<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12798" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/12798?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-07T01:03:18+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43770">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/b68013eb41b2d07d5db8218b79dc527c.pdf</src>
      <authentication>2833b84993b77a56b2c7ea4d884c58c3</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="40169">
                  <text>Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

organizatio~;

Meigs

Middl~rt.

Pomeroy

Tuesday. April 1. 1986

Ohio

gather for meetinis recently

singing "Biesseq Redeemer." Car· to contact Mrs. &amp;mlen.
. 'Suwort of. tt.&gt; Meigs County
tentatively set lor 'Ji.Jesday momroll Ann Harper, secretary; and
Carron Ann Harper gave c1evo- · TubercuklslsLevytobevotedonln
ing when the United Metoodist
··11. soup supper was planned for Ruby V~ughan, trea5Urer, gave lions entitled "At Last I'm Begin- the May prtmarY was given by the
Mrs. Everett Hayes reviE&gt;wed Women of the Pomeroy Church
April
5 when the Alfi·ed Church reports. Tbe Slota VaUey Sprtng nlng to"Understand." Group I h.ad group. Sununer meeting ~ the
Georgi' Bernard Shaw's "St. .Joan,"
met
recently
at
the church.
lftv1YF
met at the church J'!'Cen!ly . Presbyterian was announced for the program entitled "Thoughts As!Klclatlon was announced for
published In 1925. at the Wednesday
It was noted that the Sunday
The
supper
wlll be held at the AprU 16 at the Covenant Presbyter· About Easter: Reflectklns on a JUne :a; at 7: llwlih Group II to h•ve
ma&gt;tlng of the Middleport Literary evmlng Bible study program on the
church
with
se1vlngfrom~ to7p.m.
ian Church In Cclumbus. Reserva- Broken Boey and ~ Matchless thep-ogramandGroupltobelDst.
Club held at the home of Mrs. Holy Spirit wUI concludE' on Palm
and
!he
mPnu
will
consist
of
chili
,
lions ~$3.!J:laredueby AprUlland Love." Mrs. Vaughan and Mrs. Refreshments were served by
F.orest Bachtel.
Sunday. Aretreat foryoungwomen
anyone planning to attend Is asked Harper gave tiP p-ogram.
· Group II to the members attending.
Mrs. Hayes told of the authentic under 40 to bl&gt; held on Aprill!lwas' vegetable soup, sloppy joes, hot
dogs,
and
pie.
written history when the English announced along with a district
.,li t Sull!lay night's meeting the
Public Notice
Public
Public Notice
Public Notice
occupied most of FranC!' at the time retreat to be held on May 2 and 3.
grou
p
played
games,
Marilyn
of William, the Con&lt;juerer. Sh&lt;? The school or missions has bel'n
Meltll Ccuntv. Ohio. 4117e9.
-MEMORANDA DATE:
Robinson had the lesson, songs
noted that during the 100 year war, planned for July 14-21 and tlw
The .rnv• of tho C011111alnt
Aueued
were sung and r£1reshmmts wPre !Con tinued from Page 7)
clonWidl Judtl.....llltloinittho
1357 to 1456, each Province was dlstrtct annual me&lt;&gt;tlng will bl&gt; held
Valuation ......... 3.690,420
se1ved. Next meeting will be on
Delondlnll. Owlght E. C.t
Property Tox Loviea:
ruled by Its own Lord and the on Sept. 25. Oct. 16 will be spiriiual
TOTAL REV .
Apru~ 6.
· a~d Jllilqu.... K.. Cor!, In tho
10
Milt
...........
10.po
tnoldo
country was deeply divided Into mrlclun~nt day.
RCPTS ......... ...... .. ..69,467
.,m of Twenty- Tho....,d
Outoldo 10 Mitl ......... 30.80
loyalties. The peasants lived in
EXPENDITURE /
Activitioo ............. ........ 296 Eat. Population .......... 1 000 5_, Hundred Slxt- DotIt was noted that bijo.akfast will be
OiS8URSEMENTS: Basic Utility
complete dessolution with disease held following sunriSe Services-. at..
len 1nd Five Centt
1980 Foderot
Pero.
Sorv . .... .. ....... 18. 960 S_arvicoo .... .... .. .. .. ..... 4 , 828 Canouo P!JP . .... .. .... .... .. 948 (t20.718.06), with lntNew
.officers
were
installed
in
a
and srarvatkln prevalent. A devout the church. Eighty-nine sick and
Fringe Bonaflto .. .. .... .2, 161 .Tranoponatlon .. .. .... 19, 710
MAR. 24, 1988 - · lit rote oi M;ll2 .,..
Joan De Ark, a 12-year old, had shut In calls were rep(\rted . Dorothy ' capd light cet·emony conducted by Mawlatoond
Gen . Go• ....... ...... .. 21 ,369
t conify the following ro· cloY. from- 5, 1ll85, .
Kath
CDanicl.
retiring
leader,
at
visions of a unlted France an.,; Downie used a letter from Adena L.
Sup! loa ...""-.... .. .. .. .. 11,287 Pore. Sorv ........... .. . 18,950 port to be correct and true,
one! tho colla of tHo tction:
'Ji.Jesd· nig-ht's me£&gt;ting of Pome· Utititieo .. ....... .... ... .. .2,636 Fringe 8onofill ......... 2,161 to tho boot of mv knowl· IIIII 1ho . Corrc&gt;lllnt bo loreunder the leadershp of King Goety, a deaco.ness lor the Met hoOutlay ..... .. ...... .2.600 Materials and
edge:
ond 1hot "tho Mono
Charles In 1429 at the age of 17, she dlsts pi C_Jnclnnati, and a pl"dyer roy T , Cl ub 570 held in tt&gt;e Cap.
Supplioo ... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 11 , 26 7
Other Operating
J1nice Llw1on . •nd/ or intertltl• or an tltd
cal,eteri·
at
Veterans
Memorial
saw her mission a success. Later poem lor devotions.
Utilitioo
....................
2.
636
Expensea ................. 13.480
property, il any, bo mor·
C\.erlc-Treoo.
. Hospi I.
she was tried for heresy .
TOTAL EX PEN 0 .
Cop~al Outlay ...... .. 14.046
ohlited and the real ollato
Wetor'il .. P. o . Box 261
Alice Wamsley presented a proFr nds Haggy, McDaniel and OISBURS ...... ......... .60,231 Other Operating
Mrs. Hayes read excerpts from gram on the tubl&gt;rculosis problems
titlo quiotod and oald prop Syr..uoa. Ohio 46779
Exponooo .............. .. 13,480
Exc. Rctpa. Over
any sold In the foreckJaure
PH. 814·99~ · 7351
the play. For roll call membl&gt;rs and asked lor support and endorse- Kay Monis tied fo r being the best lUnder)
Oiob . ............ 8.473 TOTAL EXPEND.
action and 111 amoLntt due
1411. ftc
losers of the week with Margaret tnt. Rev ........
named a famous martyr from mmt of the levy. She noted that 21
.. ...... .. .. 3,36 0 OISBUR$ ...... .. ..... 116,886
Plaintiff be paid from tho
Biggs
as'
11li)J1er-up.
Thirty-four
religious or political history.
TransferExc. Rcpu. Over
proceed• of the tale.
cases have been found in Meigs members weighed in With two nE'W Operating
Public
Notice
In ............................ 600 (Under) Olsb ... .. .. .... (4 ,116)
Mrs. Bq,chtel Introduced the Coilnty. Frl'E' skin tests arc availaPlointlff bo peld from tho
Int. Rev ......... ....... .. .. 3,360
nansfer•proooodo of tho ula.
prograrri theme. E117.abeth Mourn- ble · at the office in the Meigs members bl&gt;lng welcomed. Area 9perating
Out .. .. ................. .. ... . 600 Operating TransfauYou 1re f'«&lt;Uirld to answer
Recognition
Day
was
announced
Ing, Jen Cheshire and Beulah Multi-Purpose building on Monday:
Note and Bond
ln .. ......................... 1.1 50
IN 'THE COMMON PLEAS
tho C0f111illnl within twonty·
for May 17 in Cincinnati. Winner of Retirement .......... ... 11.131 Operating TransfersMcComas were guests.
COURT OF
eight (28) days .... tMt
Tuesday and Wednesday morn
04t ...... .. ...... .. .... .. .. .. 1 ,160
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
this week 's fruit basket was Int. Ex.p. and Fiacal
puiJIIcotiotl
of
lhll
Notico.
lngs.
DIAMOND SAYINGS &amp;
Virginia Smit h. Weigh-In each Chargeo .................. :2,394 ' Note and Bond
whlcl1 witt be publiohod once
A report was given on the Church week is from 6 to 7 p.m. with Other Fin. Usea ..... ....... 718 Retirement .... ....... .. 11 . 131 LOAN COMPANY, 1'1week lot olx (81 ......_
tnt . Exp. &amp; Fiscal
VS.
Exc. of Tot. Repts.
Women
United program held at the meet ings following.
live
· ·The r.. pubtico- ·
Quarterly birthdays were ob......
..
..
..
.......
2,394
Chargee
Over IUndarl Total
DWIGHT E. CARL. ot.,ot.;...,.., tion wiii'IITIIin
Cl1 tho , .. day
Other Fin. Uaoo .......... .. 718
served at the recent me&lt;&gt;tlng of the Episcopal Church with abcut 50
Otlllldtnto of April, 1988, _.,d tho
Oiaburo . .... .... .... ..... (2 ,4101
Fund Cash Balance
TOT . OTHER
c- No. 811-CV-375
Harrisonville Senior Citizens Club persons attending. The Emmaus
IWentv· olght (28) dayo for
Jan . 1 . ' 86 .. .. .. ....... 12,630 FIN. SOURCES
Walk
will
be
held
onAjprU
17toll,
It
..
NOTICE
B~_ BUCACATITION
BU
~tn~w.r-will commence on tt•i
oold at the townhouse. Adinner was
(Uoao) ... ,.......... .... .... 1 ,300 TO : Honry D. ~ _. dllte. In the C8H of your faikJre
Fund Cash Balance
was
reported.
Spring
,
a
ctivit
il's
Including
a
setved. Next meeting was anWtltroud Andonon, . whoM· to .m.'AW' or otherwlae ,..
Exc. of Tot. Acpta. Over
Doc . 31, '86 .. .'.... .... t0,120
Cookie Day lor shutlns on May 1 . mother-daughter banquet on May Rea.
(Under) Total Oio·
nounced lor April 12.
for Encumb.
!tot lin-. odd1574 opond .. ' requaotod by tho
will berepeatedagalnthlsyear,AII _ _1_3 were planned at the Thursday Doc . 31, '86 ........ ... 1.086 bunementa .......... (14 ,981) Smith S1N11. Millon, Wilt Ohio
Ruteo of Civil Pmooduro,
Fund Cash Balance
YtrgOIIo, 26M 1, ~ od· judg,..,t by -u~ will be
members are asked to donate two
night meetfng of the Wom!'n's
TOTALS
Jan . ' . 1986 .......... 71 , 110 dreu w-~known.
. ·•. . , _ llflolnlt yau and lor
dozm cookies. Mrs. Ada Warner
AssociatiOn of the MJddleport First REV . RCPTS.: Fund Cash Balance
You ore honlby
Pmp . Taxu .. .......... 12,624
tho -~ ctemonded n tho
PfE'Sbyterian Church .
Susi!' Cleland of Chester host€0 asked that Campbell soup labels bl&gt;
Doc. 31 , 1985 ........ 66,129 you
State Lev1ed Shared
C01111tolnt.
O-IlThe group also planned a ya1'd Taxei, etc .. ............. 29,091 Res. tor Encumb .
the Thu rsda)' night me&lt;&gt;ting of I he saved.
lilt In tho tegol tction ontltttd
D- thlo 19th day of
Dac. 31 . 1985 .... .. .... 3,469 Dlomoncl . Slvingl e. _Loin FobNory, 1986.
The birthdays of memlll&gt;rs were
sale for May 7 on the chureh lawn lltergov. Grant/
ChaMer Club.
"1th proceeds to go toward the C'ontracts .. ....... .. ...... 3.221 Oepos. Sol. .. .......... 26,312 Compony, Ptolilliff. vo.
' iAn'! E. Spencer
Linda Ghci'n was a guest at the observed. Mrs. Downie presented
tnvostments ....... ..... 30,000 Dwight E. Cor!, ot. II.. Defonllfor
Cleok of Cauno
repair of the Iron! doors and canopy Charges
me&lt;&gt;t lng. Officers reports were the prayer and self-denial program.
Sorvieeo .. .... ... .. .. .... 69,037
Total Treasury
onto.
Thlo
lOtion
By
Olano
Caluthon,
given and dues and the flower lund Kathy Corbitt and Gertrude Mit- of the church. Jean Sorden presided Int. Eomlngs ............. 1 ,696 Balance .. ............... .58,312 oaignod· Cow No. 85-CV· 12) 25; 13) 4, 11,18,~1'1
26;
at the tn&lt;'&lt;'l in.g which opened with Fines &amp; Forfoito .. .... .. 2,888 Lou Outotond................ 46 376, "l'l lo pondng in tho (4) 1, 8tc
manics were collected. A card was chell served a dessert course.
TOT . BAL ............... 66.287 Coun of Common " ' - of
All Other Rev ........... 3,963
signed lor Dorothy Roach and
flowers were sent to Mary Starcher
and Donna Fry. Plans were made
lor a bake sale at the next me£&gt;ting.
Hostess gifts were presented to
Mrs. Cleland and Doris Wilt
received an anniversary gift.
Games were played with prizes
going to Mrs. Wilt. Ruth Young and
DeiofE'S Whitlock. RelrE'Shrnents
were served. The door prize went to
Elaine Quillen. The April meeting"
· will be held at the home of Dottie
Jones, Gallipolis.

Alfred UMYF

prerary Club

TOPS
~

Senior Citizens

Women's Association

.·

w•

Chatter Club """'

hiM!-hll-

...-!hot

Colwnbia Grange
A quarterly birhday supper with
decorated cake and homemade ice
cream was enjoyed by members
preceding the march metelng of
Columl:ia Grange 2435.'
Ellz.abethJordan, women 's activities committe&lt;&gt; chairman, announced that Columbia.Grange had
13 entries In tbe national grange
w.vlng contest held rECently. RUth
Birchfield had the first place entry
In Class A, adults. and Patty,
Manzey had the second place
garment. In Class C, sewing for
children. Jane U!'wellyn had first
place, and Rose Barrows had
second place. Ms. Llewellyn also
placed third in Meigs County in
Class C.
A donation was made to the
Meigs County Council on Aging to
help fund projects for the elderly
and nC&lt;'dy.
Legislation was disrussed as a
part of the Uterary program, and
Easter readings, a contest and joke
completl'd til' program. Columbia
Grangt&gt; will visil Star Grange on
Aprlll5 and present the IJ"ogram.

'.

-...._.,. ., :::.J{
.

...

:'

UMW

·e

lly Unlled Press lnlematlonal
State officials say they will not
Issue penn its for open burning In
lire-sensitive areas during the
current dry, windy conditions
that have whipped up brush and
forest fires In what is the worst
outbreak of spring fires since
1950.
Tuesday Gov. Richard F.
Celeste said that peoplE' wishing
lo bum material outdoors muSI
.~dmYall\&gt;a perm11~Urofnda ls say
· t~ won't Issue permits in
lire-sensitive areas.
.
Twenty-three countk&gt;s and
parts of 10 others - mostly In
southern and southeastern O.hlo
- are Included In the firesensitive areas.
The governol'- could no I declare an outdoor burning ban
because he lacked the lpgal
authority. Prople violatln~ permil rules, could bl&gt; fined $aX!.
Rain fell in some parts of Ohio
'Ji.Jesday evening, but not In
Scioto County along lhe Ohio
River when• some of the worst
fires of the day occurred.
Autoorities said 235 acres
were burned, one house and one
mobile home were destroyed
and two firelighters suffered
minor Injuries. One was said to
have suffered from smoke inhalation and Oil(' Injured a hand .
Three children riding their bikes
were trapped for a while by
names In the Rubyville area of
Scioto County but were rescued
by firefighters.

WASHINGTON iUPit - The
has ordered Union
Carbide to pay a $1.3 million fine for
safety vlolatilns at a chemical
plant In West VIrginia , th~ biggest
penalty sought In the Occupational
Safety and HE&gt;alth Administration's
15-yO'ar history.
Union Carbide, however. said it
would "vigorously contest" the
penalties proposed Tuesday by
OSHA and announced tiy Lahar
Secretary William Brock .
The n&gt;cord fine, which the
company has 15 days to challenge
and could bl&gt; reduced through
negmlatlons, followed a "wall-towall" OOHA Inspection of Union

Kings
&amp;
lOO'
s
Also available in Menl/io/,. •

SURGEON GENE·RAL'S WARNING : Smoking
By Pregnant Women May RestiiL.in. fetal
Injury, Premature Birth. And Low Birth Weight.

individual education plans utilizing microcomputers.
John Perrine and three Chapter 1 readingtffichers
were authorized Ia attend a one day reading styles
seminar to be held in Columbus on April28. Dr. Mar1e
Carbo, one of thr nation's foremost authoritll's on
··reading slyles, will be seminar leader.
The board granted p&lt;-nnission to Janice Weber and
four students to attend the FHA -HERO State
Convention on AprU 25 and 26 at Veterans Mernortal
Audltorlum in Columbus. The local chapter will pay
the costs inv-ol ved .
The board granted approved for Valerie Am
Ramsbottom, vocal mu sic director, and the show
choir to participate in a spring festival and
competition on April27. Approval was also given for
Charles Collins to assist with the baseball program
and Don Jackson wit hthe softball program at no cost
to the district .
Calamity days for th(• school year were approved.

state's
worst
sprtng
lire [iij;at;W~iiii$iiiiiiii/Eii~~:::::;]
season In
recent
yearsforest
and they
lear it will bl&gt;come the worst in
Outdoor Fires Banned In 23 County Region
the division's history If the
unseasonably warm and dry
weather conditions continue,"
said CE'Ieste.
"I urge all citizens, especially
In the state's densely forested
areas, not to Ignite any outdoor
fires."
- I
OHIO
'file ban affects Adams,
r---1
••~ ·I
l
I
I
,- · J
- . .......
Athens, Belmont, Cacrou. CoI
~
I
I
J .
shocton, Ga llia, Guernsey, HarI
)
1
1
- .l "'! .
'
I ;.. - - - - :,. _:...__ . •
• :
rison, Hocking. Jackson, Jeffer·
,... L"'
r
\
,r-..
·
I
·t
I
son, Lawrence, Meigs, Monroe,
I
......... .... ~!
.. . ..... 1
( ) Full ban on
f
'J
~
I
Morgan, Musklngum, Noble,
;
I
.
I
I
J
I
· outdoor fir~s
r .- " . . . ._.. l . .......... ....s. ..... \ ..,., ........
I .
Perry, Pike, Scioto, 'li.JscaraI
. I
I
I
was, Vinton and Washington and
() Pat1ial ban on
1
J
I
I
,
L..
...
_
_
...
t
.,
,
.
..
-,
parts of Ashland, Columbiana,
· outdoor fires
,
!.. t
Fairfield, Highland, Holmes,
I
\...,. .., .. J ..
I
1
'
'
Knox, Licking, Richland, Ross
1
~n
:
1"'~'·- ~---'
and Stark.
"r
' ..·r~ L ,. j .
~ .... - ,. __
1
.
I
'1
Tom Berger. stall forester
, .. /
. . t- ..... -1
with the Division of Forestry,
/
\
I
I
·- -- .....
said sta te firefighters were
I
.
I
l _ ..,, _, • • t , ...
battling a bia7.e 11onh of New
I
1- ... ..
&amp;.;ton In Scioto Cou nty, while
I
I
crews from the U.S. Forest
Service were fighting two other
bia+es in the Wayne Nationa l -1,-,..-- ----Forest .
·
"They (state firefighters)
were hopl n~ they could eontaln
BURNING BANNED - People wishing to bum material outdoors
It, but the wind has been gusting
must olllaln a pennlt, but offlclalt! say. they won't Issue pennlts In
a1 to 30 mph and-it won't stop
nre-..,nsitlve areas. Twenty-three countie!l and parts of 10 others burning," he said.
m0811y In soulhem and southeiUitml Ohio - are lnc..ded In the
State foresty officials estlm~e
fire-sensitive areas.
as many as 000 seaparate fires
out in the county's parks, some
County Park Dislrict issued a
have destroyed' more than ll ,(XX)
forest fire ale11 for the county's
of which are heavily forested,
acres in Ohio in 10 days. Most
16 parks. the first time In the
but park officials are warning
have been started by ca reless
56-year history of liP park
visitors to be very careful
trash burners. but a good
district that such an alert was
percentage have bl&gt;en dcllber·
because dry conditilns could
Issued bl&gt;fore S~.Jmmer.
cause a firl' to quickly sprl'ad
atcly sel, Berger said.
and get out of co ntrol.
ln Clnclnnall, the Hamiil on
No major fires have broken

-,

r-.. .

Carbide's plant at Institute, W.Va,
that turned up 221 safety violations.
The Inspection was sparkl'd by an
August · 1985 accident In which a
toxic chemical cloud escaped from
the sprawUng laclllty, Injuring 135
area residents and plan t workers.
"We just were surprised to lind
conscious, willful, overt violations
on such a widespread basis," Brock
said. "We found what we belk&gt;ve to
be very serious problems with the
Institute plant's safety systems, its
reconlkeeplng, Its safety and health
programs, and Its safety management systems.
"We. found employees without
respirators being asked to detect

the presence of deadly gas by
sn~ling the air alter alarms
indicated a leak. We used to use
canaries for that. "
Plant managpment consistently
Ia iled to report serious on-the-job
Injuries, Brock said,' Including
broken bones and eye Injuries.
ln Danbury, Conn., Unkln Carbide President Robl&gt;rt Kennedy
sald: "We fl'E'I ' that OSHA has
grossly distorted the actual saiety ·
conditions and attitudes In the
plant. Most ol tbe citations ar~
entirely unju~tified and our attor~
neys have been Instructed to file an
appeal."
On Dec. 3, 1984, a gas leak at a

Union Carbide pesticide plant in
Bhopal, lni:lla, caused what has
been called th ~ worst Industria l
accidenl In history , killing more
than 2,500 people.
~

Appl-cants sought for rehab project
Middleport ll'layor Frffi Hoffman
anhounced today the village wlll
soon be applying for funds for a
housing rehabilitation program
similar to the one operated by the
vUiage in 1982-84. .
Village officials request that
:. anyone needing repairs to their
t , tJomes thr'OIIIh tbLs program to
r. -~ the O!llce of Community
·, IJp;elopml!nt . at 992-6782 before
ApriJlO.

• 1
Kings: 10 mg " Ia( 0.8 mg mcctine IOO's. t2 mg "tar: · 0.9 mg nicotine av. pe1 ciga1e1te b1 flC mel hod .

show

Mh's. suggested p1ictng based on lull·ptitebrands
I

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

James Wilhelm, Jr., band instructor, reported oo
the Ohio Music Education Assn . co nventkln and
Wendy Halar, principal at 'Ji.Jppers Plains and
Riverview, reported on a principals' conference she
aMended on March 18and19. Board member Manicke
reported on a spring conference held in Columbu s
l'l'gardlng legal aspects of school rmployl'E'contracts.
A motion fo set aside $1,CXXI Ia covpr expenses In
obtaining legal counsel with expertise In school law
pertaining to renewei, non-renewal ani! termmatkln
of schoo, contracts passed unanimously.
The board also unanimously approved a new set d
bus conduct rules formulated by a bus committee.
The board agrl'E'd to apply lor !'llglbllJty with the
federal surplus property department of admlnistralive servicl&gt;s to be used for educational J11rposes. The
board will me&lt;&gt;t in special session on AprU 16 and
regular session on April25, both me&lt;&gt;tlngs starting at 7
p.m.

.Open homing ban·declared Rhodes ·blasts
Celeste
again
in 23 fire-sensitive counties

~vcrnment

PAGEVILLE -Scipio Volunteer
Fire Department Ladles Auxiliary
Is sponsoring a smorgasbord Saturday, !rom 5 to 7 p.m., at the
PagevUie Townhouse. Prodeeds to
the jlre department.

"

contract lor Martin, pmposed by Smith and Gaul,
failed at a 3-2 vote. The one year contact for Martin
was putto a vote and passed 3-2 wllhHeines, Manlcke
and Caldwell voting in favor of It and Smith and Gaul
casting no votes.
Bus bids on two vehicles were accepted. The cost
will bl&gt; $35,00.64 after reimbursement by the state.
The bodies were purchased from Edwin H. Davis and
Son, Inc., Langsville, and the chassls)rom Gibson
Truck Parts and Equipment, Inc., Athens.
Two executive sessions were held, one for heartngs
with parents concerning bus discipline problems and
another for teachers. Discliplinary action taken ey
the administration will stand, It was announced.
The board approved an Appleworks workshop on
Aprll_8 for special education personnel, Carol Brewer,
Mary Jo Buckley, Ron Hill and Mike Douglas. The
workshop will be held at Ohio University Inn with no
cost to the hoard. It will place emphasis on creating

·violations net Union ·Carbide $1.3
million fine
·.

FRIDAY
REEDSVILLE ~ Olive Township Trustees will ml'E't Friday, 6: :xJ
p.m., at the Reedsville fire station.

I ,.
2 Sections 16 Pages

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio. Wednesday, April 2, 1986

Easteffi"s LocaTl:!oard of Education nas approved
its annual approprtations resolution totaling
$1,545,129.71. The tax amounts and rate for the 19ffi.fl7
budget were accepted. The tax rates consists of four
mills Inside and 21 rnUis outside.
Anticipated revenuE' wlll be $102,287 for the four
Inside mllls and $524,221 for the outside millage. ln
addition, one-half mill will bring in $12,582 for debt
service.
,
BY a 3-2 vote, the board set work blurs for
administrators In the Eastern Local School District
from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. eac h day wtth ll minutes for
lunch.
Board members. Roger Gaul and Jtni Smith, voted
against the sch&lt;;'dule of hours and board members,
SuS\e Heines, Kathy Manicke and James Ca ldwell
voting lor the measure.
The board was again split (3-21 on a vote to give
Rick Martin, prtnclpal at the Chester Elementary
School, a one year contract. A motion for a .three

Natural Resources' Division of
F01·estry is in the midst of the

TIIURSDAY
SYRACUSE - The Meigs Association for Retarded Cit izens will
meet Thursday, 7 p.m.. a t the
Cark&gt;ton School.

ALFRED-Alfred t.liuted Meth·
odist Church Yiluth Fellowship is
sponsoring a soup supper Saturday,
4 to 7 p.m., at the church on Sl. Rt.
681. On the menu wUI be vegetable
soup, chUI, hoi dogs, sloppY jOE'S,
homemade· pies, coffee, tea and
• pOp.

etittne

Eastern board ·okays appropriations

"The Ohio Department of

WEDNESDAY
SC'I PIO - Senior citizen's of
Scipio Township will have blood
pressure day, Wednesday, from 2to
4 p.m. at the Scipio lire house. The
J11blic is Invited.

SATURDAY
POMEROY - Royal Oak Dance
Club Is sponsoring a dance, Satur·
day, 8 p.m. to 12midnlght, at Royal
Oak Park. Admission at the door is
$15. Music by the Tunetimers of
Columbus.

•

at y

Vol .35," llto .246
Copyrighted 1986

Weekly Bible studies and prayer
sessions lor the summer were

Calendar

•

. In order to
a definite neep
for this type of assistance -In the
community, the mayer said applications . for lDme repair wUI be
I " -·~ -

- ·· ·~t

takm now before the tirant applicaUon Is 'submitted. All applicants
submitting bl&gt;fore the April 10
deadline will rECeive top priority if
the application Is approved by the
state.
Both rerital property and ojVner·
occupied homes wlll be eligible lor
this prqp'am and ali It yet, no
particular area ot the community
has been targeted for assistance,
which means the area from which
most applications are received wUI
probably become the targeted area
with an In-depth survey of that area
being conducled bl&gt;fore application
submission.

I

,.

lncorne guidelines and ap~atlon
forms are available at the Office &lt;1
Communi ty Development, 237
Race St ., along with assistance In
filling out applications.

The mayor stressed the lmportanre of filing applications immediately slnre the number of appHcants wiU be used in convincing
state officials of the nl'E'd for this
program In Middlepot1.
Since these federal funds are
Umlted, only those communities
with exceptional needs and data
will 5Urvlve the compeiitkm from
all over Ohio.

DETAJLS FINE - Labor
Secretary William Brock tells
repooters 'IU~ that the

Ocatpallonal Safety and Health
Admlolstratlon (OSHA) has ordered the bluest penalties 1n 1ts
l~year hl8tory. The agency Is
lining Union Carblde $1.3 mWion
for more than QJ safd]o viola·
tlontllli the compants chemical
plant In lnslltute, W.Va. UPI.

IRONTON, Ohio (UP! I
Fonner Gov. James Rhodes again
lashed out at Gov. Richard O&gt;ieste
'Ji.Jesday, but a Celeste spokesman
said Rhodes ' comments were appropriate for April Fool's Day.
Rhodes , ooe of three candidates
for the Republican gubernatorial
nomination, told a Republican
audience In Ironton that, if elected,
he will revitalize the slate's busi·
ness climate to tnake it attractive to
business and industry.
" The present governor is chasing
industry and jobs out of Ohio with
his anti-business actions and poll·
cles," Rhodes said in notes prepared for a speech at the Lawrence
County Uncoln Day Dinll{'r. "We
can' t afford fourmore yearsofthis.
"Ohio's unemployment rate Is
one of the highest in the country .
Celeste says he's proud of it . His
pride Is misplaced, " Rhodes said,
adding that 46 of Ohio's 88 counties
stiil have recession· k?\'el unem·
ployment of 10 percent or higher.
"Celeste may be proud that there
are 455,000 Ohioans unemployed
today, but nobody ciS(&gt; Is ," be said.
Brian Usher, a Celeste spokes·
man, said in a telephone Interview
that Rhodes' statement s are "nonfacts."
"The fonner governor mu st be
taking April Fool's day jokes.
seriously, in continuing to spred his
non-facts," Usher said, echoing the
Celeste's sentiments exlJ"essed at
Democratic party dinners In Nel sonville and Daytoh Tuesday
evening.
" If it were up to Rhodes. Ohioans
would ceieb!"dle April Fool's Day
all year long," Usher said .
"Ohio ha s recovered at a faster
pace than the natklnaiaverage," he
said. "When Rhodes ll"ft (unem·
ploymentt was at least 14 percent.
Now It' s below9 percent. It also has
dropped at a faster rate than the
national average ... that's an
example of a (Rhodes') non- !act.
Thai's the kind of April Fool's Day

joke Rhodes likes to tell."
Rhodes also said he wUI restore
professionalism In the Developmen! Department by getting ride of
"the amatro rs and the hacks who
don't know the first thing about
attracting and ke&lt;&gt;ping induSiry.
Rhodes knocked what ~ called
CE'leste's inaction on the state
Workers' Compensation problem,
which. combinl'd with tax In·
creases. have chased Industry from
Ohio, he said .
" It was no acc ident that Celeste
lost · !General Motors' ! Saturn
(plant ! to Tennessee , Toyota to
Kentucky. Chrysler- Mitsublshl to
IUinois, Ma?.da to Michigan and
General Motors to Indiana,"
Rhodes sa id. "They are not going to
come to a state wher!' the cost II.
doing business is higher than in
most other competitor states."
Usher said taxes were ralsl'd :II
times In the last four years ~
Thodes ' administration, "and they
still didn 't balance the budget."
"Rhodes likes to lhink that we're
all ilollsh enough to take the mess
(Rhodes and his administrators!
created and k&gt;ft for us four years
ago ... and let them do It again."
·

Fonner Governor
James A. Rhodes

Long oil slick found
in ·river at Pomeroy
u.s. Coast Guard autoortties somewhat hl~h&lt;'l' - about 2,111)
were in the · Pomeroy-Middleport gallons, Shelle)· addl'd. •
area around noon.Monday trying to
An EPA cl&lt;'anup crew was·
determine 'the origin or' a large oil reported to he in til' Poln \ PleaSJnt
sUck on the Ohio River thought ID area about 111 a .m . 'Ji.Jeslla)'.
have begun somewhere between however, according tu ShPIIey,
mUes 249 and-250 around Pomeroy. cleanup m~asu rcs will only be
Lt. Frank· Shelley of the Coast feasible " II enou ~h Oil is localized In
Guard's Huntlrigtlllj office reports one area ."
that authortttes do riOt know how
The coast gu ard has sent sampJcos
long the sUck Is or where It came of the spill to a laboratory for
from.
tl'stlng. but results wUl rot be
He says the Ollis a thick, black available for about three weeks.
substance with a strong odor and
And wherwer the cil leak came
has the appearance of crank case from, ShE&gt;iley says the ieaka~e
oU.He says it extends down river to appears to hav~ stopped.
mile 310 at Huntington and possibly
beyond.
No· flshkUi has been noticed by
1
A guard patrol boat was on the coast guard authorities, he reports.
Keith Little of the Meigs County
river Monday in the PomeroyHealth Department reports that
Middleport area and a small
Meigs health authorities took picprlvale airplane was used to take
tures of the spill from the Midc!leplctur'!!s d the slick as It sprpad
port levl'E' at about 3 p.m. Tuesdownriver.
The Environmental Protection daay: He says it lookro to him thaJ- ·
the largest concentration of cil was:
• Agel~CS' Is coordinating ' cleanup
atthat point. He said some 91 the 011- •
efforts, Shelley saya. He estimates
hal! washed up on the slnre
about l,:m gallons of Oil !pllled Into
Middleport.
the river. EPA's estimated !lgurp Is

tn: :.

�--~-~"-~

Wednesday, April 2, 1986

:; ..

'.
'

•

P~e~2-The ·Daily Senti~el ·
Pomeroy- MiddlePQrt. Ohtc
Wednesday. April 2, 1986
I

.!.,! -....------------~------..,
.. . I'
.·;...
.
.
~- .

'. •

....;'
.

~~

The Daily Sentinel
.
Coun

111
Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERfllTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

- '"
'

. •

.'
ROBERT L. WINGETI'

Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General ~Ian ager

PAT WHITEHEAD
·Assistant Publlsher/ Contrqller
DALE ROTHGEB,' JR.
News Editor
A MEMBE R

or The Unll ed Pres s Interna tiona l, Inla nd Da ily Press Associ a·

First. casualty of war __:. __ _ _ _.___J_am_e~s1_. K_i_lp_at_ric_k
WASH INGTON - 'Ji·uth is the
fir st casualty In war. We saw tha t
aphroism reafliJm ed last week In
the Libyan affair. White House
· spokesman Larry Speakes repeatedly insisted that the president had
not the slightest though of provok·
lng Col. Moamma r Khadafy. PerIsh the thought ' It was the lu rtrest
·thing from the president's mind.
Mr. Reagan's sole plllpose was to
mount '·. a peaceful navagatlonal
exercise intended to make "a legal
(X)in t.'"

t!On and the America n Newspaper Publisher s Associ ation .

LETIERS OF OPINION are welco me . They should be less than ~ words
long. All letters are subject to edltlne and mu st be signed wtth name, address and
t ~ephOne number , No unsigned ltotte rs will be published . Letter s should be In

.··

good tu te, addresslng Issues, not perscmalltles.

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

Unleash the truth
Chuck Stone
When I read that a dozen broadcast
The only judicial rationale lor the
and jGunlallllm organizations had pe- fairness doctrine ma y be found in one
titioned a federal appeals court to word. Scarce.
stqp tile Federal Communications
"II does not violate the First
COIIIIDIIslon from enforcing the "fair- Amendment," the Supreme Court
MSS doctrine ," my memory flipped ruled in 1969 "to treat broadcast liback 52 years to a literary exercise censees, given the privilege of using
between my father and youngest sis- scarce (my emphasis) radio frequen·
cies. as proxies for the entlre.eommy~ .
ter, Irene.
My father was bouncing 5-year-old nity, obligated to give suitable time
"daddy's favorite little girl" on his and attention to matters of great pub·
knee and pointed to a newspaper lie concern."
headline . .
"Can you read this'" he mischleAn incredible leap from electronic
voosly inquirt:d.
fact to judlci.al fancy.
Irene assured him that she could.
In the early years of radio, broadWhat does it say' persisted my father. casters welcomed government regu·
"See what it says'" asked Irene, lation and allocation of scarce frepointing to the headline. My lather quencies. At some point. our
nodded. "That's what it says."
government decided the right to regu·
Either the First Amendment says late frequencies could be translated
what it says or Congress and the as a right to regulate free speech.
coorts have succumbed to the folly of Congress agreed . Few protested. Cer·
Spencer's lament, "How often mis- tainly, not newspapers.
used words generate misleading
In 1986, with television and radio
. thooghts."
almost equal partners in the dissemiThe First Amendment does m t nation of new!Mind ideas and "lull and
equivocate. "Congress shall make no free discussion,' ' the fairness doctrine
law ... abridging the freedom of speech debilitates the First Amendment.
or the press .... " ·
Premature government worries
But Congress bas made a law about network monopolies on opinion
abridging television's and radio's have been proven fatuous .
fr~om of speech, and the courts
Today, there are 9,766 radio sta· - have upheld it.
tions, 1,208 television stations, i,688
My dual professional commit.m,ents daily newspapers and we haven't yet
are a case in point. In addition to this fully exploited cable television.
column, I host a five-day-a-week talk
In Philadelphia, residents get the
show on WCAU· TV in Philadelphia: news lrom 20 radio stations. nine teleMany ol the criticisms I have leveled vision stations and only two daily
at President Reagan or other public newspapers. Extending the Supreme
. figures In my column would not be Court's logic, a "fairness doctrine"
. . : permitted on my television show be· lor newspapers would be appropriate
' · caUBe of the "fairness doctrine." It "to present representative communi'.: . .' ! mandates equal broadcast time to any ty views on controversial issues."
;;·. public figure who is attacked or crili·
Some 324 y.ears ago, Jolin Milton
:. ' ciZed in an editorial or whose oppo- wrote in "Aeropagilica" that we in·
; nent is supported editorially. .
jure truth "by licensing and prohibit.,'' . II newspapers are not req01red to ing to misdoubt her strength. Let her
· provide "equal time," why should an!! falsehood grapple. Whoever knew
television and radio stations be treat- truth put to the worse, in a free and
. ed as constitutional second-class open encounter."
.
~- :&lt; ~ i citizens?
Fortunately, a swelling number of
: ·:; · For the same reason, I guess, the Americans, including FCC Chairman
. _' :; Supreme Court held in Plessy n Fer· Mark S. Fowler, and print and elecgUSOII, 1896, that "separ~te but equal" tronic organizations are trying to
.. ·. . scbools were constitutional and Con· keep faith with Milton. "Licensing" of
·. . gress agreed lor the next sa yean. free speech stifles honest discussion,
,· : -, SometimeS, democracy Is a sfow whether it is practiced by the king of
: ,. , ' learner. But with painstaking nobil- England in 1643 or the U.S. Congress
. ily it does learn and change. So far , in 1986.
If you agree. drop your represenl&lt;l. ,! ~. the faii'ness doctrine, a crusty
·. relic from the past, has defied change. ti ve or senator a letter and sav so.

z.,. ,

,.

Letters to ·editor
Egg hunt appreciated

.

:I would like to thank the
"' : , - Rutland American 1.eglon and
· : the Sons of too Legion Post 467for
· . ttl? nice Easter Egg Hunt and gift
· ·dra wing It held at the Rutland

American Li!glon. It was really
nlee and lots of fun for the kids. I
just wanted thelff to know my
family really appreciated it .
·
Candy Tobin

Not insane
I would like to say , one would
Stahl's letter tb the ooltor March · have to be a foolish person toev!,r
28; 1986. Stating - Insane out ol call any human being Insane. If
the Ne w World dictionary of the you were not there, how do you
America n language, second edl · . even know-what went on concern·
Uon . Insa ne: Mentally Ill or jng Mrs. Larkins law suit aga inst
di!ran ged, demented , mad . Word Sher iff F rank, Mr.Moody, Bismeaning fr. F ool-Ish: 1. rldlcu· sell and Snyder ? Mrs . Larkins Is
taus, absurd , a bashed, wisdom, oot Insan e by a long shot lady .
Cha rl ene K. Yonker
silly, a~s urd, unwise, ridi culous,
Letart, W.Va .
worthl ess .
In reference to Ms. Barbara

Today in history
Toda~ is WedneSday, "April 2, the 92nd day of 1986 with Z73 to tlUow.
The moon Is moving away from Its third quarter.
'!'he momlpg stars are Mercury, Ma rs, Jupiter and Saturn.
The evening star Is Venus. .
Those born on this date are under the sign ol Aries. They Include the
French Emperor Charlemagne In 7(l A.D.; .,II&lt;lllan author Giovanni
Casanova In 1725; Danish storyt.eller Hans Christian Anderson In 18J5;
French sculptor Frroerlc Barthold!, who created the Sta tue fi Liberty, In
1834; French novelist Emile ZO!a In 18«J; educator Nicholas Murray Butler
tn 1862; automotive pioneer Walter P. Chrysler In 1875; actors Buddy
Ebsen In 19!1! (age 78), Sir AlecGulnness In 1914 (~ge'l'l ), and J ack Webb in
1!r.ll; and country singer Emmylou Harrts In 1947 (age 391.
On this date In history:
In 1792, Congress passed legislation i ulbofizlng Ire U.S. mint to roln
money, all to be Inscribed with the la tin wor.ds "E Pluribu s Unum"- "Out
' of Many, One." ·
·
In 1917, President Woodrow Wilson ~sked Congress lor a declaration of
war against Germany.
In 1932, CbarleS Lindbergh lett $00,00&gt; In bllls In a New York City
cemetery In hopes of regaining his kidnaped son. ·Bruno Hauptmann
' ·, sui!Sequent!Y was found guUty of Jddnaplng and mmleringthe Llndber~
··;·~· child 11Qd was executed. ·
·.
.
·

.-·..

-.

.

Well, yes, Larry, but then again,
no, Larry. The president sent three
aircraft carriers and 27 otl'&lt;'r
combat sh ips, armed to the very top
of tbelrdecks, into thecolonel's Gulf
of Sidra. The president had a chip
on his shoulder. He dared Khadafy
to knock it off. Short of sendlng
George Bush to punch the Libya n
leader tit the nose, It Is difficult to
Imagine an ac t that would be a ny
more provocative.
The touble was, it didn't provoke

much. The colonel fired six SA·5
mlssles at U.S. lighters at U.S.
lighter planes. They all missed. In
retaliation, we took out two Libyan
patrol boats imd messed .up their
radar base at Sirte. This was not
wha t you would call another Battle
of Midway. As naval engagement s
go, It was a long, long way from
Trafalgar.

Greece a party committa• l,s su&lt;XI a
statement · accu$lg the Villi :xi
States of risking "a holocaust In the
Mooi)erranean ." Spain was cool.
Italy mumbled . a protest. 'lbe
French behaved Frenchly. That
was about the size of It. Apart from
Sy iia and the Soviet Union, the
colonel has lew friends anywhere In
the world. .

Still, It was a useful little way in
every way. The Six th Fleet galned
some exper ience with shots fired ln
anger. Ou r airmen got some
practice In evading the Soviet
SA·5s. The United States made Its
point that the Gulf of Sidra does not
belong to the colonel. Great powers,
if they would remaln great powers,
must demonstrate that power now
and then. This was a modest
demonstration. It was mostly
elfeetlve.

Khadafy' s reactkm should not be
disdained as the bluffing and
blustering of a madll\an. "It Is a
time lo r confrbnl&lt;ltlon," he said, "a
time lor war." He threatenoo
rel&lt;lllation against U.S. facWtles
"all over the world." u~a·s
cificlal radio called lor attacks oii
American bases In the Arab
homeland . The threats ought to be
taken seriously. The man Is as
dangerous as a drunk with a
straight razor.

Other na tions, you will note,
reacted mildly. The Sov iet Un.lon, to
be sure, put up a squawk, but it was
not a loud or bellicose squawk. In

This means that SECUJity must be
furt her '·ttght.enoo ar American
embassies and military bases.
Khadafy Is perfectly capable of

fiG)
APRIL

n~
APRIL

()bscene

fl7J
APRIL

sendi ng his ICI'rorlsts anywhere.
Tllese are suicide squads. · As the
world saw last December, lnt he
horror of the at!&lt;leks in Vienna and
Rome .. Kltad ~e llghts In the
men, women
slaughter of clv'
an d children. his Is a dreadful
game thp t he plays - pointless,
mindless, demonstrating nothing
more than the . ugl iness of an
egomaniac at work.

"'.

Yes, it was risky fort he pre;sldent
to provoke the Libyan leader, but
obviously ttl? risk was carefully
calculatoo , Khadafy may be mad,
but Khadafy Is not stupid. He was
oot about to respond to the Sixth
Fleet by flinging his entire navy Into
an all-oot engagement. He never
dispatched Libyan i lghters anywhere nea r the American task
force. When It comes to conventional warfare. Libya Is a popgun
foe.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

·By United Press lntematlonnl
Major league baseball teams conductoo a massive
sprlng cleaning Thursday, with such famllla·r names
as Pa scual Perez , Len Barker, Rick Camp, Riehle
Hebner, Ter ry Fra ncona and Jack Percont e being
swept away in the roster cutdowns.
The At lanta Braves had ttl? biggest over haul with
manager Chuck Tanner and general manager Bobby
Cox releasing four veteran pit chers and sending six
other players to the minors.
In the bigg st one-day roster chang~&gt; in their 20
years ln Atlanta , the Braves asked. waivers on
pitchers Pere'l, Ba rker, Camp and Terry Forster, and
shipped outfielders Albert Hall and Brad Kommlnsk,
first baseman Gerald Perry . ca tcher Larry Owen.
and infielders Paul Runge and Pa ul Zuvella to tl'&lt;' ir
Richmond tVa.J farm club of ttl? International
League.
In addition. the Braves ,.ofler&lt;XI a major league
co~tract to l'l'tt•ran outf_
leld&lt;'l' Omar Moreno , who
spilt last season between the New York Yankees and
Kansas City and came to the Braves' ca mp as a free
agent. They also asked that pitcher Pelf' Falcone be

reinstated from 'the retirement Ust so they could as k .
lor his outright release to enable him to play again.
Pere"l, 28, won J.l garileslor the Braves In :i983-84 but
was only 1·131ast season alter pining ttl? team la te
beca use he had been ja ii&lt;XI In his native Dominican
Republic lor drug possession. He pitched fairly well .
this spring but inc um &gt;d Tanner's wrath ~ his
tardiness .
Barker, :JO, pitched a perfect game for Cleveland in •
1981 and w(ln 15 games lor the Indians In 1982 but had
only a 10-20 record since joining the Braves late In the
1983 season. He was 2·9 with a 6.:£ E RA last year
when he was plagued with elbow problems.
Ca mp , 32, spent10 seasons with the Braves, posting
a !'.6-49 record . He averaged about :.!J starts a season in
1982-83-84 but was used almost exclusively in middle
rPI!eflast year a nd went 4.£.
Forster, 34. spent 12 seasons with the Chicago White
Sox, Pittsburg h a nd the Los Angeles Dodgers before
being slg!\ed as a fret• agent after ttl? 1982 season. He
was 7-5 for Atlanta during the past three seasons a nd
f'('C('!Ved greater recogn ition for a weight proble m

RACINE - A nine run seventh
Inning boosted ttl? Wahama White
Falcons to a 15-6 non-league
triumph over Southern here Tuesday In boys' varsity ba seba ll action.
Matt Thompson with relief from
Marshall plckoo up the w1n wtth
only one walk and thrre strikeouts.
Grueser sulferoo the loss In relief of
Brian Frreman , "while Bostick
finished up the game. Southern
pitching walked 14 and fanned 5.
A walk, error, and triple by Matt
Thompson gave Wah am a a 3-0'Iead
as Thompson ca me lllme on a
grounder.
Four walks gave WHS a run in
the second fr ame as Frooman H t
the game, the score 4-0.
In the third Inning Matt J ewell led
orr with a single, Hesson walked,
F isher singled. and Gress singled' ·
for a 6-0 lead.

The useful li ttle war m ay have
provided one more perlp!Jeral
lesson. It minds us anew of the
sheer lo lly of the War Powers
Resolution or 1973, "-'rely the wor.;e
piece of rongresslonal ieg'lslatlon
s ino&gt; the Alien and Sedition Acts of
1798. Rep. Da
aseell, a Florida
Democrat, romp
last week
that the president 11 -violatoo the
law in not letting Co gress know In
advance that the Navy fighters
would lire if they were !lroo upon.

offenses committed by law enforcement officials are considered too
lnslgn ~ican t to be given special
treatment."
Nor did the International Association of Chiefs ci Pollee show much
concern. "In the opinion of ttl?
IACP. illegal drug IPalflckln g ~
law enforcement officials is "-'Ch a
rare occurrence that It Is oot
sign ificant enough to krep separ.
a too sl&lt;ltlstics," the Justice Department report notes.
Even Ignoring the fact that
lawmen gone bad contribute far
more to the b,reakdown of law and
order than oFainary criminals do,
there is evidence that the actual
number ci cases prosecutoo represents only the till of the Iceberg.
In fact, Kevin zeese or the
National Organization lor the Reform of Marijuana Laws has
identified more than lXl public
officials Involved in drug trafficking from 1983 to 1985, lnqludlng
dozens of cases or federal otflcla ls
implicated since the Justice Department's report .

Cotton·,mill blues __· ___· __R'o_b_ert_~_a_lte_rs
I

HILlSBOROUGH, N.C. (NEA)
At that time. U.S. textile and appar- gan administration that to become earnings of $268 a week or less than
The Eno Cotton Mill here has a tong, el imports were equivalent to 4.8 bil- competitive in the global market they $14.000 a year - hardly an extrava·
proud tradition dating back to its con· li on sq uare yards of material. That · must reduce wages - but the typical gant amount.
"We're running out of options,"
struction in 1895 - but today it fig ure increased in each ensuing yea r textile worker now earns only $6.70
says Cone Mills' Leonard. "especially
stands abandoned and forbidding be· and by 1985 it had more than doubled. an hour.
.
hind a bar be4 wire fence.
to 10.8 billion square yards.
At that rate. an employee working if the industry is going to be sacrifi ced
The mill's plight in recent years Last yea r. the value of this coun- a 40· hour week would have gross at the altar of Tree trade."
typifies the anguish of the entire tex- try's textile and apparel imports was
tile industry as it has sought to cope $21.2 billion. The val ue of its compa·
with competition beyond its control; rable exports was less ;han $3 .2 bitthe torrent of low·cos t imports from lion. producing a trade delicit of more
throughout lhe world.
than $18 billion.
·
The mill, the 550 jobs it provided at
Many of the cheap imports come
its peak, the residents of this small from Hong Kong, South Korea and the
T~t
community and the plant's owner. two Ch inas - but they also origi nate
in Portugal, Turkey, Sri Lanka, MauCone Mills Corp., all are victims.
ln the late 1950s, Cone Mills bega n ritiu s and scores ,of Third World na· ·
producing corduroy at the sprawling tions where WO\kers are paid less for
340,000-square-foot fa cility, but by a full day's work th an mill employees
the early 1980s, this country was ex- in thi s country earn in an hour.
periencing what William 0 . Leonard,
"I don't want to see the standard of
a company vice president. describes living in China improved on the backs
as "severe impor t penetration" of of North Carolinians,'! says Charl es
that fabric.
Dunn , executive vice president of the
Cone Mills sought to keep-the plant North Carolina T~xtile Man ufactur-·
open by addi ng twills and other tab- ers Assoc iation.
"If th e trend continues , we could
rics to its product line, but they also
laced stiff competition from imports. easily go bac k to rural pover ty lil&lt;e
"After losing $7 million at that one we hav.en'l seen in this state since the
facility , we just had to give it up," Depression ," adds Dunn, who says he
says Leonard. The plant closed per- is e spe~i a lly concerned about shrinkmanently in early 198t.
ing job market's effect on young peoThe textile, fiber and apparel in- pie who become "never hires" when
dustry is the largest single source of seeking their·first job.
employment in North c;arolina, pro:
"It's having a terrible impact on
vidmg jobS'-for slightly more than those just going into the labor mar·
300,000 peopl e - but its pay rolls now ket," he says. "I'm concerned about
are being r_elentlessly pared.
where we're going. It sca res me a lit- , the most rece nt mon th tie bite'
n J ll:nuary
.fpr' which sl&lt;ltistics are ava ilable,
La te la~ t yea r, both ho us~s of Con. Slightly more than 205,000 men ·and gress ap~rov ed, by substantia l majorwomen were working in the state's Illes, leg•slatJOn des1gned to Sigmlltextile mills alone _ a decline of • ca ntly restrict textile and apparel
more than 20,000 from the compara- impo_rts - but the bill was vetoed by
ble figure only one year ea rlier. Na· Pres1dent Reagan.
.
llonally, more than 150,000 textile . Industry ,?IIIClals say .~hey , are bemill jobs have been lost since 1980.
mg told by free traders rn the Rea-

OFF

flORIDA CoAaT,

f;ALVK,E OPERATION§
.CoNTINU£.. .

. predictoo lor him beca use of two major knee
opera tions, each of whch cost him a year.
Perconte, ·31, was given his release by the Seattle
Mariners. Traded to the the Mariners In 1983, he tied
the team record wit h 180 hits in 1984. He also lf'd the
club in stolen bases twice. Last year Perconte ba tted
.254.
The decision to drop Pr&gt;rconte means tha t rookie
Dan ny TartabuU will be tbc clu b's sl&lt;lrt ing second
-baseman. Tartabu ll hit 43 home runs and drove in 109
runs at Ca lgary last season.
Elsew here, the Houston Astros asked waivers on
relief pitcher Bill Dawley, th&lt;&gt; Expos dropped veteran
Infielder Iva n De.Tes u., a nd pitcher .fohn Stuper, the
New York Metscut relief pitcher Tom Gorman ll'&lt;'n
acqu ired pit cher Tony Ferreira from Kansas City and
· the Cincinnat i R&lt;XIs dropped relief pitcher DougBa ir.
The Milwaukee Brewers released veteran pitcher
Ray Bun·is and outfielder David Green and opt ioned
pitchers Bob Gibson and Chuck Porter and rookie
outfielder-first baseman J irri Adduci to Vancouver of
the Pacific Coast Lc•ague.

Southern ca me back In ttl?
bottom ha lf of the inning on a
Grueser single, Hensler wa lked,
Fr ee man s in gled, -,Am burgey
singled, Wickline singled, and John
Ri ffle singloo .
.
In the fourt h SHS tied the score
wt lh a Grueser double. Freeman
tripi&lt;XI, and Amburgey slammoo a
sacrifice Oy, ttl? score &amp;6.
Southern threatened in the slxth
fra me when pitcher Kell ey Grues·
er's head first slide was just shy of
th&lt;&gt; plate and the gam~ood tiro at
6-6.

!n tha t Incident Grueser "-lffer&lt;XI
a jammed wrist and pitched to ju st
one ba tter in the top of ttl? seventh.
mak ing way for Jay Bostick . The
ceil ing coll apsed as Wah ama
plated nine runs be fore the du st had
setti&lt;XI
the 15-6 fi nale.

on

Coach Mick Win-ebrenner whose
club had been undefeated, praised
his tea m for a grea t comeback aftPr
ge tting oown early in til&lt;' ga me.
Soutt.&gt;rn is oow 4-l overall and
Wahama 1-2.
Sout hern hitters were Freeman
with two singles and a triple.
Amburgey a single. Scott Wickline
two singles, J ohn Riffle a single. K.
c;ru'eser a single and a double.
Wahama hitters were Todd
Gress with two singles, Thompson a ·
triple and sin gle. Tucker a single,
Matt Jewell a single and double.
and Hesson a slngle, Wolle a single
and double, Fisher two singles.
OIJ4 200 0- 6- 9-4
.. :!12 flOO 9-1.1-12-2 .

Sou 1hNn
Wiihilm cl
Bat!rrif's

B rian

Frf'f'ma n. Kf'll£'v

CI11 ('Sf'T' , .lav Boslick an d Sloan Gru£&gt;Sf'r .
148 8 , :1SO, th ump son, Clay and Tucker.

tAB . .1 SO.

NCAA champs given hero's
.welcome by 20,000 fans

-

classilied.survelllan o&gt; lnlbnnation
and selling it to a drug dealer. She
was sentenO?d to slx months In
prison and live yearn' proliatlon .
She lost an appeal.
- WUIIam C. Page, a specia l
district judge In Oklahoma County ,
Okla., was convictoo of providing
protection to an operation dealing In
cocaine, marijuana and Quaaludes.
He was sentenced to 14 years in
prison. He has appea led.
The list goes on and on.
Perhaps the most disturbing part
of the Justice Department report Is
the "What - me worry?" att itude
rome agencies take regarding
corruptbn in their own ranks.
For example, the Drug E nforcement Administration's "marijuana
~sk " informed J ustice t hat It had
" no readily available Information
concerning law-enforcement offi·
cia is In drug trafficking." Why riot?
"In any given year less tha n 25
police officers are Implicated In
Illegal drug activity," the EDA
exp alned. "For this reason, drug

that became the brunt of jokes from television la te
night host David Letterman.
Hall, Komminsk and Perry have all been regu lars
a t times lor the Braves, but mne of them have
dlstlng(Jished themselves.
Hebner, an 18-year major league veteran, was
given his outrlght release by the Chicago Cubs. The
Cubs also optioned sou thpaw pitcher Ray Font.c'liot,
bothered by Injuries In the spr ing, to their Iowa farm
team of the American Association (AAA 1.
A career .276 hitter, Hebner broke into major
league baseball In 1968 · wit ~ t ~ P ittsbu rgh Pirates:
He also played with Philadelphia, New Yor_k Metsand
Detroit. Last year with t.he Cubs, he battoo .217 with
three homers and 20 RBI .
Francona, whose promising ca reer was ruined by
two knee operations, was given his release by t ~
Montreal Expos.
The 26-year-old Francona, son of former major
leaguer Tito Francona, Is a five-year major league
veteran with a lifetime batting average of .290.
However, he never really achlevoo ttl? stardom

Waltama defeats Southern

p~fits ________________J_ac_k _A n_d_er_so_n

deputies and a variety or other
WASHINGTON - The obscene
persons a t all levels oJ government.
profit s In big-time dope traffic have
Here are some of the cases cltoo :
led to the kind of corruption among
-Joseph
Prlce,..a former special
some government officia ls tha t
of
the
Customs Service
agent
most Americans tend to consider an
assign~
,
to
the
Vice President' s
affliction of povertY-stricken Third
Druglfask
Force,
was convicted on
World · countries . The lure or
several
charges
after
he tried to
afflu ence is turning cops Into crooks
recruit
an
Informan
t
as
the middleon an alarming scale.
man
on
a
sa
le
of
~ashlsh
oil. Pr ice is
The evidence of this development
in
jail
awaiting
the
results
of his
Is conl&lt;l lned In an internal Justice
appeal.
Department report prepared last
- Harold Lawnmce, a Drug
year a t the request of Thomas J .
Enforcement
Administration spe·
O'Malley, then the act ing chief of
cia!
agent
with
30 years' experienq&gt;
the narcotics an d dangerous drugs
as
a
narcotics
olllcer, pleaded
section. O'Malley told our associate
·
guilty
to
conspiracy
In a drugDonald Goldberg the report was a
smuggling
operation.
survey or various law enforeencent
-Frank Robin Jr., a former
agencies ·and associations.
Justice
Department a ttorney; was
The report covered the period
convicted
of br ibery and obstrucfrom about 1981 through the end or
tion
of
justice
alter a drug-relatoo
1984, and It lists 142 government
Investigation.
According to the
empioyees or off icia ls who were
"The
prosecution... comreport:
caught dealing in some phase of
pared
Robin's
crime to that of
Illicit drug activity.
treason
during
a
Iinne of war."
The list Includes four judges, 12
other elected or appointed officials,
-Customs Patrol Officer Linda
48 police officers, 38 sheriffs or .Osterman was convlctoo of stea ling

Ttle Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

Massive spring,' cleruiing includes big names

That bizarre position presents a
pretty scenar io: The Libyans nre a
m issle, the U.S . pilot sees It coming,
the pilot calls the admiral, the
admiral calls the White House, and
the Whit e Hou se calls Dante
Faseell. ''I'll call a meeting of the
committee lor next Tuesday morning,'' says the gentleman from
Florida. "Meanwhile give the pilot
my regards."

...

•

-

f ..
''"".

\

I

"

•~"'",..#1.

• ft

MAKE! TAG - Oe•eland Indians' calcller Andy
AUanson tags Seattle Mariners' centerfielder Da•e
Henderson In the back during fifth Inning actloa

,

·~J.

\,, \

.:

•

..

. .
'

• •

'

•

G
""I
•

~

l

·~.

•.

"

....

Tuesday at Tucson, Ariz. AUanson caught a bouncing
foul tip from llenderson's bat. UPI.

Eastern gals split two games
BEVER LY - The. Fort Frye
Cadett es plated seven unearned
runs In ttl? bottom of the second
In ning enroute to a 19·15 non-league
triumph over the Easter n Eaglelles
here Tuesday even in g.
Eastern commllted 16 errors and
walked 9 batters to !IJI IT in
scoring posit ion mu ch of ttl? time.
(ioing into ttl? bott om or ttl?
second. Eastern led 3-1, bu t shabby
fi elding Ignited a seY$' run drtve
that propelled Ffi to th(\-wfn . •
Lisa Lance ted Eastern with a
double and single, while Lisa
Driggs. Lesa Ruck er. Arlene Rit-

ch le and Tanya Savoy each had
hits.
Amy Young sulferoo the loss
~spite ii good effort , fan ning five
and wa lking nine. Tammy Wal bu rn
plck&lt;XI up the win wit h no strikeouts
and 18 walks to her cred it .
Monday Eastern 's gals rolled to
an Impressive 17-12 win over
Symmes Valley to post a 2-0 k&gt;ague
record and 2-1 mark overall .
Eas t er~ hitt ers wer e Lesa
Rucker with Jwo singles and two
doubles, Arlene Ritchie a ooubl e
and triple. and singles ~ Tonya
Savoy, Amy Young and Amy

Lady Bobcats still unbeaten
Th e Kyger Cr('('k Lady Bobcats
improvoo their record to 4-0
Monday night with a 7-3 victory
over ' the Sou thern Tomadoett es.
K,vger Crct•k rallied from a 3-2
deficit to score four runs in the six th
to clin ch thr victory.
Renee Ward pirk&lt;XI up lhe win

working seven Innings wllh 10
str ikeouts, six walks and permitted
just three hits.
Rachel Reiber suffered the loss.
Kyger Creek 's offenmse conslted of
three doubles, one each by Wa rd,
Amy Brown -a nd Kelly Roush.

Hager.
Bryant, Owens, and Fuller had
the lone SV hits.
Amy Young was the winning
pitcher wit h seven strikeouts an d
five wa lks to her croolt. Symmes
Valley's Wilson suffered the bss
givin g up nine hits, ten walks, and
three st rikeouts.
Eastern agaln made sixteen
errors. Coach Pa m Douthitt said ,
"We did not do very well defensively. You just don't make 16
errors and win usually. We have a
lot of lnexpertenoed players In
positions they have never pl ayed
before."
Eastern overcame a 8-12 deficit
In the six th when Savoy slngloo,
Ritchie tripled, Amy Young
doubled, Rucker singled , Kim Dent
reached on an error, while another
two errors, a walk and Rucke r by
double produced the runs .
Amy Young ret ired the side In the
seventh after., Symmes Valley
loaded the ba ses but could not
srore.
Eastern travels. to Southwestern
tonight.

LOUISVl LLE , Ky. iUPil- For
the second .time .In this decade,
nearly 20,000 screaming fans
packed Freedom Hall .Tuesday
nlghi to pay tribute to college
basketball's national champion.
Louisville coach Denny Crum
att rtbuted this year's NCAA championship to a lot of ha rd work ,
dedication and unselfishness by ~i s
Ca rdinals.
·
" I think that really characterized
this team," he sa id. "Their will ingness to play together and give the
ball up to each other. Tha t's why we
gal the gre'at balanced scoring and
that 's why we were tough to bea t."
He said the celebra tion at
19,000-plu s seat Freedom Hall Is "a
nice way to culminate the season. I
remember In 198! when we did it
and it was a lot of fun then anddt is
something to remember for years
to come."
Da rrell Griffith , who led Louisville to the I9!ll championship, went
on to play professional bas ketba ll

with the Utah J azz and is now a lrce
agent working as a loca l television
sportscaster in the interim.
Gov . Marth a Lay ne Collins joined
Sen. Wendell Ford ID· Ky.), Rep.
Romano Maanli 1D· Ky. I, and
other dignitaries at the pep rally .
"Louisville is Number One and
there's not a better freshman In the
United States than Pervis EUis&lt;in.
There's not a berter basketball
tea m than the University of Loul~­
vlll~ ,'' Collins said to the carsp llttlng approval of the crowd.
Ass istant roac h Bobby Dotson
took center stage, telling the
jubil ant fa ns,- "They have tl'&lt;'se
polls that come out every week that
says Duke's number one or Nort h
Carolin a's num tFr one. They never
had the Ca rdinals number one all
yPar.
"When it cameoown to ttl? time it
rea lly counted these guys stepped
forward and prov&lt;XI lor you the
greatest fans in the Unitoo States
who was number one- that' s the
Cardin als."

Louisville mayor Jerry Abra mson took the podlum and anmuneed ·
20 signs will be placed around the
city designating the community as
the home of co llege ba ske tba ll 's
national champion.
·
At the same time, he took a shot
at lndi31la coach Botby Knight. ·
"The firs t one wen t up today at
Second and Main,'' Abramson said.
"The reason was because there's a
coach up the road, oh I guess 100
miles over in someolherstate nort h
of us, who was wearing a bunon
that s;lid 'Duke.'
"Now, wt.&gt;n those Hoos iers come
over ttl? river the first thing t t.&gt;y're·
go nna see is this," he said
displaying one of the ova l sigris
reading: "Louisville 1986 National
Champions."
Earlier in the day, ttl? Cardinals
traveled to the sta te Capilol In
FrankforT. where they were ho·
nored ~ members of the House and
Senate and Collins. who Issued a
proclamat ion making ApcU 1 "Uni versity of Louisville Cardinal Day."

Local bowling ·results. given
SKYUNE BO"LING ·lANES
MORMNG GLORIES
&amp;antbp for March 25, I!WJ

Team
~.
Brenda 's lb.itlque ........................ ...... .~

Francis F'lortsl.. ..................... ............. ~
HIIley Winf (WMP0' .... ... ....... ........... ~1(1

Dan's.. ........ .. ...... ...... .... ........ . ... .. .... 48

SmiTilns Olds. Cad . &amp; Cht'V ................. .44

Pizza Dan ... .... .................................. ... 38
RJols Plus .... ..................................... ...rJ

r'\",~l;:~n~"8.iiiie ~ iieiiii;, 1i ~ !i.l, 'in~

SK VU ~'E L.\~lll

SKVUNE BOWLING lANES
~IORNING GLORI ES

M~ttch ts , 1986
Team
Brrn ctfs BoJIIQuL
Fran ci.~ F"lorlSl.. .. .... ....... ....
Hln£1)' Win£&gt; 1WMP01 ...............
Slmmon5 Olds . Cad. &amp; Chf'v

Dan's.... .. .... ............ ..
Plz1.&lt;1Dan ... .....................
The Fabrir Shop .

MOR/'1.1 NG GLORIHI
Slllndings fo r Mllrd&gt; U!, 19116

Pt'i.

.......... ~
.. .. 52
. ..... 44
42

... ... 42
.. ..... 32
... 18

Pools Plu s ..
.. ...... ,.... .... ... .. .... 26
151 IHgh Ind. Ga m(' - Ma~· Ppr1('r, ID5:

High Ind. Game - June Lam ~~. 182: 3rd
2nd High Ind. Camf'- Shirl£')' Meadows. arl:
High Ind. Game- Sh~ley Mea~~ lSI; 1.&lt;1 . Jrd HIJ!h Ind . Gamr - Junr J..amtx&gt;r1 , 197: l~ t
High Jnd. 3-Games- June Lambert, 514: 2nd
High lnd. J.Games- .Jun e t.a mtx&gt;n. 561: 2nd
High Ind. J.Gamf'S - Shlrley Meadows. 492;
High Ind. lCames - Shirit&gt;y Meadows, !'130:
:rd High Ind. :&gt;Gam&lt;o -Chris Wheatley, 475. Jrd Hi,gh Ind. J.Gamrs - Mary Por1 t'r. 513.
1st High Team Gam(' - Pizza Dan, 1044:
1s1 Hl.e:h Tram Gamr - Simmons. Olds.
2nd High Team Game- Brenda's Bou!lq u(',
Cld. &amp; Ctwv .. 1051: 2nd Hl /;l'h Team Gam('1017: Jrd H~gh Team GamE&gt; - Hiney Wine Slrnroons Olds. Cad. &amp; Cht'V., 1041 : Jrd H}Rh
!WM POI. 1003; 1st High Tt'ilrn J.Cames Tram CamP- Hint"y Win£&gt; (WMPO l. 10Z7;
Hin ey Wine IWMPOJ. 281\l; 2nd High Tram
1st High Tram J.Cam('S - Dan's. :B92: 2nd
3-Games -Pools Plus, 2866; .lrd High Team
HJgh T£'arn J.Cam('5 - Sim mon'&gt; Olds, 2'!8.1;
J-Games- Pizza Dan, ~7.
3nl ID~h TPam .1-Games - Hln('y WinP .
I WMPO I, 29!1J.

Team
Pts.
An:nda '!io &amp;lutiqu£' .
. ................... . !'A
francis Florist.. ... .............
. .. .46
Hiney WlnC' t "'-'MPO I ......
. ..... . .... &lt;ll
IX!n's.....
.... . ......
. ... :tl
Simmons Olds, Cad . &amp; ChC'\'..
..... .31
Pizza Dnn ...... .. .. . .... . ..... ... .
. ... :n
Thr F•brir Shop ............. ......... ... ... ~
Pools Plus ............................. .'........... . '.ll
lsi High lnd\'. Game - Corky K('llnedy.
212: 2nd High lndv . Camp - Shirr~
Meadows. :!19: :lrd H I~ lndv. Game- Jull(l
LamtJrrt. 19'~: lsi High lndv. 3-Came5-J un£''
Laml:x&gt;rt. 5-18: 2nd High lndv. J.Camf'S Cor ky Kcntx'd y, 523: .k d High lndv. l-Gnm£'5
- Sh!r!PV Meadows..'flO.
lsi H i~~:h Team G1tmf' - Hin('\• \Vin ('

!WM POI, 1070: 2nd llll':h Team ('~urlf' Si mmons Old'&gt;, Cad . &amp;: Chf'\'., to:tl: :1n1 High

Tf'am G&lt;tm(' - Tiw. F' ubri&lt;' Shop, JO?l: ls1
Hi~~ ~L".Jm :1-Ga~
.· - .1-11~.0Y ":Int•1~\1 M £.l()t .·
2981, ..nd High £'.1 ,1-{,mt'lf'S- Simmon.;
Old~. CJd . &amp;. ·. $ · ;1: d'High Tr·a m •
3-Gaml'S- O&lt;tn '~.
.

Haskins accepts Minnesota post
MINNEAPOLIS (UP! t - Clem
Haskins, coac h al Western Ken·
tucky lor six years, has been named
the· new basketball coach at the
Universit y of Mlhn'esota .
Minnesota athletic director Paul
GiPI made the announcement Tues-

Doyle selects
Salem College
' SALEM, W.Va. (UP])- Bellaire
tOh ioJ High School llnebackerollenslv.e guard Mark Doy le says
he'll pllll' at Sa lem College this !aU.
Thl' 6-1, 205-pourld senior tied his
school's record of ·143 tackles In a
season and now shares the ma rk
with New York Jets' Pro EiO.wi
lin ebacker Lance Mehl .
Doyle will be coached at Salem
by Da na Griffith who left. the high
school ranf\5 to replace Terry
Bowden, now an asslsl&lt;lnt under
Gen y Faust 'at Akron (Ohlol
University.
Doyle recorded 24 tackles In one
ga me lor Bellaire.

day night, confi rming several
report s that Haskins would be
chosen.
Te nnessee coach Don DeVoe was
rcoportooly a ca ndida te lor the
position but he denied I'&lt;' was
intervlewoo by the search committee and said Monday lhat he was oot
a candidate.
Haskins will replace Jim Dutcher
who resigned In January after three
basketball players were .arrested
on rape chargl's In Madison, Wis.
Jimmy Williams finished the season asactlng coach. - - '
Haskins, 42, Is a graduate and
former AU-America basketball
player at Western- Kentucky. ,He
playoo professional basketball fo r
nlne years.
This season his team had a 23-8
record and lasted,. untll the second
round of the NcAA tournament,
losin g to t tl? University of
Kentucky .
Haskins said he wlll start rec ruit Ing lrnm&lt;XIIately and wlll return to
the Twin Cities for a news
conference this weekend.

.'

D~G ATTEMPJ' FAWI - Chicago third baleman Ron Ceydlves

for the ball hit by Oakland's MlckeyTettiecondownlhe llrlrdiBiellnebt

.'

fifth Inning action Tuesday Ill Mesa, Ariz. TettJeton got a slngie as the
ball wenl past Cey Into the ouUield. UPI.

'

'

/':

�'

,

'

/

,.

I

. Page 4-:The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, OhiQ

''

..

i!}a~

Wednesday. April 2.

..

.

'Ellison going -home ·
DALLAS (UP! I - The only place ~tv is ··Never Nervous:; . Ellison
•
wants to go now is back home to Savann~h. 'ca.
He has no desire whatsoever to go to any of those big, bustlingciti&lt;'swith
NBA franchises like New York. Chicago. Los Angeles, San Francisco.
Philadelphia or Atlanta .
·
In other words. thr Louisville CardJnals. the NCAA's new college
bas~etbalf champions. haw no reason at all to \Je netvous about their
fabulous 18- v&lt;'ar-old freshman suddenly getting up and leaving them lor
the pros.
·
·
To lx&gt;gin with. that Idea is the fimhest thing from his mlnd. He likes
Louisville. Ky., and want s to finish his education there.
Far mm-e impm1ant. at 6- foot -9 and ax&gt; pounds. Ellison isn't "'ady to
withstand the body punishing grind of th2 NBA He isn't preparro for it
either physically or mentally. The Larry Birds, 11&gt;2 Karcem
Abdui-Jabbars, the Dany l Dawkins and all the rest of them would eat him
up alive in no time fla t.
Ewryone marveled at Ellison's ability in leading all scorers with 25
points in I.:Ouisviile's 72-fi9 NCAA title clincher over Dukt• at Reunion Arm a
·
Monday night.
They couldn. t gP! over the enmmous rnmposure hr showed, enabling the
Cardinals to putt he game away wit height of his points during a six- mlnute
stretch just before the final IJI!zzer to wind up the Fin"l Four's Most
Va luable Player.
,
Mike Krzvzewskt. the Blue Devils' coach. said the skinny. gangling
ElliSQn was "terrific. " Mark AI~Jie, Duke·s hard- worki ng forward.
admitted the Devils were ··sutprlsed" by Ellison's performance.
Especially since he was a freshman.
Then someone asked "Never Netvous" Pen·is a lairly obvious question.
What about the NBA'? Did he ever lind himself thinking he''s ready to pay
in it?
Ellison never e\·en blinked.
"Not much," he shrugged. He wasn ·t vety interested in the question.
" I'm tired." he said later, bending down in front of his locker to sluff
some of his belongings in a canvas bag. ··]just wanna go home. I haven't
been home in eigh t months."
Ellison was only the second rreshman ever to be named MVP since the
inception of the Final Four in 19:!1. The only other one to do it was Arnie
FetTln of Utah in the wartime 1944 tournament.
To give you some idea of how far back that was, Ferrin, who was at the
finale here, picked up his award using a I'Ml-hand shot. But in a way, he
outdid Ellison when Utah went on to th&lt;&gt; N.I.T. afterwards and he was
named nmnerup to the MVP in that one.
Even if "Never. Nervous'' Pervis should ch,l!Jile his mind and start
thinking about joining the pros, Denny Crum, I he.Cardi nals' rnach, would
do everything to dissuade him. Not so much because he doesn't want to lose
a blue-chipper, but beca use he·s a grea t believer in all his players getting
an education first.
··He ain't going anywhere." offered RobbiE&gt; Valentine, one of Louisville's
rcse!)'C forwards who spends a lot of time with Ellison. " He's very
academic- minded. Always asks questions."
Valentine and Mi\f Wagner, th2 Cardinals' senior guard, are jointly
responsible lor Ellison's nickname. They hit on it because he never shows
any emotion.
·Tve never seen him nervous about anything and I don't think anyone
else has," sa id Valentine. " You don' ! have too many freshmen come into a
program like ours and fit in so well light away like Petv did. Nothing
bothers him. II he wasn't 6-9, 6-10, whatever he Is, you'd never know he'sa
basketball player. What does he like? Girls. Same as any 18- year-olq."
Pervis still wears braces on his teeth and doesn't even shave yet, but no
one has to show him the way to the basket.

'

April 2, 1986 .

The Daily

. ..
'

J

Bethesda, Md., said in betWeen 'disappointed f~m last . night, ~ut
biles r1 cake . ."We figured trey'd tJ;·• tooy're'~till No. 1 kl o.ur hearts.

DURHAM, N.C iU PI\ - The
" This Is the rndfor l'Jle, bUt Duke
Duke Blul;' Devils, whose spirits
will always be No. 1 In my heart .
were dimmed after their 72-69 loss
You're No. l. and we're up !here
in the NCM ·championship to
somewlJi&gt;re," Dawkins said as the
Louisville, t-etumed home Tuesaay
other players ·bowed towards the
to the uplifting cheers Qf more than
crowd.
·
3.000 fans.
"They're still No. 1," insisted
"It really feels goo:l to be home," · Kim Lat hrop, a freshman from
Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski told
Montraal. "We know they're great.
the crowd assembled on the
They know tlJi&gt;y're great. II the.
school's rnaln,quad. " You make me
national skeptics have any doubts
fC'el grea t Jighrnow. For 40 games,
about it, that's tlJi&gt;ir business."
we were the most consistent (team I
Campus workers distributed
111 the country, and all the support ct
cake with blue and white Icing to
all you real prople makes the whole
people around the quad, where the
season a specia l one.
night before about 5,000 fans had
" ] can't promise you 37 wins a
gathered to wafch th&lt;&gt; game on a
season, but we'll always be able to
giant television screen.
play in front of our special fans and
" Tht" school was anxious to
do it the right way," he said. "We'll
sho\vw.our appreciation to them,"
play our buns of! and win as many
Linda Johnson, a senior from
gal'Jles as we can . Believe me, these
guys have given me tlJi&gt;ir best."
. The Blue Devils finished the
season 37·3, the most number of
victories by a Division I team in a
single season. They returned to the
Raleigh- Durham Airport late
Tuesday morning, greeted there by
several hundred rhythmically clapping fans.

.

'

•'- .

3,009 fans ·~~~ N(;~ Nnner~up. Duke:·

Today's Sports Parade

'

'

\.

.

,.

'

'

1·2fh

•

KEBLER BUSINESS SERVICES.
. ACCOUNTING &amp; DAT4 PROCES~ING

618 EAST MAIN STREET
• POMEROY, OHIO 45769

STORE HOURS
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
~unday 10 AM..J.O PM

PH • t614··) 992:07270

OUR SERVICES INClUDE

- Com~uterized

~ Payrotl

Accounting
- Internal. Control
- Tax Planning
- Sales Analysis

Processing
-Federal &amp; Siate Reports ·
- Profit &amp; Loss Statements
- Financ!al Statements

..

A~di- ~

We Reserte
Riehl To
·Limit Quantities

298 SECOND ST.
pOMEROY, OH.

versa·ry
·sale!

~

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, APRIL5, .1985

THE PROFESSIONAL SERVICE FOR A
SUCCESSFUL BUSINESS .

I.Nf
WIN I

LOOK MOM

A SUMMER SPECIAL FOR
THOSE DIFFICULT
MONTHS.
ONLY
FOR 5
WHOLE DAYS OF CHILD
CARE WITH A CHRISTIAN
ATMOSPHERE. (IN(LUDES LUNCH!
ONLY S6so FOR ONE
FULL.DAY

The ieam was whisked by bus
!rom 11&gt;2 airport to Duke's West
Ca mpus, where they waded
through th2 throng onto a platform
- decorated wilh blue and white
balloons- in front of tre WJiverslty
chapel. The team's five seniors took
turns addressing t hi&gt; crowd.
•• J'm a true competitor. It hurt s
like hell," sa id srnlor David
Henderson . ·'['U l;'l!t over il, but
you've made it easter for me. The
last four years, truly have been the
greatest cl my life. We've allgrown
as people and as athletes."
Some people in the crowd
chanted 'We're No. 1:· That
prompted senior All-America
guard Johnny Dawkins to tell the
st udents "You're No.1. You're No.
1."

S26oo

Chuck Roast .!~ ••••.
BUCKET

.

.

I•

.$199

LB.

ee •e•• •••••• e.

Cube Steak ..........

(INCLUDES LUNCH!

69(
Drumstick'S.... !a~...... ·
'

FROM JUNE 2 TO AUG. 22

12 1ears Of

~HICKEN

CALL ABOUT PHONICS TUTORING
9.92-3&amp;24

.

49&lt;
Thighs
•••••••••••••••••••
$ .,. 09
,

c

SH PORK BUTT

Service To Our
· Customers ...
We Would Like
To Show Our
Appreciation.

':

CHICKEN

YOU CAN'T
. DO BETTER THAN
'

$1 09

U.S.D.A~ CHOICE .

LB.

LB.

Steak/Roast ...••••.
.
f
B
ee
•• ~ •••••• 99&lt;
Ground

'

SI(;N UP
AND WIN.

LB

TERRIFIC .TENNIS .
SHOE SALE

~

.

:; :

(

\

20°/o OFF

ll'l9b Prices McJ¥ YrJtf IJ s.:.n.
Slotes Due To Local c~

OPEN DAILY 10-9; SUNDAY 12-6

THURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY

FRESH

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY
'

Chicken Livers ,.':. 39&lt;

eeeeeeeeeeeeee

We•eners ••••••••••••••••• 59(
KY~

BORDER

_____...,

1.

12 OL,.,.

•

WHIRLPOOL
CLOTHES
WA·SHER

·--

. 5.47 ... Price
2 00 Leu FoclooV

-.

"

DRAWING APRIL 26, 1986

3

•

47 ~~~~

.

••••••••eee•••

RetKne
Auto wax for a durable
shine. Available In 16-oz~ llq·
uld Ot14·oz~ • paste. Helps '
give yout cat a fresh look.

2.

YELLOW

Onions •••••••••••••••••• 39&lt;

'Fl 0o1

2 MINUTE
SHOPPING
SPREE

3 LB. BAG

Sl
29
2°/o Milk ••.•••• :!~ .... .

VALLEY BELL-•

SHURFINE
•

LeSS FOCIOty

2 • 99

't'ourNetCOSI
Atler llebote

Margarine ..... ~~~.':~ .• 99&lt;

- r •00 llebote
i

31%

Price
AHer
•
Rebate
Armor All protectant.
Helps protect vinyl,
plastic, leather and
rubber. 16 fl _oz.

2 99

The Conv8rse • Westwind ~
brings the great looks
and feel of soft. garment
leather to the basketball
court · An unsurpassed
combination of

1.49 '

Our 2.17. Armor All
cleaner. Cleans, conditions rubber and
16 fl. oz.

-·
.•P'.s··
a oz.
, 89·
&lt;
(h
Corn
99&lt;
Ice
.Cream
···········~
•••••••••••••
CIS W/K CORN, APPLESAUCE
.

FRITO

Save

Save -.. -...,_

1~47

1.77
Our.2.67. Zip wax ear

7.47

Ouri.97. Whitewall
tire cleaner in pump ·
wash adds a wax
dispenser. 20 fl. oz.
shine as It cleans your
OUr 3.91, 64 Fl.
2.91~-~18 II. oz.

Our,9.97. Genuine
ehai'!ICIIs for washing,
wlninn dusflng. and ~
.
. fl. .

1h .GAL

3/
$1
Stokely Veg •• ;:~.o;.
or

GRtEN BEANS, RED BEANS, PEAS

•
Save ......,_

6.97 wash brush

CHAPMAN SHOES
,

NEIT-10 EUORLDS IN POmOY

•

.

.

• •• •• •• •• COUpm •••••••
• •••••• •

style.

Our 1.97. 31"
wlfh wotet·absorber\1 brls·
. lies. For car, home, RV.

Save41%

Save

S~fe22%

97•
Our 1.67. Jumbo synthetic

1.47
Our 1.97, nre-c:Iean kH with

sponge helps save washing
lime. For cors, more. .

1.37•
Our 1.77 Ea. Absorbent

scraper and obtoslve pod
tor !Ires, grills, more. · 1

wash mitt tot aulas, boals.
!rucks. SoH and absorbent

.. .

185 UPPER RIVER ROAD. GALLIPOLIS

'

•

•

;Fli.\VORITE SUGAR •

~ - S·.LB. ~ $139 ~

• BAG

..'·

eeeeeeeeeeeeee

.

~

limit I Per Customer
. '
Good Only At Powell's SLI'ormarbt
• Offtr, flpirts Sat., Apr. 5, ijl6 S
I •I I I I I I I . - . I I I t I I

•

69
(·JV Dinners •••••~~.o;••••
BANQUET

I

~

.

-.

PURINA ·

STOKELY CATSUP

~ i~~- 69&lt;

Ullrlt·I hr C111tomor
At Powell's SLI'onnotfrtt

o

, I

.I

3.

·.
DAILY
...
•
. DRAWING
.
FOR CASH
.
REIMBURSEMENJ
'...'
.
•
,

-

2

:

••
e-, I I

..

Limit 1 of any item
(No cigarettes or anything
else exempted by law I .

DAIRY" LANE

'

comton and

I:OfiVIIISI

S~READ

IN OUR STORE

s, 1916

.

s.

CAT FOOD
6.5 oz.

sf$1

Umit I Per Customer
tll ,.,o GOod Only At Powell 's SLI'or,....tt· .
Offtr bplrts Sat., Apr. 5, 1916 S

.....

BOUNTY

PAPER TOWELS
PKG.
OF 3

$199

limit 1 Por Customer
Good
Only
lt Powell's SLI'trmarlttt
0
o Off~r Erpirt1 Sat, lpf. S, 1916 S

~

Whatever Your
Purchase 1$
We Will ·
Refund The
Mo~ey!

'

"

'

..

-·

�)

\
'

.

'.

, .. . . .

'

.... _,

Spring results

•

By l TniU•d l•n'S'I Inlt'rnltloMI
Nllllonall ..tii«UU'

" ' L Pet.

t:-.

10 iiiWl
1:1 !I ~~

Arl:ml.l

Phil.1
1'1,\uch
~'" t' J". I:I
f'no ·n1111

Dil''

Sl i.clU

lA

n.,

11

~

.~il

1:!
1:1
J:l
H
111
Ill

!+

'171
'&gt;b'i

l(l

;~

IIi
I'&gt;

1.1.1

~lnlrl

!'(

~

,

NBA scores
. 1\J~ 'fli ~
1\Non 1:!.1. llf•n•land 1115
,\r l.tnlu 107, W;~'lhlnRton 91
Llt'!ioll llti. lndlnn:t ICll

1 1~

iiolll

Mllwuukr&lt;' llti. Cbl&lt;'ugo lf17

""

Dallas l :lfi, Phlx&gt;ntx 9l
Hooslon ll.~. GoldtT! Sta ll' 121

)

;..·,

"
1~

T~"'·''
i .tiH

LA

:i ~l

II 12

ko' l'

SilC'I'M1U11 1o

10 ~l
II .5!1

\"! \.1

l"nl

Kl
lli!ITU

1.1 .~i(l

q

11 .J'il

Wf'~··~

So• . ill~ ·

]II ll

Gohli' n Starr ;11 Phoe-nix. 9:ll p.m.
l'l:tll alL\ fllpJX't'S . JO:l) p m
PnrH.;md ill S!•allk. li! ·.Yl p m

rt.lnid11,V'!i (;~

·ll i

\\ ashll1gto n .11Nl'\.\ .ICrst'\', nlf,!hl
Ch in~o il l lndl.;tnit. nlr,: ht
CI£'\'C'!andm Milwauk.N', ni~hl

SplJt !&gt;Cjl&amp;lld &amp;: IIIli•"~&lt; h r l\ultd
Th!Nt~)··~ ~osuiL"

l'h il .ulo •lphi.l I l~l'IOIT II
:'\rv. Ynr k M.-1' -1. l.0' Ancl'il'' i o\2 mn

Df'fWff a1 D&lt;~lll s,

T:::~~:~;o::s· m~h/'

'•

, Monu·,•;ll .I. To"O:,t• !

........

Tni'O nh • Il l. flm 11111.1Ti II
1\~ ns;J .' C11~ · ~ . No'\\

York

\'ankf'&lt; ~

I

Arl anut - Offm&gt;d ourlit•lti•r Orru1 r
~1mrno it m~jM 1/',ijru(' &lt;'Ontrae t. ~~.ail ·f'd
pllchm P.1~·ual F\'1"("'1. Lr n R;,r kt•r. 1\it'k

"11&gt;1 1'1.&gt;11 i . H0tr~1on i 11:.! inn I~ ··
t\ikl,mrli l 'hr il,(!o( ' uh' I
San F r,mi'L..n l ti. Mi~-.Julii·t • '1 1\fl irm ,
..., ,tTl~ ' .!, n,.,·c•l:mtll)
Ch10. iij!" \\ hlh' :-lo.\ i. S1 l. roui• n , 10 Inn ,
i\r-.&lt;. York Yanl·:t'&lt; 'l&gt; !1. T• ·.\ a' ~
S:ln ll ir~o K, C.11Jior nla 4
\\'r~ ·., (iamo'!i 11\U nn•·~ ~TJ
~l o ntn ':tl r,; t , .., .\Tlo~nl ;t ,,, \\ r-.t 1':ilm
~ ·.l('h . Fl.&lt; 1 ·'~111 m
l'l.:!lhmun · n Tn.1~ ,11 Pomfj.lll!&gt;. Fla .
I II p.rn
~l&lt;mlro ·, l l r ~'' ,.~ Los r'lnj..'l.''ll '' 11 1 \'rm
flo '.wh
1 -111 p
'-'t Inn' '" f'il!·'rur~h ar Br;ulrnlan .
~i. 1 1 .ll pm
Tvlllnlo" l 'ht l.uklJ!hJ ,, .ol t1o·itr\Oo!llt1'
~l . t I ll pm
f\ an,,t, l ' ll .\ 1' f'hrt .ti!l• o,\1 o ;&lt;I S..t r&lt;l ~.l
~ l.! .. l&lt;•r IJ Ill
n nr ·rnn.1 11 '' ll ro~J~ T on .ol Ki~' imn ll't·.
F1a I .ri jliTl
~ .• n Fr ••n. Nlr ' ' f'li'\·d.md .tl Tur~n .
, \n; lpm
fhit.!J!U r ~l ' " O;,kl,md ,11 l'hoJ •ni:&lt; . .\
i&gt;m
.\Ji iU .I U~'I' I \ Sl•; t ll ~ ' J l T Pmfl ', A111, I

Ca mp itnd T1•rn for~Tt •r: 'il'!llnutli l' kll •t · ~

'

n,

nlgt\1

Hwslon at S.m Antonb. m_ght

'"',\ll;!nl,o tl . t\i llllllllll ' II
Pill, tlJil:: h :, ~1Lnn""' 1.1

G11TJr.1111AU nmt'lt EST I

ll11ro11 a T tk.:tun. l ::•l p.m .
:"1/1'\1' Yor~ ~ ~ F'ltdlldPIJlhiil . ~: .Yip. m

11 H .HII
Til 1\ .n;,
Ill 14 ~ 1 ;

\

113. L:ta h 109

PurrlaJJd lli . Dt•nl '('r 11{)

~~l

1~

Cllpp&gt;t~

DUNEDIN. F1a. tUPII - ·Jim
Glancy scattered five hits over ·
seven lnnbtgs Tuesday to lead the
Tomnto Blue Jays to a 10-0
Gra~fru!t League triumph over
the Cincinnati Reds . .
Clancy, who last season was .
hampered by lnju ties including a
sore right shoulder, and an appendectomy, did not allow more than
one hit in any Inning.
Luis Leal gave up two hit s in th~
two innings he pitched to complete
the shutout.
The Blue Jays, 14·9, were led by
solo homers from Cesar Cedeno
and Uoyd Moseby . The Blue Jays
rolll'Cted 12 hits, including a :Hor·5
frofn Jesse Barfield and a 2·for·3

\.A l..ltkt&gt;n. 100, Smtr Jtl 11)1

11 12 .:.-.1

c•, lncl

Clancy, Blue lays dump R~ds

100. San Antonio ~1!1

Al bert Hil ll

tmd

~i·ad Kommlno;~ . fir~ ·

from Willie Upshaw.
The Reds, 13-12, made five
ermrs, leadbtg to five unearned
runs .
Toronto announced It has optioned catcher .Jeff DeWIII!s lo
Memphis of th:! South:!m League.

' Cllir ;~~o tL'-:1.• - I WII'~Wd fl t"&lt;l ba!ool'ffi&lt;tn
l tirhil' llr tn,.,
o p1iul1'11 jtildH Hil.'
t'nnrt·nut to 1111\'a of tht· 1\n11'riran A.&lt;Nt 'ia
lkm . ~·nr r:lfl'ht•r Sir"&gt;~' Chr l, lm;r' 10 Thc&gt;l r
minor k·aJ!w t·;tmp fm n ·,r~~i~ nu• •nl
I 'inrtnnal l - I tt-Ira~ rt'lld pih·hN·IJouJ!
Fl.:ur
('1f'\'C'I ,tnd- ,\s kf'll ll. i ll~ l'i' ton t.lll 'lll 'l
.l~ rrv Will:ml :md pltl'hl'l ,lo •rn ll•'&lt;~l for thr
[J.lrplo"(' ol ~111nf.! 1h£'m liwlr urr·•mr:llr v nal

m

.Kent .S'tate'
c.08Ch d··es
'···

·

i\r

EastNn ...................... lOO 101
~
l1:1

rr ................ .......... tro

''

KENT, Ohio (lJPI l
Dick , saddened " by" Scesnlak' s sudden
.
Scesnlak had 9nly four days to go · death.
"(Scesn!akl had )liven his life to
. h:!fore reaching his third annlverh:!lplng young people devejop and
sary as Kent State University's
achieve th:!lr goals and aspirations.
head football coach.
During the second day of spring While he wUI be grea tly missed, his
trabtlng Tuesday , Scesniak col- lnDuence will live on through the
lives Qf his family, player s and
lapsed while exercising at Dix
friends."
Stadium, the victim of an apparent
Athletics director Paul Amodio
heart attack.
Scesnlak would have been ~6 ·also expressed slll:iness at th:!
coach's death.
years old June 28th.
•
"The rntlre Kent family has lost a
KSlJ Presiden t Michael Schwartz
said he was "shocked and deeply very fine man," Amodio sa id . "We

1.·

l&gt;C'troll ;l!

Mon l n&gt;al.

JR. liVI'S

r-------------

WHITE PATCH SUPER STRAIGHT
REG. S13.99 NOW

S22''

ANNIVE RSA RY SPECIAL

c~

MEAT
Ill FORMATION
HOniNE

CDIW'IRM

1-800-&amp;32-6900

20°/o OFF LADIES' SANDALS &amp; AEROBIC SHOES

10 BEGINING SES(IONS

Larry Bird and Magic Johnson . The shoe they choose to
do battle in is the Converse® Weapon'", Loaded wiih
performance features, it's great looking, too. Bird and
Magic have chosen their weapons. Now choose yours.

\ '\•\

lABY'S SHOE .Black/Whitt
MAGIC'S SHOE. Pwplt, Gold/Whitt

$30

Sun and Sand Tanning MINERSVILLE
Salon

•

CAll FOI APPOINTMENT 992-6311

IIIlO IJ I EPO IT

GOLDEN QUARTERS

Mrs.-· Filbert's
Margarine .... ... ...-.

.

--.....

FOREST RUN RD.

MIDDLEPORT, OH .

290 SECOND AVE.

Come in to your participating
Converse retailer for complete details.

q.

This week your manufacturer~d products "cents off" c&lt;iup~ns are
worth double at Kroger with $10.00 or more purchase . Llm1ted to
manufactured products coupons worth up to and including 50¢
Off . Coupons worth more than 50¢ are redeemed at face value
only. Limit one coupon for each product purchase~ . L1m1t one
coffee coupon. No beer, wine or cigarette coupons Will be double.
Not valid on free· coupons, Kroger coupons or retail food store
coupons . The amount refunded cannot exce.ed the pnce of the
item. You must purchase product in sizes spec1f1ed on ~~e coupo~ .
This offer applies only to manufactUied products cents off
coupons for items we. carry . To assure product availability for all
our customers, only one coupon per shopping familY. w111 be
doubled on . any brand item during each store VISit.

INSTANn.Y!

~~··

OUR STAFF HAS AnENDED SEMINARS ON .
PROPAR TANNING PROCfDURE FOR YOU, WITH
THE SCA WOLFE SYSTEM.

work ethic. I think most r1. tl'.e
people here will rememh:!r him, for
that."
Though he 1&gt;9sted only an 11-5
record in his three wyears at Kent
State, ~nlak was buUd!ng a
\\'Inning team for th:! future, said
Tom Bochenek, a KSU sports
spof\esman .
'
Scesniak, a Ch icago native, was
an assistant coach at th:! University
of Wisconsin ilr one year after he
graduated from Iowa Slate
Unjversily.

WIT~ $10.00 PURCHASE

ons

WIN iJp TO $2,000 CASH·

NY lslan!X&gt;rs;tl Pllls bJ I): h . 7: 1'• p.m.
~tttal Nt'\l·, lrr!i()', 7:J5 p.m .
Phllad£'lphla al NY Ran~J•rs. k ~ p.m.
M\nn£'SOta ar Chk·nlo,'U . R: :~ p .m.

WE USE THE SCA WOLFE SYSTEM AND
WE STOCK A FULL LINE OF
ACCELERATORS AND AMPLIFIERS.

11'3"-"ilmnwnr

Scesnlrik was an'&lt;ifenslve roordlc
nator at Kent State under Don
James from 1971 to 1974. In 1972, thf'
Golden Flash:!s won their first -ever
Mid-American Conferenre championship,. followed by a record·
breaking lj.2 season.
When James accepted th:! head

~= ~~t~

lt'il 'illil:'
l loo~lon - A..)u'(l lri'I"&lt;U ' 1 tbll·wa t \ l 'l'~ 11n
ll'l)l'f pltr hc,.lllll n ,o\l 'k''
K ; m ,t ~ C111 - H:t •lf'""-d ~ hurls!op On i.\
Corw·t•po··ifin. " '"' wlfll·ltt-r 0;11 1' I.«'JM 'I'.
).llll'hPr O:tll' 0 1111' and r:lll 'hc1' Brl.m
f"'oldh:rg lo lhf&gt; minor ~ ·.oJ&lt;lll ' r·amp lm

rniss€d.''

ALL WEEK

•

TOI'Onlo 2. S! Lou is ~ II~' I
Chlcu~o :l. M lnm&gt;ola I
('n l~u ry 6. Van luuv••r. 5

(AU nnte8 EET)
7: .l~ p.m.

coaching position at Washington In
1974, he took Scesn!ak with him as,
an assistant.
Scesniak returned to Kent as
head coach April 5th, 1983. In the
middle of . a losing streak that
eventually would span three seasons and 21 consecutive games.
"Coac h Scesnlak came In when
our team was at the slowest point
ever," said 19ffi team captain and
Ail·MAC receiver Jim Kilbane.
''We ju st came off an 0-11 (season) ,
and he came iii .vith 'a rea l solid

·are saddened for his family .. . He
was as much concerned for his
players as students and young men
~she was forth:!ir athletic ability on
the field ... He will ·h:! sorely

'·

Ph llatt&gt;lphla 4, I' Y lslancifors 1
Wa.~h lng!O n ~. Pltl.'ib.JIJ(h 1

\\'ednesday'~Gume.o~

_The· Daily Sentinel,- Page- 7

Pomeroy-Middleport•.Ohio

1\J(!;(J"Y'Ii Kfeults
l!arT fllltl ~ . RulfHIO ~
Quf'hN' 4. Ol'llull (}

GET YOUR TAN
READY FOR
SUMMER VACATION,
WEDDINGS AND
PROMS

I~ ~~he · Clllll~ · , ., , ~ ·a.'il'tl

Wednesday, April 2, 1986

NHL results

f!Jo,f&gt;m;m f'.rrald Prrr'l C"il!(·hl'r l..trl ' '
Owh1 . wu.llol ll'lo•·r ~ P a;tl l!u ng1' dil l l':tul

Zuwlhr 111 H1r hmond ot !tlr 1!\.o\A t lnrt •rn&lt;t
trcjn; tl i.c' &lt;ij!\11 '. •rnd a~kflcl pilChl't P1•tr
Fo~i}unt· t.• ll'lll'&gt;l&lt;~ll'l:l f liNT! Till • n •tm'll\1'111

hit a home run, Massey had two
wubles, and Treadway and Hart
each singled.
Bissell su!!ered th:! loss despite a
good effort, while Kyle Davl,s and
Barber came on In relief. Barber
looked sharp In his one and a third
Innings of work . ,
Sllvus went the distance to pick
up
win for the Cadets, fanning
thrre and walking three. EHS ·
pitchbtg walked 15, and fanned
.
four.
Eastern play s Southwestern
tonight.
Unescore:

Kevin Barber pulled EllS closer
In the burth as he reached on an
ln~eld single, then hustled around
the bases on two FF errors, th:!
score 3-2.
'
The wall tlnally started to
collapse oo th:! Eagles bt th:! fourth
round as thrre roore errors and
tlrre wdlks gave FF a 6-2 lead. FF
scored three runs each In the !lfth
and sixth lnnbtgs to complete the
scoring.
Barber was two for three wit h
two singles, Brent Bissell singled,
Steve Horner singled, and Mike
Martin singled for the Eagles.
Fort Frye had only five hits, but
th:!y were big ooes as Steve Hinton

'

Nf'll .11'rf4') 111 . Nr,;.,· York ~n

""'1'1 10, ,..

11&lt;' 11"\)11

Tnrnnln
I \1kl;tn d

wildness glve ·cadets' ·12-3 win

BEVERLY , Host Fort Frye . oo a Brent Bissell single.
tOQk advantage of eight Eastern
· Four walks and an error bt the
errors and 15 walks as the Eagles
lxlttom half of th:! Inning produced
hand:&gt;d th:! Cadets a 12-3non-ieagile
tiE Cadets first run as sophomore
_triumph in boys' high school
Brent Bissell threw well, but didn't
basebaU play.
get a . break In rtndlng the strike
Fort Frye boosted Its recoFd to 5-&lt;1
zooe.
overa ll, while Eastern is even at 2-2.
Fort Frye took a 3-1 lead bt the
Eastern took an early 1-0 lead as second on two singles by Treadway
Ed Collins walked and rode home
and Hart and two EllS errors .

Bo5llm vs. 0Ptroll al La.krlaM, rilL, 7:))
p.m
Ch icago TA! 1 1 lUI I'S, NM!.• York rank!'(&gt; ~
itl Ft . l.aud£'rdulr. Flu .. T:.llp.m
Mlnnt'SOia \'S, N(»A· York M:-l s 111 S t
11·1t'!"Sh.JI"J{. ~·tu.. 7:.~ p.m.
l'aUfornJu 1 ~ . San Dl~ al Sill1 !1~1.
JO·tt• p.m .
llillh'll~ !IIOCpld ~·

12 ;,·.!lJ
Ll ~ 19
11 i:t&gt;
1.1 U'i

\(I lli

ll oosh.&gt;n

~·hnn

Wednesday, April 2, 1986

Pomeroy--.::Middleport, Ohio

Err~rs,

~llv.

I

..

Page-~-The

S;111

..

\

992-51127

NABISCO

Ritz
-cra·ckers . ...... .

1-lb .

PINT RETURNABLE BOTTLES, CHERRY RC,

Diet RC
or RC Cola... .

DINETTE

WITH 4 (HAIRS
REG. 1149.95

.BUY

EARLY AMERICAN FLORAL

,

~9f.~~~HAI~ow $544

1 LAMP
GET 1
FREE

DINETTE

WITH 6 CHAIRS
NOW

WAS 1299.95

$.19888

RECLINERS

'

$9995

BEDROOM SUITE

RIG. tS99.9S

NOW

NOW

$344 44

.

SOFA/LOVESEAT
WASSI099.95 NOW .$6999$

MAPLE TABLE
6 CHAIIS

HICKORY

BEDROOM SUITE
REGULAR
11099.95

WAS 1699.95

NOW

DARK PINE
TABLE
. 6 CHAIRS
.
WAS 1599.95

NOW

$699 95

NOW

WAS S699.9S

.NOW

$3 8888

TABLES
FROM

~

FLEXSTEEL SLEEPER

Sugar.. .. .... .

NOW

E PIRE IU NITURE OF POMEROY

992-3307
'

'Stat.king
Chairs ................. .

•

AOV(RTIS(D mM'!to\ICY

I ~th ttl II""'" a &lt;lv~I1&lt;St!d ~· ·m~ "' ot•truwll'fl 1&lt;1 bo• t o•a &lt;ld ~
ro ~(I!I M I •Io • lor ~. till '" 1•8r. h i(&lt; Oil'" S tn ot! , •! ~ C ~I a~ ~Dl'Cif&lt; r ~ll~
ruw •d "' lh &lt;~ ~&lt;l II WI' rlu &lt;un nuT ' &gt;I ~ll ~~~~•1rtrsed,l em wr• W&gt;ll

" "' '' ~ ''" vnuo

1

hlll r&lt;' 11! " rn rnJJ•"hhl•· •Iem

&lt;"''l&gt;tf&gt;

~ •a•~thlr

,.t i!;r. l&lt;~•!l Jht! 'WilT'&lt; 'J V~'II ~ o • . o '-' "" n&lt;•O Wh u I&gt; Will l'f11•llt•
~011 In pw o h ;"'' 11 ~ , ,ot hl• ' ' l ~&lt;·• l •I• •"' , I! ill" .h l v••l1oo;.eo1 jllort•
wnh on JO rlav' 0111v "'"' vo·ndo• ro.upOol "" ~' b•· "' ~ .-l!t• •r1 '""
' '~m f)Uotl'lilsell

COPYRIGHT 1986 · THE KROGER CO .
ITEM S AND PRI CES GOOD SU NDAY ,
MARCH 30, THROUGH SATURDAY ,
APRILS, 1986, IN ~Lftii iS &amp; POMEROY STOR£S .

Each

WE RESERVE THE RIGH T TO UMIT
QUANTI TIES . NONE SOLD TO
DEALERS .

32-oz

~ti~~k~~. . . ..'. ':. . . . . -.'.·. '.-'. -.

'

,,

II

EMBASSY WIRE

0res~in g..........

FREE DELIVERY
'

LIMIT 1 PLEASE

Salad

1/2 PR~CE

$5.88r 88

51b

KROGER MAYONNAISE OR

MAnRESS-SETS

REG. $1099.95

·ss888

38

'

SEALY
BEMCO
IMPERIAL

OCCASIONAL

108 .W. MAIN

$388·88
$34444
$2 9888

QUEEN SLEEPER REG. '499.95 NOW
----------------------~
EARLY AMERICAN SLEEPER

·,

8-Pak ,

Domino
CONTEMPORARY

HIGDON

PLlJ S

DEPOSIT

STARTING
AT

EARLY AMERICAN ,

SOFA/CHAIR - REG. 1699

7

$
Gal.

U.S . GOV'T INSPECTED

Holly Farms

. . ·. .
Mixed.-Fryer Parts ..........
_....._.......
LIMIT 4 PLEASE

49

lb.

39c
' '
'

.

•

�.

I ,

,·

Beat of the bend

((ClASSIFIED ADS sure -~a get results))

Time is running out

The Pomeroy High School Class
of 19li wUI be observing its !iOth
anniversary when the annual
alumni banquet is held this year. So
far., there hasn't been any leadership appear to carry the ball to
make ilK· oJ()t h anniversary a rea l
occasion. Any takers''
Members of I he Women' s Auxil iary of Veterans Memorial Hospital

Is plan ning a bake sale for April ~
and guess where they wUI hold II ?
In the lobby at the hospital.
I'm told that the location has been
quile successfUl for the auxiliary
.w hal with all of the hospital
employes 1\lfd•.tre visltlng traffic.
However, If you don't have occasion
to be at the hospllal, members wUI
welcome your visit and your
purchase.
Don Da iley, fotmerl~· &lt;iPomeroy
and a rea l Meigs supporter, would
like to get hold ria ropy of "Black
Stone and While Rock". He says
this Is a book about Pomeroy and
probably deals wit h the days when
coal and salt were biggies in Jbe
town . Don can be reached at 223
Western Ave., P.O. Box 109,
Ol illlcothe, Ohio 45rol.
Incidentlllly, I hadn•t heard of I he
book before.

, oWHkly 'S.I~11111
oM9ney
llems
•Everyday Low Prices
•USDA Choice Meats
•Tendltrtresh Produce
•Quick
C.,..rteoul. Service
'

April 2, 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

By ~B HOEruCH
sentinel Staff Writer
Y.ou only have a few more days to
register as a voter in Ihe May
prim ary elecllons and while
there Is not too
much rooking on
the local front, it
is a year fo r
elff'tlon of state officia ls so you
probably should get involnu.
DeadllnP for registei'ing is 9 p.m.
Tuesday, Apd l 8. and the Meigs
Board of Elff'lions, located In the
Masonic Temple. will even be
maintaining a couple of special
time slots in addition to regu lar
hours to get you signed up.
Do kPPp In mind that changes
should be tworded· also if you are
reglslcred. For exa mple if you've
move or your name has changed
due to maniag&lt;', then this should be
recorded at the board office.
This Friday evening the board
office. will be open from 6 to 9 p.m.
on spec ial hours will be maint ained
from 8 a.m. to noon on Saturday.
Then on 1'u rsday, the fina l day tor .
registering. the officl' will be open
from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. for your
conveni&lt;'ne&lt;&gt;.
So - the board staff is doing its
part to accommoda te.

'

•.

•WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIIIIT QUANTITIES•PRICES EFFECTIVE
WEDNESMY, APRIL 2 THIU SATURDAY, APRIL 5, 1986•WE ACCEPT USDA
FOOD STAMPS• NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR T'fPOGAAPHICAL
OR PICTORIAL ERRORS

,,

-

'

'

tl1~
-- ~

VINYL SIDING

HOLLY FARMS GRADE 'A'
MIXED FRYER PARTS or

TWIN 4 • DOUBLE 4 • DOUBLE 5
WHITE ONLY

$
Hazel U!e

3ft_
'7,9
· 5

Whole Fryers .

Prim Good Thru
April 9th

CAS H &amp; CARRY ONtY

Speaker set

Hazel Life, who pastors the Full
Gospel Te mP,Ie of Little Hocking,
Looking ahead, the Pomeroy "ill be speaker for the April 10
Fire Department would like for you meeting of the Pomeroy Chapter,
to mark May 3 on your\:alendar . Women's Aglow Fellowship, to be
The department will have a bake held at the Pomeroy Senior Citizens
'
sale and spaghet ti dinner at lhe Cent er, Mulberry Heights.
Butternut Ave.. quarters on that
Ufe received her minister ia l
date and they 'd like to have you training a t the Chicago Bible
I here.
College. Chicago. m, and was
orda ined in March, 1974. She Is
Elza Larklns will mark his rot h recognized a nd affilia ted with the
birthday on Aprll16 and loves towt Full Gospel Fellowship of Churches
ca rds. Larkins uses a wa lker .but he and Ministers, International o!
does get a round pretty well. He sees Dallas, Texas.
At the Aglow meeting, she will be
and hears wells. He and ius wife
resident at Long Bottom and mail sharing experiences of personal
can be sent to Box 54.
· heallngs a nd miracles in her life.
There will be special music.
Reservations for the buffet are to
Don't push the pan ic b.JIIon. After
all , you have way up to Apd l l5th to be made by Monday with Bev
file you r tax return . Now let's see . Rupe, 742-3003; Carolyn Searls,
where did we put all of those 992-3467; Karyn Dav is, 992-5893; or
"necessary" papers?. The}" II show Nancy Beaver, 992-5286. The buffet
will be served at 7 p.m. wilh the
up, meantime, keep smiling.
meeting to follow al 7:45 p. m.

PREMIUM GRADE
2x4x7

s

Mothers in Mason, Jackson and search firm and spOnsored cy
Meigs Cou nl ies inleresled In infor- Proctor and Gamble indica ted that
mation on breast feed ing are invited many doctors, childbirt h educa tors
to cont act the· Lal..eche League of and nurses recommen d that mothPoint Pleasant , F.lairie Ma theny, ers turn IQ a La Leche League.
675,4439, as a source of help about • Moskrecommended t hat mothers
nursing their babies.
nurse their babies for at least 19
The loca l group meets roonthly Jo weeks. Fony-two percent of the
discu ss breastfeeding and motherly pedia trtclans included in Ill' samIssues. Next meeting wUI be held on ple suggested that rmtrers breasl April 7 at 7: 3() p. m. at :JJ03 Brook feed their babies "as long as
Drive, Point Pleasant.
possible." A solid majortty of the
Results of a · recent survey &lt;loctors surveyed reported a favorconducted bY an independent re- able opinion of La Leche League.

Prices Good Thru April 9th

. 99E~H

CASH &amp; CARRY ONtY

Prices Good
Thru April9

112"

CDX

PLYWOOD

$699

I

.

SHEET

,.---------I
I

.

1 FRU
1 DELIVERY
I

L

OISCOU~T~
. ~~

22~..4 ~~!~'ng'h

ALL T-RUSSES

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN -

FREE

.

I

~2:~:;c: ·

~ ~~:;~~ Ust~2;~53
28 ' 4112 Pilth
$38.S6

29

SJO.BS

" Free Delivery On All Trusses "

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

1
1

..1I

39

HOGG- &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS
Cd.
MASON, W. ~A.

IQNELISS

773-5554

ENGUSH IOAST

lr,

$1 99

Heart Association gets donations

TAB, SPRITE, DIET or REG:

FRESH LEAN

5Jt JACMSON PIKE -RT. J5 WEST

- - -· 4524
HATIHEES \ATURDAY
A SUHDAY • Al l SEATS 12.50 '
A!III ISSION EVERY TUESDAY $2.50

Ground

~ARCH 28 -APAIL:!J
fRJOAY thru THURS DAY ~

Ch·uck

Publlsht'd f'vrry afternoon , Monday

Comp::myJMu ll lmC'dla , l nr .,

Pomrrnv, Ohio

-l~i69.

4PRil

Ph . 992 - 2 1 ~ . S('-

rond &lt;:!:i ss posta,gt• paid al Pomt•r ay .

LB.

ffJOl'f DAY

Ohio

Mrmbrr : Unitr d Pr ess lnl&lt;&gt;rnatlonal.
Inl and Da il v Prrss Asso.:•la!lon and thr

5 LBS. or
MORE

Ohw N1•w spap1•r Assodati on. Nallonal
Ad\'C'r!lsin~

RPpr('st'nlath:t•. Br01 nham

N~· sp&lt;tper

Salrs. 711 Third Arrnur.

N~·

N£'~

York.

York 10017.

POSTMASTER: Send addrrss rhan~
10 Thr Dall\' ScnTI MC'I. 111 Coun, SI. ,
Po~r o.v . Oh.kl-157\),q .

Equipment ·owners can now take advantage of a complete new line of Caterpillar Equipment featuring :
• Unequalled partsfservice availability

SU BSCR-IPTI ON RATEq
By Car rlc&gt;r or !\'iolor Routt

• Competitive

Onr Wrrk.... .
.. ............... .$1.10
Onf' Monlh ........... ..... .............. $4.80
Onf' \'f'i.lr ............... ..... .. : ...... .... $57.20
SINGLE CO P\'
PRICE
.... 25 C(&gt;nfs
Dall;.r .....
rlrr

mn~

prlcef ,

• Attractive financing
The Centurw Une. It's only from Walker Machinery
Company! So call one of our sales representatives today - and discover the deal of the century for yourself!

not df~ ir ln g to pa y !h(&gt;ca r ·
rrm\1 In advunC&lt;' dlr&lt;'cl to

Su hs C' rlh f' r~

Ground Fresh
Several Times

WALKER

Daily

Machinery

•

[BI YOUR C ATERr:&gt;ILLAR O EAU. nl
Calerp.Uar, Cal ana

rn cue Traaema r~ s ot C;uerpillar TraCIOI Co

For On the Job Security!

Thr Dall Y srntlnrl on a.1. 6or 12 month
ba s i~. fiC'diT will bfo 2f\'&lt;'n can-ll'r Pach

VIVA

KING SIZE

2°/o
'
Milk

Food land
Bread·

monTh

$149

No su bsrr lptlon... b ~· m;lll pPrmlttN:IIn
to11:n s whf'rr homf' carrkr srrvlc£' Is
avalla blr.
Mall SurnK·rlptlon!!

GAl.

lmtld t- Ohio

1:\ Wf'f'ks ....... ...................... U t 56
21i W£&gt;€'k S, .............. , ................. $29.12
f)2 .Nt'&lt;'kS.. .. ..... .... ........ , ........... $58.24
Outsld P Ohi o
'· 13 'N£'t'ks ........... .
.... $15.i0
26 WP£'kS ................ ..
. ... $31.20
~2WE'&lt;'k5

I
U. S. NO. 1

QUICK &amp;
• OLD FASHIONED

·OATS ••• ~........
E~ery Day

White
Potatoes

50c

Lo• Prlee
Bul~

Food_s
We Accept
FOod Stamps

.,

· 20-0Z.
LVES.

Heiner's 35 Wheat .. tad

'I

49(
ONION SETS .... ....

? ·~~-; '~ '

...

20 LB.
.BAG
'

· 01111 11 en (304) 949-6400 • Becldey (304) 253-2706 • Parlcerlburg (:114) 424-03)) • Su~ (304) 872:43()3 • Loglln (304) ij52-0300 .

Jl .

•

...

·.-"

.

•

.

" .

~;

.

NEW

' ;

1'
(

YEllOW or
WHITE

LB.'

992-6910
S14 EAST MAIN
POMEROY .

toWfATIIII

29

SEED
· $399
POTATOU............

'

Ohio Valley

(;A,•• 3

KINNIIEC-SD ll. lAG

.... S5!l.IIO

.... ... .

•

FRESH LEAN

Ground

•'

I

89

6 PACK
CANS

rhmu~ h Friday. 111 Court St. . Po·
mrro~· - Ohio. by thr Ohio Yilll('y Pub·

lls hlnf!

R C Cola

Coca-Cola

Midkiff, Carol Adams , Becky DePoy, Donna Karr, Linda Ha ley,
Kathryn Hart, and J anet Bolin.
Bank One and King Builders served
as headquarters for the day's
activities:

BARGA!.~

!USPS 11 5-911111
A Dl\' ls lon of Multimedia, Inc.

Beans

TENDERBEST USDA CHOICE

1
1

4
..

·24 " Overhang

COUPON EXPIRES APIIIL lO, 1986

-Pin1o

89C

II.

~IVERY.

22

Grapeor Jelly·
Grape Jam
BOLOGNA

----------.,

2.0°/o off usT

PEAK

MT. IRAND

'

MUST PRESENT COUPOJ'I TO GET

SMUCKERS

CAS H &amp; CARRY ONU

4'x8" SHEET

1
1

·'

The Daily Sentinel

•

SUPE-RLOW .PRI·C·ES!!!-!

LaLeche League plans meeting

Over ·s:m was collected by
members of Pomeroy Boy Scout
249'\Ybo took dona tions for Amelican 'Heat1 Association ba lloons on
Ire streets of Pomeroy arid
Mktlleport.
John Bartels, Jeremy Heck, Eric
Hff'k, Olris Alkire, Joe Roush,
Stacy Shank, Chase Cleland, Hank
Cleland , an d Shain Phillips, scouts
took part In the fUnd raiser under
the direction of . Mike Edwards,
asslslant scoutmaster.
,Adull s assisting with the rrolf'f' t
were
Midkiff,

Your ln••P•••••tly Own•• Foo.lan~
. S~perntl,tket Has M,ore
-~ S~~lng1 For You!!

·' .

~::~~GE- .........~;.... 19 (

FlESH

RIPE · .
TOMATOES .......~t ...
MKHIGAN PEAT OR 40 11

TOP SOIL .......uP..:

69C

$169
·

I,

..

.'

./

�..

...

.
'
: ,; Paga 10-lhe o.iy Sen*'-1
'

.

'

·~- . ;_",
Jeremy "D. Jomson a&gt;IPbratro
~- . , .- his sevEnth birthday with a party at
. ~' the home ol his parmts, Mr. and
. ::!. Mrs. David Jollll!on.
: ;~
A cake with a train on top was
~ : · made for tiE party by Jeremy's
· ·~. aunt, JUI Jolmoon, and was sel"!'d
, ·- ·, with u crewn, chips, koolald 1111d
;: &gt; CIJ6'ao. Games ~m"e played 'with
; -: :::-: 'plile -&amp;Uing to AmbPr, J .R. and
·-:-"' • :A¢3 l!ll!l:kwl'll, Kart Miller, and
··~-::;. !1{1)hanle Bw1on who also won lhl'
:: -· · door pr1zl'. Each child rtrf'lvro a

&lt;.:

fawr.

: .- ~;- · Anmdlng wm- Chl'l1 and Bm'--. jamJR. ~- ~ and Donnie .
· ·-:~ , Ji&gt;lwlson, Connie, Slephanle and
'Asl!ley B1111on, ,l&lt;Arl and ntrany
;• - &lt; Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Steyf' Blackwei Jr. Amber, Artca and AJa,
· Sandy and Jessk'll Wright, Hyllla
. ' El)lln. Barbara Colmer, Mr. and
.·'.,, ': Mn. Clyde Henderson, JUI Jom son, Mamie SIEp!Enon, maternal
•· gt&amp;dnotiJpr, Evelyn J ohnson, paternal grandroothl'r, and Jeremy's

.&lt;: ,·

~

,,

~-

!

:..·

t

•

"'&lt;&gt;;;¢jjr

~

parmts and lrotll'rs and !ister,
Scon and Kimberly. s.ndlng gifts Wt're Mr. and Mrs.
Ja.,.,; Farley and 9011S, Manetta.
Ouist~r Pickens and (bad

Bw1on.

Carleton menu set

..
:
:
;.

TIIUISDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Evangt'llne
Chapter, Ordt'rol thE' Eastern Star.
wUI nll'el at 7:ll Thursday at thr
Middleport Masonic TE&gt;mple. Otllcers a!"'' to wear chapter drf'Sses.

Oak Park. Adnitssion at the door Is
$1!i. Music by the Tunet lmers of
Columbus.

~+~+o·t..

S~ecial

.

of the Week

~

54C
ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

"At the End of tiM Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
pOMEROY, 011.
PH. 992·2556

oo+~••••o

Revival set
MIDDLEPORT - Rev ival will
he ll'ld a t the Middleport Independent Holiness Church, Pearl Street,
Wednesday, April 16, through
Sunday, Aprll al, 7:ll eacheventng.
There will be special singing each
f'&lt;lenlng and the pastor, the Rev.
Odt'UManley, will be the speaker.

·-

\-

has brf'n announr(d . Muklng a gradf'of B
.or ab0\'1' In al l th•· lr subjN·ts I n bC' namf'd
to Thr rol l " '{' f'.g.:._
SEVENTH (i!I 1\DF: _ Cha st' CIPiand ,
R:1 nd\' Corq, Tt'rN&gt; a 11f'C" m. J ohn Eva ns,
Davkl F'rymyrr . Howard Grovt'S . Er ic
Hl'ck, Susa n Hourhl n ~. Va n Kl rln. Jea ·
rl ('ltt;&gt; MrDo n &lt;~ld , Stl'\11' M . M a r 1!n . Missv
Nrlson. 'I'Prry RrUt f'r , A&lt;~ ron Sht'f'IS. Kri ; .
r; n Sl ..t ~lr' r , Jason ~ml th , ,IOSf1Jh Smith.
KPII.v Sm ith. M oni P Swtndrll . ,JPnnlfcr
Taylor, Am.v Wagm•r. Strp hanlr Y.,1alkrr .
Da y mond Wo lff'.
EIGHT H GRAD F.- Na nl'y B:1kl'r M(ll a·
nlr Be('J! i(l, Cary ~17/ng . UC.tdl Ca r~ ltv&gt;rs,
Hank Cir lunrl. John Conlf')o·. Eddlf' Crook.~.
Lruh Danl&lt;'ls. Lis;1 Dar ~ t . Kim Ebli n. Am y
Eppl e, Pt~ g y Estrp . Mary Halt:', KP!I y
Ham ll! on. Wall y tfa!lkld . Brt&gt;nd:1 H awleY.
M art· Howard. Am v .loh!l son. Da iP .lohfl .
st on. Da nny K('nn4:'dy , fk'r ky Ker r. Kristin
Kin~ . Tony Mlllrr. Shanrion N('V.'SO rtl(' ,
· Harh Hlchrnund, H ~J C hf'l Robi nson, Todd
Smi th . Ctwryl S!f'vtm, Mlkr W&lt;.~lls. Tom
Wrrr:-·. Annp W!ll ia m s. T&lt;tra Wolff• .

llw Jnurth six " "f'f' ks ,wading period

honor rolln t l hf' 1-: a ~ tNn .Junior and Sf.'nlur
Hi gh Schoo ls ha s ht~n an nouncrd . M &lt;J klrt g

a ~ r a d PO l A or ul&gt;on In a llthf'lr su hj('('ls to

.--- - - - - - - - --1

smor-.

lX' nam("{l tol h(' roll wr rf':
TWEL FTH GRADE - Mr liss a BarkPr ,
u.~a

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN' MUSSER

7-UP

INSURANCE
111 Second St., Pomeroy

8 ans. $J~9

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1-868

16

oz.

TENTH &lt;iRADE - Mara lvn Barton
Rt'nt"'' K:n•lor, Wrls.sa Lone. ·Am v Bl•rk.
hi mPr , Lor lt• BurkP. Ahl.l{atl C:iuthorn.
Amy Connolly, Chad Coo k . Tim l .:.~wson.
Cr isty 1\' f'w lun. Ru lh tl: ui!Pr. April Rlrrhll'.
.Jodi Sc h af'k ~' l . T rf'nt Upron .
NINTH GRADE- Amy HagPr, Ml ch;,s(']
Martin. Dan' RIC'f' . l.lsa Orig:~s . Ma r.~· l:d·
wards . HI'&lt;J ihf'r F'lnlaw. Krls Hf' lnf'S , Wil l
Hi ll. Mi chr lil' H ugh ~. T t11nm,v LC'ach ·

&gt;•

\"'4

. -.,

·,'

,..

.

·.•

Needs, Scotty
and Enn Invite
'T heir Friends ·

To

R"I~AL

man. Li sa Pool er. Chr is Spm('('r, T r lsh3

Wltherl'l l . .
FIFTH GRADE- Na tt}an Baloy, Ellli! ·
bl•!h Downif.&gt;, Misty Hayman. Jason Huff ·
man_, John Martin. Cou rtnf'y Mid ki ff , Shf'l ·

Sprn ~r .
.
. EIC. HTH GRADE - Eli:wbth B~·imt,
Shuwn Bush, Grrta Rl ffl f', Amber ShorT,
Robin Wh iu•
SEVENTH r.RADE - Blllir John son.
Suzann(' Cla .v. Andrf'a Clt'land, Leig h Ann

Jpy Smit h.
SI XT H GRADE -: Slf'Vf'n Carutht'rs.
Ap r il Hudson. Conn tf' Sa ulrrs. Valf'r lr
\\ll son .

H«&lt;ov lcm .

Th r fourlh six W('f'k s ~ radl n g per iod
honor r oll :u lht• Ru!l:tnd EIPmenl ar y
~khool has bt•en announ ced . M a kin~ a
grad £' B or abovl' In allth&lt;'ir su bjt•t·lto be
namf'll to lht' roll wt•re:
FIRST GRADE- Chad Bart rum, Oilry l
Row.-.rs. St&lt;'phanie Coll er ill. Brookf' Dal ·
IL•y, f"k&gt;lly .l o Dldissf'. E liza bf' l h El li s.
Sro tty G('(J rg£'. Frank Hera ld . Ml chellr
MIIIC'r. Am&lt;~nda Musser. Jer em y Pier cr.
As hlry Roac h. 8&lt;&gt;\w ly S!('Wafl. ,J&lt;Jm ie

The fourth six wr ('k s 2rad!ng pf'riod
honor rol l at lhC' Har rlson\' lll e Sch oo l h &lt;.~s
trrn an nounced . M aklnJ!: a gradf' of B or
above In allth(&gt;lr subj('('! S ro b(' nam('d l o
t hf' rol l W&lt;'f l.':
FIRST GR ADE - Lau ra Ar lx, Jl'Ssl t•
Bl a&lt;·krord , J ess(' Dil lon . Matthew Our ·
ha m , Joshua How ard , Alicia Stegall,
.Jo.'! hua Wan dl inl!. Rick y \' os l.
SECOND GRADE - Amber BC'n nell ,
KP\th E lfr ink , Gary Stanley, Tab lltw
Swear ln2en. Donald Yost .
THJRD GRA DE - RogN Ar lx. Dean
Hankl ll , Elolda S1~ all , Melissa Van('(' .
FOU RT H GRADE - Cl)' sta l Donohu(l,
Mlsty Frum . MPron l.rueser, Shawn
lnl'! t'i s. Ron da Raymond , Jona than Van('(•,
Timmy Vance.
.FI FIH GRADE - M E•IIss a Du rham.
SIXTH GRADE - Ja mf:'S How('r ton .
Pau l Sha r p . Anthon y Slx .,·Bobb y VanCf'. \
___

The difference In lost days of
The Meigs Loca I Board of
Educ'atlon has designatEd graduaattendance Is due to differences ln
tion date for Meigs High.seniors as
til' number of days miss!'d by the
respective schools. The use of oor June. l. Additional information
regarding time and location wi!I!Ji:
schedulEd Spring Break kept the
system from having to extend the releasEd at a later date.
sdlool year any luther Into J une.
The House of Represehta tlves In
For the public's information tre legisla ture of the State of Ohio Is ,
Ihere is legislatlem introduced in currently considering a bill that
Ohio that would prohibit the,start of
would permit senJors to be releasEd
school unlll the first Tuesday after three days early for graduation
the first Monday ln. September. prEparation. If this legislation Is oot
Schools In oot area have tradition - passed, it will be necessary for
ally startI'd In Iate August. This Meigs seniors to return to classes on
legislation If approvEd and It the June 3 and 4, before fin al diplomas
school retainEd Its current vacation may be recetvro.
March 10, marked the begtnnJng
and oollday schedule would cause
oor schools to have to operate lnto of the fifth six weeks grading
period. The sixth and fina l six
the rmnth of June.
Any excess of the allowEd five weeks grading period \&lt;111 begin
days of calamity would cause an , AprU 21.
Meigs Local Schools will not be in
even longer extension Into June.
Complicating the Issue even more session on May 26, in celebra lion of
Is discussion of eliminating the five Memorial Day.
April and May are months of the
day calamity days granted witoou t
school year in which a multitude of
makeu p.

cxx:v~
.. . . . .

school activities are taklng place
and bPcome a · demattdlng and
exciting time (91:. ~~~ In the school
commu nities. WeVencourage our ·
parents and other interestEd persons to bPcome familiar with school
events and schedules and to
participate and support our stucEnts and schools.
A "school year" of 183 days and
"school days" of 5-5'h hoUI&gt; seem
fD many to be so long but when one
consi&lt;Prs all that Is requir,ro to
happen and to be accomplisij:,d by
Ire schools It is. In reallty,'a tilnlfed
period of time.
The Meigs Local School District
appreciates the community/pu blic
silpport received and encourages
you r active participation in becoming more familiar with the system's
operation.
If any readers wtsh to suggest
topics for future articles, please
contact the Superintendent at 9922153. .

SECOND GRADE- Phy llis Clark, Jer·
Pm \' Co lem ~ n . John Clt'la nd, Kriste n Das·
'-)' IVa. Mt~rlenl' Hess, Jeremy Honaker.
AnJ(I e Powell . Tim my Priddy. Lori Ru ss£&gt;11. Terri .lo Smllh . C\ndl SteoA·ar1, Matt
T itus. Cand ic-e Wa lk er, Roxa nf' Wil li am s.
THIRD GRADE- J ana Dal lt&gt;y. Rril'lgrl
Davl!'i . Philli p Edmonds, 'T'ravls Grate.
Roy dr n Hawkins. JNemy Imbod en. Mai(·
e:le Kr nnedy , Lori MeC her. Sherr! R om sburg . Cynth ia Roush, M!chellr Ward, Car ·
rl e Wil liam s.
FOURTH GRADE - L orri Bu rnPm,
Bobbl Jo Di dl s~. Arnie Ell loll , Rachel Hy·
s('l l, Mlssv .Jpfff'r~ . Jason Miller. Jov

Th(' fourth she wr('ks grading pf'riod
honor r ol l aT lhf' Sali sbury Elf'menlary
School has bi&gt;('n a nn oun cC'd. Me~k i n ~ a
~ radt.&gt; B or nbov(' In all t heir subj('c ts 10 br
flllmed to th(' r oll wrrr :
F IRST GRA DE - .J on athan Dtck r ns.
Tara GruPSt'r , Bt&gt; rsy H o uda ~ h r l r . Ja red
Kl nf:. Lf'i!ll'h Ma sh, Ti mm~· Pt•a \'l£'y, Chris
Roush, MP JL-.s&lt;~ Wh al('y, L('E' Cord ra y.
Srth Kern . Ra qu('l Maddux , .Jor1 Milll'l',
Randy Sm llh , Br('n1 Wha l('y, Ma x Wi lson,
,Jos hua Wlth£'r('ll. Brian Wll hraw .
SECOND GRADE -~lkki"JPn i i P \' . Au·
tumn Condt', J£'r£'my Hubb ard. DOrorhv
I.Pifhl'it , M indy Pall crson . T ra cy Shaffri .
Ja son Sh(I('I S, Na1a sha Starer . Karyn
Thompson, Jam('S Whl1 ('.
HURD GRADE - R_ya n Dodson. Far
rod Fol fll(' r , Kl'll t&gt;)' Grur-srr, H't•ld l Huff.
man, Ann if' .)(IssiE', J()(•y Li psco mb. Shilo
Moo rt', Ma!thpw Morri s, Erica Roblt• ,
Molly Toban, Tanya Wa u ~ h . Pat Y o un~ .
FO URTH GRADE - .Wnni fPr Clark(',
R~· an Condf' .•Jarrod Do u~J as. Bf'ck y Hoff.
man, Bria n WalkN . M arl a Whl!f', .Jason

O'Bri en. ·

'

·

F'l F"TH GRADE- Jod,· Fowler
SIXT U GR,\ DE - Tam my MIIIPr. Ke·
vln MussN. Miranda Nicholson . J ason
H £&gt;y nold s. Mar jorl£' Trom m
I NT . - DH - Alann a Cl eland. Jos hua
Dunkle. Shaun lamb&lt;'rl .
Thr foul1h six wf'f'k.o; grading prrlod honor
r·ou a! thf' SyracuSC' Elrmmtaf)' Schoo l ha s
b«&gt;n :mnoun{'(l('l . Makln_g a ~adr of B or
~txJ\'1' In aU thl&gt;lr subj£1Cts 10 IF namA:! toth£&gt;
I'OIIIA'f'rP:

Grad(' Orw: Brian Allf'fl, Carls.o;;&amp; Ash. Chris
Ball. Jr remy Buo;ldrk. KN\n Flrlds. Ph!Uip

Hamm. Trudy .J ustis·. Erin Kraw SC'"~' n .•Jason
l..awn•nt."1', Travis LL&lt;ik•. Jt'Sslt•a Sayr£1,
Am tw:&gt;r TOOmas .
Gradr Two: Ryan Hill. RochPlk&gt; .lf'flk in s.
J£'nnilff Lawren('('. Jay McKelvf'y. Chanda
Mu lford. Sa m an tha Stsson. Rayan You ng,
Ma ndy Mills, K im Cornel l.
C ralk&gt; Thr('(&gt;: Brian Andl'rson , Randy
Bln,g, Mason Fisher . Carr if' ln~els . Adam
Krawsczyn, Andrea l\1oorr. Amy Weav('f',
R.van Williams.
Grad(' Four : Aaron Drummer. Ctysral
Harm:m, Jodi Hobbs , MIC'hacol McKelvt&gt;V.
AmbPr Ohlin~£'f . Stephanlf' Sayll'.
·
Gradf' Flvf': KI"Vin Amort . Bethany Bass.
John B&lt;'nll~·. Raber la Caldwrll. Valerif'
Connolly, Jenn l!f'f' Cross. K1mbr.r l_v J mk.lns .
HP&lt;J iher Mc Phail. Angle Mills
CracJto Six: David Black, Ambfor Cumlnlls,
Sron Uslf'. Olrls Thoma.~ .

Gr ade One: Gary CooP,Pr. G n ~ McKinn{·:v.
Amy RlzRr. Sarah Wallbrow n, Hlllf'r)" Harris.

The quick,
' easy way to
colorful
decorating
schemes
' without objectionable
paint odors.
For all interior .

Gr ade 'TWo: C.J . H:mis. Gabf&gt; Sml1h.
Grad(' 'Il\r('(': Mlr hrl lr Har rl'&gt;. Erika
1\orrnan. David Plrk('Os.
.
Grade Four· Rva n Ada ms. ChrL'ili f'
Coop!:•r. Tonya Cr('tTiea ns, Pf'nn ~' Glllispif'.
Jllmcy Smlt h.
.
Grade F'lvf': Nick 1\ dams. Mirhorl Evans.
Kristy RliTr. Kenn.v Rilrr . Rarhtlf'l RosC'.
Barbh.' RO\L&lt;ih , Shaw n Wolf('.
Gradt• Six : Jos hua.' Codrwr. Hrathl'r
GJD?aut.

D.H.:

.lamf'S

P a r son~.

Chr is Hamm.

•

•

wa ll ~.

washable.

·Finest

Professional

WRESTLING

Saturday, April 5
8:00P.M.
Featuring the Lody Wrestlers
and tht Midget lady
Wrestlers. Tht B:ue Cyclonu;
Tht Shang Gang, John
Diabiose and others.
Advance tickets may be
purchased at:
CK Supermarket, Middleport;
Miller Bros. Grocery, Rutland;
Rutland Dept. Store, Ru\lond.

•

Adults ss.oo
Children 12 &amp; Under 13.00
Ticket $1.00 More at Door
Sponsored by the Rutland Civic

PICkENS HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.

Center

Thl' fou l1h six wN'ks ..,-adinR pr-rb:l honor

roll ut ·Thr Portland Elemrt1'fary School

....

.,

be£&gt;n announced. Making a grad(• of 8 or
aiXlve In all 1hrlr su b]f'C'ts to IX' namcd ro 1he
roll W('f(' :

11..1.\

OUR FIRST
1986

FIRST SOUTHERN IAPTIST CHURCH
•1112

dictated by law ·

W ll ll ;~ m s on .

Mr. and Mrs. C.E. Blaki.'S it&lt;e Florida. _
have rrtumcd 10 lhrir home on
A highlight of their trip was a
Lincoln Height s after sp&lt;•nding the cruise through the Panama Ca nal
wint er In F'lorida.
which included a dugout canoe side
Enrouto .thrrr thr\' visit ('(! with trip by moonlight. and time on San
their daughters. .lr nnifer Butcher. Rlas and the Pearl Islands on the
and her fa mu)' in RO&lt;-ktord. In d..
W&lt;'S t end of lh&lt;' Ca na l. Mrs.
and Pat ricia C'ircl&lt;' and hrr familv . Blakeslee pursuEd her hobby of
in Wichit a. Kansas. Thr Butchers collect lng shells during the winter.
lalrr joined thPm for a visit in rrtumlng home with hu nd reds .

. ~ '.;=:::.;:=:;::;::~====·=··---------;;;=ii
- ' r .•

sch~l year

Schools are requirEd
begin ning of school, one In October
for Instruction not tess t n 182 days for a county-wide teacher tnservlce
ln each school ye&amp;r; oowever, the meeting and a.day at the close of the
requirEd nu mber of ·days may school year.
include up to two days !~service
The calendar caUed for)80 days
and m&amp;y also Include up to two days of Instruction, with two days to be
per school ye&amp;r for paren t-teacher schroulro fo r parent -teac her conconferences.
ferences. The original ca lendar
The min imu m requi!"''d numbe r 'would have hi.d the last day of
of school days may be rEduced by schoo l for students as May ll, 1986.
up to five days due to closing school · However, due to the number of days
because of "calamity". In such lost during the school year due to
cases the min imum req ui red weather an d other circumstances It
number of days may be reduced to was necessary to adjust til' ca175 Including parent-teacher con- lendar to comply with the state and
rerenel' days.
contract req uirements .
The Meigs Loca l School District
As the calenda r now stands. the
has a "school year" of 183 days, . last day for students at Middleport
which exceeds the state minimum Elementary, Salem' Center Eleby one day . Theextra dayisa result mentary, Salisbury Elementary,
of a negotiatEd day In the collective Meigs Junior High and Meigs High
bargalnlng agreement wit h the School is June 3. June 4, Is the last
Meigs Local Teachers Assoclatkln. day for students at Brad~ury,
The original school calendar to r the Harrisonville and Pomeroy Ele1985-86 school year callEd for three mentarles. Rutland Elementary
teacher meeting days; one at Ire student s wlll be in attendance
through June 9.

Blakeslees return to Meigs area

"""'· ~ "
&lt;( ·~~
' ••.
• · :.... l
.•

HPndNson. \'Nonlca Provo. John

Hkt•. Kim Srhu l. Linda Bartlmu s Ton £'
Cht~pman , Kim l)(on r. Dawna G~uc&gt;st'r ,
i\!Psh la Holsl n ~wr . CPnt' J acobs. An2r la
Pnolf'r . A lan Rf'f'd . Tr icla Sa ms. Mik f'
Si m , TPrr l Stan' hl'r . Amy Yount( .
ELEVENTH I.RADE- Travl.~ Nt•wlu n.
Kirk Hrf'd . Dc-la nl Bil kcr . Rob.v'l B.1 rnPII.
Durlrnr Baum . Mrll!isa C 1la""·a'v Todd
Cla y, Ed Colli ns. K risl i Hawk ." Gr~
L ('&lt;~C hman . Amy L ouk s. Ar lr nf' Rl tch il'.
l.£•c 1\nn Hohln snn. Df'lrah Sil n(!l•r s .

---

.. .

_

Thf'&gt; fourth si x W('('ks grad in £ prrlod
honor r ol l ~ ~ thr· Mt•igs Junlor H ll:'h Sctlool

LOCUST &amp; PEARL STS.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
PHONE 992-3471

Area ling
MASON, W.Va. -A Bend area
gospel sing will be held at 7 p.m on
Saturday, April 12, in the Wahama
111gb School gym, Mason. W.Va.
Fealurro singers will be The
Reflections Trio, Sounds, and
Inspiration.

Len_h of

The Daily SentinOI- Page- ·11

Meigs
County
school.
honor
rolls
_
_
_
_
..

the Nenlng services. Thompson
will have both serv ices on April '!J.

PAGEVH.LE - Scipio Voluntee r
Fire Department Ladles Auxiliary
is sponoortng a smorgasbord Satu rday, hun 5 to 7 p.m.. at the
Pagevllte Townoouse. l'rtxleftls to
the !Ire department. '

ALfRED - Alfrro Unttro Methodist Church Youth Fellowship Is
sponsoring a soup SUAJI'I'Saturday,
•: SYRACUSE - The Meigs Asso- 4 to 7 p.m., at the church on St. Rt
. • elation for Retarded &lt;;ttlzens wUI. · ~ - On the menu will be vegetable
: · meet Thursday, 7 p.m ., at tht&gt; swp, chilL rot dogs, sloppy jOE'S,
:· carl(oton School.
homemade pies, coffee, tea and
p:&gt;p.
FRIDAY ..
, · RE~Vlll.E - Ollve To~m­ SUNDAY
: ship Tru st~ will meet Friday, 6: ll
MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs: p.m., at the Rf@dsvUle fire station. Masoo Girl$. SoflbaU Ass&amp;!iatlon
wtll meet at 2'p.m. on Sunday, Aprll
RACINE - Proal tractor pull at 16, at the Mltklleport Masonic
; Southern Local Hlgh School In 'l'l'mple, North Second Ave. Eve-;, !WltWi; ..-etgh-in siarts at 5 p.m. 11'1Xte lnterf'Stro Is askl&gt;d to attend.
pulllilg at 6; sponsored by
' . ;;,·: and
PI'O's c1 Portland. Letart and Otuldl pi'OKI'1IIIl
•
:.' .; :: Racine; refreshments wUI bP
EWINGTON - Choir from the
-.... 1.
" avalia"''~
;:-.
I.ISC'·
Unkm Bil*' Seminat1' will be at the
PlneGmveHollnessChurchFrlday
...... :' ·''r.:
SATURDAY
at 7: ll p.m. The IXJbllc Is lnvitro to
-·.' -i LONG BO'M'OM - COOlil1unltv attend by Pastor BEn Watts.
·: Assn. wUI sponsor a sprlne
;. gasbord at the communtty building !pmkera lilt
: : ln Long Bot tom at 4: ll p.m.
HYSEll. RUN - Speakers at the
·· Saturday; ham, meat loaf, chicken Hysell Run Holiness Church for
• and noodles; good selection ol AprU have bPen announced.
_eptrees, desserts, salads; adults.
On April 6 MIke Thompson wut
$3.50; children under 12, $2.50 have the Sunday rooming service,
; ":;; tnciudlng bPverage.
with ll&gt;land Haley to speak In the
......_~·
~lng. On Aprlll3, Thonipeon wU
-· •
POMEROY - Roya l Oak Dance have both tlr morning and evening
·'· ·• Club Is sponsoring a dance, Satur- · service, and on Apt1lll, Maley wU~
' " r day, 8 p.m. to 12 midnight, al Royal have lht&gt; rooming a.1d Thompson

By DAN E. MORIUS
Superintendent
.
As many of the readers of this
article may know, the length of a
minimum school year In Ohio
Public Schools Is governed by law.
Statutes provide only minimum
levels of rff}uired att enda nce and
allow boards of roucatlon t ~ req uire
In struction beyond . th e legal
minimums.
By law. a ~ school year" Is defined
as that period beginning on July 1fi
a part icular calendar vear and
ending on June 30 of · the next
succeeding calendar year. A
"school day" for grades one
through six consists of not less than
five clock hours wit h IXJplls in
attendance but may Include two
fiflel'n minute recess perklds. The
"school day" for pupils In grades
7-12 consists of schrouled classes, .
supervisEd activities excluding Interscholastic at hletics or approved
!'ducat to nal options fo r at least fi ve
and one-halt hours.

1.09

Carleton school luncheon menus
for the !"''malnder r1 the week have
been announcro.
On Wron~ay, the menu wUI
consist of a ta~ala d casserole,
raw · vegetables, irecrea m, fruit
and milk; on Thursday,- chtcken
noodle soup, peanut butter sandwiCh, vegetable sticks, fruit and
milk; on Friday, spaghetti pizza,
tossed salad, fruJt and milk. ·

Calendar I happenings
WEDNE!DAY
SCIPIO - Senlor cit izen's ol
Scipio Township wUI have bbod
pressure day, Wl'd!K&gt;sday. from 2to
,. 4 p.m. at the Scipio fire house. The
: publ ic is invitEd.

Know your schools

'

SPEAKER - Dan Dempsey
wUI speak a&amp; lhe Soulheastem
Ohio l'ellowsltlp Conference to
be held now through Salunlay a&amp;
the Church II God, Slate Boote
1:u; Rutland. Services are Wednesday' Thursday lind Friday a&amp;
7 p.m. and Satunlay a&amp; 5 p.m. ·
Public lnvlled.
·

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio •

Wednesday. April 2. 1986

A chUd assault - safety actions -· .. Child Sexual Assault", and "Child
workshlp Is being offerEd by the Pemography". Each workshop
Department of Continuing Educa- _,. includes audio-visuals or slides,
tJon for · Rio Grande College at the . resource lists, role plays, questionMeigs High School Ubrary, on answer period and handouts.
Aprll 3, 10, 17 and 24 trom 6: ll to 9
The registration tee Is Ul for the
p.m.
tour SE'Sslons. For roore lnlorrnaToptcs for discussion J"UI be lion residents can contact Rio
''Misslng ChJidren-Paren tal Anduc- Grande's Continuing Education
tlon", "Child Abuse-Neglect", Department, 614-245-5351.

Plans for serving the canteen at
the Apr U16 bloodmobile were made
when the Mlcijleport ChUd Conservatkm ll&gt;~e met Thursday night
at lhl' .Ohil Power Office.
Husband's night to be. held In
Aprll was dtsrussro and arran ~
ments made t6r a potluck dlnner
and white elephant sale at the
grange tiau. Peggy Houdashelt,
Janet DuffY. and Thelma Sines
were ap!XJintro to ~ nominating
oomrnittee. The tuberruisosts levy
was endorsed . .
The spring conterenel'. "'as announ&lt;J&gt;d for April 25 at Rodney with
lhl' Ga llipolis Toddlers to Tassles
Club to be host.
Nancy Morris presided at the
meeting and also had devotions
entitlro "The Miracle of Easter"
and "Peter's Hideaway." The
traveling prize, donated by Mrs.
Morris, was won by Llnda Broderick. Helen Biackston won the
hostess gift. Susie Aboott and Mrs.
Morryrved refreshments.

~

Wednesday, Apri(2, -1986

Child safety ~lass set

Middleport
ca meets

.., .~

~

(.

Pomeroy- Middlepoi-t, Ohio

·_;; Johnson
~~ birthday

.

.'

,

~-·,

DODGE
OMNI

p_,., ,.., '-"'· Ohio
APRIL 6 tba t1

Sunday 10:46 A.M .
SUR dey thru Fridey
7:00P.M ..
Tim Morrilolt- Mutic DIMc1or ~ loiMt

AIL
MEN'S
HUSH PUPPY

THERE'S A
IN FILL

SHOES

2'0°/o OFF
''

-

All

NATURAliZER
HUGH PUPl»Y

20°/o Off

AU SINGER
. SEWING MACH..ES
AND CAIINETS

OMNI
DOOOE
Ofl'llASo

DRESS SHOES

20°/o Off

Sl.OO cash back
.. WITH
.

'With 7UP or Diet 7UP proofs of purchase
(llmlt one per household)
To rece1ve refund. pleue send In proofs of purchase '
correspondinc to one of the following
(check appropriate bo~~:) :
01 D Fou r 7UP or Diet 7U P lllter • or 3 liter • llbel 1 ' .
02 0 Twelve 7UP or Diet 7UP 16·ol . botde cap liners
03 D Cuh re sister receipt(s) with ilmount circled for two

115 West
, Seo!MI St.

,_.,

7UP 6·pack uns plus' UPC number from
o~e can written on the receipt •
04 0 One proof seal from a ll ·pftk un wrlL'P of 7UP
7UP/Oitt

or Diet 7UP

"2·2214

'

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

N•""'- - - - - - - - - - - - -Add.-. 11 _ _ _ _ _ __ __ _ _ __
City

State

---

SEND TO: 7UP ' $2.00 Refund , Post Office Box 120' .
Ridgely, Maryland 21684 ,

'Ptuut .. ow liM B -~h tor di!h~r, ~eluM1 rtqu"e tile u'e of~~" off1mt
form No (JUlmL!e' Will ~ ucep,tc:l Cull rtl•lter f tHiptl Wllh (!r(l~d

ilmounu mull be d.ttd.tfter Jmunr 15. l ~h Offer ~ood where renrotted

or proMI&lt;tt&lt;1 br ,,,..
·
Hurry, Refund Olfer eKplr e s Ma~ 16, 1986.

' ReMltnn or depg1n law 1t1tt1 mayforfe•• IH!fXII•UII'f pm&gt;eopat.na

'· Emptr COI'IttMt of, bo ttlt

lit tort rt~o.on lliltlel\

\

;t':

000~3___.!:!:~~~~~., ;=.:.!:'~;::::·. ._ 1~~J
..

l

Thank You For Your Support This Past Year
A~d We Hope to See You in the Co11,1ing Y~~~

Zip

\

z
•

·-HARTLEY SHOES .
MAll' YIN YRANKEN- OWNEI .

210 EAST MAIN

'

.

•

·

500

O~UPTO s
·

PERCI!Hl'AGE
ANNUAL

rtN~o·

CAS II

BAO: '

,

'

WIT II J\UTOMAfiC TRANSMISSION DISCOUNT PACKAGE

s2soo GIFT CERTIFICATE TO BE GIVEN AWAY

MAIL:IN 'REFUND

7.5%0

'

992-5272

POMEROY

Save up to 1835" with low 7.5\ APR flnancin~.
Or qet 1500 Cash Bacb! Plus Sa•e 1504'" more
when you choose this Omnl Au1omatic Trans·
mission Dlscoum Pacbflqe,

• automatic transmission
• 2.2 liter enqint.
• power steerlnQ

• am/hn stereo radio
• 13" ra llye wheels
• .. and more!

PLUS YOU GET DODGE'S

5/50 ~~:~

yqr'or 50,000 mUe pf'Ote('tlon pl~p .
limited wammry oo pao.verlrt~ ln and ou1er toey rust lhro UQh
Rc5tr!ctio n~ ·,pply _
Erdudes Imports ond non Gold Key leases.
Sec copy 81dealer
\,

!

. ..

'flnonclnQls 101' qualified bvrfn t h~ Chrpk!r Cn.'l.ltt Cur porfttioll Qe.,kr contrtbution !TillY tlltetl tiM! ~c Must t.'llic del ivery lrom stoctl AsR !of
det~~lls. "f! Mnc.e st~•lnqs M.Yd on comparl50nltl currenta•erft\14! Chrysler Credit Corpor.!l tk)n F1nanclf19l C rftle of 12 ~\ Annlllll Pcrce~ 12ete. u"ng

:~~~~~:·M~· Aa~· ~·,~cOoPER·~;:.,,

---~~ 0, ... ~.,~.~PKM~

hrysler • Plymouth • Dodge, I
'

399 S. THIRD STREET
,. MID DLEPO RT, OHIO 45 760
1

•

�·-

-"

. I

12- The

.

Ill C111111 S1..'Pomeroy, Ohio «S769

ADDENDUM TO PART f
ITEM E 151
SOUTHERN OHIO
COAL CO!I/IPANY \
MEIGS MINE No . t
REVISED 9 / 19 186
LEGAL NOTICE
Pursuant to Ohio Revised
Code &amp;action 1613 .07 lfl
notice 11 hereby given of ravision tO OONR Permit No .
0-0354. Meigs Mine No . 1,
owned by Southern Ohio
Coal Company , P. 0 . Box
490. Athens, Ohio 4570t .
The site is located 1.6 miles
E11t of Salem Center adja cent (in a Northerty direc tion) to State Route 124 in
Meigs County. Ohio . More
specifically. the site occu pies porttons of Section 8
and 16 and Fractions 1, 2 , 6
and 12 !Sections 9 and 16)
in · Salem TownshiP. T.BN .,
R . 15W., in , tile hollow of
Partte, Run and its unnamed
tributartes. The described
arae is conuined in the Wil·
ketville and Rutland U. S .
Gaological Survav 7.5 minute quadrangle maps . A
copy of the application is

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

available for public inspec tion at the offici' of the
Mtigs County Recorder,
Meigs County Coun House,
Second Street, Pomeroy ,
Ohio 45769 . Wr~tan oorres·
pondence concerning the
applicatiOn may be a~bmil­
ted to the Division of Recla ·
mation. Fountain Square,
Building B-3. Columbus,
Ohio 43224 .
1412. 9 , 16. 23, 4tc

Roads 27 end 9. approxima tely 1. t miles Southeast Qf
Point Rortk in Meigs County .
Ohio, More specificially. the
site
·
of

· Public Notice

Mills
U. S. Geo-

7.5 minute

~;~:;~:;~~:~~~::~·,A~

available
copy of
i at the
of tho Meigs County

- - - - - - - -- 1Recorder;

ADDENDUM TO PART 1
ITEM E 151
SOUTHERN OHIO
COAL COMPANY
MEIGS MINE No . 2
REVISED 3/ 31 1 65
LEGAL NOTICE
Pursuant to Ohio Revised
Code Section 1513.07 {FI
not tee is' hereby given of revisipn to OONR Per.,it No .
0 -0366 , Meigs Mine No . 2 ,
owned by Southern Ohio
Coal Company, P. 0 . Box
490, Athans. Ohio 46701 ,
The site is located jult South
of tt. intersection of County

Meigs County
Court House, Second Street.
Pomeroy, Ohio 46769, and
Vinton Courlty
Recorder,
Vinton County Court House.
Main Street, McAnhur, ·ohio
46861. Wrinen correspondence concerning the appli catk)n mey be submined to
the OiYitiOn of Reclamation.
Fountain Sq~are. Building B·
3. Columbus, Ohio 43224.
{41 2, 9, 16, 23. 4tc

Public

tlon It tha gfflce of tho Vin ton Countv Recorder 1 Vin·
ton County Court Houl8
Main ' Street. McArtt..n'
Ohio 46651 , and Malg~

Or Wnlt OJ•IIr St~l•n•l Clan•l~ed Dtpt

Public Notice

Notice

ADDENDUM TO PART I
(TEM E {51

~~~lHJS~p'!~~

RACC00)\1 MINE nil
REVISED 3/ 31 1 86
LEGAL NOTICE
Pursuant to Ohio Revised
Code Section t513 .07 IF)
notice is hereby given of re·
vision to ODNR P"ermit No .
0 -046.3 . Rar:coon Mine NO .
3, owned by Southern O.hio
Coal Company, P. 0 . BoK
490, Athens, Ohio 45701 .
The site Is located 2.6 miles
West of Wilkesville adjacent
(in a Southwesterly direc tion) to· State Route 124 in
Vinton County, .O hio . More
specifically, the site occu·
pies portions of Section 16
and Fractions 24 , 30, and
36 in Wilkesville Township,
T. 8N ., R.16W .. immediately adjacent (1o the East) of
Raccoon Creek . The de scribed area is contained in
the Mulga and Wilkesville U.
S . Geological Survey 7 .5
minute quadrangle maps. A
copy of the application is
a.v ailable for public inspec -

County Recorder. Meigs
County Court Houie, Second Street, Pomeroy , Ohio
46769 . Written correspon dence concerning the appli cation may be submitted to
the Dtvision of Reclamation,
Fountain Square
Building· B- 3. Columbus '
Ohio 43224 .
'
1412. 9 , 16. 23, 4tc

Public Notice
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO '
!;stat! of lola louisa Cross.
Decea'sed .
Coso No . 26 ,066 .
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On March 3. 1986, j n the
Meigs County Probati. Court,
Case _No. 25.006, Judy A.
McGuire, 31 042 Will Vr-1ce
Road, Langsvile. Ohio 4674 t,
was a~inted Administrator.
of the estate of lola louise
Cross, deceass:l , late of
31042
WiN Vance Road .
Langsville, Ohio 45741 .
Robart E': Buck ,
Probate Court
lena K. Nesselroad , Clerk
13)26: 141 2 . 9 . 3tc

·FINANCIAL REPORT
lnvootmentl ....... ... 6000 .00
OF TOWNSHIPS
Total Treaaurv
For Fisctl YHr Ending
Balance ........ , .. 31 , 744 .24
Decomb•r 31, 1986
Le11 Outstanding
'
BEDFORD TOWNSHIP
Chocks .............. 8,861 .80
. COuNTY OF MEIGS
TOTAL
" This li an unaudited FinanBALANCE ....... 23,082 .84
cial Repon"
MARCH 19, 1986
SUMMARY OF
I certify the following re·
" CASH BIILANCES
port to be correct end true,
RECEIPTS AND
to th&amp; beat of mv knowl·
, EXPENDITURES
edge:
GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS
Btirbara J . Grueser,
RECEIPTS :Township Clerk
Taxoa . .'....... ..... ... . 9.06B :78
42774 Helwig Ridge
Intergovernmental
Shade, Ohio 46776
Ro.ceipts .......... 62 ,460. 74
PH 614-696 -1244
Interest .. ............. 1, n5.98 1412. H e
TOTAL
RECEIPTS ....... 73.306.50
· ·~
DISBURSEMENTS:'
General
Government ..... 18,755 .47
Public Works ..... 47 ,086.87
Capital Outley .... 1,260.00
TOTAL DISBURSEMENTS ............. 67,091 .34
Total Receipts Over/
{Under) Disb ........ 6,214. 16
Other Sources / Re ceipts Refund .,. ...... 62.69 ·
TOTAL OTHER FIN ANCING SOURCES
{USES! .............. .. .... 62 .69
Oisb. and Other
Uses .... . .'............ 6,276 .85
Fund Cash Balance
Jon . 1, '86 ....... 11,805.79
Fund Cash Balance
Dec . 3t, ' 85 ..... 18 ,0B2 .64
Depol!litory
... ·
Bel. .. .............. 26.744 .24

Program format for the day-long
event Includes local packs and
troops displaying various cra!ls,
skills, and gamesmanship to· I he
public. Tickets are on sa le lhrough
any scout unit. Scouis "ope 10 earn
enough rmney lo pay their way to
summer camp.
The M-G-M Dislricl Cub Scouts
plan to pul on a " Pinewood [A,rby"

Cub Scouis, Boy Scoul s and area
seoul leaders are pulling logether a
dislricl seoul show from ll a.m. to6
p.m.

..•

in ru'l,t adjustments wit h Cleland to
set up the meeting. A meeting of the
Shrine Club Park Committee wa.s
announced for 6:30p.m. Thursday
at the oark building.

Ohio lottery winners
CLEVELAND (UP! 1 - Tuesday's winning Ohio Loltery
numbers: DaUy Number
~-

the Commltllonert ot Juiora of Meigt County, Ohio,
Jurors will be publicly drawn
for tho May 1986 Torm of
the Common Pleat Court of

said County .
Wallace Bradford,
I. 0 . McCoy,
Commissioner&amp; of Jurors
141 2. ltc

WH0-0-0-0

can help

you?
CLASSIFIED
ADS .

992-2156

THE OFFICE OF

pionl't'ring projecls, dulch oven
cooking and IIE Order rf I he Arrow
'
Indian DanCE' Team.
"The Scout O'Rama is a greal
opportunity for -the public and
especially youngslers of Seoul age
to ice the many ways boysfan join
to~rher in wholesome ac11vities,"
a cornmiltl't' membet· remarked.

R. CRAIG MATHEWS, DDS
AND

LARRY D. KENNEDY, DDS

['"jj;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j WILL BE CLOSED SATURDAY, APRIL
MEN'S WRANGLER DENIM SHIRTS

Council endorses Meigs TB levy
Meet ing in special session Monday night, Rac ine Village Council
endorsed liE upcoming I('V)' of the
' Meigs Counly Tuberculosis
pmgram.
Council discussed a rev iew of
insuranCE' for lhe fire department
and sinCE' il was found that there Is
duplicalion of coverage in some
areas, revised the policies. It was
agreed lo hold a meel ing with Herb
Gibson, owner of the Racine .Gas
Co., to dL&lt;&gt;Cuss lhe posslbiliti~ of
lower rales due to the drop in cosls

r ace.
Otl.,rlroopsandpackswill sel up
booths inside one of I he exhibition
buildings to demonslrale knot-lying
and various examples of scouting
skills, which are pari of the scouts'
training.
Other demonstralions staled lo
take place on I he "midway " Include

• NOTICE OF
DRAWING JURORS
Office of ComrNuloners
of Juror•
Meigs County, Ohio
March 31, 1988
To All Whom It May Concern:
On Thurtdoy, the 10th day '
of April, 1986, at. 9:00
o'clock A.M .. ottho office of

$1599 REG. 118.99
20°/o QFF ALL WORK SHOES
SHEBOYGAN, REDWING, CHIPPEWA (Includes Stool Tool
APRIL 3, 4 &amp; 5

rmm290 SECOND AVE.

STH SO THAT THE ENTIRE STAFF MAY
ATTEND A' CONTINliNG EDUCATION
SEMINAR TO BETTER SERVE YOU IN
THE FUTUR[ OFFICE HOURS WILL RESUME MONDAY~ APRIL 7TH.

THANK YOU

MIDDLEPORT, OH·.

Ticket sales t o t a I e d
$1.173,44J.fji, with a payoff due of

SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
The State of Ohio.
Meigs County
The Farmers Bank &amp;.
Savings Co., Plaintiff
VII .
Walter P. Wears. et al.
Oefendanta
No. B6 -CV-372
In pur.:suance of an Order
of Sale in the above enti11ed
action. ! will offer for sale at
Pl4blic auction, at the door of
the Court House. in Pom eroy, Ohi9. in the above
named County. on Friday,
the 9th day of May 1966. at
10 :30 o'clock A .M ., the fol lowing described real estate ,
sit~ate in the Cq,unty of
Meegs and State of Ohio .
ond In tho Village of Middle port to -wit :
. Beginning a~ the · Southeast corner of lot 56 in
Palmer's Addition to se.Ld
Middleport, Ohio, late tho Vii loge of Sheffield, than,. North
-along East li1e of oaid Lot 66,
·86 ·foot to 'its oomor; thence
West olong tho North line of
said lot 58, 49 feet; thence
South and parallel with th8
Eo!l lino of said lot, 66 feet
~o the South lin'e thereof ;
and thence East along the
South line .of aaid lot , 49
feet to the place of begin ning . This portion of lot 66
is 49 feet o n lincoln Slreet
and e"tends back 66 feet
Reference Deed : Volume
270, Pall' t 31, Deed Records Mt,tgs County, Ohio .
{4)2. 9. 16. 3tc

, :• Public Notice
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIOS COUNTY, OHIO
Eltete of Alice Barnhouse.
Oeceaoad.

ca•:o~~i:~s0~7s .

:

· APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Mard1 19, 1966. in the
Meigs C.._.nty Probate Court,
Ca110 No. 25,078, David Bamhouse, 43066 Cook Road,
Hemlock Grove. Ohio 4573B.
w•• appointed Administrator.
of the estate of Alice Bam·
house,
deceased. late of
43065 Cook Rood, Hemlock
Grove, Ohio, 45738
Robart E. Buck ,
Probate Coun
lena K. Nesselroad. Clertl;
{31 26 : {41 2. 9 , 3tc

, MAKE IT ARULE...
USE WANT ADS, ·_·• f
ARANDV __- ·

$1,034,652. PICK-4

· 111
f

TOOL

4416.

-I

-~

54 Misc. Merchandise

•

WANT THE BEST
. FERTILIZER AT
THE LOWEST
PRICES?

ECKRICH JUMBO

Bologna...................~~ ...•.... Sl. 7·3·

DART VACUUM PACK

BLENDED TO
YOUR NEEDS
PLENTY OF
SPREADERS

.

Sliced Bacon ............~~ ........ S1.29

HONIMADE

;

Ham Salad ..••••••••••••~~ •••••e......99&lt;
BAR S
Shredded,,lb, $2.39
SliCED lB.$219
B01'Ied 'Ham
I

•••e••···· . . ·······••ee

OHIO COllY

LONGHORN
CHEESE ...... , ....... ~.~: .. ~1. 97

•

MGM Farm Gty
·

("""-~

( 1HA3 Rli#Hf-)

40 CT. MUSil liD

COnAGE

GREEN
CABBAGE .,.........~.-..... ,23c

1-11. TASTE O'SEAS

Ocean Perch

I ••••••

CELERY .....'•••••••••• !~:..... 59(

~~~~

••••••

~-

••••

I

'

t-J'J
'"'\

S1. 97

Noodles •.....••.....•~~~······~··•ee••~ 9(

24 OZ. DEL MONTE

Catsup............._.... ~ .. !~.R........ ·S1.~9
50 CT. 9 OZ. SOLO

1

Foam .~ups ............. !~.S.E........... 79c

TWIN PAC

B~unty

Good news ... you can have
gas heat without a lot of expensive
home alterati0ns.
That's because some of the
new high"Sfficiency gas furnaces
vent through the wall, and ·don't
need ,a chimney. So they can be
installed easily-.and in so little
time, you can hav~? it done on a c.old
winter day and never feel a chill.
i

j

I )

CLC COINS
BUYING
GOLD, SILVER &amp;
CIIIIENCY &amp; RARE COifS

992-2259
NEW LISTING - 1984
14•70 Skyline mobtlehome .
All electnc. BUIII -m double
oven. range top 3 red rooms. bay wrndow. Must
move lo your tot 16,:&gt;10.00.

1.

COLUM.BIA GAS

20 CT. GLADihnJM

Garbage Bags ................... S1.49

\

16 111 OZ. STOKELY

I , ,.

'

.

·992-6215 or 992-7314.

,,

1.

NEW LISTING - RUTLAND
- Build1ng, land, equ tp~ent . stock. recipes. know ledge &amp; adVIse an dI hisllouri)hing bu st ness can be
yours..Great vo lume. Ask lor
details.
NI.W LISTING- Stlte Route
7 - Recently redecoraloo 3
. !lidroom home. Approx. 2 oc re
lot. Beaulilul hreplace, family
room, lull basement and
t~~uippro krtchen. $27 .~.00

(

FARM - 98 acres. lilla)lle
grou nd. pastu re. house, ba tn,
ponds. Has great potenltal.
ONLY $43.!MJO.OO.
POMEROY - Owner called
and wantsoffer now. 2 ~or~
frame wilh fu ll basement.
large yard, many leatures.
Call for appoinlmenl. Make
,ollet $26,500.00.
IJjTEREST RATES 9\1· 11 v,
FIXED FLEXIBLE TERMS .
CI)ME IN AND PICK YOUR
NEW HOME TODAY!
.•: Hency E. Cleiand. Jr.
992-6191
:
~~~n Trussell 949-26eo
:Dottit.Tu~ner 991-5691

m
.
A
-

.,

.

.

1..[!
IEitlOI·

3-3·'86 -1 mo.

.,

PAT HILL FORD

2 FT. LONG IRON.
I'IADIATOR, BRASS.

tt2-2196

Mjddt.port, 0 hio
:.
1-11-tfc

COPPER , CAST.

IIDER

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6'
Up to 24'x36'

SALVAGE

TOWI &amp; COUNTRY

St. Rt. l24, Pomeroy
PH. 992-5468

ClM .

Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614·843-51t1

.. ,__A••·
.....IIMMHOUIS

U. S. RT. 50 EAST

I -1!J.Ifc

CIRCLE
CONTRACTING
Complete Building

and
Contracting Senill

........ •Thors. 3-S pm
T•. ..lt-8: Fri. 1-2 ~m

SALES &amp; SERVICE

. . . ., 10-11:30 ...

Authorized .ltllln Deere,
New Holl•lldt-Buslr Hog
Farm E"iplllent

1-3-Hc

2·20-tlo

161..,. Second
a11 pctl, Olio 4S760

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

Jll CLIFFOID

VINYL &amp; AWMINUM

CALL COllECT:
Ph. 1614)

843 -5425

3-11-lllt.

!CUT OUr lOR FUTURE IISll

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

.SYLVANIA

•• Duty

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPliANCE

0

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•Refrige rators
•Dryers •Freezers

JNTII'ITif!AM. COLEMAN

* * #1 * *

No Sundar Calls

Real Estate General

RACINE
F. . DEPT.
lllhen Building

fEAFORD(H
Real Estate muoR
216 E. 2nd St .
Phone

1-1614)-992 -3325

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
Factory Choke
12 Gaup Shotcuns Only
9-30 :tf

- FARMS WANTED ...: LARGE 011
SMALL
NEW LISTING - 2 large
level lois wilh old ~oine . 3
BR, smal l cellar, 2 porc~es.
dtilled well . barn and corn
crib. All need work. But
cheap.
BUSINESS LOT - 2 car garage on a high ~i l l . Wonderful
view of , t~e Ohto Rivet.
POMEROY - 2 BR ~ome in
Pomeroy. full basement and
large lot. $12.000.
SOUTHERN - 2 houses
need ing wotk on 2 acres. TP
water. On hard road.
COUNTRY - Near Chester ,
10 acres of wood s an d two
mobile ~ames .
POMEROY - Good business
bldgs wilh good income plus
mote rooms to lease ..
MIDDLEPORT - Lg. lot lor
a new home with 2 older
~Q mes Jbal can be torn
down.
Having A Selling
Problem17
l;alh.llll&lt;t: - 3325

Yard Sale Centenary Townshouse. April 3 &amp; 4 . Drapes,
bedspreads. home iflte rio r.
Pfaltzgraff dishes. small applian ·
ces , si lv erware , childre n s
clothes.
Yard S11le April 2nd . &amp; 3rd. 203
Kineon Dr., 9 to 4.

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

F11 All

y,., ,1111/ltf lt11ir

.........."

PLUS: Office Stpplitl &amp;
fwnilol'l, W...n1

SlationWJ, llagoollc
Sign~,

c.,,

hlllllr

Stomp~,

ltslnftl ftrrns,

lenkll, Etc.

Ul Milllt., .tlcllopart
IH Mulbsrr1 At., ~om••T

992 ·33453/2/tln

11t7 Sycamore St., Pomeroy, Oh.
•
PHONE 992-7875
HOUR$:

9 :00

l!veninga

A.M .- 5 :00P.M .

Mon. thru Sat.

a. !Iunday By Aptlointmont

3-!4·11~

Corner of 141 and Debby Or. 2
mi1u out 141 . Hou se hoJd
goodl. Sat, 9-3.

1-15-t!n

z

-

~ USA M, KOCH. M.S.
~

z
-

Licensed Clinical AudiQiogist
(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
Gaftipolis, lllio 45631

8·13' rtn

312 -lmo.

BUILDING

GENERAL REPAIR
REMODELING
,

INTEfUOFI

PAINTIIG EXTERIOR

BANIS COIISTIUCTION CO.
31 7 11. Second

Middleport, Ohio

''All ISTGIIATES"
·-~~-·

.

3 Family Gar.ge Sale. Friday,
April 4th. 9-6 . 339 Debby Or.,
Ex. Bike . blkn. 1oy1. children
c loth ing , adult clothing ,
(women 's 3 -181. name brand
jean•. misc.
Thur1, Fri &amp; Sat. At 141 , 1 mile
beyond centenary. Everything
se lls a11cept 1tove and refrig .
Workmap ResidenCil.

·· ----Poni'iirov -- -- ·
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

PIIONE (614) 992-5009

JAilS KEESEE

SPECIAl/ZINC 1/f ftllfOOW I. DOOR REPlACEMENT

PH. 992

3-25-'86-1 mo.

DElrNY CONGO
friLL HAUL

JUST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SpiL
FILL D.IRT

~rt-~1
)

~

·i

BISSELL SIIING COMPANY

1/

~-=:-JJ' '

lfFEIS

S•rlnf&amp; Sam•tr Speciale

1lfPii PANE THflllAL IAARIER IILUXE TilT ·
SASII, IASY ClfAN RIPLACIMINT WINDOWS

-, ~ $Jj9 fnclutlts Complste lnstollotion

•FREE Vinyi _ Si~ E11ime..,.
•New Homes Bwift
FHA-VA -HUDI
In Insulation
•A Profe11ional Lecal
Contractor
•15 Yra .
Local Service

•~lown

.r

PH.

........
---mm•
Pwtt• llmw

"'·nt•
\* ...

I ""'

PIII.,..to_odl
....ITUNIUP'
-~- lhalpen Blades

.

Tum toll lit Molu• Momo'Y
G....... 1_. tfl At. 7 CW~
tho . .
.,1li ..... llhttlt Rd.

~

·

\_.
l
' ·j
· · __!~
~

1

v ··~

I

;1

949·2801 er 9n-28111 Day or lllaht
•

10-8-tfc

119.95

7 15 Third Ave. Thurs. Fri . 9 ·5.
Dishes. dask, 2 chest of draw an,
pictures . sewing machine. storm
windows. bicycle. old wood
burning stove,wooden wrtnger,
old love ~eat . Movin g Sale-loti
of mise, antiques &amp; collectible• .

Thurs. Fri &amp; Sat. At 141 , 1 mile
beyond centenary. so. fad temp

COMMERCIAl • RESIDENTIAl
-FlEE ESTIMATES-

IMuiit vyindows

Saturday. 9 -? 298 Debby Or.
End tables. milk can1. Avon
bottlas, Holly Hobby kitchen set,
tova. clot hes . ate .

4 fami li8s. Frl &amp; Sat. Gun1,
lawnmower. bic ycle . wood
burner. tools. cu rtain s. sheets.
bed spre.tdl, children a. adult
clean clothing. South on At . 7
behind Clay School

417 Secood Avenue, Box 1213

llteAY CALLS

'3-6-ffn

IIARCH 17th,

IE·

JO'S
Gin SHOP
Rt. 114, In s,.....
Co• ill and l'lfistar fer
FREE ...... TH to .. giv111 away

NOTE: Flrs1 ~~ meraMI!tl19 from factory
. . POTIIIT &amp; . . lATHS AM IN
Kissing c._,t ,.rd dolltl, cement animals , clay
red fire
will! tlo• flewer pots of aM kinds
(some """ s. . . .); Gltlll ., aishes. figurines,
l•mpa, .Iadet. INito. v814t•

"'*llllt

. 1-17-Hn

•

9 family . First of year. April 3rd
and 4th. Tru&lt;:lt topper. bowtinv
ball. dormitory refrigerator, 4
prom c:! renes. weighti "' and
bench, e11erciae bike, cloth11,
misc. and mort. 48320 Eagle
Ridge Road . Tum at Memory
Gardens from Rt. 7, vo 5 mi le1.
If rain. Will be held following 2
dayl .
- - - -- - - - "ICThrse famity yard sale, Friday
April 4th only from 9:00 to 5 :00.
We have boat gu 1anks, ti r11,
clothes. 111nd lot• of good item1.
One mile South of Portland et
Bruce Mckalvev•.
3 fam llv. Men• . womens . c hild·
ren• end baby cloths . Books,
knicknackl , toy1, high ctleir, ect
260 Sycamore - in Mldd lep on,
acro11 from tmparlal Ehtctrlc
April 4th &amp; i1tl frbm 1 1 :00 to
6 •00.
Moving 11le. HouHh okt mil e.
ltemt, ctothing, gal and electric
ranga1 . Frid.,.-. Saturday. Depot
St .. Rutland.
Rummage and bake sa le. Epil copal Parish Hou1e. beside Cit~
Han. Thurldav and Frid•Y'· 9 :00 4,00.
Third and Charry St. . Syracu1e .
Ba by ltemt. priced to go, Thurt·
day, Fridly , and Saturday.

.......PfPieiisiiiif .....

.. AUTO
· \ CENfiR .

w........ St...t, Pomeroy Ohio.
,.,.... 61'4-m-t171

lOifr '-"'-• A~~ ltlrpa lr Center
lody Flll..-t, t dp t;u·• . l'ollltir'lg Compound$, Poirlf1
Urettl..,_ tton~nen._, ISold """' Whol ..oJt To AI.II
ou'nd" New Ropfaoament
For Ttuciu And Cors

{ISbl'!'tlon

q-p

q

•.._,.

1!=:::1-

~

Buying ~aity gold, silver coint,
rings. jewelry, sterling ware, old
coin a. large currency. Top pri- ·
en . Eil. Burken Barber Sl'top ,
2nd. Ava. Middi~~PQrt . Oh. 814992 -3476 .

11

Help Wanted

AVON Sail Awn star,t up fee
FREE . limited~ time. Call 614'446 -3356 .
Pool Man-o..- and Me gu~rd•
Meded for Middleport Municipal
Pool. Pick up application• at
mayor' s office Monday thru
Friday SAM to 4PM .
Manager &amp; Aut. Maneger with
uperience in rwstaurant man ·
agement salary neg . Send re ·
t ume to box T222 in care of the
Gallipoli• Daily Tribune, 826
Th ird Ave ., Gellipolia, Oh
45631 '
lk,ttypeOO
Help wanted applv in peraon,
Giovanni'• of Gallipolis. 435
2nd . Ave.
Need 8 Good People
No experience necuury . Must
be available for imm.diate em plovment. Houn1PM tii10PM .
S1 ,200 per month . Call Thun or
Fri 10AM to 3PM for penonal
intaNiew 614 -446 -7441.
Government Job1 . ~ 18 . 040 ·
$69,230 - Y' · Now Hiring . Call
806-687 -6000 EAt . R-9806 for
current federal list.
Et1y Auembly Work! 1600 .00
per 100 . Guaranteed payment.
No exJ)erience·no ul81 . Oetliil•
ten d telf·addrused rtamped
envelope: Elan Vitat-6847 3418
Enterpri18 Rd . Ft. Pierce. Fl
334 , 2.
Ea1; A11embly Workl 1800 .00
per 100. Guaranteed P•vment.·
No experience-No aales. Detaill
•end •elf·addraned t tamped
enwelope: Elan Vital · 716, 3418 ..
Enterorise Rd . Ft. Pierce. Ff. •
33482.
•
Fechral. State and Civil Service -.
Jobt now available in your aree. •
CALl (refundable) 1-618-469 - ~
3646 for conant Faderal Uat. :
Maturalady to live in with eldii'IV- •
woman. Room. board and .... •
"
llry. 304-675 -1678 .
WANTED: Prior Military Sarvice Mambara. The Arm.,. Guard
naed• your experience. Join now
for a pan -time job.wlth btnt1its
like ret irement and .tucational
ani1tanca . 3}4-875-3960 or
1-900-642 -36 t9 .

12

Situations
Wanted

ContCieniOUI 23 Yilt ofd Chris·
tian mall wish11 to rent 1
..eaping .oom in RliO Grande
1r1a. Refertncn upoo r~unt.
C1H 614 -448 · 3303 aft« IIPM
Of write P.O . Box 309, R;o :
Grande , Oh .t&amp;674.

Vacancv for men or woman. •
private home, hot meals. TV, Ige...
room, bath , reasonable Call ·
614 -256 -61109 .

Have room and board for elderly.
Reaso nable . Call 614 · 9926022 .

'

18 Wanted to Do
Employment wanted. Heavy or
light hou1e deaning. weekly or
biweeldy. Call614-246 ·6028 .
Will do babysitting in mv llome·
for working parents. Call 814367-7873.
•
Painting . interior Mid e•tedor.
Reasonable rate• . Call61 4 -448 7212 after 6 :00PM.
Young , hard-working girl wants
to do housa clea ning work .
Phon&amp; 61 4 ·388 -93 73 after 4
p.m.
Tree Work Wanted . Prun ing .
topping . removals: h..::lgea &amp;
bulhes trimmed. Call 614 -o\46 .
6076"' 304-175-4863.
Dependable Yard Servica .
lawn• mowed, general yard
wo rk, Jighl hauling , manual
labor . Bill Slack 61 • ·992-2269 .
Oepfl"tdabla ma" would like to
rrow larg fl lawn•. Ca/1614 -992 5275.
Will do e nv lawn maintenance .
moMng . tr imming, yard clea n- •
up , elc. painting in11de or out
and minor repairs, misc. odd
job1 . Ca/1304 -676 -7991 .
ShUt ln. nee~ help? _Avairpble for
houn c.leen~ng , m11c work includ ing co oking . 304 · 6751276.

&amp; Vicinity
GARAGE SAL!, 6 miles out
Jarry' s Run Ro.:l , a t Appla
Grove. New clqthlnu. if;ho•.
Home tnterior, end lott:·ot misc.
April 111 to 1 .

Garage

., , ,92-7121 _

Thundey ,Friday. Saturdav . 4 Vt
milea out 141 .

Television Listening Devices
·
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
'-' Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

lager Hysell
AUTO "&amp;lRUCK
RE,AIR'; '
-Mn T••li•loa~
"'· .,2-5612

1069 Second Ave .. Thurs. Fri.
9-6. Good clean dothing-all
si zes . Some large siz11 and long
dresses size 7. Other misc.
i1ema. Rain or shine .

FE. .AL-STATE
INCOME TAX RETURNS

•
''

lt. 12Vomtroy Ohio

2 houses on Kriner Rd ., 21 10
mile , old piano . 3 wheeler, ca r
seat. dishwuher. other baby
items , etc . Thurt, Fri. 9 -7.

W. E. (1111) .SNOUFFER

3/11/,fn

GUN SHOOT

Yard Sale

&amp; Vicinity

. CALL (614) 446-9416

'

•w.'n ...G
AI.U. . . SIDING
.OWN IN
INSULAnoN
BISSELL
SIDING CO.
•AeiP

Lo~t and Found

·· ·Gam.:;ons ·

FI'IIE ESTIMATES
24 HR . fiMEAGENCY SERVICii

Uud Tr1iters. Cell 814 -446·

0175.

Serv1ces

7

'FURNACES
'HBAT PUMPS
'AIR CO NDIT.IONERS
'COMPlETE UNE OF REPLACEMENT PARTS
'F ACT OilY AUTHORIZED &amp; TRAINED
SERVICE CENTER

TOP CAS H p1ld for '83 model '
and newer utedl ean. Smith
Bu ick-Pontiac, 191 t Eaatem
Ave., Gallipolis . Call 614 -4462282.

' 1 Beagle and Peki ngn ~~~~oe dog to
good home, 304·61 06 .

614 · 992· ~074 .

By efferlng a complete Hoe of molllle homo
heating snd ...,ling preducts f!Jr the tricounty· area .

We pay ~ .. h for l•ta roodel ciNn
used can .
Jim Mink Chev .·Oldl Jnc .
Bill Gene Johnaon
614-446 -3672

Emp lovmenl

Lost : Burnt orange IP&amp;Yed fe.
male cit Mining from home on
Route 33. Browntown . Getting
leukemia stlots and third 00111 is
due. Pleeu Call Carrie Kennedy

BENNETT'S MOilLE HOME
HEAftNG &amp; COOLING

sroucii AVAitlm
·•

1837

FOUND: Cute golden brown
puppy. Front of G1111ill Academy
High School. Blu e collar. no
tags . Call614 - 446 - 44~3 .

JNTEfl THtiiM

9 . 'jahted To Buy

Free firewood to be cut and
hau led away . 304-676-3669 .

6

n

K-.tip, Ohio

4/ l!fln

week.

Registered Golden Retrieve r:
female, no papers. Good with
children. Caii814-367 -0l12 .

2-17-86-tfn

446-8592

CHESTtR-915 , 3307

Giveaway

Tree to givaawav in town. eas.v
access. Call614-446·3870 .

'94t-2263 .
or 949-2969

.......... !,lYing On Premi101

otmllf

4

AUCTION. "saturdly, April 6th.
1 1 :00 AM . Moun1elnMt Home
Center. Rt. 12. Butfllo. W. Va.
AllltOck , fixtu,ll, Dlflgtequlp-·
ment. tools . For brochure phone
1· 304 · 438 · 7490. Mudows
Auction . License No. 63.

WAN nO TO BUY uaed wood &amp;
coel heater1. SWAIN 'S FURNI TURE , 3rd . &amp; Olive St. Gatllpo·
lis. can 614 -448 -3169 .

for Lorena.

Gutter Cleanlftg
Painting
F"' EE ESTIMATES

8fiT MONTH
Sri I, ·lhTt, 10124

.. llut A hR Tl•
Atp TN hale len

Singles in1roductton1. free applic:ation. Perso'nal Touch lntroduct;on, P. 0 . Box 6636. Chadeaton . W . V a . 2 6 3 '0 2 .

3 ca t s with lltterbo•e•. 2 btack &amp;
1 white . Call61 4·446-0399 as II

Guttere
0 ownspoutl

SPACE?
CCHIVENIENT
ntuGI UNITS

.

Jo11nn

Dog with dog housevary playful

NEW- RIPAIR

NEED STORAGE

•SPUD QUEEN lAUNDRY
*"IBSON REFRIGERATOR
..wuun SAUl &amp; S£~

985~3561

All Makes

4/2/ '86/ 1 mo.

ROOFING

fLII2-7ZOl

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH

" 8 ' " d t"e ki II . c oil
11t 614r_388·8833 .

701 Cherry 9t ,. Vinton . March
3rd, 4th, 6th. Many antiques.
collect iblu. Cl ot he s . Lots
ofjunk.

DOII!II, BACKHOE,
tMNCHlR, SEPTIC
IYITUIS, WATER ,
CIAI &amp; BEVIER LINE,S,
REClAMATION, PONDS.
SPRING OEVaOPMENT.
HOMI FOOTERS,
DUMI' TAUCK STONE
&amp; DIRT

SAliS &amp; SfRVICf

Complete Gutter Wolt
Complete Remodelng
~oofing of all Types
Worked in home arM
20 years
"Free Estimates "

949-2493

Home 843·5340

CONT .. ACTING

PlUMIING &amp; IlEATIMI ·
lltw Ia 11om

E•••

~ d'

m"~'""

1-304-727 -84:!4

JStF

JEFF CIRCLE, 51.

PH. 949·2649

DON ROSE, Owner

446 0294
'
·
ladies to htve needle craft
ctmeo ;n theh home .

Yard Sa le all
Chestnut St.

'*'lours
JM-372-5704
10-14-llc

(Free Estimatesl

long Bollom, Ohio

nl

1-705-672-31.88
Ph. After
1
1-705·"•17 .IR~

..... Office

,.,. ... lpmut
P1rtt &amp; Service

IDENTIAL, COMMERCIAL
&amp; INDUSTRIAL
(Certified Electrician)

Ph Before Ap..u IS

PIL .-4-675-2441
. . . AliA CALL

Dillie(

llo&lt;lrital wa,k

""'

IIIiait·-~~
&amp;
••
., AI'PT.

GUYSVIllE. OHIO

LandKaplttg, lastments,
Land Clearl:, Ponth, lopli&lt; •
Ita 1
lytltlftl, avy u ing,
S"tont &amp;Gra .. l Hauling

North CoiHilt, Ontario
POJ-'1110 "NADA
•

Ct.. no•. one hall mile u p
Geo&lt;Q81 C"ek Rd. Coli 61 '' -

,

Oil field Ienke,

Bol 218,

PT. IIUASAIIT OFFICE

BOGGS

Otltorto

For moreln1of'fNtiOn wrlta:

Pallll Slleckey, DYM

HOURS: 8·5

lACINE, OIRO

FREE ESTIMATES

' MAIDEN BAY CAMP

tlfti&amp;IJAIIAN

Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

•
In NOrthecnt

Howard L """"I

cllf • lltlllllten and
htltfr c~ns. We can
1111 teN boll and rod
tit l'ldiators. We also
repiir Gas Tanks.

SHORT STEEL

ALL STE£~ &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start From 12x16'

CaR

992 •319 4 .

IHEET ALUM .

'

NEW LISTING - 12•55 mobtle home - 2 bedrooms.
all el ec tr~ e. Mu sl move lo
Our lot $6.000.00

F« Service

Wt ca~· ,.,air and re-

SEUING

P.M~
4/ 1/'116/

$-POINTS AREA

V. C. YOUNG Ill

(OINS, GOlD &amp; SILYER
- WHOLI!Alf 14KT.
JEWElRY

AFIER 5

'

r---::!'"=-::~ ~

P-.-,. Ohie
12-8-llc

PH. 985-3937

a•"".t

-A4dOM iltld remodeling
- RooHng and gutter work
- Concrete YJOrk
- Plumbing and electrical
wOrk
(Free Eetimateal

Pl. 949·280 I
or 949·2860 .

.

Orange Juice...........~A.~ ....... S1.15
I0 'OZ. VIETTI BEEF
CAN
B·ar-1-0ue.......................
e••• $1 •39

..

"frH E1timate1"
Installation Avaikibll

JtO(K SPRINGS.

~

CARPENTER
SERVICE '

HUN1JNft &amp; FISIIING

"

Tl,.$11 SERVICE
flO* •mNG THE

, . 11 •1 .....

yo.UNG IS

4 I

ltt

Of.....

., .

POMEROY,O .

Sound good? It gets better. A
new high-efficiency model uses as
much as 30% less energy -even as
it keeps your ~OrT!e W~rr:n and COZy.
Check_w1th a heafl ng dealer on
availab(lity"of these new side wallventing units. You may find there's
a welcome shortcut to having the
comfort, efficiency and dependability of gas.heat in your home:

46 OZ. JUIC.YBOWL

'

II

..

flh% flllill RAT£
VA I FMA.Iew ' ' " ' Av-.!loW.. Purchow
.......
~
:!,
"aullfrtn-(46-4042
(OiffNUI Rill MOIIGAGE (0.
,

E. Mairrlool.iUII

p
I.

Towels ....... !.K.~.. ~ .... S1.39

. Succotash~ .....,_
... I~2~!....... 2/S1 ~ 19

I

__..I '

..~. tl,

.

Fig Bars ............................ S1.79
13 OZ. SANICA DRIP-MA DC
·coffee .....................&lt;!.~ ••••••• S4. 98
16 OZ. DEL MONTE
Large Prunes ...·....... ~~-~ ...•. S1.39.

..

··c llomo Morfii"JJI loCIIt ·

"F.ree Estimates"

. -'

-=--

I

8 OZ. REAME' S

· 2 LB. FIRESIDE

FENCE COMPANY
PH. 992-6931
Aftwr 5 c•
7U·2027

.r,~

30 CT. CAUF.

CHEESE ........... ,,•.1!:.. S2.39

I.

New Home• Built

r . '" /" .

3 Announcements

SWEEPER•n~,ew~gmKh~e
I~====~==~::~::;,~:.;::::::::::::::;r;:::::::::::::::~~~::~~~;;~:::;1j~:;~;;;;~;;;:.~ · repair,
part and supplies. Pick
.ACCEN.T lOW INTEI!ST REitfiHCIIII
aaNLE.Y'S
SPRING
ROSE -EXCAVA'RNG up and dtUVO"f, Oovio Vacuum

4-5-tft

ASHER'S lull AMER.

PROCESSED

Real Estate General

&amp; Auction

'

'

'

13 '

An noun;: P.men ls

Business Services

PARTS and SERVICE

GRAPEFRUIT ............ 3/ 79c
NEW

POMEROY

992-2181

•

24 OZ. BROUGHTON

CHEESE ............, ..~~: s1. 39

BULK OR BAGGED

The Daily

Ohio

.

Public

Public Notice

Scouts to gather in GaUia for tri-state event
GaiUa County will hosl lhe 1986
Tri-Siale Area Council Seoul
O'Rama al lhe junior fairgrounds
on Saturday , April 26. a district
spokesman said loday.

April 2, 1

1986

Ohio

.PHONE 992~2156

..

-~-

Moving s... Tbunct..y. F..-nl·
ture. Clo1hlng, houtehold Items .
168 Mavo Drtve01 N1W Haven. 8 -

1.

'

Yard Sale, Thurs and Fri. 2218
Jefferton A~ . plants, dolls,
gOod ctolhlng ,l bike, baby clo ·
th ing , much mo_, .

'A mlle'from College Hill Church ,
Gallipolia Ferry; Fri •nd Sat,
Home InteriM, Tupperware. Clo·
thing , Houn Hold Furniture.
2 family Ttturs and Fri. 8:00 10
5:00, 2114 Mt. VtmonAve. lotl
baby tt.ma , glusware, tuml tura, etc .

Financi .tl
21

Business
Opportunity

Will place cigarette machin...
Good commillior'll. Clll 304:
n3-685t .
Own your own jean-aportaw.ar :
lad 1111 apparel, children a. "rv~ ~
size. patita, comb!natfon stor1 , '
maternity. denc.we1r, acceuori• . Jor"dactle. Chic, LH L..- f
lzod, Gitano, Tombov. Catvw;
Klein . Sergio V1l.nt1, Even
Picone, Liz Claiborne, •Memb«s
Only. Ga•ollna, Healthtax, over
1.000 O!harl . •13,300 to
f24 .900 inventory . . training.
flxtur", grand optnlng etc . C1n
open 15 dtvs . Mr. Loughlin
16t2i888 4228 .

�.

'

'

•
Page- 1~-The Daily Sentinel
21

LAFF·A·DAY

Business
Opportunity

44

Point Pleatanl 1 bedroom apt
Adult• 2 br apt L1m1t 1 child

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH,

304·"6·B221

lNG CO recommends that you
do buiJin•• w•th p80ple you
know tnd NOT to tend monev

Own your own Jean
Sportswear , lad•• • apparel
ch•ldrens, large s•ze pet1tt
combtnltlon ttora . matem rty

over

1 000

614 (46·0239

grand op81111g , etc Can open 15

Mr

•

1 or 2' dquble tr111ler \ots sc&amp;mc.
wooded Space for famejy and
petl Close to town Ceunty
water Call 614·246-5 856 or

others Sl3 ,JOO to 124,900
mventory , tram1ng ti•tures
dtys

614 · 246-5062 9 00 · 4 00

46 Space for Rent

ache. Ch •c Lee levi, lzod
G1ttno Tomboy CaNm Kletn
Seig10 Valente, Evan P1cone. lla
Cl11borne Membeu Only. Gat ·
Ht~ahhti!IJII

For rent SleepinG Rooms and
hghl house keeping room s Ptrk
Cllfltral Hotel Call 814 446-

Keenan (3051678

Storege buildrng for rept 12x60
in town , concrete floor Ca ll
814 -4-46-3870

31139

22 Money to Loan

purpou leader Mortgqe Co .
614 692 3061

23

PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR ,
rwd1acover your p1ano ' •beauttful
tone call today Werds Key: board, 304 676 6600 or 676 -

3824
SHELTON J!'OOL CO Swlm m!n g Pool Sale• lnatallat10n1 ·
Repa111 Your fnendly pool
builders Butftlo, W Va 304 937-2476

Rea I Estate
31

Homes for Sale

4 bedroom
fireplace. 3 mr
hs, $29 ,900
o&amp;46 - 1616 or
1244

h{luse for taiL
s'itu th of GatlrpoCall dtys 81o&amp;n1ghts 61 4 -448 ·

2 bdr 5 yr home m1nt conditron Restricted subdiVIItOn, 9
mllea from Gallipolis Ctll 61o&amp;256 -6200
7 room• a. bath, 1 acre mort or
Ins, etrpeted th roughout VInyl
srdmg $25.000 12 N Ma1n St •
Chtsh1re Call 614 448 -3793
68 acres Two-story restored
home fuel 011 furnace. woodburner, stone f1replace tg barn.
gra1nard, milk house. work 1hop
and other bU1Id1nga A ural water
Beautiful settmg overlookmg
Raccoon Creek At 160 1n
Ew1ngton Shown by appoint·
ment only Call 614-388-$&amp;10

1984 14 x70 2 bdr , 2 batha,
stove. f~replace , slurt~ng storage
bulld1ng. on rented lot, •18,600
Frend'l City Drobratge. 814 446-9340
Make an Offer 1~h60 New
Moon w1th 2 lge Iota. Ac . bldg •
many a~etras, 10 maiH from
Galllpolrs on At 218,1nJtiOutto
sell Call &amp;14 245 -6049 eve
1 97C Freedo m Spec:1al12•85 2
BR w1th undirplr'ln~ng. Ref &amp;
Stove On rented lot. On KerrHarJIIburg Rd Call 614 -4484410 or 814 ·446 ·2948
1977 Hotly Perk 12ll60, CI A,
underp1nnrng. pal11y fumiahed ,
axe cond t7 ,600 Call 614 -

245-5120

9489

'

1980 Libert'i 14Jt54, 2 bed ·
room. unturnlthtd,""van&gt;tJ unC~er­
pmning Included Must sell Ctll

304 773 5B7J

Houses for Rent

2 bedroom house for rent In
Pomeroy
deposrt. •190 per
monlh Ctll614 -992 ·3064

•so

42

6624
12Jt65 Shutt 2 bedroom f ront
drn1ng room, rtllecl panel cetlmg, new fumtture av11llb ..
12x60 BlyVIew 2 bedroom.
front and ...., New 10.1120
alummum awntng 1 only $598
Call Ktngsbury Homfll Sales at

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Household Go~ds

AUCFION lo FURNITURE 62

Furn11had cable. beauttful rNarm KenauiJa. no city ta•e•
Foster• Mobtle Home Park Call

814-"e-1e02
In Eurekt n1ce &amp; clean, part
turn . adults only, no pall, 1180
mo Oep raq Call 81o&amp; -258·

1636 or 814 25B·1291
2 bdr mobile nom&amp; Cell 614-

"6·0390
2 bdr uniumished, 12.1180. v,
m1 p11t Holzer Medlcel Center
Call 814 -448 -4369 or 304

875-9760
Kantuga 446 -7473
2 bdr located Evergreen , child
ren accepted Call 814-44&amp;3697 or 61 4·246-6223
Call

614·992 5B6B
Trailer for rwnt. refrences end
depoait you pay utilities 304-

614 992 5587

675-2535

MOB LE HOMES MOVED ,...

Two bedroom trallet with lerge
add on room, Crab Creek Road.

, reaaonllble ratet, Call

51

SWAIN

VIew,

2 bedroom. Ractnt aret

Merchandise

304-576-233e

304-875-1206

Holly Park 12x65 81112 fie ·
panda 3 bedroom, porch, un
derpenn6ng, Iota of e.11tras New
heat pump Sell Cheap 304·

Gall•pohs 2 bedroom mobile
home, Umlt 1 child 2 br apt 1st
Ave Adults 448 -8221

Ol1ve St . Gallipol11 New &amp; unci
wood co• I stoves 6 pc wood LR
suite •3 99, bunk bedt •199,
antron reclinett 199, niMI &amp;
uaed bedroom IUitee, rangaa
wringer washtra , &amp; lhoes New
hvingroom suetes 8199 $599,
lamp a, alto buy1ng coal &amp; wood
stoves Call614 -446 3159
LAYNE ' S FUANIKURE
Sof11 and chairs pnced from
S286 to t895 Tab lea.
and
up to S126 H1de-t -beds.•390
and up td t S60
soia bed s
•146 , R~ chners . t226 to
$378 • Lempa from 128 to
1125 p c dmett81 from f 109.,
to436 7pc f189andup Wood
ttble with si• charrs 1285 to
t?o&amp;IS Desk 8125 up to &amp;375
Hutchn •650 Bunk bed co m·
, plete With manretses t3, 75
Baby bed 1,
and l4t to S396
t110
Mtttreases or box
1
aprlngs, full or t w 1n, S63 . film
f73 and t83 Queen aetl,
S225 Bed iram as, 120 1nd
S26, 10 gun - Gun c tb~n.t s.
t360 G11 or electric rangH
e371S Baby mattres aea, U5 &amp;
t4ti , bed framtt UO $26 , &amp;
UO, ktng heme 160 Good
aelectlon of bedroom Ill ites.
ro ckers , metal cabmets head ·
boards 138 &amp; up t o ee 6

•so

Used Furniture ·· Dre11er &amp; bad ,
Trundle bed, metal offtce deshs
3 miles out Bulaville Rd Open
91m to 5pm , Mon thru Sat

8 acrn. 3 DR . bflck 1\oma. lge
kitchen &amp; d1n1ng tree Lge. L.R .
1 V1 bath, 'h basem8flt located
Kyger Creak Sch D11t.
U9 ,000 Call 614 -367 7231 .
HouM for Stle or Trade. 1 6
acres ntJtt to Clly School. Make
offer Call 61o&amp; -266-6680 or
614 -446 -1511
Large 2 atory home Full bile·
ment, wood furnace end fuel oil
turneca, tra•ler hook up Appro•
1·2 acres Close to Me•gsM1nes,
1n Outer Priced to taU Call

-6 14·742 2832
In M1ddlepo rt 3 bedroom remodMed home Arr cond1t1onect
vmyl tid1ng, Insulated, ianctd-ln
btck ytrd , I10111Je buildmg,
close to schools Sflow by
appomtment only Cell 614 -

992 -2012
1 floor flome . storm w.ndowt
arM! doors, alum1num 11d!ng,
new 10of, new wtring, garage
Good condition Call 614 992 -

5204
6 room house witfl bath 1 1-7
acre•. at 1n11rstct1n 143 &amp; 7,
turn leh first green house Call

614-992 ·7453
7 room houae in Chnter. Ohto
Pnc&amp; r&amp;duced 'h down rest like
rent for 5 yea rs Call 814 986 3571
4 bedroOm 1\ome for 111e Good
Hunt1ng tnd IJOOd f11h1ng Can
be negotiated w tth owner Ca ll
6to&amp; -985·4392

44

33

7!5 acrn on Happy Hollow Ra.d
with 6 worldng 911 wells Call

614-742·2693.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
8 acrea 3 barns. Mptic tank end
county weter . F~ntnclng ava1la·
bla Call 814 -379-2268
For Rent 60 acrH fll.t ground
2,200 lb. tobtcco bua. 9 m11•
bMow Gellipolis, At 7 Call
Between 12.30 &amp; 7 00 PM

e14 -258-e038
1 acre w11h water. electricity,
and •ptlc tank On C R 1.
S1lam Ctntar, 10 minutes from
Mtna No 1 81o&amp; -992 -2989
60 acrn, amall barn, tobacco
allotment, mlnerel rtghta. rural
water, 304-&amp;76 3828
1 3 acr• Leon B1den Road.

304·4&amp;8 ·1920 al1er 6 00 PM
1.6 tcr•. I mil• from town,
304 -875·6689 after 5 00 PM

36

Real Estate
Wanted

304·B96·3363

For the ret~rtd ptrson. Two
bedroom house. close to down ·
town Point Pleastnt Rebuilt
smce las t occupied Phone 304 -

Ren tals
41

Houaee for Rent

15 Court St 3 bdr Kitchen
furnithtd. no pets,
m9 .
plus utrl1tl•. refertneea &amp; deposit Ctll &amp;1o&amp; -448 -4926 Of

nso

114·"e·9&amp;BO.
3 txlr hou... furnilhad kitchen

Coli 614 ·445·7021
NEW AND USEO MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S OUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES . 4 Ml
WEST , GALLIPOLIS, AT 35

3 bedroom, aH carp.t.d , water&amp;
trash paid, 1 mila from hoapltal,
•226 rent plua depoalt . Cell

PHONE B1o&amp;· 4o&amp;B -7274

e14·"e-1364

1972 141170 3 bdr honw good
conditiOn , best otter Call 614·
o&amp;46 -76 46

N1ct 2 bedroom apt lnCheahlre.
furnished , carpeted, clttn , lerge
back ytrd UOO month. Cell
~14 246·5818 .

1979 14.1170 . Schult w1th e• - '
2 bdr , Yt dooblt, cerpeted,
pan do 3 bf!droom. 1'1, baths
kitchen eppllancll. Located .
fireplace. heat pun'l) , dtclt,
120 Sttte St • UOO mo Call
ewnmg underpinning Call614-

245 ·5565

614·"6·0254 .

1978 ' 8JYVI8W 14x70 , 2 bad room, btth tote! electric, ah,
woodburner, eJtCallent conditio n Call 614 446 -1425 after

B room house rn ctty . '260 mo
plu s 1100 depotit Call 814 -

, 6 .00
14.1170 Feat111al, 2 bch . 2 fu a
bltht, lot s of clouts. utility
room, AC Ctll 61o&amp; -"6 -82o&amp;1
any1ime
a.
1~7 8 flltmor1t BIYVIft';', 2 bdr ,
large livingroom din ~~room
witb bullt·ln hutch. applitnctl,
double oven, new carpet 1n
nfllttr bedroom, curta ins 2
pordlea. underpinning good
cond , muat aell, make us an
o ffer Ca ll 614 · 20 -6816

• ' ::.2.:_------:::-:--

7 4 Grtywood 1 4•70. 3 bad room. 1'h blth, washer I. dryer.
Set to appreciate. remodelltd.

07,800 Coli 614·446·3040
1975 Richwood 1h60 2 bdr.
part. fuw
•14 -446· 4651

c.n

or e14 - 367·0~97 .

Largelt Mlecdon In are 12 1r1d
14 wid• Fr.,cfl City Mo l?lle
Homes Inc 81 4 -4o&amp;8 -9340

MENTS /Equal H9ustng Oppor
tunity) monthly rtnt Jtans at
*176 for 1 bedroom and e212
for 2 btclroom. depotit *200.
located near Spring Valley Plua
and Foodland. poolandCabteTV
•vatllblt, office hours as polli·
ble10 am to4 pm and7 pmto 9
pm Monday -Frid.y. Call 81o&amp; 448 -2745 or leaw m.,age
Nicely furnllhed mobile home,
eff apt , cantril 111 and hett in
c1ty, adults only. Call 114 446 -

0338
Redecoretad ept , 2 bdr . 1175
only Call 304 -875 6104 or

304-875-538e

446 -0924
2 bdr. rtfrlgtrttor, rtovt, good
neiiJhborhood. rlverv 1aw.' 16
Ylna St Catl614·44&amp;·3949 or

e14 "8 ·24 1&amp;
Two - 3 bdr apal1ments In lown,
oft ttreet parking, all utitltlea
p11d, f8f II' dep required Cell
TheWisam•n Agency, 81.t -448-

3844
Nice 3 bdr houaa full.bnement.
CA. fanoed yard . Orun School
dtttriC1 At . 141 . t326 phil dep.
a\ltllable immediately Caii814-

B52 ·281e oft" 5PM
Beautiful new 2 or' 3 btdroom
houae Alao n.w one bedroom
furnlahed -,artment In Middl•

Furn tpt 919 2nd Aw Galli
polis share bath aingla mala,
1150 mo.. utiliti es paid Call
448 -« 111 after 7pm
2 bdr , near Silver Bridge Piau
Ntce cerpttlng, water l garab~e pakl Call 1o&amp;-448 . 7028

e

Unfurnishtd 2 bdr In Crown

Citv Coli e14-25e -e520
Upltatrs unfufnl shed tpt . car ...
peted Ut1l1t1tt paid, no children,
no ,_11 Cal161o&amp;.U8-1837

. C. II f1 4·992·5304 or
t14 ·992·8566

County Apphance. Inc Good
used appl1tncea and TV sets
Open 8AM to 8PM Mon thru
Set 614·446 -1699 , 627 3rd
AVI Gallipolis, OH
Valley Fumitur&amp; nWN 6 used
Ltrga aectlon of quahty tumi ·
lure 1216 Eutern Ava ,
Galhpoh s
Whirlpoo l wuher '76, GE
wtsher t150 , Maytag drytr
•86, Wutinghouse dryer t95 ,
r.tr~ljlarator frostfroe 1126. refrlger-ttor avocado small •95,
chest freezer t96 . 30 lf'ldl 91 ,
range t76 Skagg1 Appl1ancas .
UpperRiverAd 614 -446-7398
cu ft gold Call614·388 -9728
Krng size wtterbed t325 .
heater wtvelna mattress, 11de
pad s. matt ress pad Ca ll 614256 6608 after 6 00
7 pc dinette aet 150 ~ 3 pc
bedroom 1u1te including mattrill &amp; box •300 . VJ bed
Including m'aureu &amp; bo.11springs
end dru aer UOO Call 814 -

44e-0924

l :---,-------Amane l ide-by-aide refrigerttor
end Glbton contmuous cleantn g
stove Good con drtlon Call

Nice 2 bdr apt .• 4 ml from
Gallipolia Stove. refrlg &amp;·w 1t•r le::1-:4-·9
_9_2-:·-:
57_4-:1- : : - - - - - furnished 1200 month, no pets
Pickens Used Furniture Goo d
Call e14 -"6· 8038 .
quality used fumt ture Open 9 to
6 or ca ll for appointment
Ouplell tpl for rent , U50 mo
lOo&amp; -875 -8483 or 67 6 1450
no dep., ref req. Call 814 -448
4&amp;70 afJar 3 30PM
Vary nlca ona BR furn'ed apart·
ment . UtlliliH Included Good
loc.tion In c1 ty Adults only,
mual have rei 's &amp; dep Call
Furn1ahtd Apal1ment 2 BA . 243
Jeckton Pike, Galllpolla, 1250
Utlllti• pakl Ctll 81o&amp;-4464.4.18 alter 7PM
Aparttn.nt for rwnt Quality 2
BR. :Z beth aptrtment In prima
downtown location wrth offt' " " t perking. Kitchen furmahtd
f!With tafrlg , seU·clean oven,
OW, gtr. dlsp • hookup for
wash.,/ dryer For non-smoking
s-ingle or couple No cttlldren or
pett .All electric. UOO per
month . Include• wattr l stw ·
I traah A ana year ItNt 11
required Call 814 -o&amp;ol&amp;-1&amp;9•
SAM to 6PM.
2 bedroom ept 1n New Ha ven.
W Y.• Newly remodeled In
town Call &amp;14 992 -7481
1 bedroom apt for rent Basi c
rent lltaftl •216 e month that
includ11 til utltltlta Oepoth:
reqUired of t200 Contact V1l·
lege Minor Apt Middleport.
81o&amp; -912 -7787 EQUII Hou a1ng
Oppol1unity
1 bedroom unfurnished t pt.with
stove, rat • Wllh.,, dryer All
utitllll pd a~ecept alectrlc Ouiei
c oun try uttmg 12 mlltt
northwest of Pomeroy Ofl U 33.Call 814 -992·2807 1fttr
8 :30pm
4 room furnished tnd 5 room
unfurmshld apt1 for rtnt Call

e14-992 ·1434 or 304·B82 ·
2568
In Middleport, 2 bedroom.
ground floor apartment with
v•rd. t171S . plua utllhl• Call
114 992-1177 eft., 1 :00 p .m
3 room fumlahed

Complete plzr:e equipment
Lighted 11gn, 6 line One 7 ft
show cate One 4ft ahow case
One8ft counter Call814 -992 -

2772

Jl No pets

Cal1114·949·2263.

po~

54 Misc. Merchandise

1- - -- - - - - - - Callah., 's Uted T11e Shop Ovar
1.000tir•.alzn 12. 13 14. 16 .
18, 16 S 8 mil" out Rt 218
Call614 -256 -6261
Electfolull veccuum claeners ,
A -1 co nd ltlo n- •tta c hmant a
Avllltble at 112 00 Cash or
tarma arrtngld Call 814 2469115 or 30o&amp;-87B·8799
Plattlc c11tam tt•te approved.
pla1tlc aeptlc tenkt , plastiC
culve111, metal culverts all ceps
Ron EvtnsEnterprlln. Jtckson .
1974 John Deere dozer 350 B-6
way bl.cie, Long lUper two 15 NI
ba ckhoa, 1989 GMC 6500
1arlea V-6. 6 spd cab &amp; c:hasey,
1978 Ford Fa~rmont Call 614-

TONY S GUN REPAIRS . hot dip
rebku111ng , all tvP• of gunamlth
work. fast aarvice 304-676·

4631

Metal lethe, smell horizonal
nlllllng mach ine, Mig welder,
Radial arm drill press, 30o&amp;-4681920 after 6 00 PM .
Prom Gowrts t t.Ze 9 -10 One
blue one p1nk. l1ke new .Muat
11e to apprec11tt, 304-676·

6976

2 ton Cran e a~r co nditiOner

304 675-5599
Zen1th conaole stereo wtth everythmg, used very little Exc
co nd . 1200 304 -773 -518o&amp;
F1bergla111 Jeep top, f1t1 CJ6

304-675 2932
Troy Bilt T1ller, Horse Model,
HKE new co nditron• 8750 00
16 hp Roper ltw.n tractor w1th
plow, tr11ler , 42 inch mower and
snow blade du1l wheels tnd
cha1n1 H1 -Low Speed Trans
$1 800 00 Phone 304-882

304 -882 2775 .

55 Building Supplies

Pets for Sale

Dragonwynd Cattery Kennel
CF A Himalayan, Partlan and
SlemHe k1ttan1 AKC Chow
pupp111 Ca ll 44&amp; -3844 after

7PM
TrcllhMd Kennats All breed dog
grooming Obed1enee tratn~n g
1naltuctlon AK C Germen Wltl·
helred Potnttr pul)pln. Ctll

614 ·388-8720

258 ·19 19
AK C Regl atered Btsset Pupp1aa
Tri-colored Ctll for Information
Clarh -614-682 -&amp;Ul )

57

Musical
Instruments

2 year old Kimbal Conaoie
preno e11cellen t condit ion ·Call

614 ·"6 7661

Sale or trade for anything 10
used Honda street M-C 600 cc
1200cc all pr~caa Ping pong
tab le •2&amp;. Cell tnytl ma 814 ·

387 0482

Wedding dre11, long vetl, .half
alip, preued 9 bOxed, stze 7,
bought at Bem•dines, t400
ColdiPot refrig .. 17 cu ft. harv·
eat ljlold. ice maker need s fl.11ed
•126 Picture windows &amp; 12
reg , window a 'plua ttorm win dows w 1th screens, good cond ,
111 for •&amp;oo Call 814 -448·
&lt;

5 HP rew Ttnad'tiller Like niiN

Call e14·388 ·970B.

APARTMENTS,. mobile
houiM. Pt. Pl1111nt1nd Gelllpo-

Ger~g• door 7ft by 9 ft All

814·992-5118,

lia. 114·"e·l221

0482.

h..-dwtta 131!5 . Call ft1.t -367-

All11 Chtmblar u•rden tractor.
1940 Chevy 1950 Dodgttruck,
1970 1 ton, baby duck• I.
chicks Ca11 814·381·9038

115 Mt11la Ferguton cab and
Uactor Erctre nice M11111 Fer·
gu10n moWit', 7 fl: ' bar tell&amp;
John Detre rake. "8&amp; Ntw
Hollard 88 baler 1895 BN Ford
with high and low range Ntw
rubber • uva I Two 12 plow•
•295 2 rowcutltvtttr. *198 . 3
point .tjustablt disc t2915
Poat holt digger 1196 Call
John D111re model &amp;0 mtnure
spreader 1300 Almon ntw
farm wagon 18ft bed, ullld poat
hole dlggor 3 p1., &amp; 11. 3 pt. bnuoh
hog n.w
1 ••• new stock
rach for 8ft pick· up truck . 14
ft aluminum Jon boat. like new
with or whhout motor. Single14
in 3 pt plow, 3 pt ltlbtolltr
Robert Hill. Racine. Ohio Call

••so.

e14-949·2013.

&amp;

Supplies

LIVI!,IULk

U S 35 Welt, Jtchaon, Ohio

614 -286-8451
Me11ey Fer~ JOn, New Holland.
Bush t4 og SeiH &amp; Servrca Over
40 used t ra ctors to d1oo11 from
Ill co~ let e line of new &amp; uaed
eqUipment Largtst 11lect1on In
S E Oh10

JIM ' S FAR M EQUIPMENT
C~fi!TER SA 3G W Oollipollo,
Otlio Ctll 614 -oi48-9771. eve.
614 -446·3592 Up front tr~c­
ton with wtnanty over 71 used
tractors 1000 tools
340 lntet:national tttctor wnh
plows It mower, t2 o&amp;9 6 Call

814-288-e522

Utility bldg spl '30 'llo&amp;O ' x9 ',
16' •8 ' sliding door &amp; 3' • .,.
door, 16 ,265 erected. Iron
Hor1e 81dg t . 814 -332-974!5 .
FrHmtn 2000 kt-.:ler tor M .F
135 &amp; 315 VICtOr Call after

e oo, e14 -367·0493

1980 Ch...,ette IJOOd cond1tlon
•1.575 Call814-388-8448
1986 Ptytnouth Ou11er AC,
AM-FM lttreo. tport whetla.
only 16 ,000 miles, 1&amp;,5()0, CIA
814-246 -MO&amp; or 81o&amp;-4o&amp;6 -

0212
1981 Camaro charcoal gray, PS.
AM-FM CIIHttl 1itt ateering,
new carpettng, new tnow tlret,
air, 2 dr coupe, V-8 engine
eltctllent condition t5.1SOO
firm Call 814 - 448 8176
~nytime

78 Buick JPOrl coupe, 311.000
nWies, Iota of Ptraa Call &amp;to&amp;

21i8·6600
1982 Hondt CB. 780. with
1.11tras, 2,900 m1 t1o&amp;60 1984
Rtbblt GL. o&amp; dr., AC, etc.
19,000 mllat 18 ,800. Call
4o&amp;6 -0122 after 4 p m
1178 Ford Pinto 4 cyl, IUtO·
matic. stltreo, caaaetta low
mllttge, new tire• Aaklng
•7&amp;0 Lookl and Nns good
M ,OOO mtles Call 814-446-

Maute Ftrgu10n model 42 1 h
mo""'nv machin• UOO Roa11
hay rake •200 Barmt•7fl: hy
oond1t10ner • 1&amp;0. All equipment
'" ucellent condition Call 814 ·

1977 Ford Van *150 1973
OMC p•ckup
1954 Chsvy
8460 1983 Honda Scooter
UOO. 1979 Honda CM 18!5·T

742·2163.
3010JDm•al 518hrt Creem
puff ftrm&amp;r ratlrlno J D Gr•tllf
Blade, •186 3 bottom J D
Plows, •391S J 0 894-A Rake,
1896 J DU-TDalar, *895 Call

.

614·28,·111122.

Manard! Ba11 Bo•t with trtller.
70 hp Chrytltr motor plua
trolling motor, IIVI well. ate
. , 9150 00 LyonaAddltlon, Me·
10n W Va 304 nJ-5621

76

:145-52110.

•eeo.

e471. Callt14 3e7·01541
1977 Du1dl Century wagon, low
mllttgt Call814-441 -1941
1980 TC3 Horizon AM-FM
Ctllttte, 4 speed, turban
wheela In excellent condiUon
U300 Caii&amp;U-992-7401

John Deere Trtctor 830 dieael ' 198f Oatsun 200 SX Loaded.
3 cyltndlr wtth bush hog. Take Good oondh:lon Call 814-992·
OYif bank loan Call 814 -843 1723 aftet 6 00 p.m

2 row mech tansplantlr 300
gal. water tank like new f1000,
52 " tobecco or tomato 111ck115
centt . Morgtn's Woodlawn
Farm, At. 35. 304- 876-1281 or

.

Pole Building Spacial, many
cok:ns and tlzN, call for tow
prlcn . 514·246-9148

8. 10. 11 . 13. 14. 1e , 17, 191n

895 -3974 . .

w•

304·896·3874.

IJ:)T 1Q? UW5U,I.L., EiVEi~ ~

'5l'ART'BJ 1D

'

MATWE ~L"I.--""'p

CID Eyewitness

HIS

:179 2220 .
W1ntld to buy. automatlctrens·
m111lon, good, ulld for Pinto

Game

(!) NBATodoy
fJ) Cll WKRP in Cincinne11
0 (I) @ Jeopardy
(I) To the Manor Born
@! Wheel of Fortune
(8 lllJ Entertainment TC).

304· 882· 3288

Auto Repair

FRANK AND ERNIE

Auto pemting and body work . :
dlne to your utisf1ction re·
cei\1~ 10 plr cent off •ny ,10b
sch aduled between now and ·
May 1 It lnlllr•nce claims
dt1e1llng and aoma mech.,ical
work , frH tltimat• Cal for
appointment 1-304 -875-2883

79

NATIONAl E
FOR

night Peter Frampton discusses h1 s latest album

WE- CAN'T HE-4-P You

'Pre momttan·

I: PON 'i cAFE.'" If

l ·l

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers,

You~ !'lAME 15

"ART"·

1972 Tag-A Long 18 tt trllltr
Very good condition t1496
Call e14 -992 -8173 or 614 -

MacGyver places hts hfe
on the l1ne when he ts lmpnsoned 1n an effort to
help a woman ' s convicted
bro t her escape (60 m1n I

ALLEYOOP

992·f20e 'I

OH, NO! IT'S QUEEN
M"-RDO "-NP HER
WARRIORS '

1974 Prowler. 20 ft. self con ·
taln~ . sleeps SIJC , IIOOd Cortd,
12 800 00 304 882·26::tS

G REAl! THEY1 R.E
BLOCKING 1H' ONLY
WAY OUT"- HERE i

fj) (I) MOVIE: 'The Fury'

0 (I)® Fest Times

(I) MocNei~Lehror Newsh.
our
(}]) Placido Domingo Sings

Ser v1 ces

lll50

Zarzuelal Plac ido Dommgo
perform s Zarzuela , a t hree- •
c enturtes old Spam sh en -

Home
Improvements

tertamment trad1t1on. {60
mm ) In Stereo
@ MOVIE: 'Cowboy'

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

8:05 ([) MOVIE: 'Riding Tall'
8:30 (!) NHl Hockey: Monnesota at Chicago
0 (I) ® Tough Cookies

1978 Pinto, runs good, 211 MPG
t&amp;OO C•ll81o&amp; -7o&amp;2 -2578after

8:00.
1980 Buidl Riv1..-a. Total elect·
nc, txc . cond , 8&amp;.1500. Call

e14 ·992·3965 After 5 PM
1876 Dodge Dart 8460 30o&amp;-

B86·3638
1971 Ford Gran.ta. one owner
1975 Toyota Ctllca. 4 tplld.

:1810 M oplo Ave , 304671
4014

1988 Ford GIIPia, 2 door HT, I
cyl , 3epeed, good body. perfect
Interior. Rune good. 304·87&amp; -

21i01.

EEK&amp;MEEK

Unoonditlonal lifetime guaran ·
tee Local rlflfencee furn11h-.:l .
Fraa ntimatea Call collae1
1 ·81o&amp;·237·0488 day or night
Rogers Baaament
Waterproofing.

Cliffs dream turns mto a
n1ghtmare When h 1s htgh
school flam e reappears
ask 1ng for protection from

telephone dea1h 1hru1S
9:00 IJ CIIIHI Blocke's Magic

D•ve·• Homt lmprovtmanll.
Vinyl, alummum guttets &amp; cua
tom trim. 17 .,..,, a•perience

Alex and leonard attempt
to penetra1e a heaviiVguarded
Mediterranea n
vdla to recover p hoto negat•ves be1 ng use d m a black-

Call 614 ·448·9487 .
Vinyl Repair Service Home,
busin•• &amp; au1o Setting, Mon •
Set. 8 .00 -e:oo. For detallt c111
Henry. 814-379 2&amp;30 or 614-

mao! plo1 160 ~fin )
® 700 Club
(I) CI) Il}l Dynasty ICC) The

379·2635

,., 5

Hardwood Ftoor1. Sanding &amp;
refin ishing Parket andtounue•
400PM
groov1. F'" ntlmet11. rlf•en·
caa 1111lltblt. Willard • D1v1d
' 18 Monte Car4o, real nice
Blankenship, 81o&amp;· 4o&amp;8 -0288 or
80.000 eoma nil", U . 760 00 · 114-4411 · 4047 Commerciel &amp;
304-e76-32ea
retldtl'ltitl.

e122

72

Trucks for Sale

1980 Chevy ~ ton , 4 wtlttl
drive. 360 tutometic. Call 8to&amp; -

Registered full blooded ARAB
gekhng. well trained . Polled
purebred Slmmtntll bull. 7 mo
of ega Callafter8 00, 814 -387·

0493
Hor111, saddle &amp; bridle for Nil,
•3oo Call 814 -317-n7o.

.-e.

4447 or "1·9752 10 .00 ·
12 oo, • ·oo-e:oo.

13 year otd ttandaJdbred mart,
Siddle. bridle. hatttr 1370 . Ctll

nal&gt;la Call e14 ·992-2210 after

1980 Toyota truck 6 apd.
AM-FM, bldUntr, tow mllttge,
axcallant condition, t3, &amp;00
Call 814-448 -1965
1978 Chtyy Luv, 4 epd., AM ,
wire • rims, apor1y, t1,t99
John' 1 Auto Sal• . Dulaville Ad

Oolllpollo, Oh .

RON ' S Talevlaion S•rvlce
Haute cell1 on RCA , Quaa:ar.

OE Spaelollng kl Zonkh Call

••.an

197e

Coli 814-992·3281 .

Blea-.~e .

3855 .
M illed hey ltrge tquara b•lee,
t1 ·ifi· 304 -175-!1&amp;79 .

19H ChiVrolat 2 ton truck 283
1100 00. Calll14 247

en~e .

C793.
e2.000 00 304-451· 1920 Of·
1971 Dodge 0 -10 Sport, Smlll
truck , 72,000mll•. slldlnQbtdl
Qltsl. IUnroof, 5 apelld. ll:and·
lfd thift, ~nal 1nep top 01'1 bid,

mog wheolo. 304-&lt;1118 -1163.

73

Vans

&amp;

ovwhauled engine, *1 , 700. Call

114 -379-2424
1886 Chl\"f S-10 blazar good
oondttkm Cell 814-317-7894

oftor e ·OOPM
1976 Ford. four wheel drive, :a.4
•2.000.00.
fair cond. 304·488· 1813

M otorc:yc:lea

1981 Buklk lt&amp;abre .., poWer,
AM-FM CHNnl. cruiaa, V·8',
very cfHn. *4 ,200. Ctll 114·

j· DKJ:

londO&lt;oplng 304-571-2010.

()lo,\Ll)

42

Ill•. .., .......

Rotary or clbte tool drHiing
Moat w.lla completed 11maday
Pump aalea and 1trvlce 304 -

82

WHAT'S
JUGHAIO·s
FAVORITE
SUBJECT IN
SCHOOL?

Plumbing
&amp; Heating
CARTER'S PLUM81NO
ANO HEATING

814·245· M2e after 5PM .

MUSIC

1882 Yem~a Vl1ion 1150 with
blckr•t. 1300 mil•. •1 .900.
ctll 81-'· 4ot8-86•3 1fter 6.00

PM

~-80

/
Harley Daviton

Good

eond , t2.1!110 CaU 814-367·
7238.

P-

446 · 19e5

Toma Moped for tl'le. 2 speed,
tutom~tlc . Excell«~t condttiOn.

72 Corvtttt. C•K 114· 4419449 afttr IS.OOPM .

to MI. 0181. Coli 114143·1425.

J•me• Boys W1ter Service Alto
pool• filled. Call614 -28&amp;-1 141
or 614 ·o&amp;o&amp;8-1176 or 814 -4o&amp;e

Fra nco. 180

WHAIWA-5

D~ . JEI&lt;Y~I.'5

FA VO ~ITE GAME?

ISLUDOH"I

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug
gested by the abOve cartoon

(]
Answerhere: "K I X1 r &amp;[I XI J
r)

1

(Answers tOmorrow)

Yesterday's

I

Jumbles BROIL FEWER ACH ING BECAM E
Answer Whal mother sa1d to the boy who had been
pla,-mg w1th coa lWHERE HAVE YOU 'BIN "?

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

Surprise,
surprise

NORTH
• 97

Hh

.KQJ10 42
tAK 7

+As

By James Jacoby

EAST
+ J 86 14

WEST

Who could blame North lor b1dding
SIX dubs' Apparently South had a long
dub suit and at least the ace ol spades
The opening lead would presum~bly
be a diamond. If so, South would then
be able to draw trumps and lead
hearts whde dummy's other high dta·
mond remained as an entry for ail
heart tricks That was not bad
thinking. Unfortunately West had a
surprise opening lead for North-South
qmte naturally led the king ol
spades. Now what?
The answer would depend upon a
slightly lucky distribution of the cards
for starters, but it would also require
that West be given the opportunity lo
make a mistake Whatthe declarer d1d
was to return the surprise, ailowmg
West to hold the first lr~ck. Meanwhile
East, with nothing beller to do. had
signaled encouragement with the
spade 111. Now you and I know thai defender West could cash the heart ace
at trick two, reducing lbe chance for
121ncks to nil. But West was worried
that South might be void in hearts AC·
cordingly, West continued . spades
That was all declarer needed
He took the second spade with the
ace and ruffed a spade with the club
ace. He now played out all his clubs.
On the last club, West had to reduce to

+KQ 2

• nJ

• A86

tQ2

tJ10986 3
+4

+ 53 2

SOUTH
t A 10 3

.9

+ 54

+K Q J 10 9 7 6
Vulnerable Neither
Dealer South
Wes1

North

Eas t

Sou1b

2+
Pass

2•
3

Pass
Pass

3+

Pass
Pass
Pass

1+
6+

Pass
Pass

+

Open1ng lead

t+

3+

5+

Pass

+K

three cards. If he threw the ace of
hearts away to hold three diamonds,
dummy's king of hearts would be the
12th tr1ck When he kept the ace of
hearts, declarer t hrew h1s heart king
from dummy and took the last three
tr1cks with the A· K-7 of diamonds

~"
...r
br THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I Volcanic
spew
5 Texas
statesman

2 Cry or
surprise
3 Wor9hlp
4 Last word

5 Memonze

10 lnter-

6 Sally

jectaon ,.
II Te1711
or office
12 Subsode
13 Gennan

7TV
newscaster
8 Regio n
9 Trust

composer
14 Step in
16 "That'll
llt&gt; the -"
17 Swlor
19 lnsh river
21 Prophet
23 Whop
27 Honey
badger
28 Russ1an
resort
29 Restmg
30 Playful
talk
31 Pitcher
33 DIStaff

Menno
34 Young seal
371nternal
39 Primates
41 German

-

Howes

Yes~rday'o Answer

I I I've sa1d it! 28 Rabbit
36 Pather
15 Swiss hero 28 Tall tale
(Fr.)
I 7 Japanese
30 Comedian 38 Zounds'
code word
from
40 "Give 18 Semote
Waukegan
break'"
20 Ardor ·
32 Brandish 42 Writer
22 Yteid
34 Free
Serllng
·24 Counterpart
ticket
43 In the
25 Ragout
35 Atop
piiSt

b.-+-+-

City

44 Distres·
smgly
43 In wonder·

ment

SL Elsewhere

7397

CAN

'

'I'DU GIVE ME
.SOME SU66E5TION5 ?

..'

tiD Newawe1ch
IDl Nawa
10:06 ([) Portrait of Amfrica:
Wuhington D.C.
10:30 Cil Amorloan Snep1ho11
fl) (I) INN News
(}]) Moneymaker• Five
11:00 D CII NowoCentor
(]) Girl from U.N.C.L..E.
(I)
I1J al 1]}1 (jJ News
fll (I) U.nny Hill Show
(I) SCTV
(j) Eyewltne11 Nowo
(}]) Comparoble Worth
IDl WKRP In Clnolnnatl
_tfjj~J-'1=Jiji ' 11 :0B ([)MOVIE: 'Agency'
,..
1 1:30 D (l) • (jJ Tho , Tonight

m

PEANUTS

- - - - - -·'

TURN QFF APPLIANCES
NOT IN USE, FORM
POOLS AND DEFROST
8EFORE COOKING

Show Tontght' s gues.1s are

Don Kong and lucy lao
Flippln . l60 min .) In S1ereo.
(!) Spo&lt;11Center
CIJ WKRP In Cincinnati
at CIJ®T..i
CJ (I) T,J, Hooker Hooker

Ave . Gall•pohs

e14 ·446·7B33 or 614-446 ·
1833
R &amp; M Furniture Manufllcturing
St Rt 7. Crown City, Oh Cati
814· 2!58-1470, Ctll Ev.. 114445 - 3438
Old &amp; ne~ , ,
Uphostertd.

'\

_J I I . tJ

46 Golf great
47 Antiquated
pe11i0n

OOWN

!::-::-+-+++-+(sl lb-+-+++-

I Stalute

...

DAJLYCRYPTOQUOT&amp;'i-Here's bow ~&lt;_~work 11:
AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

&lt;irle letter stands for another. In this samp'e A IS used
for lhe three L's. X for lhe two O's, etc Smgle letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnalion of the words are ali
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

a student folm directed by
her froand (60 mm)
(I) Spain: Ten Years Alter I
A Roporte(s No1tbook
ICC) This documen18ry ex·

of General

..,

I.

CRYPTOQUOTE

'

4-2
J 'L' TAL

II X

B Y H N

M WZ

min )

General Hauling

Sec.

CII !HI

amtnes the transformatton
Sp atn has undergone m
the dace de si nce the death

Good-1 Excevatrng basements,
tooters. driveways, teptic tanks,
landacaplng Call anyt1me 614 448 -4637. •Jamea L DtVIIOn,
Jr owner

1 163

' tLYKING

the hospotal (60 min IIR)
(]) CBN News Tonight
(I) Ill ll}l Arthur Hailey's
Ho1ti'ICC) A wou ld·bolet1h
healer vis1ts the hotel, a

SNAKE!!

TR1 STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

±
I I r ·J

Craig's mtsftt son amves at

4 -L

----~

tJ

...

[TUSEG

prom1nent female _attorney
plans a dangerous e lop ement w 1th an escaped convict , and Megan appears'"

Exc:avating

Upholstery

amines th e transformation
Spain hn und ergone m
the decade s1nce the death
of General F ranco !60

rash of drug thefts and

Clltll Plumbmg end Huting. 18
years tJt pltfillflca, unltop dr11n s
New-ramodellng -repair work
Phont 304·882 2012

87

(}]) SP*on: Ton Yoers Altar I
A Reportefa Notebook
(CCI ThiS documentary ex-

Momson agontzes over h iS
wife's
extended
labor.
Whl1e 11 suspected tn a

"e-4477

85

centur ies old Spa m &amp;h en tertainment tradition. {60
mm )I n Stereo

10:00 U

Cor Fourth and Ptn t
Gl llipolls Ohio
Pnoni 614 -448 -3888 or 814 -

83

Zarzuelel Placido Oam1ngo
perform s Ztuzuela , a three-

mm)

BARNEY

Coat. llmaatone, gr111el. etc:
Delivered 1 ton tnd up J 1m
Lanier. 304·875·1247 or 8715

1978 Spo~Utar cu1tomlred
pttnt • chrome, t2,100 . Ctll

7545

I'

79'11

Autos for Sale

1918 Chevy II SS very good
cond, bBit offer Call &amp;U-448-

5TRAN6il: DUO&lt; .

Starks TrN and Ltwn Strvl~.

4 W .O.

197e CJ 6 Jeop, n- 4·WD,

74

198. Ford LTD auto, til', AM FM. *3.699 John'eAuto hiM
Bul~llle Rd .. Gallipolis, Oh
'

875·20BB or 875-7361

e14 ·" f·3243

_..:...-,--------- 1 ton . standard shift.

f rdII S/Ill rl ,1 111111

RINOLES ' S SERVICE, "Pa·
rienced carpenter, .electrician,
meton, paint•r, roofing Undud·
lng hot tar appllc.tlon) 304 -

C'-v tNcl&lt; , e cvt .

Wh'ife~ Rockt chicken Nna; Bull
grade fad angus, Ntdy for
tervlce Phone 30o&amp;·676 -28 17

1001argeroundbal•ofhey. M .
P« bela Cell Aodnty Chtvali.,,
Sttada River Farma 814-981-

0 11J ®

~~Q..,......-1

Fetty TrN Trimming, atump
removtl. Cell 304-875-1331

lttndlrd ehlft. Ctll tfter 11:00

tar 800 PM

614 ·379 -2424

CALLS IT

'~INNIE:':

and Alexis love. (60 mm )
MOVIE: 'News At
11'
(I) Placido Domingo Sings

MY GRANDF;A.THER'S
KINDOFA

1988 Nlsaan stand , ! spd :

18.72 ChiVY half ton truck,

Hay for 111171 pants a btle Call

NO... HE

OR, 61.JRE .•.
HESGOTA

896-3802

6·00 p m

Hay &amp; Grain

banle to control Blake 's
company contmues , Oom1 n1que reveals the 1dent1tv
of Ja ck1e's real father and
Amanda struggles to overcome th"e loss of losmg Oex

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

30o&amp;-&amp;7•· 2318 or 114-448 ·

21ie · 1917 or 814 992-3881 .

livestock

Yearling Charolais bull,

Toyota Celtca, u:c cond
phone 304 876 - 2001 tfte r

1980 Musteng, 4 cyl. 4 IPMd
30 rf'IPV, wn roof, 51,000 miiN,
OI&gt;Ortv. U.BOO 00 304-675·

the rehvm g

(]) To Be Announced
(!) NFL Films
(I) ell II2i MacGyvor (CC)

8540

81

Mark h elp an agtng nollei ISt red1scove r h1 s wntmg
talent through

814·992-2724 .
1983 Pontiac 1000 PS . PB.
auto. 12900 Call 614 948

()]) Bob Newhe rt
7 35 ([) Sanford and Son
8:00 0 CII (jJJ Highway to
Ho6ven (CC) Jonathan and

of a beautifu l teenage d
romance (60 mm)

Sleesu IIJC . canopy . tllcellent
condnlon . •too Call614 388

1979 Monte Carlo J,.llnduu
Lolded. Good condlteon. CaR

News

(}]) MacNeoi-Lehror Newsh·
our
II) 1I21 Dtvorce Court
()]) Barney Millar
7:05 ([) Mary_Tyler Moore
7:30 IJ CIJ (§) Now Newlywed

2454

John D....-s A., E•c cond Eaty
Flow aprlldiM'. John Dterl Hay
condttlontr 304-896· 3471 111'

71

part sox of 'The 20 Shows
That Changed TV'
fj) Cil Jollorsons
0 (I) !HI Wheel of Fortuna
Cil Nightly Business Report

HABIT f.W

·n

Outte· AIIIa Tractors 1nd Farm
Equepment. Don 't buy before
you give ut 1 t ry,
can aavt
you money on every deal. plus
buy wMJe you can 911 partt and
service St~~ournewmodel386 .
o&amp; row corn plant•a. tt.ey h...,e
been teJttd for 4 ya ... . K•etera
S.rvlct Can1tt, St . At . 17, Point
Pleaaant and Ripley A oad, phone

63

TIIAT I'S A ~!:I!\Oil'5

M'i ~USBAIID... ~~'5

transmluiOns- trensfar casn
too Overdrive front wh... &amp;
rear wheel drive. Tran1m111N0n
ldta I. tork converters All 1YP" ·
air CO rfl'tiiiOrl 1 to 60 HP 5 '
HP·2 lttQt •1 .295 Call 814

5346

Bafore you buy your n111t tttCtOr,
get t he bnt prica. Sid..-s Equip·
ment Company, Henderson . W
Va . 304-175- 7421

l'M~EO~

Auto Parts

&amp; Accessories

77

1

Peter Strauss looks at the
success of '1, Love lucy' 1n

All types uud &amp; rebu11t

1982 Chevettt Low mil",
13250 Good cond . Call 114

388 ·98e7

CROSS lo SO NS

Autos for Sale

44e2

Milled hty •1 btla . Cell 814-

Farm Equipment

71

3020 JohnDHre Tractor. heel·
lent condition . 2 axiM low boy
tr11ler Call 614 -992 -7o&amp;01

64

~arm

61

11 HP mower. rubber tire wheel
barrow, 100 amp breaker bo1,
high chair Call 44.8-2867

n..-

16 year old Pinto mart Reaao·

59 For Sale or Trade

v,

388 ·8148

19B9 Mas•y Ferguson 135
diHel tractor new paint, perfect
condition, with
10&amp; buah
hog Call 614-o&amp;48-3658

e14 ·1141·2111.

HP Hobart meat grrnder new
held Call tfter 8 00, 614 -387

•eo

Farm Equipment

HousttVJ)e pupi)V 'h Gorgey. 'h
Peklngau. mala, US Call 814-

440 -0 373

Roger Reng e double oven , avo
cado, * 160 00 El ec Singer
ttwlng meet-tint. blond e cabinet,
00. 82 model eloc
1tart Gr.avety tractor wnh cultt·
vator. grass mower&amp;: bush hog,
t2500 .00 . Elec. sheer, $35 00

61

d iff erent ~ situ and mower
widtht Wt have comptct di•el
tractof'l In Hp rllr'lge18, 28,,32
Buy wh..-t you can get Mrvice
md partt. KNfara Service Center, St Rt 87. Point Pt. .ent
and Ripley Road . phone lOo&amp;-

Flri'Hood 100% oak IS35 1loid.
'•U2 for 6 or more . Call 614-

0493

e14 797-Vee

614 ·"8·2783

56

THI~ GUY CO UI.I'N 'T
RIT THE BROAD ;IDE
OFA

18'11' Crls Crtft V·bottom tkl
boat, 2 topt , 3152 cu In 225 HP
rnboerd engine 40 gel t.nk, all
gauges lki blr. trailer. Call

Ductz -AIIia ltwn and garden
tra ctor• and equipment Defore
you buy check wHtt us on the
horsepower you need We hiVe

1,600 h Walnut tnd Cherry
lumber, Jtatontd and cured for
2 y11rs, 304 675 -3924 after
6 00 PM

(J]) Hothe Yoga
•
()]) Good Times
"
8:05 ([) Andy Griffith
630 U CIJ NBC Nlgh11y News
(]) Tho Rifleman
(!) lnoldo tho PGA Tour
(I) Ill II2i ABC News
fj) CIJ One Day at a Ttma
0 (I) (jJ CBS News
(I) Doc1or Who
(}]) Body Electric
()]) Joflarsons
(jJJ NBC News
8:35 ([) Carol Burnett
7·00 U ~ PM Magaztne
(}J ~lias Smith end Jones
(!) SportsCon1or
(I) Entertainment Tonight

38B B711

Kentucky Lump. Ohio Lump.
Ohio StOker Yard or delivery.
cam&amp;nt block• and building
meteual G111ipolis Blodt: Co •
Ptne St . Galllpohs, Ohro Call

Va 304·682 2222

Boats and

18 It Tomboy b111 boal 1974
SOHP ~venrude. lot• of eldrat,
t1760 Call after 8:00, 814-

304-523· 11843

BloeM, br~ck·, mol1ar and ma·
so nry atpplin Mou nta in State
Block, At 33. New Haven, W

~ Eyaw1tnaas News

Motors for Sale

t~~~';;~E~===:=--,~T~~~:;:~~~~~

I AGLEE
·~..:::::-

U CII NowoCentor
Cil Green Acree

by Henri Arnold •nd Bob 1M

lour C]«&lt;lnlrf words.

r)

(!) Mazda SportaLook
(I) flJ (I) II) 1]}1 (jJJ NOW'S
fj) CIJ Dltrrent Strokes
(I) 3·2· 1, Contac1 (CC)

1988 Hondt250tourwheeler. 2
months old, lttll und..- werranty,
after '00 ctll 304·15715-78153 .

Build 1ng M tteflalt
Block, brick. teWer p1pt1, wmdows hntela et c Claude Winters, Rio Grenda 0 Cell 614·

245 -5121 .

8:00

1-

1.!{1 ~~ ·

Un......-ntlfo
four Jumbleo,
one letterloHCh square, to form

EVENING

good cond. • 1.300 00 firm,
304 676-15097 after 7·00 P_M

75

~

4/2/86

'71 KZtOOO tullY dretltd, Vlf'Y

CAl'S!

814 -288-111122.

HALF PRICEI Flesheng arrow
11gns •2991 L1ghted, non-arrow
82791 Nonhghted U291 Frte
letters! Only few l&amp;ft See
loc ally 118001423 - 0183.
anyt1me

258· 19061

3 bedroom. dining ,-oom. car·
pttld, utility room, 11ortg1
bulkf;ng., nlc. lot Mt Varnon
Ave , Pt Pluunt, W Va . Cal

hom...

Sawmill with Caterpll·
ltr Power Umt 366 Fargu10n
frofl{ end loader Grtvely Aotoapede New, never been uaed .
Call 614-74'2 -2473

Oh . e14 -286-1930

2370

F01 rent New furn lahed 1
t.droom tpartment In Middl•
po~ Coli f14 ·982·5304.

Fr~ck

Call 1ron bath tub w1th leg s
Fauce ts fit on nght end of tub,
good co nd. call aher 5 00.

Seat~ Coldspot refr~gerator 17

814·"1·4119

675 ·6709

1000 gel polyurethane water
tank Cell 814-742-2833

GOOD

Washtrl, dryers. retngerator1.
rtngu Skaggs ApJ) hancu.
UPSlet Rwer Rd betide Stone
Crut Motel 614-446 -739 8

JACKSON ESTATES APART·

Quality bu11t 1 1h story Tudor
1tyle home on 5 wooded acres.
10 mmutes from Pomt Pltllant,
Sand Hill Road . •as 000 00 Call e14 -24&amp;·5890

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Apartment
for Rent

Farms for Sale

Wanted approalmataly 10 acres
vaunt ltnd within 20 min of
HMC, mu11 hwe rold frontag t,
prefer at leaat p.rtlllty wooded

All e l tetr~c , 3 bedroom, cenual
llf. anachecl garage, Gallipolis
Ferry 304-875 -2932

14 94 9 2 1
-6 __·_ _ _·__ 8_ 1 - - - - -

3421

USED APPLIANCES

bRt\111

6461

814·"6·0322

773-9134 .

~ 10

WEDNESDAY

304 862·2822

M1"td hardwood staba t12 per
bundle. containing appro.11. 1 '),
ton F 0 8 Ohio Patlot Co ,
Pomeroy, Oh1o Call 614- 992·

00

3 BA mob1le home, 314 :hd St ,

1975 Ctmeron M obil a Hor1)e for
ule 121160 Call 6H · 992 ·

sur

5 rm houae Ewmgton, OH, 1'h
lot. t8 .500 Cell 61' -876 -

41

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

~. ~•HA! ,11\ttJ~ 1.1~! C•IU .
Ill flel!f II~D ~lOll. M~! I

614 "6·2297

For Sale Hammond Organ wrth
leslie IPHker t500 Call614949 2477

Professional
Services

up!

l6t1V6

Vie~ing

6433

Sylvania 23 1nch black &amp; white
t v aood condition •2o Call

Smith-Wesso n 3!7 mag Also.
Dan Wnson
"" mag
Call

K. 304-e76 -1 078

'81 Suzuki Q&amp;UW'l_ lllC OOnd,
new wlndshlehl tna lillY Hr.
7.000 milll. tBOO 00 Call

Computer Rad io ~hack ti •·80
model 4 With trs pmp 120
printer E.lllrl TR S 80 mlm diiC
dr~ve . Call814 -245-6062 Mon :
Fri 8 00 4 •00

f railer apaces, small ctuldren
l ccepted, sewer and water
furmahta. Locust Rd. back of K
~

AW, NuT~ !

•'i}ft!J~ fi}~ fi' THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD OAIIE

Television

Motorc:yc:les

(t'i1~(~

JOS1' Wl'f

For sale· Sterling were 60 pc
Servas 5 ph11 . Royal CrNt
Comes w1th chest U26 814·
985 3937 after 5 00 p m

7.4

1980 KtWtllkl LTD 1000
E.llcellent Cond11lon 30o&amp; ·678-

Mon. Fri

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Parle.
Rout e 33, North of Pomeroy
Large lots Call61o&amp;-992-7479

HOME OWNERS Ret1nance to

low f••ed rate Useequtty for anv

r_;;_--=------,

~·s

GroFfrv atore equipment Dell
ca .. dairy ctae, cash reg latera,
etc Call 814.-2o&amp;6·6052 8 00·
4 00 Mon ·Frl
Taylor 2 heed soft aerve 1ce
cream machine Hot wr1p aand·
wich macttlne, 1 roll&amp; 3 roll. Call

0756

dal'\cewaer accusor111 Jord·

54 Misc. Merchandise

Furnished Ro~ms

45

through the mail until you tJave
•nvest'Uated the offering

ohne

Apartment
for Rent

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by L•rry Wright

15

Ohio

1986

Wednesday, Apri1 .2. 1986

Ptimeroy_:_Middleport, Ohio

..

•

.'

IVAMWYHK

G W ADZ

GAL H

MJYVAL

PE

YO

.J

.I

TJ H

F'VJ IB ·

~

DTY MW
JTPLAOZ
PYZLIZ
Yestenja)"o Cl')')ltoquote: WHAT 111E FOOL DOES
IN 111E END, THE WISE, MAN DOES IN THE BEGIN·
NING. - PROVERB
and

Romano attempt to

smooh a high school drug
ring, (80 min.) IRI.
(I).Auatin CltV Limits
qp ~.!~News Nlghtilne
()]) Trapper John. M.D.
12:00 (]) Bolt of Groucho
(!) ·Skiing: Suboru
tyle Chompionahlpe Coverage from Lake Plocid, New
York (80 mln.1
([) Entortal~ment Tonight.

F-•

...

Peter Strauss looks at th e
success of 'I love Lucy' m ..

part sox of 'The 20 Shows
That Changed TV'.
fl) (!) Rawhide '
® MOVIE: 'The Cheyenne
~ocial Club'
t
II) 1]}1 ~e on Hollywood
12:30 D (l) llll Lalli Night with
David Letterman Tontghfs
guest 11 si nger

Amy Grant

(60 min ) In Stereo

�Page::_ 16- The Daily Sentinel

Pome~y- Middleport,

Area deaths
Manley Gaffney; a daughter, Mrs. preceded in death by his wife,
Donald (Tammy I Walgamott. and Dulcie Martin Reibi&gt;i, also a former
Edna M. Clark. 87, Middletown. a son, Herman E. Gaffney, all or Meigs resident, in 1984.
Massillon, and several local
Surviving.. are a sister. Mary
Ohio, fomerly of Letart. died
Virginia
Reibel of Pomeroy: fy.o
r·elatives.
Tuesday In the Middletown '
step-daughters,
Mary Jam• Kit ·
Services
will
be
hNd
at
:l.
p'.m.
HospitaL
chen,
Mlcco,
Fla
..
an d Jeanne Ann
Thursday
at
the
N~wman
Baptist
Surviylng is her husband John H.
Bradbury,
Middleport;
a stepson,
Church
with
Rev.
James
Ash
Clark of Middletown, Ohio.
Joseph
Young,
rural
delivery,
officiating
and
burtal
will
be
in
the
Funeral sef\·ices wlll be 10:30
Newman
Cemetery.
Friends
may
Pomeroy,
seven
grandchildren
and
a.m. Thursday at the Foglesong
ca
ll
a
t
the
Atklnson-Feurht
·
13
great-grandc
hildren.
Fu·neral Home with the Rev . Teny
Shaidnagle Funeral Home'.ln Mas·
Serv ices wUI be held at lUa .m.
Alvarez officiating.
silion
from
6
to
9
l1tis
~vening.
Friday
at the Kelly-Kemp Funeral
Burtal will follow in the Graham
Home
In
Morristown where friends
Cemetery.
Robert
j.
Reibel
may
call
from
7 to 9p.m. Thur~day.
There wlli bbe no calling hours.
Burial will be in Meigs Memory
Robert Jacob Reibel. 73, Morrl
Margaret S.' Messick
Garden followin g the·..Morristown
sontown. fotmerly o~Meigs County, seiTices.
Mar!ret Stewa;; Messick. 54, died Tuesday arOhlo State Univer·
s·ily Hospital in-,Coiumbus.
Grace A. Petzinger
(&gt;00 Fl t St.. Point Pleasant, died
Wedn . ay morning in Pleasant
Mr. Reibel was born Nov. 19, 1912
Crace A. Pl&gt;tzinger. 85, Coium·
Valley Hospital fo llowing a long in Pomeroy, a son of I~ iatl'Jacob
bus,
died March 12 at the Whet illness.
and Margaret Matthewson Reibel.
ConvalPSCenl Center,
stoene
Born Oct. 16, 1931. in Point He was a ret ired employee of the
Pleasant, sh(• was the daughter of Ohio River Collieries Co. He was a
She had been a teacher at the
Elizabeth E. Stewart' of Point member of the MorTisi0'\11 Chris· Ohio State School for the Blind.
Pleasarit and the late James tian Church and was a past SuiTiving are her husband , Leroy
Stewart who died in 1900.
president of t he Bethesda-Belmont· J .; sisters, Mrs. !)Ina (Carrie\
Surviving in addition to her Morristown Rotary ' Club. He was Roush, Middleport, and Mrs. Laura
mother arc thra" daughters. Linda
Mae Smith, Rutland; Sheila "Spur"
Harmon, Gallipolis:'- and RJta
Vaughn. Point Pleasant: one son,
Roy of Ga llipolis, Ohio; three sister.
Lofl'!ta Randolph, Point Pleasant,
Audrey Westmoreland, Roanoke.
Va .. and Judy Roush, Henderson;
six brol hers, Samuel, Guy, MaiTin,
Roy, Harold and John Stewart, ali
of Point Pleasant; three grand·
children and several nieces and
nephews.
She was prt'Ceded in dea I h by one
sister, two brol hers and two
granoc hildren.
.
Funeral seiTices will be at1:JJ
p.m . Friday in the Wilcoxen
Funeral Home with the Rev.
William Banks _qfficiatin g. Burial
will foUow in Suncrest Cemetery .
Friends f!1ay caD at the funeral
home after '4 p.m. Thursday.

Edna M. Clark

Hennan H. Gaffney
Herman H. Ga ffney, 74. Massil·
ion , :died Tuesday at a Masslllon
hospital follo"ing a five xear
illness.
He was born a t Starr, Ohio. a son
of the late Charles T. and Amanda
Gaffney, He was a retired freight·
ways worker and was a member rJ.
teamsters bcal union 24. He
belonged to the Newman Baptist
Church.
Surviving are his wUe, Audrey M.

CALL NOW AND SAY-

.

Ohio'*

Wednesday, April 2, 1986 ·

Fire.. damages van

.A van :-owned. by Vincent Grey,
Route 2, · Racine, was heavily
B. Hager, Columll.ts.
damaged along · with Its con Ienis
She was a member of the First
when it caught fi re In Pomeroy
Congregational Church and the
Welfare Association of the Sightless Tuesday afternoon.
Grey pulled the van to the side of
of Columll.ts.
Graveside services were held ' a t the road at E. Ma in and New Sis., at
10 a.m. on March 17 at Glen Rest about 12:40 p.m. Tuesday when it
Cemetery in Colum!X!s "1th the did not seem to be handling
Scho€dinger Funeral , Home in properly. Shortly la ter flames burst
out from under the hood. C:Iothlng
charge. _
and contents valued at $J,OOJ in the
van were lost as well as the
extensive damages incuJTed to the
Mostly sunny today with highs vehicle.
Meanwhile, two young me n wil l
between 65 and 70. CLear tonight
be charged as the;-esult of sell ing a
with a low near 40.
Sunny Thursday morning and teiepoone directory 9" fire in a
clouds increasing In ihe afternoon. phone booth on West Main St ..
' Tuesday night, Pomeroy Police
The highs will be near 70.
report.
Extended Forecast
Police Chief Jerry Rought was a t
Friday through Sunday
Ch1111ce ol rain Friday through the nearby American Legion Hall
Sunday ..
area when he saw the two young

Weather forecast

men at the booth and investigate\~ ..
Being charged with dest ruction of
pmperty is Doug Jenkins, Pome·
roy, and Steve !'/)ox ley, Pomeroy,js
being charged' with aiding ilnd
abetting.
At :1:25 a.m. Wednesday poll~!"
answered a ca ll to.the Kroger Store
for an alleged theft incident. Police
said, David Bland, 18, West Colum:
bi.; , W. Va., and a juvenlle, exited
through a back door atthestoreand
were iater apprehended in a woods
in back of the store alter having
allegedly taken with them several
packs of beer, cigarett es and otber
Items. Bland will be charged In
•
-!'
mayor s courl.

I

Veterans Memorial

•

at y

e

Admlssions .. u ra Morris, Ra·
cine; :::velyn Freeman, Racine;
Guy Bush, Pomeroy; Martha
Howell. Middleport; Merle Davis,
Rutland.
Vot.36, No.246

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, April 3 , 1986

Copyrighted 1986

'

LITTLE DAN'S EXXON

402 EAST MAIN ST.

Investigation
underway in

POMEROY

992-9907

VALUABLE COUPON
ALL

PEPSI or COKE
PRODUCTS

$5 75

Case of
24 Cans
NO LIMIT

REGULAR PRICE 15.99

MUST HAVE COUPON FOR THIS PRICE
EXPIRES APRIL 30 , 1986

VALLEY BELL 2°/o .MILK~:v.!:r.!:ic:•• $159
•MILK
•LUNCH MEAT
•BREAD
•CHIPS

•INSTANT LOTTERY
•CIGARETTES
•CANDY
•OIL

...

ATHENS, Greece (UP! I - U.S.
offi cials opened an investigation
today into the bombing a Trans
World Airlines jet that kUied four
Americans and Italian pollee !den II·
fled an Arab terrorist thought to
have planted the device.
A pro-Libyan Palestinian terror·
isl group claimed resporistbility for
bombing the Boeing 7'n jetliner
15,000fcet over Greece Wednesday.
The group said it staged the attack
to avenge U.S. milita ry strikes
against Libya last week.
TWA spokesman Step he n
Heckscher sa id the airline's team
investigating the bombing would be
joined today . by U.S. authorities
from theFedPraiAviationAdminis·
Iration and FBI.
State-ru n Creek television said
the planes flight data recorder which records flight informat ion
such as heading, speedandaltitudl'
-will be flown to the United States
: today for review.
'
The jetliner -TWA Flight B4D.
which originaiL'Ciln Los Angeleswas bound from Rome to Athens
and Cairq whet) a blast tore a
gaping hole In the plane's right side,
' killing four Americans who were
sucked from the plane.

. Sidney , Edwards, dir('('tor of t.tre
.. Gallla·Meigs Community Action
Agency discussed the administration of Ihe county's $2500 ' summer
litter grant. C.A.A has adminis·
tered the grant in previous years,
ll.tl Edwards said he will only
administer the !?'ant this year, if he
has control over the workers. In the
past, the Ohio .Deparmenl of
Natural Resources has been the
authority figu re in the gran I. ,,
Edwards said C.AA is more than
willing to admin ister the grant for
the oounty, but pointed out, "there's
a lot required of the contact person, .
yet, ODNR hires and controls the
\,

l

'

..
''

J

GALLIPOLIS- AMason County
man died of injuries received in a
one-vehicle accident off the U.S. l'i
bypass near Ga lilpoll.l ear ly today.
Sidney E. Huddleston, 59, Ga!U ·
polis Ferry, died of multiple
internal injuries and hemorrhage,
sa id Dr. Donald R. Warehime,
Ga llia County coroner.

1
The damaged airliner madE," a n
emergency landing at Alben's
Helllnlkon lnterna tion Airport mo·
ments tater. Most of the UO
The state highw~y patrol's
passengers who surv ived the explo·
Gallia -Meigs post sa id Huddleston , ~
sion left Greece early today,
identified as an employee of
Heckscher said.
Stauffer
Chemica l Co., was west The dead Americans were identi·
bound on l; sometime between 2:30
tied as Alberto Ospina, 37, of
and 3 a.m. when the 1975 pickup
Stratford, Conn .. Dimltra Stylian,
truck he was driving reportedly
52, Annapolis, Md, her daughter.
went
off the highway, through a
Maria Styllan Kiug, 24, of Annapo·
lenCI' and down an embankment
lis, and Klug's 9· month-old daugh·
ter, Dimitra.
Into a creek, '\"'erely damaging the
truck ,
T)leir badly burned and mangled
The truck was "standing on Its
bodies rained to eart h outside near
oose" in the crrek, a patrol
the tiny village of Statheika, about
spokesman said , until abou t 6:10
65 miles southwesl of Athens , and
a.m. when a passing trucker
were found by a shepherd.
spotted
the wreck and no!Uied the
AI least nine passengr:&gt;rs, includ·
patrol
by
CB radio. The patrol and
ing three America ns, were injured
the
Gaiiia
County Sheriff's Departin the bombing. Four of the
ment
were
on the scene and Baird's
passengo?rs, two of them Arnerl·
Body Shop and Towing, Kanauga,
cans, remained hospitalil.ed today ,
EARLY MORNING FATALITY - Local law died early today. Huddleston was reportedly drtving
was called in to p.llilhe truck out of
but none was reported in critical
enforcement Inspect the wreckage of a pickup truck the tl'l!ck sometime between 2: 30 and 3 a.m. when It
the creek.
condition.
in which Sidney E. Huddleston, 59, Gallipolis Ferry, went off the U.S, 35 bypass 1111d into a creek.
Police said the bomb may have
been hidden in a passenger"s
e
e
'
carry-on luggage.lt exploded as the"'Boein_g 7'll was flying at L'i ,OOJ feet
over thP ~ioponnesus peninsula,
llr Stra tford . Conn ., friends and .
By STEVE GORMAII:
' "President Reagan has my vote.
the U.S. ·Libya n conficl.
which forms the southern part of
United Press International
An eye lor an eye, and a l,ooth for a
'"You know Maria, it's a hot spot neighbors of Ospina Jiad mixed
mainland Greece.
Relatives of a Maryland woman tooth," said Waiter AugPr, who over there and you shouldn't be views of what action, if any, the
killed with her mother and baby lives down the street from the going,"' K!ug said he told his son's United States should take in
daught er by a bomb blast a board a Ospina home in Stratford .
wile. "And she just said, 'Oh well , response to the incident.
"I don't know what you could do,"
TWA jetliner piPadL'&lt;l with her to
The lour victims were sucked we'll be all right .' She·was just tha t
cancel lh&lt;' trip to Gra"ce for fea r of from their seats of the TWA jetliner type of girl. She wasn't a worrier.' ' said Elwood Sl. Marie. who Uves
terror·ist attacks, the woman 's through a gaping hole left in the side
But Klug sa id he was ·worried thrw houses down from Ospina.
father -in-law says.
of the plane by the explosion, which about terrorism and he wants the
"We begged her to stay horne, but occu rTed at 15,00! feet over Greece. Uni ted Stat es to do something about
she said sil&gt; had to go. " said
Their remains were Jound by a it.
Warren Klug Sr .. of Ballimorr, shepherd in the village of Stat Jx&gt;ika.
"I just wish Pr~ ident Reagan
whost' daughter-in· law, Marla 65 miles sou thwest ci Athens, Greek would stop the terrorists instead of
Edwards said he would be Stylian Klug, 24, of Annapolis, was
television said .
antagonizing them, It seems
discussiQg the mat ter wtlh Da vid one of four Ameri&gt;ans killed by the
A pro-Libyan terrorist group they 're just adding fuel to the fire
Pinkermah, of the ODNR Office of e.,pioslon Wednesday.
claimed responsibiliy for the explo· instead of going over there and
Lilt&lt;'r Control, Jx&gt;fore making a
The 01her 1octims were !dent ificod sion. but Creek authOrities specli· stopping them," he said .
ck&gt;cision whether !o;Jdminlster the as Marla Klug's 9- month -old Ia ted a OOmblng could have been a
"We believe if you kill somebody.
grant.
daughter, Dimilra; her mother, suicide attempt.
you sho uld be kiUed . We believe if
Shawnee Stale Community Col·
Edwards also noted that it may Grcek·bom Dimitra Sty lian , 52,
The ex plus ion came just days we find these people (who bombed
lege in Portsmouth has been
Jx&gt; a problem for C.A.A. to provide also of Annapolis; and a Colombia· after Libyan leader Moammar the planer they should be killed ."
authorized to convert to a four-year
tran sportation for summer litter horn U.S. citizen, Alberto Ospina, Khadafy . tlu·eatened to launch
Klu~ said til&gt; thra" went to
slate university after July I.
workcrs because C.A.A. \'Chicles 37, of Stratford, Conn .
terrorist attacks against Ameri· Grwcc to seltlr some legal affairs
Gov. Richard Celeste authorized
will be Involved in another specia l , Some grief-stricken relatives and cans in t&lt;'faiiation for the sinking of dealing with the recent death of
Shawnee
State University by sign '
pmgram this summer.
lri&lt;'nds of the victims reacted to
Libyan missile boats in the Gulf of Styllan's husband , Andreas.
ing a new law Wednesday.
E&lt;lwards te'ported that C.AA rcpor1 s the explosion may have Sidra last wrek.
Klug's hu sba nd , Warren Klug
The House-passed bill to tha t
now has in exwss of $2fi,OXJ cash in tx&gt;en the work of terrorists by
Klug said he warned . his J r. , and her sister, Kathy Stylian,
effect sailed through the Ohio
lh&lt;' Emrrgo?ncy Food and Shelter calling for U.S. retaliation , while
daughter-in-law again st traveling lrft Annapolis for Gra"ce Wednes·
Senate on March 26, 30-2.
Program which has br!&gt;n underway others urged restraint.
to the Mediterranean in the wake of day, a relatrve sa id .
The overwhelming vote was
for just about IS months . Edwards
attributed to the bili'schiefspor\sor,
said mprethan 1000 fa milies in both
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr.,
G~ Ilia and Meigs Coun ties were
D·New Boston.
assisted last year by the emergency
In pushing the bi ll through the
program,
Legislature; Rifle sa'lct his area
Commissioner Manning Roush
needed a four -year university
spoke by phone with Phil Roberts,
because resident s can't afford to
tounty engineer. to check on the
send Iheir sons and da ~ghters away
progress of the Carper access road
from home.
project. Roberts said he has not
made any fur1her progress on the
Sen. H. Cooper Snyder, R· ,
plans for the road . Commissioners
Hillsboro. who carried the bill in the
are anxio'us to see the Carper
Senate, told his colleagues ~ uthem :
project on the Ohio Department of
Ohio has "long been dcpl'ived" and :
T ra ns portati o n co nstru c tion
needs a lour-year public unive,sity
schedule.
to spark ils Lxconorny and · assist
In other matters, til&gt; board
young pcoplr who can not afford 10
oka yed l lht• following animal
travel to other colleges 100 milrs
claims; $Gl8, to Erwin Gloeckner,
away.
Racine, for two !lXJ pound hereford
"Ohio's sou thl and is one of the .
cows killed March 18, and $50 for a
areas of high unemployment in this ·
40 pound two-day-old call killed
state," said Snyder. He d ied a 13.6
Mar·ch 31; $70 to Louie Christian of
percent jobless rate compared to a
Pomeroy for .two 100 pound nanny
statewide average of 9.4 percent.
goats killed March :n
"There 's no place In Ohio a
The board pays animal claims
four -year institution is · needed
based on the most recent stock
worse than in l/1&lt;' Sha wnee ~rea,"
market repor·t,
agreed SE?n. Oakley C., Collins.
By law. commissioners ca n not
R·lronton. "Many young people
pay animal cla ims to any individual
don't have the resou rces to go away
who owns a dog and does not have it
to school. 11ris will help keep
licensed.
talented young pmplr in the area ,"
And fi nally, a mreting of the
The propo'il!i passed without the
county records mmmisslon hils
enoorsement or the Ohio Board of
been scheduled for Wednesday, 11
Regents, which coordinates higher
a.m .. in the cominissioners'office.
education plan!'lng, Some oppo. .
:
The records mmmlssiop is com·
nents believe the Institution wm :
prlsed of the president of the county
hurt enrollments at Ohio Univer- •
Importance oi continuing education for ~ial and
commissio n, the clerk or courts.
LIBiiARIES: LEARNING FOR
sll y, Rio Grand' College, and OU :
ewnomic
growtlr in the ocrnmunity and the
auditor, i'l'(:order and prosecuting
Aprll 7-13 lras been designated u.~ "I.Ibn~rk&gt;s:
branches at Iront on an d Chillicothe.
imJ&gt;Orlant role which llbrarles provide in IISSistlng in
Learning for Ute Week" by proclamation of the
att orney. 11re records commission
Riffe made certain thi:! 1987-&amp;g
mu st approve a list of outdated
Meigs Coonty Commissioners. Here Conunlsslqoors the professional, inlellct'lual, educational IUld
capital improvements bill contain~ ·
personal growth of lite convnunlty. Next week Is
county records whiCh are to be
Manning Roush, Richard Jones IIJid David Koblentz,
$al m!Uion for a llbr~ry, ama(hand
National Ubrary Week and as a part ~ tire
from left, Jobi Ruth Powers, Dbrarlan, for a picture at
disposed of IJr George Bain, local ,
·science building, and parking imthe Pomeroy Hbrary before signing tire ..-ocJamatloo. observance, a rally wW · be held on lite Statehotlse
records specialist for the Ohio.
provements to make Ire transition
grounds April 9. ,
Historical Society.
Mrs. Po~ers In the proclamation emphasizes tire
.at Shawnee.

Litter control
manager hired
By NANCY VOACilAM
Sentinel staff writer
The Meigs ,County Commisslonprs voiLod Wrodnesday to hlr&lt;'
· Stephen Powell. of Pomeroy, to
manage the cou nty's $76.42.1 litter
program for 1986.
The hiring l'l'COtnmPndation was
made by the county liltPr m ntml
board which rPviewed applications
Monday night.
The remaining position of litt er
control collC&gt;Ction sutx•rvlsor rt•·
mains unfilled.
Chester resident Aljdrca BaiL'\'
has bc&lt;•n hired by Ihe board as
county dog warden on a 90-dav
pmbalion period. Batey is taking
over for Bill McKinney, who has
resigned the position to take a job
out of the county. The commission
had two other applicants for the
poslion, but chos&lt;' Batey beca use
she has be&lt;&gt;n working for an area
veteranarian and Is already .quali· ·
lied toeuthanilethedogs. The other
applicants wou ld have needed
training in th is aspect of the job.
Without a dog warden who Lsable to
euthanize the dogs, those services
have to be contracted through an
outside authority at a great expense
to the county.
Mcl&lt;innry was praised by the
board for his work in the past few
months as dog warden.
Also pfi&gt;sent to discuss the dog
warden posit ion were Dorthea
Fisher and Rita Ball Lewis of lh&lt;'
loca l humane society. The dog
warden and humane society work
closely in the county.
Discu,.. litter grant

2 Sections 1 2 Pages 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Man dies
in wreck

TWA bombing

workers." .

en tine

vICtlDl S ~amily begged her to stay. home
Celeste signs
bill giving
Shawnee Staie
4-year status

"'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="140">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2721">
                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="40171">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="40170">
              <text>April 2, 1986</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="205">
      <name>clark</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6444">
      <name>gaffney</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4489">
      <name>messick</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7014">
      <name>petzinger</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3512">
      <name>reibel</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="103">
      <name>stewart</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
