whitewash .
For Instance, the committees
have done little to restrain the
Increasingly popular practice of
special Interest. groups paytng
legislators large "honoraria" for
taking escorted tours of factori es
or other facilities operated by
thos~ with an Interest In leglsla·
lion In Congress.
Similarly, the committees see
no evil wh'en special ln!erest
groups pay all of the expenses to
bring lawmakers - and often
their tamllles - to expensive
resorts for extended stays. In

'

••

return . the legislators make tr ips , most of them from Wa·
conventio n speeches - for which shington to Florida, on private
they arc paid.
planes .
Finally, th e eth ics committees
House rules require members
have allo"',ed pollt icians who ., to disclosE' the receipt of gifts
acce pt rides in corporate aircraft
valued al $I DOor more from those
lo consider the cost of their flight
with a n int erest in pending
equivalent to the price of a coach lrglslalio n. The ethics co mmit ·
se at on a co mmercial plan(' tee, however. accepted St Gerwhic h is thoroughly unrealistic.
main' s ex pla nation thai the
One of the charges against St val ue of each Irip was only $99Germain was lhal he failed to the cost or the chea pes t ai rline .
publicly report at leas t seven coach sea 1.

BLACKHAWKS BASKETBALL TEAM , These students made up the Letart Falls
Blackhawlis basketball team for the past year.
They are, front : Ito r, Corey Hill, Jason Barnett,
Klrt Turley, Billy Craig, .Jason Shuler; second, I to

MHS nips Wellston 2-1
.
on Donnie Becker's home run
ROCK SPRINGS - For the
.second consecutive game a Don·
nie Becker homerun provided the
winning margin, and Jeff Nelson
gave up only 2 hils '\S the Meigs

~~~~D~ur:lng Spring Sale
In stock tor Immediate delltieryl

stole second and advanced to
third on a wild pit ch. Chris
Hanning picked up the RBI on a
sacrifice By. Wellston tied things
up In the third when Wlttekainp
1•
walked, s tole second and scored
on an error by the MEigs left
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Three
fielder . It was that way until linebackers head a group of six
Becker blasted a homerun down free agents signed Wednesday by
the left fie ld line to complete the the Cleveland Browns.
scoring In the sixth Inning.
Linebackers Carlos Bradley.
Nelson. was the winner giv ing Je ff Pegues and Miles Turpin
up just two hit s striking out 10 have been added to the Browns'
and walking only tw,o. Besides training ramp roster alond with
CHOICE OF TWO DECORATOR
Becker's hom e run, he also offensive· tackle Bob Grub&lt;'r,
singled. Charlie Barrett went 2 wide receiver Perry Kemp and ·
for 3 with 2 singles while Nelson · defen sive lineman Mark Smythe.
Prices Start As Low As
900
and Haning each singled .
Bradley, who turns 27 Monday ,
Williams was the llslng has the most NFL exper ience of
pitcher, giving up 6 hits, walking the s lgnees. He played 51 games
one, and s triking out four.
over five years with San Diego
The Marauders are now 6 and 3 b&lt;'fore being waived during train·
overall and remain on top o! Ihe lng ramp last year.
TVC with a 5 and I record .
Pegues. 25. a producr o! East
Llnescore:
Caro lina, was Wa shington's
Meigs
010 001 0-2 firth -round draft pick In 1984 but
Wellston
001 00Q 0-0 spent his rookie season on
Nelson (WP) and Barrett.
Injured reserve with a sore
_ _:W::.:,:IU:::Ia:m:::.s~:.:__ _ _ _ _ __:s:::h:::.ou::l::d:::er~.---------...L.:==========;;;;:===;;..;....,_~-----:
.-

the bases still full Mike Martin
By Scott Wolfe
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern ripped a game-win-ning double
Eagle reserves boosted their for the 5·4 win.
Sharp had two singles and Tom
record to 4·0 overall Tuesday
evening with two hard-fought Stobart a single for Southern.
SOFTBALL
wins over the Southern Jayvees ,
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
4·1 and 5-4.
In the first game Eastern · hustling Eastern Eagletles con·
picked up the win behind a two tlnued In their winning ways with
hitter by sophomore Michael a 12·2 SVAC softball trlump over
Marlin . He fanned four and ·t he Southern Tornadoettes .
walked two ..
Eastern Is now 10·2 and 6·1 In
Mike illll pitched well for the league. Southern drops to 4·3
Southern but suffered the loss, and 3-lln the league.
Eastern had but two hits ,
walking four and striking out 6.
however,
they again managed to
SHS went ahead 1·0 In the first
as Mike Sharp reached on an play super defense and get runs
error, and Mike Hill hit a single. across the plate.
Lisa Driggs was the winning
Eastern came back to take a
2:1 lead as Scott Filch wa lked, pitcher as she gave up on ly two
scott was hit by· a -pitch, and an hil s, walking just' one and strik·
o:&gt;rror on Howle Lawrence's hard lng out six. Rachel Relb&lt;'r
,
hit ball.
stifrerd· the loss with reller from
In the third EHS scored two Lee Ann Clark. They each
more runs as McDonald was walked eight and ranned rour and
agatn hit by a pitch, Kenny three respectively .
Caldwell singled and Martin
EHS went ahead 1·0 in the first,
rammed a two run double, fort he but SHS quickly tted In the second
4·1 score and ,the w'Jn.
as Bridgett Bing double and
· Lawrence, Kerek Yonker, and scored on a steal and a ground out
Shawn Bush all drew walks.
by Carol Fisher, J.l.
. For Southern Brandon King
EHS came back for a 3-1 lead
and John Wickline each walked on an Arlen Ritchie walk , a Mel
with Sharp and Hill picking up Mankin single, and ·hard-hit
the hits .
misplayed fly ball to left Held by
Southern took a 2-0 lead In the Lee Ann Robinson.
second game orr southpaw Kenny
Eastern broke open a close
Caldwell as Sharp singled, Shane game In the foUrth on six walks
Simpson walked, Gary eeese hit 'and two Southern errors.
a sacrtrice !ly, and an error.
Arlene Ritchie wa lked four
times and Robln'son three times
EHS rought back with one run
for EHS, whil e Mank in and
as McDonald reached on a bunt
single, but was out on an
Ru cker each singled.
Bing and Rachel Reiber had
overthrow. Kenn y Caldwell
the lone Southern hil s.
reached on a bunt then sailed to
third on a series of SHS errors,
Eastern plays at Federal Hock·
lng on Thursday.
·
scoring on a misplayed ball hit by
Line score:
Howle Lawrence, th e score 2·1.
Southern scored twice more In Southern
oil' boo 0- 2 2
the third as Simpson walked, Eastern
120 505 0-12 2 3
Reese singled, and Jcrod Moore
Batteries: Driggs (WP) and
doubled for 2 RBI, the score 4·1. Mankin; Reiber (LP), Clark
EHS fought back with one In (4th) and Fisher.
the fourth as Lawrence singled.
'- and Mike Martin doubled.
'--Itt-t he fl!lh , Fitch, McDonald.
. and Caldwell all walked to loaq .--------------l
the bases. Lawre nce forced
home a r un with a walk ,and with

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•

Marauders bear Wellston ~-1 In
TVC action Tuesday night.
The Marauders dented the
plate first when Nelson singled.

Eastern resenres up mark
to 4-0 with double victory

Publlshrd l'v('ry af!£&gt;rnoon . Monday
lhr ou~h FridaY. 111 Cour1 Sl.. Po·

Berry's World

r, Mike Montgomery, Shannon Statts, Justin Hill,
Mike Craig, Coach Scott Wickline; back. 1 to r,
Kyle Wickline, Darrell Sayer, Len Singleton,
Samuel Shatn, Robert · Kimes and Danny
Terzopplous.

talented centerflelder Sieve
Horner was another big key. With
one runner In scoring position.
Shawn Cunningham drove a 2-2
pllch · Jn th(' gap to right center
fi eld. With Horner and right ·
fielder Jeremy Barber on a
co llision course Horner cata·
pulled over Barber ro secure the
win , making the catch just In
rront of the fence at Ihe 345 foo t
mark.
Eastern rallied off Southern
pitching ace David Amburgey In
the second Inning. -Steve Horner
led off with a double down the

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Thuriday. April23,1987

.

'

,

111 O~~tkhUJd , •IlCht

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w ith ~ .

SAN DIEGO tUPI ) - The San
Diego Padres, with the help of
Kev tn Mit chell' s ba t to dr ive In a
career high fou r runs wilh a
double and a homer , marc hed to
their second straight vic tory a nd
"bea t the Cincinnati Reds 6-3.
San Diego starter Ed Wh itson,
2·2, allowed. five hils In six
Innings and earned the W~&gt;dn es·
day night victory des pjte allow·
lng home runs to Sal Butera and
.Kal Daniels. Whitson has given
up 10 home runs in 211 -31nnlngs.
Craig Leffert s pitched three
hitless Innings to ea rn his fi rst
save.
·
San Diego manager Larry
Bowa said Whitson threw the ball
well, " but every tim e he makes a
mistake It seems they hit it out of ·
the yard. ll 's feas t or famine il
looks like."
"I was stru ggling to find m y .
stuff," Whitson sa id . " I was ju st
wild enough lo keep !hem honest.
If I ca n win one I 'II la ke It any
way I can get it ." .
Mit chell's two·run double in
the fourth off Blli Landrum, 1·1,
ca pped a th ree· run ra lly, giving
San Diego a4·21ead. Tony Gwynn
had lied the score wi th a
run--scoring t rlple.
·
"When runners have been on r
haven' t been coming th rough for
the team, so It was a really gOOd
feeling,'' Mit chell sa id. " I' ve
been having troubl e with brea k·
ing balls, but today I hit two or
them, so I'm very proud of

Eagles...

'
myself. " .
had gotten the guys out 0 and ton pitched 7 2· 3 Innings,
Ci nclnnatl manager Pete Rose two."
allowing four hits and two walks
lamented Landrum's breaking
"That's 18 extra pitches. while striking out five to Improve
ball pitch to - Mitchell In the That's kind of making It tough on to2·1. Phlllles starter Joe Cowley
four th.
yourself,-" Rose said.
fell to 0·3,
"He's got Mitchell up there
Bowa said he was pleased with
· Mets 8, Pirates 7
with two strikes off t-he fastball, his team's effort . "We got a
At Pittsburgh, Tfm Teufel
then says '!)ere it is , here's the couple · of breaks . tonight and . drove In three runs with a double
breaking ball, hit it,' and he hits some timely hits that we hadn't and a single to pace· the Met s.
il ." Rose said.
been getting."
Ron Dartin'g, 2·0, gave up seven
"'Sometimes you get a young
Commenting on the Padres 4· hits over 6 2·3 innings for the
pitcher wra pped up in a game 12 record, Bowa said "we dug victory. Jesse Orosco, the fourth
and he forgets about the count ,'' ourselves. a pretty deep hole. Mets pitcher, recorded two ou ts
he said .
· Now we're gl)lng to start shovel· for his fifth save. Bot) Patterson,
Aft er Daniels clos~ the mar· ing ou_t."
1·2, took the loss.
gin to 4·3 with a solo home run In
In other action, Chicago edged
· Astros 8, Braves 0
t he fi fth, Mllchell lncr~&gt;ased San St. Louis, 5· 4; Montreal belled
At Houston, Jim Deshaies a·nd
Diego's lead to 6, 3 with a two-run Phlladelpllla 7·3, New York two relievers combined on a
homer to left center in the sixth edged Pittsburgh 8-7, Houston seven·hltter and Bill Doran and
off Frank Williams . John Kruk blanked Alla.nta 6-0, Cincinnati Glenn Davis each cracked solo
had preceded Mitchell's homer 6-3 and . Los Angeles topped San home runs to lead the Astros.
with a lead·off walk.
Francisco 5·3. ·
Deshaies, 1·0, allowed lour hits,
The Pa.d res went ahead 1·0 In
In the American League, . It walked three and equaled a
the first. Joey Cora walked, stole was : Seattle 4, Minnesota 3; career-high with 11 st~lkeouts In
second and went to third on Oakland 7,' California 6; New seven Innings. ))avid Palmer fell
catcher Butera' s throwing error. York 4, Detroit 1; Boston 1. to 0.3.
.
Cora sco red on a single by James Kansas City 0; Toronto 6, Cleve·
Dodgers 5, Giants 3
Steels. Cincinnati too~ its only land 3; Baltimore 3, Texas 2, 10
At San Frimctsco, Alex Trelead in the second on Butera's innings; and Milwaukee al Chi· vlno smacked a plnch·hit, twotwo-run homer.
cago was ·postponed be.cause of run double In a ninth . inning,
Sa n Diego, which has won two rain.
three·run outburst that rallied
straight lor the fir st time thi s
Expos 7, Phlllles 3
the Dodgers. Fernando Va!enzu·
season, tied Its season· high for
At Montreal, Mitch Webster eta, 3·0, struck out 12 over eight
runs. Cincinna ti has lost two tripled with the bases loaded and Innings for the victory. Tom
straight for the fi rst time since Tim Wallach hit a soto home run Nledenfuer pitched the ninth for
las t Sept. 19.
In a six·run sixth Inning to lift the his first save. Mike Krukow, ()o3,
Rose said Landrum made it Expos. Expos starter Neal Hea· was the loser .
tough on hlmsself. "In three
innings he threw ~.~ pitches. He
had. 28 pitches in the (third I
inning. He could have had 10 If he

continued from page :l

concluded a perfect night with a
single I two singles, a double, and
a walk) then went to second on a
passed ball . A 4·3 ground ·out, a
pop up, and Horner and Barber's
tandem effort in the outfield
saved the ga me.
In adpltion to McCoy's super
offensive night. Todd Lisle had
two singles, Cunningham a sin·
gle, John Riffle a single, Tu r ley a
single, a nd Mike Wolford , a
single.
Sieve Hor ner wa s perfect a t
3·for·3 with lwo doubles; Martin
had a single and three RBI,
Jeremy Barber had a double and
single; J eff J ohnso n a double,
and singles by Coll ins and
Caldwell .
Collins, now 4·1, was thl' winner
with one walk and two strikeouts,
while Amburgey suffered the loss
with one walk and 8 strikeouts.
Eastern ca tchl'r K¥1e Davis
was credited with catching an
outstanding game. . .
"Once we took the lead our
defense became a little too loose,

but It came through with the big .
play when we needed it. These
kids are all competitors; when
they get their backs against the
wall they perform .... they have a
grea t ability to bounce back and
I' m ver y proud of them," said
Easte rn Coa ch Scott Wolf~&gt; .
".South ern has a good ball club,
especially with David (Ambu r·
gey) on the mound. He Is a class
pitcher."
" I'd also like to thank Coach
Charlie Collins, becau se he' s a
big pari of our success alon g with
th e t re mend ous communi ty
suppor t."
Eastern travels to Federal
Hocking tonight lor a non -league
tilt. while Southern Is Idle until a
Satu rd ay doubleheader with
Meigs.
Llnescore:
Southern
001 200 0-3 9 3
Eastern
041 000 x-~ 9 3
Batteries: Ed Collins (WP) and
Davis.
· Dave Amburgey (·LP) and
RUDe.

.

..., SUNGLASSES

~ · 1/2

PRICE

GOOD THRU MONDiY

COMPLETE STOCK
DURST '!'liKES STRIKE - Eastern '• Bryan Durst takes
strike In gamt• ugnlnst Southern Wednesday evening.

17 attend ladies
.go If !!4'~!1ion
· Sevenlr en ladles altended lhe
Tuesday, Apr11 2l leag ue. A short
'business mee ting was held. Aft er
_pluy. winners for t he day were:
lllw gross, Sue Burnett : low net.
r enny Compt on: low putt s. Ada
llleusr: Chlp·ln ·Hole. Sue Bur·
.r\ett. Sara Owe ns and Penny
:compton.
~ Play stHi s al 9 ''- m. every
!f'ucsday m or n l n~ . Ev~&gt;ryo ne Is
.welcome.

992·5776

Kenneth McCullougl\. tlf .Ph.

$ 1 PO DOIEN PACK

Ooen Nights till 9

S750porut

Po....,oy. Oh.

It's

DOLLAR GENERAL STORE

ClOSED EASTER SUNDAY

. POMEROY

S2.00 OFF
CLOTHING &amp; SHOES

vlf'W lhl' ra~tn g )'o'ilh an addltionlil tOO fans
in tht- pits . Ewi;vone R9t to see somp
f;;~ nt ast lc racing acti on tn lhe 1at(' m od ~
f('atu rt&gt; as a thrPE" wav battlE' WE"nt on all
nll'! hl lon~ wlih. Sli&gt;vf' ShaYl•t , Mlkt&gt;
Balzan o, and MikE' Smit h ba tt l in~ fOr ihf'2:5
lap ev(' nt In th(' Late ModPl division, Thl'
season sta rted rea lly .well for St(IVP Stiavf'r '
as hPquallfi t?d at a· quick tJm(l of 14:23on
nn avera~e of 100 mllr-s JX"f hour on t hf' ~
m jl e . ~\ay tr ack.

,

'In IhE' Hobby Stocl(s , Steve Burns ide of
Mineral Wells. WV. had his hands lu ll as a
thrPP-way bat tiP to I ~C' chrckPrrd flng was
. foug ht whh Bill Chlld&lt;'rS and Larry
H o lm ~ wit h Burnside C'Om ln~~t out on top In
th e 20 la p Hobby St ock fPat ur(l;.
In the StreE- t Stoc k d ivision. Keith Riddle
of Penns boro. WV , won his fl r s l sPa son
s hO\I.' at SkyllnP SpE&gt;edway .
--l'lm ~~ri&lt;I I S art&gt; at 7 p.m. an d racin$! at 8
staitlnj.'! on tlm (l this week
""'"'"'''"" Ia do so In the fu lurE'. For
morP raci li.~
I . at Skyll nc Sp('Mway.
cont act Da~~ Will !('. promot('r. ar (614)

~\
CHEERLEADING HONOREES- These beautiful young ladles
were recognized with special awards at the EHS winter sports •
banquet. Pictured, l·r, are Delanl Baker, Devotion award; Missy
Caldwell, Spirit award; _and Larissa Long, Ability award. Baker
and Calaway were also presented Senior awards.

Trask continues to have hot hand
AKRON , Ohio, IUPI\ - Art
Tras k, Fres no, Caiit. , continued
lo have Ihe hoi hand and the lead
after two rounds of the $250,000
F ires ton e Tour namen t of
Champions.
Trask, a fo ur· ti me llllist on the
:Profess ional Bowlers Assocla·
·lion tour , averaged 232 for his
. f irst 16 gam es with a pinfali of
~ . 726. Th e field of 52 bowlers rolls
~nother eight qualifying games
:toda y with the top 24 survivors
:returning for match play.
; Jim Murtishaw , Vista , Calif. ,
;competing in his firs t Tor C, is 94
:pins behind Tras k with a .~. 6.12
' pinfall. Murtishaw won his only
itille in this year's Bowl ers
:Journ al Florida Open.
; Hugh Miller. Mercer I stand,

Was h., Is the high est lefthander
in the field claiming third spot
with 3, 611. MOler is a four·tlme
tltlist.
Another left y, Mike Aulby.
Indianapolis, moved up one spot
aft er the first round to fourth.
The 13·time tour winner amassed
Ra 0dy Pedersen .
3,598
for, a 20-pin
cushion
over,
Santa Ma
ria, Calif.
Pedersen,
Ihe only two· time winner so far
lhls year , Is In fifth with 3,578.
One of Pedersen's win s cam e in
Toledo.
'
Don Gcnalo of Perrys burg ,
Ohio - the only Ohioan In the
field - fell to 19th after the
second round. He had been
second after the fir st round ,
thanks to a 300 game.

662-4111 .
Race- resu lts are as follow s:
Late Model Dlvlslon : Fast lime: St eve
Shner 14 :2$, 100 mph .
La, te Models Coors Dash for thf' Cash:

Plan tournamenl
A men's class c and

D ASA
softball tournament will be
staged on May 2 and 3 in
Middleport under the sponsor·
ship· 01 th e Bradbury PTO.
Deadline for registering is April
28. Entry f ee 15 $65 and two balls.
There will be trophies for first,
second and thi rd. For more
Information call 992.6890 or 992·

No. 28 Har old R£&gt;dman; 30 Su•vc

Shav~r:

A55 Bnb Ada ms,' Jr, : E l Mik(' Baluna·.

U Heat: Sl Mlkr Sml1h: 45Co tton Sayrt';
5 Sonn~ Stutll,'r: Rl Rod Evans.
25 L ap Fra tul'(';.. 30 Steve Sh~v('f: El
M lkr Bal zano; ~ 1 M Uw Sm it h; 88 Da ve
Robinson; A55 Bob Adams. J r.: Rl Rod
Evans; 29 Mark FrPnch: 17 B!il Barbf?.r: S7
Mark M('yer: 45 Coiton Sayrl": 0 Mark
Dickson; 28 Harold Re&gt;dman: 5 Sonnv
StuTler: llJ Roy Johnson .
·
Hobby Stock Division: Fa.st tlm t: 31 M

Su lliva n.
.
10 La p Ff'a tult' : 599 Kl'lt h Rldjjlr: 17

Clair S1,1Jl l van: 24 Bob Magrud er: 17
Willard a arbE&gt;r .

r;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

COACH'S SHORTS

Ste\·e Burnside 'IS: 82, 8() mph.

Dash: 31M S!c&gt;VE' Burnside; )] 8111
Chi lders: l X Larry Holmes: 44 Ron
Marks.
1 HE"at: 77 Earl Nichols: 54 Davf:' Mlller:
29 Jack Quf'C'n; 53 Buck Litmb ..
20 l ap Featurr: 31M Stevf' Burnsld£': 11
Bill Childers: I X Lar rv HolmPS; 33 R. 0
Atkinson: 53 Buck Lani : 54 Davr Mll!er: 2
Eddie Dt'Pm: 29 Mark French: 46 Grell
Carpent&lt;'l': 32 B!ll Lucas; n Earl Nichols:
62 Jim Lanham ; 34 Gary Ha z(' : 06 Gary
Buck; 86 Ro n Cll•vlngPr: ·14 Ron Marks: 55
Jim Diddle .
Street Sl ock Dlvlsion:, F ast 11me: S99

Kellh Riddle,

1~: 86.

Dash : 599 K(&gt;ilh Riddlf'. 24 Bob Ma·

JZrucl('r: 17 Willard Barlx'r; l7 ClaJr

Softball tourney to
be held on May
A men's ASA softball tournament, sponsored by Bradbury
Middle School PTO, will be held
May 2 and 3 at Mldd)eport.
Entry fee is $65 and two balls .
The proceeds from thi s tourna ment will go toward buying
romputerequlpmenl and a score·
board for Bradbury's gy m.
Ent ry d ~a dllne Is Apr11 28. For
more Information , call 992·6890

9 COLORS
SILVER, MAROON, NAVY, BLACK, GOLD, PURPLE,
SCARLO, BIO.WN, COLUMBIA BLUE

.*BA.TTING GLOVES
by SARANAC

992·562 7

r~2~67~3~.~~~~~~~~~-~o~r~99~2~·2~6~7~3.--~----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i

..

3 DAY SALE
,

1986 FORD
MUSTANG LX

1986 FORD
Lm
~.;,k ~ i 0920. 4 dOO&lt;~ air rond., auto. trans.
PS. Pa, iJOW6' winmws, tilt wheel. cruise

'

rontrol, AM!fMlad~. radlalttes,bucket seats

VILLAGE PHARMACY
' MIDDLEPORT

S.ffPIIu

$9295 •

S8250.

Wake
SPRING
WOMEN'S

JUNIOR DENIM

SPRING COATS
&amp; CAPES

JACKETS

tUJoi¥Jisoups.

.

-

'cu."· I
,,_

• Cnip, mllfcll PI

molrturel
• Prolects rootl

-''.J

--FERTILIZERS
--

. Retains

VAlUES FROM S29,9S-S46.99

NOW

.----...
- - . TI Sl'
....'Bv....'J I
I (M' ..... I . ··~
I Allra.b I StuLJ)iai1119 99!.... ,
I $.A49 12J7' I =:.:a ·~1. I,

.

~-----·
M I 1I

iisc:CJunb;,
l i).IIOI Ind.C....
.... llrlll,.,.....

O.IU1111111"'
I 11111
"

'

===-=-.. . I

. ·"

I " ...........
.......

• ...
.. ) b 51

- POIIIQ9!At11L
•
PUI

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

...P.••--

$1120

$488

SALE$4200.

I'll

••

KNIT
SKIRTS

JUNIOR MID-CAlF

•

COTTON
SHIRTS

•

NOW

9°

JACKETS
IEGULAR S18.99

COUGAR
, AM /FMradii ~ereo tape, ooat·tioes.,
walls. bucket seats 1!1! window delo~

8

WOMEN'S
1oo't. conoN

1984 MERCURY
H76521. 2 doors ha&lt;d lop, 6 cyl.. air
aut~ trans.. PS. 1'8, power wlllows
seat flOWe' door kx:los, tift wheel. cruise

SIZES 3-13
REG'R fl3.99

25
tow$14
MOw$1 .4 40

Ptlu
•

•
•

•
'•
•

$7450.

1984 FOlD
.ONCO II

TEMPO

•

# 10890. 4 doors ~ont wheel drive, 4
81r cor&lt;!, auto. fran •. I'S. PB, AMifM
, radial tires. bucket ~ats. rear window
delo~

$8475.
1984 FORD
F-250 PICK-UP

I,OOOIO.fT.

*

$8225.
1981 CHEVROLET

CHEYET1E
Stoel: ! 75651. 4 doors hard top, ,4 ¥!heel
OOie air cond , outo. trans.. PS. Pit. lit wf1eel.
IMtfM radio, !18Sl fJI)e, r!diet ti'es, wllle
watts, budciJ! seaf1 re¥ ....., deb&amp;

· s3oo.

S(On'S or TRUE TEMPER

OFF
ENTIRE STOCK OF
LAWN

DROP ar ROTARY TYP£

$) 174 TO $3749
OIIIIEG. 124.99.549.99

ON PURCHASE OF S10.00 01 MOtE
EXPIRES 4-30-87 '

~···

• !dell for

ENTIRE STOCK

25°/o 25°/o
.SPREADERS

1•

ft' 41!lftouuro.

7.99::::.

stock# 75612. ar cond .. stand. trans. PS.PB.
rontrd, AM/FMoadio. too pickup,
bed."''· fu~ lank. oidinR rear ~ass

ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

' of ~lhr" .......... .

,_•a'aahmtJyfn",.atPh It

$14,275.

IEGIUI S17.99

llur RcL-1.... 7

#76291. 2 dooos. 4 wheel drive,V-8. air
auto. trans. PS. PB. IJilW6' willlows
0001 klcks, tin wheel, cruise ronto~.
rad~. stereo tape, radial tires. wh~e
bucket seats rear window delo~ .

PANT
REGULAR f7. 99

1986 FORD

1986 FORD
BRONCO XLT

LADIES
POLY PULL-ON

SIZES 6·16
REGULAR s13.99

lUG. S59.99

----.,

..
·-s.&gt;""""""""
I'
~=~
:r:.&lt;=::J~=
_ _Coonotbo_i'~"':...l
... _
., ....... .... -

LADIES
SKIRTS

LONG
RAIN COATS

Dinrm irw:/J,Ide hokedpo!ato .
and
atwl saladbuffet with fir!sh fruit, 7J:,t ~¢al~

I

DOLLAR GENERAL STORE

If you can't get 11ere when the
bridge closes, we m'ail prescriptions
anytime.

WOMEN'S

T-Bone'llmel
r:rDinner' l/J=

1·5

I., _.

!"'

so. Pl.

Shrubbery or Fruit TrHI,
many varieties;
G1ranlums, VIolets &amp;
Hanging Baskets.

I

Chid• Rl..... R.Ph. . . ._ _ _ _. .

Fti•"dlv S.N icl

E. M1ln

S7SO PE.,.._,
FLOWEIING 'LANTS

9 TO 9 DAILY - 12 TO 6 SUNDAY

estlmatE'd crowd of 1.200 wa s on hand to

It's our main concern when filli.ng
prescriptions and advising you about
over-the-counter drugs. As your pharmacists,
you can rely on us. We're here to help.

ONE GROUP

Mon. lhru 81t. 8:0 0 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Sunct.y 10:00 • .M. to 4:00 P.M .
PRES CRIPTIONS
PH . 992·2965

VEGn AILE 'LANTS

EVERYDAY LOW PRICE
$AVE $2.00 WITH COUPON BELOW

Si!ovpnt Pen l.a !P MOdE'I s.' sevE'nteen HobbiPS and fiVf St!'E't't Stocks shOWf'd up for
the&gt;S(&gt;ason opener at Sky llllt"Spe«&lt;Way. An

$2810.$5200 $2400.$3750

lto...td HICJlng. A. lit!.

Bridge Cloaing Special

PEl

Shaver wins opener at Skyline speedway

Here's To Your Good Health

MOW

Pharmacy

Now Open for Sprlftl Season

Sl

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy.:..Middleport. Ohio

SWISHER LOHSE

HUBBARD$
GREENHOUSE

SYRACUSE

•

1987

'

VAlUES FROM '35.99-'64.99

NEW SUNDAY HOURS
10:00 A.M.-4~00 P.M.

11

Thunda~April23.

-

OFF

PLANT
STARTER POTS

WITH
TIIAYS

&amp;

I.H
work; at,.dy

•
•

sse

grip holle nozile

TRUE TEMPER
By J.a,kson

COLOR IT£
100% VINYl 2-PLY

4 CU. FT•

GARDEN
HOSE

WHEELBARROW
•300 LB. (APA(ITY
•HARDWOOD HANDLES

PLANT
STARTER TRAYS

97&lt; TO $299
OUR REG. '1.29 •.s3,99

FOR
REG.

$5

REG. S2.99

S34.9~

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA STORE
• I
-·

' l .•• ,

OUII,:Ia.

•

. ~ -.J.-. .

~----

".
'

, ...
~

�..
•

•

By The Bend

FOlD IPICIAL PURCHASES ·

19861SCOIT

• 1

- ~· · ·

2DOOR

1987 COUGAR

Room for. five • New design • 3.8-llter

engine • Automatic overdrive lranamhlaiO&lt;
• Power ttterlng • Power brakea •
con~itlonlng I Tinted glaae
·

$2500 Down Cash or Trede Amount
Finonced $10,112.90, 8.e&lt;;; APR for 80
month Interest $2,453.50, Total Payment
$12,588.40, Only hm Tille Faa Extra .

AS~W$
AS

As:WS4999
4zllhort WhMI ....

THUIIEIIIRD

OR 1986 COUGAR

1.3·1°2

5

YOII

MOIII

CIOICI

$1000 down, Amount Financed
$6040. 80 Monthe 10.9% AP.R
$1821.20·Intereit Total

1987 L
Front-wheel drive • 1.9·11ter rour·Cylln·
der engine with electronic futllhJeetlon

B TO CHOOt• l'fiOM

••
LIICOLI TOWI CAl

• Four·epeed manual overdrive Iran ·
taxle • Power brak11 • Reck·lnd·
pinion tletrlng • · Optional rub atriPa
and body aide molding

AS
LOW
AS

s1 0807
.

MO.

CIOICI OF COLOI

$2600 Down Caah or Trade, Amount Fin.
$6218.11,. 8.8% APR for eo montha,

lntaroat 11,268 .08, Totol Paymont
$8,484.20. Only Taxaa, Tltto Faa Extra.

SAVI

ltt-:::,su $6995
YOUICIOICI

·

·

.

161999.

5
'"'
·•10..

DELIYIIID • bel.~•• tu

...
prestige
CALL
TOLL FREE

,.,.,.", ,

1·800-2215-30~7

triH A " " " - .... ' ..,_

ftOHTIAC • 1UtCk • QMC TMD

·

Page- 7

Long Bottom community happenings

Become a donor...

• 1000 lb. payload • 2.51iter
L4EFI Engine I 4 Speed
• Wide Side Equipment

·

Cloaa .t a IIIII., prlco·

OPEN SUNDAY 1 TO II

By BOB HOEFLICH
In fact, I want to warn you Sentinel Stall Writer
shape up your disposition or I'll
· There's a ilrst time for every- probably be stamping you - the
thing - like a
forehead's a good place -: with
·child's first step
scarlet letters that read Keep
.&lt;Jr~lrstword, the
Smiling. After.all, scarlet letters
·first day of
have been used effectively
schpol - that
· before.
·first love.
Well, · the
. Meigs County·
Blood Program Committee
would like you to experience
another great first - becoming a
. first time volunteer blood donor.
The next visit of a bloodmobile
to Meigs County will be In
Pomeroy on Wednesday, April
29, from 1 to 5:30 p.m., at the
Meigs Senior, Citizens Center,
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy .
_ The committee says that if
you 're healthy and between 17
·and 68 and weigh at least no you
cah be a Red Cross blood donor
and help meet the needs or people
of your community - people
such as cancer patients, accident
'victims, open heart surgical
patients and others.
The Tri-State Regional Blood
Service encompasses more than
50 counties In West Vlq:tlnla,
Kentucky and Ohio and to meet
the needs of patients In 65
regional hospitals, ·at least 300
people must donat e blood every
day , the committee reports.

Mrs. Linda Weber and her turned to Long Bottom for the
Infant son were in for a vislt last summer months.
week with her grandmother,'
Mrs. Mary Carroll was the
Mrs. Ernestine Hayman.
recent vlsltor of Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Barber Is recuperating Pi!Ul Hauber.
from pneumonia .
Elza Larkins celebrated his
Tawnya Larkins has rece ived 9lst birthday on Aprll16.
her license as an emergency
Mrs. Marie Swan Is a patient at
medical technician.
the Pomeroy Health Care Ce nter
Patty Stet hem Tr ipplett is a during the Illness of her brot her,
patient at Veterans Memorial Kenneth.
Hospital fo r medical treatment.
Larry Gri(fin, son of Mr a nd
Dick Hayman , who has spent Mrs. Ernie Griffin, will be
the winter In Florida , has re· admitted soo n to University

Southern High Basketball
Coach Howle' Caldwell reports
that the SOuthern High Athletic
Department will be holding an
Independent softball tournament
the week or May 15 and 16.
There will be spo nsor trophies
for the first three finishers as
well as Individual trophies for.
first and second place.
The entry fee. Is $65 plus two
softballs or $75 and no softballs.
Get In touch with Howle at the ·
high school , 949-2611 or evrnings
at his·home, 949-2954.

CASI IACI liDS
APIILJOI.

CELEBRIIY

CAVALI

Mrs. Laura Hoffman, 1704 W.
Mound St .. Columbus, formerly
of Middleport, also remembers
Mr. Odenbaugh who was a taller
In Middleport many years ago.
Mrs . Hoffman was employed at
the Mary Jane Coffee Shop- and
many of us remember that well,
don't we?
It was owned and operated at
the time by Ralph Sayre and his
mother and they later sold to th e
late Mayme Harris. Laura says
she remembers that Mr. Odenbaugh ate regularly at the shop.
The mention of him In an earlier
lot of
column brought back
pleasant memories of the Bend
area to Laura- and that's good.

a

America's Ill selling I
car In 1986.

Feel the thunder of
Arnerlcil' s legendary
sport coupe.

AlongHstol-d

,.............. yougtt
more INn you oxpoct

tar tho price.

$750

One of the mast
popular choices In
America

S7SO

Aerodynamic design
makes SpKtrum one

Shilrp object.

ssoo

...-

•

~-

advises 'that It Is sponsoring a
fund raising program to get
money for needed equipment and
as a part of that drive a person
representing the dePartment will
be visiting all homes serviced by
the department . The person is .
legitimate and will be asking
·donations of $12 for which the
donor w111 recei v'e and 8x10
fdmlly portrait to be taken at the
fire house .

'

-

. I

Hospital In Columbus for ca rdiac Club. On the fourt h Tuesday from
evaluation and possible surgery. 10 a.m. until noo n. blood pr~s­
Crlsty New lun has a new son, sures are taken.
Kenneth Dustin . The lnfan·t
Recently Mr. and Mrs . .John
weighed seven pounds. 13 ounces Brewer treated the se nior cltl ·
and.was 23 Inches long.
zens to a fres h trout fish fry. 'l'h ~
Mr. and Mrs. Harley McPeek, Brewers ca ught the fish at
Belpre, was the recent visitor of Forked Run Stale Park.
Mrs. Mae McPeek.
--News'' notes - flum the Long
The Long Bottom Senior C'iti· Bottom community may be
ze ns Club meet s the second and ma iled to P. 0. Box 7. Long
fourth Tuesday of Each monlh at Bottom, or telephoned to 98&gt;·
the Long Bottom Community 427!\.

•

Oil Fillers

. Everyday Low Price
Limit 12,

R~g. 3.85, Llmh 2

•

FourCard

IW30

AlrFI"-r•

Alg.1.09

Reg. 4.15, UmH 2

Umh12

1.49

2.99 49!.~.

•

IJeaUey's Bleclle·IJHe
tlquld wiiH-11 cloa..,

lapree
,.atone
IJIIeel Magic lrake "ufd
22oz.Spl'ay
12oz, #A840tl Or
Reg. 4.15, #WII747
,OWer $feerfng
Ffufd1 IA82t0 Reg. t.et

20 oz., Reg. 2.21, #500
Your Choice

1.88

IJelfler'•
Auto Pollsll

. . . Hlaprlca

12oz. Plllle
Reg. 2.111, #WCt01 .

- lOti mlr'a rata
Your COli

or Tire Sllfne

41- etter rllleto

3.79,#7512

sa•

17.95

Your Choice

9.88

Guardian Semi·
Metallic lralce
Pads

Guardian
Brake Sltoes

Cleanrfte
fJollsllfng Clotlls
Reg. 1.41

Everydey Low Prlco

Reg. from 13.10
1 YEAR WARRANTY

'rom

Dfac Brake Pads'

3.49

Reg. to.tl8

Universal Brake Tool~~eg. 2.15,

m-3111.95

AIIDrutan
Cllamofs

Pfews Brake lleecler ""·

2.3Uaq. ll.

Reg. lrom 5.41

2.000FF
And the Ohio Chapter of the
Andersonville Society was mentioned In another recent column.
As lt 'turns out, the grandfather
· of the late Edward Hedrick or
Pomeroy was a prisoner at
Andersonville during the Clvll
War and did manage an escape.
Edward and hts wife, Virginia,
· who Jives on Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy, were always fascinated by the stories of Andersonville and last summer, before
Edward's death. they were enroute home from Florida and
decided to visit the spot. Virginia .
says they took scads of plct lires
and the once hated prison location is now ·a spot of beauty.

The Chester Fire o(partment

FORD

By Melody Roherts

. Everyd1y Low Price
Llinh 12

Remember when you marched
proudly down field with the Meigs
High Band?
Sure you do - and remember
you always thought your uniform
should have been bronzed rather
than passed on to ~omeon eelse to
wear at a later lime.
Well - now's your chance.
You can pick up your uniform
on May 8· and 9 at the Middleport
Park when the Meigs Junior and
Senior High School Band Boosters will be holdln~ a uniform
sale. You can pu rrhas~ the entire
uniform for $25. I don 't know
what the bronze will east.

•

Thursday, April 23, 1987

.

Beat of the bend

I TO CHoot• MOM

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday night J stopped by the
Rawltngs.coats·Biower Funeral
Home to pay my la¥1 respects to
an old friend, Helen Sauer. She'll
be ml.ssed. A couple of yean ago,
Helen gave me a neat rubber
stamp which reads "Keep SmUIng'' . It's clever and appropriate.
I think of her every time I use It
and I uae It often .
'

HiCiretllom
lfgYellow
GaaSIIockl
For ltght trucka,

95

Cllallenger
Motorcycle Batteries

.Yourself

Reg. !rom US

u!!P

4.000FF

Do not crawl
1n 1u1omoblle unleae
h le on 1 good jack
etand, rtmpa on

2.49

plct&lt;-upe, 4 K4'1
Reg. from 2U5

SAVE5.00

Dorey .
Helmet Viaors

34.95

Heclretllorn
llgYellow
Steering St.IJIIfzers

holat.

From

95•

Dorer

!'Or..., trucka u • 4'a

Lawn Mower
Mufflers

Reg. • .H

Reg.lrom 1.95

SAVE5.00

1.000FF

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
Store 11oura 1:00 1.m. to 1:00 p.m. Mondlly through F,..,
1:00 e.m.to 1:00 p.m. s.tun1ey and 10:00 1.m. to 5:00p.m. Sunclly.
.... prtcea In IHict Aprt1231hrough Aprll21, 1117.

"

•

3.19

Dorey .
Lawn Mower
Tune-up Kits
Reg.trom 3.15

#324')$ I. 3240M

14.88
74.88
Pair

209 Upper liwer Rd.
· Galllpelis, ·Ohio
....- -

TruCut
Car Ramps
Reg. 17.11 pair

#AR6500

Wlteel Doctor
2'/" Ton
Trolley Jack
Rag. 94.85. #JAeeoH

'

�...
Pag!!- 8- The

. Ohio

Better
for service at ARC .Bloodmobile

Community calendar/area happenings
THURSD,-\Y
TUPPERS PLAiNS - OliveOr ange VFW Pos t 905.1 meets
Thursday, 7:30p.m., at T uppers
Pl ai ns Grade Sc hool. New o!flr·
ers wil l be nominated . All
mem bers urged to all end.

Chu rc h. Th e following F riday,
May I , at noon. everyone should
bring .a sack lunch and t he c hur ch
will furnish the dessert and
beverage. A meeting will follow
the luncheon.
POMEROY-.=- Senior Ci tizens
Dance Club Is sponsoring a dance
th is F r iday. 8 to 11 p.m. at the
center on Mulberry Height s.
Music by Tr ue Country Band.
Ad m ission $1.50 per person.
Bring snacks.

RACI NE - Amer ican Legion
lluxll iary. Racine Post 602,
meets Thu rsday. 7:.10p.m .. at the
hal l.
CHESTER Shade River
Lodge 45.1, Chester, will hold a
special meeting Thursday, 8
p. m .. wit h wor k in the E :A.
dcgrcr·.
FRIDAY
PO ME !lOY- May Fellowship
of Church Women Un it ed will
meet for a planning session 1: 30
Frid ay aft ernoon at Tr in ity

Community corner
•

MONDAY
POMERO Y - Bedding plants
and hanging baskets will be for
sale by . the Volun teers of
Amerlca r e-Pom eroy N ursin g
and R ehabilitation Cen ter tfor·
merly Pomer oy Hea l th Care
Center 1Monda y 8 a.m . to 4p.m.
Pr oceeds will be used fo r .Chr ls t·
mas gifts for the resident s.

. TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT
T he
Midd le p o rt -Po m er oy Area
Branch of the American Assoc iation of Univer sity Wom en will
meet
Tuesct ay at the Middleport
SUNDAY
Masonic Temple for a dinner.
POME ilOY
Eva ngeline
Chapter 172 Order of Eas tern 6:~0 p.m. Members m ay take
. guests. Du es are paya bl e. Reser·
Star olfl cer s will practice thi s
Sunday and nex t Sunday, M ay 31, va tlons are to be m ade by
Thursday at 992-2907. Ga llipolis
at 2 p.m . Inspect ion wlll be May
).1 at 7:.10 p.m . Inspectin g offi cer members will be speakers

SYRACUSE - There will be a
spaghetti supper Frid ay, from 5
to 7 p.m ., at Carlton School in
Syracuse.

A curzous woman...
By (; HARLENE HOEFLI(;H
Sentinel Starr Writer
Remember Weaver's Clothing
Stor e and Ml·
c il ael St e rn
C l ot h es, 10 4
M a in S I. ,
Pomer oy?
One of th e
Be nd 's r es t ·
dent s 1asked we
not usc• her name1 has a clothes
brush fr om there with a pictu re
of a Red Ca p on it. She's
lnter·es ted i n knowing about how
old II is, so if you ha ve any Idea.
just pass the wo rd along to us and
we' ll get the word to her.
· . llnothN of her treasures Is a
pre-Civ il War direc tory from the
Bedford Christian Church w hich
she found among the possPsslons
of her hu sband's fam ily .
Inci dentally , she's not Interes ted
in part ing with ei ther.

will be Deputy Gr'and Matron
Li nda Davi s.

orga nJui t ion to benefit revllal i·
zat lon and communit y Im prove·
ment project s In A thens.
Hours ar e F rid ay, May 1.. 6 to 10
p.m .: Sa turday, M ay 2, 11 a. m . to
9 p.m . and Sund ay, May .1. noon to
5 p.m.. Adm ission is $2.50 at the
doo r.

UMLW meets

·Donations were made to Spe·
clal proj ects at the Tu esday
night' s meeting of the Rock
Spr in gs Unit ed M e thodi st
Church held at the churc h.
A bake sale was se t for M ay 1 at
Kroger s to begin at 9:30 and
ar ra ngem ent s wer e made for a
work session the new chur ch
The 42nd Infantry !Rainbow ) banner. New ofllcers will be
Div ision Veterans Associa tion's elect ed at the next meetin g.
68th A nnual Reunion will be held
Group singing of " When I See
.July B· ll at the Radisson Hotel t he Blood", " He Lives", a nd "In
South In Bloomingt on, M N. Men t he Garden" opened the m eeting.
who ser ved In the Rainbow Prayer requ ests wer e taken and
Div ision during any lime, WWI
t he prayer was by Sharon
or WWJJ . are elig ible to j oin the Folmer . Devotions wer e given by
association and all " Rainbow· Thelma Jeffers and Lenor a Leifers' ' and thei r families ar e heit with Betty Will giving
Inv ited to the r eunion.
" !;:aster ." Mildred Jacobs read
For mor e In fo rmation just
"God Are You Really Rea l ?" and
contact V .J. Eva noff, 5101 Wes t · " Make Me a Channel of B lessing
109 th St. , B loomington, MN Today. " Sharon Folmer gave 'Oh
554.17.
L ord You Are th e King."
Offler s' r eport s were give n by
Ann . Mas h and Tracey O 'Del l.
Lookin ' good. F'r ed.
If fact, we wouldn ' t have Mrs. Jacobs had the closing
known the " new yo~."
prayer . Other s att ending were
F red I A lfred I Sisson was the Betty Dill, Linda Fos ter , D orothy

Wd i. now .....
T his paper, and probably
hundreds mon •, has rece lvrd a
lett er !ro m Evangelist .Jer r y
Falwell . and whi le ask in g for a
co nt r i b uti o n, docs a li tt le
chidin g.
· It r ead s. In par t. " ..... In my .11
yea r s of Chri stia n se rvice, I have
nevc.• r seen such hype In the
media and confusion, co ntr ov·
er sy and tragedy In the Chr ist ian
·communlly . I am talkin g, of
course, about the slluatlon at the
PLTL T elev isio n Network and
Herit age U.S.A."
Th at statement is pull ed from
lhr first two par agr aphs of a four
page IPtt er In w hirh Falwell
pleads for &lt;'on fldenre. pr ayer·
and "I f at al l possi bl e, a special
gi ft of $2:i."
G~e .....

compa
's adverti
In Tues·
successnysubject
of sing
a weight
loss
day's Di spa tch. It tells F red's
story of how he dropped 1.14
pounds In five month s, showing
" befor e" and " aft er" shots of th e
Pomeroy native who teaches
middle sc hool In Ga lion. Th e
stor y quotes F'red as say in g one
his bigges t thri ll ca me when he
tossed the " bi g man's" ca talog.
/\ gain , Fred, lookin' good!

F'or a ll you antique lovers. the
8t h annual At hens ll n t lqu ~s Fai r
will be hPid May J.:J at the Ohio
U n lvc r~ ll y Convocat ion Cen ter
on Richland AVl', Athens. Fine
quality eoiiPcla bl es and ant iques
w il l be ex hibi ted and so ld by
more tha n .1;, dealer s.
The fair Is sponso red by
Co mmun ity S&lt;'ope. a non·prlllit

23, 1987

Don'r get swng by high prices !;
Shop the classified sedi,on . .:

Business· Services

'

Plans for ser ving the canteen
at the June vis it or the Red Cross
bloodmobil e were made at last
week's meet ing of the Rock
Spri ngs Better Hea lth Club held
at the home of Trecl e Abbott ,
Dorothy Jeffers opened the
meeting with the L ord's Prayer
and the pledge In unison. M ild red
Jacobs had devotions using scrip·
l ure from Luke 23 and 24. A
donation from Wi lmetta Leifheit
for the use of a w heelchai r was
acknowledged. Helen Blackston
gave the treasurer 's report, and
Anti Mash the secrtar y 's r eport.

Correspondence was given by .
Beuna Grueer arid Phyllis
Skinner.
For the pr ogram , Lenora Leif·
heit took each mem ber's blood
pressur e. Phyllis Skinner ha d the
con test and Agnes D ix\)n and
Helen Blackston won. After the
f los ing prayer , M r s. Abbott
served refr eshment s. Next meet·
lng will be at th e home of Mrs.
Jacobs, May 21. Others attendi ng
Were Frances Coegl ei n, Na ncy
Grueser and llnna Jeanne, Violet
Hysell, and Nancy M orris.

IEI LEI

......... .

•••
, ,.,Ill

__________
111..
~· •

.

.....

!

.....

.. .

-. . _.
~~.

614-CJ92-7270

C».. OU!Jll-1 -

"""'0••
.... .
ruun .... .,.
""'
"
"'
'
&amp;
O••uJt"a
·-•n.•••"'-•

~

NOTICE OF RIG.HT TO
: ~OMINATE BY PETITION
, · The Fanners Home Adminiltralion !FmHA) is accepting
: nominations for County Com-

' mitteo elections for MEIGS.
AND ATHENS
• VINTON
: COUNTIES. This nl&gt;lice is is·
• sued to inform eligible wten
• of lhe rlgtrt 10 nominoto con~·
' dal• by petition. Copies oflhe
; petition and instructions on its

•· compfedor\ can be oblained
' from your klclll FmHA office.
Peraono nominated should
be eunemty ongogod in lhe op• eration of a fanri, have their
: principal f1Jrming operation

mlttee elections are open to
all eligible voters without re·
gard to race. color, religion,
national origin, age. political
affiliation. marital status.
sex , and l or handicap.

of 43 Cole Streit, Middleport, Meigs County, Ohio. ·

14) 23. 26 . 30; 161 3. 7 . 10,
14, 17,21 Stc

Lena K. Nesselro4d, Clerk

-·

(.

--

. ~~ ,.:'. . .. ...-:..t&lt;.
~:-~·-:·-::·. _:~~·--~~

.
. --;:-:'

0

..

.

..

...

~~;;-

2·- ~.::...-

20°/o
OFF
THURSDAY, FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

CONNIE, FOOTWORK$ &amp; NATURAUZER
WITH EACH PURCHASE OF REGULAR
. PRICE SHOES RECEIVE s2.00 OFF FOR
EACH FERRY TRIP

141 16. 23 , 30 3tc

i

ROOFING

• fully odmlttod to lhe Un~ed
' States for perman~nt resi-

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

~

'

-

.Riverine Antiaues

pumps, ond air ·conditioning.

1124 Eall Moi;ft.

8

~-,.,.·­
MNI( 01*. A
nee.*

NEXT TO ElBERFElDS IN POMEROY

"'*" CIND

I

.~ .

7:00 P.M.

Public Sale
8r Auction

._,.., FDIC

LOTS OF NEW
MERCHANDISE
HAUISONYILU
FIRE HAU
SCIPIO VOL.
FIRE DEPT.

161 North

,

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM IUilT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

•-w.

Prices"

PH. 949-2801
or ·949-2860

What customers like these are findin&amp;at
BANK ONE may be exactly what you reafter.
So whf look any further?We think you'll find
theulttmate equity loan right here. Because at
BANK ONE,we'reworking very hard to !Jerome
your ultimate bank.
•
Toapplyor to get more information about
·EQuityMoney Service, lust stop by any BANK ·
ONE office, or call us at 593·6681qr 1-800-824-6954
inOhio.

Day or
NO SUNDAY

C~rry

87 1

MOHAWK CARPETS
5, 10 AND LIFETIME WARRANTY
ON CARPET 8r PADDING
Up to 38. Montha Financing Available

IJ18tttn

!

POMEROY
HOME REPAIR

I

Free Eatimetea - Fully neure

d

CARPENTIIY- Addltfont. G1r119t1, Sun Deck s
CONCRETE WORK- Ikllwotb, llorotmentl ond Orivt·
Wll'fl

SIOING- VInyl. Aluminum, and Wood ·
PAINTING - All types Including opace oge lnouloling

I A~a.Oii:!t 1101(: Th~ • one or ttte 1&gt;51 so~es wtts nice lrrritur!!
•

_

915-3561

r..a

want I&gt;
this one.
AOMNSIRATOII : Robon E. fMtl. Sheriff
AUCTIONEER: Ric* ....._

All MI..•

....

•W-.r oO-ohoro

TElliS: 773-11430
Mooon.Jrf. V&amp;
773-1171111,
Clift 01 Ctrlcl 1111110
'
(... I ; II Fer 'c ·ws Or loll Of l'l ...tyl

•llefritorllon

oOrtwt•F-1
PARTS and SERVICE
4-5-ltc

"

Buying junk cars . Call after 6 :00
pm . Ce11 6 14-992- 5648 .

Went 10 buy CMry out busineSs
for. bee r license tor Pomoroy
store. 614 ·992 ·&amp;652 or 8149_9 2 ·7402 evenings.

tlllploylllenl

Serv;ces
11

Mother cat with Sik kittunt, all or
any of tttem, 304-773·5207.

Ellperienced body men needed
to build aalvaged qar1 or tr~ ck a .
Must have toots &amp; be able t o ~do
at ructure work. Call 614· 388·

Puture for 10 head Cfttt,e, cell
after 5:00PM . 304-675 -1918.

6 lost and Found

LOST In lower Muon, gray male
cal we.rlng blue colla r. RE ·
WARD, 304 -773· 9688 or 173·

9125 .

&amp; Vicinity
·······- -···· ··--;·--- ·-··- ·· ·· ···
Michigan Salt · Cemetery
wr..tha, lawn mower .• bikes,
bedding &amp; drlpts, )ewehy,. It ·
large clothn . 80 Nail Ave ..
Oslllpolis ,

1 Ftmlly Yard Slit, Thufl. &amp; Fri.

a. Sat . Vt mile out 141 . Chlldren t

clothing slut 0-12 ladlet cloth ing, appUsnca ti, lots of mi sc.
Watch for 1lgns .

2 Family- Frl &amp; Stt., 9·15 ,
Skldmora Rd. Evergrnn. Something for everyone. Rain or
1hine.
Ytrd

Halp Wanted

96t 6.
Pllti·Time Admini strative Aa·
t iatant . Must type 60 wpm
ac curstaly. Good verbal t kllla &amp;
writt en communication skill s
reqllired. Go od filing s kills requlrftd. Mu t1beabl11towork we ll
under pressure. Knowl edg e · of
t horthand, computen &amp; w brd
proc:es t on benefl clt~ - Job t herlng position . HOtlt l ar e 8em 4:30 pm every ~hur~ev &amp;
Frldll'f &amp; evory o er Wednea·
day , Send rea um e o: SEOEMS ,
Rt. 4, 80 11 144, allipolls, OH
466 3 1 by April 27th.
P•t-tlme LPN &amp; part· time MiT ,
Apply In penon betwttn 9 ·6
Mon lhru Fri. at the Medi cal
Pike, :203 Ja ckton Plala.
Babysitter to comatomy home2
children, close to Holler ?:30 to
2:00. Reference r*'ultd C~ ll
614 ·448· 0498 atttr &amp;PM .

REPS NEEDED
FOr busln111 8ccounts , Full·
t ime. S80.000· t iO.OOO· Pert·
time , t12. 000· S18 .000 · N o
Sailing, repett bullne.. . Set
your own houra. Tra ining pro,
vlded. C11t : 1-812 ·838·8870,
M·F. Sam to 15pm !Central
Stlndllfd Time).
Need 8 Good Peo ple

.

t300 Per Wtek
No tiiPt rlence nece11ary. Mutt

bl av•lltbltt for lmmtd l1te
emptovm-"' · Cttl1 Oam to •pm

Ph. 8 '4· 448-8148 .

,

Pool end perM director, Mldd"le·
port Munlclpe1 Pool. Appllc•·
tlons tvtllabta 11 1111 Mayors

Otflco.

Saln PMJPI• w1nttd C1il. ~
tw.en 1 6 9pm. Ph . 114 -441·
1142~ .
'
Excellent Income taklnt afton
phonemn111111t homafor lnfo
Ctll 804· 141· 7922 IJtt. 31J ,A.
Go,...rnmtnt Jobe. 118,040 •
Slt,230 yr. Now hiring. Call

80f ·lt7-8000 ht. R·IB05 loo
current fedtttlllst .

Sale, clothing, c:trp•1,
giiUWifl , dlshas, m irror , hymn
books. Misc. Items . Frld.y April
24. 8 · 4, Edgemont Drlvt.

Hlrlngl Oov~rnmeflt Jobt· vour
•rea. S16,000.-t88.00o. Phon e
call ratundabla. (8021131·1185
bt. 1448. 1

Frl a. Sat 9·5 Old At . 110,
Evergreen. 'T able ..w. pool
uble , k ids clothlnljJ . few
antiques.

Fed••l. BUtt tnd Civil S.,vlce
Joba. 118,707. to 1&amp;9,148.
ye• r. Now hir ing. Call Job lln fl

Gtrtge S.lt April 24th &amp; 21th
1 :00·8 :00 come down At, ? to
Cllpptf MIU1 1nd turn tight
follow tlgnslo ahontrlng ridge.
Tha Znd . tnd 11t11 housn Kevin
Dennis • llfblt 8D¥tllng ru l•
danet. Furnlt urs. dlshwllher,
console st•reo . ,_end mtdt
woodwork~ bike, olothM, toy1 &amp;
many mite. lttml. Ph. 814·448·

2847.

.

Vlfd Stle Thurt 1nd Fri. 91 111 5,
April 2 3 &amp; 24. 1038 S eoo nd
Ave : ·'I ·
Y•d Stlt 1 mile out Tttns Run
Rd ., ofl At. 1 nt • Eureka. Fr i.
and S1t . 9 to ?. Aotortlller,
blcyc lt l . furniture. elothH 111
sizes. b r~ nd name jeans. c u~ ·
t•lns, bed spretds. books. lo u
more.

Yard Sale 811Urd1y, April 2&amp;,

519 01k Driv• Spring Valllr'/

Subdivllion.

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

children• clothes. Milo. turnl·
ture. H,ppy Hollow Ao•d. 2nd

hou10 on rlghltNicinoky'oJ,

.......P·t ·Pliiiiiiiiii·t·.....
&amp; Vicinity

Dlint

Vacuum lluting of ltructural stHI, tanka,

bullcll1191. and mltctllaneoul lltnll.

·

I· IS t mo. pd.

BOGGS

Computerized Hearinc Aid Selection
Cl Swim Molds · lrrterpretinc Services

z

I1&amp;1 Ucensed
LiSA M. KOCH, M.S.
Clinical Audioloeist

Authori;od Jollll htrt,
..... llollanitl, hlh llog
,.,.... L;:iplent

:t

........

!

Yard 8111. Thurs tnd FrldtV.
9:00 till 1 Retu,Hitt::h, Cllftnlng
J•n. childrtr" clothing, mjt c.
2515 Mt. V•non Ave.
Yllf"d s.. e. AI. 2 brtlida Aottlnt
Gulf. Clothing. 3ft pool end lou

Y81d S•l•. 2 12 Camden Ave,
Thurt, ffl tnd Set. 10:00 t itl 7.
Nell Youth C•ntlf,

.

1-3-'86 tfc

tfn

..

go. 2105 N. M•tn St .. 30•·876·
6808 .

mooe. 10 :00 AM till 8:00PM .

,.,.. &amp; .....,.. .

Fe,. E••lt•t~t

MOVING SALE , Tuts thru Stt.
complat• houHhold. furn iture.
dlshw. lin ens. IY8r'fthlng must

Wed. Th vr1 , Fri.

(6141 446-7619 or (6141 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
·

•

992 ·3478 .

Naturel gas clothes dryer. Call

SANDBUISTING - Ory Blaotlng. Wt1 Bloallng. and

•

SERVICE

\

Put CoiUo, part labrad or pup·
pi" to gtve away . 5 males. 2
femal es. Cell 614·992-7871 .

Womtn' t16 petitt·14 reg. in
••etll t nt cMdit lont tnd some

FOR MORE INFORMATION CAll 614/ 949-2686

U. Sl RT. SO EAST
GUYSVIllE, OHIO,

4 kittens. 5 wkiL old. 2 mal e, 2
female. Part Siamaae. 4 month
old puppy, part Collie. partly
treined. ca u 614 -742 -2401 .

:D•.•d
:..:.•_••_ho_o_l.- - -·lc~
April 2&amp;,' 9· 4:30. Men .

ROOFINO - ShlngiH, RolledRoofii1g. Gutlers andln ·
auleting Roof Coating

4-15-1 mo.

APPUANCE

l"o a good home, 3 t mall hou se
dog pupp ies: V:! Pekingese &amp; 'II
Gorg ey . Ctll 614-446 -2046 .

or 181 next to Tuppers Pl ti nt

GHEEN'S PAINnNG, IN(.

·

Leave messap on

SALE$ &amp; SERVICE

446-0898 .

'·

1·518 ·489·181 t h t. F-138J D
for ll1tlna , 24 hr s.
AVON, no serviQI ch1rge, ope n
ten lt o rl tl , phone 304 -87 8 U-28 .

U.dy to thle In tnd hetp lady,

304· 875· 237•
MONev for colleg e. Call th 11
Army National Guar d For FR I!'E
lnform•t lon pscket . 1 ·800·842 ·

•

381~

Ell pttrlenced mu t -cu n• • Apply
Cra.vt ords Super Market. Hanp·
erson. 304 ·871-6404.
..

12

Situations
Want~d

..' ,

.

Mature d u lttlan men grounD•
keeping, hendy m1n , l1wn Ct(e
Ph . e14 ·44 &amp;--27&amp;0.
...

•

R11raln Now. South&amp;l lttrn 8~,t•­
lneu College. Call 814 -4441,-

436 7

•.
Hobson Drive
Middleport, Ohio
.................................. 18 Wanted to Do ·======~9~9~2~-6~1~7~3===:;===~ IMo,lng
Tho•.
•nd
fo l.PlApoU
23 1nd ,.le:
24. 9·4
, Tup
pefl
1ln1 J - - - - - - ---7"
Residential - Commercl1l - lndultrial '

All types Carpentry,
· Plumbing and
Electrical Repair 25%
Off for Senior
Citizens. Free Est.
C1ll 992-6952

IEff'S

8wk . old puppies 1 female, 2
r'nales ml11 ttd breed Ph . 614 ·

LARRY'S CARPET OUTLET

1111chine if no answtr.

!CUT OUT FOI MUll USll

'

..... "Poirlero·.;.·......... ·

Expert lnatallation

16UI 992·77S4

Bu yiri9 'dally g01d. sil'ole r coin s,
ri~g!J•.j.Welry , st erling ware, o ld
coiOsL large currency . Top pr i·
ce1 . td Burke« Bllrber S ho p,
2nd.·Ave. Middleport. Ott. 6 14·

Etttte V•d Stlt. 57.t Sun Vtllty
Drive , fr iday &amp; Stturd.y, Apfil
24 to 28, 10:00am tr D1rk.
Btdroom suite. yvtt irlpool microwave with c.,-t, 3 point hitch
cul tlvatofl. 2 t ob•cco pretlet, I -=-=---::c-.,...-;--~..,
old otlit typewriter dtlll, aleu· 15
School1
"'
w1r1, man '• &amp; women 's clo·,
Instruction
"
thiilg. llttla bit of evarythlnv.

STAINMASTER
WEAl DATED

Fishing Supplin

Pay Your Cabla &amp;
Phone 81111 Here
! IUIINill PHONf
16141 992-6SSO
IEIIIENCl PHONE

6·17-tlc

ESTATE
AUC'nON

*"""

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We

Alee Trt•••lul..

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

·

~==========::::====4=·7:··=·=m:o:· ::::l
~

~·tpOrl, Ohio 45760

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

"At

•consult your tax it&lt;! visor for specific mndi1100~ and derails.
"The ann~~&gt;! fe&lt; is $50.

UDNALL

PlUMBING &amp; HEATING

Rt. 124, Pomtroy Ohio

1 Beth and john Minard

BANKSONE..

108 W. Main, Pomeroy, Ohio
PH. 992-3307
TWIN MATTRESS/BOXSPRING ............ S98.88
FULL MATTRESS/BOXSPRING ............s148.88. .
CHESTS .......... S49,9 S RECliNERS ..... 599.9 S
DIN.Eil£/ 4 CHAIRS ............................. S99. 9 5
12 Months Free Financing

Good Fri. &amp; Sat. nights
or any open bowling
time. Call us for parties
for

Roger Hysell
Garage

4·17·1 mo.

EMPIRE FURNITURE

to bawl 2 gomtl anll

got ono frttll

36632 BAILEY RD .
POMEROY

949-9070 or
949·2045

3-20·87

Iring this od with
your fomly or group

Smell black · tan dog
wit h Children . Ph.
4 314 between 8· 1h m or 710pm .

614·3 79 -~ 446 ,

z

ACTION
TOWING

12 6 4· wheeler. Good cond itio n.

Ph . 6t4 · 2 ~ 6 · 6251

a

@)

Used Mobile Homaa Ph. 614 -

Male _Pup l · Nloth er ~eeg le . Call

1 Family Mite Sale. C•ntenerv
Town t4ouH, Thurs. &amp; Fri. 9:00.
Men
Women 1nd ehlldrens
CI01hM , leatl1tr COlli, g1m1
table. c1ptaln1 bed. w.lght
btnc.h • weights. color tv,

992-6611

382I. 2ND ST.

48t8

tpm.

Middleport, Oh.

Pomeroy lowlilt!l Co.

Wl i"l ted to b1,1y, good work ing
ring er w u he; . Reaso n a bly
pr iced. Call 814-742-2 256 .

Ylfd a craft 111e . Frl &amp; Stt. 24th
and 21th. Comer lot of Ntlgh·
borhood Ad. •nd t 41 . l•m to

USED ·TIRES
NEW BATTERIES

TOP CASH paid for '83 mo del.
and newer used e&amp;ra . Smith
Bulch-Pontioc. 1911 Eastern
Ave,. .Qa lll polilil. Call 614-4462282.

3 Puppies 1 male, 2 t amale
m hte d br eed . Ph . 614-44 6 -

Y1ml. Bultvlllt Rd . l"hurt·Frl.
Garden tools, old htnd toola,
children• clothing, old hlll1ld t
plow, Euttka Swe ep ~ r. furniture. 4 tlrn 13in .

24 HOUI TOWING
&amp; ROAD SEIVICE

6'4 ·446 -3872

446_
-0176
· _ _ _L _
_
_. _

Northup Stoond haute aoroas
bridge In Northup . 9 -4 April 23
&amp; 24 tlowtn, tablea , dlahaa.

VALLEY LUMBEI
&amp; SUPPLY

BOWLING II

VARIOUS PATTERNS
AND WOOD SPECIES
985-4176 or 985-3564

4-22·1 mo. pd . ·

Jacob11n

4-14-1 mo.

CUSTOM :
'PLANING
•JOINTING
•MOLDING

Bus. Ph. 915·3113
Home 915-3837

We pay Cl l h fo.r-late tnodel c;; lean
used cars,
J im Mink Ch ~W . - Oids Inc.
· Bill Gene Johnt on

M1le Hua ky. 1 vr. old, very
Ph. 81 4 -37 9·22i.lhf:t.er

All Types of
Trenching
GAS · WATER
ELECTRIC
DRAINS

Wanted To Buy

frien~ty
6:00 .

Yard Sale
THE DITCHING 7
SERVICE
.. ... ·aanriiolls......... .

HomoltiO

992-2526

B&amp;B
WOODWORKS

FRIDAY 24th

4 / 8 / 1 mo. t.

Briggs &amp; Stratton ·
' Tecumseh
Weed Eater

RUSS MOORE

4 -8 · '87-1 mo.

AUCTION

-·t

--

Authorlted Service
&amp; Parts
_

by Chante or ApttOinl1114!nt

Price; $1089.95 plu1 tax .

Public Sale
8r Auction

SMALl ENGINE
IE PAIR

Sunday: I p.m.-7 p.m.

conditioning for mobile
or modular hornet, 2 112
or 3 ton units inltalled
on pad &amp; rudy to cool .

37

992:7632

3·17·1 mo. pd.

3·15·1 mo.

lit# Sf'rilll· I Tftl/ly mjoytd

Once your credit line is established, you can
use it anytime over the next 10 years-simply · Some of our customers prefer a more tradi·
by writing a check. So you can get as much
tiona!, one-time loan with a fixed interest
cash as you need,whenever you need it- with· rate. And thesame payment every month.

SPECIAL:
HElL- Package oir

Rates are lower than you'll find withother
kindsof loans.

"I Wllllted to 11,1e /he eqr1i/y I've lnlillup in my
plllce to lulp my grarulslln bNY his first hoiiSe.
Wej~~&amp;t a"anged for the 101111
at BANK ONE.Irold tlrtm
"Btt:o~~&amp;e of my iNcome, we didn't qiUllify for
how m1«h I needed... allli it
go11m1111mt 1hldmt l011ns. lluul to fitU/ a lowIIW a nite surprise to fillli
cost way to borrow $25,000
how
low tlu intemt rate lUis."
for "'Y dillfllclm' coll«t hti·
tiotJ over the lit# few yam.
Tllu way, I am j~~&amp;t write a
Ed Bird
tlld ...orull kMw the
IIIOIU)I'S tiJm. "
"We nredtd 1111 wier way to dt~~l with !evtral
biU /ltlymtrtts at hitlt inhrest rates-so~ ron·
Elizabeth Hunter
. SG!idllltd tlltrtt witlt 1111 &amp;/rtity MoNey Smite
loan. Now we k11ow wlrtn our
"Wllml SllW lllllt hollte·tquily borrowiHg motlt
loa11 wiU be fJIJid off,lt'1 also
a lol ofUll.lt from alllx-fllw 11mtd/10in~ I
a relief to make j~~&amp;t 011e /lilY·
figrlnll it IIW ti~~~e to setup o
111t11t a month-at a11 i11ttmt
rndit liM tvm U.olfllr we
rak lllllt's ellSy to live Kiitlr. "
rtttd the IIIOIU)IIIMl

Or choose a
single-sum loan for
aone-time need.

CALl (614) 985-4222

SSO Page St., Mid••port

CAll 7 DAYS A WEEN

949-3088 Bus.
949-2606 Home
All Makes &amp; Modtls
24 HR. SEIVICE

Pomeroy
HOURS: Tues.·Wed.·Fri.
11 a.m. to 7 ~. m .

·

LOST Calico Ctt nam ed Cl11o,
blind lrf oneeye. 304 ·676 -1046
after 6 :00.

49135 St. lt. 124
lacine, Ohio 45771

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SELL

All work guorontftd,

BODY SHOP

•Weddings ·
•Graduations
•Valuables
•Ins. Claims
•Special Events

G&amp;M TV
REPAIR
•

s04-77l -SS7l 1
Aft•• S
\ ....iirll'.,i
614-741·7191 4-13-1 mo.

SERVICE

GEARY'S

lransltrs lSmm &amp; 110 Posi·
live !lidtt to VHI Vidto lope

10·8·tfc

PURL &amp; IARIAIA
VAN METER

commeniol unit1.

~ - 15-'86-lc

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL ·SAND
TOP SOil
FILL DIRT

FlOWERS FOR
All OC~ASIONS
NEW IDEAS

lnstoltotion of ductwork &amp;
holmldifi11~ furnoce, htot

The Daily Sentinel

PMOTOGRAPHER

992-3410

Moson, W. Yo.

RMidential and small

or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

3 Announcements

VHS HOME RE(ORDER

DENNY CONGO
WILl HAUL
JUST CALL!

home. Ph . ISH·-448-3479 after

6:30pm,

814· 985· 3521 .

35MM

8-20· '86 tin

.Bouquef

HEATING &amp; CODUNG

992-6215

3·9-'87·1 mo. pd.

TVs, Antennas
Satellite Salts

614-843·5248

Fla~tl

4-17-1 mo.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Ph. 1614) 843·5425

FREE LANCE

REASONABLE • RELIABLE

· 3-27-2 mo.

Free Estimales
Reliable
Guaranleed Work
992 -7636,

Estimettt)

CAll COllECT,

J.R.'s REPAIRS

· Electronic Organs
Mobile service

We'll Sell You A
Used Car or Fix
Yo11r Old One

YOUNG'S

~Free

mo.

Service

CALL '92·7403 Apt.
St. Rt. 33, Pomeroy, OH.

Drywall

Addons •nd rsmodeling
Roofing and gutter work
Concfete work
Plumbing and electrlctl
work

4· 1~1

' Installation

TUNEUPS to TIANSMISSION

Will Do ....
Carpentery - Vinyl
&amp; Aluminum Siding
-Painting-

CARPENTER

" Free Estimates "

&amp; Service

J&amp;N
CONSTRUCTION

PH. 992-9949
a,b Barton, Owner

.

Automotive Repair

1· 13-tfc

190 MUlBERRY AVE.
POMEROY, OH.·

6HIII ~ &amp;t.t, Woadslde,
NY tt 377. l'lilt Name, Adtlrlu,
Zip, Size, Pltilm tunblr.

·

SANDY'S
AUTO SALES

M.iddleport, Ohio

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND

4094-Misses Sizes 12
to 20. Great two-piece
dress with side tie and
elastic waist skirt. Size t 2
takes 2¥&gt; yards ot 60
inch fabric.
Each pattern $3.25 plus
75e postage/handling.
JN.V.resldentsadd sales 1111.)
Stnd to:
Rtlder IIIII

•

.

l e na K. Nesselroad, Clerk
(4)16. 23 , 30 3tc

992·2196

1-5..86-tfn

Choose aline of
credit for long-tenn
borrowing needs.

The Medallion Band
12.00 Cover Charre

Robert E. Buck,
Probate Judge

PAT HILL FORD

REBUilT &amp; REPAIRED

Comptete Gutter Work
Worked in home area
20 years

9:00P.M. to 1:00 A.M.

45771 .

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

NEW- REPAIR

: dance, not have an FmHA in·
~ sured

'

'JbBorrow.

Admlnistr~_rix

of the estate of Elma M . Hoi·
ter. deceased, late of 44060
Yost Road, Racine, Ohio

RADIATOR
SERVICE

WrittStl

Roofing of all· Types

Entertainment
Wed .. Fri. &amp; Sat. Night

nue. Pomeroy. Ohio 46789,

e

Complete Remodeling

992-9901
This Week ~ive

Caso No. 25467, Edith H.
Sisson. 120 Mulberry Avewas appointed

VIHYL &amp; AlUMINUM

POMEROY, OHIO

'"T'________~

United-States or an aiM law·

..

BANK ONE. "
Bill George

EUGENE LONG

Meigs, County Probate Court,

Probate Judge

r

.\\r llllll{ !\lr l\I·. Y Sr H.l'l Hl\ Fi{r l\1 B.\.\f\ 0\1~

Chapman Shoes
•

Robert E. Buck,

3-11 -tf~

'

Waod.(rO&lt;htt·Ouilting
Flowers, Stwing,
~·•k•t lids
. COMPARE OUR PRICES!
4·14-1 mo.

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On April 10, 1987, in the

' their Income from farmln:g 1 _ __;,_ _ _ _ _ _"T"_-:"______
• ~ lthlt is more than 50 percent
~ of their grou income must
' come from agricultural pro·
L
' . duction), be a citizen of the

Howard

HANDCUnn COUNTRY

Public Notice

e

O'Dell
. a ~rs~.~
r~J~
e f~fe~ris~,and
V~Jr~Mindy
g~in~la~W~e=
T~a~m~a~r=af===========:l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

ll&gt;frii;., with the ~fJk a!

·

1----------1---------..,j,--....,------1
B
s
::.t:.:;~~.~:;=~
ustness ervtces

Sandals, Casuals &amp; DreS'S Flats

•

ecutrix of the estate of Arlene

A. Hugh... So .. d8C81sod. late
·

992 .s111 ,.,

or 949·2801
No Sunday Calls

:==::::-t- .

•·

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FI[)UC1ARY
On April 13, 1987, in the
Meigs C0&lt;1nty Probele Court
Case No. 2.5 485, Mary E. Hughes, 43 Cola Slreel. l\liddl•
port. Ohio, was appointed Ex-

FARMERS HOME ADMIN·
!STRATtON OFFICE. 105
BUTTERNUT AVENUE, POMEROY, OHIO no latorlhan
May 26. 1987. FmHA com·

• which activitieo of lha courny

SPRING
SALE
ON

.

.,__

:;:=:.'f':""•
._
...........,,_

Public Notice

and be well qualifi8d for
committee work. Nomina tions ' must be received . in

Ph. 99

•

__ _ ·-"-===-·--=---=.·---·.,_
:-.......: .... ,-

~~~­

Public ' Notice

: within the county or ,araa in

Tra in ing sessions for ca r eglv·
Pr s of those with Alt zhcimer s
D is~ase and rela ted disorder s
arc cont inuing weekly at the
Senior Citizens Ce nter . 1 p.m . on
Fridays and ther e are openings
in lhl' classrs.
There Is. of course. no charge.
for thr tra ini ng and rea lly any
· ca rcglvPrs of the cldrrly or
handica pped arr eligi iJIP to at·
tend This F riday thr Home
Hl';Ji th Ser \' iceo f Vetera ns Mem·
er ial Hos pit al w ll! be giving
Instru ctio n on home ca rr of the
Infir m. Feel fn •e to allcnd. the
Info rma t ion Is in va luaiJlc.

.. .

To lloo

Giveaway

· 2 Cats and 2 klttln s to a good

..nappointment.
ITfMS

9

2 Long haired female ltittef'S,
7wk s. old. To • good loving
home. Ph . 61 4 ·446·239 3.

:::.~~ ~~h~nce 01

Other

PH. 949·2860

:·_ _ __ =~;=;====-t======t=~=:=::::===

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS

Thro
Great Ways

BISSELL
IDING
CO.
S
New Ho111t1 Built

n::..-..:.~'-

Public Notice

ISupr Run Area)
HOURS: Wtd.·lhurs.-Fri.
10 a.m. to l p.m.
!oturdoy 10 A.M.

""

4

HAT lACK

THE

'" Free Estimates' '

4·11·87-tfn

out ever having tocome into the bank again.
And since interest is tied tothe prime, you
can take advantage of current lower rates. Of
course, you payinterest onlyon the cash you
actually use~

·

·~---

!1-'11-

949-2263
or 949·2168

uwant rock-bottom interest rates
hen you look for a loan. And if it's a
ne of creditdou 'reafter, you want it
to be hassle-free an easy to1use.
That's what customers likethese are looking
for. And they're finding it all at BANK ONE.
Something to satisfy their very specific needs.
Our Equity Money Service lets you use the
equity in your home to get cash right now.
With tax-deductible interest, of course.•
. But it's all the special features designed
into Equity Money Service which make it your
ultimate borrowing bargain. We spent long
hours working out ways to give you just what
you want ...beginning with a choice of how to
make use of your credit.

· -~·~

=~
.::;::.....""C...

11- - T.....

~-

l Oll--fl-

·~~ n • r ,.,. ~

-·-"·----·-

*VINYL SIDING .
*AlUMINUM SIDING
*llOWN IN
INS '"ATION

•• - - . ... . a l l ,,_.,._,

:=::·=

tlf&gt;___.. __

gt::c:.,!i-t-....
........
::--..
.,:;t;J.

fiii!U!Y U J'{)I

- ·

._,_ ..L

..• . •
. .. .

Clau i/ied p11p1 coVer rhe '
folJo wins leleplw n• e:u:hen,.,..,.

PHONE

Club m eetings are held on I he
.thir d Monday of each month ,
Sept ember through Ma y at the
Pom eroy Unit ed Metho di st
Church, 7 p.m Anyone int er es ted
in joining may co ntact eit her
Mrs . Fau lk, 99 2-2475, or Mrs.
Thomas, 667-6836.

.. .
••

• .•
... •

- -~~~· ---·'

., I 1. llal11 St.
Po-roy, Oh. U769

Mothers of Twins Club meets;
plans made for twin convention

....
••

J .~ "

BUSINESS SERVICE

1

Arr angements to sponsor · "
loca l set of tw ins in the National
AII·Amer ican Twins Pageant to
be held In Twinsburg, Ohio were
made when the Mother s of Twins
Cl ub ·met Monda y night at the
Pomer oy Un ited M ethodi st
Church.
It was noted t hat new officers
w ill be elected at the May
meet ing at whi ch tim e also a
discussion oh the by· laws. of the
club will l;)e held . Pl ans wer e
made for a family picnic were
also discussed at ·the meeting.
The club will par tici pate in a
yar d sale June 5 and 6. Attending
wer e Eloise Drenner , Janel
Eblin, Llnda F aulk, Pomeroy;
Gall Patr iek, Gallipolis; Shelly ·
Smith, Ashton, W.Va.; Dwlla
Sayr e, E va ns. W.Va. and Debi
Gilmore.

1011"
JM1'i

IM..
... . . .

r.;:::::::::::::::;rr:::::::::::::;,~~

.. _....
·-..- ·-!:t:tEi:M

RAT.! I
·It -O. , ... _Ill .... _ ..

Ill,

you .would care.to
ma111t a CPA and talk
abtout what they can
for your company
- call us. We would
be happy to visit with
no obligation to you.

An Illl un1: e111 en Is

OLD qulltolcoth poldl 8t • · 245·
9448.

'•

Septic tonk pu mping, ' "'d•n•l~

&amp; con'l rn.,rlceL teO pf! r lo&amp;tf,
R onEv•ns£ nu~rprlaaa J11 ekAo"'

Ohio. Ctll l14 ·286 ·6930

J im't odd lobs ,:Jth'ltlng, driv&amp;•
way reseaiJnQ , earpe-ntef work &amp;
Mo t t ftJ'I .&amp;Ir, u ee• &amp; hedgltt
up fJrie nefld. Cal l 614-3 7 9'"·
2418.
:
Wou ld like t o babysit from 7pM
to 11m. alto wukend t 11nytlm ..
Call61-4 -44 6-3978.
''"'

wm

do i•wn mowing and odd
jobs, Ctll Robtrt Pickett , 614 ~
99 2·3888 .
•
For Hire off ice or house cleenlngJ

304·875· 1937.

Ftnanuol

•

•

...
21

8usineu
Opportunity

..

.'

"
~

I NOtiCE I
"'
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH ~

INQ CO . recommends thlt yo•
do bus int ts with ptopla yoaknow, and NOT to stnd moneol.
through the mtM untH you hn (:
lnvett ig tted th e oHe rlng.
•.

�)
'

Page- 10- The ·Daily Sentinel
21

LAFF·A·DAY

64 Miac. M8!'chandile

46 Spece for Rent

Own your own t1 3 .99 one priCe ·
designer shoO ltoul. A retail
pr.ice unbefhro~1 bl e for quality

614·446·3144 .

lt?ots norm !lilY pricltd from t19
to *60. Over 160 brand nemn

fixtures .

grand opening, Can ·combine
with over 1.000 brands of
apparel. 1c&lt;:nsory, dancewear -

d-v• . Mr.

Sidney

2

3

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive S1 .. Ol llipOIII . New &amp; u1ed
WOOd·COII stovea, 6 pc woodlR
suite U99. bunk bed1 1199,
reclinert new a uted bedroom
tuites, wring•r wuhers. a
t ho". New livin~t~roo.rn 1uitel ,
•199-t599, Iampi . C•ll 614,11

Professional
Services

'' A little Oeaign" , h'ltllllrior de-

sig n busineu for people on
limited 'budget . Independently
own~. 304-676-' 6&amp;3&amp;·.

Real Es lale
31

Homes for Sale

New 3 BR 2 car gara~e. brick
front. fr ont porch. nice lot 6

mlloo Sou th ol Galllpollt
&amp;47,500. Ptt. 614· 446·8038.
Modern 3 bedr oom ho me fram e.
lg ~ llitchen pl enty of eablnen.
refrigerator, alaculo rang e, dit·
poaal, dining room. 2 full beth I.
carp eted. full ba•emttnt11nlsh8d,
CA. new 911 furna ce. fen ced in
•backyard, lg. carport. Ready to
1
mo111e ln to. good 1oc1tion on
· Sun set Or. on Second Ave. Ph .
614-446·2673 or 446-1171 ,

"Norma, there's another
bird."

1-----------r----------..j
r

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

'86 Holly P1r k, 3 bedroomt, 2
bathl, Including underpennlng.

304·8 71.7298.
1 2 ~ 80 mobile home with 121124
addition. 1itting on 10011200 lo t ,

t 18,600.00. 304·676·7659 .

' Two nie~ 2 BR home• with 2 CM
g•r11ge &amp; worklhop. 4.383 ecru
en AI. 21 8. Ph. 814 -448-9888.

QUICK SALE , 12x65 mobile
hom e t1.200.00 . After 6:00
PM c all 304-578·2716 we•
kendt ull 304-8715. 5377.

t 1000. Down · *213 . par. mo.
2 bedroom houae. C1rpet
&amp; air condiUoner· 100')(160'
Lot, 6 miles from town. 614·
446· 8698 9am to 6pm.

1980 Windsor 14x70, 3 b&amp;d·
rooms. 1 VJ b~hs. exc con d.
many '"tr11: must move. 304·
895· 3048 o r 89&amp;-35B3.

t m~ll

· 2BR . R1nch Style Ho ust~, full
· b"emen1, 2 bath1, oneattechtd
gar11ge &amp; br uu way . Sur• rounded by 1tand ot plna1 on 13
acret . Pond, new fence. barn .
Call dav• 614 ·4'4 8-2107 or
evening• 245-&amp;eoo.
3 BR HOule with 32 acre1 for
' 111la. In Eureka acrotl hom the
: dam . $31,900. Ph. 614 -446·

. 2206.
Remod eled double wide 7
room •. 2 baths. nflw furnacB,
naw roo t. on large lot. 6 miles
out o r town on Johnson Ridge
Ad. t29 ,000 . Ph . 614 -446·

2946 .
· For 1ele by owner: 2 story haute
' in Mlddlepol'1 overloo king p1rk.
30 yr. guarnteltd vlny le tiding,
w-w ctrpet. 11h b~h . unique
woodwork. 614-992 -6126
Povernmenl homes hom t1 .
!U· tepairl Delinquent tu prop·
.. rty. Aapolltulont . Call 806687-6000 E.xt . GH .-9806 lor
ctm&amp;nt repo list.
' 2· bedroom hou1e In Clifton.
Price reduced tram 116,000 to
114,000. Phone 1-304-773-

6&amp;34.
3 BR .. lfJCteatio n room. kitc hen,
dining room. large front and
back porch. 8 )(10 wooden build·
lng, yard with chain link lence.
. Ru ttlc Hills, Syracute. Ot.lo.
614 -949-2910 between 9 ·
4p.m. 614-992 -6866 et1er 4 :00
p.m.

'79 Mobile Home, 1411 70, un·
d e rpennlng , 3 bedrootn l,
17,600.00. Phone 304-468·
1774.
1984 Shylinl!l mobile home
14x70. to1'el electric. 2•6 t)(te·
rior walls, 2 bedrooms. 1 bath
witll garden tub, It den, 304·

676·6367.
33

20 acre farm Htnnan Trac;;e
Road, Olenwood, W. Ya. tor
more inlotmatlon call 304-n3 .
5 H8 or 773· 5186 after 6:00

Si• acre mini-farm, fenced pulure, wooland, one barn, two ou t
building •, three bedroom. all
elect ric. brick ttncll home over ·
looking rive r, near town, 304 ·
675-7119.

34

7 roomt, bath y,, house In
Chtller, Ohio. Pr ice reduced
from 127.000 to 126.000.
Phone &amp;14-985-31571
Mu mt ao ll whhln 30 days. In
Pomeroy. nice 3 bedroom haute
with flra pl ua. full b11ement and
newe• aluminum aiding. Only
t16 ,000. Call614·992 · 3, 87.
3 bedroom home, 1to rm w ln·
dowa. Cllrpeting, utlll•y·garage
M1d storag e. Garden spot . Priced
for qult:k s1le. See Fred Williamson or call614-?42-2490 eftnr
6 p.m.
hrge house aero" lrom Piua
Hut in Pomeroy o n locust St.
Will u ll on Lend Con tract.

614·966· 3837 .
Houle fo r ute or trade. May
consldM land cont riiC l 6 room1
with beth , 1 1h 11eres C1111
814-992-7463 ,
t-t ouse for 1111 by owner. 4
bedtooma. living room. dining
1oom. kitchen. wa1h room. bath.
sc reened porch. See on Fifth St.
in Syracu•e C11 ll 614 -992·

Business
Buildings

Commercial building• for l11n .
Down town Pt. Plaaunt. Store~.
officet. A-One Reel Estate.
Carol Ye•ger, Bro ker. Call 304·
67&amp;·5 104.

8o

Acreage

33 acres: 3 mil es weal ot HMC.
nttlr route 35. Cell 614·446·
8221 after 6 .
lot 4-6 1cre1 mo re-leu. 5 mllet
fr om cit y llmitt. Rt. 218. Call
814· 446·2460 after 4pm .

607 ChandlM Drlvo , Poi nt Ptu tlml . 3 bethoo m&amp; newly re modalttd kltchttn and be th. New
ca•Ptt. Unat111 chod garego. Full
slu b11emont . L1rge 1ivingroom
Md dining Great lo cation. Low
50 ' t . Ct~~lt 304 -766 · 0128 ,
Thuraday l 9·00 9·00 ask for
Dave.
Nn poln11 or clos ing colts! 3-br,
1 b•th . lamlly room W ·
woodburner cent111i 11ir, 1 v,
IC181, At~urne tonn Itt 10
percen t ln tere1t. Cflll ofter 4 :00
p.m. 304· 676-44 50.
Newty buill hom e 3 bedrooms.
wall· lo-wall e,erpeting. 2 c er
g111rag1, e)(tr!l lilrge kilchM wit h
o11k cebinelry. Shuated close to
1cttool. Minute1 from town ,

304·676 ·6836 .
3 bedroom houtt, 2 11 0 N. Ma in
St .. Pt . Ptt. UO.OOO.OO. 304468 · 18 75 . " No Ru ltOrl
Pl111e"

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW AND US ED MOBILE
HOM ES KESSEl 'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME 8ALES . 4 MI.
WEST. GAlliPOliS. RT 36.
PHONE 514 ·445·1274 .
For " It by owntr, 1979 Buddy
14Jt70, 3 BR . 1Y, b~h•. tottl
tltc. wood 1tor10e l htd. wood
71hxl . porch. underp8ntling.
some furnlthlng l. loctled lnt 4,
P1rk L•n• Mabll• Coun. C11l
8U-441-3081 tft., 1 pm.
1982 Menlion on beautiful
rtverfrontlot in MiddiiPort. Tot t i
electric, AC, two l1rg e bedroom• t nd mtny IMtru . Ctll

614 · 992·3308.
1976. 1 2xeo mobile ho m• for
11le. 12200. Call 514-!»92·

A·, Reel Eatate.

New aptrtment : completely
furn. Raf. &amp; Dep. 1 or 2 adulu
only . C•ll 814-44&amp;-0338.
Spacloua2bdr. ap1. , C. A.. water
paid. Near Piua Hut. Gallipolia,

Ph. 614· 448· 7026.

Baden.

R Bal Estate
Wanted

10 lo 16 ecn11. let11rt, New
Haven o r Millon aJeas. With or
w ltl'lout hou1e. C1 ll 614--4463012 atter 6 :00 PM .

41

Houses for Rent

3 bdr . ranch, Rodney Villlgell ,
1286 mo. ptus depo. lt. Referen·
cem required. Cell Bltckburn
Realty 814 -446-0008.

Couch, chair, end tabln. COffH
table. lamp•. piano PF1 0 very
good lor gospel group . 304-

740 Secand Ave. 1 BR., &amp;1 85 .
par mo. Deposit required. Call
614-448-4222 betwaen 9-6.

61 4·992.77e7. EOH .
1 bedroo m furnittled apt . Ut ilities p•ld. 1210 perm'onth, 1100
depoait . Middleport. 814· 992·
5160.
2 bedroom ep1. for rent in
Pomtroy, •bove c1r wuh. Call

614· 992·6216 .
APARTMENTS , moblte ho mn
houses. Pt. Ple11an1 and GalUpa3 bedroom tpt with ttove and
rtfrigtr~tor , all tle c tric ,
12!i0.00 month plut ,,00.00
depotlt, 30-'·875·15421 .
Five room tpt , Vltnd St., Point
Pttlltnt. gea tnd water p1ld.
furn ished optlon•t. deposit: required. ctll 304 -895-3450.

Ready ml)( concrste and all
concrete aupplitt. Ctll us Velkly
Broolc Cement 1nd Supplies,

56

3 bedrooms. 2 full bMh•. ,.,...
li\'inO room. dining room and
kitchtn. Alao laundry room , 2
cat glftlt. centrtl alf. E11t1m
SchOOl cHttrlct. Refttll'lctl t•

qulrod. C.lll4·247· 4141.

2 IIDfY Mull fot rtnt. 17 ~
Ruitanc:laru. t221 . per month.
C1ll Jo Ann Stew•rt •• IU-

6941 .
1974 OranvHit Ux'70, 3 bed·
room. 1 ~ bath , alleltctric. Muu
bt moved. t&amp;BOO. 010. Call

2 bldroom haull tn New Hav.n,
unfu,...._ed. ref•.n~ and dep.
Galt requhd. I 110.00 month,

30&lt;1·112·2113.

Hav flkt 1nd 4 whMI Massie
Ferguson for Ale. C.lll14· 992-

'

Ch1in IIIW p11rt1, supplln and
reptirs. Siders Equipment Sales,
Henderson, W.V1. phone 304-

875·7421 .
I.H. Cub with cuftivator land
mower, verv good cond,
t1,800. Powell tobacco lttler
t180. Tobacco bail•a (3. t&amp;O.
each. Gl.nrldge Farm, 304-675END LOADER . John Deere420
crawltt. good cond, t3 ,800.
Glenr ldga Farm . 304 · 675-

62 Wanted to Buy

Groom lnd Supply Shop-Pet
Grocmlng . All breeda ... AII
styles. Julie Webb Ph. 614-446·

Now buying 1hell corn or e1r
corn . Call farlatlll quot81. River
City Farm Supply. 814-448-

0231 .

2985.

2 AKC Registered Slue Eved
S iberian Huskies. 185 each male
2yr. old &amp;: female 1yr. old Ph.

Wlnted to buy grande log•
dellv.,ed to sawmill. Paul
Mercer Sawmill , McArthur.

Chlnl Cabinet, 11ble &amp; 4 chaitt;
tappan microwne ove n. floor
stereo Zenith, Haute plants.
glauware. Call 61 4 ·448-8398.

814·266·6021 .

Ohio 45651 . 614·891· 6933.

Washer &amp; dryer. freezer, lawn
mower, tcsnner , t mall gu itlt
amplifyer good cand. Call 614·

Reglltered female Great D•ne:
Bleck with white ble ze. 2 'h yra.
old. Pay for vat bill• S100 . Ph.

63

614·2Be·5110.

Ouroc loan . Ired jult like the
bolfl w. ltttld If ll'le Ollio
Te1t11ton that a•lned over 2 .1
lbt . per dey. Rag..- Bentley,
Sabine. OH. 513-584-2398.

Quality Rottweilur pups. Sue
both pltents and pup from last
litter. 614 -693-84fJ9 or 614·
696· 1317 .

CHIANINA bulls. excellent bloddlinn. top perfvfmance. Slate
Run Ftrmt. Jac::kson. Ohio 114-

~EGISTEAED

ANGUS btollund

286·6395 or 814·2BI·17B7.

Plena ticket to San DIIQO fOf

$200.00 Ph. e14·«5·0193.

I ar111

Plastic cistern ltete approved.
pla[ltic atptlc ttnks. plastic
culvel'1s, metal culverts. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES , JeckSOfl, Oh. 614 -286· 6930.

Suppiii'S

.0: LIVCSIIII:I&gt;.
61 Farm Equipment

2 hydraullt: t:~llrt, e.~~:celtent
condition UO.OO 11eh. 1 IliOn
hair dryer t60 .00 Call6 14· 446·
8621 .

CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S. 35 WMt. Jaclcton, Ohio.
614·288·6451 .

Manev Ferguson. New Holland.
New hotpit•l mattre••· whHl· · Bush Hog Salftl &amp; Service. Over
chair 6 poUle chair complete. 40 utlld trt c:tors t o chool8 from
Sale all cheap Call 614· 446· &amp; co mplete line of new • uMd
7476 Daytim e.
equipment. lltg"t Hledion in
S.E. Ohio.
Cat trailer. Single ex le, leaf
spring1, S h . by 48ft . S700 . 5 JIM 'S FARM EQUIPMENT
Pc. C11ptalns bed set t 100. CEN1:ER . SA 36 W. Gallipolis.
Refrigerator goad for camping. Ohio. Call 814· 448-9n7. eve.
Mite. Volkswagon pens. Call 1114-448·31192. Up front lrlcaft..- 5 :00p.m. 814-949-2422. tors with w•rrenty over
uMd
tractora. 1000 tools.
Kimball pl1no. good eondhion. 3
point hook up ditc, 3 point hook Utilrty 81dg. Spl: 30'x40'1119',
up cultivllor. 2 fuel tlnll s. 1 eet 16)(8 Overkeld door , Servict~
14 Inch bottom plcws. Big round Door. $5333 Er•cted. Iron
ba!H of ~IV· 614-992· 388B .
Horse Bldgl. 814-332· 1146.

•o

2 prom dreues lor tile. One I•
sire 1 1 ·12. other is sire 13. Cell

e14·992·2428 .
Tony's Gun Atpalfl, hot reblue·
ing. Open 9:00 AM to 7:00PM.

'80 Cordoba Clr runs good 1nd
looks good. 11.000.00 . 304·

en.3385 .
1971

Gr~nd

'

Prix parts for aale.

304·676· n1o .. 676·6749.
1979 Trant Am 128&amp;0 FIRM.
Rebuilt tnglne, trenemission.
new clutch, preuure plate.
throw out bt~ring: 400 cu. in.
High Parfarmance. Netd1 Ptln·t.

EVENING .

WA&gt;JI.JA MAKE
CA~H,

~OME

8R00KE

1 970 Chwille, 2 door hard top,
PS. headen chrome, slots with
IO't on back. Chroma tri .. on
front. 307 four b~rrell. good

Maney f•rguson Tractor, 89hp
w ith plows, tranapondltc, 4 row
planter. Ford mowing m•chlne.
International raike. New Holland
Bl ltr t41150. Ph. 814-288-

6622.

3vr. old Regiet•d Sonlll Quarter Hot• mare gehling $400.
R~islefld Sorrell Mer• bred to
. grandson of Sonny O.t 81r

1300. Call 514·286· 6622.

Bentty Pig &amp;tie Wad, April 29,
7:30 PM, F1y1ne County Feirgroundl W11hington Court
Hou•. Selling 180 held of
Duroc's, H•mp-Duroc. Hemp·
York, Blrrowt. Giltl. Con ·
ligners Aoter ltnU8'f. Ph. 113·
584·2381. l.orov l.afrlft. Aondy
Ouiol.,-. Aemembtf the Ch•m·
pion BetroW tt the Ohio Sttte
Ftlr Juniot Show
purchned
It

'••t .,........ w"

676·1361.
1980 Dodge Omni. very-good
cond, 11 .500.00. 304-67&amp;-

36.14.
72

Trucks for Sale

V-8. 4

tpd. 32.000 miles.

06760. Coll61 4·268·6623.
1986 Ford Ranger 18,000mi..
good cond ., IllUme lOan . C1ll

814·26e·6867.
1978 Chevv C-10 306, euto·
m•tlc trans.. running boards,
tllding b1ck glau, in good cond.

t1995. Ph. 614·318·8280.
1988 GMC 5·1&amp; . Silfa Pac"-lgl, V-6. fuel Injected. real

sh"P· t9400. Ph. 814· 446·
2106.

1•87 Siera Clastic 4 - ~oel
drive, loaded. &amp;. OOOmi. Ph.

614·379·2e2o,

1978 FCM'd'F-150 Cuttom, 8·e'fl
trucll; 351 eng. crew Clb, air,
AM -FM cMHtte, etp with a
but radl , bulh to pul tr~ller

n5oo . Ph. e14 ·441·9649.

spHd overdrive trana. 4 : 1 1 ,...,_,

1&amp;.22 tlrn on Budda. Phone

&amp;

Fertilizer

Seed com fof Nit, De«elb and

Konwonlty. 304·171-111041.

304-675· 6123 . .

5079.

I' .111\lr llllilll'l'

Co11304·e71·4831 .

'

•

..

1979 Camper Palomino fold 1
down, aleep1 8. refrigerator tnd
turn1ca, 304-675-2477.
2 bedroom trailer. pertlallv furnithld, gas furnace. 12•50.
t3 ,100.00. 6th wheel in Jake1
sonvilte, Fla. 30•·'468-1988. .

FRANK AND ERNEST·

.. a)

4418.
t1 ,250.00. 304-571·4437 or
671-3314 . •
74

Motorcycles

18J Jellertono

8:00 ()) Dlktlri
II &lt;2J (I)) The Colby .Show
The Huxtables lip sync for
Grandma and Grandpa's
snnlversary. (R) 1;1
(!) Major Leegue lltlnball'e
Ortltell Hht The Fo, Has (T)
(5) Major L11gue IIIIHball
(1)
Our World 1;1
(f) 1!11 Moyere: In Saarch of
1111 Contlltullon Bill Moyell
8Xamlnesth6 U.S.
ConsHiuHon, Ito evolution
6nd Impact 1;1
ill Ill tDI The WiZird A
robot, created by Simon, is
charged with murdered. (~I
(I)) Prtmenewa Wrap ups ol
lha day's world news and In
depth lealu,. reports . (1 :00)
I8J MOVIE: Ceptaln Blood
(I :39)
(!) MOVIE: In-tor
Cloilneu (G) (1 :34)
1:30
tDI Family Tlto Ale•
mual choOae between his
lrl1ndahlp and his fraternity .
(R)C
(!) NIIL Hockey

S1!rv1ces

81

Home
Improvements

a ())

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guaran·
tee. Local ftf8fenc .. furnithed.
Free estimates. Call collect
1-814-237-0488. diP;I or night.
Aagers Basement
Waterproofing ..,
SWEEPER and sewing machine
repair, parts. and supplies . Pick
up end delfverv. Davis Vacuum
Cl .. ner, one tlalf mile up
Georgea Creek Rd. Ctll 6,4·

446·0294.
All types carpenter • concrete
work: Interior, exterior, ramo·
d&amp;ling , painting, roofing , free
utim~es . Call614 ·448-8174.
Lawn Mowing Chwrchet. Resi dtlnti•l. and 8uslne11. By hour or
by the job. In Gallipolit 1nd
1urrcundlng 1reas. Ph. 614-

367·0834. .
RON ' S Television Service .
House calls on RCA. Quazar,
GE. Speclellng In Zenhh. Call

304· 676·2398 or 614·441 ·
2454.

e

EEK &amp; MEEK
- ----n
I LIKE. S1~6, 11-J •
CX~f.Jt:WT WJ VJfJO
CfW D£AL VJI1H Uffi

9:00 ()) 700 Club

G (}) tDI Chllfl Cllll meals

a wealthY man and dacldes

the man should merry his

;jj~~ld1and Mike

Fetty Tree Trimming, ttump
r1moval. Call 304·676·1331 .·

New jobl lor Mike snd
Jactde tl1rnlen to end their

AINGLES ' S SERVICE . e•perlenctd ctrpenter, eleetrlda,,
m81on, painter. roofing llneludlng hot tar applicttlon) 394 ·

1 • tDI Doullldke, Part 2

marrlage.~':j.'/;l
(f) Will
nla Jerz

flltiYtl Woody Harman 1;1

676·20B8 or 576· 7147.

0 Myellfyl The Maxie

family ataysllghtUpped, but
Adlm 's auspeclllsl grows. ·

Rolllry or ctble tool drillinp.
Moat wellt completed samtdl\'.
Pump 11lt1 tnd service. 304·

8

'MORTY ·MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
r-~----------~

e14·885· 4464.

WHAT c:a:s )OLIR M&lt;.fu.1ER
82'

DO WHEN YQJ a:l'v\E HO'viE
SO DIRTY~

Plumbing
Heating

&amp;

I DON'T REALLY

K NOW WHAT
HAPPE,.S ...

ITS &lt;Jl.J5fONE Ql.JICX BLUR

F'RCM THE FRONT l)ooR
TO THE: M"THT/...IB.

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

1!11 IDI ~WI

Cor. Fourth and Pin e
GaMtlis. Ohio
Phon• 814- 8-3888 or 814-

(I)) Evening Newe A wrap up

ol tOday'a news and a look

ue.« n

ahead to tomorrow 's new s

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

A..idential Of commercill wir·
ing . New Mrvlce or repail'tl.
Licensed el.ctriciln , E1tim1ta
,,.., AidMtour Electricll. 304'-

BARNEY

GOOD NEWS, JU6HAID !!
MAW JUST FOUIJO YORE
SNf\PPit.J' TURTLE

171· 1716.
86

General Hauling

Autos for Sale

1370.

rtf)OI11 on world economics
and llnllftCiel news with Lou

Oobbl. (0:30)

IDIHCIMY-elD M'A"I"H

.

11:30

171·7397.

-to

j

gal.t

- ·· 304·671·2241.

•

I

,. Ia M Custom Couch11 ~
~~- ...... St. fit. 7 . Crawn
City. 011. 114-2151· 1470. Ew:
114· 441-:1431. 0,..., dolly •••
4 ,30, .... 1 '30 to I ,30, Old 1/
new
1

114·112·2101 or 114· 112·

2311.

Spadouo Mobllo Home lolt fo&lt;

u,.._• .,,

ftnt llflll f'MNI!tlon Mel pk:nk:

&amp;_,., .......... _

e

PEANUTS

·773·11e1.

c.•

'I'ES, 51 ~ .MR.PRINCIPAL..

I'VE COME TO AS!( vov
TO CONSIOEI1. PAmCtA
FOR •MJlt( QJJEEN '

Joen'(OU

IT WOULD MAKE
~E~ 'fER'&lt; MAPI"(,51R

'·

"He sollnde

1/~'&lt; VE1N QJEENLV...

furtoua ... uys l'le"elrollt the

.

IN OIER .

~AIILSIIE L()()I(S

dinosaur mueeum... "

.

SllOULD SEE &gt;IE~

WI~ FLOW~5

·
- 3073
lot . .
. - I'M.· 304·
611·
•'"'
1:00

loc;ull Ad. lit. I , Polntlll-nt,
304·171· 107e.

1
1.I'
. . .

·~

I

':!

. •

I love gQing to muftlple th81ters
In ahopplng malta. You rtally get
your money's worth. You see one

Ie

fll~ a n d - -.

R A C E E f4

t--,1:.:...:.;1;,7.=.,1,:;8;....:;..1..;.:..r.l,:-1
.

•

•

•

•

Complele lho chuckle quolod
by filling in tho missing words

L......I-..J..-J......J'-..J..--'. yov develop from step No. 3 below.

YESTERDAY'S SCIAM·lEIS ANSWEiS
Unlace - Un1111 - Tease - Urtle - SENTENCE

One prisoner boasting to hie cellmate : "My wile will get me.
out ol jail. She never lets me finish a SENTENCE."

BRIDGE

NORTH
•to 1

James Jacoby

HI·IT

'J64
tAH 3

Try today's deal as a problem, with
the defenders'.hands covered. You nat·
urally play low from dummy, and
East produces the ki~g . Well' Did you
play the ace? That, of course, is the
natural play, but you see the probable
outcome. When you force out the club
ace, East will return the spade Seven,
ducked by West. Now you ca n take a
heart finesse and cash out eight tricks,
but when East comes on lead with the
diamond king, h&lt;!' will play his last
spade and down you will go. Some
sharp·eyed advanced players may see
that declarer can still prevail by play·
lng his third spade, forcing West to
c~sh his spade tricks and In the pro'
cess squoozlng East between the dia·
mond king and the long hearts, but
there is yet a simpler way to make the
contract.
West must be leading from a five·
card suit (otherwise he would have
likely led partner 's heart suit\, and
East certainly must have the red kings
and the club ace for his opening bid. So
what happens if declarer allows the
spade king to win the flrsttrlck ? Back
will come a second spade - jack from
South and queen from West. West may
now play another spade to set up his
sult, but there's nota ghost of a chance
that he' ll ever win the lead again to
take those spade tricks..II is !mportant

.QJ 9 4
WEST

EAST

.Q9!6 2

••

t967 2

• K7 4
'Kt09873
t K tO

+876

+A2
SOUTH

•.us
'AQ 2
• Q6 4

+K tO I 3
Vulnerable: East· West
Dealer: ·East
WMI

North

Pass

3NT

Eall

Seu1h

Pass

I NT
Pan

I'

...

Pass

J .

Opening lead: • 6

to note that with this line ot play, de·
clarer must play the diamond suit by
leading away from the A·J ·~· 31n dum·
my up to the queen In his !land. If he
first plays to dummy's Jack, captured
by the East klng, the diamond length
In the West hand will prove a slum·
bUng block, and declarer will come up
with only elghllrlcks.

'

43 "Singln'

ACROSS
1 Prefix
for meter
5 Outdo
9 Saying
11 Ooe klnd

of code
12 Witches'
gathering
13 Literary

great

15 Before

long ·

16 Carry

IS -

standstill
19 Infuriate
21 Thrice
(Lat.)

'

In

the -"

44 Set
of three
DOWN

1 Tempo

2 Venerate
3 Symbol

or

bad luck

20 Engrossed 30 Asian

4 Mature

23 Merry

5 Shield
6 Historic
period
?Rudman
or Gramm
Sin shreds
10 Intertwine

22-du
IIeber

country

24 Naval

31 Type

vetl8el

1' coming

face •

25 Dress

32 Candle

fabric
26 Japanese
wild dog

36

27

Have

Pile

Actor,
Sean 3S Tell'&amp;

28 ElfYI)tlan

17

28"AStar

18-"
24 Manage
26

Royalist

27 Silent
film great
28 Philippine
peasant
29 Work

unit
30 Spanish
horse
33Macaw
34M .D.'s

group
311 Drink up
37 GI's
poster
39 Nonsense
41 Poet
Pound
42 Consumed

i....t.. ...J.....t~

·

DAILY CRYPTOQUO'I'FS -Here's bow to work It: ma
AXYDLBAAXR

!aLONG FELLOW

~ T,he

pecked spona htonllghto with
Nld( Charltl 1ncf Jim Huber.
(0:30)
eO 'Nigltt HMI' CBS l.lte
Night Vlgillntt .juallct II
IHut when Combll COUrt
the l t r -. (R)
ill M1gnum. P.l. Echoa Of
the Mind, Part 1
(!) 1.811 111ow ltlrltng

F'orrMf1v Ken '• now John 't
Water Sln'ic&amp; John W•ltereon.'
Jr. Owner, 1:000 or 2.000

largo trail• lot In Mlddl-.

r

t

---TR"""TA..:So...rH-'Hr.-il '

s ]
. .

Ctndnnati

·=·'·'· .•

Hou11 coal , llmtetone, •nc(
gravll. 0.1"'-ld , ton and up,.
J'm Un ler: 304·1'75 ·1247 011

Spece for sman t,.llert. AI
hooli;•UPI· C.bl .. Allo efficiency
roomt, l!lr and Clblet Matan.

I I I' .

1

Ill Tonlglll 8I10w

0 1pom Tonlglll Action

- - - - - -·

7478.

.

-n-"1 _,.1..;..P-+R'-r,....,l •

(!)~(L)

~

2919.

COUNTRY MOilLE Home P~rk.
Route 33. North of Pom1r0y.
Rntll tflll••· Ctll 114-H2·

_.
II

!f.:t:D

W•tterson'l Wattr Hauling.~
reasonable rates. immediate
2,000 1alk&gt;n delivery, claterns.\
pools. well, etc. cat! 304 -176-1

46 . Space for Rent

e (})

(1) WKIIP In

514·2•6·9286.

Nell' ltOfW and IChoot.

slorle6. (1 :00)
• (!) Sybti'Yialon
10,1 5 1 1 J - &lt;lames ShOW
10:30()) Celebrity Chell'
'
(5) Major Le1g111 lllnboll
(f) Jazz In lito Weel Vlrglftle
Joe Belcastro
liD Tony lrown't Journal
.Ill USA Tonight
11:00 ()) Hlldcltllt end
McCormick
• (2J ()) • ()) 1111 •1121
ilJI Newtl
(f) Mtcltanicoll UniVIfll
Atoms to Oul11&lt;'o
1!11 L.oolllng lack to the
Future: lteymonfl LOewy
O~Currtnt

J .J . Wattt S.mte. Swimmin1
poots. citttrnl a wells. Cell

w.vo. Call *

L...,y King Uvtl In daplh
Interviews with top
newamakerB and celebrities.
1:30e&lt;D 111 Nothing In
Common
•
10:00. (2) 1111 L.A. I.IW Kelsey
muat find someone who 's
lruly dowh and oulln Beve~y
HNia.(R)
~CJl. Jenntngo·Koppel

R &amp; A Water Service. Home
dlt11n1, w~ls. pools liMed.
F'otmMiy JIMal Boy1 W1ter.
Same r.tet. Call 304-615-

Furnished Roome

USEQAY

e (})

Dillard W.ter Serviee: Pools.
Ciaterns. Wells, Delivery Anytime. Call e14·441-7404-No
Sunday calli.

882·2827.

® JIIOptlrdyl

e (!)Too Cloot lor Comfort

84
19815 GMC luxury Conversion
Van. Plltlh lnt..-lot, llr, cruise,
dtt, ate:. Garage ltept. 12,000
mil•• · t1 1 . 000 . 814 ·186 -

®Newo
(I) SportoL.ook (T)
Cl) lleve~y Hlllblllleo
(f) Squ.,. One TV 1;1
1!11 Secret City
1])1 Focto or Llr.
(!) Dlll'rtnt Strolcoo
6:30 e (}) @ NBC Nightly Newo
(!) Winner'• Circle (R)
(5) Andy Clrtlllth
(1) II ()) ABC Newt !;I
(f) Nightly Bulllnen Report
!Ill • a) CBS Newo
1!11 Knowzone Follow a group
of scientists as they learn
mora about tornadoes . 1;1
(I)) ShowBiz Today News ol
lhe entertainment world Is
anchored IIY6 from N6w
York. (0 :30)
1])1 WKAP In Clnclnnau
(!) Hogen's Heroes
7:00 (}) HlrdCIItll and
McConnlck
G (2J PM Magozlno
(!) SportaCanlor (L)
C5l Sanford and Son
(1) Entertainment Tonight
D ())People's Court
(f) 1!11 MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewoHour (1:00)
1111 Newo
(I)) Moneyllne Current
reports on world economics
and financial news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
Ill a) ® Wheel ol Fortune
I8J Birney Miller
• (!) M'A'S"H
7:30 G (}) (1) Newlywed Game
(!)Spe.-ek(T)
C5l Honeymoonere
e(J) Judge
ill
of Fortune
(I)) Croaell,. (0:30)

w-

WAIT A tv'\INUfe.! THAT~ I'IO'T'
A CoMEr, . IT;s' ('-- pooL. CUE:!

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

1171 Chevy Luv. 4 wheel drive.

71 ,

1976 Star Craft cemper. tleeps
8, awning, good eond,' 304-773:

114·981· 4422.

73

8122.

1986 Caravan, low mileag&amp;
loaded. Like nftv. t10,700 or
bttt offer. 814-742-2026.

1972 WhiM Frelghtliner COE.

'70 Chevy truck 327, 4 speed,
thrH qutnet ton, 1700. 00. 'Jt•
Scaoter $1 ,200.00. I hp Rotill• ulld on• month t300.00.

65 Seed

111~ ~XT11Mt ~IS ORBIT
COI~IDE~ Wlf~ ~R11fS.

3839 .

Concrete finish , parklno loll.
b••m•ntl · any size job. Solar
Chinn Ditcount , Ric) Oarfitfd.

2yr. old P.-t Thoroughbred P.-t
ApptlooM IYC:ktldn M1r1 bred
to Reg. Arabi_.. 8t1Mion 14150.
Rerg. puN bred Arabian ltaMk&gt;n
stlnding It ttud. A19. M•ret
t1110. gr1de maret e1oo. Call

514·379·2510.

ASK VOUR ~T~~R

'
Truck topper a~d truck camper
for sale. lee ·bo)( , furnace.
lfOvCIIilllfitd d
Truck topper and truck camper
for ule. Ice boJC, fumace. ltove.
cven , Sieepa 6. 86~6 . 814-985·

896·3802

176.00. Ph. 614· 216·6817.

3000 Ford Tractor with 309 2
row Ford Corn Plan ..r, plows,.
disc . t4150. Ph. 114 -28e -

fBOOO. Coli 614· 949·2128. '

1878 Ford F-100, 75.000mi ..
ta96.oo Ph . e14·742· 3118.

310 Cummins, Majored. 10

lho _...-,......,--...
beform four ;,irnplt words.

e

1976 Dodge Rockwood Mini
Motor Home. 47.000 miles.

304·676·2477.

1176 Chevy ptckup 310, auto,
PS, no tust. nice truck. 2 tone
pelnt, 11 ,460 .00 . 304· 676 ·
4181 .

5 Goltt, 2 n111nyt, 111 fo•

~

1971 VW Beetle, 66,000 miles.
'74 lmpaiJ, runs good, AM· FM
cauette. after 4 :00 clll 304·

tq

I

e

Oi&lt;. 1&gt;0 YA WANNA
, li VE IN 'THI~ CRA;H
PAD TH' REST OF
YER L I FE~

t

.•,

. .

Roorrongo lo-.rs of
0 four
scrambled warda

• (}) (I) • ()) QJ) . . a)

•

814·446·0008 .

WOII

6:00 &lt;D 111g Veney •

28 h . Tittn motar home, complet~ly telf·COf!lained, generat
tor, siMps 8 . t8900.· c. ~

304·671· 48•9.

318·9e32.

Cell614·256· 6261 .

614·992·2021 .

742·30BO or 814· 44e·2459.

pick-up truck 1850. Ph . 614-

Callahan '• ul~d Tire Shop. Over
1 .000tli'ea.slus 12. 13, 14, 16,
16, 16.6. 8 miles out Rt. 218.

Storm windows for aale. Call

198&amp; GoH, IIspeed. air. AM-FM.
4 door. still und• w.rrenty.
24.000 miles, $1800. Caii814-

,.,.-,----1979 GMC% ton 4-wheel drive

59 For Sale or Trade

For aaht. Railroad till. You pick
up. 16.00 each. 814-992-2478.

Specltl· 1986 Mercury Lyn)(·L..
2-door hetctl, 6-apetd. 20,000
mlln. Wat$4600 . Now 83800.
Ph . 614·388;9516 .

1984 OodgoAom 1104•4. 3'1 8
Livestock

814· 448·1364.

Golden Retriever Pupplet AKC
Regi1tered. Very healthv. excel·
lent bloodlines. Going fast . Ph.

THURS., APRIL 23 •

0

tAM I

lcr,w

CAPTAIN EASY

79 Motots Homes
&amp; Campers

cond. 0700.00. 304·468· 1712.

Dragonwynd Cattery Kennel.
CF'A Himalaytn, Persl•n and
Siamese krttens. AKC Chow
puppies. New Chow pupplet.
Cell814-446· 3844 after 7PM.

Ht. Aent 26 MiM Crult Ph.

812· 3090.

Case 99&amp;. 58 H.P ..
O)(c:;lllent ccndrtion , new tW81.
t6800. Coli 614·911· 4143 If·
tit 8 :00 p . m . anvtime
weekend•.
'

6604.

New hoult lor rent or lilt In
Crawn City: 16 mlutts fro m
Huntington, 26 mlnut" from
Gallipollt, new loc11 tchool. C.ll

4 roomt, bath, 111 new paint. nice
and cletn. Oepoalt •nd ttf.,.,.ce
requlr.t. 1 or 2 children. 114·

19n

6604 .

Pets for Sale

3 raom eon•o• · all
newl y de ca rtttd , In town ,
1dul1 s. Pl tan no p.ts. Ref. •
Oapoalt Ph , 814-448-2543.

614· 44e·8t19

'

1953 Ford JubiiM Tr1ctor with
plow• • disk. Good running
condit6on, f\tW paint, UOOO
Firm. Ph. 614-992-8092 .

2268.

2783.

304·773.5414 .

1982 Ford Escort GL 4 ·dr .. Ac.
etc . Aell nice Ph. 614·3677243 lfter 5pm.
1980 Chavette. 2 -docr, 4 -

Furni•k~

614-268·6009.

1982 Subtru Gl. 4 -Dr., 6·spd ..
with 1ir, tilt. AM -FM, 66.000mi.
Ph. 814-448-8217 efter 6pm.

speod, t?OO. Ph. 614 ·379·
2140 .

Apartment. one or two aduhs.
no pMI, nice. U2t!i .OO per
month, 304· n3-635Z or 304 ·

46

Ma..ey Fergu10n 86 tractor
with plowt, dltc &amp; cuhlvatof,
corn planlef, bush hog 13&amp;00 ..
3' Masaey Ferguson Oieaelwhh
&amp;ft. finlah mower UBIO. C1ll

614·446· 6980 .

Concret&amp; blocks ell1i1ea verd or
delivery. Mason ~and . Gallipolis
Block Ca .. 123Yt Pine St.,
Oallipolit. Ohio Cell 814-448-

256· 1747.

Autos for Sale

Surplua, Army Cemouflaugo,
Denim, Rent1l clottling. lWIId
Turkey teuo n 1t1rt1 April 271 .
Sam Somrvllle't, Junction lnd•
pendance Ro1d Old Route 21
Eaat Fhvenawood, Fri. Sat. Sun.
1 2 :00-B:OO PM .

Unfurn l1 hed hcuse, 3BA , Rod·
nev Village II. U?5. Ph. 448·
4416 af1tt 7PM .
3 BR . llv lngrocm, lari e khchtn.
single garag e. utility room , on
Rt. 36 3ml. fr cm t-tMC. With
option 10 buy. Ptt . 814·448·
1358 .

71

4A4 Farm Tractor wh:h 600
hours. PTO, lronl IOIKI•. Call

246·5121 .

Good uied ealor pon1ble &amp; floor
model TV 'a Ph. 614-446-1149 .

64 Misc. Merchandise

Etticency apt. utllillet paid next
to Rio Grande College. t 175 per
mo. Ph . 614-446·8883.

61 Farm Equipment

676·e674.

Building Materials
Block, brick. sewer pipee, win·
dowa, lintel•. etc. Claude Winters. Rio Grande, 0 . Call 614-

Used living room 1olas and
lo vese~ . Corbin &amp; Snyder Furnl·
tute .Ph.814-448 ·1 171 .

Private entrance a. privtte p1rk·
ing, 1 bedroom, utllitlet paid.
Gaod location Ph. 614·446·
Furnishlld Apt. 1BA, 701 Fourth
Ave .. Gallipolit. 1226 Ut ilitiM
Pd. Ph . 446·4416 after. 7PM .

t::::::=::=====l:;=::::==:;=::::;:::1
514·286·5622 .

56 Building Supplies

5· drawer chest 8&amp;9.96 .

3 pc. bedroom auite with box
sprlng1 and matt re11. phone

lls. 614 · 446·8221 .

Rentals

each . 14 inch
spare tire 1215 .00. 304·

676·2848.

048.

94 Locust St . 1 BA . furni11'1 ed,
ept. uptt•in. UOO Utilitiea ptid
160 dep. Ph. 446-1340 or
446· 3870.

Camping
Equipment

'

no.oo

f~orv

304· n3 ·6234 .

19 inch Motorola Ouasar T.V.
w ith stand $100 . 8 pc. bedroom
suite wllll box t prings and
mtttrtll 1200 . Call 614-9922413 aher 5 p.m.

3 04 · 89 6 · ~873 .

36

tires

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

Country Uvlng. 1 BR furn 'ed
apt . AC , Wathtr 1nd dryer, no
children or petl, ret &amp; dep
rtq 'td. Call 614-992-2807. liter 8PM .

Grtclous liYing . 1 and 2 btd·
room • P•rtmentl at Villege
Menor end Rlver~ldt Apart ·
menu in Middleport. From
8215. including utilities. Ca ll

742· 2421 .

614·9el·4357.

6104

Asht on bu ilding la tt , mobile
home• permit red, Clyde Bowen.
Jr. Jl)&lt;l. 578·2336 .

2239

Old time tog hamel. fo r more
lnform1nion cAtl304-676 -7384.

304· 676· 1738 or 304· 676·

2 a 3 BR . unfurnlahed apart ·
ment•. end 2 BR . furnished
eptrtment . Call614·446-0284.

hon

ole 066.00. 2 IPZ06· 71· 141

0900

4 8 / 10 acres· Jeckaon Co. with
32d8 Building. electric P. ci1y
w1ter hook -up. Owner uys no
reaton•blt offer will be rvtuaed .
Caii614-2BS· &amp;622 .

4 acres li nd,

,000 Ford
.00 . Kenmore
dryer
1t1'77
ttetjon wagon
•100.00. Ladln10 speed !Hey·

Chell of Drawers- 4 draw&amp;r

7615.
36 Lots

1975 Chev pickl,lp 1800.00.

P,arscna Furniture
1416 Eettern Avenue
Bedraom Suitet t399 -1900
Living Room Suites $179 .95·

Furnithtd &amp; unfurniahed IPtl ..
1160.00 and up, rtftrtnces Ph .

63&amp;7.

Valley FUrniture, new &amp; used.
largo 18ction of quality furn l'
ture . 1216
Eastern Ave ..
Gtlllpotil
.
.,..,.,_--------

Television
Viewing
•

Lot for Sate- 40x1 00 ctmpi"u
lot, in c.-npground orlRae~n
Creek . Ph . 614~ 4146-1294 . • .. 1

sell lot for 126.00. 304 ~ 876 ·

Seve~

1812.

SAt::€ /&gt;6 A,......,,..,...,

~OU

7223.

614·446·0322.

Apartment
for Rent

11111.10? mAt?

ei56 \IKlOI..D ~ I..I&gt;T IE
H.'{ t:DtJ flJ.'D ~ LA"ffi¢~

ZOO PIPC?r back rcmanc•. will

Sofas and chtirl pri ced frcm
tJ9e to *996 . Tables •so •nd
up to *126. Hid••· beds &amp;390
to t&amp;96. ReclinMs 1226 to
2 Bedroom lurnilhed, AC . 1 BR .
8376. Lamps t28 lo •126.
1pt. furnithtd. Hud accepted
Dinettes *109 and up to U96
Fatten Mobile Home P..-k Ph.
, Wood table w -6 chain *286 to
614-441-1602.
1796. D1sk 1100 up to 1376.
Hutches t400 end up. Sunk
Trailer above Krogeu In Pomeroy tor rent. Total nl11ctric. C1111
bee:!• complete w-mttlreisea
1296 •ttd up to t396. Baby bed•
614·992·5215.
t110&amp; t176 , Mattreuesorbox
springt full or twin 1 63, firm
2 bedroom unturnllhed, 68
*73. and 183. Queen aettt225.
Burdette Addri. Newly redecoKing t;JBO. 4 drawer chut t65 .
rated, 11150. month plus utili·
Ores't ere 189. Gun cabinets 8 .
tlet. 304 -273-5666. Only M ·
10, 12 gun . 011 or electric range
rious Inquiries.
$37~ . Baby meurenes 135 &amp;
*46 . Bed frlmn 120. UO P.
Mobile home for rent. 2 badKing frame t50. Oood selectin
rooms. deposit required. you pay
of bedroom suites. metal c•
utilitiet. 304· 875·25315 .
binets. headbo11rds 130 and up
to 166 .
2 b~room trailer, coupiH, 1
sm•ll child, Locutt Rd , Rt. 1,
Used Furniture: wood teble &amp; 2
Point Plettlnt, 304-675· 1 076.
bench", beds. a dreaaer. 3
milet out BullVille Rd. Open
3 bedroom trailer Plymale Road,
9AM to riPM , Mon. ttuu Sat.
Gallipolit Ferry, 304-875-3693.

44

7B

304·876. 1484

266· 1393.

1 Bedroom b11ic rent 1176.00
plus eleeuic. Also required 11
1200.00 Mcurity deposit . CON TACT: Jackson Estates Dept. Ph
446 · 3997 Equal Houa ing
Opportunity.

9.3 acret, 7 miles o n Rt. 82 from
Point P'l•••ant. Timer, mlneral t,
well, septic. Owner financing,
t37, 200 . U . 200 down and
t242.22 per monll'l , 304-626-

White pine Jeedlingl for ule.

WaL,%TILii':~~, .. ~ ._.......,~

~ c::f FLYI~ , 0LAD'{?, ..

'

•

County Appliance. Inc. Good
uHd applianc'"' and TV lftlt.
Open BAM J o 8PM . Mon thru
Sat. 614·441·1899. 627 3rd~
Ave. Gallipolis, OH .

'OJ ""~ lOl.P !Ne '1tllllAo A

Used &amp; Rebultt Transmia_lioni.
All intllrnaUy lnspeeted • guaranteed. lnmllatton lnd pick-up
IVIilable. Ctll 814·448-0966.

Sears yellow print b..dlpt. .d.
eenapy and prisclllal, full tize;

Wahtrl, dryers, refrigerator•.
rang u . Skaggs Applianc u,
Upper Alver Rd. bnlde Stone
Crqt Motel. 114-448 -7398.

14155 2 BR trailer, 8mi. from
town on 218. lllrge private lot
with .indu striel type play ground
·.equipment. t200mo. Ph. 814·

c:.....

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 11
•

Topper tor a_pick-up truck. oo0d
cond. Ph . 81'4-256· 6631.

304·576·2106.

•26.00. 304·676·60e5 .

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio .

2220 or 1·304· 671·8768.

WANTED TO BUY so·· or 80's
Jukil Bo• or Pin Ball Machine.

446·3119 .

1987

a

876·6422 .

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Over 6I V2 ·aCre farm . Very clean,
19 acre meadow. rest p.aJture,
gaod fence, all mineral rlghu,
28x88. 3 bedroom home, 2
barns, 2 pond I . Loti of outbuild Ings, school but and mail by
door . Pr ice reduced , 304-458-

For nle 58Ft country home. 20
acres $3 9 . 900 . 00 , Cherry
Ridge, M ei~JS Count y.
Call

614·992·7160

Farms for Sale

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

t.,,

Th~y.April23.
·r

BORN LOSER

Rlbuill . All tYPII COf'CIUt COII.Vtr·
&amp; ,......,
eye
Joinu. o ...rsntHd • mlnumum
of 30 dayt, Will deliVer, CMh
c•rv or Install Call 114-379-

Complete Satellite system, ontv
6 months old. 11 , 100.00. 304-

(404)252 -4489 ,

Auto Pana
&amp; .Acoeatoriea

BUOGETT(IntmiMiofts, UIOd ..

Roush'• Tack Sho p now h•
Memorl•l Day Flower• on · Rt.
82. 1 mile abodllkln.

51 Household Goods

a•obic, chlidrens shop. Cen
16

76

Formtll, blue Gunne Sax.
m~~.tYe Filtrations size 9. Pink
Wrth bl1ck lace size I . All w01n
;e~9 . · t)(c. eond. 304.•471-,

Merchandi se

250 svtlea ..• 14. 800 to •2 8.900

Open

KIT 'N' CAIILYLE €by

Office &amp;pace lor Rent. Excellent Aka! mod .. M-9 ANf ReCOt'M
for Attorn-vs. Account11\r. etc. whh Cr~ Fi.td head ..,.._,,
.C iote to Court HouM. C•ll , built in 1mp and IPiaker. 3()4.
Wisem•n Re11 Estt te Agency. 461·1563.

8 uslneu For S.lePh . 61&lt;\·446·
3542.

in.,.entorv. trai ning,

Thursdiy, A ·123 ..1987

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Buainen
Opportunity

.

12:00 (I) llumiiiiCI Allen
(I)~(R)

i;;::&amp;..;..
tc1V

(0:30)
I!J)IIpOII
0 .......gilt l..lvt .....
with Plt&gt;1c:k Emory lnd
. KJrltln Undqulsl. (1 :00)
12:JII (I) llelt ol Gnluallo
• (2) • L.Mt Night """
Dl¥fd ..........

One letter standa-fOfoanather. Irrthis sample A is ·used
for the three L's X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apoetrophes, the iength and fonnatio~ of the words are all
hinta. Each day the code letters are different.

'

I'

CRYPTOQUOTE
4 · 23

CM

Wli.JWSM

K U PUV

· MDHPUM

ME CUKEU

•
·J V D K A

w

CR

JCRNDLR

IVDOHUT

(f)

.&amp;•:--

U W RC K A
· AU'nVAU

RIJK
0

TDVU .

•

.MNWJ

Yfllterday's Cryptoqu.ote: QUARRELS WOUW NOT

LAST LONG IF THE FAULTWASONI,YON ONE SIDE. LA ROCHEFOU~AULD

'

�· Page- 12- The

Daily Sentinel

Thi.I'Sday, AprH 23.

·.,...--Local.Briefs:------.

,·fteside.Dts.awaiting (Continued from Page~-~

Boston,·Utah

Meeting date is changed

.
.,'
commissioners asked Roberts If. wpuld be available.
·~
Irma
Mae
Calhoun
officiating. Burial will be In the county trucks could be made
Everett Schultz, Olive Tow)h:
Today 's meeting of the Ewing Chapter of the Scns of the
available for hauling dirt at ship trustee, was a·t the meeting:
Irma Mae Calhoun, 62, Rt. 1, Bald Knob Cemetery. ,Friends
AmeriCan Revolution has been changed to April 30 with dinner
may
call
at
the
funeral
home
Gilmore Cemetery on Forest to dicuss the' possibility of using:
Crown City, died Tuesday at her
a t 6:30p.m. followed by the meeting at 7:30. The dinner- meeting
f.rom
7·9
tonight
and
from
2-4
and
Run Road, where a new road to salt brine as dust control on Olive:
residence.
·
. will be held at the Meigs County Museum .
7
·9 p.m. Friday .
the cemetery Is · belng · built. Township roads . The commts.:
She was born Jan . 6, 1925, In
Tampa, Fla., · a daughter -of Grace L H08kins ··
Roberts said it was the county stoners explained It would be ut&gt; ·
He nry and Nina Perryn.
Grace L. Hoskins, 74, Raclne
highway department's policy to to the trustees to call a publlo:
She was preceded In death by died Wednesday at Veteran~ help township trustees whenever meeting to discuss the matter:
Memorial Hospital. ..
·ihey could and that the trucks with township res idents. If the.
two sons and one brother.
Rev ival meetings will be held Friday a nd Satu rday, 7 eac h
Mrs. Hoskins was born Nov. 4,
major ll y in attendance at th~:
Survivors Include her husband
even ing, a t Car th age-Troy Communit y Churc h In Coolville.
Robert Ca lhoun of Rt. 1, Crow~ 1912, In Athens County, a daugh·.
public meeting have no objectloll"
Speaker wil l be Rev. Edsel Hart. Special singing w!ll be
City; two daughters, Tina and ter or the late William Marlon
fea tured. Pastor f3il ly C. Mu rphy invites the public .
to brine as dust control, th~
Nina· Calhou n of Rt. 1, Crown and Bessie Archie Frazee.
trustees would then have to pas!(.
Clty; four sons, Robert Jr., and
Surviving are three daughters,
(A~ of 10:30 a.m.)
a resolution to that effect . OnlY:
Jack, both of Rutland, and Robin Mrs. Gene (Sharon) He in Baker,.
Provided by .
licensed brine haulers may apply.
and Kenneth, of Myrtle Beach, Mrs. Howard (ijetty) Wrltesel.
Bryce and Mark Smith
brine as dust control thecommts;;:
Meigs Coun ty Emergency Medical Services reports s ix calls
S.C .; seven grandchildren; one both of Racine; Mrs. Otto (Bar·
of Blunt, Ellis&amp;: Loewl
s toners added.
::
Wedn esday : Pomeroy at 8:16 :a. m. to LI-ncoln Hill for Evelyn
brother, William Perryn• and . bara) Hopkins, Columbus; four Firm
Price
Knight to St. .Joseph's Hospital; Middleport at 10:28 a.m. to
one sister, Jenny Perryn. ·
· sons, Ted Frazee, Chauncey; Am Electric Power ........ :.... ... 28
Stonewood Apa rtment s for Mary Gilkey to Veterans Memorial
She will be cremated and there Tom Hoskins, Dexter; Larry 'AT&amp;T ....... ....... :.................. 24~
Hospital; Rac ine a t 2:50p.m. to Ml! e.Hill Road for Mark Combs
will be no service.
·
Hoskins, Columbus, and Robert Ashland Oil ........................ 60\1,
to Ve terans Memor ial Hospital; Middleport at 6:36 p.m : to
Arrangements will be made by Hoskins, Me Henry, Ill., 24 grand· · Bob Evans Farms .... .......... 253,4
Stonewood Apar tment s for Shirley Frazier to Veterans
the Willis Funeral Home, children, and 18 great· Charming Shoppes .............. 25%
Memoria l Hospital ; Raci ne a t 8: 05p.m. to a brush fire on Hill
Ga llipolis.
grandchildren.
Federal Mogul ...................... .43
Road; Middl epor t a t 8: 1.1 p.m . to Sycamore Street for Keith
.Besides her parents, ·she was Goodyear T&amp;R ...... :.... .... .... 60 ~
John Hayes
McCarty to Vetera ns Memorial Hospita l.
John Hayes, 82, Chester, who preceded In death by her hus· Heck's Inc ................ .-.......... 4¥.
died Wednesday at his home, Is band, Robert E. Hoskins In 1977 Limited Inc..... ..... ....... ....... 42¥.
also survived by three great· and a son, William D. Hoskins. Multimedia Inc......................54
grandchildren besides survivors Eight brothers, Clifford, Delbert, Rax Restaurants ................ :. 53,4
na med ear lier. Services will be John, Floyd, James, Donald, Robbins &amp; Myers ................... 12
&amp;
The So uthern Loca l &amp; hool Dis trict Board of Education will
Mark and William Frazee, and.a Shoney's Inc ................. ,.. ... 29\-4
at
1
p.m.
Friday
at
the
held
meet at 6: .10 Friday In the sc hool cafeteria.
$2.00 Cowll' Charge
sister, Bertha Helghtland, alsg Wendy's Inti. .............. .... ....... 11
Ewing Funeral Home.
preceded her In death.
Worthington lnd ........... .. .. ... 183,4
Minnie CaJTOII
Services will be held at 10:30 r----""7---------l----------__..,;
Minnie Ours Carroll, 76, Route
a.m. Saturday at the Johnson·
1,
Portland,
died
Wednesday
at
iConttnued rrom Page 1)
West Penn Hospital, Pittsburgh, Souers Fu'neral Home, . 46
Fayette St., Nelsonville, with
doliar~, Powe ll reports.
an Important portion of the grant Pa.
Rev . Gary Alton ol!lclatlng.
The progra m receives In-kind with over $4,700 Included In this
A homemaker, Mrs. Carroll Burial will be In Greenlawn
by us ing general relief workers, year 's grant money to be spent
was born March22,19ll , ln Meigs Cemetery. Nelsonville. Friends
County, a daughter of the late may call at the funeral home
as well as from sources suc h as for containment. Powell has
governmenta l units - the town· plans for on-site construction of
Goldie Ours .
anytime after 3 p.m. Friday.
s~ lps a nd county highway de- concrete trash containers, which
Surviving are five daughters,
partment - providing needed may be built for organizations
Kathleen Coursln, East Liver-· Veterans Memorial
eq uipment a nd oper a tors. The and loca l governmental units
pool; Josephine Stephens, Par·
program also has free privileges throughout the county on a
kersburg, W.Va.; Wanda Do·
Wednesday Admissions -Perat the county landfill.
cost-share basis. Powell believes naldson, Findlay; Cindy Fitch, mella Cox , Middleport; Marvin
This year's progra m grant Is If trash containers are provided,
Portland; Charlene Wallbrow'n, Darst, Pomeroy; Mary Gilkey,
for $79,650, with the $3,000 In· most people w!ll use them .
Portland; a son, Michael Flem· Middleport; Susie Bess, Ru ·
crease to be spentln promot ion of
And what happens when this tng, Columbus, 15 grandc hildren , !land; Martha Clonch, Pomeroy;
10 great-grandchildren and 12 Evalena Pauley, Portland; Betty
recycling later this year.
year's litter grant expires?
And agai n this year, a portion
Powell will be reapplying for step·chlldren .
Music, Racine; Shirley Frazier, ·
of grant money must be s pent in funds In August or September
She was preceded In deaqth by Middleport; Kathryn Weaver,
educating e lement ary age child- a nd should know by November tf a son and her husband. CharlP~ Pomeroy.
ren In proper dis posal of litter. another program yea r will be Carroll.
Wednesday Discharges "Studies show," Powell says, funded by the state.
Services will be held at 1 p.m . David Frymyer, ' Carol' Baker,
"tha t higher grade levels are not
Saturday at the Ewing Funeral · VIrgie Fetty, Lorena Ault.
H0 In
llh R
Bill H b k
'!tal .1NMr1pring Mattr~.~·
as educa bl e In rega rd to litter r-;::==========::f~!!!!:e:.._:w:::!!;~~e;:v:_;....!:~~o~a~c~_:,::_:~:_::,:.:::.:_::::_:::::.:_:.::__ _
TWIN
FULL :
disposa l beca use bad ha bits hav e
III.
'IUS
$ltlc.SIOU5
a lready been formed."
$49fl
6995 ,
Thts {year 's program again
Includes the Teacher's Stipend
lOX SPRING
BOX IPRJNQ
Program, In which six e lemen·
.....
'79.95
tary teachers In the county are
'
QUEEN
chosen to develop a two-day
KING ,
....
. 179:95
FLORIST
R•. S19U5
curr iculum on Utter, to be
Incorporat ed In the da lly lessons.
Meigs County's Otdalt FloriO!
...
The teac her receives $75 In
. . .... Oiiy
FOI
A
FE
CONSULTAnOI
Will
Seta Only
retu rn for his or her efforts. This
352 E. Main St., Pomeroy, 0~.
program Is coordi nated through
NO o•IGA110111 CAlL (304) 675-6535
PH. 992-2644
John Costanzo of the Co unty
~'Often Imitat ed - Never
4 "Little,. Design Is Independently Owned
Board of Education.
Duplicated"
Licensed
Jane Little.
Lastly, con tainment Is again

Ohio Lottery

•
wmners

•

Daily Numher
877
PICK-4
4624

In

NBA playoffs
-Page 4

Revival slated this weekend

Partial clearing tonight
wllh a low In lhe mid 40s.
Mostly sunny Saturday wllb a
high In the mid 60s. The
probability, of precipitation ·Is
near zero tonl~ht nnd Saturday.

Daily stoc'k pn'ces

· EMS units respond to 6 calls

r-"'"----'----------··

MIZWAY .
TAVERN

Chaflit Lilly
Friday &amp; Saturday
Night
April24 25

Southern Board meets Friday

Litter Control

~u..

&lt;A ~. &lt;;irn&amp;:. ~~~
A NEW CONCFPf IN RESIDENTIAL
AND COMMERCIAL DESIGN.

.... ....

....,_

,,,.J,..

.......

'""

DON'T MISS OUT
ON OUR . '

Great new loak for Spring.
Print tops, pants, shorts, skirts, jackets
and tank tops.

GIRLS TOPS &amp;BLOUSE SALE

IIIII pGI~ shirti. T·badl shirt1. tonk tops, birydt
shift1, ""' ,., and biiVIII.
Slzts: 611101. to 24 IHI., 2 to 4, 4 to 61, 7 to 4.
.HG. '6.00 TO $16.00

Stock up on your favorite music.
Country, rock, easy listening,
religious and sound. tracks."

Reg. 512 Sportswear ...... S9.S9
Reg. 516 Sportswear .... 512 ' 79
Reg. S22
.... 517.59

Sale Priced

--~L-~~O~N~S~ALEROW

BED
-PILLOWS

Stop in, SH our new
ulection in Standard,
QuHn and Full Bid
Situ. Dacron polyester
or foam latex filling.

Selut Yourt Now

MEN'S AND BOYS'

SALE

GYM
SHORTS
1OO'Ao Polytst•, llitt llllctlon

•lncluclel
knit thlrtt end
tpOrt ehlnt8 to 18.
•Include• ell men'o knit thlrtt end
tpOrt 1hlrtt '- Van Heuten dre11
thlrts - eri,d all aport shiru . .
Plenty of ts1l11 and big tlzei.

of relon in Jiz• XS 124·26), S
121-JOI, M 132-341, l 136·
381, ll(40-42).

11.95

Shirts ........ Sale S7.60
110.95 Shirts ...... Salt suo
S12.9S Shirts ..,. Sale 111.00
Sl 4.95 Shirts .... Salt 112.70
.

.

$479

MEN'S

LIGHT WEIGHT JACKETS
Perfect for spring and suMIIMr wear.
Regular and extra lar.. slzu.
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY

1/2 PRICE

to S1279

MEN'S AND BOYS' DEPT.

$595

Spt~lal

$479

...

•N'S SIIIU

CAPS
AND
HATS
•llctilll of styles IIMI colon. Special prices for the

........

Ow MW

.

'

IIIILAI tt.JO ............................... SAU 12.15
111'11.11 IJ.SO ........................;...... SALE SJ.9J

-.all ~1.95 ............................... SALIIJ,JS

__.. l.t.9S ...............................SALI St.IO

25 Cenlo

Mullimedlolnc. Newopoper

AEP ·shareholders block revelation of ·details
CHARLESTON, W.Va . iUPI ) -Again, Amerl·
can Electric Power Co. has overwhelmingly
defeated a resolutloo by religious groups that
. would have forced the utility to reveal detaii'sol its
policies related to acid rain .
Under the proposal , AEP would have been
required to explain the amount of expenditures on
lobbying against acid rain legislation arid to
declare Its intentions about six older plants
considered serious polluters by the religious
orga'nizatlons.
AEP owns 18 major coal ·f!red power plants in
Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky, _ West Virginia and

co rporate secreta ry of AEP, told shareholders
that since 1973 the company reduced it s sulfur
dioxide emi ssions by 10 perc ent des pite a ·22
percent Increase In coal burned.
AEP has spent $1.7 billion to comba t sulfu•·
dioxide emissions , Including more than $1 billion
on air pollution con1rol equipment, Dowd said.
The Rev. Thomas Gaunt of the Society of Jes us
said AEP provided about $1.5 million during 1985
and 1986 to a lobbying group called "Citizens for
Sensible Control of Acid Rain ." This group
presents itself as a grass-roots organlzallo.n but

Virginia .
Appalachian Power Co. of West Virginia is par t
of the AEP organization.
Sponsoring the resolution were the Maryland
a nd Detroit provinces of the Scciety of Jesus and
three other religious organizations. The resolu ·
lion drew support by 9 percent oft he votes cast at
the annual shareholders meeting Wednesday.
The support was less this year than last year
when 11 percent voted lor the proposal. In 1985, the
prop&lt;lsal drew 8 percent of the vote.
A. Joseph Dowd, senior vice president and

the utility company's funds apparently provided
a bout half the group's budget, Gaunt claimed.
Th e lobbying expenditures are justified. Dowd
said, since acid rai n legislation aliegedly would
have cost AEP about $1 billion a year and would
ra ise customers' rates 20 to 30 percent.
Gaunt said the Information sought Is not
proprietary, and AEP should be willing to reveal
it. The Jesuit group won a battle In the Securities
and Exchange Commiss ion to force the company
to put the Issue on the ballot for the company 's
annual mecllng.

·Records
will aid
probe
of deal

House approves plan to alter
time off for model prisoners
COLUMBUS I UP I) -For the one-third.
.
second time In a week. the Ohio
Currently, Ohio prison inmates
House of Representatives has r an qualify for eight day s of
taken a small step to clear out "good tl.m e" per month. Refor·
some space In the state's over· matory Inmates can qualify for
~rowded prisons.
12 days a month.
Despite complaints of "cod·
McLin said the Gover nor' s
dllng prisoners," the Hou se Tas k Force on Prison Over·
voted 65-25 Thursday for a bill crowding felt th e qualifications
expanding, on a trial bas is, time should be equalized. and th at new
way s of reducing sentences
off for good behavior.
The bill. which now goes to the should be found .
Senate, gives prlsonrrs a
The b!U, wh ich would be in
monthly reduction of 30 percent effect until July 1, 1990. a lso
of the length of their se~ t e nce for allows three days of cr edit per
faithfully observln~ the rules of month forprison ers remalnlngin
the Institution .
minimum security sta.tus , and up
Earlier thi s week. the House ro four months for meritorious
passed legislation providing ffor conduct Involving the protection
sentence reductions for non· of persons or property while
violent felons of up to 90 da ys in In carcerat ed.
t~c 0vent of an overcrowding
"We're coddling pr isoners as
far as I'm concerned, " said Rep.
emergency .
The lastest bill , sponsored by ~obert E. Netzley , R·Laura.
Rt:P· C.J. McLin, D-Dayton. also
The easier we make It. the more
.
• .. , lli.QU~,allow.ppJ.soner.s.u&gt;.earn.an.. ~r~ld),vlinl). we ·tli.Y.t!, • lil~laQn r~
· · additional two days a month off should be unpleasant enough so
their sentenc€6 by participating they don 't want to go back."
In academic or vocati~nal educa·
"When you vote for this, you're
lion programs, prison Indus tries going to be voting lor less time
or alcohol or drug rehabilitation served, .. . said Rep . Steve n 0.
programs.
. Williams, R·Lancaster, who
In no case could a prisoner's pointed ·out . the monthly "good
term be reduced by more than ' time" points cannot be revoked

BRIDGEPORT , Conn .
. tUPI I -Searchers repor ted
"no sign of life" today as they
pulled bodies from a labyrinth
of ro~crrte and steel created
by the collapse of· an apart ment building unde r construe·
tlon that killed nine workers
and left 19 missing and pre·
sumed buried.

TAPE SALE

Missy ond htra Sizes.

A

Searchers recover bodies
from collapsed building

LOW, LOW HICES ONs
*Vinyl Floor
*Lamps
Covering
*Patio Turf
*S'trta Btclding
•TV's
*Berkline Recliners •Sumnw Furniture
•Tobin
•uving 11oqm
•carpet
' Suittt
*Washtn/Dryers

SPORTSWEAR

2 Secl ions , 14 Pagn

even if th e Inmate later
misbehaves.
"We're weakening our crlml·
nai justice system , giving them
credit just forobeyl ngt heru les,"
said Rep. Russell E. Guerra Jr .,
R·Englewood, a former pollee
officer .
"A couple more bills like this
one and we're not going to ease
the overcrowding, we' re going to
vacate the premises," said
Guerra.
. "This bill does no t let anybody
out," responded McLin . "It only
lets the Inmate reach the parole
board ea rly. The parole board
decides whether It's safe. and
most of them don 't release
anybody on the first hearing."
McLin said over a 10-year
period the proposed oollcy
would 'tree 1 800
hbds _
equivalent 1 ~ butldltlg
prisons at a cost of
ptus$l!89'mliltot~''te10pei'!IT!•-tht~.·'f
On another front. House
Spea ker Ve rnal G. Riffe Jr., DNew Boston. es tablished a spe·
cia! committee headed by RC'p.
Michael c. Shoemaker , n.
Bournevil le, 10 study Ohio's
education system.

WASHINGTON (UPll -Con·
gresstonal Investigators now
have Swiss bank· records and
other docume nts confirming t~e
diversion ol U.S. arms sale
profits !rom Iran tO the Nlcara·
!(Uan Contra rebels. sources say
- and they are ready to draw a
ch.&gt;ar map of the com.p lex money
tralitn President Reagnn 'sworst
crisis .
Documents obtained In Parts.
where lnvesti!(ators traveled thi s
week to Int erview Iranian-born
arms dealer Albert Hakim, will
help show where the money came
from and where II went , accord·
In!( t a a congressional source.

FUTURE - The future for the lot where the former Metp Inn
once stood doesn't look ,brlghl. Rumors circulated alter a fire
Kulled Ihe slruclure last year that piiUis were being formulated for
new co118lructlon at the slle. However, apparently the plans did not
malerlallze and alii he sign on the lollndlcales,lhc lot Is up lor salt!.

Higher prices ·boost inflation 0.4%

APRIL FQINITURE
SALE

DONIENNEY

Vol.36. No.248
Copyrlphlod 1987

Under the eerie glare of
spotlights, six huge cranes
plrk&lt;'d t h1·ough a pile of rubble
two s tories high early today as
the grim -fared rescue
workers usl'd pollee dogs and
ultra -sou nd listening devices
In hopes of hearing a mutfled
cry for help at the site of the
L'Amblance Pl aia project .

' 'I'm not a n optimist , ..
Mayor Thomas Bucci said.
"There Is not a bright prospect we will be soon In locating
a slgn!llcant number of survl·
vors alive. There Is no sign of
life. The chances of finding
anybody is very minimal."
But he added. ·" We haven't
given up hope. We' re hoping
there are pocket s within the
des truction in.whlch s urvivors
are located. "
As the nlg~t wore on. more
famil y a nd fri ends of those
believed trapped gathered at
the scene. ·
"He's d·ead. he's de ad,"
sobbed one wot'nan as others
in the crowd tried to comfort
·her.

WASHINGTON iUPl l ·- lnfl a·
lion jumped a hefty0.4 percent tn
March fueled by Increases for
housing, energy a nd the biggest
price jump for clothes In B
yea rs, the Labor De partment
reported tollay.
With the March report , tnfla·
lion Is running at 6.2 percent for
the yea r- the fa stest rat e In five
years.
The 6.2 percent rat e is a
seasonally adjusted annual fi g.
ure and reflect s what a yea r' s
shOwing would be If a!l1987 werl'
like the first three months and
seasonal fa r 19rs were removed.
Economists expected toda y's
repor ted 0.4 percent Increase In
lnllarton and predict the Infl ation
rate should set tle down and tota l
no more than 5 percent for a ll of
thi s year.
The March increase ca me In
part because of a 1.8 percent
jump In the Index forappareland
upkeep - the largest month!~
adv ance sin ce Augu st 1974, the

La bor Department said .
"The Introduction of s ubstan·
ll~ lly higher priced s pring and
summer merchandi se. p~rtlc u larly women's clothing, was
lar gely responsible for the a dvane~." government a nalysts
said.
Clothin g for wome n and girl s
went up 2.4 percent In March.
Gasoli ne prices rose 2..1 per·
cent In March, and energy prices
ov~rall went up 1 perce nt. Sheller
costs, mea nwhil e, advanced 0.!\
percent fo r the' third consec utive
month .
F'ood and beverages cos t 0.1
percent ~ss In March on a
scasonaT!Yadjus ted basis than In
February.
Grocery store food prices
dropped 0.4 p'ertcnt, led by
declines In the cos t of fruits and
vegetables and dairy products.
Ce reals, bakery products ,
meats, poultry. fish and eggs all

rose 0.2 perce nt , while fOod
meant to be consumed away
from home - lncludl.ng rctau ·
rant s a nd fas t food es tablish·
ment s- ros&lt;' 0.4 pt' rce nl.
Liquor prices remained
stea dy .
Medica l ca re cos t 0.4 perce nt
more In March. aft r•r ris ing by
the same amount In .Ja nuary and
February. Aura Insurance costs
jumped 0.7 pl'rcent , feeding a 9.o
percent overa ll jump s in ce
Marc h 1986.
The 1 consume r price Index
tracY.s the cost of typically
purchased goods a nd services,
and It stood a t :1:m.9for March mea ning $100 worth of goods In
1967 now costs $.135.90.
Th e Labor De partme nt also
reported that e nt e rtainme nt
cos ts rose 0.4 percent In Ma rc h
and that the Index for 'a ll items
excludlnl( food and e nergy went
up 0.5 percent .

Sniper's rampage leaves eight dead
PALM BAY. Fla. tUPil " We still ha ve no explana·
light s suddf'nly blazed on jus t
Police stormed a supermark('! before the attack and " fire
lion," s he said. "We did have a
behind a barrage of tear gas trucks. everything, Is going to· pollee psychologist at the scene
e arly today_lo capture a berserk . ward the store."
to help our negotiators. We were
gunman who shot to death at
able to have a very limited
"There was a big bla st! It
least eight people In the parktpg
dialogur with him . He was very
sounded
more
like
a
high·
lot and held authorities at bay
hesitant to speak. and· we had
powered sbotgun ," he sa Ul. " I
large amounts of quiet time ori
wtrh ~os ta!(es for eight hours.
seP some. movement. There's
the communications link when he
At least a dozen people were another big bla st and the light
wouldn't talk at all ."
wounded In the massacre. But went out. Eight cops are running
The gunman. who· may ha ve
neither the gunman - tenta· around behind this building.' '
been enraged by children cross·
rlvelv identified as William
Late r, he said, "Two pollee·
lng hi s yard, appear,ed at the
Cruise. a bout !ill - nor his men are leading a woman , shopping center about 6 p.m.
remaining hostage apparently they're running. They're runnin g Thursday. tired randomly at
was hurt In th&lt;' (&gt;ollce assault
just below us."
shoppers and took three hos·
around 2:08 a.m. EDT on the
Carlton said he then saw
!ages. He let two women go.
Wlnn·Dixle supermarket In the policemen scaling down the side
The gunman stOOd off pollee
Sable Palm Square shopping of the building with ropes.
and a SWAT team through the
renter.
"I bet Ihey blew a door open,"
n!gl!l and repelled with gunfire
· Pollee said three people who he said. "It sounded like · a one attempt bY ofltrers to storm
hid In the stbre - apparently grenade."
Ihe rear 01 the supermarket aftl'r
wltbout tbe gunman discovering .
"lt'a over." he added .
1 a.m .
them - also escaped unhurt
Lt. Candice Leek of the Palni
"They're shoaling rlghl now, "
during lhe raid.
Bay pollee depa.rtrnenl said a witness told United Press
Dean Carlton, an aer01pace authorttll!l had no tmmedlllte . lntel'lllltlonal . ." 'Everybody Is
worker who lives nearbY and
Indication of a motive for the running. They're running Into the
watched tram a vantage point actions of lhe gunman, who was back of the store."
overlooking the darkened shop- armed will\ two 'rlfies - one of
About five minutes later, he
ping ctnler 30 mites south of the them high-powered ...- and a bag said: "II seems to have quieted
Kennedy Space Center, uld the of emmuniiiDn.
down. No more ahoollng."

f:

' " It Is known that a ' diversion
exists," the source sa id Thurs·
day, speaking on the condtrlon of
anonymity.
Information and records [rom
Hakim. who has been . voted
limited Immunity from prosecu·
lion In exc hange for his testlm·
any before the cohgresstonal
co mmittees probing the Iran·
Co ntra scandal , Is not lh~ only
evide nce held by the panels.

·'We had very good tnlormu·
tlon before t.ha t money was
diverted, " thl' source said, bur
until now , e ffort s to trace the
path of financial transactions
bad been hampered by tnablllly
to ~a tn acress to secret Swiss
accounts.
Foreign account s In the scan ·
da! have lleen linked to ma jor
fl~urcs In th e case s uch as L1.
Col. Oliver North and rellred
Ma j. Gen. Richard Seco rd, but
Secord had won a court ba ttle
jus t last wee k against be ing
forced to turn ove r such bank
records to Senat e Investigators.
Hakim , whose link to t h ~
accounts was noted car Her by
co ngress ional probers a nd the
preside ntia l Tower Commi ssion,
Is a Ca llforntu llu stncss associate
of Secord. It wus learned ear lier
this week hl' had turned over
certain docum cnt s.
Scurccs su lllln vcst lgators now
have reco rds show in g c h•u rl\·
that moncy from the Ira n dea l's
was diverted to the Co nt rus at a
time when U.S. mlllt iJry aid to
the rebe ls was illega l. Contra
leaders have denied recrlvl n ~
suc h fund s.
Lradcrs of thr ~e l ec t St·na tt
panel Inves ti gati ng the sca nda l,
Chairman Oitnlcl Inouvc D·
Hawaii. and Vice Cha lrma ·
Warren Rudman. R·N.H., uug.
men ted Thursday the co mm .. nt.
they made l'ar llcr thi s wcrk
about nallin ~t down the monrv
t ra II.
·

Brl'K-111H 1.0. Raedel bulldlngallhe corner
Main IUid Nye AYeStDeloobllke aomeone tookablgblleoutof the
corner. Late Tuelday night a tractor· trailer Atruck the comer ~f
the Pomeroy laD..,.arll, currently occupied br Klnpbury Homes,
knocklns out eeveral llundred brlcb. Since t~e doting ol the
Pomeroy Brldse, traffic lA helng routed 1&lt;1 and from the
Ra~enawood Bridge ~Ia Ohio 124. Larse trucb traveling down 124
to reach U.S. 33 have to awing tar lett ollhe center line In order to
make the tum, not only 1o avoid bltllnglhe corner of the old brick
buDding bulla keep from golnglnlo the deep cotlcre!ed ditch area
there.

" I would sa.v the mon ey Is vcr~l
well es ta bl ished. and It's csta b·
l!shed In · a way that 's sa tlsfuc·
tory, and we 'll have more by thr
time lhe hearing gets undl'l'·
way," Rudman sa id, referring to
joint House-Se nat e public hea r·
lngs scheduled to begin May 5.
"I don't think we'll ever be abl~
to relate to the people of the
United States the completr nio·
ney.trail, " Inouye said, "but on 11.
scale of one to 10, we've got
nJne."

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