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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
Cincinnati
•
sweeps .senes
at Houston

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-

at y
Vol. 36. No. 249

LOWI LOW PRICES ON
EVERYTHING IN STOCK

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS. tUPil - Bills revising the
regulation of savings and loan associations in the
wake of a 1985 scandal-crisis are expected to
emerge from committees in the Ohio House and
Senate this week .
In fact the legislation, ag reed to by th e
administration of Gov. Ri chard F. Celeste, House
and Senate sponsors from both parties, th e
banking and thrift industries and other Interested
parties, may be ready for floor action later this
week.
' Rep. Robert E. Hickey, D-Dayton, one of the
sponsors , said the legislation has been debated for

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2 Sections, 32 Pages

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A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Legislature maY move on S&amp;L regulation bills
two yea rs and it 's time for action. "All of this Is not
something we just sat down and mulled over over
a beer," he said.
The idenliral bills give the sta te superintendent
of savi ngs and loa n associations additional
regulatory powers. and a direct line of authority
from the governor.
A bipartisan Senate-House committee crafted
. much of the proposal aft er holding ex tensive
hearings on why the Ohio Div ision or Savings and
Loan Associations failed to stop Imprudent
investments by Home State Savings Ba nk.
Cincinnati, IJl a Florida securities firm,
1'Jome State collapsed In March 1985, and the
state spent $129 mill ion to reopen it as Hunter

Reagan
staff
weighs
advice
SUPER SAVINGS ON A NEW
DINETTE SET

•

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Monday, April 27, 1987

. Copyripl:ted 1987

.

Save

9-22-24· I 7-34-31

•

LAUNDRY ROOM- FAMILY ROOM

M~Stlf cloudy tonight with a
chance of showers and a low In
lhe mid 40s. Mostly ·cloudy
Tuesday with a high near 110.
The probability of preclplla·
lion Is 30
'tonight and

Super Lotto

-Page 3

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Daily Number
295
PICK-4
4941

.WASHINGTON (UPII - The
White House is publicly welcomIng advice from Ri chard Nixon
and Henry Kissinger on how to
negotiate wlih the Russians, but
privately officials are second·
guessing the architects of the
detente President Reagan has
mocked In the past.
In unusual public advice to the
president as he considers a
Soviet offer for removing nuclear
weapons from Europe, the expresident and former secretary
of state -said in Sunday newspap9!'11-tlial· 11eJ:()ilaHons mu ~ t be
linked lo Russian reductions In
conventional warfare superior·
ity lest "a false peace" result.
'White House spokesman Dan
Howard, In a carefully worded
statement avoiding comment on
the wisdom or propriety ·of the
column, said. "We genu'inely
welcome everyone's views on
this Issue" and no decis ion has
been made.
A united U.S:-NATO res ponse
will be ready before Reagan goes
to the allied economic summit In
early June, administration offl·
rials said.
Priva tely, however, such offi·
clals warned that linking missile
reductions to conventional forces
would derail a potential agree·
ment and thus the chances for
Reagan to achieve such an
accord before he leaves office in
21 mon ths.
"Theronventional for ce lmbal·
ance was lhere before the first
lnt~rmediate- rangc missile was
ever Introduced," said one offi·
cia I who spoke on thecondition of
anonymlly. "We arc trying to
turn the nurlea r clock back and

Savinl:s Assoclalio n.
Similar regulatory reforms cleared the House
las t year but stalled In Ihe Senate when Ihe Celeste
adm inistration balked at the res tructuring of
agencies.
Last year's bill would have created a new state
Department of Financial lnslltullons. This one
leaves the Division of Savings and Loan
Assaria lions in the Department of Commerce but
makes the superintendent more lndpendent.
Rep. Ronald J. Suster, D-Cieveland, chairman
of the House Financial Institutions Committee,
said the btU will be voted out Tuesday and co uld
come to the floor later In the week.

'

Sen. Richard H. Finan, R·Cinclnnati, sponsor of
the Senate version. said the 'Sen.ate Financial
lnslltutions and Insura nce Committee will
approve his bill Wednesday morning, and II may
hit the floor la ter that day.
The Senate F inance Commitlee. which exam ·
Ined proposed lax Increases las t week, will turn Its
attention to the spending side this week as Its
review of the proposed $22.1 billion state budget
continues.
.
Sen. Stanley J . Aronoff. R·Ci nclnnatl, chairman
of the committee, sa id he wa nted members lo get
an Idea of where the money is&lt;:&gt;o mlng from before
looki ng at spendin g levels for th e var ious
agencies .

New PTL leader considers
leaving troubled organization

BACK HOME - President and Mrs. Reagan returned to the
White House today after spending the weekend at Camp David.
tUPI)
remove a J!! hole ~~~ss of weapons
from the landscape."
U.S. and Soviet negotiators are
trying to reach agreement on
eliminatin g medium-and short ·
range missiles from Europe. but
many NATO allies fear that
removing all nuclear wea pons
from th e conlinent would leave
them prey either to a Soviet-led
Invasion with superior armies or
to politlcai blackmail.
In a 1,700-word column In The .
Washington Post and Los An·
geles Times. Nixo n an d Klssln·
ger sai d that by accepting "th e
wrong kind of deal, we could
crea te the most profound crisis of

thf! NATO alliance In Its 40-year
history."
·
They advised Reagan to link
mu tual withdrawal of missiles
fro m Europe to "the elimination
of the hu ge Sovjct conventional
superiority" and to Insist upo n
scrappin g all medium-ra nge
missiles . not just the ones In
Europe.
Nixon·. who resigned In 1974
amid the Waterga te scandal,
·negotiated the first strategic
missile limitation treaty with Ihe
Soviets in 1!172. Kissinger was the
principal ex ponent of "deten te"
with the Russians .

Ferry e.xpec!ed to operate today
The Pomeroy-Mason forry
has been out of commission
si nce Friday afternoon du e to
engine probl ems. but was
expected to be ba ck in opera·
lion by noon today.
Marcia Rod~er. wife of
fe rr y opera tor Darr e ll
Rodger, sa id lhe boat began

experiencing engine problems
early Friday afternoo n. The
river began rising about the
same time and operations had
to be closed down .
It was hoped thai engi ne
repairs would be completed
and the ferry back in service
aro und noon toda y, Mrs .
Rodger sai d.
J

FORT MILL , S.C . tU Pl)- The
Rev. Jerry Falwell is questioning
his ow n future as PTL's chair·
man In the wake of allegations
th at Jim Bakker. former leader
or lhe beleaguered television
ministry, had homosex ual
affairs.
" I rea lly am pra ying about
how long I should be here."
Falwell sa id Sund ay In an Interview on CBS's " Fa re the
Nation."
Falwell said he would an·
nounre Tuesday at a meetin g of
the PTL board whether he will
remai n as head of the TV
minis try, which he was handed a
month ago when Bakker re·
signed as the sex scanda l
un!olded.
' ·
M that meeting. the'PTI.:board
Is expected to make public the
findi ngs of an !nlernallnvestiga·
lion of hush money paid to form er
church secretary Jessica Hahn,
wit h whom Bakker had the
sexual encounter th at prompted
his res ig nation Marc h 19.
The latest accusalions abou t
PTL came from riva l minister

.John Ankerberg. a Tennessee TV
evangelist, who said Ba kker
engaged ·In tiomosexuai actlvl·
ties, slept with prostit ut es and
condoned wife-swapping amo ng
members of th e ministry.
Bakker denied th e newest
accusations.
But Falwell said. "Reverend
A nk~rberg Is a hi ghly res pect ed
chu rch leader In America. and
we do take seriou sly what he's
saying."
In anoth er development . News·
week maga zine reported the
Inter nal Reve nue Service Is
Investiga tin g whether bonuses
paid by PT!. exceeded lhe
"reasona ble" pay slilnd ards re·
qulred of tax -exempt
organizations.
The CMrtbtte Observer ttl·
ported the Bakkers received $1.6
million from PTL last year and a
total or $4.8 million since 1984.
mostly In bonu ses .
Falwell said the Assemblies of
God. the denomination to which
Bakker belonged, has a rcstora·
lion process for cerla ln s in'~.
Including drinking or family

problems.
''Homosexualit y Is not one of
.those (s ins)," Falwell said .
"They allow no recovery to
ordination."
Bakker would be "perman·
ently" forbidd en to preac h If the
allegations are true, Falwell
sa id .
Bakkor' s wlf&lt;', Tammy, ca lled
United Press Int ernational Sat·
urday ni ght and read a sta tement
by her husband denylng·Ankeerberg's allegations.
"I ha ve never been ·to a
prosti tute. and I am no t or have
ever been a homosl'xual ,"
Bakker said. "Those who say
sue h thin gs should have those
acc users come for ward and give
tbell name and prove their
.accusattom11 ''
Louisiana eva ngellsl J immy
Swagga rt defended Ankcrberg.
" I do nor believe he would
make these charges un less he
had substantial(!(! proof, and r
have seen some of the proof
myst•lf," satd Swagga rt. "l do
believe that (some or the aliega ·
tlonst are tru e."

Rescue crews press search
flRIDGEPORT, Conn. I UP! I days. He added. "We have no
-Search crews who were bei ng news that Is encourag in g.... But
counseled on coping wll h despair the number of missing Is too
by psyc hologists In hard hats numerous to cut off the search at
'
labo red for a fif th day today to this tIme. "
Some rescue workers had tJetln
find workers bu rled In the rubbl e
of a collapsed building that at the site for up to 60 s t ral~, t
hours, officia ls said. Minis ters
already had yielded 1.1 bodies.
Fifteen workers were believed and counselors In ye llow ro n·
trapped In the wrec kage of th e structlon hats were thPre rou nd ·
L'Ambla nce Plaza- 1.1 1lsted as the-clock to help lhem handle
missing and two who have been their growi ng anger and fat igue.
"We 've had some workers who
spotted and arc presumed dead .
Four bodies were recovered wen• face to face with a dlsfl g·
Sunday, bringi ng the total to 1.1. ured body for four or five hours
Ma yor Thomas Bucci said the before It could be removed," said
search co uld co ntinu e for several Dr. Charles Zlgun of Bridgeport.

"That rips you up in side. It tea rs
yo u apa rt. "
.loPI Kusntt z. !13, who has
helped operate one or the seven
cra nes at lhe site since Thursday, sul d, "It's like tryl n!l to gel
yo ur own family out."
Loca l and federal lnvcstlga·
lors say It could take months ro
ex plain Thursday's collapse of
the planned 13·story apartment
and re tail complex .
The Hartford Courant reported
an engineer It hired lo examine
the disaster sa id the complex
may have been planned lot·
ground lao weak to suppo1'l it. ·

W ahama· selects
co-valedictorians
MASON. W.Va. - Two Wa·
hama High School students who
hav~ achieved a perfect 4.0grade
point average during their high
school careers have been se·
tec ted as co-valedlctorlahs of the
class of 1987. Principal Jim
Reymond has announced.
Sharing top honors are Mal·
thew A. Jewell of Mason and
Timothy W. Fink of New Haven.
·co-salutatorians, with grade
point averages of 3.957, are Scott
Lee Hoover of RJ. 2. Letart. and
Leslea Renae Cole of Hartford.
Honor students are Jennifer
Miller of New Ha ven, with a 3.988
GJ'A, and Rodney Dayo of New
Haven,•wilh a 3.935 GPA.
Jewell, son of Diann Jewell and
the late William Jewell, plans to
attend a four-year college to
major in music following graduation from high school In June. He
Is a member of the National
Honor Soclely,
Wahama
While Falcon baseball and bas·
ketball learns and the pantomIme team and WHS thorus.
·He Is also organist at Sacred
Heart Catholic Church In
•
Pomeroy.
Fink. son or Roger and Gear·
11eann Fink, plans to attend West
Virginia University and pursue a
degree In medicine. He wu a
delegate to Mountaineer Boys

me

State and Is a member of the
National Honor Society and the
pant omlmo team.
He Is also minister of the
Eucharist, a lector and active In
Sunday School at St. Joseph's
Catholic Church. Mason. ·
Hoover, so n of Gle nva Hoover,
has been accepted at West
VIrgi nia University where he
plans to major In agronomy. He
Is a member of the Natio nal
Honor Society and StudeJTt Co un·
ell, and Is presldf'nt of the Mason
County Vocational Chapter Fu·
lure Farmers of America, active
In numerous FFA activities and
Is listed In Who' s Who Among
Am~rlcan High School Students .
He was a Golden Horses hoe
winner, recipien t of the Hugh
O'Brian Leadership Award and a
Math Field Day participant.
He was vice president of the
Mason County Junior • Fa lr
Board, Is a 4-H member, worked
at the Mason Counly Fair·
grounds and the West VI rginia
State Farm Museum, ls a Special
Olympics volunteer and Is acllve
In· numerous other community
activities .
He Is president of the Vernon
United Methodist Church Sunday
School class and president or the
youth group.

·r

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:

I

WAHAMA HONOREES - Waharna High Schoolsenlon at the
lop of their class are, from left, Scott Hoover, c•Halutatorlan,
Jennifer Miller, honor student, Malt Jewell, co-valedictorian,

Rodney Dayo, honor &amp;tudent, Leslea Cole, co-salutatorian, and
Tim Fink, co-valedictorian .

Cole, daughter of David and
Sharon Cole, will attend Marshall University to major In
music-following gradua tion from
Wahama. She is a member of the
WHS band, choir, Future Busl·
ness Leaders of AmerJca, Ihe
National Honor Society and
FHA/HERO.

Naitona l Honor Society and
served as-treasurer of both her
senior and junior class .
She attends New Haven United
Methodist Church and teaches a
pre-school Sunday School class.
Dayo, son of Drs . Mateo and
Zinnia Dayo, plans 10 obtain a
degree In biology In undergradu ·

She Is also a member of the
4-Corners 4-H Club and Hartford
Ba ptist Church.
Miller, daughter of Gary and
Sue Miller, plans to attend
Marshall University this fall and
major In chemistry . She Is a
member of the White Falcon
Band, Is vice president of the

ate school and pursue a career In ·
medicine. He Is a member of the
White Falcon football team,
parflclpates In weight lifting, Is a
member of the chorus and FHA
and par tlclpales on the panlom·
Ime tea m.
ls minister of the Eucharist
and the Sunday Sc hool class at
his chu rc h.

He

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Monday, April 27, 1987

''

Cincinnati sweeps Houston ·in
'Dome first time· in 13 years

-·
Page-2-The Daily Sentinel .
~

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Comment
'

111 Court·Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

.

....,,

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA

Pomeroy-Middleport, OHo
llllonday. April 27, 1987 ·

--

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sm~ ,...,...,__,L__,.,..,~c~ ~

., ~v
1-'

·

a

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlsrer

PAT WHITEHEAD
A&amp;~lstant Publlsrer/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

'

Replace -dole with jobs _ _,__~---.,.-G_eo__:__rge_M--:-c_Go_ve_rn~
One of lhe most co nstructive
proposa ls from Cong ress in a
long lime is Il linois Democra lic
Sen. Pau l Simon' s plan to pul
unem ployed Americans to work.
Loo king al lhe nation'.s 10
mill ion unemployed - many on
welfare or unemp loyment Sim on rai ls for an effort to
prov ide jobs ra ther lhan a dole
for idleness.
Under Simon' s proposal. ea r h
gover nor would a ppo int a commlll ee IO delerm in e the approp·

A MEMBER of The United Press lnl ernatlon ai, Inland Dally Press
Associa ti on and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

riat e governi ng unit within the
sta te.
Public·ser v ice jobs - slreet
repa ir, Iras h collecllon, ass is ting
in da y-care centers, etc . -would
be deve loped on a project -bypro ject bas is .
A person oul of work for five
weeks or more who can es t ~bli!lb
thai he or she has made an effor t
to sec ure prlvale employment
would be e li gibl e.
The person would I hen be paid
10 work a :12-hour week at

LETI'ERS OF OPI NIO N &lt;ire wel come Th ey should be less lhan :J.lO words
long. All lcncrs are~u bject to editing and .mJsl ~ slgnOO w l1h name. ndd r ess and
telephone nu m ncr. No Wl slgncd . lctter .s will be p1:bllshed . LN teh shou ld be In
good t aste, addressing Issues. not personalJ !Irs.

Ohio Politics

BEELINE

Celeste seeking
national exposure
Hy LEE LEONARD
Ul'l Statchuuse ltcport••r
CO LUM BUS (UPII - Is Gov. Richard F'. C~i es l e '¥'Cking high
nationa l office'! Onl y his public rc lallons firm knows for sure.
Bul If his pub lic relullons firm' s hypcracl lvit y Is a ny indication,
Celesle Is running for something.
Give ear.
The gover nor wenl to Da llas late las l we&lt;·k to aeecp l a na ll onal
a ward· fo r Ohio's cxce ll r ncc In parlnrrs hips between the business
co mmunit y a nd IWo·ycar col leges.
Hi s arrival was preceded by a public re latio ns blil z lhe li kes of
which Is usually reserved for mo vie s tars or roya lty. Malone Hall, a n
1\.us tln, Texas , public rela lions firm engaged by lhe OhioDe partmen l
of Devc lopm enl , look it upon It self to no I ify eve ry media outlet In the
Dallas· F'Orth Worth area of Celcslc•'s avai la bilit y fo1· interviews.
One of those who g rabbed the bait was Ed Bus h, hosl of a nat ional
radio la lk show wi th outlets in New York , i.os 1\.ngelcs, Bos ton,
Tampa, Phoe nix a nd a bout 20 otht•r ci ties, including Cinci nnat i.
Bush, who has inlc r vlcwcd presidentia l ca ndi da tes, must have
thought hl' ha d one on his ha nds. He desc ribes Ma lonr Hall's

overtures:

"Th ey would ea ll here 1wo or lhrcc tlmrs a day," hP said. " They
asked me lhin gs nobody ever as ked me. They would wanlto know how
many s ta tions a rc carry ing this ini l' rvlcw a nd where arc I hey. Th ey
wanted lo know about sc·curil y arran gem ents, like they' re real
nervous.
"This Is lik e a campaign a ppearance." sa id Bush. " Thi s smell s
exac li y like 1 Repu blica n pres ident f'andlda lc .Jack) Kemp, those
peop le ...
Forth~ Celes te a dm lnls tratlon, the.Dall as visit was viewed slrictly
as a bus in ess j)romolio n for Ohio.
" I don ' t sec It as a nylhlng .tha t's nol par for th e course, " sa id
Marjory Pizzuti, deput y dlrPCtor of marketing In the Department of
Development, which Is paying Ma lone Cor porate Comm unications of
Akron abou l $27;,.())0 durin g the current biennium to "crea te a
nationa l and reg ional publicit y presence for Ohio."
Malone• jus t happened 10 ha ve a bran ch office in 1\.usl in.
Plzzull s;~ id lhe receipt of lhe edu callon·bu si ncss award was a
r ha nce fo r Cc l cs t ~ to drum up bu sin ess fo r Ohio in ot her pa ris of the
cou nl ry. "G~t lln g the awa rd wa s a good opportunit y for the gover nor
10 leverage the message a bout what Ohio Is doin g," she said.
" It' s a spring board for olher pi'Ogra ms," sai d Pizz uti. without
mentionin g whet her onr of th ose program s i n vo l v~s Ce leste's
politil'a l aspirations. " It 's positioning. a nd it' s done by co nsis tently
be ing out there telling Ihe nation a nd the regions abo ut Ohio."
Plzzu ll acknowledged thes ~ efforl s may be lnc1·eased: I hal more
money may be spent on the m in the futu re. "O ur program s are
gellin g off I he ground ." she said . " We' rr gelling more reques ls to
talk about what Ohio Is doing ."
Which fil s righl in wllh the pla n for Ce les lc to I ra vel around the
cou nlry. beco min g more visibl e, comfort a bl e In the knowledge tha i
when yo u pro mol e tlhio. you a lso promole Dick Celeste.

minimum wage - $l07weekly or nol hing, or paying them fordoing,•,
somelhin g. It makes Infinit ely .
$464 a monlh .
more sense to pay people for. ,
Beyond this. Ihe participant is
assured 10 percenl in in rome a ny doing something.''
Simon 's program would cost
. welfare or unemployment com pensa llon , he may have been an estlmaled $B billion annually: :
That is about onP·fourl h of the .·
rece iv in~.
No more tha n two people wou ld , increa sed in military spending.,,
become eligible for suctla job in a requcsled by the administralion .,
household, and no one in a l ~s t year. II is less than one .:
household wilh an nua l income of percenl of the federal budget.
mo re than $l 7.1Xl0 would qualify.
The program would also re· '
As Simon puts it : " We far e the duce some current budget costs "
cho ice of payin g people for doing for welfare and unemploymer\f ;,.
compensation. And, to whatever
@IQIM FORI' WORn\ $TI\IFI'aE'~.-[TTA
extent an army of employed ·•
lf-D
Hll~ workers stimulates Ihe ecpnomy .
and s trenglhen the tax base, it.·.
would improve the revenues of ,
Ihe federal government.
:.1\.side from the human cost of
unemploymenl in the form of·.c
I
demoralized non· workers, lam· ·''
ily lens ion and s lress, there are '
Ihe rela ted cosls of Increased ·
r rimr , teenage pregnancy , fam .,;
ily breakup and other by· '
products of high unemployment. '·
It is esti mal ed that each one
percent of unemployment cosls ·
lhe nation between $25 and $35
bill ion annually. So Ihe transfe~~·
of idlr wor kers into th~ wor k;.
force may res ult in initial federal
oullay. s th a t will be reco uped in).,
lhe long run.
In making the case for full
employment ass isled . by the
govrrnmen I, Simon adds some
int eresting observations on cur·
re nt nalional priorities.
During the past six years
spen ding for the milit ary ha s
increased 88 percent, entitle·,
I
menl s sur h as social security .
ha ve grown .'\6 percenl, discrc· ,
bonds, inside tips, marijuana, lionary non· mililarv programs •
ha ve gr nw·n 20 p&lt;&gt;rcenl

I

HEMp
iSSNUR~

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"We're a full-service firm
cocaine ... "

stocks,

Getting the snort end_.. Ja_:: . ._c_k_An_d_er_so_n_&amp;_·D""T'a_L('_J!_an_A_t__,ta:
W!ISH INCTON -1\.fgha n free·
dom fighter&gt; used up thc•i r
modes t supp ly of Americ an Stin·
.err anti ·aircraft missiles more

ltw n three months ago and have
n ·cein•d no l'epl aremcnl s, drs ·
pile rO'port.&lt; 10 I he ron lrary. Thi s
has ser ious I&gt;' cr ippled thei r right
against lhr so,·icl in va ders of
lh~ ir coun try.
Tha i's not al l. The anli-Sovirt
mujahcdd in

were:

dr as Hcu lly

shorlcd on lh&lt;• Stinge rs and
la un chers th r.l' did gel : on ly ][)0
mi ss il es inslt'&lt;l d of 150. and onl y
18 lau nchers i n s le;~d of 5(1. Th.e
Clll sim p!)' didn' t del iver what
Congr!'ss appare ntly ordered il
10.
The Slinger sca nd al is one of
S!'I'Ct'a l indi cat ions lhat the Clll
is botchi ng - per haps deliber ·
at~ly - its bi ggcs l covert ass is l·
a nee program s incr I he Viet na m
Wa r . We wrrc a lerl ed by sources
wi lllin the agency who r laim tha t
millions of dolla rs in 1\.fghan
mililary a id ha s bee n was led or
rni s us~d. We bega n an in ves tiga ·
lion , including a trip b)· Da iP Van
i\ 11 :1 10 the 1\fghan-Pa kis la ni
border.
Prom sources in Was hington

'-.

and in Peshawar tlhc Pakis t·ani
r ill' thai is headq uarlers formos l
of th r mu ja heddin unitsf, we
lrar ncd thai th ~ Cl/1. ha s bung'ied
lil e scrrel suppi)' line 10 a
mind ·boggl ln g degree. The agcn r .l·'s m ismana gement Is pa rl icu·
larly myst ifying in light of lhe
broad bi p;~ rl isa n supporl for lh&lt;•
Mg han guerril las both in \on grrss unci in the counlry a I large.
F'or years after lhe Soviet
In va sion In Decembcl ' 1979, lhe
i\fg hti n guerr ill as begg~d lh~
Unil ed Siales for an an li·a ircrafl
wea pon tha t could shoot down or
sca re away the Soviet wa rplanes
and he licopter gu ns hips lha t
were devasla ling !heir fighlin g
unil s and th~ villa ges lhat
s upported thrm .
The CIA grudgingly produced
some Sov iet Sl\.7s, shorl·mngc
sur face· to-a ir missiles of dubious
re li abilily. Th e agency com·
pou nded 1he incffecl i\•e ness of
_lh" weajlons by issuing precise,
wrongheaded orders for their
US&lt;': one or more rebels hidin g
nrar !'&gt;oviel · run airporls a rr
supposed 10 sland up and firr
when a pla ne ta kes off.
Th e mu jaheddin werr dis ·

maye!l at thi s lac tic . Not on ly
wa s 11 a lmos l ccr ta inl&gt;• su iridal,
bul it mis sed lhP w hole poinl of
!h('ir rPquc~t for anti-airc ra ft
missiles . Thr 1\.fgha ns wanled
the wea pons to protect !heir
su pply convoys a nd a nd frie nd! ~·
vil lages from Sov iel stra fing
attacks.
Bu l as onr· inlcliigence SOU IT&lt;' .
pul it, Ihe Cl/1. "ha d a box ·srore
ment a lity, just like th~ body.
rount ment ali tv in Vl elnam.' "No
ai rporl a tl arks. no miss iles.
When Ihe 1\.fghans compla in ed
that the Sll7s WNP no good. their
C!i\ su ppliers di sagr eed, po int·
ing out thai the Viel Cong had
used them to dcvas laling eff~cl
in Vi clnum . Th r mujaheddln
tried to explain lhc crucial
lerrain difference: In Vietnam,
guerrillas rould hide in hra vily
ra n op i ~d jungles until i\merlca n
helicoplrrs were hovering pracl ira lly ovcrheiid. The)' couldn 't
miss.
1
But there a re no proleclive
jungles ,in 1\fghanista n. \h e
guerrill as mus1 take what cove r
they ra n in gu llies on Ihe barren
hills idrs some di s tance from
their targels.

Del ermin e d co ngress ion a l .
friends of Ilie mujaheddin finally
ovcrcam~ Ihe resistance of Ihe ·
CIA a nd Penlagon officials who
" didn ' t wa nl lhC'ir fanc y toy s
going lo some ra g heads," as one ·•.
so urc~ pul II , and forced lhe •
shipmen! of Sl ingers in the '·
•.
spring of 19R6.
::
!'or a whilr the mujaheddin ,.
used the Sf.ingers with great ~
cffccllveness. achieving a 60 ,.
percrnl kill ralto . The •Sovlets ~
radi ca lly cha nged thei r air oper· •
at ions in easlern 1\fghanistan- ~
and last December closed thei r ~
air field al .Ja la bad, belween ·:
Ka bul and the Khvber Pass.
;.
Rut then. in lhe fi rst week of ~
January. lhe supply of Stingers :
slopped - a nd the mu jaheddin
ran out of the missiles a week '
taler. Th e Sov lels qulrkly real· ~
ized wh a l had happened, and ~
reopened the .Ja labad airfield, ~
capa ble of handling :roo or more ~

•

t

aircraft .

•

The CTII st ill Insisted on Its ~
alrporl a tl ack policy - they ~
'assigned 10 launchers each lo use ~
against the Kabul a nd Bagram 1
airfields. and eight to the .la · t
labad airfield.
~

''

U.S. COlonieS Under fire _____R_ob_e_rt_~_al_te......r.s~:
WII.SHINGTON - 1n earlier
l imPs, Kwajalr in &lt;I lOll was lndis·
lingul shabl e from thous.mds of
Olhrr isla nd s sca ttered across
Ihe Pacifi c Orran. Today . its role
is so unique tha i it ·ca nnol be
mi st ake n for a~y Olher is land·.
Kw a .lal~in . , brisl lin g with
l'a dar, sonar a nd phol ographic
a nd telemetric rq uipment. is the
primary large! for long·range
missiles lesHif·ed from Vandr n·
berg 1\.lr Force Base a nd Po int
Mu ~ u Nava l Base. bolh thou ·
sa nds of miles eas l in Cal ifor nia.
To acco mmodal t• the requ ire·
ments or Ihe Defense Depart·
ment's Pacific Missile Range.
mo1·e Ihan :roo natives havr been
moved from Kwajai ci n to F:brye
Isl and . Th eir new home. dubbed
the "s lum of Ihe Pac ifi c" b,v one
critic, lac ks adeq ua le hous in g
Hy Unlled Press International
a nd hil S neil her a hos pital nor a
Tod ay Is Monday, 1\pril 27, Ihe 1171h day of 1987 with 24R 10 follow.
sewage sys tem . ,
The moon is new .
The lra nsformal ion of Kw aja·
The morning sla rs are Merr~ry, Vrm1s, J upiter a nd Sal urn.
lcin lyplfles Ihe milita rizat ion of
The evening star is Ma rs.
lhe entirr Pa cifi c Rasln, a
Those born on Ihis da le are undN lhr sign of Ta urus. They include
phenomenon documenled In a
Engllsl1 historian Edward Gibbon in 1737; Samuel F.B. Morse,
compe ll ing new book tilled
America n arl!s t and Inventor of magnellr telegraphy, in 1791:
"1\. mer lca n lak e: Nuclear Peril
Ulysses S. Grant. Civil War general and tal er pres ident of the United
In the Pacific."
States , a nd landsca pe archll ec l Freder.lck Law Olmsted, both in 1822;
Wrill en by Peter Hayes, Lyuba
Wallace Carothers, in ventor of Nylon, In 1896: English Poet C. Day
Zarsky a nd Walden Bello. the
Lewis In 1904; actor Jack Klu gman In 1922 (age 65); Caretta Scott
book portrays a n ocean thick
King, widow of civil right s leader Martin Luther King Jr.,ln 1927 (age
wlill mllll ary surface s hips and
60); actress Sandy De nnis In 1937 (age 50). a nd rock singer Sheena
subm a rln ~s prepared to wage
Easton In 1959 {age 28).
nuclear war on behalf of the
nations whose flags they fly On this Hate In history :
the United Siales and the Soviet
In 1850, the American·owned steamship The Atla ntic began regular
Union.
trans·Atlantlc passenger service. It was the first U.S. vessel to
Along the Pacific Rim are
challenge what had been a Brl1ish monopoly.
nations bristling with iand·based
In 1937, the first Social Security payment was made In the Unl1ed
missil es, jet fighters and Inter·
States.
continental bombers, all armed .
In 1975, South Vletnamese legislators named Gen. Duong Van Minh
with nuclear weapons.
president and Instructed him to end the VIetnam war on communist ·
" The threat of nuclear war In
terms.
the Pacific is g rea t and grow.
In 1984 an ll·day siege of Libya's London embassy that began with · lng," the book warns , " While
the shooitng or a policewoman ended . Brllaln broke diplomatic
everyone's future Is at stake, few
relations with Libya over the Incident.
people ~n~w the full extent o~ the

Today in history

'

nucl ea r peri l."
Th e au lhors note tha t lhc
Padfi&lt;' Basin has bee n the scene
of the la st thr~e wars to which
this coun1 ry com mill ed it s troops
- Wol'ld War II , Korea and
Vielnam.
In addition, tensions in lhr
reg ion have been heighte ned by a
succession of hostile confronta·
lions - lhe seizure of lhe USS
Purblo by the North Korean s, the
destruction of a Korea n Air Lin rs
by the Soviet Union, Ihe bombing
of a Greenpeace ship prores ling
French nucl ear tesling In Polyne·
sla a nd str ife in lhe Philippines .
Ru l perhaps Ihe most e nduring
symtxrl of whal modern warfare
has done 10 lhr 1·eglon has been
I his country's treal men I of the
Souih Pacific Islands it ca ptured
fro m t h ~ Japanese In World War .
II.
.
To de monstra te lha l it had no
des ire to exercise colonial dom i·
nalion over lhr area, th e United
Stales turned lo lhe United
Nallons and had the 2.141 is lands
formally des ignated as I he Trust
Territory of Ihe Pacllic Islands.
But Jhe Is lands soon became
appea ling targets for testing a
new mllllary weapon - the
atomic bomb.
Eniwe tok a nd Bikini a tolls
were subjected to dozens of
nuclear explosions between,1946
and 1958. The residents of Bikini
were evicted from !heir ances·
tral homes, then reloc~ted three
tim es in four years- to Rongerik
in 1946, Ujelang In l94i and Killin

1949.

lrcatv was ralified in 191i:l. lhis
couniry h'ad conducled 66 nu·
cl ra r weapo n s lrs l s in
Mi cronesia .
In one cond ucted in mid·l91i2, a
1. 4 megaton warhead - more
than 100 times as powerful as Ihe
bomb droppccl on Hiroshim a illuminal ed I he s k.1· from Hawaii
to Australia .
The tru st anangemrnl still has
not been formall y dissolved , and
the Unit ed Sta tes slli.l continues
10 rovl'l th~ Philippines .. Mar·

~

shalls. Mari a nas. Ryukyus and
olhcr Isla nd chains for military ~
purposes ra nging from missile· ~
tes l target s lo base siles.
1
Indeed, mosl of the 13,,000 ~
inhabi tants of Micrones ia have ~·
agreed 10 grant this country ::
exc lu s ive military control of a •:
. a continued •
reg ion In relurn for
fl ow of finan cial ass istance - a w '
lawdry arrangement "A m er ic a n ~
Lake" author Bello apt ly charac· ~
l er l zes as "strategic '
colonialism.''
:

'

'

'·

'

'

Lanier fuming.
"I don't care If It's a rookie or a
12·year veteran, " Lanier said.
"You just can't give up 12 hits In
five Innings. We are going to have
to makesomechanges .Maybe he
will just have to work out his
problems in the bullpen."
Parker's homer In the first
drove In Kurt Stillwelr, who had
singled. Eric Davis, who had
struck out In each of his nine
previous plate appearances,
singled, went to second on a
ground out, stole third and scored
on Bo Diaz ' single to give
Cincinnati a 3-0 lead after one.
The Reds added single .runs In
the second and fifth on RBI
si ngles by Stillwell and
Concepcion.
B!U Doran drove in all three
Houston runs with a two· run
homer In the fifth and a sacrifice
fly In the seventh.
The Reds batted around In the
ninth off Kerfeld. With one out,
Tracy Jones and Stillwell singled
and scored on Parker's homer.
Oavls and Buddy Bell singled,
with Davis scoring on Dlaz'
double. Concepcion then singled
to score Bell and Diaz .

OUT AT THE PLATE - Cincinnati's Tracy
Jones (29) slides as Houston's Mark Bailey (6)
blocks home plate to tag the Reds runner out In

ByJOEILLU~ZI

over Indians
Yan.kees 14-2 ·victorv
• .J

By DAVID E. NATHAN
UPI Sports Writer
Tommy John Is back. Again .
The ageless left·hander, mak·
lng yet another comeback, threw
a one-hitter for seven Innings
Sunda y to help the New York
Yankees loa l 4·2vlctoryoverlhe
homestandlng Cleveland
Indians.
John, 1·0, kept Cleveland hit·
lers so off· balance that only one
Indian managed to hit the ball out
of the Infield. Cleveland·Manager
Pat Corrales was convinced the
43·year·old was doctoring the
ba ll and asked the umpires to
check John's glove.
" I noticed the facing of his

'
glove is a different color than the
rest of It," Corrales said, "but he
had nothing In there. The baseballs were looked at and they
weren't scuffed."
"As Pat left the mound he said,
'Old man. you're too smart for
me," ' John said. "I hope that was
a compliment."
In 1986, John came to training
camp as a non· roster Invitee and
made the Yankees. He retired at
the end of the season to become
·
pitching coach at the University
of North Carolina but resigned
after a month and signed a one
year contract with the Yankees.
JohngotplentyofsuppoMfrom

every Yankee In the starting
lineup had a! lea st one RBI.
Winfield and Gary Ward each
had three hits and Rickey Hend·
erson sltlgged his third game
opening homer of the season.
The first tour Yankees batters
reached safely off loser Tpm
Candlottl, J.4, ~nd all scored.
Before the first {nnlng was over,
New York had scqred live runs.
Elsewhere In the American
League, Toronto beat Chicago

5-2, Kansas City defeated Detroit

6. 1, Ml.l waukee downed Baltl·
more 5-3, Minnesota ripped Call·
IJ.S T
pedBo 1
fornlal • exass1op
son
5-3 In 13 Innings, and Seattle
topped Oakland S. 5.
Blue Jays 5, While Sox 2
Bell hit t
Ch
G
In thr':
runs to power Toronto. Bell
clubbed a two-run homer In the
first and a solo shot In the eighth
to give him three home runs for
the ,series ancllour tlllt seaton.
Jlmmy.Key, 4·1, was the winner
and Tom Henke got his fourth
save. 'Chicago starter Jose De·
Leon, 2· 2, suffered the loss.
Royals&amp;, Tlgen~l
Detroit,
Bret Saber hagen
At

his teammates Sunday. Dave
Wln(leld drove In four runs and

ho~er;c::~· k=~~

Scoreboard ...
IIMIIIIQ'• Rhlllt"

Majors
..,. • .-.t

lanpCIIM ntr I. Dtirolt I
Ntotr Yeft 14, ""'ee..lt
MlnM~Mta 11.,ra1Hornl.ar.l

• .. N,\TION,, L LE;\GliE
By l1111trd Prf'!OM lnlt&gt;rnutlorud

Toronto S, fllkap t

Mllwar.uluot&gt; I, . .Umon• 2
Tf&gt;xp $, 80t1t011 I. II lnnln-"

E.•l
' R' I. Pa·l.
Ill ~ .SKI!
8 II . $~
!I M .Sft

Nt. I.
I 'hie·

NV

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Mont

Pitt

"""

II .1'15

31t

i

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K .Jit

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Hind"-''" R.&gt;•ull ~

Mllw.. kl'f' iNinf'!l HI IIi flllllornla
IM . Will!-!), II,: II p.m.
'hflltht,)'',. O.m~
fhlcap IIi fln~Mtl, 7: U p.m.
MlniW-IIab ar.t Tor&lt;HIIo, 7: Jl p.m.
lilt trn..-. .t a..- flly, M: l5 p.m.

:1

31 t
1

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lt'lltwa•kn Ill r•lllor•a. It: SS p.m.
Bo!lton 111 Oakl .. d, lt:U p.m.
Dtirolt at Krll.llt'. li: SS p.m.

! 11

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f 'hlc•ua:•• i, Montft•ull

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l"hlllld1olphl• I. PIUKhurl(h I
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f'l••·lnnull II , Houlll.on .'1 •
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International

I

11\'TERNi\TIONAL LEA(IUE
" ' L PI-I . Gl
R«ll'ltfo!ollt•r fRill
II $ .117 -

IMnn~·· fl~tmf'11

S11n fi'nult'IM·o Ill Allllllil111, J : -M P·"''
Monl n•lll 1M rhllud!"'phiM. 't: J3 p.m. ·

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t · 'hl•"dllf '11 ro~tm""

Sllft "f'r~U~diiC'11!d C'hh·IIKO. :t::el p.m .
IAII ''""'I"" at riiiMhllra:h. 7: IIi p.m.
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Transactions

I

Holl!lllon -

.......

Opllo"" rldll · luuu.NI
noll..-•r~'harlr K1!rfettltt1Wt'IIM tfl..,
P1U.i ftt• fOUII#apf' t.U.4.):

,_,

The Daily Sentinel

,...,. , .... ,...('1

pllft' •

Mf'mbPr: Unlltd Pms International.
Inland Dally Prt'll AsiOC'Iatlon and. thP
Ohio Newspaper AJJOC'Iatlon. Nl1tonal
AdvertiJ\ng Rrpresentatlve, Branham
Nt'Wspaper Sales. '733 Third Avenue.
New York. New York 10017.

One WHI&lt; ...................................$1 .25
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.... CAA.Al: N'UIIHI lllfhtt ..... Nrhl•
NormM from , . . . ...,.. • .

Toledo results
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - Cheer
Power, driven by Charlie Brown,
won Sunday night's featured
pace at Toledo Raceway Park,
going the mile In 1: 59 2·5 . .
Brown guided Cheer Power lo
a four·length win over Mannart
Megaspeed with Wading Sam
coming In third.
Jockey Mahone and Bold Spin·
naker won the first two races to
return $11.00 on the dally double
combination of 2 and 6.
The crowd of 2,428 wa~tered

$263,983.

81NOU:COPY

l'liiCE

~~~age~

,

.

SUbscrlben ""' d,.lrtnRIO pay tho car·
rl("l" may remit In advaact" &lt;1iJKt to
The Oatty senunet on a 3. 6or 12 mon1h
bula. Crfdlt wOI bt gtwn car rift' ••rh

-·

allllHE

No subscrlpllons by mall permlllod In

artu' whert home carrier JerVlce ta

~
.'

"If, lndeBd, miniskirts ARE

~ --"'

•',.
(

•

.....7.,~lnl:.

-S.boc'C).

.

(13 Inn.)
At Arlington, Texas, Pete
O'Brien hit a two-run homer with
noneoutlnthebottomorthe13th
Inning, carrying Texas to lts
fourth straight victory. Mltch
Williams, 1·1, retired the only six
men he laced to record the
vlctory. Calvin Schiraldi, IJ. 2,
was the loser.
Marlnenr 8, Albletlca 5
At Oakland, Calif., Ken Phelps
went 31or 4 and knocked In a run
and Jim Presley hit a two-run
homer to power Seattle. Reggie
Jackson belted his 550th career
horne run, a two-run shot In the
sixth, for Oakland. Mike Trujillo,
2· 1, earnedthevlctoryandEdwln
Nunez picked up his third save.
Oakland's Jose Rljo, 0.2, look the
loss.

Wins hoopshoot

•

011--pC~

bBc/C - does It

13 W..U ................ ...... :...... .... IIJ.:II
:MW..U .: ................... ............. 131UO

sow..u .................................. wuo

•

•

•

By MARK COHEN
UPI Sports Writer
The Philadelphia 76ers tlghl ·
ened their defense and evened
their opening· round playoff ser·
lesagainsttheMIIwaukeeBucks.
The Slxers, who came froin 10
points behind In the fourth
period, used a mixture of expe·
rience and youlh at the guard
position Sunday 10 tak e a 125- 122
overtime victory over the Mil·
waukee Burks a nd send the
series back to Philadelphia tied
1·1.
Philadelphia used the combl·
nation of Maurice Cheeks and
rookie David Wingate 10 frus ·
trat e the Bucks on offense and
spearhead their comeback run.
"The tu r ning point wa s when
we went down 10 point s a nd were

INDIANAPOLIS (UPI)
Keith Robinson of Lima, Ohio.
won the free-throw competition
for boys 12·1.3 years old in the 16th
annual Elks National "Hoop
Shoot" contest at Market Square
Arena .
The "Hoop Shoot, " a 36·year
Elks tradition , became a na·
tional com pelion in 1970.
Three million young fr ee·
throw shooters from 50 states
entered the competition this
year, 72 making It to the final s,
oltlclals said Saturday.
Wlniil!rs will have !heir names
enshrined on a plaque af the
Naismith Basketball Hall or
Fame In Springfield, Mass.

WE'RE OUT FOR BLOOD
WEDNESDAY, APIIL 29 ,
RED CROSS BLOODMOBILE
AT

11 w..u ................................ ~ ll7. 21
26 w..u ' ................................. $31.06

52W..U ..... ............................. fii6.5CI

bode well or IN. for the market? I forget!"

•

-......

available.

lnthenlnlh,glvinghlmflve home
In th? 1\.merlcan . League, •.'
run s thi s season.
was . Kan,as City 6, Detroit 1,
"It look me a while tq get Into New York 14, Cleveland 2:
Ihe groove," Dawson I said. " I Minnesota 10, California 5; To·
started slowly . But I fixed up my ronto 5, Chicago 2: Milwaukee 5,
mechanics since the season Baltimore 3; Texas 5, Boston 31n
slarled and 1 know the hit s will 13 innings: and Seattle 8, Oak·
fall in there as long a s I land 5.
concentrat e.
Ph lilies 6, Plrates 4
" With the other guys swinging
At Philadelph ia, Lance Par·
th e bat now, I think we' ll have a rlsh s lugged his first NL grand ,
good season and w~ will have to slam lo highlight a sbo ·run firs)
be contended with.
Inning. Bruce Ruflln, 1·1, w~s the
Th·e Cubs swept the Expos for beneficiary of Philadelphia s big
the first time In Montrea l since Inning and evened his record at
1982 and are8·2 away from home, 1·1. Steve Bedrosian, the last ol
9
hill ' 1 h
ed hi
their besl road s larl since 1 46. five P
les pte ers, earn
s
Chi cago Is 9·8 overall.
first save. Rick Reuschel , 0·1,
was the loser.
Chicago's Steve Troul , 1. 1,
Cardinals 7, Mels 4
AI New York Jack Clark
went the di stance for the first
'
lime s in ce Sept. 29 . .1 98.'; _ a co llecled three hils, Including a
period during which he failed to solo home run that started a
pit ch a complele ga me In 29 four· run rally in the fifth Inning.
starts.
The Cardinals have beaten the
. '1 was wonderlna when my Mets five lim es In six games this
h
seaso n, one fewer ,victory than
last complele gam e wa s, " Trout St Lo ui s had agaln.st New York
said. " I knew It wa s so long ago
·
that 1 forgot about it ."
a ll of I a~ I season.
ln other games. Plllladelpllla
Gl~nla 6, Br•vea 4
beat Pltlsburgh 6·4, St. Louis
1\.tl\.llanta, Jeff Leonard drove
defeated New York H, Ci ncln· In lwo run s with a homer andha
nail clubbed Houslon ll ·.1, San sin gle lo lead the Giants, w 0
Franlcisro edged Allan Ia 6-4 a nd 1urned four double plays. San
San DIPgo bl anked los Angeles Fra ncisco set a major· lea~
4· 0.
·
record for most double plays ikn
lhree consecutive games , rna ·
lng ~ In the weekend series. The
previous record was 12 held by
four c lubs .
Padres 4, Dod«en 0
(
1\.t Los Angeles, Eric Show .
th rew a three·hll shutout and
Mark Parent drove In t he first
able to get ba ck In It," Phllad ci· 1w0 runs of his major·league'
phla Coach Ma ll Guokas sa id. career. The viclory was just the '
"We dldn 'l really have a ny flflh In 20 ga mes for San Diego
w
rhylhm up lo th at poln 1. e and s napped the Dodgers' four ·
finally dec ided on Maur 1ce game winning streak. Show, 1·1•.
(Cheeks) ani! David (Wi nga te) In ear ned his first victory since
Ihe backcourt and it worked. A
20 r 1 t
ug.
o as year.
They trapped some and I lhfnk
the defensive lnlcnslly pick ed up
at that point. "
Cha rles Barkley scored 8 of his
26 points In overtime, Including
the go·ahea d bas kel with 11
seconds remain ing, as the,1llxers
rallied from a 97·87 deficit In the
flnal6:43 of the fourth per iod.
The score was tied 108·108 at
the end of regulalton a nd lhe
76ers opened a ll!i· I1 2 lead on
Juliu s Erving's ,J. polnter with
3:28 left In the ex tra period .
The lead switched hands five
times before Bark ley hh a
baselin e jumper with l1 seconds
left to pul the Sixcrs In fronl
123·122.
Elsewhere. Por lland defeated
Hous1on lll ·9B, Basion gOI by
Chi cago 105·96, De lrolt bl ew ou1 ,
Was hington 128·85 andi 1\.tlanla 1
squeaked by Indiana 94· 9:!.

76ers even playoff
senes agaiDS Buck s

Dally .................................. . 25 C.nll

•'

'second Inning of Sunday's NL WcstDivlslon game
In the Astrodome. Cincinnati won, 11·3. (UPI)

hurled a seven·hltter to raise his
recordto4·0andFrankWhltehlt
a two·run homer In the first
Inning to power Kansas City .
Saberhagentookatwo·hltterlnlo
the seventh. Walt Terrell, J.3,
was the loser.
Brewel'!l5, Orlolell3
AI Milwaukee, Juan Castillo
hit his first major, league home
t lift the Milwaukee Brew
run
· to lh 1 16th let ry In 17·
ers o e r
v o
games. Mike Birkbeck, 1·0,
earned !he victory and Dan
Plesac go! hiS Sl·th save. The
Brewers scored all their runs off
starterandloserMikeFlanagan,
0.3. Baltimore has lost four
straight.
Twla 10, Angels 5
At Minneapolis, Steve Lorn bar·
dozzl Ignited a four· run seventh
Inning with a solo home run to
power Minnesota In a game
featuring seven homers. Wally
Joyner hit two homers tor
California. Reliever George
Frazier, 2·2, earned the victory.
Mike Cook, 1-l, sultered the
defeat.

Ran1enr 5, Red 8o~ 3

.,.l

ol r..tlPvf't' .... w ... rr.m

M•lllnoal - MNI laflfl..r IA..

UPI Sports Writer
Andre Dawson who often
compla ined about playing on Ihe
artificial turf In Montreal, rarely
had a probl em hitting In Olympic
Stadium .
·
Dawson returned this weekend
10 the stadium where he played
the previous 10 seasons, and it
was just like old times. The
former Expos slugger hit two
home runs Sund ay to power Ihe
Cubs 10 a 7.1 victory and a
lhr~·game sweep of Montreal.
For the weekend Dawson wa s
·
for
12 with three doubles, two
7
homers and six RBI.
"I don't want anyone to ·tnink
lh 11
her t 0 beat ponmy
a cam e
e
u
formerteam,"saldDawson, who
signed with the Cubs as a free
agent "For me it wa s just the
,· d
job "
wogubs
Gene Mi chae l
likes the way . his new player
operates.
.
"Dawson Is a winner, ' Ml·
chael said. "We need a player
like Dawson and his bat. Having
' the advantage of playing so
manygamesonanaturalsurfnce
like we have in Chicago is go ing
to help him ."
Dawson hit a two-run homer In
the fourth and clubbed a solo shot

A

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SIJIIIICRII'TION IIATEII
87Carrler01'llolor . ..U

•'

The Daily Sentinei.:....Page-3

Dawson slams two "home runs
Tommy John's ?ne-hitter hel~ give as Cubs rip Montreal, 7 to ·1

POSTMAsTER: Stnd addreu dlanfi'S
to The Dally Senllnel, 111 Court St ..
Pomeroy, Ohio 4SIIIII.

'·
'

'

·HOUSTON IUPI ) - A miles· for his first victory since last
to ne for Cincinnati pitcher Mario
summer's arthroscopic surgery.
Solo ..:.. his first victory since
"I was throwing my fastball
undergoing shoulder surgery last
for strikes on the outside. part of
August- helped produce history
the plate," he said. ''I'm not 100
of a more dubious kind for the
percent back, but I've shown
slumping Houston Astros .
some progress In my two outings.
Soto was backed by Dave
I felt It would fake me four or five
Parker's two home runs and five
times out to go eight or nine
RBI and Dave Concepcion's four
Innings but I'm on my way.''
hits In Sunday's 11·3 victory over
Parker, meanwhile, said Sun·
the Astros. The loss marked the
day 's flve·RBI performance was
first time Houston had been
his best ever at the Astrodome.
swept at home since June 25·27,
He ripped a two· run homer In the
1985, against Atlanta. It was the first off Knepper and a three· run
Reds first sweep In the Astra·
blast In the ninth off Charlie
dome since 1974.
Kerfeld, who was optioned to the
Cincinnati's victory closed out
minors following the Astros' loss.
a series that saw the Reds bump
"This Is probably the best day
off all three of Houston's pitching
I've ever had here In my whole
aces - Mike Scott, Nolan Ryan career," Parker said . "It's the
and Bob Knepper, 1·2, who took
best April I've ever had. I'm
the loss Sunday.
seeing the ball well, not lunging,
'' When you face Scott. Ryan,
and I'm keeping my hands
and Knepper, you're not going to back.''
t
sweep them oft en," said Reds
The Reds slugger Is lied with
Manager Pete Rose. " Baseball's
teammate Kal Daniels for the
a game of peaks and valleys.
league lead In home· runs with
We're three ahead of them, so
seven,
Concepcion had three RBI as
they can't catch us for three .
days .''
the Reds pounded out 19 hits -12
Soto, 1·0, pitched 6 1·3 Innings, .. off Knepper In oa performance
allowing three runs on seven hit s
that left Astros · Manager Hal

Publis hed pveo ry afternoon , Monday
through Friday. Ill Court St. . Po·
meroy. Ohio, by lhe Ohio Valley Pub1\shln~ Company/Multimedia. Inc.,
PumerO)I. Ohio 15769, Ph. 9!!2-21!!6. Second class posta~e paid at Pomeroy.
Ohio.

Berry's World

.

Other natives were exposed to
unconscionable levels of radla ·
lion as Christmas, Johnston and
other Islands were transformed
Into nuclear test slles. By the
.time the atmospheric test ba~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio.

·~

'

The Daily Sentinel

·:/",

·•

PO.IOY SENIOI CITIZENS CENTER
1 P.M.-5:30P.M.
•

1

.------------..1..----...,--------

POMEROY FIRE
DEPARTMENT
·CAPTAIN D'S
ALL YOU CAN EAT
FISH FRY
'

ADVANCE TICKnS: S4.25 ADULI

'2.50 CHILDREN

ADVANCE TICKETS AVAILABLE FROM ANY
POMEROY VOL. FIREMAN

AI DOOI: S4,50 ADULtS

SUS CHILDREN

SATURDAY, MAY 2
4:00-8:00

�April27. ~ 9a7

..

By The Bend

--

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

'

PHONE
992-2156
.
Iff lrito Doitty Sootiool
lfoll.

.

Cla$~04

Monday, April 27, 1987
ORDINANCE NO. 1181 -87 ofvaluation. in ••co11 ofthe

.Organizations take action at recent meetings

,

~

Beat of the bend

Ready for Derby...
'

By BOB IIOEFLICII

Sentinel Staff Writer
· II "Derby Day" dinner and
dance wi ll be
staged by th e
Pomeroy II rea
C hamber of

Commerce on
Sa turday, May
2, at Royal Oak

RPsort Park .
Hors d'oe uvres will be ser ved
a I 7, dlnnPr wi ll be at 7:30 a nd the
band. Jan a nd Bi ll, wi ll be on
s t a~c · from H: :!0 to mldni ghl.
Di nn er wi ll be. barbecued
rhlcken , potat o salad, baked
beans, slaw , ro lls . coffee-tea, and
cake.
Tickets arc $10 a slnglea nd $20
a co up le a nd may be purcha sed
from Bill Nease, Ron Ash. BruC'e
Reed, Je nnifer Sheets. Tom
RPu trr, Paul Si mon, Mary Powell or at the c ha mber office and
the resort offi ce.
And If a dinne r-dance Isn't your
ba g, perhaps, a fi eld duy to be
staged on Sa tu rday. May 2. by
the Appalachi a n Draft Ho rse a nd
Mule Association will wor k for
you.
The fi eld da y will be held at the
Redbird varm bctwec'n Guysville a nd Stewar t on Rou te 329.
There- will he plowin g contesiS
and a log skid ro n tes t. everyone
Is wol c·ome to bring their tea ms
and tak e pal't or just wa tc h.
There will bl' a $:1 fee fo t· each
c·ont es t a nd pri zes will be
awarrlrd . Lun ches wi ll be avai lable. Activi ties will start at 10 a. m.
-.the ra in date is Ma y !l.
For more Info eall Wald
Spencer at 9R&gt;-J:;:IO.
Congrutulat lons to Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd Stou t of Long Bot tom
who will cclebt'a le their 6Ui h
wPddlng a nniversary on May :l

with a fami ly din ner.
Mr. and Mrs . Stout were
married on May 2. 1927 at the
Methodist Parsonage by Rev.
G.C. Nu tt er. The Stouts have
been lifelong residen ts of Lo n~(
Bo ttom. Mr. Stout is a retired
elect rlclan.
·
Mr. a nd Mrs . Stout are the
paren ts of two so ns, James of
Tuppers Plains, and Glenn of
. Long Bottom . They have ' four
grandchildren , Mrs . .IImmer
Sou lsby , Ter ri, Jody and Kellh
Stout, a nd one grea t-grand ch ild,
Shannon Soulsby .
Cards ca n be sent to the couple.
Long Botrqm , Ohi o 4574.1.
'·

Ke ith Kinzel of Pomeroy Is
recu perating nicely at the St.
.Joseph Hos pit al in Par kersburg,
W.Va ., from serious Injuries
received In an aut o accide nt In
the Parkersburg area. Since the
acc iden t on April JU. Kei th has
undergone two majoropera t Ions.
His room number Is 240.
And Ik e Nea l o( Middleport
seems to be making great progress at Universit y Hospital In
Columbus whe re he unde rgoi ng
observa tion and trea tment for an
apparently hear t ailmenl. His
address Is Room 8~8. Rhodes
Hall.
Rodney Spires. Kyger. who has
undergone three operatio ns at
Veterans Memorial Hospi tal
si nce Fe br uary, has been moved
to Universit y Hos pital In Columbus. His address is Rooll) 1079,
Doan Ha ll.

ular shrub which can be grown In
most landscapes_ Root rot Is a
common disease, she said, but
this can be cont rolled by using a
compost of hardwood bark which
contal~es a · n ~turai fungicide.
The plan t has 10 stamens wHile
the azalea has only five stamen,
she said. Rose shrubs are an
older species of roses and can be
used to cover banks. as a ground
cover, or as a privacy screen,
according to the program leader.
The lilac is a good accent shrub
which Improves with age. 11
needs full sun to flower imd
limes tone for acid. To prune a nd
shape shr ubs, there are three
types called light heading. cutting off the tops, ha rd heading,
halfway shrub cutting and severe
heading, cutting off close to the
ground . They also need an
occasional thinnin g out of the
lesser branches , she concluded.
Refreshments were served to
those named . and Helen Eblin.
Marge Purtell, Suzanne Warner,
Wilovene Bailey, and Thelma
Giles.

TOPS
and Mrs . Venoy, the mission
(
Phyll is McMilla n was the top study.
,we ight loser at fhe Tuesday night FERNWOOD GARDEN CLUB
meeting of TOPS 570 at Veterans
Members of th e Fernwood
Memorial Hospital. Runners- up Garden Club di scussed plans for
were Maida Long and Lenn ie their trip Tuesday to Lake
Bell Ales hire who also won -the Catherine for the nature hike and
fru it basket. Teen queen ~ was illustrated talk by the · resident
Penny Gillispie.
_
naturalist at' yesterday'.s meetPlans were completed for the ing held at the Zion ..Church of
.trip to Ci ncinnati Saturday to Christ.
attend th e Area Recognition
National Garden Club Week
Day. M e m ~rs· ar~Jo meet on the was s tressed with members
parking lot at the Senior Citizens - reported on plantings of roses,
Center buuldlng · at ~:30 ·a.m . forget -me-nots and the sta rting
Arrangement s were made to · of a magnolia tree. Nominations
begin a new contest In four for l)ew officers wll be presented
wee ks.
at ttie May meeting:
•
Kathryn Johnson brought a
MISSIONARY SOCIETY
teapot to be used at the state
A mother-daughter · banquet cenvention In July .and also
was planned for May 7 at 6:30 dlspayed the mat erial to be used
p.m. at the Pomeroy Church of for lhe tablecloth which the club
Chris t by the Evangeline Mis- will send to the convention. Mrs.
s ionary Group. Mrs. Ca thelne Evelyn Thoma was hostess fo r
Proudfoot will be tlie speaker.
the- meeting which opened with
Pt 'thomijs presided at the the cl ub collect. Mrs. Thelma
meeting which was preceded by Giles had evotions using poems
a potluck s uper. Roll call fo llow- by Helen Steiner Rice, "New
ing prayer was on Easter. Beginning" and 'Grea test
Devotions were led by LaDonna Blessings ."
Clar k on " How Christ Died or
For roll call each , member
Us." Officers' reports were given r espdnded by naming a favorite
and cards were signed for spring shrub. There was a
several' who are il l. Sunshine display of favorite containers for
boxes are to be prepared for arra nging, many novel, some
several In the churc h.
modern, some antique.
Ths mission study was by
Fonhe program . Mrs. Thoma
Eileen Bowers wit h Janet Venoy .talked on "Care of Spring
reading scripture. Charldlne Al- Shrubs. " She commented on th e
kire had the closing prayer. three classes, narrow leaf, broad
Others attend ing were Gertrude leaf, a nd deciduous, and their
. Bass, Eva Dessa uer, and Pauline growth req uirements. She menti Kennedy . Nex t meeting will be at oned the rtroda ~endron, roses,
the home of Mrs. Thoma with low shrubs, and the lilac, noting
Mrs. Bowers to have devotions, that the rhodendron is a spectac-

.

.
liver the remaining lilies. .
Officers' reports were given by
Evelyn Gil more and E lizabeth
Fink, acting secretacy In the
absence of Mrs. Jewell. Four
coffee carafes were added to the
church kitchen.
P rayer vigils to be held fromnoon until midnight, Sunday,
May 3, at the church were
discussed and more volunteers
were signed for half· hour •lglls.
The 50th anniversary · of the
circle was noted. Mary V. Reibel,
the only c harter member, 'n !- ·
called the organization of th~
Young Women's Guild In 1937 by
Christine Kuether, wife of the
pastor, the Rev. Ralph Kuether .
Organized as a study group
p r im a rily ~
several members
have belonged over 40 years.
When the name became Inappropriate. It was changed to
Friendly Circle.
Peggy Harris presented · a
program on spring and God's
Beautiful World, which included
a prayer from Peter Marshall
Prayers and a meditation. "Your
Own Back Yard," and poems,
" There Is a God In Spring."
Carrie Kennedy dedicated the
offering. Unison prayer closed
the meetin g.
Miss Reibel and Mary E . .
Chapman were hostesses. T)le"
refreshment table decorations
included an arrangrment of pink·
carnations with gold appoint-"
ments and featured a decorated
cake Inscribed "50th Anniver:
sary." The 16 members enjoyed
the anniversary party. Favors
were quaint prints with a typed
mes sage minus all the "e's" •
making the point of how needed Is"
one letler or one person.
•

ten mil.l limitation. 11 carti-

Ohio reserves thnight 'o ac. cept or reJect -any and

Be it ordained bv the

The Polls of sai" Election

Council of the Village of
Middleport 11 followt :

will open at 6:30 o'clock A ,
M. and remain . open until

bida. Blddero must bid on
coverage equal to or exciH)d-

the

, •

YEGRABLE PLANTS

:

ordinance Dated Fob. 17. 19B7
in conflict! •w;lth~.:~~- onlllnance• 1141 13. 20, 27; 16) 4, 4tc
it hertbV,
Sec. IV.
Ordinence
· Public Notice
thall take effect and be In
PUBLIC HEARl G
fO&lt;ce from and after tho ear. NOTICE N · ,
tioat thtto u provided by lew. The VIllage of Middleport
Pao!8d tho 23rd day of is applying to the Ohio
April, 1987.
Attest: Jon P: Buck . Clerk
Dewey .Horton
Preaident of Council
.
tc

t41 20 27 2

P!Jblic Notice

Ryan ,Jeffers
Taylor, Connie Bailey , Hilda
Harris, anq Christopher and
Corey Dars t. Gl fts were presented to Ryan at bot h parties.
Visiting Ryan on hi s birthd ay
were George Miller a nd Mar sha
Terry.

School

Oiatrict,

Racine ,

pond service.
A public hearing will be

Ohio, po11ed on the 16th
' day ofFebruaty. 19B7. there held on Mev 26, 1987 at
·will be submitted.to a vote of 7:30 p.m. in the Council
the people of said Board of Ch~mbtirs at v·illage Hall.
Education-Southern Local
Fred Hoffman
School District at the Spa·

Mayor

clot · Election to be held In
Village of Middleport
Southem Local School Dis- 141 20, 27
trict. Racine, Ohio, at ttle re·
gular places of voting there-

Public N otica

in, on Tueaday. the 6th day
of May, 1987, the question

NOTICE TO BIOOERS

of ieauing bonds of said

Southern

Local

Meigs CouJltv

School

Board in the amOunt of one
hundred and fifty thouaand

dolton 1'160.000.00) for

tha purpoH of improving,
reconstructing, renovation.
remodeling, futniahing. and

equipping building and la·
cilftiea u provided by law.
The Maitimum number of
years during which · such
. bonds are to run is10 yean.
The estimated average ad·
ditional tax rate amountl to
$0.04 for each one hundred
doll an of valuation, which is
.40 milia for each one dollar

' 1 Card of Thanks

Comri'liasioners
Court Houu

Pomeroy, Ohio 46769
Sealed propooofo ohott he
received in the Office of the
Commissioners. County. of
Meigs. Court Hou!8, Pomeroy, Ohio 46769 for hoo·
pitallzation , aurgical, major
medical, dental and vision
care until noon on May 20,

19B7.

.

Propouls are to be sub-

mitted booed upon the benefits 81 outlined in the follow ing specifications.

6

Happy Ads

ing the spectficationa as

. We, would like to
thank eveJYone who
helped when our son,
John Curtis, became ill
last Friday, April 17.
We would especially
like to thank the nice
people on the emer-

•

"

Two copies of tho bid

forma have been provided,

one copy of the Bidder
Questionnaire and Bid Form

ia to be returned and one
copy is to be retained by the
Bidder. All bldo mull be
marked as "Sealed Bid
Healtti Insurance" .
·
Seated proposals will be

opened on Moy 20 at 1 P.M.

in the Office of the Commissioners , Meigs
Coc- 'V.
Ohio. COurt House. Pomeroy, O~io, and read aloud at
that time .
The conaulting firm of
McNelly, Patrick &amp; Asaocl·
ate• will be analyzing eft bids
for adherene to specifications . all questions regarding bid materials are to be directed to Mr. Rick Patrick at

1-B00-7B2-427B.
141 27; 161 4, 2tc

Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
PURCHASE OF
. COMPUTER SYSTEM
MEIGS COUNTY
DEPARTMENT OF
HUMAN SERVICES
Sealed proposals will be
received by the Meigs County Commisaioners. Pom·
eroy, Ohio at the Clerk's Office until 12 noon on the

13th day ol Moy, 19B7 and

at 2 o 'clock opened by the

Clerk of said Boord for a
cumputer

ayatem

lhard·

ware, aoftwarti, lnatallatlon.
training and service) to be
used for the processing of
the General Relief payroll/ reporting
and medical
claima procesaing· for the
Meigs County Department
of H~man Servic11.

Eacll"llld propooal ahalf

contain the lull name of Nc:h
person or company submitting a bid and ·ahalf be ac-

ety bond In the amount of

100%' of the total bid price.
.Outtide of Envenlope containing bid must he clearly
marked: "Bid. Computer" .
Separate and independent
bids wffl be received with
rnpect to the computer sv•·

tem to 'be purchued u pro·

pney sqUid and also

their quick respilnse.
Aspecial thanks to
John Lentes ·for not
being afraid to get in·
volved.
Thanks again to all
.
concerned,
M~. &amp; Mrs. Larry E.
Curtis

listed. Any deviatiOn. from
the specifiCations must be
so noted . .
,

companied by o bid bond In
the amount of either (1) a
cathlen check or certified
check on 1 solvent benk In
tho omountol10% ofthato·
tal bid price or (2~ ·a bid sur-

CARD OF THANKS

"

vitied

by

111t spectflcotlono.

Specificetlons and instruc·
tiono to bidders may be ob·

!lined at tho office of tho
Clerk of the Maiga Coun·

.

601
E. Main

POMEROY;
o.
•'
992· 2259
NEW LISTING - 5- room
house in town. Needs some
work and remodeling but
owner will finance with a
small down payment Askin&amp; $9,800.

,'

oz.

Love,
Mom and Dad

·,'
;.

•
'•

BOGGS

SALE~

·'
~

&amp; SERVICE

U. 5: Rl 50 EAST
GUYSVILlE, OHIO
Authori1td John Dstrt,
Ntw Holland, lush Hog
Form fqulpmonl
Daoltr -

LARGE PIZZA
.,

Ftr• E••ltMIIf

EAT IN OR
PICK-UP ONLY

P1rt1 &amp; Servin

J.3.'86 tic

4·7·'87·1 mo.

IN THE COUNTRY - Free
gas plus royalties are good
but approKimately 90 acres
with a nlce 3 bedroom house
is better. Secluded and
scenic make this the best!
located near Rt. 33 in
Sal1sbury School District,
this home has been remodeled, insulated, vinyl siding, modern krtchen, central
air. Barn and storage cellar.
2 ponds. JUST FOR YOU!
$53,000.
.

USED TIRES
NEW.RIES

RACINE - Cute little one
bedroom hom e in town in
good condition . Aluminum
siding, all storms, level Jot.
Now J,ust $12.000. Make
Offer.

(CUT OUI FOR fUTURE Ulf)

NEW LISTING .- Owner
wants a sale and is offer ing
this home in Middleport at a
reduced price. Large lot all
on one floor. 2 bedrooms,
b a t~ ,
porch. Asking
$16.200.

?85-3561

ACTION
TOWING
949·9070 or

949·2045

4·t7·1 mo.

Birt~days

ROV ALTY - .Jennifer Erwin, daught er of Jack and Joyce
Erwin, Langs•Uie, and Matthew Barrett, son of Da•id and Ginny
Barrett, Lungs•lllc, have been named queen 1111d king oft he Salem
Cenh•r Elementary School. The two were named to the positions of
royalty recently us the res ult of u contest fund drl•e In which they
rals ('d the most money lor school playground equ!,Pment. They
t•xtend thank s lor donations mad e on their behalf.
·
P'ublic Notice

Aja Lynae Blackwell and Kimberly Renee Johnson celebrated
their first birthdays together
recently with a party at the hom e
of Mr. and Mrs. Steve Blackwell,
Pomeroy.
A teddy bear cake was made
lor the party by Kimberly's aunt ,
Jill Johnson, and served with
koolald and other refreshments.
Games were played w lth prizes
go ing to Melanie Blevins and
Dan iel Whltteklnd who also won
the door prize. Others attending
were Mam le Stephneons, Evelyn
and Jill John son, April and
Tiffany Miller, Barbara and
Jerry Co lm~r. Bill Colmer.
Nancy Whltteklnd, Shawn BlevIns, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Hender·
so n, Mr. a nd Mrs: Steve Black·

ORD INANCE 11 BO·B7
A Special Purpo•a Flood

Damage PreiJentlOI\ Ordi·

nance.

This ordinancu makes
ch•ngu to the existing flood
damage prevenUon ordi·
nanct aa required byte FEM

and OONR.

The full ordinance i1 av•ll ·
able for irlapectlon It th•

mayor's office, 237 Roce
St .. Mlddtepol'1. Ohio, Monday through Frlthty from BA.
M. to 4 P.M.
Piuad March 23, 1987.
Fred Hoffman, Mayor
'
Vllfo~e ol Middleport
14120, 27 lc

1

THE ROBINSON LAUNDRY &amp; DIY
CLEANERS WILL BE CLOSING THEil
BUSINESS APIIL 30; 1987.
CUSTOMEIS PLEASE PICI UP ANY ORDEIS
THEY MAY HAVE IY THAT TIME.

WE WISH TO SINCERELY THANK ALL OF
OUIIUNY VALUED CUSTOMEIS.
The Robinson laundry &amp; Dry Cleaners-Co.

MAIN ST. PIZZA

Kimberly Renee Johnson

observed for girls
wen: Arlca and Amber, Mr. a nd
Mrs. David Johnson, Jeremy and
Scott.
Se ndln ~ gifts were Aja 's paternal grandmother, Ruth Blackwell and the aunt of both
youngsters, Paulette Farley.

POMEROY

In computer talk, "hardware" Is
the physical apparatus or "nuts and
bolts" that make up the computer. It
includes si licone chips. transformen,
boards and wires, etc. It Is also used to•
describe various pieces of equipment
including the CPU, printer, mode,;
and ~ideo-display terminaL

,-------------&lt;

HOMES
FOR SALE

BY GOV'T
Reposeeseed homes from Gov't
£rom $1 plus repairlltaxes.
Available throughout your area
and around USA. Also Tax Proper·
ties, Forecl08111'@8, etc. For intorml·
I tion Phone (216) 463-3000, '
· Ext. H7320 1
j lfll986 DSA RHIS\
At m, inti

992-2228

I

MOTHERS COME IN AND REGISTER
FOR MOTHER'S DAY' GIFt' TO BE
GIVEN AWAY MAY 9TH AT 11 A.M.
1987 GIADUATiOF SOUTHERN HIGH
:- SCHOOL co• A IEGISTEI FOI Gin
BnwEEN NO AND MAY 1·5TH.

.'•.
..·',,'

PAT9

'

HAll BOWS $299 ElCII .

.

- . !!At1111- -.

mulime if no answer.

4-ti-1 .....

Meig1 County Board

of

~

Authorlr.ttl Strole•
&amp;·Parts

36632 BAILEY RD.

CUSTOM BUilT
HOMES &amp;GARAGES
"At Rlasonablt Prk!ll"

PH. 949·2801
or 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

•
•

BOWLING II

8owlna Co.
3121. 2ND Sf.

POIIIIfoy

HEAnNG &amp; COOUNG
· lnidonlial •d

"""'! .-

CDmiMJdal 111i11.

•

tnstollotion of dudwork &amp;
humiolifitr~

,.,.... hoof

, _ , 011d oir conditiooing.
AH work-ool..t

CA1llbl41915·4222
SPECIAL:

HEIL- Packlpair

conditioning for mobile
or moduler homH. 2Y:!
or 3
lnotoflld
i1oii~ii&amp; ~to coot.

PlUMIING &amp;HEAnNG

•

.

.... tWs

,•

GOLDEN IUCIEYE (AID

RACINE DEPAUMEN1 STOlE

•

•

...' '•

1111

witlo

r:"M!r71~=

pi-frill!

'

Good Fri. &amp; Sat. nilhll
or any OPif! bowlhll
IIIII. CIIIIS lor PlrtiH
lor JOIIf
992·343 or 99lil10~

roup.

•'•

Po1111roy

HOURS: TuH.·Wid.· Fri.
ll--'~:

to 7 11_. m.

Sunclay: 'l. p.m.·7 p.m.

"'a...992·2526
.. "'''"-'
RUSS MOORE

4-14-1 ...

LN. 805·111"' llltllr

PUIUC fHV!11D

We Cerry Fl•htng

I~.~Ppll• '

Pay Your Cable •
Phone Billa Here
111111111 PilON(
i't41 Ht-6SIO
u.oKIPIIOIII

"'41 "'·7754

IUNIU'S to TRANSMISSION

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Addon1 end r.mod..ing
- Rooting •nd gun• work

- Concrl1t work

wo"'
!Free Eatlmates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

992 -7314
PDmeroy, Ohio

REPAIR

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.
IIG. . LOIIG

YltiYLIALI•ItM

CorntlleM Rtmodlltng
Roof1111 ot eN lypoe
Compllote

o..- Wortyo

WDOIII&lt;I In home orN

20yters
.. ,,.. EttitnlltH''
(AU COWCT:

Ph. (6

Dl

"VINYL SIDING
• ALUMINUM SIDING
"ILOWN 1H

~I•• T~••••lul ..

PH. 992·5682
or 992·7121

INSULAnON

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

6·17-tfc

l/28111'n

Gun Show at Aullend Ctv lo
Centtl Mev t hom 8:00IS:OOp.m . Ttblt renttii&amp;.DO. For
informttlon or table renltl call
114-742-2233.

The Dtbble Shop, Middlep o rt
vrlll bt cla11d Aprfl 27 th rough
Mty 5tt1 . Will re-open May It h.

.......... hilt
"F'" Eatlmetn"

F/0'11
B~tlf"''
MaNtt.W.

PH. 949·2160

or 949-2101
He SII..IY

ROWElS FOI
AU OCCASIONS
NEW IDEAS ·

,.. ......
VAIIIITII

dey, Mev 1 tnd Sat ., May 2.
9:00 am-7 :00 pm. lwo bedroom tuitea. dlnln9 room suite.
T.V.. rockers. ttend tablet,
lempt, crtft mlterialt, material
tor quihs. kitchen tt,ms . Call

IU-742 ·2007 o r 614 ·742·
2490 .

Wanted. To Buy

2282.
8uvh'g dally gold. sllvtr coins,
rings, jewelry. starling ware, o ld
coins. large currencv. Top prices . Ed Burken BerbM Shop,
2nd. Av.. Middleport. Oh. 814·

992 -3476.
BuyinG Junll cart. Ca ll ah er 6;00
PI!' · Cett 814-992 -5848.

· Want t o buy c::any ou t bualnett
for beflr license for Pomeroy
store. 814 ·992 ·6662 or 614992· 7402 evenings .

OLD quilts !cash paid) 61.t-246·
9448 .

[ nt II Illy ntt! II t

•

o• 6!4·440· 298&amp;.

College St. In Sy ra cu aa. Ntw
hub cop. Coli I t 4"992 · 7080 .
LOST Calico Ctt named C1to,
blind In onaeye, 31&gt;4 -87&amp;-1046
... ., 6:00.
Lost ftmtlt Ctllco c at . Tueadl'f
evening at Oehy Ouatn, Pt.
Pletlln1 . 304 -4&amp;8. 1761 .

7

ROOFING

-------GiiiiTpoli'i'--- -- ·-&amp;Vicinity
Ytrd Stlt Mon. &amp; Tutt . Aprll27
&amp; 21 tern t o 6pm. on Krlnftl Rd.
'!. mile off Route 218. Men,
Wamtn , 1nd children• elolhlng,

949-2263
or 949·2168

4'22-17·Hn

J.R.'s

2025. 2023 Chttham, 2018%
rttr Ettttrn. Ctrport • yard"' '
April 28th &amp; 29th. Clothing,
houHWtr... furnh \.Ht.

RE.~AIRS

Ysrd S.le, Newbornt 10 tdults
clo1hft, btr 110011, miiCl . Off At.
7 on Addlton PK . tppro• . 2 ·
mlln. 1tl Ad. to left. Whit t
houtt with red bern behind
Addavlllt School. April 27 thru

TYs, Anttnnas
Satellite Sales
Installation
Service

Office.

Ptrt· tlme RN ne~td In 1 ni ce
100 btd. lon g·ttrm etre ftcUity,
good bentftu tvallable. ContiOt
.Mtry O 'Brltn, Dlrtctor of Nurt·
lng , Scenic HUl a Nutting Center.
Monday thru Frldl'f.

ARCHWAY COOKIES hu o
dlttributoJthlp evtlltblt In the
Gelllpollt·Jt ckiOn tfet. Butl·
nett dtPOalt , ttep 111n truck, tnd
w~rthouu

requlrMt. Ho•plu\1-

zatlon, rttlremant tnd llftlntu·
r~nct prO'IIIdH. 'and r"ume to
P.O. Box 1 , At hltnd, Ohio
4480 5 or Coll418-2e9-07 8 7.
Need tomeona to bruth· hog 2
tettl !n Bidwell t rtt . Ph.
~ 1•· •48, 2101 tfttr 8pm.

Mey 2.

Mtntg• Traln ... fuii -Time '"'

perlence dealrtd. E11celtent
wag11. Good fr inge benftfltt.
Mutt be neat. elun&amp; t ltrt , Stnd
rep ly to Box T-802 , Care of
Gtlllpollt Deily Tribune. 128
Third A¥e., Otlllpollt, Oh.

Govt,nment Joba. 1l1.040 t!9.230 yr. Now hiring. Call
e05·887· 60DO E•l. R-8805 fo•
cwrrent fldertllltt
Hiring! Gr.vernment joba-your

,,. •. e1e.ooo...ea,ooo. Phone
MON EY for co llege. Call the
Army Nttlonal Guard for FREE
ln formtt lon ptckel. 1-800· 142·
3819.
hperlenced mea1 cutttr tppty
Crawford• Sup er Mtrket. Hend·
eraon, 304&gt;157ti· 6404.

Pan-time hatp wanted, tppty In
p11110n only, Mister Donut . No
Phone Ctlls.

12

Situations
Wante d

Work wanted mowing, odd jobt,
ligh t htullng . M11igs, Galllt and
Muon Counllea . 814 · 992 ·
6599.

Yard Sale

NEW- REPAIR
Gu.t tart
Downspout•
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

port . Municlptl Pool. Appllct·
tlons available tt thfl Mayors

bt. 14.t9 .

Found on corner of Sixth and

Howard L Wrltt1tl

, Pool tnd park dlraC1or. M/ddl•

ctll rtfundtblt. 11021831·818&amp;

at Hatrer Hatplttf. Ctll 114·

44S-2886

2-5--86-lfn

Ellm Home at 209 South 41h St .

Mlddhtport . Room and board far
eld mly and t,andl-cap. Reteren ·
C.tt. 614· 992· 6873.

15

Schools
)nstruction

Retrain Now. SoutheetternBut·
inost College. Ceil e 14•44G ·
4387.
LEARN HOW··· Vou can sand
your child ·t o • dittincdve
Chr ls t11n School. Rivefllde
Chrlttlan Acedemy , Milton. WV
for half the normtl eotl. Cttl
now 304-743-8107 or 7433823.

·

. 18 Wanted to Do

UASONAIU · RIUAII£
1·20-'86 tfn

Orivewtv Sal• 1 271Sgll . ruel oil
tank, 2 ll&amp;gll. oil dr~o~mt 1 new
1 Ogai. tqlltrlum &amp; •cc•orlet. 2
old btth tubt, /ott Of lYOn
bottl•. old couch and 2 chtltl,
porteblt Wllhlf, dlthll &amp; glts•
wart, men &amp; woment clathtt ,
55Qtt eltC1. wattr hett... tank.
At 7 Ch11hlre tct'Ott from tht
Exxon Statton. MtY 1tt &amp; 2nd.
9-lpm Ph. 614-367-7241 .

GEAIY'S
BODY SHOP '

..---. 'Pt '"Piiiiiiiiiiif ----.
&amp; Vicinity
................. ................. .

Call 614-448·51::.8 vrork, or
448· 7849 home.

Y~t~d 81lt, 127 Englith Rd.
Tundey, Apr. 28th, 9 e.m. · 2
p.m.

M1n to mow g ra11. Ern"'
McKinney. 71 COurt St. C1ll
e14-448- 36SS .

Electronic Organa
Mobile saniica

614-843-5241

Ph. 992-3537
4-8·'17-1 mo .

Allor S
6"·742-2t"

Happy Ads

Fownd· Med ium brown thort
halrlld dog wl1h rt d eolltr, Found

lob lorton, Owner

REPS NEEDED
For buslntll acco unts. Fulllima, t&amp;O ,OOO· IBO, OOO· Pert·
lime, 112 ,000 -118, 000 -No
Sailing, repea1 butlnell . Sat
your owo tlourt . Train ing pro·
vlded . Cell:. 1·812·938·1870,
M·F, 8am to &amp;pm (Ct ntral
Standtrd Time) .

•120.00 Per W tt~ Ptrt•Time
I 2•0 .00 Per Wllk Full·Time
Opponunlty lor advanetmtnt.
Mutt b t nut. dependable. embl·
tlou1 . tnd hevt tutomoblle. For
Interview C•ll61•·••6· 7'51 .

REBUilT &amp; REP AIRED

PH. 992·9949

Pike. 203 J1ckao n Pteu.

8 Adorable puppies free to t
good homt Ph . 814-44t · 7025 .

6 Lost and Found

190 MULBERIY AVE.
·POMEROY, OH.

Part-time LPN &amp; part· tim• MLT .
'Apply In person between 9· &amp;
Mon thru Fri. at lhtl Mtdlctl

a MON Et t

SOMEONE CARES · Rlvonldo
Chrltlian Actdemy hu 19
partn•• willing to underwrht 1
ttudtnt for half th• tuhlon. It
on. of tht flrtt new or rtturnlnv
•tudenta to tlkt edvtnttgt of
t hlt greet opportunhy . Call now
304·743·8107 • • 743-3823 .

550 Pogt St. Mld.lpltl

l04-17J·SS7S

'

S.lem St ., Rut!and: Ohio. Fri·

Giveaway

6

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS

3·27-2 1110.

992-7636

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

I will not bt reapontlblt for any
Mbtt contracted for by al'tyone
other thsn myu lf. Ro gtr D.
Clark.

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Ave.nue. Box 1213
Gallij)olis, Ohio 45631

We'l Sell You A
Used (ar or Fix
Your Old One

Fret Estimales
Reliable
GuaraniHd Work

SALES &amp;SERVICE

NOW OPEN . ,Come Clamp with
u1. Ohio Rlvtr Camp Grounds.
614-949·2526 .

Strtv puppv, Shepherd mlud,
camt to my hou11 but cen't atty.
Htt e to ltke to pound. Ctll
814-992-6373 .

SANDY'S
AUTO SALES

Will Do ....
Carpentery - Vinyl
&amp;Aluminum Siding
- Paintinf Drywal

161 North Seconcl
Mid.apttl, Ollio 45760

_ _

licensed Clinical Audi_ologist

St. Rt. 33, Pomtror, OH.

J&amp;N
CONSTRUCTION

Garage
••. 124, ,_,.,Ohio

The Vlllege of Rutland h• the
foll owing 11tm up for tale: a uted
Burc;M progrtmmable scanner.
Sultd bldt m.y H 18nt to P .O.
Bolll 420. Rutltnd. Ohlo41!1775.
In Cite of th t Cllfk· trtllurtr.
Bldt mutt be received by MIV 5,
1987. _,utltnd Vllltge Oauncll
ru...vts the right to refec1tny or
til bldt. Sctnntr offtrld for u lt
11 Ia wtth no guarant...

Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Swim Molds • Interpreting Services

Aut-ti" Repair
&amp; Service

Roger Hysell

4-15-16-Hn

ANnQUES
BUY OR SELl
RiY • 'AntiauM
,=.t-.Jt~~

Reduct ute &amp; lett w ith GoBett
ceptulet &amp; E-Vap "water plll t "
Fruth Pharmacy.

1·13 tin

TacumMh
Waed Etter
Home! Ita
Jecobun

·4-17-1 mo.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

3 Announcements

Briggs &amp;. StraHan

3 -2 0·87

tttt hOme Qf Edith Wlllllmson.

Bill Gene Johnton
614 -446 -3612

Allllllttlll:t! nti! Ill S

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

!

992·6611

Giganti c insi de and yard sale at

10-8-tfc

4 / 8 / 1 mo. f .

4

•

•

\

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

992-7632

._151mo. pd.

- Pfumb/ng 1nd electrlctl

lnvt IIHSIII on '

•
•

UCM

CUSTOM :
'PLANING
•JOINTING
'MOLOING

CAll 7 DAYS A WEEK

bulldlnga, end mitcollanoouo Items.
FOR MORE INFORMATION em 614/949-2686

"'"

POMEROY
HOME REPAIR

••

949-2100

6

Middleport. Ohio
1-13-tfc

Call 992·8962

GOOD SEUmON OF JEWILIY FOI IOTHEirS
DAY AND GUDUA110N GinS.
NICE ASSOITMINI OF SIIITS AND ROUSES,
UDID' "NG JACUTS AND DIESSES,
GIAIUATIOI WAWTS, lllhiNG CAIDS,
MIN'S WHITI PUMA PlESS AND IANDlJIA
HANDIIICHEFS.

3ID

t'J\l,!0RD

All types Carpentcy,
Plumbina and
Electrical Repair 25%
Off for Senior
Citizens. Free Est.

BIUCE BEEGLE OF GAWPOUS WON THE POT
OF FLOWEIHN tHE EASTEI DIAWING.

f

'

We can repair and re·
core radiators and
heater cores. lie can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

~~~~~~~~~~~~!!~~~~~~~~~~~~..

Hardware

Adv.

R~~~o1:r

•Ins. Claims

•Special Events

SIDING- VInyl, Aluminum. end Wood
PAINTlNQ- Ait II'IMI Including epoco ogo lnoulot lng
·
· Point
SANDBLASTING - OIY Bfaa1ing. We1 Btuttng, and

CALL "t-7403 Al't·

B&amp;B
WOODWORIS

•Graduations
•Valuables

Wiys

SMALL ENGINE .
IEPAII

COMPARE OUR f'ltCEII
· 4~U- 1 mo.

Collt9e, Svucute. Ohio.

TOP CASH peid tor ' 83 model
end newer used cen . Smith
Buick-Pontile, 191 1 E.. tern
Ave., GalUpollf , Ca ll 6U ·4.t6·

Jranlfen 35mm &amp; II 0 Positin llidn lo YH5 Vidoo Topt
•Weddings

V1cuum Blnting of structural steel, tenks,

Mlddl.,ort, Oh.

Vera Ven Meter. Corner 6th and

Bus. Ph. 985-3113
Home 985·3837

VHS HOME RECORDER

GHEEN'S PAINTING, INC.

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

novelties,

vasea. glauwlfes. new quilts

J im Mink Chev.·Oidt lnc.

WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992,3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
Fill DIRT

Residentt.l ~ Comf'!lllrclal - Industrial
Free Estlmetea - Fully Insured
ROOFING- Shingteo, Rolled Roofing. Gulloroond fnsutetfng Roof Cooling
GARPENTRV- Addltlons. Ger111 ... Sun Docks
CONCRET£ WORK- 8-otb, Bllomento ond Driva-

~

Woed-Crochot-Ouilting
Flowers, Sewing,
lashf Lids

Chrittn'llt ceramic

uMdc••·

DENNY CONGO

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

PARTS and SERVICE

County Comml11loners
141 27: t51 4. 2tc

....

Serv tt:l! "

•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryar~ •Freezers

AmT1~

·····~· · ·

We pay uah for ltte modtl cleen

FREE LANCE
35MM
PHOTOGRAPHER

All M1kee

Hen,Y E. Cleland Jr.
992·619i
Jean Trussell ..... 949·2660 ·
Dottie Turner ..... 992-5692

....

GAS · WATER
ELECTRIC
DRAINS

4-22·t mo. pd.

•Wa•hers •Diahwaahart

NEW LISTING - SYRA·
CUSE - 2 bedroom home
on I acre lot. I iloor pla n
with part basement, '! car
garage. Good beginner
home. Sl6.000.

-·~--·

Coo~lno utensils , !arge_ sin
clothing. Tupper-were dit tled.
electric grill, 5 QaL heavy elumi· ·
num kettle. el&amp;etrlc awaeper,

9

Trenching

Middleport, Ohio

24 HOUR TOWING
&amp; ROAD SDYICE

sionera reserve the right to
waive formalities to accept
and reject parta or all of any

appointment.
HAIIDCIAniD COUIITIY
ITIMS

All Types of

. 4·16-87-1 mo.

and all bids.'
Maty E. Hobatetter, Clerk

(Supr Run Area)
HOURI: Woct •• Thun.-fri.
10 o.m. lo S p.m.
Saturday 10 UL
to U NOON
Other tiowor by chon&lt;t or
coli 992-l7311or

THE DITCHING
SERVICE

LARRY'S CARPET OUTLET

Commlulonere. Pom.aroy, Qhio. Bidder mull uaa
bid
form provided by
County.
Sold Boord of Commlo·

THE HAT RACK

3-17-2 mo. pd. -

ON CARPET &amp; PADDING
EKpart _Installation
Up to 36 Months Financing Available

Hobson Drive

........ ...

All Makes &amp; Models
24 HR. $EIVICE

6, 10 ANI) LIFETIME WARRAI\ITY

PRICE REDUCED - MID·
DLEPORT - Newer modular. nice level lolin M.t,d~l~­
po rt . Woodburn in'g
fireplace, porch and deck
area . Beautiiul pla ce.
Owners mu st sacrifice.
$27.000.

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

949-3088 Bus.
949·2606 Home

STAINMASTER WE~I DATED

Business

1

WITH PURCHASE
OF ANY

Aj!l Lynae Blac kwell

-------.,-c;n;·erov _______ _

49835 St. Rt. 124
Racine, Ohio 45771

MOHAWK CARPETS

NEW LISTING - In the
country. Cute litll e ran ch
type house with ga rage and
almost acre of ground. 3
bedrooms, equipped kitchen. Want $25,500.

ty

Blnhdeg Nell

·

Yard Sale

~

G&amp;M TV
REPAIR

TWIN MATTRESS/BOXSPRING ............ S98.88 ·
FULL MAnRESS/BOXSPRING............ S148.88 CHESTS .......... S49.95 RECLINERS ..... S99. 9S
DINEnE/4 CHAIRS ...........;................. SCJCJ. CJS
12 Months Free Financing

•

PEPSI'S

Mary Murray Is gung ho for the
Boy Scouts . Boy Scout Troop 422,
headed by Larry Wiles, took on
as a community projrct the
clea ning up of the Ohio River
Ca mp Grounds. Mary, owner or ·
the grou nds. Is deligh ted.

provide a public transporta·

·:· NOTICE OF ELECTION ON area.
ISSUE OF BONOS
The village invitet comNOTICE is hereby given ments from all interetted ·
that in pursuance of a Re- public. private. and paratransolution of the Board ofedu- lit operators ir.tcluding taxi
cetlon of the Southern Local operators regarding the pro-

•

MONDAY AND TUESDAY ONLY!

s

of the . Middleport-Pomeroy

FLOWERING PLANTS
Shrubbery or Fruit Trees,
•
many varietits;
Geraniums, Violets &amp;
Hanging Baskets.
Open 9-5 Daily, Sunday 1·5

Department of Tranaportation for an operating ais~std
1 1B
ance grant un er ect on
of the Urban Mass Transportation Act of 1984, as
amended. The grant will
tion service for thf) residents

SJ50 Pll FL.&amp;l
•

Jane M . Frymeyar. Director

Sec. ttl. Thot

$ 1 PD 001111 PACI

$ 1 PIISQ. Pl.
$J50 Pll FL.&amp;;

of Meigs County, Ohio

clirk-trel!surer 1hell be

$5,000 per year.

Now Otltn for Spring Siason . --&lt;
Bridge Closing Special

an

Sec. f. That the aala'Y for 7:30 o'clock P.M. ·of said listed. Tho County of Maigo.
Ohio reaerves the right to re tho mayor ohaff be e6,000 dey.
,
per year.
By Order of the ject •ny proposal that does
Sec. II . That the sala,Y. for
Board of Elections, not include all coverages at

H'UBBARDS
GREENHOUSE

4-32

-

'

.

108 W. Main, Pomeroy, Ohio
PH. 992·3307

The County of · Meigo,

• • . An Ordin~~nc• t() Establish

lloforiaa for Vitfoge Officials fled by the County Auditor.

FRIENDLY CIRCLE
Plans for hosting May Fellowship Day were made when
Friendly Circle, Trinity Church,
met Tuesday evening_
Church Women United will
meet at Trinity Church on Ma y 1
for the observance. There will be
a sack lunch at noon with the host
church serving dessert and
beverage.
Allee Globo kar gave the
thought for the day to open the
meeting a nd welcomed Jessie
lllss, wife of the Rev. John lllss,
Interim. pastor of Trinity .
Cards were signed for Norma
.!... Jewell and Erma Smith. It was
~
noted that Robert Arnold Is a · .----------~ ~
surgical patie nt at Veterans
HospitaL Reports were given on
the 111 and lilies taken to the·
•
shutins followin g Easter servlSYRACUSE
_
992 5776 •
ces. Several volunteered to de·

Jeffers birthday
Th e birthday of Ryan Jeffers
was observed recently with lwo
parties being given in his honor.
The first party was held
Satu rday with an Easter bunny
ca ke bein g served wit h lcecrearri
a nd chips. Ga mes were played
with prizes going to Rainy
Walker. Joey Riffle, and Mi chael
Denl. Others attending were
Rachel and Ca rin Tay lor,
Leean n, Rya n a nd Joyce Dill,
John Michael Dav idson, Natalie
Granda\, Amy Hayes, Derek,
Candace and Pam Miller and
Chr is Jeffers .
Se nding gifts were Geo rge
Miller, Jua nita Miller. Hilda
Harris, Francis and Dick Jeffers
a nd Joe .Jeffer s.
A seco nd par ty honor ing Ryan
was hosted Eas ter Sund ay by hi s
mot her, Mary Van Meter. Cake
a nd Ice crea m .were served.
Attend ing were Brady a nd Jane
Huffman, Carin and Rachel

Business
Se..Vices
.

EMPIRE FURNITURE

Page-4

\\reek.

7

Ill Co11rl St.. '-mJ. 01Wo457"

•

BALLOONS AWAY - This was the scene in front of the
Mlddl ~port Public Library recently as youngsters staged a launch
of helium filled balloons to mark the opening of National Library

TIM! Daily Sentinel Page 5

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

\

'

1

Jim'• odd jobs p•lnti.ng. drl'llt·
NJIY rateailng, CtrPtntt r work •
roof repair, tretl &amp; htdu•

uperlenced . Call &amp;U-319·
2416 .
Mttur&amp; ehr lstltn mtn uround1
keeping. htndy man , lawn Clrt

Ph. 614-446-2760 .
Plano Leuons In my home, five
minutes outtlda ot Gellipollt.

�.

•

'

iP~age:iiiii6iiiiP.TiihiieiiDiiaiiilyiSerm_i_ne_l_~-::-=::--:-:-:~----r;;;:;;~P:ome;:::;ro:v::::M:"idd~le~port~.~O~hi~·o~~21-:::::-=.':':'::-::':':::7":::'=::~;....---M~on~da~y.~A.;pn::=";l::27~·;1::9::=87,'
LAFF· A·DAY

Ftnanml
21

Business
Opportunity ··

47 Wanted to Rent

64 Misc . Merchandise

KIT 'N' CARLYl.E ®by I.Mry Wright

76

3 or 4 Bedroom houtt in Kyger
Cr.- School Oi1trict Rtferen·
c• Ph. 114-·41-BI21 .

28

Merch~rHJ t sr.

7080 after 1:00 p.m. or .nytlrM

61 H ou1ehold Goods
SWAIN
AUCTION llo FURNITURE 62

Grocery and c;:a rry Out Business
for sele In Chester . Ohio. lo·
cated adjicent to State Route 7.
For more informa\io n. call 1·
614-667· 3933 after 6 :00p.m.

Olive St., G~mpolit . NewS. uted
1 WOad· COIIIIOVII, 6 PC wood LA
suite 1399, bunk bld1 8199,
reclinen new Ill usect bedrOom
11.1it.... wringer washert, Ill
lhOH. New llvingrOom auitet
1199·8599, lampt. Call 614-

22 Money to Loan
, 500 , 00 AVAilABlE FOR
CHR ISTIAN EDUCATION .. . if

you are interested in sending

•46·3159.

0111,..,.. ,__.,.,.,.. ....... _..,.__

County Appliance, Inc. GoQd
used appllantet and TV Uti .
Open BAM' to BPM . Mon thru

11·1.7

Sa~.

"Ster01'ds!"

your child to an axceptional
school for hatf th&amp;coll . All o1her

614-448-1899. 627 3rd.

Ave . o1111 po,.11· OH ·

Milton. WV.

23

Professional
Services

" A little Design", interior de-

sign business for paople on
limited budget. Independently
own11d. 304· 675 -8635 .

RIVERSIDE ACADEMY MAY

BE FOR YOU. Apply now tor
8500.00 tc holarship at River·
tid a Academy. Call 304-743·
8107 or 743· 3823.

Real Eslale
31

Homes for Sale

New JBA 2 car garege, br ic~
front , front porch, nice let , 6
mllet So uth of Galllpolh

t47.600. Ph. 614·446-8038.

Two nice 2 BR hornet with 2 car
garage a. worklhop, 4.383 •crea
on Rl. 218. Ph. 614·446·9686.
t 1000. Down · $213 . pt~r, mo.
2 bedroom house. Carpet
&amp; air co ndit ioner· 100 'x 160'
l ot. 5 mUet from town. 614446· 8598 9am to 5J]m.
~ mt~ll

2D A. Ranch Style House, full
b11ement, 2 bath•. one attached
Qerage &amp; breezewav . Sur ·
r,ounded bV uand ol pines on 13
ICtal. Pond, new hmce, barn.
Call day• 614 ·446-2107 cr
evo ni11g1 245-6600.
·
3 BR Houta with 32 acres for

tale. In Eure ka acrou from the
dam. S3 1 ,900 . Ph. 614·446·

2205.

4

old hout n in Mereerville.
Hu 3 bedroomt , 2 full batha.
CA. &amp;lectric hont pump , 2 car
911rage one year old, In Hannan
Trace School District.' Price in
40's Call 614· 446 ·7610.
ya~~r

For tale by owner: 2 I lory houlfl
in Middlepo r1 Olrtletl ookl ng park.
30 vr . guarntaed vlnyle tiding,
w·w tll rpat. 111, bath, unlqu&amp;
woodwork. 614 -992 -6126.
Government hornet from 11 .
{U·repalrl Delinquent tu prop·
tH ty. Reposteuiona. Call 806·
687-6000 h t. OH .-9806 lor
current repo llst.
3 BR .. recreation room, klrch~tn ,
dining room, large fmnt and
back J]Orch. 8x1 0 wood on build·
ing. yard with chain link ftmce.
Ruatic Hills, Syracute, Ohio.
614 · 949 · 2910 be twee n 9 ·
4p.m. 614· 992 ·5866aher 4 :00

ture . 121&amp; Eastern Ave . ,

614·992-7160

Largo house acro11 from Pizz•
Hut In Po meroy on locutt St.
Will t ell on La nd Co ntra ct .
614-986 -3837 .

ENTE~PRISES.

Golllpolio.
oooo usED · APPLIANCES

PHONE 614·446· 7274.

For ule by owner, 1979 Buddy
14x10, 3 BR, 1 \6 baths, total
elec. woad storage t hed. wood
71fu8. porch, underpaneling.
1omp lurnit hlngt, locatl!td lot 4,
Park lana Mobile Cou" . Call
614-446 -308&amp; after 1 pm.
1984 14x66 Mobile Hom t~.
fenced yard, 3 Iota, R t . 160 at
Evergreen Ph. 61 4· 448· 1339 or
4'48-1628.
1980 Felrmont Bavview Deluxe
14x70 furn lshad. 2BR , natural
gel heat. CA . a:n private rented
lot. 0 n At. 36 Rodney. Ph.

614·446·7644

1976 Buddv Mobile Hom e14x65 with t 2xJ2 add on,
wether and dryer end wvod·
burner ioclud&amp;d. Call 614-4468427 aher 5pm or 448 ·1279 .
1983 Nashua 3Br. In good
co ndition. Ceii614 ·2Ei6·1448 .
1976, 1211:60 mobile home tor
tela. 82200. Call 814·992·
5941 .

33

614-445·0282.

2 Btdroe~m 66JC14, AC, quiet
rteighborhood. Referen ce S. depOiil required. Close to Rio
Gra nd e . Adullt prelerred . Ph.
614-246 -5856 or 446-0239 .
Tniler above Kroger• in Pomeroy for rent. Total electric. Call

614·992·6216.

2 bedroom trailer for rent in
Reci ne. Call ·614-992-6039 .
2 badroom trailer, couptae, 1
tmall child. Locust Rd. Rl . 1 .
Point Plea~int. 304-876 ·1076.
3 bedroom tr1iler Plymale Ro•d.
Ga!Upoli• Ferry, 304-876·3693.
Smell house, located At. 35 near
Beech Hill. 1160. pet' month.

304·675·1900.

191e.

20 acft larm Hannan Tra«:e
Road, Glenwood, W. Va. for
mor8 Information call 304-773·
'61 18 or 773-5188 after 5:00.
9.3 acre•. 7 miles on Rt. 62 from
Poi nt Pleannt. Tim&amp;r, mlnerllt,
well. laJ]tic. Own&amp;r financing.
137,200. t4.200 down and
1242.22 per mont h. 304·526·

6357

e75-71 19.

.

110 acret. leon Baden Rd ..
t1ou1e S. ou tbuilding. Stream
through propany. 304-458·

1055.

Business
Buildings

Commer cial building• fo r lean,
Downtown Pt. P!eaunt. Stores,
officet. A·Onee Rul Estate.
C1uol Yeagflr. Broker. Call 304·
676-5104.

LAYNE·s FURNITURE
Sotaa and ehaira priced lrom
t396 to $996. Table~ 8&amp;0 and
up lo t12&amp;. Hld•a· beda $390
to tli96. Recline,. 1225 to
$376. l..amps f28 to t12&amp; .
Oinettet 8109 and up 10 '49&amp; .
Wood table W·8 chain 8286 to
t796. De•k S1 DO up to 8376 .
Hutch" t400 and up . Bunk
beds com~ete w-mattrtuea
t296 and up to t396 . Baby bed•
1110 a. $17&amp;. Manre11e1 or box
IPfinga full or twin 163, firm
173, and t83. Quaen seta 82215.
King e360. 4 drawer chest t66 .
Oren•• 189. Gun clbineta 8 .
10, 12 gun . Ga1 or electric range
1376. B•bv mattr"•e• 836 &amp;
146. Bed frames t20, 830 &amp;
King frame tt50. Good ae lectln
of bedroom tuites. mete! cabinets, headboards UD and up
to 865 .
Ueed Furnit1.1re: wood table &amp; 2
benchtl. bad•. &amp; dreNer. 3
mllet out Bula-vitla Rd. ' Open
9AM tO 5PM , Mon . thru Sat.
Pa,.ona Furnitur11
141 6 Eastern Avenue
MIUrall. Box Springt· 199.96

Apartment
for Rent

t2 100. Coli 81•·245·5439.

1 Diah wa.htr portable. like
new. 276 gallon fuel oil tank Ph.

e14··48-2683.

1 Bedroom batlc rent 1176 .00
plu• electric. Alto required •
UOO.OO •tcuritv depoeit. CON ·
TACT: J•ckton Etttte1 Dept. Ph
446 -3997 Equa l Houaing
Opportunity

78

1 Bedroom ground floor. private
entrance 81 private parking.
Ulllltln paid. Nice for older
perton or cou ple. Furnished or
Unfurn ished. Ph . 814 -448-

7515.

2 &amp; 3 BR . unfurn ished •part·
menta, and 2 SR . furnithed
apartment. Call814·448·0284.

304·773 · 6~34 . .

Rough Lumbar . Oa~ &amp; Popllt'
8150 per 1.000 by bundle; 20c
by board ft. 304 ·.6 78-4412 .

56

Pets for Sale

Farm Equipment

wh..
81"-448··149.

C11a Modal OC-4 Tractor in
good cond. Wide fTontend, 3pt.
hitch •7&amp;0. C11e 2-14tn. puU
typa plows t71J .OO. 7fl. Drag
Dl1k •715. Hay wagon wtth
f•ctorv bid and tid• nice 1hape

*250. Ph. 81•-388·8995 oftor

Groom and' Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming . All buedt ... Ail
ttytea. Juli•Webb Ph. &amp;14 -446-

0231

Reglatered femele Great Dane;
Bla c ~ with white bla:&amp;:e. 211: yu.
old . Pav for vet bill• 8100. Ph.

814-44e-1364.

AKC Regiatered Ronweiler. lnt
Ch. Kattanlen Baum bloodline
8400. Male 3mo. Ph, 814-388-

9364

69e-1317.

59 For Sale or Trade
Plene ticket to San Diego for

Uoo.oo Ph. &amp;U-44e·0193.

Uniden 8000 Stet'eG Satellite
Byattm, fully remote control,
Bft. solid dish, 1 yr. old Priced

I'" 111 Suppllt:.,

1800. Ph. 814·445-7544.

1!1 Ltveoluck

27' 1 0-speld bycycle good
condltlcn 860.00 Call between

8 Gun SolldW1Inu1 Gun Cabinet

Coli 51•·4•8·2729.

For 11le. Railroad ties. You pick
up. U .OO each. 614·992· 2478.
Kenmore heavy duty w"her
UO. Kenmore heavy dutv plus
loureycle dryer t126 . 814· 992 ·

6344.

Sofa. coffn tabla and 2 end
t•bltt. excellent condition .
Phone 614·992· 8111 ,

Now buying ahall corn or ear
corn. Call for lat..t Quote a. River
City F•rm Supply, 814-44G·

2985.

3538.

Houte. 3 bedroom I , 11 yeart
old. Apple Grove area. t39.600 .

304-578·2688.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1974 12x86 Eagle. 2 bedroom,
total electric. 1 bath, wood atovto
&amp;f\d 2 decltt . Cs!l 614 ·949·
2149.
'B8 Holly Park. 3 bedroomt, 2
belhl , lncludin9 underpenning,

304·676 -7298.

1 Zx80 rOoblle home with 12x24
addition. lilt ing on 1OOd OO lot

t 18.600.00. 30• ·875·7689.

QUICK SALE, 12x55. mobile
hom e 11 ,200.00. After 8:00
PM call 304· 578· 2716 .we•
kend• call 304-676·6377.
1980 Winds or 14x70, 3 bed·
rooms. 1 'A batht. e•c con d.
many extras. mus l movtt, 304·

S96·3048 ., 895-3583.

'79 Mobile Home. 14x70, un·
derpenning , 3 bedrooms .
n .eoo.oo. Phone 304-458-

1774.

1976 !-lolly P•rk lrl'liler, excellent
condition. total electric, centr•l
t~~ir , 38ll8 porch. 2 1m11l out
buildings, 1 · 16x20 building
with dog pan attached to back ,
Satting on approx. t,; acre,
lOcated on J im Hill Ad. 7 mil"
trom Henderaon. Wilt take uted
• car or truck trade ln. Call

304-575-•a•a.

1986 Ctlampion mobile home.
Thnte b&amp;drOOn'll, e,~~;tra nice,
816,900. Financing available.
3041676·4480.

Ashton building lot•. mobile
hom•• permitted. Ctvde Bow&amp;n.
Jr. 304 - ~78 - 2331 .
4 acrtt land, leon

30.·B96-3e7,3.

Baden,

6 .13 acre• oH At. 2 for "''·

t26.000. 304·57&amp; .• 208.

AP.-.RTMENTS. mobile hom•• ·
ho1.11t1. Pl . Pltatant andGalllpalia, 114· 4415·8221 .
Five roo m 1pt, VIPd St., Point
Pl ..unt. ~aa and water pild,
ftJrnlthed oplion•l. dtpatlt required. eell 304 -895-3450.

WANTED TO BUY 50'1 Of 80's
Juka Sol or Pin B•ll Machine.

30.·676·2108.

For Hie · Lim01tone. aand.
grtvel. fill dltt, firewood. D•li·
vertd. 304· 876·"1 2.
One lot norm window• and
windnws, Simpllei'ly rota tiller 9
hp. 36" «:1.11 alae. lawn mower.

304·576·2130.

41

Houses for Rent

3 bdr. ranch, Rodney VIllage II,
t285 mo. plu• depo1it . Rtferencn requlrad. Ctll Blackburn
Realty 114-441-0008.
Unfurnit hed houu. 31R , Rod·
nay Village II . U71. Ph. 446·
UU •fter 7PM .
3 OR ranch, 8300 Plf month
plut utilltitt. Dtp. required. Call

Utility Bldg. Spl: 30'x40' x9',
18JC8 Overhaad door, Service
Door. 115333 Erected. Iron
HOtll Bldgs. 114· 332·9745.
300 gallon tpraver tank evith cart
•nd 20ft. booms •ne. New
Holland ·270 hay liner wJth
mod•l 50 bale kicker.
t .1,295.00. John Deere ralke
t850, John D•ere Hay condl·
tloner t1350. Call 814-288-

514-285-8522.

qulrod. Call 81•-247-•945.

2 a1ory houaa for rent. 17 aer•.
Rutlend area, U25. per month.
Call Jo Ann Stew•rt at 114·

742-2421 .

6 room end bath, baaement and

a•eo• It Oalllpolia Ferry. 304·

878-3218-

Hou• • 4 rooma, bath. Atfer·
ence and d....,.lt requ lrtd. 304·

871-1010.

2 bedroom "A" frame houtt,
Southakle. t171.00 plut d..,._
otit and ret•111ce. 304· 111-

1185.

1176 Chftrolet

255 - ~61 .

Verm• 504 Round Btlw ullld
1 HBSOn 881500 . Ph . 614· 318·

9832.

4x4 Farm Tractor with &amp;00
houra. PTO, front load•. Ctll

614-445-8980.

1953 Ford JubiiH Tractor wh:h
plows • diek. Good running
condition, new_ paint, t2000

Fhm:l&gt;h. 51•·992·8082.

304-895-3UO.

cond~lon.

66 Seed S. Fertilizer
Seed com for salt. DeKtlb and
Kenworthy, 304·1715·1501.

..,,

Tr &lt;~llsporlol t on

814·.W8-3844.

1918 Ctmp•. tiMIIt e, 1700.;
1876 F-100 Ford pickup 8100.

Frn •tlmetet. Call collect
1·614·237·CM88, dey or night. •
Rogar• Balem•nt
Waterproofing.

1985 Ford 150 v., whh doluu

1872 Oldsmobile Vlat. Crulur
Station Wagon. full PGWfl'· AC,
runt good. 1 owner •300. Ph.

mM•.

514·24&amp;·9157.

1882 Ford Thund•bird very
good.-...!. 50.000mll. Ph.81"-

t15.000. Ph. 514·3117·7554.

251-8887.

1111 GMC Luoury C.._.loo\

73' ptymouth Furv. 311 Ent~ .
Good work car. *ZOO. Ph.

Yen. Pluth Interior, atr. cruiu,
tMt. etc. Garaga kept. 12.000

81"-445·2101.

mllto . tte.OOO . 114·1854411.
1tll C.rav~n. low miMQe.
kladed. Uka ntw. •10.100 ot

bto1 ollor. 114-7U-2028.

wor~ : Interior. exterior, remo·
dellng. painting. roofing. free
altimtC". Ct11614·448·1174.

Mowing, Pruning, trH • ltump
remov•l. mulch, stone, flit, •1a·
1111, evergrHnt, rodod.ndron.

114·448· 7441 .

•

GE. Spociellng In Zenhh. Coli ,
304-575.2318 01 814-441· '
2484.
F•ttv TrH Trimming. ttump ~
remOWII. Call304·1575·1331.

RINGLEB'S SERVICE, oopt·
rlenced c;arptnt..-. •ltctrlcltn,,
muon, paintN, rooflna Clnctucf..,

oppllcatlonl 30"-

111·2011 orl71-7147.

•

ROtarv or cable tool drilling.
Moat weUt compltttd nme dey.
Pump HI• and 1eMee. 304·

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

&amp; Refrigeration

175-1785.

General Hauling :

11mo. ean 514·&lt;W5·7•o4-No .
A &amp; A Wetw a.Mce. Home '
dttama, weUa, poats fiHid . '
Formerly Jam• lop Weter.':
ltmt rates. Cell 304-171-

we"•·

""""CM~ ~

.178·7317.

Formtrty lten't now John"a

87

Jll. 100. ""' ....

B011ta and
Motoft foJ 8111

....

R • M

br .• AC. 1·. - t.

:::r"ortn a• Rd. "'· .,..,

:::o.·,.:,.,-:::c:":l\.Q:

COIMI.
I .IUfft
"
" t200.
-41Jincfllll
·ftlr

-

t100. ""· 114-441--.

--1,00.

.

.'

PEANUTS

~.

Upholltlry
~

e ~~:~:RrUMBFREO I'
•

~~~~~MBLE

FORI

I, I'

2

1

I' I'
I I I
1$

III

I' I
I I

1•

I

-YESI'iiDAY'S SClAM-&amp;nS"AiiS•a
/mmt¥*11_. - Glt1lt - Junto - So/1ft - ON lht INSIDE
Whlll cllrnonltrallng an unbrelklble comb, lhiMlllman
eniDOid HIn half. TIMi 1ucllenoe llughtd, but he smllld lfld
uld; "Thll II whit the oomb 1ook1 like ON lhl INSIDE."

-------------·

.

BRIDGE

NORTH

HHI

.lOS
.AH2

James Jacoby

•u

.,

IAJ7h

TilE PRINCIPAL JUST CAME
IN ..TII6'1'RE TAI.KIN6 AeO\JT
~0'5 601N6 TO 6ET TO

CDII lhc::s .....

R11 Jf I I 1 • lt. fh. 7, CIDWII'

BE '' MA'( QUeEN ~..

C"'.
Ott. I14-IM·14711. 1....
114-441·MJII. 0,..4ti~rl10
4 ,!10. Sot. , ,30 • 1,3Q, Old •

I'M AWAKE!

(IJ SportaLook (RI
(IJ Nlah1tlnl t:;l

1 Blehop's
IO"Love"
hat
in Nancy 2 Worship .
12Work
8 Trying hard
13 ~Yfrlnoid 4 Building
deity

wing

6 TeXll!l
fiver
18 Actreu . 8 Moeque
19 Greek
Z7 Source
shopplnll 80 Type
Ballnller
priest .
place
· or.thread
17 Mendacity 7 Rabat Is
18 Win bac;k
illl capital zo Servant 81 Roee
eaeence
20 Uana, e.g. (abbr.)
Z8 Film
21 Make
8 Vox populi
director 88 Csech
eyea at 11 Carl or Rob 24 Fly
river
22 Maple
14 Cautious 26 "I - kick 38 Fit
11enus
Ill Type of
out
- ftddle
23 Cathedral
oven
37 "0 Sole -•
cle'11YJ11811
16Marlne

.

bird

the Huns
32Hebrew
title

!33 Ulster
rebel

group

MA real
iowre
35 NCO's
command
87Haze
88Gennan
city
89 Ksnsal city
40Pungent

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here'• bow to won ll:

One letter stands for another. In this sample AIs used
for the three L's, X for the two O'a, etc. Single Je~n.
aporstrophel, the length and formation aflhe words are aU
· hints. Each day the code !etten are different.
CJYPI'()QUOTES
p y T

F KD

NY M

·z M s

EMFTPYLDV

I!J] tllgnOif
Q2) -11Nig11t Uve news
with Pltrick Emory and

I Q

Z L 0 H E

Ktroten Undqulat. (1 :00)
' 12:30m a..t or~

In fumftu,. uph\18 k4. Cd.
304 -176 · 41 84 lor lrtt•

II Ill Men Raat People
11JSIQnOII

II)) Lell

Nfgf1t with

4117

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

II Ill"Men R"l People
l1l 8CTV (0:30)

Dl'lld~n

I

J:~

9 Imagined

m

(IJ Flahln' Holt (RI
(IJ VlluiTeilvtalofl

Win••

whack

IS Ninny

27Look
28 Gailileo's
birthplace
29 King of

.... u... 1 ....
Mo•rar•• Utlf:l ctm 114 -.int.

••

1 Created

25Grandeur
211 AMeverate

• (%!

l r t - - 2 2 - Tllollool.

f~Blg

ACROSS

m

e
m
Eaplorlr
12:00 mBumo tnd Allen

gnwll. 0•111 .... 1 ton ..... up, ;
J"" leo'-. 304-171·12·7 .. &lt;

715

1tM -

NHL Hockey
Ill 021 My Sitter Sam
Sam roluctantjy tela har
sister Pattllhrow har first
party. (AI Q
9:00 700 Club
It(%! l!ll MOVIE:
'Ditperado' NBC Monday
Night at the Movlta
III II Ill MOVIE: 'I Want to
Ltvel' ABC Monday Ntghl
Movie C
11m Ill 1121 Newhllrt Dick and
Joanna have an opportunity
to overcome nawcomer
status. (A) Q
1!11 Larry King Ltvet In depth
lntarvlew6 with top
newamakora and cetebrhles.
8:30 cr§l II 021 Dntgnlng Women
Julia Is aurprrsecr when she
finally maeta her son'e
girlfriend. (R)
10:00 11m II 021 Wilt 57th CBS
News prlmetlme magazine.
021 Evontng - · A wrap up
of today'a news and s look
ahead to tomorrow's news
storlea. (1 :00)
Q!J Newa
10:05 (I) MOVIE: Seminole (NRI

e

Dillard Wal11 SeMct: Pool1, :
Ctlterns, Well•. Delivery Any· ,

2.000- -·71-7471.

1HlThuuidaaafL 1T 1ZOh., .
1tM..._C _ _ .1·0.110_0...
__

"That reminds me ... we're out of Q. Tips."

HOUSE AN' SEE WHAT

RIGHT NOW
HE'S UP To TH'
TOP SHELF

HF'S UP TO

Weltri_J_W_ _,
Jo. Owntr. 1.000 or 2.000 gel••
.
·~

IOPI* "'· •14-2,....

-·...... ·--

TATER'S AWFUL QUIET.
JUGHAIO·· RUN IN TH"

2ttt.

•

lhe ch"'kle quoted

by filling In the missing worcl1
L-..I.-..I.L......I..-.J.'--....1..-..I you develop
from S1ep Na. 3 below.

,.

• (%! (IJ II Ill 11m Ill 021
l!ll Nawa
I1J Bobby Jonta Ooopel
Ron Hollingworth
IIJI Ollie l Ruby Allee
We8thorscott Is etruggllng
actres&amp; on the verge ol a big
break. Q
l!ll Moneyllill Current
reports on world economics
and financial news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
QJJ Honeymoonera
(!) M"A'S'H
I 1:30 II(%! Ol 8111 of Caroon
(!) SportaCenter (LI
(IJ WAKP In Cincinnati
a (I) lltgh11tne 1;1
11J Country Eaprolt
11m Magnum, P.t.
IIJI This Old Houae Q
021 8portt Tonlgh1 Action
paCkecl eports hlghtlgllts whh
NICk Charles and Jim Huber.
(0:30)
• 021 'Simon and Simon'
CIIS l.ett Night Innocent
tourluts get ceught l.n the
middle ot gangster'&amp;
vendetta. (A)
(!!).Magnum, P.t. Par1dlao
Blues
•
crJ .Lilt . ~ starring
"-AIV1f11
t 1:110 -...r Geographic

BARNEY'

Atlid1ntlal Of' commercl.. wif. :
lng. New MI'VIce or rtp~lrs. ,
Uc.n-.1 el.ctrician. Eatlmate ,
tree. Rlct.tovr Eleal:rlcal. 3M· •

Hou1t coal.

. I I Ia I 19 GComplote

.J

10:30 Bill Cotby
•. 11J TIA
IIJI Newt
11 (ZI Sybervltlon
t 1:00 HlfdcoltUI and
McCormick

Electri~:al

Wattar•n ' • W1ter Haullne.
rHsonaltll fit•. lmmHiate
2.000 gollon dellvtry. clotomo. •
-"''· well, etc. ell 304-171- •

1980"-0ov-·uooo. Ph. 114-3117-7113.

.

SOuth's rebid of three spades was
aggressive. If partner did not have WEST
EAST
Ill(!) M'A'S'H
enough to accept the Invitation, South tJH2
7:30 f)(%! (IJ Newlywed Oama
.96U
would probably go set. When partner, • K Q10 B
(IJ Malor League Beaebell't
t K Q 10
does accept and bids four spades, as t84
Oreateat HRa Game and Its
.KJ8Bi
today , South still may go set. It's • Q 10 7
Glory
worth noting thai a simple rebid of
SOUTH
Ill (I) JudGe
two
spades by South should not end thE
.AKQDB7
11m Wheel of Fortune
auction. North, holding two aces and a
Q2l Crt~aaflre (0:30)
doubleton club, which might be worth
tv I 2
Ill 021 l!ll Jeopardy! Q
•.ut
something, would still invite game
Q!J Jefferaona
II(!) Too Ctoao for Comfort
with a raise and South would quickly
Vulnerable: Neither
accept.
8:00 CI1 father Murphy
Dealer: South
South did not fit the mold of the nor·
II (%! l!ll ALF ALF buys a
sparkling new Ferrari for
mal aggressive bidder. Most overbid· w..,
North Eeo1
Soolll
Lynn. (A)
ders are quite skillful at the play of the
III Ill ill MocOyvor
I NT Paa It
hand, since they spend much of their Pan
p.,.
Suffering from amnesia,
u
Pan
bridge life taldng as many tricks as Pan
MacGyver gets hell!_from an
Pau
possible In precarious contracts. Toattractive rescuer. t;J
day's
declarer took the simple ap·
l1l l!ll SHOAH C
·
Opening lead: • K
proach.
He won the ace of hearts and
11m Ill Q2l Kote ' Allie Kate
played a club. East put up the jack and
and Allis look back with
laughter at themselves In
South played low. East now led a
trump. Declarer won, played the club ,dummy, when he gets back to hl1 hand
1970. (R) Q
1!11 Prtmenewt Wrap ups or
ace and ruffed a club. He ruffed a by rufftng slill another heart, he can
tho dey's world nawa and In
heart back to his hand and tried to pick try to pick up trumps. When spades
depth teatura reports . (1 :00)
up the remaining trumps: Since they fall to split, he has another way to get
11!1 MOVIE: Como Back to
·
did
not split, he had to lose four tricks. his lOth Irick. He plays to the ace of ·
the 5 l Dime Jimmy O.an,
blundered in his haste to 1dlamonda and ruffs one more heart
Declarer
Jimmy D11n (Pa) (1:50)
'ruff
a
club.
Instead,
It costs him noth· ,with his last small spade: Since Weat•
&amp;I (!) MOVIE: The Final
ing to ruff a heart at trick two. He can ;mutt follow , that makes the conlract.
lrpiTon (AI (2:04)
8:05 (I) MOVIE: Pillara of the Sky then play a club, and everything will. But this could not have been accom·
proceed as before, but with one impor· pUshed without the careful rllff of 1
INRI(1 :35)
tant
difference. After the club ruff i~ heart at the second trick.
8:30 II(%! l!ll Vollfle A family
·friend shocl&lt;s Davia by
asking him to sleep with her.

(1 :27)

4U-44n

IU-241·1285.

w.v.. Cotl304·773·5151.

'I"Ctl,
locutt Ad, At. 1, Pok'tt PtHMnt.

.

1370.

Motorcycle•

hooll·""·

Spoco lor rtn1. 1rol'-

E;-ET THE
H ICCUPS.

Cor .. Fourth and Pine
, GoM ...Mo. Ohio
Phona 81 4-448·3111 or 81•-

ltiO Chovtttt, 2·door, • ·
........ t700. Ph. 814·371·
2140.

Doy-

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

SundiY calla.

:=:n•
'"

DON'T ~TTOO t=;o&gt;.&lt;OT,
6 /RqOf&lt;.- YOLJ'LL ...

·'

J .J . Water leMct. Swimming •
pools, ctrtemt a
c.M

1lnc-GT·T--.
11n Faod F·IOO l'lcll•.. -

-.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

814·115-4414.

B6

"''ling·

. ,.. you sugglll to·ICCOIIIpeny me?"
...,-0-0_W_S_O_Y_·...,, ~!!lpn . a-o: "Setter try • -

m

RON ' S Teltvialon Servict . :
HouM calli on RCA , Outur, ,

84

•

11m

room only $18.16 p• room. ,
Grot Am.-ican Floor Care. 710 ·
Firlt Ave.. Gtlllpolil. Oh. Ph. ·

82

.

(IJ

give It that new look. Any alu ,

tar

II

(A)

Lit ua .tNmpoo your c.-pet and

Ina hot

I•

E N WU D
Famou• elnger: "Now thai
17 . .~ you've hlll'd
whom do

I

HAPPENED TO

THOSE TWO I AH .. ·- .

All typ" Cll'l)lll'ltet' • concrete

1112 luberv GL 4-Dr.. 1-opd ..
whh tk.111. AM·FM.II.OOOmi.
Ph. 11"-441·1217 eftor lpm.

4·whHI

OUT WH-.T

448-0294.

Ph. 114-2111-1174.

IPH't for m11ll 1111"-t. AH
Cable. AIM tffidMtCY
rooma, elr tnd cab!.. M110n.

AH SWEAH, AH CI'.N'T FO'
TH' LIFE 01' ME FIGURE

SWEEPER end aewing mechlne ,
repair. part•. and suppli•. Pick
up and delivery, D•vls Vacuum
Cleantr, one half mile up'
Georg• CrHfc Rd. Call 614· ·

CARTER'S PLUM81NG
AND HEATING

SttrcruiHr cultomQ.ing , Dual
1lr • Met, Cl. AM ·FM tterao
c•~•· TV a power out1at1.
fuM~ INnl, brakM. doors•
win-. 351 hlgll OUqMit V·l
engine with dual tankt ' tfllltr
Pickel•· Bleuttful two tDne
blue, 4200 aeau.l
E•tended &amp;yr. warranty. Actual
colt 119,040.70 will 1111 for

1171 Oh..mo ... Dett.ll, PI,
PI.--LNM...,.S.

7478.

304·871-1078.

Uncondition•l lifetime guaran·
lee. Locel reterenc" tumithed.

Vans 8o 4 W.O.

73

.

S.odout Mobllt Homo 1o1o 1&lt;1&lt;
...t ,.,.. .......""' ond picnic
. _ 11M lo1 give OWly. 304171·3()73 ~ a,oo PM.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

304-575-2738.

Autos for Sale

304-171-44!17 or 171-!1314.

Route 33. North of Pomiii'OY.
Ramal trailwa. CaM 114-992·

'
t::lLAUeA
AGAIN!

Home
lmprove111ents

'70 Chovy 1tuek 327. • opud,

luould SIO QT. - -

COUNTRV.MOIILE HomaPork.

THe~E GOES' THE

304·175-5123.

lptalel- 1111 11....,., lyno-L..
20.000
2·- - .. _
-.w.t4100. N-tJIOO.
Ph. 11"-311-N.11.

Office Space tor·Aent. bctlltht
for Anorntya, Accountant, e1C.
Cio" 10 Court Hou11. C.ll
WlumM Atal En•te Agtney.

B1

Concrata ftnlah , parking loti, ,
baMmMta · any lila job, Ienior
Citizen Ditcount. Rick Garfield. ·

74

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

WATCH You~ F~E-r!

Se r vr~es

815·3802

tin c,_., Lw. • whlll drive.
•ueo.oo. 304-t76-&lt;W37 ..
8711-33114.

I::-:-:--,--------

- - - - - - ..·

4111 .

thrM quarter ton. 1700.00. '84
Scoottir $1,200.00. 5- hp Ro-tMier ulld on• month noo.oo.

FofMiaor trade round htY btlar,
mak• BOO pound baltt. Me·
chanlctl tobacco .. uer .

48 Space for Rent

Call 514·911·3353.

1970 Ch.,y pickup 350, auto,
PS. no rutt, nice tNCk, 2 tone
p1in1, t1 .410.00. 304·876·

Raomt fOf rent, day . w.ft.
month. Gallit Hottl. Call 614441·9115. Rent u low aa 1120
month.
~

Furnlthad room. 8100 . Utlllti81
paid. Share bath. Single m•le.
819 Second. Gallipolia. C.ll
4415-4411 ahlf 7pm.

tan plck·up

1913 Dotfte pickup ~ ton.
hctllent condition. 1973
Coechmlll'l C.mper. 21ft. Good

For Slit F•ir Lambs, phone

'

~

83 GMC hollton. • apd .. 20.000
aCiual miltt. tl5500. Call
81.-379-2241.

R. . .let'ed AmeriGan Sllddlebf'td Horan for Nle. good
bloodllnH. 4 MtrM Call 814·

5pm .. 448-7311.

61 4·388·8824 1ft.. 4pm.

3 badroomt, 2 fuH bathe. lergt
llvlng roam , dining room and
kitchen . Al•a ltundrv room, 2
car garge, centl'lll 1ir, Eeattm
School di1trlet. Aafw-.c• ,..

UIG GMC 1·11. Si.,l Pack·
tg•. V-1. futl lniecttd. real

81·-2·5-U57.

71

FRINK AND ERNEST·

Spring C1Hnlng Spacltl

l 1··251·8817.

Ph. 51"-258·127• .

Furnished Rooms

Trucks for Sale

1rll&lt;k Ph. 445-32.3 oftOf e,oo
pm.

CENTER . SR 316 W. Galllpoli1,
Ohio. Call 814· 448 · 9n7. eve.
614· 448· 3182. Up front trtc·
lOti with Warranty ovtr 40 uaad
traCicrs. 1000 toole.

•

Ph. 81•·448·9045.

1Ill Ford ftMt• 11,000rnl.•
ood cond., aRuma la.n. Call

Belly mower for a 1trmal cub.

45

1527.
72

1350.00 Coli IH-258-1215.

Ren l t~ls

1911 Olda Delta 81, power
INti. pow• brakes. powar
altl1'ing, ttlt tnd CJuit:a. AM· FM
tape. Clttn, llkt new inttfior.
non·•moktn Clr, 304·458 ·

Black Anau• Bull. ml~etd hev
t1.60 bill. warm morning
wood now, refr~ator Call

1980 Chryllw Fifth Avwnue.
Maney Fetgueon I! tnct~ good condH~n . Call 114·441·
with plowa, disc • cultivator. 0008.
corn plenter, bu1h hog t3500.•
35 M•tttv Ferguson Dln•lwJth 1988 C111la11 Salon loaded.
&amp;fl . finlth mower t3850. Ctll 1 • .&amp;OOml. Call 175-2332 after

3 bedroom hnusfll. 26 At::UII .
bfllrn. gar111g&amp;, storllgfl building.
Ge lllpoll1. Ohio. lot for tale
Polecat Road. Ph . 1 -304 ·882·

871-1311.

CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S. 35 W•t. Jacckaon, Ohio.

Arbor Vltafl, Blueberrln. BurnIng bu1h, Birch. Aaale11. Dog·
wood rid tnd whitt, Holly,
Junlpera. Pine. Red Lett Maple,
Rhodandron. Spruce, "ftw1, etc.
All p1•m• euaranteed. Wuhlngton Nurtery, 15 minutn Nonh
of Point P1ellant turn at Wut
Col1.1mbia lollow 1lgn1. 304-

882·2572.

'74 Imp•. runt good, AM· FM
cauett1, after 4 :00 cell 304--

e14·256·52.0.

Nlctfy furnished apt. View of
river. 8y wHit or Mon th. Ohio
Rlv•r C•mp Ground a. 614 ·949·

1 btdroom furn ished apartment.
Private entrance end parking.
DtpOiit and Jefarence. No pet a.
' Phone 814·992 · 6942 after
&amp;:00 p.m .

t7oo.oo. 30•·"68·1712.

ohorp. •uoo. Ph. 61•·445·
2105.

8622.

100 ac res on Grimm Ad ..
Portland mall route, mineral•
with fr•e Qat , good buiklin~
shes. Hunttrl paradise. 8400 .
per acre. Call614-843·1i185.

~ond.

r,urtl

Coli 30•-875-4831 .

mon1h. Coli 81•-992-57S3.

1970 Chevllla, 2 door hard top,
PS. hNd. . chrome. llou with
60's on back. Chroma triu on
front, 307 1our btrrll. good

304-575·4819.

2yr. old Part Thoroughbred Pan
Appeloo• luckllkln M•r• bftd
to R.... A,.blan Stallion t460.
R11.
brtd Arabian StaHion
lUnd ng It ttud. Reg. Mar"
t110. ~radt nwrn 1100. Call

5H·992-8215.

1 badroom apanment In Middl•
port. all utltltlat paid. 1210 ·ptr

1979 Trans Am 128110 FIRM.
Rebl.lih engine. tnntmla.on,
ntw clutch. pre11u·re plata.
throw out bearing, 400 cu. in.
High Pertormanca. Nelda Plint.

61 Far.m Equipment

JIM 'S FARM EQUIPMENT

.'

3839.

454. 02800. Coli 61•·9493003.

Bently Ptg Sale Wed. AprH 29,
7:30 PM, Fayattt County F•lr·
grounds Withington Court
Hou•. Sailing 160 h•ad or
Ouroc'a, Hamp-Ouroc, H1mp·
York. Berrowa, Gilts. Conlignen Roger Bantle, Ph. 113· ·
6:84· 2388. Leroy Larrick. R.ndy
Quigley. Remember th• Cham·
pion Barrow tt the Ohio Stilt
Fair Junior Show WII pufClhltld
at last yeat ult.

Tony's Gun A•p•lrt, hot reblu•
ing. Open 9:00AM to 7 :00PM .

3 bodroom hou 18. 21 1 0 N. Main
St .. Pt . Pit. SJO.OOO .OO. 304·
468 · 187 6 . " No Rultort
Pleate" .

1984 Z·28, ~w mil11, 5 spetd.
AC, PS, PB. CBIHttl player.
18~00. 1970 Monte Carlo SS,

Livestock

2 _ badroom apt. for rent In
Pomeroy. tbova car wuh. Call

2&amp;28.

t200. 080. Coli 514-742-

I. ..J

.6

~iii Barney Miller

2•62.

Ohio U851 . 81.-515.5933.
63

--------------------

B

5

and financial news wl1h Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
111 Q2l l!ll Wheel of Fortune

2528.

1977 Ptymouth Volart~ . Runs
good, UOO. Alto 2 trailer axtlt.

Wanted to buv grande logs
dallvered to uwmlll. Paul
Mercer Sawmill, McArthur,

Gracloua living. 1 and 2 bed·
room 1p1r1ment1 at Vill19e
Manor and Rivtnlde Apnrt·
menu in Middleport . From
t216. Including ulllltl~ll Call

Coli 814 ·992·2802.

2693.

0

reports on world economicS

1985 Full tize pop-up, tilde in ..
truck camper Ph . 814-448· ·
864B after 7pm.
;

V.W. camPer van. Slaepa a. Very
good conl:lition. t2600. Ohio
River Camp Groundl. 114·941· •

5 Work hor'" for cath. Ph.

614 - 286 - ~81 .

~~::-::-:-----:-~ )

1914 Dodge Dart Convertible.
Complete but need• totll rnto·
ratlon. a..t Offlf', 814·949·

en .

514·371-2510.

Maney FtrQuon. New Holland,
Bush Hog Saln &amp; Service. OYer
40 utad tractort to chooaa from
&amp; complete lint of new • uHd
equipment Ltrgest ttltctlon in
S.E. Ohio.

·.

62 Wanted to Buy

For Sate: Sears Craftsman riding
l•wn mower. 7 HP. needa
trantminion. Whaelhorse riding
l1wn mower need• motor. New
storm door witfl ICften. 3Z~e82 .
Solid oak m1ntal with beveled
mirror. Call814·992·8373 after
6:00pm .

87 .49 •cr•• whh minartllon Rt .
33 8, 1 'AI mil" b•low Raven•·
wood Bridg&amp;. 66 acre• ltNel.
Good loeatlon, hu gr.. t poulbUitie• . Call 814-843·15185 .

1986 Golf. 5 apead, •ir, AM·FM.
4 door. atlll und• warrtnty.
U .OOO mH ... 05800. Cell 814-

81.·445·0008.

1976 Dodge Aspen. 2 door, VB
auto. Good ovel'llll condition.
Be1t off•. 614-949-2893.

Furnlthed Br . for rent with
prWate bath Ph. 814-448-2041 .

514·992-7787. EOH.

t10150.

----------::·
' .

. 21 fl . Ttgn motor homa. com- ~~
pletely •If-contained. genlfa- •
tor, • ...,, 8. t8900. Call .~

Truck topp• end truck c~~mp• :
fOJ ule, ~. bolt, furnace.
'
atovCiatsifled d
Truck topper •nd true~ Clmper ~
lor Nle. Ice box. furn•ce. •-ove.
oven. Sleep• 8. 8896. 1514-985-

Rauaur•nt &amp; Tavern for sela.
Interested parties write B o~ P23
House for tale by owner. 4 in care ot Pt. Pleaunt Aeg later,
bedroon1s, 11-.rlng roo m, dining • 200 Main St . Pt. Pl .. W\1 ,
room, kllchon, wnsh room. bat h.
tcreoned porch. See on Fifth St .
in Syracusn. C11 1l 614· 992· 3~ lots S. Acreage
2239.
.._..

Comfort Air air conditioner.
18,000 BTU . Uted 6 limn. Call

Ood~e0mnl4·dr .

··.

1
Uncoln Mark V ~80.
Brown. Full power. EJCcellent
condition. 814· 992·7641 .

Kenmore Waher &amp; Dryer 1yr.
old t600. heavy duty . Stove &amp;
rtfrlgera1or 1yr. old t&amp;OO. Ph.

Ouallty Rottweiler ~ pups. See
both parents and pup from lut
Utter. 614·693· 8489 or 614-

1911

1975 V. Dodge pick-up t1200
Ph. 81"-445·8558.

I

G
RA y c G
1 2

.,
.

m

79 Motors Homes
·S. Campers

Cheiil aaw par11. tuppliu and
repain. Sid art Equipment Salu,
H•nderton. W.Va. phone 304·

Horn ad HMtford Buill &amp; Htlt••·
Calt1a are tong &amp; tall. E1Celltnt
mu1cUng. Call J•y 614· 2fi6G518after IPM. ButlerHit'eford
Farm.

814-44e·1393.

1979 Lincoln Town c• new .
palng, new vinyl roof. !IIW
angint. Good condition 82195.
Ph. 51.·388-8896 eltM Spm.

3108 ·

7U-3080 o• 11•·441·2•59.

675-7421 .
Dragonwynd Cattary Kennel.
CFA Himalayan. P8ftlan and
Siamne kittens. AKC Chow
pupplet.- New Chow puppie~.
Cal\614-446· 3844 after 7PM .

Autos for Sale

~
~

lpm.

Reglttflred Engliah Springer
Spaniel Pups. Excellent h1.1ntlng
1tock. F. T. Champions Dad •
Grandpar•nt• from England Call

7-9 PM Ph. e1•·446-3538.

71

GraVIty Trectore tnd attachmenta and 1110 snow bllde. dua4
and rot0f'1 plow Ph.

0686 .

54 Misc . Merchandise

740 Second Ave. 1 BR ., 118&amp;.
per mo. Otpo1lt required. Call
614· 448·4222 between 9·6.

A udy mix concrete and alt
concrete supplies. Call !.It Valley
Brook C•ment arid Supplies.

~ 81

30.-773·&amp;397.

MlddlfiPOrl. refinished lntide, 8
rooms, bath, large porch . garage. work 1hop. good locetlon.

Camping
Equipment

lf containtd, air, awnlntJ,
~~==::==:~===,:;~=~~;:~·~·M~'~"~""'~·;~;· ~ H1876
Wilderne1a
18'304-882camp11, .
antenna,
exc. c!)nd.

AKC Reglnered male Toy Dt·
ctlund, 11 wka. old. all shots 81
wormed. 1200. Ph. 814-446·

Spacioua 2bdr. apt. , C. A.. water
paid. Near Piz:ra Hut, Gallipolis.

Furnished Apt. 1 BR , 701 Fourth
Ave., Oallipolit. t226 Utilities
Pd. Ph. ~6 · 4418 .after 7PM .

2783.

WITH THAT WIRI!.

··:'

Bunk B•d with Bunk•· 5199.96
New Chest· 848.00
New living Room Suites·
t179.95

Furnithed &amp; unfurnished aptl., 61•·446·8621 oo 445-4778.
f150.00 and up, references Ph .
304 ·876· 7738 or 304-675- . 19 inch Motorola Ouuar T.V.
with ltand 8100. 6 pc. bedroom
5104 A·1 Aut htate.
1uha with .box springs and
New apartm•nt : co mpletelv maureas 1200 . Call 614-992furn . Ref. &amp; O.p. 1 or 2 adults 2413 aftar 6 p.m .
onlv. C•ll614·448 ·0338.

94 locutt St. 1 BR , fumithed.
apt. upttalrt. t200 Utllltln p•id
160 dep. Ph . 448·1340 or
441·3870.

Conctete blodtttlltizet yard or
deUvery. Mason sand. G•lllpolia
Block Co.. 1231Ja Pine St.,
Gallipolit. Ohio Cell 614-446-

JIJ~T
C~055 THI~ WIRf

304·876-4038.

66 Building Supplies

245·6121 .

.

NOW IF I

I
. 1 1 I, I .
I I~ 1 t yl Ii
.
t

MON., APRIL 27 • .

EVENING
e:oom Btg vsttey
11 (%! Cil a Ill 11m 111 021
l!ll News
(IJ SportsLook (l)
I1J Square One TV Q
l!ll .Secret City
Q!J Facto of Life
81 (!) DIH'rent Strokes
8:30 II (%! l!ll NBC.Nightly News
(IJ Action Outltoora with
Jullut llorot (l)
(IJ Ill ill ABC Q
(!) Nightly Buotneaa Report
11m Ill 021 CBS Newt
l!ll Rlldlng Rllnbow 1;1
021 ShowBfr Today News or
the entertainment world rs
anc~ored live rrom New
Yorl&lt;. (0:30)
Q!J WKRP In CtnctnnaU
II (!) Hogan's Heroeo
7:00 mH1rdc1atle end
McCormick
II PM Magutne
(IJ SpomCenter (L)
(IJ Entertotnmont Tonight
Ill ill People's Court
I1J l!ll MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewtHout (1 :00)
11m Nowa
1!11 Moneyttne Current

Four 1 5x8 US Indy INgl, ..
aluminum 11011, t1 160. Phone ~

S1•·•4e·2583.

Mobile Home lot Plant Subdiviaion. wooded. concrete pad,
ca untv w•tflr avall•~le Ph. 8142 46 · ~ 866 OJ 446 · 0239 .

'·

Uatd &amp; Rebuilt TransiNitionl. •
All intemallv lnaptettd • ou•·
rtntead. lnatallltion and pick· up
available. C•ll 814-«1-0811.

HALF PRICE! .Fitlhlhg errow
•i~n• 12991 U9hted, non·•rrow
t2891 UIJIIghtad t248t FrM
lttttrt! Sea locally. Call today!
. F•ctory: 118001 423 -0183
e~nvtime.
'

Building Material•
,Block, brick, aewer plpas, windows. lintela. etc. Claude Wlnteis, Rio Gr•nde, 0 . Call 814-

•

,
•

2220 or .1·304·176·5758.

Herbellfe •nd wallPaper lntt:.ll•
tion. Ph. 614· 448·3131 ·or
446-2200 or 676 ·2480..

3 room• a. bath. stove &amp;
rafrigerato' turniahe. Utilit il!l
paid. No children, no pet1. Ph .

7 rooms. 1'h bath , house In
Cheste r. Ohio. Price red uced
from t27 ,000 to U6,000. Call
614·986-3671 .

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

BUDGETTr.niamllfi9n•: Uallidll 1
Rebuilt. All types torqua conwr· •.,
tll't •
treneflf C. . .l . eve 1
Jolntl. GuaranMtd • minumum 1
of 30 dtvt. wHI deliver. c•h l · :•
c•rv or lnatall CaM 814·379· 1'

48 Inch all steel btiiiW 11wmiU

Duroc Boara. Bred ju• 1ika the
boar• we tftted at tha Ohio
T..t.tton that gained over 2.1
lba. per day. Rover Btntlev.
Sabina. OH. 613-584· 2398.

St1

Ph. S14-448-7025.

Sht acr&amp; mini-term, fenced PU·
ture, woo lend. one barn, two out
bulldingt. three bedroom, all
aleatric, brick ranch home owrlooklng river, near 1own, 304·

Waahers, dryen, refrigerators,
rangu . Skaggs Appliances ,
Upper RNer Rd. betide Ston e
Creet Motel . 614·446·7398 .

814·446-0322.

Farms for Sale

71 acre. Quyan Crull. at Glenwood ha1 wells, 1prlng1. barns
and building• Ph , 304·522-

34

2 Br. trailer with add on room.
utility building, large yard and
garden, flferenc:e i'equtlted Ph.

44

Jock·

747 lnddu1t rial storage 12 toot
over heed door. 3 ph/le1 of
alactrlc, 18x4B tttel building
814 · 448 · 2382 For
appointment .

Hou te tor salo or trade. May
consider land co ntre ct. 6 rooms
with both, 1 'h acres . Ca ll
614-992· 7453 .

I

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

NEW AND USED MOBILE 2 Badroom furnished, AC. 1 BR .
HOMES KESBEL·s QUALITY apt . furnl•hed, Hud •c'cepted
MOBILE HOME SALES, 4 MI. Foateis Mobile Home Park Ph.
WEST. GALLIPOLIS. RT 35. 514.446-1802. ·-

f) .m .

For IA IA6BR , coun try homa. 20
u:r111 $39 . 900 .00 . Cherry
Ridge. Meig1 County.
Ca ll

EVANS

76

---'-----

benefits free. C11H now collect ' - - - - - - - - - - - . , . - - - - - - - - - - - I V a l ! e y Furniture, new 1c used.
304-743-8107 or 743 -3823. r
large section ot qUality fumi-

32 Mobile Homes.
for Sale

=:S~u~nd=~~·~~~==.~====:· ,~.,

P1attie cistern Jtatl •pprovtd.
plaatlc Nptlc tariQ, plutlc
culverta. metal culwrta. RON .
•on. Oh. 614-216-11930.

Bod)' Shop G1Hf9e for nle with
• trailer lot. Need tomeone to
take o-.rer payments Ph . 614 ·
446· 3243 after 6 :00pm.

n. pontoon boat wtth 21 HP

mo1or ond trol'-. Call 814·982·

I NOTICE I

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH ·
lNG CO . recommends t~al you
do b1.41inass with people yciu
know , and NOT to ~tnd mon~tV
through the mall until you have
invettigated the offering;

Boateand
Motors for Sale

NK L P E
PM

YLE

PIS D

P M T E

HM
LP
ZLSEP .
KDMD .
Yeatenlay'a C1'7Ptoqaote: THE CHRONIC GRUMS.
LER IS A CHURCH SOCIAL· COMPARED TO THE

FELLER WHO AGREES WITH EVERITHING YOU SAY.
- KINHUB~D

'

�Pomeroy- Middleport: Ohio

Monday,April27, 1987

Accidents on Ohio highways cause eight deaths
Wayne F. Matthews

172, Order ot Eastern Star. She
was a member of Omicron
Chapter 2f Delta Kappa GalT)ms
Sorority and the Meigs County
Retired Teachers Association.
She Is survived by a half·
brother and his wife, Jack and
Elizabet h Hawley of Middleport :
a half-sister and her husband.
Joan and Joe Haas, Cincinnati: a
sister-In-law, Grace Hawley,
Middleport: a special friend,
Nan Moore of Middleport; six
nephews, James Hawley, Arca dia , Fla .: Richard Hawley , Columbus; Charles Haas, ·Callfornla : Tony, Jake and Jeff Haa s,
all of New Richmond, Ohio, a nd
two nieces, Jacqueline Patton,
St. Charles, Mo .. a nd Mildred
Wells of New Richmond. Several
great-nieces and great-nephews
also survive.
Services will be held at 2 p.m.
Tuesday a t the Rawli ngs-CoatsBlower Funeral Homr with Mr.
AI Hartson officiating. Burial
will be In Riverview Cemetery .
Friends may call at the funeral
home from .1-5 anci 7-9p.m. today .
Friends may make donations to
the Middleport Churc h of Chr is t
In hrr memory.

Wayne F: Matthews, 75, of
Cheshire Route 1, died Saturday
at Holzer Medical Center. Hew as
a retired employre of the Ga llla
County Highway Department.
Born Apri129, 1911 at Cheshire,
he was a son of the late David
Matthews and Mamie Fraser
Matthews.
Surviving is his wife. Kathryn
'Taylor Malthews, whom he married Oct. 17, 19.11, in Gall ipolis.
Also surviving are one daughter,
Mrs. Lee !Betty Jo) Clar k of
Ches hire; two sisters, Mrs. Fred
!VIrginia) Taylor of Ga llipolis,
and Mrs. Claud iWinnlfred)
Ridenour of Cheshire; one
broth!lr, David Matthews of
Rutland; six grandchildren and
eight great-gra ndchildren .
Two sons, .Jack L. Matthews
and Billy Lee Matthews, preceded him in death; also four
brothers, Ross, Merlin, Stanley
and Carroll Matthews . .
He was a member of Light·
house Assembly of God and was a
U.S. Army World War II veteran.
. Services will be Wednesday , 1
p.m., at the Willis F'unrral Home,
Ga llipolis, wll h Rev . James
Randls and Rev. C..J. Lemley
Hazd K. Qualls
offi cia ting. Burial will be in
Gravel Hill Cemetery. Friends
Hazel K . Qualls, 76, 105 Kerr
may call a t the fun eral home St.. Pomeroy, died Sunday at
'tuesday from 6-9 p.m. Military Veterans Memorial Hospital.
graveside rites wil l be co nduct ed
A homemaker , Mrs . Qu&lt;)lls
by VF'W Pos t 4464 .
was born Aug. 4. 1910 at Oak Hill.
Gra ndso ns will serve as
She is survived by her huspallbea rers.
band, Oscar .1. Qual ls: a son and
daughter-In -law, William and
Jamt~M R. Phillips
Harrie t Qua ils, Gallipolis: . a
.James R. Phillips, 74, Nitro. daught er and son-In -law, Iris and
Bobby E. Payne of Middleport. a
W.Va ., formerl y of Har tford,
brother and a sister.
W.Va., died Saturday In St.
Mrs. Qualls was a member of
F'ra ncls Hospital. Charles ton,
W.Va .
the Naomi Baptist Church.
Services will be held al 1 p.m.
Born .Ju ne 28, 191:!, In Mason
Wed nesday at the Ewi ng F'uneral
W.Va ., he was th e son of the tat~
Home with Rev. Edwa rd BuffingJacob and Li llie Dale Robe
Phillips.
ton officia ting. Buria l will be In
Meigs Me mo ry Gardens .
He was retired from Monsanto
Friends may cal l at the fun era l
Chemical Co., Char les ton, was a
home from 2-4 and· 7-9 p.m.
·lJ.S. Navy veteran of World War
Tuesday.
Il and a memtx•r of St. Paul
United Methodist Churc·h, Ni tro.
He was also a member of John F. Cr~amt'r
American Legion Post 110of New
.John F'. Creamer, 80, Route I.
Haven.
Coolvil
le. di ed Monday' morning
Surviving ar~ his wife, Dorotha
at
Ca
mden-Clark
Memorial HosWcavcr Ph illips: one son and
pital
in
Parkcrsburg,
W.Va .
daughter-ln·law. Aaron R. and
He w'as born In AthPns County,
Laurie Phillip,, Victoria, Texas:
a
son .of th e late Renjam ln and
two gra ndd aught crs: six sisters,
Mattie
Reed Creamer. He was a
Myr l Purcell , Ke nsi ngton, Md ..
retired
farmer and a veteran of
Edi th Graf. Santa Rosa, Cal if.
Wor
ld
War
II.
·'
'
'
'
Mildred Stone, Parkersburg,
Surviving arc two sons and
W.Va .. Ru th Grinstead, Hart ·
daughters-In-law,
Donald and
ford, Lea h Litzinger. Westerville, and Doris Kraft. .Jackso n· Pat Creamer, Marietta . and
Russell and Iri s l.ltchfleld . and a
vil le. N.C.
daughter and son-in-law, Ru th
~rvlres will be Tuesday at 11
a.m. In Foglesong F·uncral a nd Robert Ca rroll. Parke rsHome, Mason, wi th Dr. Marvan burg ; lU gra ntlchlltlren. D great Prame offlc·latlng. Buria l will bc gra ndchildren ; lwo broth er. ,
in Gra ham C'e mNcry. F'rlends Kenneth and .Jim Cr·ca mer. bo th
may ra tl at the funera l home uf the Coolville area; four sisters.
from 7-9 tonig ht.
BPrnice Sculp. Co lum bu s:
Mildred Steadman. Athens: Mit·
Mildn•d E. Hawll'y
ford Hol ma n, Coolville; Gladv s
Rrown. Pa rkersburg . and scv.
Mildred E. Hawley. 84. a school era! nieces and nephews.
traehrr in Mrlgs Count y for over
Bt&gt;sidcs his par&lt;' nt s, he wa s
"II years. died Su nday at hrr preceded In dra t h by his wife.
r·r•s ldcncc at lliO N. Fourth i\ vr. In Gm' net !Mike l Heiney Creamer
Middleport.
in Marc h 198:;, a brother. tw~
Miss Haw if')' was horn at Long slstet's and a gra ndson:
Rott om, a dau ghter of the lair
Scrvlers will be held at I p.m.
W.F. a nd Rose Emma Hawl ey .
Thursday at the White Funeral
In addition to her tong career in Home In Coolville where friends
tru&lt;·hl ng. Miss HawiP.v wa s 1111 ma.v ra il after 6 p.m. on Tuesday
act lvc• mrm tl&lt;'r or the Mldd leport and from 2-9 p.m. Wednesda y.
C'ltu rrh of l'hrlst a nd was 11 Buri al wil l b&lt;' In the Stewart
mr mber of Eva ngr llnr Chapter Ce metery.

Meigs EMS units respond to 13 calls
M rlg~

C'ount .v Emerge ncy
Mcdlral Serv ices ri:oports 1:1C'al ls
over the wrrkcncl: e ight Snturdnv and flvr Su nd ay .
Sa turda y 111 :,:42 a.m.. Ra cine
to Bash:rn !load for Arvi l Holter
to St .. Joseph's H os ~it at. Parkers·
burg. W.Va .: Ru tland at 1: "'
~. m . to Meigs Min r No. 2 forGrrg
Ron&lt;•cutter to Pleasant Vullcy
l·lospltal; Ha&lt;'i ne at 2::12 p.m. to
Antiquity for .lune Hayman to
VNrrans Memoria l Hospital:
Tuppers Plain s at 2: :iii p.m.
transported llt' IPn Ca ldwell to St.
.losrph's Hospital : Pomerov at
:Utti p.m. to Plve Points' for
Walter M o bl e~ to Vetrrans Memorial Hospital ; Pomeroy at 7: 22
p.m. tu Kr rr S11·ert for Hazel
Quall s to Vc•teruns Memorial
Hospital : n ar lrto' at 11 :17 p.m.

transported Eff ie Norm11n to
Vetera ns Memorial Hospital :
Reedsville at 11: :l6 p.m. treated
but did not tr:msport Frank
Kidwell.
Sunday at 1:58 a .m. tra nsported Mary Walla ce from the
pollee department to Vetera ns
Memorial Hospital : Rutl and at
:1:02 a.m. to Dew hu rst Lane for
Dan Enright to Holzer Medica 1
C'rnter: Pomrroyat 11 : 12a.m. to
Pomei'Oy Heallh Ca re Center for
Darl ene Hicks to Vetera ns Memorial Hospital: Tuppers Plai ns at
12:08 p.m. to Ohfo 681 for
Ardward McMillian to Ca mden·
Clark Memorial Hospital; Mid·
dleport at 12:18 p.m. to North
Fourth for Mildred Hawley who
was dead on arrival.

One tickN may net .$12 million

By Unl!ed Press International
At least eight people died In
traffic accldepts In Ohio this
weekend, the State Highway
Patrol said today .

Trustees to meet
Rutland Township . Trustees
will meet Tuesday; 6:30p.m., at
the Rutland fire station.

Victims included :
Friday night
Celina: Rosemary C. Overman, 69, Marla Stein, killed when
hit by a car on a Mercer County
road .
West Unity: Orvy D. May, 10,'
Blue Creek, killed In a car-truck
accident on an Adams County
road.

•

~ ..

,
WUIC&amp;NDI, IOMi: HOLID,II'I'I AND
INCLEMENT WIATHIR CONDITIONS Alii IXCL'/DID.

Edith Reiser will be at 'the
Raci ne Department Store on
Friday, from 10 a. m. to 2 p.m., to
sign up applications fo r the
Golden Buckeye Card.
Buckeye Card applicants ma y
also sign up at the Pomeroy
Library and Senior Citizens
Ce nter.

Ohio weather
South Centrai ·Ohlo
Mostly cloudy tonight with a
cha nce of s howers and a low in
the mid 40s . _
Mos tly cloud y Tuesday with a
high near 60.
The probability of precipitation Is .30 percent tonight and near
zero Tuesday .
Winds will diminish to 10 to 20
miles an hour tonight.
Ohio Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
Fair Wednesday and Friday
with a chance of showers Thurs·
day .

There will be a dance at the
Rulland Civic Center. Friday
from 8 to 11 p.m. with music by
Music Express. Admission will
be $2 single and $.1 couple.
Everyone welcome.

29
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ALLERGY
MEDICINE

PKG. OF 24 OR
CHILDREN'S
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4 OZ. BOTILE

ATRA OR
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ALKALINE

CARTRIISGEI

IYGWm

BAnERIES
"AA" OR "AAN'

99

PKG.
OF2

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PuwDER OR SP!Ct
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•Bedding Plants
•Hanging Baskets
•R hododendrons
•Azaleas
•Rose Bushes

WASHINGTON iUP ll- Rep . .
Richard Gephard t, D-Mo., complains he can't get an answer on
when President Reagan is "go'lng to sta nd up to our trading
partners and demand eq ual
treatment."
Gephard t, therefo.re, has set
out to provide his ow n answer,
supplying a hotly contested
amend ment to the trade legislation expected to spark heated
deba te on the House floor starting today. The get -tough amend·
l'(lent would force Reagan to do
just that - take tougher action
agains t certa in U.S. trading
partners. ,
Gephardt, a 1988 presidential
canctldalc, will be In th e area
Triurs&lt;laywhcn he addresses the
50th •annual banquet of the
Ga llipolis Area Chamber of Commerce at Rio Grande College and
communit y College.
The deba te has brewed for
some time OV&lt;'r tho legislation
Reagan considers "dangerous"
and protectionist, and lawmakers from both parties said on the
eve of today's Hou se action that a
vote on the bill Is unlikely before
Thursday.
That will carry the argu ments,
then, right into the middle of a
·state vls lf by Japanese Prime
Minister Yasuhlro Na kaso ne,
who arrives Wednesday to meet
with Reagan under the shadow of
a trade dispute between their
governments.
Nakasone is expe&lt;"ted to ask
Reagan to lift $300 million In
tariffs slapped on .Japanese com·
pulers, televisio ns and power
tools two weeks ago. but the
sanctions were Imposed In retail·
atlon for Ja pan's failure to abide
by a 1986 agreement on compu ter
chips and Reagan Is not expected
to .lift them yet.
"With that In mind, the Hou se
trade debate offered an oppor·
tu nity for plenty of "Japa n
}lashing" .:.... verba l out rage ove1
alleged unfair trade practices by ·
the .Japanese and their limits on
Imported American products.
The rhetoric carries potential
embarrassmen t for Nakasone.

HEllS ·

POTATO

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WHOLESALE &amp; RETAIL

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talking with police who were place along the street.
checking out the incident. Craig
"It is time for a ll laws to be
said. the group Including s he and enforced," Craig commented
her daughter, went to the police urgi ng offirlals to stop the
station and that pollee allowed arrogant takeover of North Sethe obscenities to continue until cond Street. by "a bunch of
·
she again voiced a complaint punks."
about them,
Born and reared in Middleport,
Craig said one of the officers Craig said that problems do exist
told her tha t It is not aga inst the and reported that she had talked
law anymore to be drunk and that · to resident s of the town about
"kicking her car was no big them and some had told her that
thing."
It does no. good to go to council
Craig charged that walking with the problems . She urged
either side of the street in the council members, however, to
lower business block Is unsafe talk to the people of the town and
and she alleged that loitering, s tat ed tha t she felt this will
drinking, drugs and sex take encourage residents to come

for th to disc uss matters with
coun cil.

Mrs . Custer reinforced her
mother' s story rep(Jrtin~ th at the
April 18 inciden t had been
ex tremely upsetting.
Mayor Fred Hoffman said that
he knows there is a problem on
North Second Avenue and tounril President Dewev Hor ton
thanked Mt·s. Cra ig 'and Mrs .
Custer for coming to council . He
assured them that the problems
on Nonh Second will be dis·
cussed. Cou ncilma n Bob Gi l·
more also assured th(' two
women that problems will be
tal ked over by vltlagc officials to

especially If the legislation In·
eluded th e G~phardt
amendment.
The House bill was written by
Democrats with improved relief
benefit s for Import-battered In-·
· dustrles, new job traini ng programs for displaced workers and
mandatory sanctions agai nst na tion s that vio lat e trade
agreements.
House Republica ns offered. an
alternative Monday th at eliminated some of the provisions
Reagan dislikes. They said the
president would sign their version and urged colleagues to
accept it.
House Republican leader Bob
Michel of Illinois ra iled Ge·
phardt's amendment "a recesslonary time bomb (t hat 1 will
blow up In our face." Other GOP
leaders
vowed to light hard to
TIME TO STAND UP Rep. Richard Gepha,rdt, D- defeat the amendm ent.
Mo., said Monday he wants to
For the benefit of television
cameras, the Republicans held
know when President Reagan
up a "Grphard t bomb" to IllusIs "going to stand up to our
trate th eir point - nine red flares
trading partners und demand
equal treatment." (UPI)
that looked like dynamite tied
together and wired to an · alarm
The legislation ca rries a potcn· clock with Gephardl's picture on
tlal mu ch more serio us.
the dial.
The trade bill pushed by
Democrats was written with a
variety of sa nctions, Including
mandatory U.S. retaliation when
Kindergarten and first grade
American trading partners are
found to have broken trade reglsfratlon for the 1987-88 school
agreeme nt s. The Ge ph ar dt year will get underway Friday In
amendmen t would force cou n- the Eastern Local School
tries such as Japa n, which have District.
Parents should register their
excessive trade surpluses with
the United States and engage In child for kindergarten or as new
uneven trade pract ices, to agree enrollees of the first grade (t hose
to mend their ways or face a 10 who did not attend kindergarten
percent reduction In U.S. trade In Eastern District) at the
following times and places:
fo r four consecutive years.
Tuppers Plains kind ergarten
"The president stands up to the
at
the Tuppers Plains ElemenRussians on arms control," Gephardt said In support of his tary School, F'rlday , May 1, 8:30
amendment. "When Is he going a.m . to ,1:30 p.m.
Chester kindergarten at the
to sta nd up· to our trading
Chester
. Element ary School,
partners and demand equal
Monday.
May 4, 8: :10 a.m. to 3: 30
protections?"
p.m
.
Reagan wants legislation that
New enrollees, first graders:
opens more markets to Amerl·
can products, but he opposes Tuppers Plains Elementary , Friefforts that would limit his day, 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.:
options. He lhreatened a veto Riverview Elementa ry, Friday,

determine what ca n be done to
Improve th e situa tion.
Ron McDade and Ten·y Lloyd,
represe nta tives of the Columbus
&amp; So uthern Ohio Elec tr ic Co.,
also appeared before council and
council vo ted unanimously to
renew th(&gt; con trac t with the
compa ny fot• street lighting for
the next five yea r·s. The present
contracl expires on May 28.
McDade told cou ncil of the
lighting planned for the Dave
Diles park which wllllnchide live
colonial type pos t la mps conI rolled by photo cells plus flood
lighting for the horseshoe and
I Continued ?n Page 101

Weather
prompts
scattered
outages

NEW HOME - This will he the new
of City Loan Bank.
Located at the corner of East Main and Sycamore •treets, the
exterior of the building has undergone ex tensive exterior
redecoration by the Banks Construction Co. ol MlddlepGrt. The
Interior of the find lloor. Is how being prep11red lor occupancy hy u
llrm employed by the bank and olllces will he completely
relurhls'hed for the move of the llrm from 116 E. Main St. to tlte236
EIISt Main location. City Loan Bank hilS hecn localt•d In the
Elberfeld bulldlnr at 116 East Main since a lire gutted the Mel«•
Inn complex where the company has been located for a numhcr of
year•. The hank Is expecting to move Into th e newly r~novatcd
quarters ahout ,June 8 and an open house will he held later.

Eastern slates. registration schedule
9 a.m. until 11 a.m.; Chester.

Elementary. Monday, 8: :10 a.m.
to 3: 30p.m.
C'h lldren who are presently
enrolled In a kindergarten class
at Tuppers Plains or Chesler do
not need. to enroll for the first
grade.
Any child whose fifth birthday
fa lls on or before Sept. 30, this
year, may be regis tered for
ki ndergarten and any child
whose sixth birthday falls on or
before Sept. 30, this year, may be
registered for first grade.
At the time o! registration.
parents are to provide the ri'Cord
of Immunization for their child·
ren. These record should s ho~
four DPT; lour polio Sabin; one
measles. one mumps, one Ru·
bella and proof of a recent TB
skin test, within one year be lore

enterlnRschool. The child's birth
certi ficate also must be provided. The respective teacher
will request other Information
needed on thr reglstrallon form.
Superintenden t Richard L. Roberts states that It Is very
Important for all parents to
register their child accordi ng to
the above sc hedule so th at plans
ca n be completed for the fa ll
classes.
Parenl s can direct any ques·
lions to the following: Mrs. Ci ndy
Linton, kindergarten teacher at
Tuppers Plains, 667-.1310; Mrs.
Debbie Pratt , klnderliarten
teacher at Chester, 985-.'!304, of
the local superintendent , Rl·
chard L. Roberts, 985·4292. Ques·
!Ions concerning the ava it abf llly
of the reaulred Immunizations
(Contlnued on Page 101

By Unll!•d Press International :
Sentinel Staff Reports
Scattered power outages and
wind d~mages occured In Meigs
Count y during Monday night's
storm with accompanying high
winds. For the most part , damage from th e winds was minimal.
Ron Ash, manager of Ohio
Power Co.'s Pomeroy office. said
that 96 Ohio Power customers
were out of power from about 8
p.m. to 1 a.m, today .
·
Power to these customers was
restored at varyi ng times durin~
that five-hour period, with Bowles Road at Dexter the last area
to be res tored. Customers In the
Yel}owbush and Tanners Run
Road areas ol Racine were also
affected by the outa ges. Ash,.
attributed the problems to tree
limbs hittin g lines.
In Portland, .Jeff Harris ol
Harris' Greenh ouse, rep6r tcd
that winds flattened a storage
barn and sca ttered plants that
were on wagons In fields where
they were to have been planted.
Tree limbs were left lylnR on the
tops of greenhouses he ~ dded .
Harris said he did not see a funnel
cloud. He estimates wind dam·
ages tOhis Ohio 124 farm at about
$40.000.
· In Letart Falls, Max Hill, of the
Cliffo rd Hill farm, sa id lhl• wind
did not damage their farm. Hill
said he was not aware of wind
damages to any other Lelart
Falls farms either.
Meanwhile, high winds ripped
a portion of a roof from a nursln~
home In Stark Coun ty Monday
night as thunderstorms rumbled
across north ern Ohio.
Officia ls said no one was
Injured and several other pa·
tlents In the home were un aflected by the storm.

~-------::::

Southern Local issues teaching contracts
'

'

'

6 OZ. lAG

--------

t

.,

CAPSULES-

Provided by
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl

, Relating aspects of the incident, Craig said she and her
daught er on April 18 were
stopped at the traffic light at
Race and North Second streets,
when a young man. holding a can
of beer ·and obviously intoxi·
cated, crossed the street near
their vehicle.
He kicked the rear of the
vehicle and shouted obscenities
at them, Craig said. She stated
that she reported the incident to
police and two officers in a
cruiser checked out the man.
Ne ither officer got out of the car
and Craig . charged that she
witnessed the man laughing and

amendment inspires
heated debate on trade issue

REGULAR OR MINT
6.4 OZ. TUBE OR 4.5 OZ. PUMP

(As of 10: 30 a.m.)

CALL (614)·992.&amp;21 04
(304) 675-1244

3 Soctlonl. 34 Pages

A Multimedia Inc. Newspap&amp;r

G~phardt

AIM
TOOTHPASTE

Daily stock prices

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT

Pomeroy-Mi~dleport, Ohio, Tuesday. Aprii 28, 1987

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer
Get rid of th e "drunks and
punks" hanging out in the lower
b.lock of the Middleport's bustness section was the advice of
form er Middl eport Cou ncil
member Jean Craig when . she
appeared before Middleport Vlllilge Council Monday night.
. Craig, a former ' resident of
Midd leport, traveled over 60
miles from her, employment in
Beverly ..(o voice her complaints
and relate a personal incident
which happened to her and her
daughter, Mrs. Pat Custer. on
Aprll18.

Card sign-up set

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

enttne

Ex-resident pleads for enforcement in village

The third annual Forked Run
State Park Fishing Derby, open
to all ages, will be held Saturday,
May 9, from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m .
Prizes will be awarded.

Saturday Admissions- Marie
Dudding, Middleport; Robert
Parsons, Pomeroy; Iris Baker,
S)·racuse: Vivian Powers, Mason. W.Va. : Walter Mobley,
Miami, Fl a.: .June Hayma n,
Pomero y: Ha ze l Quall s,
Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges - Ida
Pooler, Marie Robinson, Eva lcna Pauley. Rhonda Dickerson,
Bernard Stewart.
Sunday Admissions- Darlene
Hicks. Pomeroy; Chester Young,
Long Bottom .
Su nd av Discharges - Sus ie
Bess. Waller Mobley, Iris Baker.

Mostly, clear tonight, with a
low near 40. Varlable cloudl·
ness Wednesday, wllh highs
between 70 and 75. The pr.ol)ahlllty of predpltallon Is near
zero toniJ!hl and 20 percent
Wednesday.

•

at y

Vot.36, No.250
Copyrighted 1987

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. In,. ·

set Friday

in baseball
---Page 3

Derby Saturday

Vt&gt;tt•rans Memorial

Daily, Number·
655
PJCK-4
5788

post victories

The 50th Alumni Banquet and
Dance of Chester High School
will be held Saturday, June 6, In
the Chester School Auditorium.
Banquet Is at 6:30p.m. and the
·dance Is at 9 p.m. Music by
Kountry Kustoms II from Glouster. Honor classes will be 1921,
1926, 1931, 1936, 1941, l946, 1951
and 1956.

CLEVELAND tUP i t - The drawing.
'
Ohio Lott o j11rkpot. a $12 million. There were 191 tickets sold
&amp;
prize, tx•longs to the player or with five ot the six winning
players holding the single lottery numbers. Those tickets are
lt Mlddleport-Pe-oy
ticket sold wi th lhl' numbers 9, 17, worth $1,000, while 8,929 tickets
City Ullllts
22. 24. 31 and :14.
wit h four of the six winning ·
992·6036
The winner wil l rece ive u r~n~um~·~be~rs:.:a~r~e~w~o~r~th~$6!9~----l~==========:J
before-tax pa yment of appt·oxlmately $600,000 every year for 20
years. Lottery officials say
S~.38.'i,236 was wagered since .
Wednesday on the Saturday

· ~ance

Area teams

. Dayton, killed when his motorcySaturday
Mt, Gilead: Charles M. Rum- cle crashed on a Kettering cltv
ple, 20, Gallon: and Scott G. street.
Cleveland: Ronald Sellers, 26,
Rlne~art, 19, Iberia, killed In a
Cleveland,
killed In a two-vehlcl~
car-train crash at a crossing In
accident on a Cleveland city.
northwestern Morrow County.
Georgetown: Heidi M. Mollett , street.
19, · Russellville, kil!e&lt;) In a
Sunday
one-vehicle accident on a Brown
Toledo: Gina Bowen, 19, hom~·
town not listed, killed in a two-car ;
County road.
Kettering: Dennis A. Yates, 25, accident on a· Toledo city street. '

Banquet June 6

Firm
Price
Am Electric Power .... ......... 26%
AT&amp;T ........ ... .... ...... .. ......... 23¥0
Ashland 011 ...... ................. ~8%
Bob Eva ns Farms ........... ... 24\1,
Charming Shoppes ... .......... 25%
Federal Mogul.. ................ .24%
Goodyear T&amp;R ......... ...... ........16
Heck' s lnr ...... .. ........... ...... ..... 4
Limi ted Inc ...... .. .... ....... .... .40 \);
Multi media Inc ................ ... 5Hi
Rax Restaurants .................. 5 \-)
Robbin s &amp; M.vrrs . .. ............ 11 \-)
Shonry's Inc........ .. .... ............ 28
Wendy's Inti. ........ .. ............ 10\-)
Worthington lnd .. ....... .. ...... .17\-)

OhiQ
Lottery
.
.

Hiring of teaching and non- Howard Caldwell Ill , high school ball ; Kimber ly Phillips, junior • Jansupka as substitute art
teaching perso nn el were the Englis h and speech.
high vo lleyball.
teacher.
main Items on Southern Board of
Janice Curry was hired as
Also hired were Roberta Maid·
Approv~ by the board were
Education's Friday agenda. The second grade 'teacher at Syra- eng,, marching and pep bands and motions that no more Sunday
board met In regular session cuse on a continuing contract.
variety show; June Buchanan, practices will be held during
Friday . eveni ng at the high
Two-year non -teaching con- assistant marching band: Do- 1987-88- lor any sports: and th at
tracts were given Lois Mugrage, nald Dudding, yearbook; Bar- junior high and high achool
school.
Hired on one-year co ntracts cook, Letart Falls; Florence bar a Bailey, Ec ho advisor: Do- students will now be permitted to
were teachers Linda Fisher, fi rst Thornton, cook, Racine: and nald Salmons, senior play: wear shorts to school, as long as
grade, Portland ; Jenny Michael, Milford Freder ick, bus driver.
Sandra Boothe, title and com- the shorts are at least mid-thi gh
Chapter I, Letart Falls and
Continuing contracts were pllance olflcer: Carla Shuler, length.
Syrac use: Martha Bartrug, given ' secret ary-aldes Barb DPPF coordinator; Jan Hill,
The board declared two hours
grades 4-5, Portland; Wanda Brown, Syracuse; Patricia Cir- Chapter I coordinator; Dennie on Jan. 22 and all day on Jan. 23
cle, Racine; Jane Ann Hill, Hill, DPPF and Chapter I treas- and Feb. 16, 17 and 18 as calamity
Shuler. LD, Portland.
' Given two-year contracts were Letart Falls; Vicky Northup, urers: Delores Griffin, Chapter I days, due to Ice and snow.
teachers J une Buchanan, music, Portland; and Mary Findley , as seeretary: ·Joyce Thoren. lunchThe 1987·88 school calenda r
dlstrlct-wlde: Kathryn Hill. DH, custodian at Letart Falls.
room supervisor, block grant, was adopted with Aug. 24 the first
Letart Falls; Roberta Maidens,
Hired as coaches were Howard now through and hand14'j!IL __day for teachers a nd Aug. 25 lor
~lgh school vocal music and
Caldwell, athletic director and · coordinator.
students; May 25 as last day lor
band; Deborah Greer, speech head boys basketball; William
Hired as a DH teacher, subj ect s1udents and May 26 lor students.
lherapy, district-wide; Brenda Hensler, head football and assist- to her receiving her professional
In other action the ·board
McGuire, DH, Por.tland.
ant baseball; Kimberly Phillips, certification, was Brenda approved the following:
Three-year teaching contracts , head girl5 basketball; Michael McGuire.
-Seventy-lour senlon lor
were given to Kimberly Phillips, Winebrenner, head baseball: SuHired as asubstitute Cllltodlan graduation.
high school science and biology , zanne Wolfe, head volleyball and was Joseph E . Drasko.
-Carla Shuler'sreslgnatlonas
and William Hensler, high school assistant volleyball:. Deborah
Peggy Hill was hired by the Chapter II coordinator and dis·
healt h aniJ'phy'stcal education.
Greer, assistant girls basket· board asa substitute secertary at trlct computer coordinator.
Flve-y.!ar teaching contracts ball: Sandra Baer, high school the high school replacing Lori
-A request from Deborah Hill
were gtven to Lawrence Wolfe, cheerleadlng advisor; Michael Brlnager now on maternity for maternity leave.
sixth grade, Racine; Sandra Winebrenner and James Law- leave.
-Ron Clark and Pam Johnson
Baer, fourth grade. Syracuse; rence, junior high boys basket·
(Conti nued on Page 10)
The board did notrenewOUnda
l

(

..

Cfiiijii,:;:: Ill Bead Clvllan Prelklnt Lee Miller presentA the
· club's Cltlzetl of the fear Award to Middleport Mayor Fred
liolfman at the ClvltaM In Ohio DJ•triet Area JJI dinner held
Saturday nlpi at Ohio Unlverally Inn to honor their c!tbens of the
year. Mayor of MlddlepGrlslnce 1174, Hoffman was h'onored lor his.
dedication and tenacity In leadenhlp which has helped to make
Middleport a progre&amp;slve vU1a1e.

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