<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12799" 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/12799?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-07T03:38:10+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43771">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/16ece21f735e586c23ffa9f1cad7dfbb.pdf</src>
      <authentication>1119db44a22432618c772e3ac0bc1b29</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="40172">
                  <text>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

"'

�.

·,;

.

•

..·- • .1,_10

...... ' ....

f·

1•. , .. '"'·"· '''· '·"· ..•• , ... • .••

Commenl,ary
DEVOO'ED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGEIT
Publisher
BOB.HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
-A MEMBER ofThr United Prrss International. Inland Dally Press Msocla-

!lon and the Amrriran r\ewspa pcr Publishers Associa tion .
LETTERS OF OPIN ION are welcome . They should be less tllan :m words
long. Alll r uers are subj('('t tO editing and mu st be signed with na m e, address and
un s~ nro

lrtlers wlll be publls hNL Letters should

})E)

In

good tast€'. addrf'Sslng Issues, not personallti('S.

Crime panel cites
'lawyer-criminals'
Nearly three years and $5 !f!illion later. President Reagan'sorganized
crime commission concluded the mob in America is stronger than ever
and suggested wiri'tapping lawyers who work for it.
The President's Commission on Oqfdnized Crime, which earlier created
a stir by recommending mandatory drug tests for all federal workers,
finished Tuesday with a fina l report warning the mob has burgeoned into a
$106.2 billion underworld industry and charging that some U.S. lawyers are
actively working for ii.
":j'
"Although few tn number, they do exist,' the report said of attorneys It
termed "laeyer-criminals." Other laeyers, it charged, are reluctant to
report such illegal conduct, and ferreting them out "is possible only
through use of wiretaps or surveillance or from information supplied by
colleagues. friends or others."
William Falsgraf, president of the American Bar Association, said his
group would rev iew the recommendations, "ilf the same time assuring
that we do not sweep away Sixth Amendment protections for all citizens in
our rush to achieve a quick fix in these few cases."
"
• The report presented five case studies of "lawyer-criminals" who
actively worked with organized crime. (l'oviding "favors," supplying
inside infonnatlon and otherwise interceding, "because they have been
Compromised, blackmailed or intimidated."
To combat such crime, it recommended tighter methods d self-policing
within the legal society and suggested fees paid to attorreys by criminal
defendants be subject to forfeiture.
Lawyers working for the mob warrant "using undercover agents,
electronic surveillance of lawyer's conversations and 'sting' operattions
involving fabricated cases" to detect 'unlawful practices.
· "Without such techniques, the attorrey-client privilege would be an
impenetrable shield protecting lawyers," the report said.
· The commission'sftnal2.'i0- page report , "The Impact: Organized Crime
Today, ·· also claimed mob activity will cost the United States &lt;114,00) jobs,
lost tax revenues of $6.5 billion, and every American $'77.20 this year.
In a departure, nine of the 18 commissioners issued a critical sta tement
charging the commJs;;jon's history "Is a saga of missed q&gt;portunity." It
criticized the commission, established by President Reagan in 1983, for
poor management of time, money and staH.
. The National Asrociation of Criminal Defense Lawyers also criticized
the report's recommendations for dealing with bad lawyers.
: "Although the mob lawyer problem is real, (tile issue! is being ~ed to
justify certain Justice Department tactics, including the forfeiture of
attorneys' fees and the subpoenaing of defense counsel," the aSSQ£iatlon
said.
:"As a result. some fundamental Individual rights, long cherished in this
· country, are at risk," It said.
: Jerry Berman of the American Civil Libert-IeS Union said the !X'Oposais
·: may affect and interfere with a citi7.en's right to counsel, the
attorney-client privilege may be involved with the use of s~bpoenas , and
the Reagan administration has already doubled the number of wiretaps
ove~ the previous administration. We think all wiretaps violate the Fourth
Amendment." ..
The report acknowledged that seizing lawyers' fees "Is a difficult issue
that raises basic questions regarding the ri&amp;tt to counseL"
: But it said, "Nevertheless, the commission believes that aggressive use
~ forfeiture provisions is an effective means of attacking large-scale
orimtnal enterprises."

letters ·to editor
Warning for paper thief
; ·To the person who Is taking my
f!iiUy Sentinel from my box rn East
Main St., please stop It! I hope your
enjoying the paper considering
we're paying for it. To you I guess
iCs convenient as well as .cheap. To
1-Qi, 'ts just piatn theft. ·
,·.

The newspapers are only 25 cents
each. Theresa gas station that sells
tll&gt;m not a block away. Why take
mine? U we catch you, we will
prosecute. To save yourseiJ a ftne,
gJ buy your own paper!
Robyn Tatterson

Enjoys Southern banquet

Sllturday night my wtfe and I
.1)1ended the Southern annual bas·
ketbail banquet. This banquet was
ohe of the best banquets we have
I:'Yer attended. The gym was
beautifully decoratoo.
The boosters should be com·
mended for the job they did to honor
the boys and girsl who participatoo
tn the sports. The potluck dinner
was excellent.
:Also I feel the four coaches,
COach Ca ldwell, Coach Rees, Coach
P)lillips and Coach Lightfritz should
be commended for the exce ll~nt job

as coaches at Southern High School.
Thr coa~ hrs and the girls and
boys who played 1hese sports have
given the people of the ·Southern
Hlgh School area something to be
proud of. Also oor cheerleader
advisor, Sandra Baer and oor
cheerleaders should be thanked for
a job well oone. Wit 00 ut them it
would taj&lt;e a lot rut of sports. So to
all those who make it a successful
year our thanks gq out to you.
William T. Kimes
Racine

Where's the justice? .
; I~

there justice in Jaws which
aHow people woo are under the
trinuence of alcohol and wllllng
participants 11\ battoom brawls to
charge the other person with
assault because they k&gt;se?
,
These people soouid take resixm.
- '
..
-· -

slbillty for thetr acuons. u they
knew they too would be prosecuted
for their Involvement there would
be more time for the courts to
defend tlxlse few woo are really
Innocent victims.
Jennie Grinstead

The truth will come out
.

t feel !hal anyone wbo ooesn't
!mew what they areltalklng about,
· slriuldn't be saying ttings about
otllir peoples Uves.
:r )lm referring to Tracy Hysell's
sentencing. He was not only cruely
slintenced but unfairly tried and
c&lt;)nvlcted. No one provoo any one
was gullty o! '!"Ythlng except
maybe perjury, and they know who
they are.

I

.

Stop that lawsui'! __' ___._w,_'llia_m_F_.B~'u_ck-:-_ley_J___:.r.

II 1 CoUrt Street
Pomerow, Ohio

tclephonr number. No

,

"I
i

The ·Daily Sentinel·

PAT WHITEHEAD
.Assistant Publisher/ Controller

P,age-2-The Daily seuli•el
Pomerov-Midcleport. Ohio
&lt;' lburlday. ~I 3; 19~8 .

If the Governor toought Tracy

was guilty then he wouldn't be
looking into this matter.
. Most of us know Tracy Isn't glj)lty
of anything except being in the
wrong6place at tile wrong time, he
there! re became a scapegoat for
someone else's crime. God willing,
the truth will come out.
Karla DeMoss
Pomeroy

State legislatures are ·finally driver. But, the lawyer ex(iatns,
getting lp'OUnd to doing oometting there Is the watering place '!fhere
abou t the civil suit scams we have the guy got drunk: sue !hem !or
ail been reading about, which · letting him get loaded. And maybe
threaten to leave much r;t America - he was drinking a particular
brand at vOdka, friends reportoo--'
uninsured and uninsurable.
go after the Uquor manufacturer
But begin at the 'beginning ,..
A drunken driver runs over and claiming that that vodlui has a
kills y~ur 12-year-old boy. What special. toxicity; and so on and so ·
then ? Well, under the law be is forth. They call the jumble above
twice liable . .The state goes after "joint and several Uablllty." That
him for committing a crime · means that you search out the
(driving under !he tnflumre of "deep pockets" -i.e., the wealthi·
alcobol; as !hey phrase it), and est people around, hoWI!Ver tangendepending on this or that, he might .tlally Involved. Because the guy
get a suspended sentmre or he who actually killed y(\Ur boy might
might geflO year5 in jail. But you not have $10 in assets.
Many states are· rrovtng to oo
aJi;o have a civil case, and yoo are
approached by a lawyer who away with the doctrine of joint and
volunteers to press tba t case in several Uablllty, or else !hey are
. rerum for one-third of !he money planning to stipulate a oeiling
you are able to wrest from - the beyond which a platntiH can't gJdriver? Well, yes, certainly the say $50,00) !or the bar he 201 drunk

.,.

at, that

kind. of thtng. The

.

trial

lawyers 811! obviously opposed -

why should' they vote !or wage and
price controls for lawyers? The
Insurance companies are in favor,
as .are AmeriCan business enter·
prlses; as are doctors wiD are
paying more and more malpractice
Insurance; as are construction
·companies. Indeed, everyone wiD
fancies some Idea of limited
iiabllity. · '
One begins by asking a phllosophical question: What Is human lite
worth? It is obviously impossible to
answer that. Ill one sense it is
Infinitely valuable: There Is no
replacing· that 12-year-&lt;&gt;ld boy who
got killed. But to concede that a lite
Is infinitely valuable is also to
undermine the notion of "just"
compensation. How can you com·
pens ate lor somethinl( that Is
\

/
._/

Irreplaceable? When the Vatican
sent wer Michelangelo's "Pieta" to
the New York World's Fair in 1964,
tll&gt;re was no Insurance or{ it at all.
That much granted, we are
talking not about a fair pt1ce paid
lor a human life, but about
oompensatlon, which needs to be
ftnite. How do you measure it?
Early In the 19:Kls, we are told, a
brash young lawyer was suing a
oompany one of wbose employees
had been mangled tn an Industrial
accident, resulting in his emascula·
lion. The resourceful lawyer
brought in a young woman who
looked exactly like the voluptuous
wife of his 25-year-&lt;&gt;ld clieJII. He
· asked his witness what was her
profession, and she answered,
demurely, that she was a lady of
pleasure. Well, the lawyer Plln&gt;ued
his point, how much did she charge
rer clients?. Ah, $25. The rext
witress was· a doctor, and the
(Jlestlon to him had to do with the
number of unions a 25-year.pld
might expect with his wife before.
well, before dytng, or retiring from
the field . The lawyer triumphant))!
multiplled·that number by $25, and
told the jury his client should ·
receive $175,00), and the jury
agreed.
Not all complaint• 'lend them·
selves to calculations of such
architectural neatness. And the
thrust of remedial legislation Is to
separate damages actually sus·
tained, !rom the "pain and suffering" impalpables with which pro·
secutors love to deal. U the slatn
child lingered iD the hospital, the
lawyer would ask compensation !or
the pain he jX!talively sustained. U
the child was killed outright, !he
lawyer might begin by trying to
calculate how much money he'd
have earned in a normal lifetime.
But the objective would be to limit
claims to economic losses pius ·a
measure of punitive damages. If
the doctor left his pliers tn your
stomach, and you go back tor
another operation to pull them out,
obviously that doc~or or his insuran ce company has' got to pay the
hospital bill, plus what, in punish·
men! for his ~arelessness?

A PL~ parade _ ____:________::_Ja=-::ck::...:..A:.:.::nd:::::::.er~so~n
WASHINGTON - Like the legendary frontier rascal betng run
out of town in tar and leathers,
Yasir Arafat has tried to make it
look as IJ he were leading a PLO
parade out of his sanctuary tn
Thnlsia.
But the humlliat ing reality is that
Aralat was invited to leave tn no
uncertain terms, an(! he is having
the devil's own time trying to find
another AJ:ab country that will take
him in with any degree of
hospitality.
Considering the past behavior of
his cohorts in the Palestine Liberation Organization, to say nothing of
the Israeli retaiitory strikes their
presence Invites, it's hard to blame
the Arab governments for being
reluctant io play bast to Arafat and
his unruly hordes.
The FLO's press agents have
accentuated the positive, of course,
boasting that all of the PLO troops
who debarked from Beirut under
Israeli guns tn 1982 have now
returned to their old haunts tn
Beirut and It s environs. This is

An old

that any reconciliation, which they
regard as unlikely, would definitely
be oo Assad's tenns.
The history of the PLO's stay in
Tunisia is enough to make any
potential host leery. The defeated
PLO troops were allowed in only on
condition that they refrain from
terrorist activities. But the PLO
.murdered t hrre Israelis in Cyprus
last September, provoking an
IsraeU air raid ' on the PLO
headquarters outside Tunis. Many
Tunisians were kllied.
Yet the Internal dynamics of the
PLO - and Arafat's always
There has been some talk lately challengeable leadership - deof a reconciliation between Arafat mand that the organization be
and Assad, presumably under "close to the action." That means
pressure from the Soviets, who betng as near to Israel as possible,
value Arafat as a useful tool to stir and hetng given Ioooeenough rein to
up trouble, and who have un - carry out the kind o! operations that
doubted influence with Assad as his. are the PLO's main reason for
chief arms supplier. But there Is a being.
Jordan's King Hussein still re·
strong personal antipathy betWeen
the two Arab rivals - the rigid, members the PLO as demanding
ascetic Assad detests the effete, guests who nen led him until he
easily comprised Arafat. Sources ejected them tn a bloody showdown
told our associate Lucette Lagnado in 1970 -an operation that the PLO

probably n exaggeratiOn; but
even so, it po
up the embarrass·
mcnt Arafat mus
I at not setting
up his old headquarters in Lebanon.
The reason he hasn't is that even
the armed PLO guerrtilas in Beirut
are kept on a tight leash by the
Syrian army. Syrian President
J:lafez Assad was the grea tes)lsingle
benefactor of the PLO oustef in 1982
and the subsequent wifhlrawl of
Israeli troops - and he can hardly
be expected to throw away .the
control of most of Lebanon by
welcoming back a rival.

stW refers to as "Black September." In recent months, Hussein has allowed the PLO to open
offices In his kingdom, but llke hiS
Syrian neighbor, he keeps the PLO
elements under tight control. Now
Hussein has fallen out with Ara!at
over regional peace talks, thereby
souring. relations. Furthermore,
Hussein Is vulnerable to retaliation
from Israel, which has reminded
him pointedly of this.
Libyan dictator Muammar
Khadafy SUJ¥)rts the Palestinian
cause but despises Arafat. Libya 'Is
also a bit far from Israel for the
PLO's purposes.
Egypt is a possibility, but since
there's an Israeli embassy in Cairo,
a PLO headquarters there could be
sticky.
Iraq is probably the iildlest
prospect on Arafat's " househunting" list, but it Is also far from
Israel's borders, and Jraqul Pres!·
dent Saddam Hussein would bne
certain to keep the P LO under strict
bounds.

SCandai_~_______
Ro_b_er_t ~
_a_lte_rs

AUSTIN, Texas (NEA) - Deep in
the files of the Travis County District
Court there is an intriguing document
- a judge's ruling that Henry H. Mar·
shall's death was not suicide but in·
stead "a result of homicide."
,Judge Peter Lowry's decision ,
handed down following a two-day
hearing last summer, is of particular
interest for several reasons:
First, the official cause 10f Mar·
shall's death was changed almost a
quarter of a century after his lifeless
body, riddled with rifle shots. was
found on his ranch.
Second, Marshall 's death has
spawned a still-unresolved political
mystery whose cast of characters in·
eludes former President Lyndon B.
Johnson.
Also figuring prominently in the
case is Billie Sol Estes, a Texas
wheeler-dealer who was convide&lt;l in
the early 1960s on federal charges. He
was found to have conducted phony
oilfield operations that bilked leasing
companies and to have sold non-exis·
,tent fertilizer tanks to unsuspecting
buyers.
.
The disclosures ol Estes' fraudulent
opera lions produced a major Wash·
ington scandal at the time because or
his claimed friendship with then·Vice
President Johnson, President John F.
Kennedy, House Speaker Sam Ray·
burn and other powerful political
figures . .
Estes ' downfall hegan in 1960 when
Marshall, a mid-level employee of the
U.S. Department of Agriculture 1n
Texas, uncovered Estes' scheme lo illega lly purchase federal cotton ailotments lrom farmers throughout the
Southwest. ,
On June 3 of the following year, the
51-ye~r-old Marshall was found slain
. on his remote ranch near the east·
central Texas community of Frank·
lin. He had died of five wounds from a

'&amp;it-action, clip-fed, .22-caliber rifle
found nearby.
• No post-mortem examination of
Marshall's body was conducted, no
sworn statements were taken at the
inquest and no attempt was made to
examine the rifle for fingerprints.
Indeed, there was virtually no for·
mal investigation - but the loca l
sheriff, prosecuting attorney and justice of the peace nevertheless were
quick to prOClaim Marshall's death a
suicide.
To have killed himself. however,
Marshall would have had to hold the
rifle away from his body, then engage
in five separate actions for each shot
- lifting the bolt lever, pulling it
back to eject one shell and insert an·
other. pushing the lever to close the
chamber. locki ng it into place and
pulling the trigger.
Among thom. convinced that it
would have been impossible for Marshall to balance and aim a rille point·
ettbackwar'd. then engage in 25 sepa-'•
rate fnovemen,ts to shoot himself five
ti mes while bleeding to death was
Texas Ranger Capt. Clint P~9,ples .
Peoples first investigated Mar·
shall's death more than two decades
ago, was always skeptica l of the origi·
nal suici de ruling and is sti ll interested in the case even though he is
retired.
Peoples says that when he escorted
Estes to a federal penitentiary in
' 1965, Estes told him: "You can bet
your life it wasn't suicide. It was murder." Peoples also says Estes told him
to look "toward Washington'' for the
killer.
When Estes originally ' was sum·
maned before a grand jury in Robert·
son County, where Marshall's body
was found, he refused to testify and
instead repeatedly invoked his Fifth
Amendment protection against self·
incrimination.

When he was released from prison
in 1983. however. he contacted Peoples and asked to again appear before
a grand jury because he "Wanted to
get right with the Lord ...
In 1984, Estes told a grand jury that
Marshall was killed on orders from
Johnson. allegedly to stop Marshall

from revealing Estes· illegal transactions and his links with Johnson .
Johnson's family vehemently reJects those charges. but the ll)ystery
remains. Almost a quarter of a centu·
ry passed before Marshall was declared a murder victim and the ide n·
tity of those who com milted the crime
may never be known .

·.

. ..

· the Daily

3, 1988

Beng~ls~Falcoris

Ninth in~ing
y
prQvides 3-2 win
KISSJ;MMEE, Fla. (UP}) - A
three·njn ninth-inning rally keyed
by Tofiy Perez and Paul O'Neill
doubles off left-bander Frank DIP·
ina lifted the Cincinnati Reds to a 3-2
ex hibition victory over the Houston
Astros Wednesday, i
Bob Knepper arld Jeff Calhoun
had a six- hit shutout working
through eight Innings before DiPino
was assaulted for three hits in the
ninth. Astra players also made two
rnurs in the tnnlng.
Hou ston, which had ntne hits off
Cincinnati starter John Denny. :ed
after Gleim Davis' second-inning
double, one of two for the Astros'
first baseman, and catcher Alan
Ashby's RBI second-inning single.
The Astros led 2-0 in the fifth as
Knepper, who reached on a
fl elcier's choice , scored on Bllly
Hatcher's two-out J; tngie.
Ted Power pitched out of ninth·
inning trouble in picking up his
second save for the. Reds. Ashby
beat out an Infield hit and Tony
Walker walked, bu t Power struck
'out pinch hitter Mark Bailey and
got Cra ig Reynolds to pop up for the
fin al out.
The win brought Cincinnati's
exhibition season record to 14· 11,
while the Astros dropped to 8-16·1.
Meanwhile, Brei Saberhagen
eased the minds of many Kansas
City fans Wednesday in his first 'A'
game appearanC&lt;' in thr!'l' w!'l'ks.
Saberhagen. last year's Amerjcan League Cy Young Award
winner and World Series MVP,
allowed two runs in 4 23 innings to
help the Royals to a 5-3 exhibition
victory over the Chicago White Sox
at Sarasota .
There were Jrars that Saberha ·
gen miss some starts after he
experienced shoulder stiffn ess
early In spring 1raijling. He had mr
appeared In an 'A' game stnce
March 11, pitching In two 'B' game.
In the Interim.
In Wednesday's contest, Steve
Balboni hlt hi s filth homer of the
spring, and F'rank White his. fourth
to pace the, Royals . Harold Bajnes
homered
for Chicago. Tom Seaver
took th"~ loss.
In Other games Wednesdal,..
At West Palm Beach, Fla .. Rick
Mahler worked seven Innings to lift
the Atlant a Braves IDa 7-1 victory
over a · split Montreal squad.
Ma hi er, sc hed uJed 1o open the
season against Montrml in Atlan ta,
gaw the Braves their filth victory
· six
· 1 theE
thi
m games aga ms
xpos s
sprAtin g.
Vero· Beach, Fla .. Fernando
Valenzuela worked seven shutout
innings and pinch-hitter.. Terry
Whitfield ooubied holll(' the win·
ning run tn the bottom of the ninth
inning to guide thl&gt; Los Angeles
Do~ers to a 2·1 triumph over the

reach agreement
on Schenert trade

Expos' other squad.
At Pompano Beach, Fla., Fred
Lynn !lomeroo twice and drove in
five runs to power til&gt; Baltimore
Orioles !Nf!r the Texas Rangers,
12·6. Lynn hit a two-run homer in
the first Inning and a three -run shot
in the seven th to increase hi s spring
home run total to nve. Ca t Ripken
Jr. also homered for Baltimore.
At Tempe. Ariz., Mike Felder hit
two homers and drove in ftve runs
and Robin Yount and Rick Cerone
e.aeh had live hits to key Milwau·
~·s 22·10 blitz of the Mariners.
Milwaukee had three homers and
seven doubles among ItS 28 hits.
At Phoenix, Ariz .. Mike Davis
drove in seven runs - six with a
pair of three-run homers - and
rookie Jose Canseco added two
home runs Wednesday to lead th&lt;•
Oakland A's to a 16·7 rout of the
Chicago Cubs.
At Tucson, Aliz., Joe Carter's
sixt h-inning single drove in the
winning run , enabling the Cleveland Indians to overcome a four·
RBI effort by San Francisco's JeH
Leonard and take a 9-8 exhibition
victory over the Giants.
At Bradenton, Fla ., Sixto Lez·
cano drove· in four runs with a
three-run homer and an RBI single
to rnliy the Pittsburgh Pirates to a
10·7 victory over the St. Louis
Cardinals. It was the fourth straight
victory for the Pirates and their
11th in 14 games.
At Lakeland, Fla .. Alan Trammell, Kirk Gibson and Chet Lemon
homered to power the Detroit
Tigers to a 9-3 victory over the
Boston Red Sox. The Tigers raliled
from a 3-0 deficit.

CINCINNATI (UPil - A jX!bllshed report says the Atlanta
Falcons have reached verbal
agreemer.t with the Bengals to
acquire quarterback Turk Scho·
nert, who was charged with DWI
last weekend .
"As of now, we have a deal with
Cincinnati,' ' The Cincinnati Post
quoted Falcon President Rankin
Smith Jr. as saying Wednesday.
"We have to sign papers, IIley have
to sign papers, and Turk has to pass
our physical, but I'm sure we'll get
that done in a couple of days at
most."
Mike Brown, Bengais assistant
general manager decli ned
comment.
_
Smith said the trade was completed Wednesday after t~ Fal·
cons agreed to give the Bengals
their third round pick in the i9Rti
draft in exchange for Schonert.
"We would have. Uked to have
go tten him for less, of co4rse. but
(head coach l Dan Henning and ali
oor p€0pledeclded he wds worth the
third rounder, " Smith sa id . "We'vr
JUGGLES BALL- Cleveland Indians' tlird baseman Brook Jacoby
can't handle the ball as San Francisco Giants' Jeff Leonard slides brio
third base on a hit by teammate Bob Bmrly during the ftr5t inning of
action Wednesday in Tucson, Ariz. (UPI) ,

agreed with the Bengals on that,
and we've agreed with Turk a nd his
agent on a contract."
Because Schonert is a frl'l' agent,
the Bengals must first sign Schonert then trade him to AUant«. The :
Post reported Schonert wUI recleve
a base salary of about $325,1XXJ next
year, plus incentive clauses.
Henning told the paper the
Falcons are aware Schonert has
ll'en charged with drunken driv,Jng ·
in Covington, Ky., ea rly Saturday..
morning .
·
"Thrk called me last night to
ex pain it," Henning sa id. "As far
as 1 am co~emed, it is rot a
consideration."
Schonert waived formal arraign· .
ment and did not appear in Kenton ·
County District Court Thesday.
Schonert 's at torrey entcroo a plea
of innocent on his behalf. Schorert,
who is free oo $200 bond, faces an
April 21 court date.
The police report said Schonert ·
faill'll to stop for a red light and that
he failed field oobrlety tests.

Reds cut two pitchers from roster

Murphy, a lefthander. pitched in
TAMPA, Fla. IUPI I - The
six
games for the Reds t.his spring .
Cincinnati Reds Wednesday sent
with
no won-loss record, one save
two rookie pitchers- Rob Murphy
and
a
5.40 earned run average.
and Mike Smith- from their major
Smith,
a righthander. pitched in
Buffalo, and the Bears oome to league spring training camp to nine'games with a 1-2 record and a
their minor !~ague camp for
Cincinnati two W!'l'ks later,
7.20 ERA .
reassignment.
Other home Bengal games in·
elude Pittsburgh ta Monday night . - - - - - - - - -- - -- - - - - - - - - - - game\, Houston, Sea tt le, Minne·
sola, Cleveland and the New York

Bengals open against Chiefs
CINCINNATI iUP il - The
Bengals will open the 19!li season at
Kansas City, the team announC&lt;'d
Wednesday ,
Dates and tim es for the L'i other
games on thl&gt; 1986 schedule, which
includes the lirstt'ver appearanC&lt;'
by the Super Bowl champion
Chicago Bears at Riverfront Sta ·
dium, were also announC&lt;'d.
The Ben ga l~' first hom e game
will be Sept. 14, when they face ·

. At Fort Lauderdale, F1a" Ron
Guid ry spaced three hits over• ven
shu tout innings 1n leading the New
York Yankees to an 8-2 tri umph
over the White Sox's other squad.
Henry Cotto homered for New
York.
At St. Petersi:IJrg, Fla ., Dwight
to th~rd
Gooden allowed four hit s over
seven scoreless innings to help the
TUCSON, Ar iz. 1UP It -indians
New York Mets record a 7-1 victory manager Pat Carra1es sa 1'd rh at
over ti'0 Minnesota Twins. Gooden ·Jo hnny Gory1wUl coac h th ird base
also contributed with his bat,
·
dthat Doc Edwards will
year
an
·
driving in two runs with a single this
t
h'
the bullpen
1urn o IS duu·es
re
·
during a s~· ruil ~and Inning. ..
Fred Koenig had been hired as
the third base coach las\ season, but
d unexpected!)' ~s l'gned at the start
At san Vicgo, Mark Thurmon
•&lt;
sl
of sprtno trai ning fo r personal
spaced three hits over x Innings to
,
lead the San Diego Padres ID a 6-5
reasons.
Ca
Is
.. 1 put Doc at tllird th"n, but we
victory over the · llfornia Ange .
'
r"aliy
need him 'in the bullpen. "
Mike Witt was the loser fo r the
,
sa'1d Corrales. "Bobby tBondsl is
fourth time in five spring decisions.
Brian Downing's fifth homer of the doing a good job at first. and Johnny
was the obvious candida te lor
spring hlghUghted a four · run
th'lfd. "
_ea_I_Ilo_rnl_a_sev_en_rh_.- - - - - - - - - -.-

Returns

m·

6th

Professional

Anni~ersary

WRESTLING
Saturd.a y, April 5
8:00P.M. ·!
Featuring the Lady Wrestlers
and the Midget lady
Wrestlers. The Blue Cyclones,
The Shang Gong, John
Diobiase and others.
Advance tickets may be
purchased at:
CK ·Supermarket, Middleport;
Miller Bros. Grocery, Rutland;
Rutland Dept. Store, Rutland.
Adults •s.oo
Children 12 &amp; Ulllor 13.00
Iicker S1.00 Moro at Door
Sponsored bw the Rutland Civic

Center

Sale
ANNIVERSARY

*

SPICIAL
1 DIAMOND
CLUSm

·:

'~ ~0;..-

)I 1 DIAMOND

'· ,·' ·;

cwsm

./

RING

1

NECKLACE

e0

~·..:.
, .. .,i ...
'&gt; .- \

1

. $9995 -~NOW $69 95

llC. 149.9S

ANNtnm~

!IEC/Al

DIAMOND
EARRINGS

. $1995

NOW

illll '30.00

"' SI.WISO.OO

SAlE

II G.

PI\IS

Browns open season
against old rivalry

cn1 tns tn1·('

CLEVELAND IUPI l - The
Cleveland Browns home opener
Sept. 18 a~ainst the Cincinnati
Benga Is, is to be televised, club
officials announced Wednesday.
·Also included in th&lt;' eigh t· game
home schedule is a Monday night
game Nov. 10 against the Miami
Dolphins.
The Browns play Sunday home
gamPs against i)&gt;t mit Sept. :!!,
Kansas City Oct. 12, Green Bay Oct.
1 ~. Pittsburgh Nov . Zl, Houston
Nov. :lO and San Diego Dec. 21. ·.
All of Cleveland's away .games
arc scheduled for Sunday aftermons. They are at Chicago Sept. 7,
at Houston Sept. 14. at Pittsburgh .
Oct. 5, at Minnesota Oct. 26, at
Indianapolis Nov . 2, at 11!§ Angek.'s
Ralde t'S Nov. 16, at BuHalo Dec. 7,
and at Cincihnati ()&gt;c . 14.

ct. WEIGHT

1\Ql9.00

'201.00

''' ct. WEIGHT'

I U9.95

'114.95

39 5.00

•tlb.OO

1/•

ct. WEIGHT

1

519500
547500
527900

YEllOW OR WHITE

BRIDAl
·· ·' ~ DIAMOND
MIN'!
sm ~

IGLOO COOLER

RINGS

SAY!

$149 \~IT!

25%
NOW
flU SlliNii

with) urchose of
TWO WIX ® fttl'ERl

GftA! NOW
SIUCT'ION

250'/0
OFF

s12995
5A~ 140.00
MUCNING NltllaCII
SAMI PIICI

APAIL.,SLIGHTL'Y HIGHER

WI¥! FILTERS
&lt;$&gt;
PrD!Wet ,.our

engine bettw.

All-CLIMATE
Molor Oil

CHROME POLISH
BUG &amp; TAR

REMOVER
" YOUI CHOICE"
141 GOLD OVIIIU

NOW

The Daily Sentinel

20% OFF

LASTS

Pllbllshrd every aftl'rnoon. Mond~y

WIIGNEA

throu~ h F r ida y. 111 Court S1., Po·
mrr ov, Ohio. b v thC' Ohio Vallry Pllb·
11sh tn'J!: Compti ny ' Mult lmN'Ita . lnr .•
PomNnv. Ohio ·157fi~. Ph . 992 - 2 i~J6 . S£&gt;·
rond cl:iss post age paid at Pome-roy,

$699

•H5001

•HSOOG

HEAVY DUTY
SHOCKS

NOW

Ohio Nrw s pnpr r Association. Nallonal
1\dVC'rtl ~ in~ R(•pr&lt;'Sf'nlalh'r, Branham
Nrw .~pa p e r Sal t•s, 7J:! Third Avenu&lt;'.
~rw York. N&lt;'W Ym'k 10017 .

$947

NCtiiOIS lDO-A-·AD 01~1
WI
0111 T hi OIJIUIT

POSTMA!;i'ER : Send addrt'SS chanp:cs
ro Thr 0:~1\y S(lnr lnPl. 111 Cdurt Sl ..
~rrK'r oy. Ohio :1571i9.

SUBSCRIPTIO N KATES
By. Carrll'r or Mot()r Route
Onf' Wf'rk ................... ........... .... $1.10

Onr Month ......... .... .... ..... ......... 54.80
Onr Yrar ........... ............ ......... $57.20

SINGLE (:OPV •
PRICE
............... 25 Cents
Dall.v .....

S149,

TRUST BONDED IRAKE SHOlL............. 5795
,
mK. ·
MO~T

lPPliUI!ON1

SHOCKS

U.S I l"'Pf'l cars,
lt. !IWCII
•19000 mn5

20%

25% OFF

WATCHES

wl No~ 25°/o

'QUALITY'
HEAVY DUTY
·' .
MUFFLERS AVAILABLE
1 Mfg .
FOR
.,
S!onlty
FARM TRACTORS

LAAGE SEL£CT10N

14K GOLD
SALE
NOW

SAVE

oFF

•AU IIPAIIIS DONE IN OIJR STORES
•liT CEU IEPIA((Q FlEE
oHUNDIEDl IN STOCK
•DUAliTY SEIVICE '

IIASS

GlfTWatl
NOW
OFF

fJI
BULOVA·SEIKO
~:.-· CARAVEllEf.ULSAR

I~

Attention Farmers:

20% OFF

au WOOD I

ClOWNS, IURS
NOW

PENS

FREE ENORA~MC

GAS CHARGED

SlMI·IIIIAWC DllC BRAftl PADS ... 514 95
101

NOW

COIUCJUI DOU!

()hl11.

Mt•mbrr: Un lh•d Pre·~~ ln1rrna 11onal, ·
!nla nd Dnl lv Prrlls 1\ ssorla l ion and thf'

2 0 Dfo OFF

flU IMGUYIIfG

OIIOOOSEI IES

FOR~ER

CROSS ,

SPEIDEL ID BRACELETS

tl 'SPS IU-960 )
t\ ntvbdrm of Mulllmt.-dlll, InC'.

Berry's World

-.-. ~

35°/o

•CHAINS •CHARMS
•BIIA(EUTS •IINKUTS
~

LAIGm SREcnON
Of 141 GOlD IN

THI AliA.

SubsnliH·r~ nol rlr sl rln~ To pay I he c&lt;~ r ·
rlrr ma\' rrm lt In advctnC£' dlrt'ct lo
The Dal iy S£' ntlnel on a 3. 6or 12 month
basi~ . 'r,:cdl t will IX' glvf'n carrier ('a ch

monTh.

No sub.';~ rlptlon." by mall permiiiPd In
t o~• · ns whcrr hOme carrl£'r S€"rviC&lt;' Is
av.,l labll·

Midi SubflcrlptlonA

1~ .VE'~k~ . ..... ~.~~-~.~-~- ~~~~ .... .._. .... $14 .56 1

w .Veeks .............................. S29.12I

1 ~ 2 Nf.'t\k ,; · · ··· o~i~id~·o·t.i~······· ··· $58.

24

" I may just sefid a thank you note to Ortega." ·

••

' 13 N&lt;'ek s ... ... .......... ................
26 W&lt;t(lkS ..................................

E5.60
I
1.20

,__
~2 w
.. ·'::'•:::
k·:.:.
· ............
...:.:... ·:"'
.:,;";..
.."'-"'-'"-"'-"-"'-"»_9.80_.

1 GAlLipOLIS

PT. PlEASANT

PAflROY

240 O!trd A¥1, 1104 lollom A... 515 Motc.St. 26 II Jackten A¥1. 1i ]!HI Avt.
m.mo
m -27st
446· 1113
446-4204
992·2139
I a.m. till s,oo p.m.
O.llr l tOO a.m. tilt 7t00 , .m.
I1DO o.m. till S1!0 p.m.
Soturdeyt 1100 o.m. 1111 4100 ';,m,

, I I COURT
POMEROY, OH.
992 -2054

342 2ND AVf.

GALLIPOliS, OH.
446-2691-

�''

•
Thursday, April 3, 1986.

Page-4- The Daily Seritinel

~Sdumps

Eaglettes
triumph

~Highlanders
By SCOTT WOLFE
PATRJOT - A plltent 14·hlt
attack capped bv a towering
three-run blast by Brent Bissell
lifted the Eastern Eagles to a 13-3
SVAC triumph (lller the Southwest·
ern Hlghlancrrs here WedneSday
even ing In bovs' baseball action In
Patriot.
·
Eastern's complete team effort,
combined with solld ·pilchlng from
starter Eddie Collins and reliever
Kevin Barber overpowered the
hustling Hlghlanoors. Collins went
six Innings to register the victory,
while Barber turned In)I sparkling
relief effort. Collins walked three
'and fanned foul- Barherstruck wt
three .
'
In his first start, Danny Patrick
pitchec;t well, but yielded five runs In
three Innings before giving way 1o
hard-throwing reliever Andy Halslop and brother-Rick Halslop. That
trto walked just five and struck wt
four.
Eastern rallied early when leadoff hitter Bry'a n Durst singled,
Eddie Collins singled, and Kevin
Barber looped a single to load the,
bases Brent Bissell reached on an
error 'on a hard-hit grounder and
Steve Horner smacked a sacrifice
nv. tbe score 2-0.
·Southwestern plated a single run
in the second frame on a Patrick
doubleandTommy Mlllerslngleto
pull closer at 2-1.
A young but veteran Eastern
crew, pus~ across thrre runs In
the top of the third go-round as
Barber doubled, Brerll Bissell
tripled to score the first run and
Steve Homer laid down a perfect
squeeze bunt that produced a score
as well as a hi t for the fleet -footed
centerfielder. Horner rode home on
a Jeff Caldwell single, the score
now 5-1.
·
A ftesty Southwestern crew made
the game close in the hottom of the
fourth as Patrick walked, Miller
ingled, and Eric Hammond looped
S

SPRING TRAINING
By Unlk'd

~

I*I'Mtklnll

Nlllllu-.1 l.t•llf;Ur

" ' L Ptt.

lti J(l .61~
I~
!I _M9
1.1 9 .Y.II
u 9 .'191

,\ ll:• n l~•

l'hll. l

\:Y

t:l 11
H 12

S.m Ftnn
· ( 'nrnnll
Sn nDI!."
1.,\
..t ~ 1.00

1~

l.l }\li

11

n

m

-~~

1.1 H i
Ill 1i ~fill
!I Ill :nt
I lh :DI

'"

:\1n!rl
t luu ~t

~
- ~~

.. n

1-_ ·tmlt

li

O~ i k l;.m rl

I~

~y

!I

ti.~

10 . ti l~

I~

ti.l ll

'I'm onto '

HI
II IU

:\-l l\lkr~ ·

n

{ !1 lnd

11
12

111

12 u•
1.'1 VY!
12 .'ill
1.1 :Jil l
II T j~

t!

1~

46:.!

m

l~ ·~ t u n

1l 1 .~
Ill II
Ill I ~•

..... •.1 11~ ·

lfl

Tt ·~a ~

1.1

( .Jill
k C'
Jglm•
( 'tlt

Minn

~lit

'.K'I

1"-1

Jll

I'• ¥fl

..qwd l lllltll,. llll't.ldrd

"·~·~ llP!oub

,\r l.m l&lt;~ 7.

lk! llin)l~l'

MIIIJII"I •ill "" I
12. TI'X.I S ti

I.•., i\nl!l''k'!o! Mn nm •;~l '"~'

I

Pln,r.. •l!h \0. Sl l.ooh 7
Ph ii,Kk~ plii a ~ . Ton ~Hi u .1
K . t n..; I ~ CIT ~

\

('lri lnn.111 !.

ll r~ u ~to n ~

lli ~. II(O

,,\] _I \

( ,. ... d ;tnrl !1. S;m Fr .• nrl-ru II
1 ~• kl~ 1 nd 1ti. C'hlt';H,"' 11\! 1 ~
M11M ,tuk1 1· t.! . S.•;o !l ~ · !It 1fl1nn 1
ftlo ·rmll 9. Be.. ton .I
\t 'll Yurk Y . mkl ~ "' II. Ch i ·· •~u ,,\] ' "", 1
r'\ o"oo ~· ( of~ Mr h j , M lnl'l'!IOI&lt;I 1
S.m Ui'l.'() ti, C':illlornla ~
TIIUI'!Iolb,V'!i GIUTM'Ii (.\Un..- DT J

Tomntv n

f'hk':l£0 Whltr
S:m t'&gt;lllil . F l11 . nuon
T•~ ;l..,

~

111

'" M 11 nt n •:~l at " r..;t l';olm Flo •il('h,

~la .

ooan
.\tll•nw 1 ~- JJ ,.. i\n.l'f'r-. "' \'rm lll•arh.

Fl ••.. 11·: fiJl m
~N Y• ~ ·li
~~~~ .

Mr·h v'

Cioclnn~ 1li

111 Tampot ,

._..,1
S t !nul.\ 111 S!

Pt•ttn

lure . t'l,, . J·m ]J.m
]V_.!o.hlf1 1, Pllt !&lt;b.u ~ h .tl l1r: ldA'Itnn, t' l&lt;~ ..

I IIIJ m

J!ou't"n \\ MU1 rtr...-JI,I ill Or~•n•ko. .,,, .,
\ II p.m
llo.llllm~r · ' ' ' ' "" Ym~ ' ' ,mkn .., ill Fr
l .; uKktd &lt;~ k . Flo• . \:.'lllp.rn
Kun&lt;asl'l tl , .... r•·•u •ll at l.:tkda.nd . f t:•.

FRII)AY
MT. O!..IVE - A revival wUI be
held at the Mt. Olive Community
Church Thursday, Friday and
Saturday, 7:30 each evening. ·Herbert Inscoe will be the evangelist
and music will be provided by the
Pleasant Valley Singers. The public
is invited to attend .

WILL BE CLOSED SATURDAY, APRIL
5TH -SO THAT T.HE ENTIRE STAFF MAY
ATTEND · A CONTINIING EDUCATION
SEMINAR TO BETTER SERVE YOU IN
THE FUTURE. OFFICE HOURS WILL RESUME MONDAY, APRIL 7TH.

fb!.:lo n -

~'l'lll'ljU!t · h andt'd pik'ht'fs M ilu&gt;

Hr1M·n. Jpff Srlk'l'~.

ran·ln &amp; hl!'a ldl and
l trtt Wnrd v. ,u·tl anclrAJffl«drr!i .fo hn &lt;llrt~.
tt'fiM'fl and Mllct• C TfVlv:f'lllo mtnor·ll'iiJllK'
rum~ tJr IT'JS.'I i$mml"nt .
C'alllornla - S. •nl lnfk&gt;ldln J ar k tlcJ.uol l
and ClaiR C A~· tn . outfll'lth ~ H-.flno
Una• ~ and [)(-.·on Wl111r . a nd r i£ht ·h4111dl'r
L).W Wlltflo to Edmonton of !hr PC. 1 .. AI~
n •nwnt'd oon-1ml•r f'tt1t·hl , ~ ,.,., . l.lddlr to
minlol·· k &gt;JIZ\II' ramp.
( 'lnt•lnl\'-!1 1- Si'flt k•fl·hliM'•rltOO MutlMW
ilnd r1 ghl·handf1· Mikf' Smlrll to minor·
l l'&lt;t~ · rump lor r r!l~~lanmc •nt .
Clr\'t&gt;land- ~'fi t ourfl1ido.ntor:- Sn~·d!•r
110d IU..uf]oWashln)..'!On and lnfr l drr ~. htnlor

McARTHUR - Meigs' Marauderettes scored live
In their
final three at bats to post a
rome-from-behind 8-5 win over
I 11pm
f'hk &lt;IL'tl ( 'u!J,. h ." 1 ' ~ F • ~m t l"('' at
TVC
foe Vinton County here
S.• JII:'od:lk'. AJ L1 , :1 ]J m.
Monday
In girls' softball action.
0'1 1'l:md ,.,. Mlll' .tuk.-•1· "' O umrlk•r.
t\ lil . :\ p nl
Barb Hatfield hurled the distance
(~•k] ;md 1 · ~ . 11\lr:~lfo CuD&lt;; ISS I Jl Ml'!&gt;:J,
for her third win without a loss this
/\Ill ~ jJ m
Si1n Dil'~ S!att· \'\ ." ial Dil'(o:U ut ~an
Noboa und ,Jim Wilson In mlnor·k'll,l{llt'
year and has yet to walk' a bitter.
t'OO'Ipk&gt;X fot· l '('a~~I JUtmMII
lltl'fl!l. IO: ff• p m
Hatfield
struck out eight· and
St · ,m ~ · '' l 'nilf"'"\ lr\ t.o l W ;, ~ hlnl!'lt m ut
M ln........a!&lt;~ Ht1 unY'd pltr hN· Tom
allowed
Rur11:1
fo
thr
~·
Y
ork
Mf't~
.
'fl'ho
a
s~~~
five
hits, three of which the
~ · ••rtk·. iO:.'fi p.m
htm t [) Titk"'l·alf'f or lhr II..
Lady Vikings bunched In a four-run
fourth. The Meigs righty also
chipped In with two hits Including
an RBI double In the three-run
Meigs seventh.
TUCSON. Ariz. iUPII -Rookie-· but already has been placed on the
Deadlocked at ~5 golng into the
outfielder Cory Snyder headed a list
15-day disabled list.
seventh, the Marauderettes struck
of four players 'demoted WednesSince Manag~r Pat Corrales has lor three runs as Jodi Harrison
day by the Cleveland Indians.
safd that he will carry two catchers singled, stole second, and rode
Snyder, along with outfielrer
- Andy Allanson and Chris Bando home on Hatlleld'.sdouble. Hatfield
Randy Washington and lnftelcrrs - Kevin Buckley seems headed for sroml 011 Carol Snnith's double and
.Junior Noboa and Jim Wilson. wa s the nnlnors.
Snnith srored later ciJ a passed bail .
sent to the Indians' minor-league
The other three cuts will come
Meigs had !led In the fifth 011
·complex for reassignment.
from the pitching staff, and Scott Harrison's two-run single, scoring ·
Snyder was batting just .219 with Balles. Reggie Ritter, Curt Wardle Tammy Wright, who had walked,
two homers and 12 RBI In 21 games and Rich Yeti are the Ukely and Gina Follrod, who was safe on a
this sprtng. However, Tribe vice
candidates.
fielder's choice.
president Dan O'Brien hinted he
Pitchers who are ronsldered to
Meigs goes to 4--1 on the year and
may t:Je,recalled during the season. have made the team are Ernie 2-0 in tbe TVC.
• Snyder was not surprised.
· Camacho,· Tom Candlottl, Jamie
Four Marauderettes, HarrtSon ,
Washington was batting .Z18 with - Easterly, Neal Heaton, Jim Kern,
Hatlfleld, ~lth, and Shannon
four RBI In 10 games .and Wilson
Dickie Noles, Jose ROman, Ken
H!ndy all had two hits apiece.
was hitting .314 with ooe homer and
Schrom and Den Schulze.
Cindy Rl!fle, Follrod, and1Wright·
six RBI In 16 games. Noboa led the , The Infield Is set with Tony each had one safety.
group with a .385 average and four
Bernazard, Julio Franco, Brook
VInton Coonty's Collins pitched a
RBI In 19 games. ,
Jacoby, Dan Rom, Pat Tabler, good game, wallllng five and
The Indians currently have 28 Andre Thorntoh and Ed' Williams
Ianni~ three.
players In camp, four abOve their while the outfielcrrs are Brett ·
Coach John Arnett's .crew hosts
tar~ted 24-man roster. Pitcher
Butler; Joe Carter, Carmen Cas- Southern this evening 31\d travels to,
rom Wad &lt;Ellis listed on the roster,
tillo, Mel Hall and Otis Nixm.
Fecrrai-Hocklng Friday.

Indians trim roster

SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The MeigsMason Girls Softball Association
will meet at 2 p.iri. onSiulday, April
16, at tre Mllklleport Masonic
Ternp!P, North Second Ave. Everyone Interested Is a,sked to attend.
Bake sale

POMEROY - A rummage and
ooke sale wU be held at the Grace
Episcopal · Parish House beside
• vllage hall, 9to4 p.m. Thursday and
Friday.
POMEROY - Boy Scout Troop
249 d. Pomeroy wil have a car wash
Saturday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at
UtUe Dan's Exxon on East Main
Street. Pomeroy.

•CIV'Ome front bumper
•Minors
•Bri(llt hub caps
•AM radio
•Radial tires

NOW $7

GIFT

'PEOPLES BANK

----------~-----------.

I

- I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I
Exp. 4-30-86

vou oorrt neea a fortune teller to
make a fOrtune ... Just some-sm•rt
ptanntng ano our n&lt; 'detorred
1u vcu'll earn ntgn tnt-t

BY
TRA-TECH
&amp; STARLINE

•Automatic ~ans. Stock

•rntad glass
•AM radio
•Radial tires

$3,000°0
Good Selection!

652

Trim
WITH FREE AUTO. TRANS.
•Power st'?nng # 6661
•Interval wtpers
•Bright Low Mount mirrots

$ave Up To

_Was $13,061.'5

1986 FORD
RANGER XL

e4 cyt. engine

eRear step bu~
•Deluxe tutone paint

ormad glass
•Radial tires

Was $10,271.'5
0
NOW$7

,522°

1981 PONTIAC

1982 DATSUN

· 1984 CHEVROLET

GRAND PRIX

MAXIMA

C-20 4X4

StJdi N 64632, 4 &lt;biB, !1atJJn lllljj\1fl, front
air cond, aut~ 1!3115., PS, Pa
JIIW8' winOOWS. JIIWIJ Sill\ JIIW&lt;J iblr ~
tilt wlvJel, cruise, .W/fM r.di&lt;l mdial ~
wllte walt~ buciet SIIJI!, ren
de!Jflltl', rear ~"-

· MM

$2995

SiDd&lt; N6664t V-11, oir oond., 4 speed,.ot&gt;nd.
trans., PS, PO, %tin, king wide ted, rear step
bu~.

1M$

gauees.

'9495 .

IIIJW

$8495

'""diM

WAS

$7295

IIIJW ,

SiDd&lt; H 64171, 2 doors. V-11, a&lt;r oond.. auto.
tr.Jns., PS. PO. MIIFMrad~. rad~al ""

WM

'5495
CHEVEnE

accounrl and save a Sizable sum
tor retirement. StOP 1n texlav

and ter us gtve vou the facts .

..

.,

.'

1

----------------------J

Member FDIC .

PEOPLES BANK

OHIO

"KEEP THAT GREAT GM FEELING YIITH GENUINE..GM PARTS"

Second Stleel
111011. w.va.
m·5514

'

tl

COR~BA

2212 Jackson Avenue
Poinl!'liiSIIIt. W. Y1.
675-1121

5111 Street
Ntllfl HMI, W. Ya. ·

882·2135

Stod&lt; N5lti:J2.'2 dim, hard top, 6 C)i.. air
cond, aut• IJW.. PS, Po, mdiallifes, Mlite
willis, bucket !ll!lfs.
1M$

$4695
•

·~
14495
-·

$5995

1981 CHRYSLER

• • •

RECEIVE FINE CRYSTAL D'ARQUES GLASSWARE '
OR A CASE KNIFE FOR EACH QUALIFYING IRA.
COME SEE US FOR DETAILS!

Stncl&lt; NI 0490. 4doors. &lt;fdan, 4c~ . a&lt;r oond.,
aut• tran,, PS, Mt/FM rad~. mdloll t&lt;es,
wlite wafts, bud&lt; ~ .,.Is
' NOW

;$

'6995

N~

$3695

N~

1982 CHEVROLET

Stock H 66271. 1 ~ hard to~ V-11, aw
cond., linyl1110f,aulD. 1!3ns., PS. PB, tit willet,
cruile, M11fM radii, mdial ""· •Me walt~
win_dllll deiOflltl'
IIIJW

ltl'lat's also ta• deferred unt11 you
st"t wlth!!f awtng trom your

ADDITIONAL .PARTS, &amp; LABOR EXTRA

PH. 992·2114

7:00P.M.
Tim Morrison - Music Director and Soloist

CUTLASS

.SMITH NELSON .MOTORSP~MEROY,·Inc.
'

.. .:;;;

1981 OLDSMOBILE

OIL CHANGE;· FILTER &amp;
LUBE - II' TO 5 QTS. OIL

---------~---~-------J

-

f

Sunday 10:45 A.M .
Sunday thru Friday

TURNPII&lt;E USED CARS AND TRUCKS!!!

with a

Smith Ntlson Moton

~

Prk'e!s QuotEd E1dude 1'raluport.atm Chao!ft, State Wid I.Jxal TallieS and Fee~ .

Stock ! 10461, V-11, auto. ~ans .. PS, PB. tift
wl'&lt;el, AMIFM radii, l!erOJ tape,~ 1m picllu~
tin&amp; wide ted, rear ~ep bu"lltr.

SPRING
BRAKE SERVICE INSPECTION
AND TIRE ROTATION \

lap. 4-30-16

APRIL thru 11

,.mj driw~

COUPON

Smith Nelson Motors '

41872 Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy, Ohio
=~MWU:A
6

•Ught group
eCIV'Ome bumpers
•Oullide apare tire carrier

a FREE

In today.

.$1995

fiRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST CHURCH

1986
CONVERSION
VANS

Smck # 6704
•6 cyt. qine
e5 apeed tnm.
•Cloth - t trim
•Interval wlpen

Now$11

1-979 DODGE
D-100

COUPON

.' •

•6 cyl. qlne
·• •Standard tr-.

'3995

GM CARS ONLY

·Af

OVER 200 NEW FORDS, LINCOLINS, MERCURY$ AND FORD
TRUCKS AVAILABLE •••• ALL AT PURE &amp; SIMPLE PRICES!

B~ng these coupons

500 E. MAIN ST.

Stock# 6353

WM

__________ ...,____ ------,

·.

No .Giveaway•

1986 FORD
BRONCO II

1986 FORD
F-150 PICK-UP

Was $10,459.5'

YOU •••

,

. ' •

'

c.... wash

TAKE ADVANTAGE NOW OF OUR SPRING
ON .OIL CHANGES AND BRAKE\
~~~SE=R:.=..!VI~CE AT SPECIAL VALUES TO

runs

·cOuntY CooperatiVe Extension -Service has a home account book and ·
pocket calendar pal!ern you can
use to keep track d. your opendlng?
call wr office at 002·•·

. Gatrell, Jeremy,
and Matthew

No G.lmmlcks

res

I

,.

RACINE - .Pedal tractor pull at
Southern Local • High School in
Racl~e; weigh-In starts at 5 p.m.
and' P'l
at .6; sponsored by
PrO's
flOi'!llnd, Letart and
Racine; refr-estJrnents will be
available.
'

SATURDAY
MASON, W.Va . -:A Bend area
gospel sing will be held at 7 p.m on
Saturday, April 12 .- ln the Wahama
High School gym, Mason, W.Va.
Featured singers 1\\111 be The
ReOectlons Trio, Sounds, and
Inspiratk:Jn.

THANK. YOU

Marauderettes
post 8-5 win

kinds ot I!!IJienseS that do "add up"
(lllf!r tlme.
It's best to use spending catego.
rtes that ."match" )IOIIr spending
pattern. For example, a .category
for "meals eaten out" Is Important
If )1011 want ID.know how much Is
spent eating In restaurants rom·
pared with food eaten at home.
If )IOII've"not kept records, use a
6-8 week trlal period ol recording
expenses and adjust tlle categories
as needed.
Be lltll'l! to use separatl' catego'
rles or star Items that are taxdec11ctlble. And, ayold putting too
many Items In the "miscellaneous"
category.
,
~-"
Also, ·s~pllfy tbe math by
rounding borne account book entries to the nearest half or whole
dollar. Also recognize that lndlvlduals' like for !letall can vary
ronslcrrably from one person to
anotlrr so try to design a system

.
that 15 oompatlble with personal
lll&lt;es and one that will give you a
ustful pcture of where your money
is going on a regular basis.
Did You Know That: The ~lgs

PAGEVILLE- Scipio Volunteer
Fire Department Ladies Awd11ary
is sponsoring a smorgasbord Saturday, tram 5 to 7 p.m., at the
Pagevllle Townhouse. ProdeedS' to
the lire departrnen t.

l:lEEDSVILLE - Olive Town ship Trustees will meet Friday, 6; 30
p.m., at the ReedsvUiellre station.

EWINGTON - Choir from the
Union BibleSemln?ry wUI be at the
Pine Grove Holiness Church Friday
at 7:30p.m. The public Is invited to
attend by Pastor Ben Watts.

KENNEDY DDS

LONG OOITOM - Community
Assn. wlll sponsor a spring smorgasbonl at the communtt,y building
in Long Bottom at 4: 30 p.m.
Saturday: ham , meat loaf, chicken
and noodles: good selection of
entrees, desserts, salads; adults,
$3.~; children under . 12, $2.50
Including beverage.
·

ALFRED- Alfred United Methodist Church Youth Fellowship is
sponsoring a soup supper Saturday,
4 to 1 p.m ., at the church m St. Rt.
EB1. On the menu will be vegetable
soup, chill, hot dogs, sloppy joes,
homemade pies, coffee, tea and
pop.

'g

Houston ill Phornl"'. niRht

Transactions

Income tax deadline -getting closer

SYRACUSE - The Meigs Association lor Retarded Citizens wlll
meet Thursday, 7 p.m.. at the
Carleton School.

AND

(i~mtt~

Page-6

-

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline
Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star,
will meet at 7:30 Thursday at the
. Middleport Masonic Temple. Officers are to wear chapter dresses .

R. CRAIG MATHEWS, DDS

1

-

Thu~.April3,1986

Calendar / happenings

THE OFFICE OF

D~

·~

,
By CINDY OUVERI
or develop a more satisfying "rorred, they can be filed in the
.,_. Counly Extension Agent
lifestyle. And, with good records, "receipt tile" If they i.vm be needed
Home Economics and 4--H
tax preparation can be less difficult, I:Jr future reference.
Income tax SeasOn Is upon \IS. At more accuJ'Ilteand mayevm mean
The Important thlnglstodo ltma
this time of year, perhaps more some tax savings for yCll.
regular basis. It may be easier If
than any other time, people are
'Getttn'g started and finding a one person assumes the prtmarY
conscious of where their money workable system may be challeng- record keeping resp~Jnslblllty wilh
goes. This week "In The Spotlight" · lng, especially sinre there Is 00 the task rotated every 6-12 months
takes a look at ways to keep track of single best system that works for to share the responslbUity and to
your family spending as shared by everybody. Howev~. the task can keep famlllar wtth the financial
Carolyn McKinney, Eamlly He- be much easier with five basic Information.
source Mariagement Specialist at tools: (1) a "biD holder", . (2 ) a
While . only accountants may
The Ohio State University.
"keeping can", (3) a "receipt ftle,~P mjoy keeping records, It's-possible
Some people make notes m shirt (4) a home account book, and ($) 'an .~ to simplify the accounting task. For
cuffs and others serlbbie In the back Inexpensive calculator.
(\ E!J\ample, usl' a "reasonable" per·
ol checkbooks. People sometimes
As they arrive, bills are opened sonal aUowance to C(lller the many ·
use unusual methods to keep track and filed In the "biD holcrr" untll 1small "Incidentals" that add up
of spending.
paid. It helps to wrtte the payment over time. '
For those who reaDy what to date on the wtslde of the envelope
This means fewer account book
know, complete and organized
as a remlnJer.
entries and alsO gives a sense of
spending records can show where
Use the "keeping 'can" (which some personal ·spending ·freedom
the money goes and serve as a to sis can be an old ·coffee can) to hold which can be especially Important
forfuturebu~etdeelslons . Injusta
receipts and paid bills temporarily for tlght budget situations. Some
few years, an average fannlly can untll figures are transferred to the • people use a wallet size card or
spend $50,®$100,000 and without actount book. Avoid letting the ootebook to keep track of these
good records, It's dl!flcult to know
receipts aceumillate over lengthy
just how this rather lar!!J! sum was perkJds. Monthly transfer of tran·
used.
sactlon to the home account book
Spending records can heiP ' YOO ·-will be adequate for most people.
&lt;Felde If you can afford morerebt However, transfer the ligures
or where spending patterns m:ed to ev!!)' week or two if you have a
be changed. Such adjusbnenls may
large rumber of transactions.
help lnqease savings, ~educe crbt
As receipts and bills are te-

3-point .basket adopted

LARRY

-

In the s~tl-ighr

Southern dumps Pirates, 9-3

I p m.

Phtl ~ ldl ~ pN ;o 1 '

.-, ...

PATRJOT- The oolendlng state
· seml-tlnallst Eastern Eaglettes
showed their championship form
a two-run single ihrough the hole,
Wednesday evening as they rolled
the score now :&gt;,3,
to a 23-13 SVAC triumph ov~
Eastern added a single run In the
Southwestern
behind a fine pitching
fifth , but tbe big blow of the night
per:formanre by sophomore Amy
came when BL'5ell belted a three·
Berkhlmer In her first varsity effort
run home run to &lt;Pep left &lt;jenter
on the mound. ·
•
field to break open .a close game:
Eastern
·went
ahead
4-0 In the
the score now 9·3.
~
q&gt;enlng
frame
on
a
Tonya
Sav6y
The entire EHS line up got
·
walk,
an
RBi
triple
by.
Art'ene
the action In the seventh whe
Ritchie, an Amy Young·•slngle, a
Caldwell singled, Bryan D t
Lesa
Rucker walk , an Amy Berkhi·
reached on an error. Allen Trtpp
mer walk, and two SWHS miscues.
drew a walk, Brent Norton
After a shakey start In which
smacked an RBI single, HoWle
SWHS
plated eight runs, Lisa
Lawrence ripped a two-run double,
Driggs
with relief from Amy
and Brian Bailey walked to comBerkhliner
lri her pltdllng crbut
plete the scoring at 13-3.
settled
down
for a great game.
After a dismal outing Tuesday,
Southwestern
pushed
across eight
Eastern's crfense was sharp as
runs
on
eight
walks
and
a single by.
several pl~yers made the big play
Lewis
to
lake
an
8-4
command.
while puttmg forth an extra Iough
Eastern ·rallied In the second
effort .
round
on walks to Berkhimer, Lea
After Collins looked sharp in six
Ann
Robinson,
and Melanie ManInnings of work, Barber struck out
kin,
while
Lesa
Rucker
rammed an
the side In the seventh. Jim
STOLEN BASE'
Fonner Cincinnati Recb Clearwater, Fla. White Sox smrilllop ome Gullen
RBI
single
and
Usa
Lance
hit a
Caldwell played a good crfenslve
oudlelder Gllry Redus slides safely Into second base (13) waltsforthethrow. RedusandthePhllswWopen
sacrifice
fly
,
the
soore
oow
9-8.
game for Eastern.
during an exhibition game against the mdte Sox In
the 1986 baseball season lit Riverfront Stadium on
Berkhlmer handcuffed the HighE~ste~ hitters were Bissell with
Monday. (UPI).
landers
in the rext roupleoflnnln~s
a tnple, home run, and single;
walking
just six batters the rest of
Caldwell two singles. Durst two
the
game.
..
singles, Howie Lawrence a double,
big
third
Inning
put the game
A
Collins a single, Brent Norton a
out
of
reach
as
the
Eaglettes
paled
single, Steve Horner a single, and
By
SCOTI'
WOLFE
Bostick,
the
score
1-0.
The
Tornadoes
of
Mlck
Wineeleven
runs
on
big
hits
by
Rltdlie,
Royce Bissell a single.
RACINE - Another fr ee Amburgey handled a solid Pirate brenner plated three more runs In
Rucker, Driggs, and a long home
Bissell had five RBI's and
swinging offensive attack powered offense by retiring the side In the the fifth stanza as Adams singled, run by Lisa Lance. The score now
Lawrence two.
the league-leading Southern Torna- second, allowing his Tornadoes to Oliver doubled, Milliron . singled, stood at ~-8. .
For Southwestern, Tommy
does
to a 9-3 SVAC triumph (lller· get In position to widen their lead. Hensler singled, and Aml)urgey
Eastern hitters were Arlene
MUier lined two singles, Rick
North
Gallta
as
sophomore
hurler
Senior
Todd
Adams
roped
a
triple
singled.
Ritchie
with a double, triple, and
Halslop had a double, Benny Boyd a
David
Amburgey
went
the
distance
to
start
the
Inning,
then
scored
on
a
Going
Into
the
sixth
trailing
by
home
run;
Lesa Rucker with a
single, andEricHamrnondaslngle.
to
pick
up
the triumph In an
high
flying
double
by
Dan
Wolfe.
eigHt,
North
Gallia
jumped"
on
perfect
three-for-three
night with a
. Eastern Is now 3-2 overall and 3-1
Impressive
pitching
pertormance
Eric
Milliron
reached
on
an
error
Amburgey
with
singles
by
Easton
double
and
two
'singles
. and two
mslde the SVAC, while SWHS Is 1-3
here Wednesday.
allo~&lt;ing Wolfe to cross home
and
Glassburn.
Easton
scored
on
a
walks;
and
Amy
Young
two
singles.
overall and In the league.
Amburgey
picked
up
his
second
safely,
the
Milliron
himself
trotted
run
down
play
at
first
base,
while
an
Lance
had
a
home
run,
Berkhlmer
Eastern plays Federal Hocking .
error plated the second run of the a single. and Driggs a single.
In a non-league double header on pitching triumph by scattering two fvme on another NG miscue.
North
Gallia
hits,
striking
out
14
NOrth
Gallia
came
to
life
bt
tbe
inning as SHS recovered to retire
EHS pitching walked 14. gave up
Saturday and hosts Oak Hlll on
batters,
and
walking
just
three.
third
when
Welch
walked,
adthe.slde,
the
!lnal
ending
at
9-3.
7
hits,
and fanned ihree.
Monday. Southwestern plays
Steve
Thaxton
got
the
starting
vanced
on
a
ground
out,
then
scored
Glassburn
and
Easton
had
the
Southwestern
hitters were Diana
Syn;mes Valley Monday.
nod
'for
the
Pirates,
getting
relief
on
a
two
base
error
to
press
the
lone
Pirate
hits.
N!da,
Sandy
Patrick,
and Lewis
Lmescore:
help from Shane Glassburn in the score to 4-1.
Adams led SHS with a triple and with two hits each and Danta a
EasTern ....
... . ..... ... 20.1 013 :J-13·1H
fourth Inning. That duo combined
SHS again erupted In the third single, Oliver had a trtple and single.
SWHS ..................... mo :m 11- ~- ~-1
for one strikeout and two walks.
frame
as Adams reached on an double, Dan Wolfe a double and
SWHS pitching yielded 11 hits,
BaneriPS: Ed Collins IWPI , Bart&gt;-r ~h.
Southern got on the board early error, Ryan OUver launched a · single, and Amburgey two singles. walked len, and fanned four.
and B. Bl,.ell. Dan PaJrlck, A. Hat.lop4lh.R.
HaL'ii?P 6th and Boyd.
when Amburgey helped his cause triple, and Dan Wolfe singled to Hensler, Mike Wolford, and Bostick "
Eastern Is 3-1 overall and 3-0
with a line single, then rounded the plate two more runs, the score now each collected hits, while Milliron
Inside the SVAC while SWHS drops
bases on a double by senkJr Jay 6-1.
had two singles.
. to (}3.
Southern, 5-l overall and 4-0
Coach Pam Dcuthlll was peased
inside t~ SVAC, lac es Meigs with her team's effort and the
tonight and travels to Hannan successful relief pltdllng of Amy
NBA results
Trace Monday. North Gallla plays
Berkhlmer. Coach Douthitt praised
DALLAS iUPII -Sharp- shoot- have voted for II," said Texas Kyger Creek Monday.
h
er team 's defensive
NATIONAL IMKETMLL AS*X:.
Ing guards may start the next Christian coach Jim Killingsworth.
Ea.....,. co.r.n-..
Improvement .
1\UUIIIt· DlviMon
recruiting war~ollowing the adop- "The line Is pretty close. It's NG .............. ....... ... ..... 001 002 0-l- 2-j
Lines core:
S ........................... 132 Ol1 x-9-12-.1
" . L Pti . GB
tion
by
the
NCAA
of
the
3-polnt
difficult
enough
to
get
kids
to
have
Ba
lt('rlE'S:
AmburR"f'Y
!
WPJ
and
John
1· 1\:r.lnn
ti.l 13 R:!l basket.
~ l'hiiH
!'il '[1 .M9 J.l l.1
the patience to work fora goods hot. Riffle. Thaxton (LPJ. Glassbum and E ........... ........ .4 :, U 0 3-2.1- U·2
SWHS .... . ...... ....... ..H 0 1 .1 1-1.1· 7-6
.~~ . I
.r. .,., .u.:J ')il&lt;z
Beginning
next
season,
shots
Now it will be moredifflcuit. lt 's not Glassburn .
" w,,, h
~. ~1 -Vii '&lt;*
taken lrom more than Ill-feet, like the NBA. This one could be used
NY
'll ffi .H ~1'·1
(ftllna.l DtviNOr.
9-inches wlll be worth 3 pllinls in all every time down the floor."
"~1 'l.1 f8i NCAA men' s basketball games, In
)! .1\ Jianl a
Texas Tee~ coach Gerald Myers
~· .l l 6111 til,,
.\ flr •111 1il
l1 .~ Ylll J IU~
addition. referees will be allowed to was in favor of 3-plllnt line.
n. tnd
~ r: .37:1 ·1~ •'1
use television replays to help decide
"I think It wUI help put the little
'l b :fl ,:w:r '!l
clock
malfunctions. The ru les guy back In the game," said Myers,
lod
:l!l ~1 :t211 2lil
WftKfnl c~
change s were announ ce d a member of the NCAA Rules
Mhh'MlDivlslotl
Wednesday.
:c ·Hou~tn ~
.r1 2!1 6111 Committee. "I pushed for this rule.
x·DI·nw r
-H .12 .'itl 1 ••
The addition of the :i-polnt line You only have to make33 percent at
x D:~ J Ja~
n .~ -'"n ~~ ..
and 45-second shot clock, added to your 3-polnt shots to equal 50
:c Ut.~h
.1!1 .'l!J !iY1 !t •
Sn nwo
.l l ~ 2 ~i 13
games last season. wllllncreaS!&gt; Ihe' perrent of the two-point shots.
I
San Anton
.'{] ~ 5 -tl.l l ~
importance backcourt players with
"I definitely think It will be used
r..tr.· Dk·Won
a long- rarige shooting touch. The 3- throughout the game. And It nnlght
' I J\ l.kr\
i! Ul 7f&gt;l ' l'rt lnd
~ .1!0 .f.ll .01 ~
point bucket also may greatly limit change some people's thinking In
I'IIIM'fl l'
:til 4:, ...., :!'il~
the
use of-the zone defense. .
IJ\ ( 'IPI"
.11 47 ~lfl 1!1!,.
recruiting, too."
s. •:m~ ·
b ~~ :m :JJ
"The Rules Committee believes
The use of replays in clock
ri ~ln S1
:.111 ~( I .'Y.I .11
that the adoption at theJ.polnt field controversies stemmed from the
y-t·lft:hrcl dMMon tltk·
"1-t'llnliltotl plllyolf hrt1h
goal will do much 'to open up the NCAA Midwest Regional tourna" .......,...., .,. Jt.,.,.uM!I
game,"
said Edward Steitz, ment game between Michigan
lto:.ton 12'l. Dl·trolt 111i
secretary-editor of the rules com- State and Kansas. With Michigan
l'nlladrlphla Y"': . NN' York kj
f'horn~ uo. (:oki'n Sll• h· tm
mittee. "It wlll'force teams to play State ahead by 4 points and 2:20 to
J.,\ (']lp ~l ~ !f'i' , Ulilh ~
defense
away from the basket and play, the clock locked for 12-15
!U nland 121. S!'&gt;il llll' 100
ThunMI.,-',. (;MI'llr'lt (AU nml"ll EST I
assist In the problem area of rough, seconds. Kansas managed totlethe
~,~,· a~ hln ~on at N f'Yo· . h ·• ~·. 7::l J )l.m.
low-post play."
game with 11 second5 to play and
C'hk'UJ!U tu lnduma. ; · .l l p.m
Cl :•o;rland al Mll\l·aukw. ~ .1 1p m
Some coaches feel the NCAA eventually )"On In overtime.
l)pn \ '1'1' :1 ! l)aH:.IS,II: .'II pm
J.polnt line. more than five feet
Under . the new rule, NCAA
HooSJOn lll San Anlllnb . It :tl p m
closer to the basket than the 25- foot officials wUI be allowed to use
· Suc mrrnn lo ,,,J.,, Lakrt ~. IU::fl p.m
.......,.,
line used In the NBA, makes the television replays to corrett malro.; ,'ll. Yurk 111 Bo!i.•on. ~tzhl
shot
too easy.
£'1.-.'Piand ill Ph lladl'lphla . rj Etl!
functions In the clock or nnlstakes
,\tlanla at Wa.oJ\InRfon. niRI'!I
"To tell you the truth I would not
made by timers and scorers.
MU~·au lif,., a t Dl&gt;trol l. n t~~~

""

By The .Bend.

. .; . (
.

The Daily Sentinel

J

•

j .....

Scoreboard ...
Exhibition results

"

--

1983 FORD

JSCORT
Stod&lt; N64371. 4 door&gt;, frorrt !llftl dri'l~ 4
eyl., auto. tr.Jns , mdi~ tires. bucllet !~lis.
WAS
NOW

s4995

1980 OLDSMOBILE
.DELTA 88 ·
Stock N 66491, 2 dim, IJartl liP. V-11, air
cond, l'inyl root, auto trans.,•f'S, ~8, JIIWIJ
windllil~ JIIWIJ lbJr ~ Itt wiBe\ Cfllise,
.W/fM radio, sterOJ tape, Jadill tie5, wtitt
wills.
WAS

$3995 .s4995

$3495

1983 PONTIAC
T-1000

*

Stod&lt; 66811, 2doors. 4cyL, 4speed, stJnd

•ans.. PS, .WifM radii. sterOJ tape, radial

~~ wlite walls, bucket seots.

'4295
'

N~

$3295

�,,

\
(

.,

Beat of

bend

Star

Where's the
coaCh?
.
·

Sentklel Staff W~er
The horse can't race wltoout a
jockey and the
Ches ter area
girt s so ftball
team can't play
"1thout a coach.
The group of
girls - some-20
from tbe ages of.
10 through 13 - are all lined up
ready to give it their all but so far a
coach hasn't materialized. Not only
Is the team ready but there also Is a
committed sponsor and a field to
play on. If there is a volunteer or
two out there willing to get the team
on tile field please ca ll Sue Metzger
at 992·53&amp;1.
'
A new idea at the Pot1land
Elementary School is the development of a yearbook.
Material for the publication is
being ga thered this year and the
book will be available In the taU .
.Needed are old pictures of the
school, classes of yesteryear, sport s
teams and other pictures of activities through the years. If you have
any contribu tion in the way of
pictures contact Dixie Smith, 84'35439. DL•Ietells meyou wlll get your
original photos back.
I'm su1'1' many of you know
Louisa Johnson who has been on !he
staff of Dr. John Ridgway for many
years.
I know you wlii be sorry to learn
that Louisa suffered a heart attack
and is confined to the Holzer
Medical Center in Gallipolis. She
has been taken out of inlenslvecare
and is progressing nicely with
apparently no bad after effects:
Ca rds can bt; sent to room 401.
You might want to see the Meigs
Jaycees get clobbered Saturday

night- or perhaps, you want to see
this happen to ire coaches of the
Meigs Local School District.
8oth 'sl&lt;k&gt;s claim they wUI be
definite emergt' as the victor of a
basketballgameattheMelgsHigh
gymnasium at 7:30 p.m. Sa turday.
U1Je best part of the contest Is that
1ail proceeds including money taken
In at the food booth wlll go to the
Keith Oiler Family wlich was
burned out recently.
Admission is a contribution of $1
· - but you can give me if you'd like to
help the family.

Did you know that 45 percent of
Meigs County jobhol&lt;k&gt;rs commute
to work in neighboring counties?
Seems like a larg&lt;&gt; percentage but
that's what the Bureau of Employment Services reports. The bureau
also reports that In December o!
last year, ·the labor Ioree of the
county was an estimated ll,:llO
persons with 10,100belng employed
and 1,200 being jobless. an employ·
ment rate of 10.5 percent for the
month.
The first dance c1 the Royal Oak
Dance Club will be Saturday 8 to
midnight at the Royal Oak Recreation BuUdJug with the Tune Timers
providing the music. The dance Is
open to members and their guests.
The club w!ll stage three dances
during the year.
Hold the pickle and the lettuce
and the earlier report thatTu~ay,
AprU Sis the deadline tor registerIng to vote In the May primary
election .
The deadline Is one ~ay earlier,

..

Chicken dinner .
Racine Firemen's Auxiliary will
oold a baked chicken dinner at fire
house annex Su nday with · serVing
starting 11t 11 a. m.; adult s, $3:
chlldt;en, $1.50.
·

Final plans for !he Eastern
Alumni Banquet are underway
'with tlie reunion date for June 7.
Anyfl!le wishing to help or woo
needS more info may caD 667·6535.

Mrs. Bowles was
Collnty, a son of the late
Myrile Smith Bowles. He
tlle former J. E. Bowles
Oalry and had milk
Athens. He wa s also a form('r water
hilu ler in Athens and M~lgs Counties, a former fire warden in Athens
Hurley Hulton
County and a retired Athens City
school bu s driver . He was a
Hurley Hutton, 64. White Hill
memtn of the F'lrst United
Road, Rut land, dhl Wednesday
Methodist Chut·ch, thens.
Survivors Include his wile, Lu- evening at Veterans Memorial
cille Dalton Bowles; two sons. Hospital.
Harry E. Bowles and Charles E.
He was born April 21, t921, a son
Bowles. both..of Rt. 5; At hens: on~ of the late W.f'l. and Cora Gilmore
daughter. Pauline Leacp, of Grove · Hutton.
City; and six grantrhildren.
Surviving are a sister, Florence
He was preceded In dea,th by. one Barrett, Rutland; three brothers,
son, Paul Eugt'ne Bowles: two Leroy of Nelsonv ille; Don of
brot~rs. Dwight Bowles and Si
Athens. and JCverett of Dyesvllie.
Bowles; and two sisters. Garnet
Besides his parents he was
Ulbrich and Mable Ervin.
preceded In deaf h by seven brat h·
Services will be Saturday, 2 p.m., &lt;•rs and two sisters.
at the Hughes Funeral Home, 168
Services will be held at 1 p.m .
Morrl' Ave., Athens. with Rev. · Sa! urday at the Ewing Furo;&gt;ral
Claud~ Sandlin 6fficiating. Burial
Home with Rev. Lloyd Grimm
will he in the West Union St. officiating. Burial·wlll be in Robin·
Cemetery in Athens. Friends may • son Cemetery. Friends may call at
call at the fu nera l home from 2 to4 the furo;&gt;ral home from 2to4 and6t o
p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. on Friday.
9 p.m. Friday .

F&amp;AM meeting
Regu lar meeting Harrisonville
Lodge m, F'&amp;AM. Saturd ay, 7:30
p.m. at temple.

Reunion planning
Sout hern High Class of 1961 will
hold reun ion planning sesslon at
7:30 this f•vening at Southern High;
all t lass mPmbers urged to attend.

After·30 years in business,

KNOWS TAXES
UKE
BLOCK
BIKE WINNER- Betty VanMeter, left, is presented wltha 10 speed
bicycle given away by the Bend Area Merdiants Assn. MaldQg the
presentation Is Sandy lannareW, association presldenL

HIR 8I.OCit
1lE IIICOIIE TAX Pl!lli'U

r

Marcos and his party ran up a
$100,!XXJ tab for purchases In Hawaii
and I read that we taxpayers may
have the responslbliity to pay- are
they klddlng er what? Well, do keep
smiling.

Man given six;,month jail .t erm

618 East Main Street
Ponwny, Ohio
.
Open 9 All.·6 P.M. Wetkdoys; 9·5 Sat.
APPOINT.NTS AYAIAIU - PH. 992·3795

Racine American Legion Post
sponsoring public dance Saturdity,
9Circle
to 1 at
post home with muslc by
D Wranglers.

I-I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

GospeJ sing

•

• Gospel sing at Syracuse Church
of the Na7.arene at 7 p.m. Friday
with Sheklnah, West Virginia Couriers, Jenny Cadle and Dave Gibson
singing; public welcome.

'Cash 'n' Carry Sale

30°/o-60°/o Off

READY TO FINISH
FURNITURE
WICKER
CUSTOM FINISHING
HAND-CRAFTED
GIFT ITEMS

Dale A. Smith, 24, of 8900
Manchester Rd ., Silver Springs,
Md .. was involved in a one car

r favorite combinations

your

accideh! at 2:45 a.m. Tuesday
morning on Rt . 7 in Sa!isbuty
Township. just not1 h of County !{d
5. The Meigs Coun ty Sh~r~f' s
Department rcpot1s that Smtth was
1raveling south on Rt. 7 when his
car st ruck an object in the roadway .
His brakes locked and his vehicle
skidded into an'embankment. No
citations were issued. Modemtc
damages to the vehicle.

~J:~ 't/'Jodifferent toppings. AU you can eat!

1

Liv. Rm. Suite

RECLINERS

· ·'~'-

·•.

REG.$199
SAVE

.

Reg . ·~59 . 95

..._

.'

EMPWYEE HONORED - Linda Schultz was chosen Associate o1
the Store for FebrullfY at the Ppmeroy. Bi~ Wllej!l. St-bultz works In the
ladies department ·an·d wli!i'aililounced as assoclate 'by Tim Custer,
store manager, who presented her with t~ award. In addition, her
name will be added to the Associate of the store plaque In the store.
SchuHz has been employed by the Big Wheel since it openc'll lao;t
November . .'\ cconllng to Custer, Schultz empllfies an above standord
level of job performanre, and maintains good customer serviu' skills
and a positive attitude toward the company. She was chosen as one of
the outstanding a•,.,clates from over4,000employees In the New Caslle,
Pa., based discount department store chain with 'so locations in
Penn.'!Yivanla, Ohio, Michigan, West VIrginia, New York, Connecticut
and Rhode Island.

CHICK OUR
WINDOW FOR
NEW.SPRING &amp;
SUMMER

No lotto winners
CLEVELA ND, Ohio IUPII
Oh io Loftety :com mission officials
did not find any winning !lckets in
Wedn esday night' s Super Loti o
game.
Num bers drawn Wt'I'C 4. 2.'i,JR. 19,
5 and 43.
Lotttrty officials said $8,336,076
worth or tickets had be&lt;&gt;n sold for
the game in which the jackpot was
$13 mi llion. With no winner, the
jackpot for next Wednesday's
drawing will be at leas t $18.5
million.
Lottety officials said 28'2 players
had five of the number s. winnihg
$480; Another 12,671 had fo ur
numbers. winnlng $41 and 205.502
had thrrr numbers, winning $.'1.
Dally Number 12.'i

Sportswear
INFANTS &amp; ADULTS

531 JACKSON Plt&lt;E · RT 3!5 WEST
Phone 446 -4524
.
BARGA!~

MATINEES SATURDAY

I SU."OAV - All SEATS $2 . SO
ADMISSI ON E&gt;ERV fUES OAV $1.50

WRANGLER
FOR
'

LAST DAV !
"THE CARE BEAR S HOVIE 2"
6;10 P.M. ONl l. RATED (G)

CHILDREN &amp; ADULTS

"PRETTY IN PINK"
7:50 &amp; 9 :30 PJ1. RATED 1,PG 13)

STONESWEAR
FOR
BOYS &amp; GIRtS

Free rlothing day

LAYAWAY

The Gallia ·Mrigs Commu nit y
Action Agency will hold its frer
clothing days fo r low income
jl('rsons on both Thursday and
Friday from 9 a. m. to 12 noon. The
agency's cloth ing baQk is oow
located in the old high school
building at Cheshire.

.NEW HOURS 9:30 -5:00 MON .-SAT.
II PHil
ffJO!T DAY

Mostly sunny today with a high between 7U and 75. Becoming
cloudy tonight with lows In the mid 50s.
Mostly cloudy FrKJay with a high In the mid 70s.
The probability of precipitation Is ID percent ton ight and F'ridax.
Extended Forecast ·
Saturday through Monday
. Chance of rain Saturday through Monday. IUghs wlll be In the mid
60s to mid 70sSaturday,ln theupper 50sand60sSunday andlnthe50s
Monday.l.&lt;~ws will he in the mid 40sto mid 50s Saturday and Sunday
and in the 40s Monday.

ot

On Tht "1" In Middlspot~

•'

2500 GRAND CENTRAl AVENUE
VIENNA, 'IN 261 05

. 13041 295-8133
IIIJCE HARRIS

Are •/'ou Still Paying Rent?

'100

$149.95

-.

Two accidents' Wednesday and bound on 160 in Ga lllpolls Township
early today sent three area peOple at ' :t&gt;l a.m. today when Drumto Holzer Medical Center for mond reportedly lost control, went
treatment of Injuries.
. orr the left side of the road and
The· state highway pa trol said a struck a parked vehicle.
car driven by Worihy Cremeans,
James Pickens, 19, Rt. I, Letart,
69. Rt. 2, Vinton , was westbound on a passengt'r, was taken tD HMC by
Ohio 160 at !he intersection with private vehicle and treated and
Ohio 554 at 8:25 a.m. 'IVednesdav released for multiple contusions
.&gt;nd reportedly drove into the path and abrasions.
of a southbound pickup truck driven
by Teresa Canterbury , 30, Rt. I,
Langsville.
...
•
Both drivers reported Injuries
and were taken to HMC by the
Gall Ia EMS. Cremea ns was admitArticles of lnmrporation have
ted for a fractured hip and was beerr filed in Columbus with the
reported in stable condition this Secretary of State's office by Cobb
morning, whilt&gt; Canterbu ry was Motors Corp. Pomeroy. James W.
trea ted iilrd:.{eleased tor multiple . Cobb, 242 W. Main St. Pomeroy Is
contu sions. The patrol ticketed \ the agent. Other papers were filed
Cremeans for failu re to yield.
by Estero, Inc.. of Pomeroy by
A car driven by Cynthi a Drum· • agent"'Grorge H. Warner of Wolle
mond, 19, Ga ll ipolis, was nort h- Pen Rd ., Pomeroy.

Form corporatlons

Weather forecast

EVERYTHING
, ·/J.,

According to testimony at the
trial, Dlilard, at the tlrre of his
atTest, had refused to take the
intoxi llzer tes t which &lt;k&gt;termines
the blood·a lcohol content of the
body . Dillard . according to state's
witnesses. refused the test , saying
he had taken it before and Ja iled
and didn 't wan t to take It again.,
At Wednesday's sentencing hear·
lng, Assl~ta n t Prosecuting Anorney
Carson Crow. who present ed the
state 's case, urged Judge Patrick
O'Brien to impose the maximum
sentence. citing from Dillard's
driving record, three prior DWl
incidents and two prior convictions
for driving while under suspension.
Defense Attorney Stt•vcn Slot)'
ut):(ed the murt to impose the
minimum.
Dillard was forbidden f1:om
Ol\ning a veh icle for two years. He
is to begin serving his senten(c
Monda y morning, April 7.

No charges filed

'

New 2 P(.

incident which occu n·ed on New

He was charged as a result of an

Inspection of Pomeroy Chapter.
Order of E.astel'n Star, Friday, 7:30
p.m.-at temple In Pomeroy.

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY - OPEN 9 A.M.-6 P.M.

Roger Dillard Jr.. 28. of Pomr·
roy, Wrdnesday received a six
monlhs sentence to the Meigs
Count y jail. a line of $lXI and collt1
costs, and his driver' s license was
suspended for two years upon hi s
conviction of a DWI charge last
week by a juty of fiv e men and
t hreP women

OES inspection

2 (WHILE'
DAYS
ONLY.
QUANTITIES LAST)

Three hurt in GaUia accidents

Michael Bryan, I4, son foMr. and
Mrs. John Bryan o1 North Carolina,
was fatally injured when struck ·by
a car last FrKJay while enrout e
hom(\ from school. Mr. and Mrs ,
John Bryan of Middleport received
word of the death last weekend .
CMithael is the gra ndson of Mr. and
Bryan of Lincoln Park,
th!• nephew of Mrs.
Ratti of Michigan.

Elson
Athens,
at O'Blenness

•

Dance set

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7

\.

lis. were brought by Mr~. Pauline
Atkins. Refreshments In keeping
with St. Patrick's Day were serves
by Mrs Radekin assisted by Denise
Ford. Others allending were Mrs.
Viiglnia Nelson. ·Mrs. Rife . Mrs.
Lihda Diehl, and Mrs. Neva
Nicholson. Mrs. Stello Atkins won
the hostess gift..

J

April 7, and the Meigs Board of
Elections office will be open from 9
a.m. to 9 p.m. that day tor the
convenience of all last minute
registrations.

'
\

Members named their .~ ,.ri t e
spring flower for roll ca ll al the
~nt meeting of the Star Garden
Club held at the rome of Mrs.
Wanetta Radekin.
Miss Ruby Diehl presided at the
meeting with Mrs. Stella Atkins,
program chairman, introduci ng
the topics, "I Count My Interest in
Flower Gardens to Cmmos'' by
Mrs. Mart.ha Chapman , and
"Plants that Belong Togt&gt;l11er" by
Mrs. Anna Ogdln.
Flower arrangements of daffod·

.

. BY BOB HOEF1JCH

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

'

',\

Interest Rates Are Down! Now Is The Time
To Purchase Your OWN Home!
LOOK THIS OVER CLOSELY!

SAVE SilO

•w
UV. IM. SUITE
2 PC. I.A.

lEG. $31 9.00

S19995

.ALOT
I

OF

FROM
SCRATCH!
-

BROOKWOOD ·SECTIONAL
1,248 Sq. Feet
3 Bedrooms, 2 Full baths

.

. ·:

.

_.,.__ -

,

..

·t
NAPA AIR FILTEA

~

t

NEW 2 PC. E.A.
- . , ..
.NG RM. SUITE W11M EmA HIGH IACI(, 40 lfj(HES. NO PILlOW

~.

Meets or e•ceeds au vehiCle warranty
spee~hca lt0f15 Impr ove MPG wrlh NAPA
1"11 frlterS

NAPA'S BEST OIL
FILTERS*

2x6 SIDEWALLS ON 16 " CENTER
VINYL SIDING
.
SHINGLED ROOF
SELF STORING STORMS
CATHEDRAL CEILING IN
LA, DR , KITC HEN

WATERLESS .
HAND CLEANER

59¢

!Limit 2 cases)
'

4 Pc.
BIDIOOM

sunE

LAMP
GET ONE

Buy One Get One

FREE ,
""'

' $31 9·00

$39995 FREE

,

NAP.A

W ID(' I

i

THIS PRICE INCWDES SEniNG YOU'"OME ON A PERMANENT FOUNDATION,
HOOKING UP WAnR AND SEWER, AND FINISHING ALL TRIM ~ORIC. THE OUTSIDE
PEiiiMETQ WIU BE 8" BLOCK.
'

b .VIt'\ o ro ~rde cte .lr cr

v1$~on mtJ~ erlt~fllll) '&gt;iller

Fle,rblecon.

,. SlfUI..Iro n lor rnar•t yf)ars Ol roug t1

w ea ther

....

'

446-2962

992·2:131

162 Th ird Ave.
Gallipol is, OH

Middleport, OH

157 Walnut St.

.-.

. :

4NAPA.
' •

I

•

lnst~ntly

ora Million
'Dollar
Grand Prize
in Ohio's
Newest
Instant
Lo~ery.

Bingohio II

To make a lot of bread from
scratch, JUSt scra tch the coa ting
off your 9·square game ticket.
You'll find 4 numbers outlined by
the shape of Ohio. lf any 3
numbe rs make a row...across,
down or diagonally - you win
the amount in the prize qox
From a "free ticket" tq $75,000!

Win up to S1,000,000!
If you win and redeem a "free
ticket' at an Ohio Lpttery Sales
Agent, yo u' re automatically
entered in the Mill ion Dollar
Grand Prize Drawing . Pnzes
range from $5,000, $10,000,
$20,000, $40,000, up to

RODNEY, OHIO

.

Located Just Off Rt. 35, 6 Miles West of Holzer Medical Center,

. . .(i.

,\11 the right parts 111
"II tl~· ri!(ht p!&lt;K·es:

Win
$75,000

RODN·EY HOME CENTER

,

SAVIS2oO

THE MOTOR PARTS CO.

.

.

.

WIPER BLADES ~
~
OR REFILLS ,:;;~.iiiiiiiiiiii~iiii.
·o.

IUY ONE -

FROST FREE REFRIG ER ATOR.
DISHWASHER
'
SHOWER STALL IN MBR
QUALITY CARPET W / PAD
R11, R18. R221NSULAT;ION

This home is total electric w ith an add-on heat pump for the most effici·
ent heating and cooling system.

1 lb conta1ner Remo~es grease. g r~ mc
oil and dt!'llrom hand s QUICkIV ana
easily Contams spectal skrn condr·
Ironer Ideal lor mechanrcs
(ltmrt 2)

Sltft M1ttr••

!

1 -

after $1 00 mfr reba te Lrm11 one per
custohler 'F or cars and lrghtlruc~ s

._ With Full

Jriplo •'"'",
dtck ninor,
hlaAoanl,
4 dr. chtst.
log. IS99

\

L , ._ .. J

1, .NAPAt 1
i

$249

•(after $3.00 manulactu rer's

~~~/~

I &lt;1rv1 .' ;'

ON SALE

rebate on 12 qt. case.;
- -,, 1

.'

. . . t ""·

10-W-40 motor oil

SJ1900

;·)

(Mig. suggested lrsl prrce)

69¢qt.*
FULL SIZE

-- -\..
'

50°/o off

NAPA
MOTOR
OIL
.

..

-

r

OPEN 9·6 DAILY

.

CLOSED SUNDAY

245-5308

.
' ·1

$1,000,000. To enter. JUSt write
your name and add ress on the
back of your "free tiCket"

4,305, 770 chances to win!
Imagine - 4,305,770 chances
to win up to $75,800 instantly
and a chance to win up to $1
million in the Grand Prize Drawing . From scratch '

An Equal Opportunity Employer.

�.
"

•

,

8-The Daily &amp;ntinel

)

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The ,.._,.1 Aev~nuii ·
Shoring Fln111clng Roport
Form 011·1 lin 'IN' .,ding
Doconiller 31, .1981, hot.
~ completld .,d II ovoil·
able lor public lnopoctlon 11
tho Melgo County Audltor'o
Office from 8:30 to 4 :30.
Mondey lj\ru Fridoy.
Willlom R. Wlckllno
M,olgo'County Auditor
(4)3, 1tc

.

Public Notice

.,.

Lk:enn, and

·J

. PUBLIC ·NOTICE
COUNTY: MEIGS
The !allowing wore recol·
vld/preporld by tho Ohio
Envlronmelilll -' Protocllon
Agency (OEPA) loot
Elloctivo dotes o1 final octionl and iMUIROI dllt .. of
Propoaed ectlon1 are •teted .
final , ICtipna. '* may ' bl
oppnled, In writing, wllltin
30 doyo of the dolo oltltlo
notice, to I he Env~onm111111
Boord ol Reviow. Rm. 101,
260 E. Town St:. Columbuo,
OH., 43216. Notice ol ony
appeal sholl bo filed with tho
director within. 3 doyo, Propotld ocllono will become
flnol unleu 1 written ldjudi·
cation hearing requeat 11
oubmillod wit~ln 30 deyo ol
the i11uence . date; or the
director revlsea/withdrewl
the propoold octlon, Any
person may a~bmit commenta and/ or requ11t a
meeting regarding any non·
final action within 30 d•v•
of the dele Indicated. "Ac·

-k.

NEW SALESMAN- J. R. (Jim) Pleroe has joined
the sales slalf of Pat HW Fonl, Inc. 461 S. Third Ave.,

Middleport. He was fonnerly sales manager at Bert
WoHe Ford In Charleston, W.Va.

Gov. Wallace calls it quits
MON'n.&gt;OMERY, Ala. (UPII Gov. George C. WaUace, a onetime
~alionlsl whose presidential
dreams were shattered by a
.would-be assassin's bullet, has
, ended an Alabama political career
lila 1 spaMed three tumultuous
decades.
"I have climbed my lasl political
mountain," WaUace said Wednesday. "I must pass tbe rope and the
pick 10 anolher ·climber and say
'cllinb on, climb on to higher
helghls, climb on unlil you reach
the peak."
Wllh lhose words, Wallace, 66,
confirmed wlla I most had anticipated ;;- he would not srek a fifth
term as governor.
Black leaders conceded that
Wallace, who vowed "segregation
forever" In his 1963 inaugural
speech, was a changed man apd
speculated " history will treal him
respectfully ."
In lhe packed HouseofRepresentalives chamber where Wallace
began and ended his political
career, he was hailed as "the
greatest politician the South has
ever known."
Wallace, who was paralyzed and
wracked by chronic pain from a
1972 assassination atll'mpt, said
thai "as I grow older, the effects or
my problem may become more
ootlceable .
''I must realize as Peter the
Great did that It's time to lay aside
that which can never return."
After an early Olrtatlon wllh the
While House In 1964, Wallace
launched a Southern· based thli'Q .
party candidacy thai drew 10
million voles and swept five slates ·
In 1968.
He rejoined the Democratic
Party and had won St'Veral )J'imar·
1es as the candldateol middle-class
whites and opponenl of busing to
lnti&gt;grate classrooms when he was
shot by Arthur Bremmer In a
Maryland soopplng mall.
Wallace ran again In 1976, but the
fire was gone. Times had changed
and he oo longer brought crowds to
their fet&gt;l with blasts at federal
judges, bureaucrats and " pointyheaded liberals."
ln 1982, Wallace won his fourth
term as Alabama's govermr by
convincing blacks he was no longer
the fiery segregationist who
blocked lhe rntranre to t!F Unlver·
sll)::.ol Alabama to prevent Integralion and later ordered state troopers to attack civil rights marchers

past. But he's changed, just like a
'lot of other Southerners have
changed."
•
Wallace was first e)e(:ted goveroor in 1962 as an avowed segrega·
llonlst. He successfully ran his wile,

tion". •• used above dotl
not include receipt of a verifled comploint. lloignlficant
publk: lnterelt exittt, a public meeting moy bo hold. At

reverifiedincluding
complaint•.
flr:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::==:;i tooe;ptanyofaction,

iWe'reHere
To Help
• Preacriptions filled
• Over·the-oounter drugs
• Health and beauty aida

• Cosmet1ca and perfumes
·, Sickroom; surgical needs
• Vitamine and diet aida.

Pharmacists Who

Ca.re About You

VILLAGE
PHARMACY
...

.,., perton may obtain notice of further actions, and
additional information. Unleu othlrwiae provided in
notieea of partk;ular acttona.
ell communications shall be
10nt to:
Hooriilg Clertt.
OEPA. P. 0 . Bo• 1049 . Columbua, OH . 43218. Ph .
(6,14) 468-6037. ConouH
ORC Chop. 3745 end QAC
Chapo . 3745-47 ond 37466 f9r ofequirements.
Final iuuance of certification:
Huntington Diatrict Corp'
of Engineers; t..!Minon, Le-

tart, Olivo , Twps., Meigs
County, Oh. Ellective deta:
Morch 28, 1988.
Thil final action not prec·
eded by p-opoaed ICtion and
io oppeoloblo to EBR. Per·
taint to 401 Certification,
Gr•nt. Pertolno to Public
NOtice No ..JH188 · 13 . Aloo
Saliabury ani:l Sutton Twpa.
(4)3. 1tc

.

I

I-~·

I.

:;.-_

...
'

t!

- ·-,'

~· -

.

.

I 1\

'

~

.

'

, &gt;t; nil(~ 1

Rocrntlon ............ 19.829
Mlocelloneouo...... ,.. 84.81 5
TOTAL DISBUSE·
MENTS ......... .. 1,730.021

Exc. Rcptl . Over
(Under) Dlob . ..... ... 130, 7921
QTHER FINANCING
SOURCES(UIIo):-

Operating Tranafers.
ln .......... .. ......... .... 56,288
Operating Transfers ·
Out .. .. ................. . 64, 141
Advances-Out
Not Ropold ....... .. ... 2,229
Othor Financing
Sourcoo ............... 98,329

Recreatiaon ...... ... .19 .829

be.

RESIDENTIAL, COMMERCIAL
lo INDUSTRIAL
(Ciu1ttlod Electrld.OI

DO" RDSI, Owner

949-2493

R~plo./ Soun:es

Home 843-~340
"112/ 'll/1 mo.

Ovor (Undorl Diob.
and Other U~to ..... (79,fl681
Fund C~oh'llalonoo .
Jon . t , '86 .......... .427.982
F'oiod Cooh Bolonco
Doc. 31. '86 ...... .. 348,840
. R,s, for ~nc~mb .
Doc. 3t, '86 . ,,..,..,.. .. 14.868 ·
Total Treuury
Bolo nee ......... .'.t ,268,038
Leso Outot .......... (166.358) ·
TOTAL Bjll. -. .... 1, 100,1182

Fund Cuh Balance

Auesaed
Voluotlon ..... 190,132,338
lnoid 0 10. Mill .... .. ....... 4.30
Oulllde 10 1\f)ll .. ........ 8,10
Ell. Pop ......., .... .. ... 23,841
Fed. Conouo .Pop .....23;841
~ MARCH 28, 1885
I ctr1}1v .lha following roport to tlit correct end true,
to the beat of my knowledgo:
'( · Williom R. Wlcklino,
Moigo County Auditor
P. 0 . Box &amp;61
· Pomeroy , Ohio 45789
(4) 3·, Itt

63

Phormoc y
l&lt;enn•th Mc::Culklugh, R.Ph.

I
~

M1in
,

Fri1ndly Sl r.tk• •
OpW~ Nl!ltlll tll 9

,

Pomi'IO'I'. Oh

·-----------------"""

CLUit ~
LAMB &amp; PIG SALE

Sizes

6'x6'
Up to 24'x36'
from

"lnsulate,d Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Oh.
Ph. 614·843·5191
Racine,

SEUING '
COINS, GOlD &amp; SILVIA
· WHOUSAIE 14lT.
JEWElRY

PH. 985-3937
AFTER 5 P.M.
4/

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On March 17, 1986, in

APRIL 13-3:00. P.M.
PERRY COUNTY FAIRGRQUND.S, NEW LEXINGTON

the Meigs County

COnERMAN SUFFOLK'S

1984: GRAND CH. MKT . LAMB
,.
REG . CH . MKT. LAMB
. &lt;'GRAND CH. PAIR OF .LAMBS
REG . CH . PAIR OF LAMBS .

mo.

CARPENTER
SERVICE
-

Addona and remodeling
Roofing and gutter work
Concrete work
Plumbing and electrical
work
{Free Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Pr~_.bate

Judge
Lena K. Nenelroad, Clerk

1986: GRAND CH. LAMB
GRAND CH. PAIR OF LAMBS
GRAND CH. RAM
GRAND CH. EWE
REG . CH . EWE
REG. CH. MKT. HOG

'

YOUNG'S

Probate

Court, Case NO. 2!L089 ,
Robert A. Winn, 2740 Crone
Rood. Xenia. Ohio 463866815. was appointed Execu·
tor of the et~tate of Clara K
Walla, deceased, late of 575
Broadway Street, Middle·
port. Ohio . '46780 .
·. Robert E. Buck .

WE SOLO THE FOLLOWl'ftG FOR THE MEIGS
COUNTY FAIR: -

992·b21S or 992-7314

13120, 27; (4 13 ,~tc

Pomeroy, Ohio

11-8-llc

2 FT. LONG IRON.
RADIATOR , BRASS ,
COPPER , CAST • .
SHEET ALUM .

RIDER
SALVAGE

April 4, 1984.
He still is remem bered by all who loved
him.
His parents, Ayward
and Mae Jones; sisters
and 6rothers, sons &amp;
one da~th!Br,
nieces &amp; nephews .

..

BUYING
SHORT STEEL

In Memoriam

who passed away

54

Misc. Merchandise

St. Rt. 124, Pomeroy
PH. 992-5468
HOURS:

F., All

y,.,

ftl~tl•l

WANT THE BEST
FERTILIZER AT
THE LOWEST
PRICES?

&amp;...,.

·PLUS: Offiu Suppli11 &amp;
furnitura, Wedding

and Graduotian
Statlonll"y, Magnetic
Signs, Rubbar !Iampo,
Business Forms,
Copy Sarvictl, El&lt;.

lang

Bottom, Ohio

PH. 949-2649

Jlarts • Stni11
949-2969 '
fwlllil6111~

(Perts included )

47169 Eagle Ridge Rd .

-~

VINYl &amp; AWMINUM
Cqmplete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Worked in home area
20 years
"Free Estimetes"
COIII~T:

CAU

Ph. (6141 843-S42S

z

NOW$6~599

•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freenrs

....7 % .· A.P.R.
'

Flnanclng

Now Available
On AII .Renaults

..

COMMERCIAl • RESIDENTIAL
-FREE ESTIMAltS-

.,.9.

PAT HILL FORO.:

$PECIAIIZING IN 1¥/N()OW I. DOOR REPIACEME/fT

3111 / ttn
~,

j

COMPANY

. Spring &amp;

·

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

F~nanel.,tf

Now ·Avctllable
·On Ali
·

TRIPlE PANE THERMAL BARRIER DElUXE TilT·
SASH, EASY ClEAN REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

Ntw

location:

1bl North .Second
llliddloporl, Ohio 45760

~·_:_: .

Monogtr living 0'1-'rtrnilll
OUIIIDI IIORAGE lYAilAill

446-8592

Local Service

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Here

IUIINII! PHON!
(6141 99l-6l50
RIIIJENCI PHON!

SMAU ANIMAL HOUIS

1b-11:30 ..
LAIGE ANIMAL &amp;
SUIGEIT IY APPf.

Soturdcy

PH. 304-67 5·244 f

.

AUCTIONEER: Rid&lt;

p.,...,

773-5785

IN1rt mJl l~(blt for accidents or' b..~ 11 pmperty l Lmch

'·
I•

Kanaugo, Ohio

PH. 949-280 I or 949-2860 Day or Nlaht
110 !UIIIIY UllS
'l-6-lln

l-12· 1 mo .

.,

RE-OPENING MARCH 17th

WE ARE YOUR SAlES

JO'S
Gin SHOP
Rt. 124, in

HEADQUARTERS FOR

W. E. (Bill) SNOUFF
FEDERAL-STATE
INCOME TAX RETURNS

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Mon .-W..t .• rhun. 3-l pm
ru11. 6:30-1; Fri. t·2 pm

Uc. No, 6686
!11100, W. Yo.
Administrator Cecilia Ha"is

'I'

RENT IY MONTH
5~10, IOxlO, 10x24

=!j~1~~~~~~!~~~

We C1rry Fishing Supplle•

Paul t Shatkey, DVM
PT. PLEASANt. OFFICE
'
305 Jackson Avt.

NITtOUt ll&gt;andelier cillamp w~h tiftany lypeshade,Aladdin lamp, rouoo
Iailie. painled Victorian wash stand, ook ruffel, ()epress~n chest Hi
Boy chesl w~h mirror, oak L.. boy dresser wlh serpenline lront,'
ma~ny chest oo chesl 3 piece Water1all bedroom suie. oak litrary
lallit. jJiinled oak ftalw!H cupbo.-d, painto:l oak Mchen cabinet laney
organ, pak morris char. nice press' back rocker, oak llrnp table. wi:ker
child's lOCker, ligh cl&gt;air, 1 kraul iwltetS, 2 churn~ ~one jars, C&lt;!'koo
Clock, ~d cklck, co~ grinders, dd toys carbilelam(JS. dd texloookl. 35
pieces!!! Blue l'lillow, !~laving mu(l!, vases, la~ e glassware of aH kind!. Od
lools. ~eel ~ap~ dd .-my IXlilorm, &lt;l!k s~igh lEd. o&gt;d much more

TERMS: Cas- or cflock with I.D.

STOIAGE' UNilS

$34 9 ln&lt;ludeo Complete IMicdlotiia~

107 Sycamor• St., Pe•roy, Dh.
PHONE 992·7075
HOURS: 9 :00 A.M .- 5:00P. M .. Mon . thru Sat.
Evenings &amp; Sunday By Appointment

'

1-15-tfn

BEND AREA CALL
Ripl1y Office
For Hours

t!

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING ·
D()ZER , BACKHOE.'
TRENCHER, SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER,
GAS &amp; SEWER LINES.
RECIAMAnON, PONDS,
SPRING DEVELOPMENT,
HOME FOOTERS,
DUMP' TRUCK STONE
&amp; DIRT ·

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. !192-7201 '

r

Comer of 141 and Debby Or . ~
miln out 141 . Houuhold
~oods . Sat 9-3.
Saturday, 9·1 298 Oebby Or.
End ttbles, milt! cant, Avon
bottles, H~l\y Hobby kitch en set,
loys. c\otfi'et, etc.

Thufl , Fri &amp; Sat. Rf141 , 1 mile
beyond centenary. Everyth in g
Mils except stove and refrig .
Workm&amp;n Residen ce
Thurs. Fri &amp; Sat. Rt 141 , 1 mile
beyond centenary . to.fldtemp
4 Farriily Westbrook Subdivision
If• rtlile out Ruleville Rd. Friday &amp;
Saturday, 9 ·5. Clot hing , misc .
items

Moving Sale, house lor •alai By
ownerJ Furnitur e . clothing ,
mens, women• . girls aire-2 to 6
aome baby , di shes. toys , etc.
Tues. 4 · 1 to 4·5·86 . 8 :00 to
7.00 turn oft Rt. 7 to Milt Creek
Ad y, mile• red houJe on left.

····· P'oiiierov·· .. ..
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

•ZENITH

•SYLVANIA
.
•!PEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIG£RArOR
•SATELUTE SALES &amp; SERVICE

We HuJ A hll TiMe
Shop llchnlelln

BENNETT'S MOBILE HOME
. HEATING &amp; COOLING .

* * #1 * *

By offering a complete line of mobile home
heeling and cooling products for tho tri·
county area .
, 'FURNACES
' HEAT PUMPS
' I&lt;IR CONDITIONERS
'COMPLETE.LINE OF REPLI&lt;CEMENT PARTS
"FACTORY AUTHORIZED &amp; TRAINED
SERVICE CENTER
FREE ESTIMATES
24 HR . EMERGENCY SERVICE

CALL (6141 446-9416

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHESIIR-;985 -3307
'

4/ 1/ tln

.,,..

- ' - -- - -- - - -lc ThrM family yard ule. Fr~ay
April 4th only from 9:00 to 5 :00 .
We have boat get tanks. tire1,
clothes, and lots of good ilema.
One mile South of Portl&amp;nd at
Bruce Mt"llelveys.

3 family . Men• . women's. child ·
rens and bab't' cloths. Booka.
knieknacks . toys. high ch&amp;ir , ect.
260 Sycamore in Mtddleport.
1crou from Imperial Electric.
April 4th &amp; lith from 11 :00 to
6,00 .
Moving sale . Household . mlac.
items. clothing . gu and electric
ranges. Friday, Saturday. Depot
St .. Rutland .·
Rummage and bake sale . Epit·
copal Parish Hou se. bnide City
Ht\1 . Thursday and Frld&amp;y. 9:00 400 .
Third and Cherry St., Syracuu.
Baby items, priced to go. Thurs·
d1y. Friday, and Saturday.
6 tamily yard ule . Clo thing
!mens. womens . chlldreos. in·
fants, ell tizetl . a lo t like new .
Fumiturt, many mi1e . items.
April 4th aod 5th. 9:00 IO 5 :00.
At . 7 , across from Memorial
Gtrden• .
4 fam ity Yar.d aale . Saturday,
April 5 . · 9 :00 -5:00 . Rein or
shine . Cloth irw. org1n1. 1tereos.
Comer N . 3rd Ave . and Rutll nd
St. Mlddlepon .

Basement and yard ..!e. Thun·

and

.

24 .

.......Pt.Piiiiisar.f ···-&amp; Vicinity
Moving Sale Thund•y. Furn i·
ture . c loth ing , household itenu.
168 Mayo Dr ive. NewH1ven . 8 ·
1.

Announcemc nls
Announcements

v. mile from Collage Hill Church.

SWEEPER and s ewing machine
repa ir. parts. •nd tupplittt . Ptck
up 1nd tHiivery, Oevit Vacuum
Cllflnlf. one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd . Call 614 ·
U6-0294 .
Sing les innoduct ions, free appli ·
cation, Peraon•l Toudt Introduc tion , P. 0 . 8011. 6536 . Cl\erlu·
ton . W . Va . 26302 .
1 -304 -727 -8434 .

Giveaway

Yard S1fa all
Cheatnut St.

DundH Now Roplacomont Porit For TNcl&lt;l And Coro
(Sollol'!&lt;'lo~ guo'Of1tood)
~-

6

WMik .

1837

Tree to giveaway in town , e11y
tcctll. Call614 · 445· 3870 .
Aeglstltled Golden Retrlever :
femala, no papera. Good witt!
children. Call ti1" · 387 -0312 .
8 hbrltdor retrievers . rh o.
roughbredt . Call 614 -448 1290.
Free firewood lo be cut and
hauled awey . 304-675· 3669 .
dog to

Gelllpolla ferry; Fri and Sat,
Home lnterMJr, Tupptrware, Clo thtng. Houae Hold Furniture.

2 f1mlty Thura and Fri. 8:00 to
6:00 , 211• Mt. VemonA've. lo11
baby items , ~las • w•re , furni t ure. ale .

9

~.

Federal, State and Civil Service
Jobs now av11ilable in your arga
CALL {refundable! 1 -518-4&amp;9 ·
3546 tor current Federal lilt.
M1ture lady to live in with eld~rtv
wo fnllln. Room, board and I I·
lary . 304 ·676 · 1578 .
W ~TEQ : Prior Military Service
Membets. The A.1rmy Gu•rd
naeds your elq)erlence. Join now
tor a part -time job with benefit•
like retirement ahd educational ·
aui1tance. 304 -675 -3950 or ·
1·800-642 -38t9 .
lady to live in w ltf'l elderly man ,
light housekeeping and cooking.
Referencea requ,(red . For more
information call304 · 675 · 3754 .
875 · 3696. 87.5 ·1 628 or 304·
882 -3272.

6.

Conacientoua 23 veer old Chris·
male w ishes to rent 1
sleeping room in A+o Grande
erea. Reference• upon requnt.
Call 614· 446 ·3303 after 8Pft1
or write P.O. Box 309. Rio
Grande. Oh, 46874 .
tian

.Vacancy for man or woman,
privete h om~~, hOt meals . TV .lge .
room, beth , reasonable . Call
614 · 256 · 8509.
Have room and board for efderty.
Reuonab le . Call 61,· 992 ·
6022 .

18

WANTED TO BUV used wood &amp;
coal heatlt'l. SWAIN'S FUR Nl ·
TUAE. '3rd. II Olive St. Gallipo·
li•. Call 61• -448·3 159 .
TOP CASH ptkt for· '83 model
and newer uaed cara. Smith
Buick-Pontltc. 1911 E11tem
Ave., Gallipolis . Call 814 -448·
2282 .

Painting, interio, and exterior. ·
Reasonab le rates . Call614 ·448·
7212 after 5:00PM.
Tree . Work Wtnted . Pruning, .
toppmg , removal•; nedgts &amp;
bushes trimmed . Cell 814 ·«6·
8076

I

'&amp;Vicinity

.

701 Cherry St .. Vinton . March
3rd, .• th, 6th . Many entlquea.
c~l!ec:tlblea . Clothes. Lqt•
ofjltnk.
2 houaes on Kriner Ad ., 2 / 10
milt , oiq pi•no. 3 wh"l•r. car
1Nt, dishwaahar. othar bM)v
\tema. ate . Thure, Fri . 9 ·7.

Of ~4 · 676 - ·853 .

Dependable Ytrd Service ,
lawns mowed , general y1rd
work , light hauling , manuel
lib or. Bill Slaek 61•·992 -2289 .
Dependable men would lilt• to
("'lW large lawns. Celt 81 4·992 ·
5276
Will do any llwn maintenance . .
mowing , trimming , yard cl••n·
up, etc. pa inting. inside or out
1nd minor repairs, misc. odd
jobs . Call304 -876 · 7991 .
Shut In, need help ? Available for
house cleanin~ . mile worlt in· •
eluding cooking . 304 ·876 1276.
Ltwn mowing . quality dependable \Wrk, low ratn. cell 814448 -0884 t~~enlngl .

Financial
21

Business
Oppo11unity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH ING cp . recommend• that you
do bu1ine11 with people you
know , end NOT to •end money
thro ugh the mill until you hewo
investigated fhe o Hering..

•.

Will place ctgarene machln••·
Good comm l ~tlor\1 . Call 304·
773-666t .
' '

22

Money to loan

HOME OWNERS -Refin1nce 10
low tlxed rat•. Uao oqulty for any
llUrpon. Leldar Mor1g1ge Co ..
814-592 -3061 .

Professional
Servifi!S

PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR ,
rftd isCO\Iftf''(Our piano 'a beautiful
tone. call today, Wards Key.
board , 304 ·675 ·6500 or 176.
3824.
SHELTON POOl CO. Swimming Pool Stitt · Installations .
Repairs . Your friendlv pool
builders . Buff•lo, W. VI . 30" 937· 2475 .

Us.t Trailara. Call 614 -446·
Ot75 .

Real Eslale

Buying d1 ity gold , tilver coins .
rings, )ewelrt. sterllng ware, old
coin• . large currency. Top ptl·
caa. Ed. Burk~H Barber Shop,
2nd . Ave. Middleport. Oh. 614 992 -!3476.

-;:;-;::;-:=:-::-=""-:-~

E111111oymr.nl
St!rVICI!S

...... 'Giilllpous--- ···· ..

Wanted to Do

Employment wanted . Heavy or
light house cleaning, weetcty Of
biweekly. Call 6U · 245 ·5028 .

23
We pay c11h for late model c lean
used- cart.
Jim Mink Chev.·Oids Inc .
Bill Gene Johnaon
6t4-U6 -3672

lost and Found

Yard Sale

Situations
Wa'lted

Wanted To Buy

~

7

't'our COMplett "u10 tocly llepolr C~t•r
lody fill.,.. , Sond~ . Pollthlng Compound• . Palrlll
UrtthoM "~""· (Solei Und.,. Who le10l• fo 411)

Et•v Auembly Workl 1600 .00
,per 100 . Guaranteed paymeht.
No e.perience -ND ules . Detail•
send tetf -lddrelltd stamped
envelOpe: Elan Vltal -715, 3418
Eflte!prise Ad , Ft. Pierc.. Fl:
33 .. 82 .

I
bed•·
preed•. jewelry, ctothta and
meny 01htr i tem s for tale.

Yard Sale. lhufland Fri. 2218
Jaffarson Ave, plantt, dollt,
good cloth ing . biltt, b1by clo thing, much more.

FOUND : Cuta golden brown
puppy. Front of Galli• Academy
High School . Blue collar. no
t~g• . Ce1181• ·4·46 ·"63.

110'/, Weot Main Streel, Pomeroy Ohio.
Phone 614-992-6778

334~2 .

Dl Dtlf

4
INTERTHERM &amp; COLEMAN

Auembly Workl •eoo.oo
per 100 Guaranteed payrntnt.
No eJll)arienca·no ulea . Dete\lf .
tend telf-eddrnttd 11amped
envelope: Elan Vlttl-6847 3418
Ente!prite Ad . Ft . Pierce. Fl

12

9 family. First of vear. April 3rd
end 4th . Truck topper, bowling
ball, dormitort refrigerator , 4
~rom dreues. weights and
bench , exerci11 bike , clothot,
mite . and more. "8320 Eagle
Ridge Road . Turn &amp;t Memo ry
Gard ens from AI . 7 . ~ a 5 miles .
II rein, will be held following 2

·

NHCI 8 Good People
No ellparionce ntcn.. ry. Mutt
be •nileble for lmm~la'te fin\·
piOyment. Houri 1PM ti\1DPM.
•1.200 per month . C1ll Thura or
Frl 10AM to 3PM for PflfiOnal
in11rview 814-4ot16 -74•1 .

Ea~v

4 families . Fri &amp; Sat. Guns,
lawnmower, bicy cle , wood
burner. to ols, curtains. sheets.
btd SQreedt. children &amp; adult
clnn clothing . South on Rt . 7
behind Clay SchooL
·

AND SERVICE

AV.ON Sell A110n itbrt up t.e
FREE . Limit~ t ime. Call 814 ·
448 -3358 , •

Govemment Jobt. •18 .040 ·
•59.230 · yr . Now Hiring . Cell
805 -887· 6000 Ert. R-9806 fa.
cur~ent ledertllilt.

INH!fTH£PM

oa~

773-11430

•

r Speelalc

3

TOWN &amp; COUNTIY
VETERINARIAN
CUNIC

HOUSDIOlll 11 C.f ode by sj,de relrig~rator, 36" Magic Chel gas range,
R.CA colorlV. 1!iece IN~ng room suile, dinettes~ wilh 6 cl&gt;aiiS. Warm
M or~ng IllS crculalin{11!ater 50,1XXl Bl U. and much more

'"f. . .. .

NEED STORAGE
SPACE?
CONVENIENT

11?8 /tln

Lpcaled in Clifton. W.Yo. White hOolse on hill behind the
Office.

olo··
7CI A.P.R,

PH. 949-280 I
or 949-28110
No Sunday Calls

PHONE (614) 992-5009

NOTE : First quali1y merchandise from factory
NEW POnEIY &amp; IIID lA TNS AlE IN
Kissing cement yard dolls. cement animals , clay
red fire hydrant w~h ~og. flower pots of all kinds
(some with stands}; Gifts of dishes, figurines ,
lamps. clocks, brass , vasoo, toys .
SHOP IIEIE &amp; SAVEl

Middleport, Ohio
1 - 13-tfc

F.ITATI' nr \IAR/f " E S \ITr/1.

New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

RADlATOR
SERVICE-

10:00 a.m.

•

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Middleport, Ohio

Come in and register for
FREE BIRDBATH to be given away

· 3-3-' 86-1 mo.

April 5, 1986

"~

*VINYL SIDING
*AlUMINUM SIDING
'BlOWN IN
INSULATION

Syracuse

992-3194

Saturday,

Only Taxu And Title Are Extra.

/ 1/ 86/ lln

PAINTING EXTERIOR

ES&lt;imates

•Washers •Oiahwashers

ESTIMATES"

JAMES KEE$EE
PH. 992-2772

GENERAL REPAIR
REMODELING

317 N. Second

985-3561

for Service Can

ESTATE
AUCTION

Delivered

•Replacemenl Window s
•New Roofing

" Filii

.

Yard Sale. Friday &amp; Saturdey.
9 ·5. 333 Third . Ave .

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

BANKS CONSTRUCTION CO.

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
All Meku

~3011

INSULATION

3-12·1 mo.

(!Ul OUT FOR FUTURE USII

factory Choke
Gauge- Shotguns Only

•Storm Windows

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

INTERIOR

miles out 141

-

J&amp;L BLOWN

Hn
BUILDING

Th~sday. Frjdey , Saturday. " 'h

4 Fam ily some chiktrl'!ns clo ·
thing , di1h11 , etC . Out 160 at
Evergreen. blu e S. wh ite trailer .
Friday. 9 ·5 . if r•in cancelled .

SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
12

1089 $econd Ave .. Tnu~s. Fri.
9·5. Good clean ctothing -111
tins . Somalargt: sl:res and ~"f.
druaes size 7. 0 ther: mis .
itema. Riin or shine.

•Insulation
•Storm Doors

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

(6141 992 -7754,

•Stock # 621"6

IVERY

3-24-t1c

1· 3-th

5-POINTS AREA

992-2181

•Radial tires
•Bucket seats

Bashan Building

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

uJ
::c

and ·

POMEROY .

•AM/FM radio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR·

fA CINE
FIRE DEPT.

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

FarM E4ulp111ent
Parte &amp; Servtee

ROCK SPRINGS

992-2196

'

GUN SHOOT

1-IJ -IIn

Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
• Dealer

NOW SERVING THE

MGM Farm City
i

Roger Hysell
Garage
Alto Trantllltrlon
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

$1_9.95
Turn lett at Meigs Memorv
Gerdens. 3 mile ot1 Rt . 7 on
the rigt1t

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

10-8-tfc

II. i 24,Pomoroy Ohio

01111

PUSH MOWER TUNEUP

SALES .&amp; SERVICE

MANLEY'S
TRASH SERVICE

BULK OR BAGGED

8

992·5875 Or
742-3195

11 -14-lfc

BOGGS

EUGENE LONG

DENNY CONGO
WILLHAUL
JUST CAUl
992-3410 ,
LIMESTONE '
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

Call:

10.4 Mulbtrry Av., Pamlfoy

Help Wanted

&amp; Vicinity

Residential &amp; Commercial .

155 Mill II., Middltporl

11

)

FOR ALL YOUR
WIRING NEEDS

Oil Chango. Sharpen Blad..

4·5·UC'

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

BLENDED TO
YOUR NEEDS
PLENTY OF
SPREADERS

N111it

'

PARTS and SERVICE

•

NowS8,899

' ·-

·· ... GiillTpo1is..........

MILLER
ELECTRIC ·
SERVICE

PIINT SHOf

CIRCLE
·CONTRACTING

JEFF CIICLE, Sl.

GOlD, StiVER &amp;
Cli!RINCY &amp; RARl COINS

Estate of Clara K. Wells,
deceaaed . Case No . 26 ,089 .

Ingels
Furniture
"4J~,~.....
.
106 M. SECOND .
.
r.s-4;~
:·MIDDLIPORT

UTILITY BUILDINGS

l Free Estimates)

BUYING

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

50°/o
OFF
---------------------------------------------•

12x16'

Contrading Service

CLC COINS

COIUMIU! nm IIIOITGAGI CO.

•Rust proofing

ALL 14K FANCY BANDS

From

and

Installation Ava,ilablt

(onv~t~tionol

Vi&lt;kit Hauldrtn- 446-«147

1986..RENAULT ALLIAN

It ·

Sizes Start

THE QUlLITJ

Complete Building

"Free Estimates"

locrts Avoiloblt. Pur&lt;hou or l•li·
nanct.

•Front whee~drive
•4 speed trans.
•Tinted glass

PH. 992 ·19155

c•

I

livestock ·

•Tmted glass _
•AM radio ,
•Radial tires .

5

7U-2027

91h'lo FIXED RATE

On V• &amp; FHA. low

•Sedan

ChariM Rlff1•. A.Ph.

Ron•td H.nmo. A. Ph.
Moo . thru S1t 8:00 • .m. to 9 p.m.
Suo1dl't' 10:30 1012 :30 •nd 6 to 9 p.m.

PR ESCR IPTIO NS
E.

•2 door

After

Public Notice

Jeep Comllnche

SWISHER LOHSE

FENCE COMI' ANY
PH. 992·6931

lOW INIIRI!T RIFINANCING
Home Mortgage locrtt

'
--

--•Automatic trans.
•Power steering
•'X' Package
•Long bed
•Rear steP bumper

-

3-13-lmo.

ALL STEH &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

2-20-lln

•4 cyl. engine

·- -------...

r

Ph. Before April 15
1· 705-672-3118 .
Ph. After llcly 1
1·705·647·8533

2-17-86-lln

1986 JEEP COMANCHE : 2W~- ·

To Those 60 cind Over On All
Prescriptions

.... 211, .
North Cobalt, Oetarie
POJ 110 CANADA

949-2263
or 949-2969

2

DISCO~NT

MAIDEN BAY CAMP

Gutters
Downspoll1s
Gutter· Cleaning
Painting ·
FREE ESTIMATES

•Carpeting

10°/o

For mort lnformltion wrht:

NEW- IEPliR

Exc . Rcpta/ Sourcea

(Under) Diob.......... .... (649)
NON-OPERATING
REV. (Exp).: E.Ilc. Rcpt1 ./Sourcea
Ovor (Under) Diob. ond
Other Uoos ................(649)

Northl!lst Ontario

l · ll · ( ...

Uoeo ............... .... 106,937
TOTAL OTHER FIN .
SOURCES ............ (8,8821

EKe. Rcpta. Over

In

. ROOFING

Other Financing

Ovor (Under) Dib. ond
Other Uooo.. .... .. ... (39,4741
Fund C11h &amp;.lance
Jon. 1. '86 .... ....... 128,264
Fund Cooh Bolonco
Doc. 31. "86 .... ...... 88,780
Rea. for Encttmb .
Doc. 31 .' 1986 ....... 11 ,668
PROPRIETARY FUNDS
OPER . RCPTS.:Chorgeo lor ·
Sorvicoo .. .. , .. , , ,....... 70.672
TOTAL
.
RECEIPTS .. .......... 70 .672
OPER . DISB.: Pero. Serv .............. 85, 191
Controcl Serv ......... .. 8, 130
TOTAL DIS BURSE·
MENTS ................ 7t .32t

SPRING BEAR
·HUN11NG &amp; FISHING

Howard L Writeiel

CURTIS JONES

•

·~

Conservation·

Advance1-0UC .._
Not Repold , ........... 2. 229
Oiher Financing
$oJ!rdo .. : .. : ...... 1,090,227
'Other Fin,enclng
u...... ::-. .. ,, .. ....... 287 •.&amp;80
TOTAL OTHER FIN.
.SOURCES ......... 141,842) ·

In memory of

'

~A- 4

Rl!"'iPtl ,, .. ... ...... 183,478
AIOthor
Rovonuo ............. 282, 793
TOTAL
RECE IPTS ....... 1.699,229
EXPENDITURES/
.
DISBURSEMENTS:
Loglolot!ve end
. ,..
Executive .,, ... :,.... 818.984
Judicio I .. ,, ............ 327.441
Public Solely ........ 286.706
Public Worko ........ .. 34.943
HeoHh ...... , ........... ... .... 194
Humon Servlceo ...148,329

Oil fitl4 Strvi&lt;t,
Landscaping. lol,lmtnh
lond Clearing. Ponds, Septic .
Srstems, Htawy Haulint.
Ston• I Gravel. Hauling
llt&lt;lrkal Work

UKE
DIAMONDS

OHIO WELF~RE
COMPENSATION
GENERAL RELIEF
UNITED MINE WORKERS
BOILERMAKERS
PAID
P.C.S.
MEDIMET

2mm $19 95
_,
s·mm $5995

•?

lnter~vern mental

Jon. 1.'85 ................ .5,498

WEDDING B·ANDS
"-l'
/ ,*;.-;
'''··
. ' , ,,.·.
..

'

n3

lOSE EXClVA11NG
IACINE, o•o
FREE ESTIMATES

FILL PRESCRIPTIONS AND DO
THE BILLING FOR THE FOLLOWING:

MEN .&amp; WOMEN'S

, ..

Pormlto .. ,,,,, ,, .......... 4.488
Flnoo ond Forfoliluroo ......... .'....... 89,

-

W~

Hurry, While Th.ey Last.

~.;;~', w ~

·

Fund Cooh lolonco '
Doc. :n, ·ail .. ,.,.,. .,. ... 4,849
Ru. lor Encumb.
Doc. 31 , '85•,.,. .. .. ,.,. .. ,.,.3,300
AGENCY FUNDS'"'
OperatinG Transfen ·
In ,.,. .... .. ,......... 12.72&amp;,787
Oporollng Trlll1,tloro·
Out ,.,.,.,. .. .,.,,,..,.,. 13.37~. 718
Othor Flnonclng
·
Soureeo .. ,.,.,.,., .. ,,,,.,.991 ,898
Other Finencing
w.
u... .. " ,.,..,.,. .. ,.,. ...... 19 1,823
TOTAL OTHER FIN .
SOURCES,.,. •.,,.,. ... 160;324
Exc. RcpiiJSour~"'
(Under) Dlob. ond ~
Other Uooo .... ,.,. .. : .. (39,535)
Fuftd C••h Ba lance
Jon . 1, '85 ........... 284,210
Fund C••h 81lance
Doc. 31, '86 ........ 252,911
TOTALS
REVENUE RECEIPTS: Toxe~" ........... , ..... 887 ,529
Chorgeo lor
S~rvlce, ........ ........ 361 ,882
LlcenHI 1nCI
Pormill ,.,.,., ..... .. ....... ,4,488
Final and
Forloitureo .. ... ........ 89 , 773
.Intergovernmental
Recelpto .... ......... 163,478
All Other
Revonuo .. ,,.,.,,.,. ..... 282.793
TOTAL
RECEIPTS ....... 1,789.901
EXPENDITURES·
DISBURSEMENTS'legial•tive end
Exocutlvo ...... ,,,,, ..818,964 ·
Judicii I .... ,.,., .. ,.. ,.,. .. 327.44 1
Pul!llc Solely ....... . 286,708
Public Works .......... 34.943
Heollh .. ,.,. ........... ..... ..... 194
Human Sorv . ........ 148,329
Conaervetlon·

The Daily

Ohio

-·-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-,---------"T__________T"_ _ _.__ _ _ _ _T""________, _________..,

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

ln. Selma .
,• .
1'ul;kegee Mayor Joluuzy Ford, ,
black leader and founding presldenl ct the World Conference ol
Mayors, praised Wall ac~ for bowIng out.
" Hlslory will lJ? respectful to
him." Ford sa id. " He was man
enough to say he was wrong.
Tbere' s oo question ol- Wallace's

Lurleen, in 1966 because he could
not serve two oonsocutlve terms.
She died ol cancer In 19~. Wallace
was re- elected In 1970 and again in
197~
alter a constitutional
amendment.

COMBINED ANNUAL
FINANCIAL AEPPRT
FOR ntE
FISCAL YEAA.ENDED
DECEM8ER 31, 198&amp; .
''Thlolo en unoudlled Fin on·
clol Siotomonto" ·
COUNTY OF MEIGS
STATE OF OHIO
GOVT. TYPE FUNDS
REVENUE RECEIPTS:' TIXH ........... ,... .... 887,529
Chorgoolor
Servlceo ....... ...... 28 1,190

\

·Business ·Services·

Public

Public Notice

Public N otlce

.,

1986

3.1986

Ohio
•

·

.

IV .-:

Fagf

..

11

Help Wanted

Pool Manager and lift guerda
needed forM k:ldltpon Municipal
Poo l. Pick t4J lippllcationa at
m.yor' t office Monday t hru
Fridoy lAM to 4PM.

31

Homes for Sale

4 bedrool'!l houu tor ·· sell,
fireplace, ~ mi. lOuth of 011\ipo.
li•. 129 .900. Call days- 614 ·
4•6 -161 5 or nights 814-448·
1244.
2 bdr. 6 yr . homo. mint condi·
tion. Ro•tricted tubdi\lltlon. 9
miles fro m Galllpoli1 . C11t 614.
258•6200 .
7 room• &amp; blth, 1 ICrt more or
Ifill, carpeted throughout, vinyl
sldirtg $25.000 . 12 N. Mtin St. ,
Cheshire. Call 614-441· 3793. .

58 · acrft. Two· story rtttorad
home, fuel oil furn.ct, WOod·
burner. atone firepl.co . lg . biN'n,
~ralnard , milk houaa. work shop
Exp.nen~ t.male to babysit end other bulldlnga, Rurtlwater.
on• !i yeal Old and one 4 month' Beaudful ••Uin~ overlooking
okt in my home two enning• e Rtccoon CraM~ . Rt. 110 In
wtek. Mutt Mve own trtnlpOr· Ewington. Shown by eppoint·
tatlon and rwferenctt. Carta man t only, Caii814· 388-B610.
Harrison ,' 58&amp; Jay Orive, Galli•
poUt, 814 - ~8 - 1683 .
.ifaidroom house . located 3 '12
-out AI 588. t39 .000. C•ll
Manager • Aut . M1nager wttfl 614 ·256 ·8789 or 614· 2'5 &amp;•11.perienct In retllll'll"!1 m•n· 8205 ,
agomont ulary nev . Sand r•·
.,,. &amp;o t»mt T222 in c•re or the 5 rm. hOuse: Ewlngton, OH , 11},
Gallipolis D'ally Tlibun•. 82! lot . 18.500 . Call 814· 875·
Third Ave ., Gllllpolil. Otl 9489 .

"4153t .

..

..

�••

.·
•

6

LAFF-A-DAY

Home• fo ~ Sale '

31

acrea.

3

Men:h.ln r li ~e

Creek

Sch .

51

Oi1t.

Household Goods

849.000. CeO 81t-3&amp;7-723B .

..

~

Hou" for Stle or Trlde. 1 .5
ICflt MJtt to Clay School. Mtkl
off.,. Cell 114·251•8680 or
814·"1· 1&amp;11 .
3 bedroom hou... beth, utilitY
room, nlct tnd cl•n. C..

&amp;U-.WIS -3511
3607 .

Ot

S1ot-t48 ·

Star1ed remodeling 101 Gt~
Ave .. 111 tt1 nic111 large lot. good
view of river, no tuppege. ·

·
.
J

S1G.OOO. CIM 814 ·448 -0848 .
In Middlepon , 3 bedroom remo·
deled home. Air conditioned.
vinyl siding . insulated. fenced· in

.

back yard . atorage building,
c1011 to scP,oola. Show bV

appointment onty. Call 81'·
992-2012 .
1 floor home. atorm windows
and doora, eluminum aiding,

nM roof, new wiring, garege.
Good conditton. Cell 81•·992·
&amp;204 .

7 room houu in ChHt4H', Ohio.
Price rlduced. 'I'J down, , .. , like
reot for 6 yurs. Call 814 -985·
3571 .
4Hunting
bedroom
nte. .Good
andhome
goodforfishing
Can

•• nogot;otod w;th ownot. Coli
614·985·4392 .

"

.

''Would you dictate one of
your nasty letters to the
fellow who stood·me up last
night?"

1...-----====:-r:;:::::;:;:;::;;::;:;:::::::::r
35

Lots

&amp;

42

Acreage

Mobile Homes
for Rent

4 bedrooms. livin(l room . din ing

rJom , kitchen . scraened -in
porch . wash room. On 2 ltvel
lots . Fifth St. in Svracuae. Otlio.

8 acr•. 3 bllmt, 1eptic t1nk 1nd
county w1ter. Fin1ncing avllleble. C1ll 814-379-2268.

QualitY built 1 VJ story Tudor
style home on 6 wooded acre1.
10 minutes from Point pte111nt.
Salld Hill Road . 888.000.00.
304-895-3383 .

For R•nt: 50 .cr• fl1t ground.
2,200 lb. tob~~eco b••· 9 mil.. 1 ~~-~----:--­
below Golllpolio. Rt . 7. Coli 44
Apartment
8e1Woen 12 ;30 e. 7;00 PM
for Rent
614-251 ·1038 .

All' el«:tric, 3 bedroom. central
11ir.: anached gtrage. Gellipotil
ferry . 304-875-29;12 .

Nice building lot neer Holzer
M~iCIII Center, e&amp;,600. C1ll
G14· 379·2e14 .
JACKSON ESTATES APART ·
M£NTS (£qual Houaing Oppof1 ICFI Whh watlf, electricity, tunity) monthly rent ltlrtl 1t
end septic tank. On C. R. 1. e111 for 1 btdroom end t212
Sel.m Center, 10 minut11 from fOf' 2 bedroom, depollt UOO.
Mint No. 1 . 814·992-2989 .
ioCited n11r Spfing Vellty Plaza
end Foodlend, pool1nd Cable TV
1-5 Kf... plttlalty wooded lots IVIIIIbl e~ offi~ hourt II polli·
nMf approved sub·dNlllon. T.P. ble 101m to4 pmlnd7 pmto 9
end C . wet• 1nd approved rold pm MondiY·Friday, C•• 814 to •ch lot. Reeaonlbly priced. 441-27415 or 111ve mn11ge.
will t1n1nce with 10 ,.cem
down . Cell $14·985-3694.
Nicely fumlthed mobllt home,
eft. 1pt.. c.,trtl air tnd hilt in
!iO ecru. sm111 bam, tobleco city, edultl onlv. Clll 814-448·
ellot ment. mintral rightl, Nrll 0338.
•
wlter, 304 -875:3828 ,
Rtdecorattd apt., 2 bdr .. 117&amp;
" ecr•. a mllll from town. only. C1ll 304-1715 -6104 or
304-175 -5189 ottor 5;00 PM . 304-175·5388 .

Sale or rent, Nww Haven. 3
bedrooma. 2 bt ths. fireplace.
garage. S38 .500.00ore300 .00
month plus deposit. 304-273 2471 .

~

'.

APPLE GROVE . DIRECTLY
ACROSS FROM GOODYEAR
PLANT. TWO RANCHERS .
large. ..vel Iota t79, 700, utra
Iars• bridl: . feet'uring 3 blldrooms. 2 blitJu, custom 111 in
kitchen. livind room wtth wood burning f lreple:ce. eleg1nt dining
room, full unfinished basem.,t
1nd 2 cer o•~e : e&amp;9.900tot•llv remodeled •ntidt and out.
New vinyl tidil'lfl. ntw kitcf'ltn.
bath tnd utility. New c1rp11, 2
bedrooms, den 1nd offlce, llfga
cto ..tt, elltre in1ul.tK»n. outbuildinga. Mary Alice StMient,
ERA GAINER KIRTLEY 6: CO ..
REALTORS. 1011 SiJnh A,..,
Huntington, W. Va. 304-8975000 or 304-629-0672.

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES kESSEL"S QUAUTY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST, GALUPOLIS. RT 36.
PHONE 814-"8·7274 .
1972 1•h70 3 bdr. home good
condition. belt offtf, Cell 114446-7545 .

36

Real Estate
Wanted

Wanted IPPfOIIim11IIY 10 ecr•
v1cant lend within 20 min. of
H¥C. muat hwt ro.t frontlge.
pr.,.r 1t !aut Plftlelly wooded.
Coli 114· 248·1890.

41

Houses for Rent

5 Court St. 3 bdr. Kltcllen
fumilhld . no PltL e:zao mo ..
plu1 ut:Hitiel, r.rtf'tnotl • dep·
Olit. Call 814-448-4921 Of
114-"8-9180.

,I

hrgHt Nltctlon In are 12 and
14 wide• . French City Mobile

Homn, lnc.' 614-448·9340.
1984 14x70 2 bdr., 2 _)athl,
IIOVI, flfiiP~ICI, lklrting, 11or~l

buUdlng, on rented tot. • 18,600.
French City BrOkerage. 814·
.

an

Meke
Offer- 12lll0 NiM
Moon with 2 lge. lot1, Ac. bldg ..
many eitr111. 10 mil• from
G•lllpalis on Rl. 218. erutlousto
111. C1ll 11 4 -2.U -6d49 eve,
1974 Freedom s,.c:ili 12li8!S. 2
· BR , with underpinning, Ref. I
Stowe . On rented lot. On Kerr·
HO&lt;fdburg Rd . CoH 814;448·
4410 or 114-"8·2941.
1977 Holly Perk 12d0, Cit~ .
underpinning , p1rtly furnished,
••c. cond. t7.600 . Call 814245-8120.
1b&amp;O 2 bedroom, ntw carp~ .
naw furnace . underpinning.
0&amp;.800. CoH 614·288·1704 .
1980 Llberly 14•14. 2 bod·
room. unfurnished. vinyl under·
pinning lnctudtd. Mutt alii. C1H
304·773 -&amp;873.
1975 C1m.-on Mobile Homet01
Nil, 12xl0. Ctll 814-9928824 .
12d5 Shult. 2 bedfoom, front
dining room, rtlled p1nt1 cliling, new fumlturt ev1illble.
12dl0 Be~ew . 2 b«troom.
front end retr. New 10ll20·
al uminum 1wnlng. 1 ontv. UBI.
Call KinGibur:y Home Sal11 at
114-992-0887 . "
'77 Fuqua, 14x70mobllehoma.
111 elttCtrlc. exctll~nt condition.
2 bedroom , Clthldfll c.iting In
lR with \Wood burning tir.P.~et.
111111 b1f: h, ln·g1rden tub, welk·
In ahower, ltove. rlfriglr1tor.
window elr conditioner. ufiiHy
building. eeeoo. e IT'ii111 norm
ot R1v.,.1wood Bridge. Cali
304·273 -8851 .

Nice 3 bdr. haute full balement,
CA. ,.need Ylfd. Gr•n School
dlttrlct Rt. 141 . U2B plu1 dep.
•v•il•l• imm•Uatetv. Ce11814·
162-2BIS ott• &amp;PM.

3 bdr. house tor
814 -441-7437 or
0131 .
Nice modem hou11 whh two or
thrM bedioom1. convtnient to
ohotlping oroo. Oolllpollo Cl1y
Schoolt, t228 mo. J:Hua UOO
dopook. 114·"8·48t7.
811ullful new 2 or 3 Hdroom
hou11. Alto new one bedroom
fumllhld ap~nment In MklcN•
port. Coli 114-992-8304 or
814-992 -088 .
3 bedroOm. dining room. carpetld, utHitv room, ttorqe
building, nice lot. Mt. VeTnon
Av. .. Pt. PINunt, W.Va. C1ll
114·982-511118 .
2 bedroom h«KAII for. rent In
Pomeroy. el0dei'Q41t.t110p•
mon1h. Coli 114·912·3014 .
3 bdr. home In M110n. t•ll••
b....,em, nloe lot, Hom•led
Rudy. 304-182 -2408 or 304·
175-5540.

42

Mobile Hornet
for Rent

Furnlahed , cable, be1utlfui rivervl.w , In K1n1uge, no city tun.
Fotttrl Mobile Homt P1rk. C1ll
114 ·441· 1102 .
2 tidr. unfurnl1hed, 1,2ll80, ~
mi. put Ho'11r ~edlcel Center.
Coli 114 -441·4319 or 304·
178 -t?IO .
3 BR mobile home, 314 3rd St.,
Kln•ug•. Ul· 7473.

2 bedroom, ReciM .,... C.ll .
114-112·1111 .
2 Mel room maiMit home for rent
In Racine. Phone 81.4 ·317·
7148.

1974 mObil home, good cond.
woo.d burner, undlrptnnlng, · Trail.,. tor I'Wit. rtfrWtcee 1nd
8x1'&amp; ct.all. Clli 304-175-8284 dtpooh . you PlY U1ill11to. ~ ·
after 2:00 PM. '
171-2138.
.

33

KIT

Boetsand
· Motors for Sale

Farms for Sale .

TWO · bedroom trell• wtth llftle
8dd on rooftt. Crib Cr... Road,
304-878· 1201.

Oolllpollo 2 bedroom tllollilo
with 5 working 911 wetll . Clll · horM. llmh 1 c!llltl. 2 br opt. h1 ·
Avo. Adul1o. 441·1221 .
814 -742-2183 .

15 .cr• on Heppy Hollow Aold

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wufltrl. dryers. retrlget'etors.
rengu . Sk1gg1 App ljlnces,
Upp., River Rd . bnide Stone
Crest Mottl. 814·"6-7398 .

V1. New'ty remodeted . In
town . Call 114-882-7481 .
1 bedroom api'. tor rtnt. Btsic
rtnt at•rtll2115 . • month th8t
includM 111 utllltlu. Otp01it
required of UOO. Contlct Vll-110• M1nor Apt. Mlddltpe~rt .
814·992·7787. Equal Houtlng
Opportunity.
1 bedroom unfumllhtd 1pt.wlth
nove. ret.• wuhtr, dryef. All
utlidt1 pd. except electric. Quiet
country uttlne . 12 mile a
northwut of Pomeroy on u .s .33.Coll 114-892-2807 oftor
1 ;30 p.m.
4 room furnlahed. end IS room
unfumi.tlld apte. tor rWtt. C1lt
114-982-8434 or 304-882·
2511.
3 room tumllhld IIPI. No pet1.
Collll4·949-2213.
For rent: Ntw furn llhld 1
bedroom 1p1ttment In Mlddt..
port. Coli 114·882-1304 .
Eff,dency 1pt. 12 mll11 from
Pomeroy. Quiet country Mltlng.
Coli 114·992-2107 oftor 8 ;00.
1 bedroom furnlthed 1pt. 12
mil• from Pomeroy. 01rwtn
1r11. Clll .eft• 1 :00, 114-9822807.
APARTMENTS, mobile homee,
hou. .. Pt. Pl....nund OaH ipollo. 114·"1·8221 .
Point Pl...,nt. 1 bedroom 1pt .
Adultt. 2 br. 1pt. Limit 1 child.
30'·"8·8221.
•

Building Supplies

Buill;ling M11erials
Blp dc . brief! . eewer pip11. win·
dow1 , lintels, etc . Claudt Win tart , Rio Grenda, 0 . C1ll 614246-6121 .

V1lley Furniture, neW &amp; used.
Large 11etkm of quality furni·
ture . 1218 E.. tern Awe ..
Gallipolis.

Building m•teri•l•. cement,
blocks Ill si ze~ , v~rd or delivtfY.
Gallipolis Block Co .. 1231h Pine
St .. GeJIIpollt, Ohio Call 814448-2783.

King aize wtterbed *326
hllflf, wavel111 mlttriiS, lid~
ptdt. manrns pld . Call &amp;U2156-6808 after !i:OO.
Amtnl tlde-bv·tidl refrlgerltor
and Gibson contlnuout ciHni ~g
stowe. Good condition. Call
614-992-5741 .

King t ize meHre11. box. tprlngs
1nd h1m1. 2 1111 aheet1 ,
I~ 150 .00 . Phone 304 -882:
2334.

54

Mise. Merchandise

Nice 2 bdr. (lpt .. 4 mi. frbm
Ollipolll. Suwe. fefrig. ' Wltlf .
.
tumlthld 1200 month. no pett.
C1Hahan 'a U111d Tire Shop. Over
Coli 11 4-448-1038.
1.000 tlrM. aiEet 12. 13 . 14 . 1&amp;.
111, 18.6. 8 mil• out Rt . 218 .
Duplp, 1pt. for rent , t2BO mo ..
Coli 814-2&amp;1-8281 .
no dip .. rlf . req. Cell814-4484170 oftor 3;30PM.
Electrolu• v•ccuum dean••·
A-'1 condltlon - att~ehments .
Vwy nice one BR furn 'ed apart·
Av•lllbft"' lt 172.00. Ct1h or
mtnt. Utllidel includld. GOOd
t•m• arranged . CaM 614 -246' toc:etlon In city. Adulu onty, 9115 or 304-175·8799 .
mult hwe rlf'l • dep. Call
114-"8·4159 .
Plutic ciltem 111te tpproved .
piHtic ttptlc 11nk1, pi111ic
Fumlahed Ap..-tment . 2 BR. 243 cuh1ert1. m ... l culvertl, ell c1p1 .
Joclt- Plko. Gollipollo, 0210. Ron EventEnterprilll, Jack10n ,
UUihlto poitl. Coli 814·"1·
Oh. 814-2ai-G930.
4411 eft~ 7PM .
1974John DHre'dozer 350 8 ·8
~mtnt for rent. OUIIIty 2
WIY blade, long 11.1per two INI
lA . 2 blth epenrMnt In prime b1cilhoe, 1919 GMC 6600
downtoWn ktCIIion whh off· • MriM V-8 . 5 apd. cab &amp; d'IUI'f,
ltrwt pwfdng. Kitchen fumllhed
1978 Ford fllrmont C•ll 514 with refrig ., a.tf-cl11n ovtn, 288 · 1~06 .
DW . Qlf. dtlip.. hookul'. for
Wlther/ drytr. For non-.moklng FlriiiHood 100% o.. 135 eloal ,
tingle Of couple. No cflildrWI or 132 fof !i or more. Ctll 514 ,.ta. All tlectrlc. t400 p., 44G-0373 .
month. Include• wattr/ eew./ ttllh. A one .,.., IMH la ~ HP 1-4obert m.. t grindar, new
r..,..irotl. Coli 114·"1·11t4 head. Call Mter 6:00. 814 -367·
lAM 10 &amp;PM.
0493.

w.

55

County Appli1nce, Inc. G9Qd
u1ed epptiancea 1nd TV nta.
Optn BAM to 8PM . Mon thru
Stt. 614-448-1699. 627 3rd.
Ave. Gallipoli•. OH.

Good Qll Tappan rtnge. lliC
cond, 150.00. 304-875-8678 .

2 t.droom apt. in NIW H11111n.

*

8

2 bdr .. neer 'Silvet Bridge Plue.
Nice ClfPetlng. Wilt• I. g8tlbogo poid. Coli 114 -448·7028.

Upltliirt dnfumilhld I pt., Clf·
peted . Utilttt• plid, no children.
no pett. c.n 814·441·1837.

Wtddk'lg dr111, long Ylil, h1H
llip. prMMd 9 boll eel , tin 7,
bought at Bem.tin•. 1400.
Coldapot ftfrig .. 17 cu.ft. hlnl·
llt f.ld, let m1ker netdt fixed
t12 . PictUre windows &amp; 12
rtg . window• plu1 ltorm win dow• with acr"nl. good cond.,
111 for e5oo. C11t 114 -648 2370.
6 HP rear -l'ined till.,. like new.
Coli 814·388·9708 .
Olrtge door. 7ft. by 9 ft. All
hlrdw1re. en . Call 814 -317 0482 .

Block, brictc, mortlt 1nd mltonry tuppllea. Mountlln Stitt
Bk»ct. Rt . 33. N.w Hawen, W.
Va. 30•·882 -2222 .

1,100 ft . W11nut 1nd Cherry
lumblf, 111aoned 1nd ~urecl tor
2 years, l04 -&amp;75 ·3924 efter
6o0,0 PM

56

Pets for Sale

Or1gonwynd Cetlery Kennel.
CFA Him1leyan, Pertian and
Sl1m11e klttena. AKC Chow
pupplel. New puppin • klttena.
Cell 448 -3844 efter 7PM .
.Tickfleld Kennell. All breed dog
grooml,ng. Obldience trlining
lnttruction, AKC Gtrmen wirtheired Pointer puppin. C1ll
614-388-8720 .
Houeetype puppy. Y.! 001gey. 'II
Ptklngell, m11e. tl!i . C1ll 614281-1919.
AKC R8Qiltered Ballet Puppiea.
Tri-COJofed . C1ll for information.
Clortt-114-112 ·1143 .

_
L_

6 :00

1971 S11rerlft caprl with 16 Hfl
Evinrudt. Vtf"( 1100d condition,
03.000. Coi&amp;U-"1·2184.

0
0

Mon.,ch 1111 l01t with tflil8r,
70 hp Chryller motor plu1 .
trolling motor, liVI well, etc .
11 ,950,00. lyon• ~dd~ion, Maaon. W.V1. 304 - 773 - ~1521 .

76
~

CROSS i. SONS
U.S. 35 Wnt. J1Ck10n. Ohio.
814-281-1451 .
Mai"'V Ferguton, New Holltnd,
Buah Hog Sal11 • Service. Ovtr
.0 -.td tr.ctora t o chooM from
• corr.,lete line of new &amp; ulld
tq)llp nwnt. Llrttlt 111ectton in
s . ~. Ohio.

T1ylor 2 heM! 10h 11rve k:e
Ctllm machine. Hot .,.., ••nd·
wid'l m~chlnt, 1 roll Ill 3 roll. Ctll
814 - 245 -1052 8 ;00 - 4 ;00
Mon .-Fri.

340 lntemationtl triCtor whh
~w• a mo•r, U ,4te . CaN
514-288-84122 .
Utlll1y bldg. opL 30'•40".S".
115 'aB' sliding door • 3' 11rv.
doo r, e&amp; ,2151S lftcttd . Iron
Horn lltlgo. 814 -332 -9745.

Computer: Aiello ShiCk tl •·80
modtl 4 wlttl trs pmp 120
printer. Extt1 TRS 80 mini dilc
dolvo. Colll14-24&amp;·1082 Mon .·
Fri. 8;00·4 oOO. ·
.Fr!Nmln 2000 k»ldtf for M,F.
131 Ia 3&amp; tractor. Cell aft.,
Sytv1nll 23 inch blldt &amp; whtte 8 ;00. 114 ·3117·0493.
t.w. good condhion. 120 . C1ll
814·"G· 2297 .
1889 MUley fefgUIOn 1315
tr.ctor new paint, ptrfact
:Z Troybilt tiii4H', 3% MP, 5 HP. condition, wtth ntw ,O!i buah
How1rd Stewart. 1151 Jeckson hog. Coli 114·441·3681 .
Pi... Cllll14-44t-47BO.
Allll Ch1mbter Sllfden tractor,
1HP air compre11or6 rototiller, 1940 Chevy, 19&amp;0 Dodgatruck,
riding lawn mowtr, !JO ' electric 1970 1 t10n , !»by ducka &amp;
rqe . Call 814-448 --n57.
chlckl. C1ll 114-388-9038 .

"•el

10 lrtdt &amp;ouih ltnd llythe. , ,0
power, Ill IC,C IIIOrill wl
toblo. "00. Coli 11 4·89
3788 doyo .

~· \
~

. Ufllq-(

Cl * ~~~',....· ""
~-==========~==========~
1

61

Farm Equipment

M11111 F1rgu10n model 42 1 ft.
mowing mtchlnt e400 . Ro11i
hey rake UOO . Bermeer 7ft. hay
condition• e1 50. All equipment
111 eKCIIIent condHion. Call l14 ·
742-2753.

71 '

Autos .for Sale

81 Pootlac Phoenix AC , PS. auto
tr1ns. 4 door. h1tchb1Ck, nttl
cletn. 12 .896 . Call 814-3792122.

v-•

87 Chevelle,
IUtOmltic.
loti of txtfli. runa good.
01.000. Coli 114 · 379 ·2430.
1980 Pty,...,uth Camp, aunroot.
good condiUon, t1 .800 . Cell
11 4·251.B704 .

John DHre Tt1ct10r. 830 di ..el.
3 cvlindtr with buth hog . TOe
over bnk lotn . C111 8\.4-8436348 .
Rota Tilllf-8 Horat Troy BHt.
Eitctrlc ltlrt. eaoo. RoyOillllln
614-9815· 3880 .
lntemttional 300 Utility. Fqrd
309 Corn Pl1nter. 1 new 11ll28
tr.ctor rim . l older fite M111ie
Ferguton, Ford 1nd lnttrnltlonel.

:no New Holl1ncl IIIII'.

Single end double Culdp~~eklf.
Coii814-B43·&amp;16B .

Before you buy VCKAr neKt triCtor.
get the best price, Sldtrl Equip·
ment Comp.,.y, Hendenon. W.
v•. 304·8715 · 7421 .
2 row med't . trlniPIInter 300
geJ. wtttr tank lillt new 11000,
52" tobacco or tomato nicb 115
ce nts. Morgan'• Woodlawn
Fttm, At. 35 . 304-8715-1281101
304-823·84143 .

Pole Building Special, m1ny
colon ..-.d liza. cell for low
pricll. 114-245 ·8141.
John Dnre A. he. cond. E11y
Flow epre«ter, John Oteri Hty
conditlontr . 304·895 -3471 af·
ter 6.

63

1971 Camlf'O, 11 ,000. C1M
814-251-6278.
1972 Pinto ~~~ ~ od runn ing con d..
nMC11 b•nlfY, ueo . C111 614211-84170.

1-_:_----- - - - -

1880 TC3 Horiron. AM -FM
Clllltta , 4 ipted , turban
whteta . In eJCcellent condition.
12300 . Coli 114 -992 -7401 .
1982 Datsun 200 SX . loedtd.
Ga10d condition. c .. IS14·992·
8723 ottor 1;00 p.m .
1979 Monte Carlo landNu.
loadtd. Good condition . C1tl
114-892-2724.
1983 Pontile 1000. PS, PB,
allto. 12900. Ct ll 814·949·
2810
•
~

978 Pirlto , runa good. 21 MPG
· uoo . Coli 114-742·2578 ottor
8 ;00.
1980 Buldl Rivitre. Toteielect·
ric. uc. cond .. 1&amp;.500. C111
114-892-JIIH Allor 5 PM

®

CAPTAIN EASY

Regilttred lull b'ooded ARAB .
gelding. '1¥111 trtlntd . Polled
purtbred SlmntiJtel bul. 7 mo.
ofqe. C•hf1•rl:oo. 114· 3t70493.

·n Tovote Celie~. exc cond.
phone 304-675 -2006 1fter
4;00 PM.

18&amp; M•M4• Ferguaon Clb .,.d
trKtOr. Extra nice. Me11ft FerguiOn mowet', 7 ft . b.t,r. e595.
John Dllft rtke. tile. New
HollortiU bolor. 0815. IN ford
with h'gh and tow ,.nge. New
rubber. • uvt t . Two 12 plow1.
uee. 2 row cuttlveter. e11s . 3
poln1 Jdjuotoblt dloo. t291.
Poet holt dllla•. e191 . C111
114·2. . ·84122 .
John OliN model 10 manu,.
IPrtldtf '300. Atrno1t new
farmw1g0n 115ft:, bid; ultdpolt
holt dlggor 3 pt., I h. 3 pt. bruoh
hoa MW MSO. 1 111 new etock
reck• for 8 ft. plck·up truck. 14 ft. lklninum Jon bolt. like ntw
wtth or'Ai!hou1 motor. llnelt14
ln. 3 pt. olow. 3 pt . .,boolltr.
Ro
Hill , Rac1ne. Ohio. Cen
~.... 2013 .
3ozo.JOhn o..,. Trector. E•celloru oond•lon . 2 · - low boy
.. oilor. CoN 114·112-7401 .

Milled h1y lerg• Mluare bel•.
• , .211 . 304·175-5178.

I r.I II Sp llr lo lillll
71

Auto1 for Sale J

1984 Ford LTD auto, elf, AM·
FM, tJ.MS . John' 1Auto8tl•.
&amp;dtvllla Rd ., OIUipolla, Oh:
1918 Chovv II SS vory good
aund, b•t offtf. Can 814-4487545 .
191, Buick Le81br1 ell power,
AM -FM C:IIHttt. CN I... V-1.
very cl•n. t-4 ,200. Cell 814441-1818 .
72 Corvette. Cell 814·440·
9448 ottor 8:00PM.
1980 Chtvttte good condition,
01 .67i. CoM 114·311·1441.
1916 Ply~muth Oulter. AC.
AM ·fM
oport whtolo.
O.lv 11.000 mllto. 01.100. Col
814-241-1408 • • 114 ·4480212 .

11-.

1912 Hondo ca. 750. whh
axtr•. 2.100 mi. •14150 . 1814
Rollbi1 GL. 4 d&lt;.. AC. 01c.
19;ooo mu... 115 ,100. can
441·0122 ottor 4 p.m.
' 1111 D•ttun 810 maximum, all
optktn1, NAD tutu•ted IUcdon
piCI t4 ,790. Top of line. Cd
114-441·1107.
1171 Ford Pinto. 4 cyl., auto·
metlc. 114H'to, CIIMtte. low
mll•g•. new tire•. Aeklnt
nso. Lookl lnd runl good.
61.000 mil•. Call 114·"1·
44f2 .
1912 Ch1111tte.• Low mll11,
U2BO. Good cond. C1ll 114248·8280.
1t77 .ford v .. ••eo . 1873
(JMC pldlup HIO . 1814 C~owy
1410. · 1113 Honda IDODtlf
t300. 1878 Horttlo CM 1BI·T
0471. Col 114-lt7·0141 .
1977 Buklk Ctntury w~gqn.low
i'nl... e. Cl1111.t-4t8·11•1 .

1981 Ford PU. U.BOO. Cell
81 4-3117·0132.

1881 Ford F-2&amp;0 plckup,llriet,
AC , PS , PW. PL cruiM, AM·FM
Cllllttt. 1ut0 trlnl, duel g•
111tk~ , 8 ,895. Col 114·3792122 .
For 1111 n Chevy 8cottld1le, 'h
ton pickup. Pl. PI, 3 apd .,
1300. Coli 11 4·441·3227.
198&amp; Chevro'-t 2 ton truck. 283
engine. MOO.OO. Calll14-24747&amp;3.
1978 Ford picll:-up. Good work
'"'"· CoM 114-112·1192 or
woolt..do 304-112 ·2230.
1979 Oodeo D-10 8pon. - I I
'"'ck. 72.000 mllto, olltllng bock
gla... tunrvot, I ..,ltd, •andwet 1hlft. .vlnal 1n1p top on bed ,
.... _ _ 304·411B-1853.

73

Vent

S. 4

e••

1971 Ford. four w.._. drive, ~
ton. 11:1nd1rd 1hift, '2,000 .00 .
fol r cond. 304·418· 1813.
'11 Chevluv4114, 4cyl, 4splld,
n• carpet, pefnt and tl,.1,
815,000 tctut l mlltl ,
U.400.00. JC!~·I?G - 4181 .
Motor(:yclea .

1871 Sportltlf cuetomi.ud
poln1 • clln&gt;mo. 02.100 . Coli
114-245-9421 oltor IPM .
1882 Yomoho Violon 510 wkh
bd.rett. 8300 mil•, e1 .900.
coli 114·441·1143 oftor l :oo
PM.
\810 Kodor Dovloon. Good
concl ., "U.IOa. C•• i~1.J117 .
7231.

FRANK AND ERNIE
Sltepa six, cenopy , excellent
condition. 1800. Call &amp;14 -388'540.

II
____..:- J: C{lOJ$er&gt; A
I
GO~ILLA 1NiiH A
fLI?A, ANP CSOT' A
J'vliC~O&lt;:::HIMP /
~

1971 Rower cal'npet', 19 h .,
liMpl 8, 11 ,800 . Cell81 4 -44e 1&amp;11 .

2IS ft. executive ctlu A motorhome. fully •uqipped, and extra
nice OOICh, h11 Dodge chlltit
with l"athen32 ,000 mile•. Call
814-441 ·4197.
.

1112 "'"'"Corio. PI, PB. 1111.
CNIII, AM·FM tt11'810, -.top,
os .eoo. Col 114· •7·0132.

' 77 IIZ1000 tully d r - . vorv
11004 cond, 01 ,300.00 ftrm.
!04·17B·IOt7 ott• 7;00 PM.

to a cockyTheo, who is cer·
tain ha can handle life on
his own . In Stereo.
.
CD Weckiost Ship In the
Army
·
C!l Au1o Racing "88: Formule One Grand Prix of

Brazil

(]) 01

(j}) MOVIE: "Diner"
(CC)
fl) (!) MOVIE; 'Tht Omen:
CJ (I)® Magnum. P.l.
(J) MacNeii·LAhrer Newshour
(j]) Forum
@ MOVIE; 'Tho War 8•

Tent pop·up Clmp.-, .. HPS 8 ,
with g.,trltor, •1 .800 . $10
RHII tlitch tU5 . Re81• hi tc ~
ocnYl)lete 1160 . 12' fibergleu
bolt tltctric motor 1560. misc.
toolt. Cell 814 -"8 ·7019.

'

ALLEYOOP

tween Men and Woman'

'M-10 lH' HECK Y 1G0T IN MIND'?
THERE'S NOBOO\' HERE BUT US!

8:05
8 :30

1974 Prowler, 20 ft. •If contlin ... llet$)1 six. . good cond.
u .eoo .oo . 304-882-2831.
S i!fVI GP. S
Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional tlfttlme QUitln·
tee . Loc1l ref•encea furnllhed.
Free "tlmetes. C1ll collect
1-114-237 -0488, dey or night.
Aogtfl B111ment
W1terprooflng.

EEK&amp;MEEK

1W &lt;ABI~ MEM&amp;R.S

AtJD A IUHIT€ iJDJSE AIDE.

7

Dave'• Home lmprovem.,tl.
Vinyl, lluminUm gutters I cut·
tom trim. 17 Ytlrs exptfience.
Coli 11 4 ·"G ·9487.
Vinyl Repair Service Home.
buaintta &amp; auto. Se1ting. Mon.·
Sat. 8:00-8;00, Fo r detlil• caH
Henry, 114-379-2530 or 814·
379-2138.
Hardwuod Floort. Sanding &amp;
fef inilhing. Ptrktt 1nd tounge I
groan. frM Htimatn, reftren·
c" •vallablt. Will1rd &amp; DIVid
Blenkenthlp. 614 .448 -0288 or
814-440-4047 . Commerci•l &amp;
r11.1dtnti1l.
A,IU' ' B Telnl1ion Service .
l;tliiM ells on RCA, OUizar,
QE . Sptciliing Wi Ztnlth. C1ll

304-171·2388 or 114-4412414 .

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP.
~-------------.

Q.IR NE:XT.M'ATE'UR,
AAiHUR "BINKLE,
OOIN6HI5
IMP~51a-JCF

A

I HOPEYa.J

AWRX. ! AWRK .'
POLLYWANNA
CRACKER! A'M&lt;K.!
PRETTY FOLLY/

DIDN 'TQWIT

YOUR.JCeAT
THE~ ,

ARTHUR .

.
/

PARRof. .

Fetty Trll Trimming. 1tump
rtmOYII. C.. l 304-875-1331 . :

/

RINGLES 'S SERVICE , uptrlenced ·carp.,ter, eleculclln,
m.-on, peinttr, rooilng flndudint hot tlf 1pplic.tlon) 304G?I-2088 ori75·731B .
Sterk&amp; TrM end Llwn SefYict,
landiCIIplng. 30•-&amp;71-2010.
Rot1ry or clbl• tool drilling.
·Molt Milt complttld aemed1y.
·P'ump "'" 1nd 1ervica. 304B91·3B02

82

Plumbing
Heating

BARNEY
BACK HOME
FROM TH ' CARD
GAME,
I•M

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth Wid Pine
Gllllpolit, Ohio
Phone 114 -448-3888 or 814441-4477

83

86

~HE

WAS l-IKE

A L-rT·n.E LAMB!!

General Hauling

J1m11 Boy• Watet' Service. Al1 o
pool• fllltd . Calll14 -288 -1141
Of 114-446-1175 or SU-4467911 .

Upholstery

-

PEANUTS ·
VES, Mfi.AM .. MARCIE

AND I WERE
TRI STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1183 Sec. Ave .. 0 811lpoli•.
814· 4•&amp; ·7833 or 614 ·446 1133 .

A • M Furniture Mtnufacturing,
lt. Rt. 7 , Crown City, Oh. Call
11M HondeHO fourv.tlett•, 2 414 ·211·1470 , coli Eve. 814rnofttlllald,llllunder~•••ty, 448 -3 438 . Old &amp; now
.... 4:00 ... 304·171-7813 . Upltoot-..1. .
.

II CV ill) Femily Ties Jen -

nifer unwittingly embarrasses her boyfriend when
she takes on the school
bully. IR). In S1ereo .
(j]) Sneak Preview
9:00 11 (2)@ ChMrsUnab loto
find Diane in Italy, Sam returns hom e wh ile Frasier,
now an emotional wreck.
informs Sam of her wl'ler;
eo bouts. (R). In S1eroo.
CIJ 700 Club
(!) 1988 Supercross Special
0 (]) ® Simon &amp; Simon
(I) Novo : A lo for Atom. B Is
lor Bomb (CC) The wor k of
Dr. Edward Teller ["1he
father of 1he hydrogen
bomb,') is presented . (60
m in.) (RI .
(j]) My11ery: Charters &amp;
Celdlc,ott (CC) P ~ rt 3 of 6
He~n
App ley8r~ ·s • h us band is found sta bbed to
dea1h. (60 min.)
9 :30 D (2) il]l Nlgh1 Court Dan
is fired when h e cal)not
work w ith his new bo'ss- a
"little pe .,on
IRJ . In
. Stereo.
10:00 0 CIIIlli Hill Street Blues
CD CBN Newa Tonigh1
(]) Ill (j}) 20/ 20 (CCI
Iii) (!) Odd Couple ·
0 (]) ® Knots landing
(CC) Eric is rushed 10 1ho
hospital, Gary agrees to
give Abby the rest of Em·
pi re Valley a ~ d Jil l lolls Po·
ter the truth about her re la 1io nship w i1 h Gary. (60
min.)
I}) Fron11lne: Standoff in
Me&gt;lco (CC) The q ueSiion
of wh ether or not Mexico is
a democrac y is studied by
u am ining t he la st el ections in two Mexican
stoles. (60 m in.)
(j]) Nowowatch
@ Newo
-1 0:30 CD Tq Bt Announc ed
C!l S"urflng: O.P. Pro Surf.
ing Championships Cove rage
fro m
Hunti ngton
Beac h. (6 0 min.)
fJ) (!) INN News
(j]) Tony Brown·a Journal
Tony Brown disc usses issues of s pe cial inte res t to
th e bla ck commun ity.
10;40 ill MOVIE; ' Doath Wiah II'
11 :00 II CII NowaCen~er
CIJ Girl from U.N.C.LE.
(]) 0 (]) Ill (j}) IIJJ Ntws
fl) (!) Bonny· Hill Show

(I) SCTV
® Eyewl1noss News
liD Htrltago Conversa11ons
With Bill Movers Bill Mo y- •
ers di s cusses iss ues with
novelist Cyn t hia Ozick,
Abba Eben end professor
Bernard Lew is. (60 min .)
@ WKRP In Cinc lnna11
II :30 II CI1 @ Tho Ton ight
Show To night' s gu est is ac·
1or Mark lind aay Chapm a n. (60 min.) In S tereo .
C!l SportoCenter
(I) WKRP In Cincinnati
IIII C!J® T"i
D (J) ·Nigh! Heal ~ irk·
wood and O'Bri en inveati·
gate the mu rd er of a
glamorou s s tar's secretary.
(60 min.l (R).
(J) Auotln City limits:
Ooorgo Joneo I Vorn Go•
din
l81I2l ABC NOWI Nlghdlno
@ Troppor John, M.D.
1 2:00 CD Ileal of Oroucbo
C!l Mazda SponoLook
(]) En'NrU inmont Tonlgh1
ln11rvlow w i1h Ted Kn lghl.
Gl (!) Rowhlde
'
® MOVIE: 'Morrlogt on
U.o Rocka'
. OIII2l Eyo on Hollywood

JUS T

' 1, 1-L-r""o ABOUT 'IOU

POUN17 FOR POUN~
· T~AT I S ~ ·

(

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as suogested by the above cartoon.

(Answers tomorrow)
JumbleS: EAGLE GUEST KINGLV SHOULD
An swer: Wtlat wa s Or . Jel(y tl's fav orite game7"'HVOE" &amp; SEEK

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

Up, up
and away

+ K 10 3
., A 1.53

By James Jacoby

+KJ

NORTH

t814 2

Ridiculous bidding can occur in any

system. For all you know. I just may

WEST

EAST

+Qa'
"KQJ8

+J 1

. 10 9 6 2
have invenled today's bidding to get
• J 63
t10U
the declarer to a grand slam that he +91 .5
+as 4 2
could make with a lot of luck . All re-gards tbe bidding, North did not have
SOUTH
+A9642
to jump to four spades. South, alter
asking for aces and kings, should have
tAKQ
bid only si1 spades. North would know
+A Q 10 3
that his partner was interesled in sev·
en from the live no-trump bid, and
Vulnerable: Eas t -West
could go all the way with the right
Dealer: South
cards.
Nor1h Ean .
The play was s moother than the bid·
Weo1
ding. In a ridiculous contract, you sim·
Pass
Pass
ply have to play lor i combination of
Pass
Pass
cards that will let you make it. The QPa.,
'J of spades doubleton in either hand Pa"'
Pass
Pus
would work, but it was better to play
Pass
Pass
Pass
lor West to bold his actual flat distri·
butlon, with one trump honor and two
Opening le ad: 'I K
small trumps. Declarer played heart
ace and trump4!d a heart. He led a club
to dummy's jack and ruffed another
heart. Crossing biB lingers, he now
cashed all three high diamonds. He • but trw,nps , what would you have him
played a club to dummy's king and do? II be ruffed with the queen, dum·
trumped dummy's last heart, both op- my would over:ruff, and declarer
pc&gt;nents kindly following suit Nut would then finesse aga inst East's jack.
came the club ace, oo which dummy's II be ruffed low, dummy's spade 10
last diamond was .discarded. Finally, would win, and the king and ace :
w 1;
· ·
the last club was led from declarer's take the last two tricks.
_ .
hand. Since West was down to nothing
Horribly bid, but played witb
!

.4

•

~·~•e
bv THOMAS JOSEPH.
ACROSS
I Palance

2 Was
impolite

3 Mus ical

film
4 Applaud
8 Ge nuin e
9 Salome 's
stepfather
II halian

note

4 Gladsom e
5 Golf great

6 Jackie 's
second

river
12 Iago ·s wife
14 Fairy queen
15 - gree n
16 _bee n had!
17 Orison
19 Thrice
.

(Lal)
ZO Gain say
21 Quite
ZZ Federal
Age nt
23 Nuisance
I 24 Sandarac
tree
25 S ung alone
26 Storage

mate
7 Sniart set
8 In cline

Yeatenlay'e Anewer

10 S idetrack
13 Ethereal
23 Bard
29 Wee look
15 Actor Sean 24 Swedish
31 Afr. fox
18 Time
roc k gro u p 34 Scottis h
period
25 "Out o r
explo rer
21 Co nst&lt;!l·
Afrira·
35 ·A latlon
for All
Seaso ns"

box
27 Ch in a
piece
30 Veree n
31 Carney
32 Che mi cal
suffix
33 Unwilling
35 Apportion
36 E~ungc
37 On tiptoes

38 Oozt

39 Comic

Louis

DOWN
I Fragrant
wood

DAU.VCRYPTOQUOTES-Here'a bow to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

.

'

One

letter slands for another. In this sa mple A is used
for the three L's, ')( for the }WoO's , etc . Si ngle let lers, c"
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words a r e a ll
hints. Each day the cgde letlers are dtfferent

·,

EKcavating

Coal, llm..tone, gfiVII, et c.
DelhteriMI 1 ton and up. J im
Llnilf, 304-5715 -1247 pr 8767317.

(I) MOVIE: "S181eg 17"

II

5iJFFfRINI5 FIWM

Ae HE.WA!JAI!IOUT
TO 6ET MA~RIW.

1 I 1 XXI I 11 l

Answer/Jere: (

•

Good -1 Excavating , ba1amenu,
tooters. driveways. 1eptlc tanks,
llndtceping. Ctlt anytime 614·
441-4&amp;37, J1mR l . Oawl•on.
Jr. own... .

87

1178 fury Moo . Col11141·••·
9301.

Cinc innati
Jeopardy
(I) Yet. Minister
® WhMI of Fortune
01 (j}) En1ertainmon1 To.
night On location in Tampa
with Hayley Mills .
@ Bob Newhert
7 :35 ill Sanford and Son
8 ;00 II (2)@ The Cosby Show
(CCI Tho family decides to
give a hard lesson in reality

0 Cll @

W .O .

1881 Chovv 1 ·10 bluor good
oondhlon.
814-317·7894
oltor I ;OOPM .

74

C!l Speedweek
Gl (!) WKRP in

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

tSNAMEAj

(I) 011)}) ABC Nowo

I aJ (!) ·Ono Day ot o Jlme
II Cll ® cas Now•

...Game

&amp;

"81 loauld 01480. PO oond.
n• Wlndlhltld tnd ...IY bar,
7 ,ooo mlto. •8oo .oo. Coli
304-882-21122 . .

1171 ToyOt1 rune r:d· mike
11004 wortt cor. C 11,·441·
1331 or 8"·441 ·1521 .

Auto Repair

Auto peintlng and body work.
done to your ntltfiCtion. receive 1 0 per cent off 1nv job
ICheduled betwe•n now and
M1y 111: . ln1urence claims.
dttliling and tome miiCheniCII
work, frM estlmatM. C11t for
appointnwnt 1-304-876-2813.

81

II (2) NBC Nightly News
CIJ Tho Rlfloman

())Doctor Who
(IT Body El..,trlc
@ Jofforoono
(})) NBC Newa
6:35 ill Carol Burnett
7 :00 II (2) PM Megazino
CIJ All111 Smith ond Jonoo
C!l SporUCen1or
(I) En1ortolnment Tonigh1
Interview wi1h J ed Knight
fl) (!) Jofferaona
II Cll @ WhMI of Fortune
(J) Nightly Buoineaa Report
® Eyowltnoaa N-•·
liD MecNei~Lohror Nowsh·
our
01 (j}) Divorce C.ourt
·(jJJ Barney Miller
7 :05 . ill Mary Tyler Moore
7 ;30 0 (2) (I) New Newlywed

Set of 13 inch 1lotted chrome
whnla. phone ther 6:30, 304891-3438.

1986. 28 h . Sunr•y Travel
Tr11ier. Fully equipped. U1ed 1
month. C1ll 814-992 -1192 or
WMkendt 3Q4·882·2230.

1878 Ford Grenld1. one owner.
19715 Toyot• CeiiCI, 4 IPetd.
2810 Mople Avo.. 304-876·
4014.

Livestock

8 :30

WHAT 'THE MAl.!
"fHE ei"EC11!:5

I r :t · I I

@OoodTimft

- WHEN VOU CRY
IN :Z.!~O GllAVITV,
YOUR T~AR7 .
GO UP.

1

Eyawl1neaa Nowa

8:05 . ill Andy Grlfthh

Wented to buy, automatic tran•milllon; good. used tar Pinto.
.304-882 ·3288.

197&amp; Dodge Dart 1450. 304·
898 ·3138.

r1

II2l (})) Nowo

liD Halho Yoga

":'8'

1972 Tag -A-long 18 ft . trt iler.
Vtrv good condition. 11495.
Cell 814 ·99.2 -8173 Of 114892·1206.

e

Gl ill Dllfront Stn&gt;kea

lir
comprn10r11 to 50
. IS
klta
All HP
typ•
. .. 2A_ tork COIWirtltl.
e1.291. C1ll
814- ·
2 -----_379
- .:..:.·.:.~::..:_:_·

79

I PHULS

Acreo

(I) 3-2· 1. Con11ct ICC)

All typ11 Ulld &amp; rebuilt
trlnlmllliont- tranefer c•••
too·. Ov.t'drfve, front whtll &amp;
,..,. whet!,.4rive. Traiaml11 1on .

77

II (2) NowoCenter

· CIJ OrMn

. (I) D (I)

AutQ Parts
·&amp; Accessories

1874 Z-28 . Oood thepe. N.w
motor. eUOO . Can tee 1tT and
G Auto S1ln under Pomeroy
Muon Bridge.

11'·

Grocer'¥ 11t10re equ1Jrnent . Dell
· CIH, d1ily Cell. Cllh rtglat4H's 1
otc . Coli 614-245-1062 6;00 ·
4;00 Mon.-Fri.

!!irnlth-W"eon .387 meg. Alto,
Oen·W11eon .U mtg. Cell
814·1149· 21 81.

CAR,t.'fLE

.,n

J IM' S FARM EOUIPM ENr
CENTER . SA 36 W. 01lilpoll•.
Ohio. Coil 814 -448 ·9777. eve.
614-448·3512 . Up front triC·
lOti with werranty over 7&amp; uted
tr•ctort, 1000 tOOII.

1 or 2 double trlller loti, lceniC, For 81fe: H1mmond Org1n with
wooded. 8pect tor fernily end L11Me . , . -... e&amp;OO. C1ll &amp;14 ·
pltl. Clolt to town. County M9·2477.
""'"· Coli 114·245·8118 .,. ..:...._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
1
11•·448·0231 .
1000 gel . polyuntthlne WitH
10nk. Coli 814-742 -21133.
Storlflt bulkllng for rent 12xl0
In town, concrlie floor. Cell Co~pltte pine equlpnwnt .
e"·" •·•7o.
Ughted algn, e lint. One 7 h .
ehow 0111. One 4ft. thow caaa.
Trtlti IPIU tor r.nt In Mtrctr· One I ft. counter. Cllll14 -182·
vlllt on A1. 211 . 070 mo .. 2na.
lncludktg rural Water. c .. col·
ltc1 11'·"'3·' " 4 .
.00 Frlclt Sowmlll wldl Coto&lt;pll·
l1r Power Unit. 3etl Fergueon
COUNTRY MOIIILE Horrlt Porlt. fronl end told.,.. Gt~vtly RIOtoaRoutt 33, Nordt of Pomny. Pid•- New. nevtr bHn u11d.
urvoltnt. Colll"· l12-747t. Coll614· 742· 2473.
TrMier ·tpiCel, 1INII chlldr•
eccepted. ..,., tftd Wit•
furnlollocl.
Rd. - o f K
• K. 304·171·1071.

l

'79 Montt C1flo, re•l nice,
.80.000 ..... mllto . 02.780.00.
67
Musical
Hor11 . ..tdle &amp; bridle lor ait, 304·171·321t.
0300 . Coli 114 -317-7770.
Instruments
1980 Mutt•ng . • cyl, 4 tpeed,
13 Yl'lf olcl' ltandertlbred mare, 30 mpg,
fOOl, lifi .OOO miltl,
s.ddle. bridle, hatter. f 370 . Cttl ..,• .,.. u.eoo.oo. 304-175·
2 year old Kimb1l Con101e• 814·949-21 81 .
5122.
piano-excellent condlt'aon. Cell
614 ·"6·71.5
11 yelf old ~into mere. RtiiO· ' 71 Dat1un. runt good ,
nebl1. Call 114-892-2250 efter 1380.00. 304·468·1732 .
6:00p.m.. ~
59 For Sale or Trade Regllttrld HtrefO'rd Cattle 811• 72 Trucks for Sale
-J'Ick1on County Hertford
ll"ttden M1tura lulls, Cow1
Sale Of trlde lor anyth ing 10 with catvM, Helf1r1, FRIDAY, 1980 ToyOta 1ruck IS 1pd .•
uHd Hond1 strHt M-C !i00cc- April" 11 , 7:30 p.m. lhtutock AM·FM, bedlinH, low miteege.
txetlltnt condition. e3.1500.
1200cc 111 prieta . Ping pong M1rtcet. h lrpllen. W. Ve.
Coiii14 -441 ·18U.
t1bl1 126. C•ll lnytime 514387-0412.
1978 Chovy Lw. ' opd .. AM.
64 Hey &amp; Grain
wife rlmt, lfiOrty. 11 ,899.
John ' aAuto &amp;1lt1, Bullville Rd ..
Oolllpolla. Oh.
f m n Suppl11~s
M;Kid ~y 01 . bola. Coli
388-9887.
1911 Nitun atand .. I!S epd .,
&amp; LIVI!S IIII.k
0..898 . Col 814-992-3281 .
100 large round bel• ofhtry. el5.
per btiel. ~n Aodnty Chrtvall•. 1871 Chovy 1ruck. 8 cyl .•
Shed• River flrmt. 11 4· 9815· lttlndlfd 1hlft. C1ll lftlf 8:00,
61 Farm Equipment 3858.
eu ...e .u u.

Mlxtd hardwood •labs. t 12 Plf 2 row mtcfiii'IICII trtnlplenttf
bundle, containing epfUOll . 1Y, tobacco •tter, tobacco ttlckt.
ton: F.O.B. Ohio Pallot Co .. Poll.t H1r~ord celv". Call
Furnished
Room•
46
Pom1rov. OhiO. C111 514"'!"99 2- 114·288-1011 .
--'--'------1
8481
· For rent Slereplng Rooms •nd _:__. _ _ _ _ _ _ __
MountQ!etf gerdWt tractor 3
· light houu keeping room~ . Plfll For ule: Sterling w1re. 50 pc. . Y''· old, herdty Ultd, 12 HP hu
Centfll Hottl. Cd 814-441- Serv11 0 plut. Royal Cre1t. rot1ry tiller &amp; 40 In mower,
Comet with ch . .. "25 . 814· 02.100 . Colloftor I . G14·"1·
0781 .
988 ·31137 oftor 8;00 p.m.
4878 .
Space for Rant

F~1e; I-IlCE lT

lour

4/3/86

18Yt ' Cria Cr1ft V-bottom 1111
· bolt, Z topa , 3152 cu.in. 22&amp; HP
iflbp1rd ll'lglne. 40 gel \Jnk. ell
•ugee. Pd bar, trailer. C11l
14-797-27111.
~

10 WAIT AND %If 1~

•

THURSDAY

I,

Picken• U11d FurniWre. Good
qullity uud turnit\Ue. Open 9 to
6 or c•ll for IWOintment.
30'-676-1483 or 875-1460 .

Untumlahed 2 bdr. In Crown
Cl1y. Coli 814·251·1520.

c:bM1!S 10 EA'!lN~
~Vel&lt;"&gt;, IT'S AWJ/&lt;VS BeST

IAJIIEij IT

11 ·..

~~N} fi)~ j"jl THAT IICRAMIILED WoAD GAM£
~ ~ ~~· by. Henri Arnold and Bob Leo

Television
· Vi.ewiifg .

1t tt. Tomboy b111 bo1t. 1974
ISOHP Ewnrudt, tote of txtnt,
01710. c.oll oltor I :Oo. 114388 -1711 .
•

"'

The Daily

Ohio

76

'N' CARLYLE ®by urry Wright

Prom dre... Sire 5 . (1111ne Sell
dii'Dn. e4o . C•ll .,4-949·
22~4 .
''

2 fiOrma .. for •lt. 1 l1vender.
brand ntw, alE• 9 · 10. 1 po..-dtr
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62 blue. wom once. 1411 11-12 .
Olive St., O•llipoli1. N~ &amp; used hcelltnt lt'lpe. Clll 114-992·
wood·co&amp;letovn, I pc wood lR 3041 .
sultt 1388. bunk bed• e199 .
1mron rtclintf'l t98, new &amp; TONY 'S GUN REPAIRS . ho1 dip
uted bWroom tuit•. reng11, reblue,ng , 111 tVPII of guntmith
wringer w•Pert, &amp; thote. New work. f11t ••rYictl, 304-876IMnQroom tult• 1199 -1599. ,4631 .
l1mp1 , lito buying COli &amp; wood
HALF • PRICi l Flllhinf lfi'OW
ttowet. Celt 814 -448-31&amp;9 .
olano 02991 Ligh1otl, non·• 12791 NonUght.t.. t2281 l'iile
lenertl Onty few lth. See
LAVNE "S FURNITURE
Sofls 1nd crilirs pflced from lOCIIIy , 1(800 142 3 - 01 03.
U86 . to *895 . Tlbl•. 150 1nd •nytlme.
up to t126 . Hkle·•-beda,t390.
1nd ' up to 115150., 1011 bed1 2 ton Crane air qonditloner.
eHii . Rtclinen. 1226 . to 304-875-5899 .
$371S ,, lamps from ua. to
1126 . pc . dlnettft froft'll109 .,
to 436. 7pc. 89 and up . Wood
t1ble with six chlifl t2815 to ~
1146. Detk 1126 up 10 1376 . Fiberglul jetp top, fill CJ 6.
Hu1chn, e560. Bunk bed com- 304 _875 . 2 32 _
plete with .~a f!'''B"b t~e .
1
1
1110
. to
Mettreuu
or
box' Troy
KE lilt Tiller, Horll1760
00
lnd
up
g .
y
Model,
springs,
full ..
or 'twin,
163., firm,
H
condltlonl.
· ·
.
lnd
Queen
uu.
1&amp;
hpnew
Rop"
IMNn tractor with
.
073
3
1225 . ltd tr~m• . 120 .end • low. tfli lll'. •2 incfl mower end
26 ., 10 gun • Gun cabin ttL 1now blade, du•l whMII end
1360. Gaa or electric rengll chlinl. HI-low Speed Trans.
1375 . 81by m1ttr111e1, Ul 6 11 .800.00. Ptlone 304-8823_4 _2 _1 _·- -- -- - - *46, bed trema1 UO. 125. •
_
UO. king frame t&amp;O . Good 1 c 11t Iron bath tub with logo.
ultction of bedroom auit..,
rochert. metll Clbine1l. hnil - F1ucet1 tit on right and of tub.
bolrd• 138 a. U" to e66.
good cond, Clll after 5:00.
304-882-2776 .
•
U1ed Furniture -- Dretltr, &amp; bed;
TrUndle btd ~ met1 l office desks. Two prom drn1ea. siz8 18 end
3 milea out Bullville Rd . .Open 18. 304-675-1038 .
91m to 6pm , Mon. thru Sit.·
814-448-0322

Fum . 1pt. 919 2nd. A'll. Galli·
polll ~ there beth. lingle mlle.
neo mo .. utllltl• paid. C•ll
441'-4418 1f111 7pm.

46

In EurH•niCI, dean. pert. fum.,
MOBILE HDMES MOVEO; in· , eduttl onty. no pt1:1. e180 ma.
11.1red . ru.oneble f'lt•, C11i OOCJ. roq . Coli 114·218·1131 or
304-671 -2338
114-288 -1281 .
HoUy Perk 12ll.5, 8x12 Ex·
pando. 3 bedroom. porch. un·
dtrpenning. lotf of D:ttll. New
heat pufrCI. Sttl Chup. 304n3 -9134.

2 bedroom turnlahed mobile
home, e160.00 p.- month, plua
utilities. 176.00 deposit. phone
304-175-1612 after 4 :00PM .

•

bdr. houee. tumlahed kHchen.
1979 1•.10 Schult with Ill· 3Coli
114 -"1·7025 .
p~ndo . 3 t.droom, 1YJ battll,
firepiKe. heat pump. dtck.. 3 btdroom, all carpeted. w.ttf a
awning , undeq~lnning . CIII814- truh pMI:I. 1 mile from ho1pital,
24&amp; -1558!S .
.
.
U215 rent plus deposit. Cell
14x70 F. . ti111l , 2 bdr .• 2 full 814· "1·1314.
baths. lots of clouts, utiHty Nice 2 bedroom 1pt. in Ch11hire.
room. AC . Cell 814 -441-1241 fumiltled,-cerp.eted,
cl .. n. large
anvtlme.
back y~rd e200 month. C111
814-241 ·1118.
1978 Fairmont Bayview. 2 bdr ..
large llvingroom. dlningroom 2 bdr., 'A double. c~rpeted ,
wittl built-In hutch, IPPiitnc:et, kitchen lpplllnCII. LOCitld :
double oven, niM' cerp~t In 120 81111 St., e200 mo. C1il
muttlf btdroom, cuf'U!inl, 2 114·"1 ·0254.
porchu, und.,pinnlng.' good
cond.. muat tell, mlltl ua an 2 bdr. ret'fietretor, ltOve, good
offer._C~ll 114-245 -5815 .
neighborhood , fiYmtiWI .
81. Coli 114 -441-3949 or
74 Oraywood 1tx70, 3 bed· Vlno
114-441-2411 .
room, 1V.. b1th. Wither 6 drytr.
SH to appreciett, rtmodlltd, Two - 3 bcb . .,artrnentt: In town,
07.800 . Coli &amp;14 -448-3040.
off ttrHt !)Irking, 11 utNitl11
~lkt. Nf. • dep. required. Cell
U715 Richwood 14•80 2 bdr .. TheWIHm~nAgancy
, 814 -448part. fum . Call 814-448-41161 3144.
or 814-317-0397 .

448 ·9340 .

Misc. Merchandise

ai brick.·home.-lge.

ki1than 'a. di~ .,..:- tge.-LA,
1 VJ batt'~, VJ. blllfl"'f"(, LOC111d:
' Kyger

54

-

'

··'l"hursd8y, April 3, 1_986

Pomeroy . Middlepprt, Ohio

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

..
.... '

CIYPTOQUOTE

.;

J

SN H

AD G HL S

S N H

EK X WJ

UB D G

E K X .I I.
B XH

1\I;W(l

\l K R

DA

LKR G,J L
Y.. K

YB GG K S

ll (;

T

Z X fl

~

II

G .J

SNH T . B G8 SKWH
A X II 1; Y II
Yeetenlay'a Cmtoqaote: ARMO R: THE KIN D m·

CLOTHING WORN BY

A

MAN

WHOSE TA II.\IR IS A

BLACKSMrrH. - AMBROSE BIERCE
12:30

II CII till La1o Nlgh1 with

David Lettermen Tonlghfs
guest is comedian Jeff Altman . (60 min.) In Stereo.
CD Bill Cooby Show
C!l Flohln" Holo
(]) ABC N-o "Nightllne
It (]) MOVIE: "The Phoenb&lt;'
IJ]I MOVIE: "Emperor of lho
North Pole'
12:40 (I) MOVIE: 'Sill 1 Crook"\
Ship"
•
.
.

CD Dob ie Gill is
(]) Whaf s Happening.No w
fl) (I) W ild. Wild Wos 1
Ill (ill CNN Nawl
1:30 CD Father Knows Bos1
C!l Down-lha S1ro1ch
(]) Ne ws
2:00 CD 700 Club
,
C!l Malj!a Sportoloo~
fl) (!) MOVIE: "1 I Herrow.
1:00

hauu'

®

·

CBS Newt Nightwstch
2:30 (]) SportsCen1er

...

�. Ohio

April

'
•f•
Chl•g .0•
-~lg1tt-No w·ln-our··tto~n4rFtrr~ts·hhrgs· Dett. ~.
Don't.M'llt Sprl•t Cleaning

SPECIAL SALE PRICES ON:

4RE H.EREI

MEN'S

KNIT SHIRTS

Cool comfortable shirts for weer right now. Sizes&amp; to
18 . Solid colors, stripes in dt811y to cuualatyljls. The
season's belt looks.
·
BOYS '7.96 SHIRTS ......... ..... .. .... .. ..... SALE '6.30
BOYS' '9.96 SHIRT.S .......................... SALE '7.90
BOYS ' '11 .96 SHIRTS .......... :........ ..... SALE •9.60
BOYS' '14.96 SHIRTS ...... ... ............. SALE •11 .95

l_
j

.

I •''

~

'

\

Small medium, large and . extra
large size. Solid colors, stripes,
patterns and jams trunks.

,)' / ~~

\;J c ,

Jean•
S·teclal·

MEN'S
MEN'S
MEN'S
MEN'S

''22.95 JEANS ............ SALE '18.30
'25.95 JEANS . ........... SALE '20-.70
'28.95 JEANS ... . ........ SALE '23.1 0

AVANTI

•8.95 TRUNKS ....... •7.10
19.96 TRUNKS ....... •7.90
1 11.96 TRUNKS ..... 19.60
1 12.96 TRUNKS ... •1 0.30

VCR TAPE
T-120

VHS FORMAT

Sale

UNIFORMS
'"'•t•.

Solido, prlnti and ltripes in
tops, shortt and tleck1.
Knits and cotton blendl.
Mi11y sizea 8 to 20.
Reg. '14.00
Spon1wear .. .. . Sale '10.60
Reg. '18.00
Sponawear ... :. Sale '13.60
Reg . '24.00
Sportswear ... :. Sale ' 18.00
Reg. '32.00
Sportswear ..... Sale '24.00

Sale Priced

Take 16.00 OFF Any
Wr.,gler or Lee Jeans in
Missy or Junior Si1ea.
ChOose itraight leg otylea,
pleited yoke panta. tapered Lee Ridart, gathered
Riden and london Ridara.

$11 19,0
$35 99

.

. ToP.s
·sALE
TOPS, POLO SHim and
MIIIIFF TOPS · . ,,

I\

I
.
I

'

Girls' Sizes2T 10 4T, 4 to 6X. 7 t(114

REG. $6.00 to $17,00 - SALE -PRICED

I

$4~9 ~o· S1359

LeTigre brand in Iiles 8
through 18. Solid colora
and colorful patternt. Buy
now 1nd save.
Boys •7.96
···
TRUNKS .... .... ..... ' 6 .30
Boys'. •9.96
TRUNKS ............. ' 7 .90 .
Boys' •1 0 .96
TRUNKS .. ........... '8.70
Boys' ' 11 .95
TRUNKS ............ , '9.50

'Reg-;.lar Sizes and Big Sizes up to 3XL. Tank
tops, jeans shirts, golf shirts and dressy looks.
Van Heusen, Wrangler, LeTigre and Campus.
MEN'S '8.95 SHIRTS .............. SALE '7.00
MEN'S 010.96 SHIRTS ............ SALE 08 .70
MEN'S '12.96 SHIRTS ....... ... SALE '10 .30
MEN'S '16 .96 SHIRTS .... .... .. SALE '12.70

CHAIRS

Save on our en~ire
ltock of quality Berkllna chairs.

. RECUNERS,
ROCICER/BCUNERS
WAUAWAY IECUNERS

25°/o
OFF ALL
CHAIRS

.

...

'

Copyrighted 19a&amp;

·

I

\·
'

.

I
'

$470 TO
~
. $1590
1

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - A program to help
low-lncome families pay their gas biDs;, beginning Its
second year ln Ohio with $1 million from the Citizens
Energy Corp. of Boston, a group founded and headed
by Joseph P. Kennedy II.
Kennedy Interrupted his campaign for Congress
Thursday to join Salvation Army officials In touting
the success of program at a news conference ln
Columbus.
The program, which also involves Columbia Gas of
Ohio and the public Utilities Commission of Ohio, Is
expected to help more than 7,00J families in Ohio this
year.
Maj. Peter ljofman oft he Salvation Army accepted
the check from Kennedy. Hofman said last year
Citizens Energy provided ~.OOJ to help 4,!m

families.
"There Is no way you can ever meet the needs c1 all
the elderly and poor families," said Kennedy, who Is
among a swarm of candidates seeking tre seat being
vacated by House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill,
IJ.Mass. "This program Is anot rer in a range of new ·
populous entreprenrur1al programs that are trying to
make a difference." '
The program speaks to the "real laws of supply and
demand," he said and gets Its funding ·:out of the
tudes of producers."
Jake Koebel, manager of the Gallia-Meigs
Columbia Gas office, said today," individuals have
rot been taking advantage of this opportunity".
Citizens Energy Corp. generates money for the
program by buying gas from oot-of-state producers

r;NTEOT~EOMJ

!UOOISTEDRHOL

Sentbtel corTeSpondent
Overall reception and the proposal lo remove WOUB from the
cable system were major topics
discussed when Syracuse VUlage
Council met Thursday night.
Councilman Glenn Cundiff said
council was informed by Consoli·
dated Communcatioi]S Group In
September of 19ffi lhat the cable
system would be upgraded by
spending around $941,005, but,
nothlrig has been done to Improve
the situation.
Council, after reviewing the
')&gt;roposal submitt'\'(1 by the cable
company, noted the rate Increase
IIlii t was granted 1according to the
company:S proposal) would not go
into effect into Improvements were
made.
·
Council members expressed dis·
pleasure that Improvements hav!' ·
rot been made and tha t the cable
company plans to remove WOUB
from the systl'm. Council feels thai
the cable company has failed to
keep Its promise.
LIKESWOUB
A leiter was read trom ~James
Lawrence, principal at Syracuse
Elementary and Lee Wedemey.er,
superintendent at Carleton School
concemlng the removal of WOUB
from the cable system.
Lawrence asked that council do
everytlting possible to prevent lhe
remova l of WOUB from the cable
network. The station, according to
Lawrence, provides students with
learning exp3'1ences ·thai they
would otherwise miss. ·
Wedemeyer also askEd lor support and assistance In keeping the
stalion.
U.wrence noted. ltis school has
cable In one classroom and has
been IJ)'ing for a year and a half to
gel hookups In three ct~r rooms.
This Is the same situation that
exists al Carleton School excepl
theY have been trying for a year

tions for life gUards must be
submitted by April 21. CounCil wUI
meet on the evening of the 21st to
review the applications and hire the
guards. Marty Morarlty, pool
manager Is to llll!el with council oo
the 2lsl.
sYracuse fire _chief Gene Imboden reporttid the !Ire truck that Is
being rffilrblshed according to
state reqlili'emenls will be ready on
AprU 18. ·
'
Mayor Eller Pickens requested
permission to join t~ Mayors
Association. Council approved the
reituest.
Cou~U. in ether business, agreed
to place a culvert In a ditch In front
of Syracuse Elementary and cover
the area with top soil.
It was reported by Ernie Sisson
that a tree needs to be removed oo
Fourth Street.
Council went on record supportIng the upcoming T.B. levy.
Council approved the third readIng of an ordinance regulating
hours at village parks and and the
flrlal reading of an ordinance
accepting a grant In the arrount of
$22,9«1 mr the design and construe·
lion of a proposed marina.
Attending in addition to those
named were Jim Hill, Jack WUII·
ams and Kathryn Crow, council
members, Janice Lawson, clerk
treasurer, Jean Hall, and Jim
Teaford.

-Ladies Sizes S-M-L-XL

SEIZE 'DIE DAY - ~lzlng oppomdy-and'e ebitlglt wW help
Gallla Coun&amp;y In 118 puoh for ecommlc develoJJllj!llt, uld Stanley E.
Hantson; above, guest speaker at the' M Mmaal GUUpolls Area
Chamber ~ Conuneroe banquet at Rio Grande College Mtd Commun¥,Y
.
.
Colle&amp;e·

ONIO ,

1'141 ffl ·MJI

POMEROY, OHIO

- 992~3171

who offer discount prices and transporting-it to Ohio.
Columbia Gas agrees to purchase the IJwer-prlced
fut~ and target the savings toward needy families.
· Kennedy said Citizens Energy Corp. could have
transported gas to Ohio five years ago, but was not
permitted. He sa id two years ago federal Ia wchan!;&lt;'d
regulations on the shipment of gas, which opened
markets to groups such as his.
Columbia Gas, which has been pressured by lhe
PUCO to diversify its market and seek oo I
lower-priced fuel , Is the first Ohio· utility to
participate. Kennedy's group has been active in
several northeastern states slnce 1979.
PUCO Chainnan Thomas Chema said Columbia
Gas uses the difference to help (he needy instead of
spreading It to all customers because by tar~llng Ire

CHARGE CIRD

'

..

I '' '

CHECK PRESEN'IED - J011eph R. Kennedy 10, aecond !tom left,
poses during a check-passing ceremon;y wHh MaJor Peter Holman ol
the Salvation Anny Thumday In Columbwl. Others sho~m are Marvin
L. White, chalnnan ol Columbus Gas, second from right, and 'lbornas

a

v. Chema, chalnnan rl Ohio's PUOO. 'lbe 11 mDJion check wW allow
the Salyatlon Anny help PIQ' w1n1r Jt111 Witt ol the low Income and
elderly Columbia Gas customen who need 1881!itanoe. UP!.

Nation's jobless rate ·still at 7.2 percent
WASHINGTON (UPII- Amerl·
ca's unemploymenl rate in March
remained high at 7.2 percent', little
changed from the previous month
and showing marked weakness In
manufaclurtng and the oil and gas
Industries, the Labor Department
said today.
The March unemployment rate
of 7.2 percent was only slightly
lower than the February jobless
rate of7.3percenl.The rise between
. January and February, reported
lflst month, was the sharpest
Increase In six years - from 6.7
percent to 7.3 percent.
The figures show that 8.4 mUIIon
Americans are unemployed. After
seasonal adjustment, tlte figures
showed that 108.8 million Ameli· ·
cans were working.
"Unemployment was little
·changed in March," a statement
from the Bureau of Labor Statlslk:s
said.

The jobless rate for most catego-

ries of workers was aoout the same

ln March as during the previous
month. The jobless rate lor adult
• It was 6.6
men was 6.2 percent.
percent for adult women and 18.2
percent for teenagers.
The unemployment rate for
Hispanics, however, was 10.3 per·
cent In )VIarch, a significant drop of
2 perceptage points from February.
Forwltites, the March unemploymenl rale was 6.2 percent ; for
blacks II was 14.7 percent. For both
blacks and whites, the March
figures were about the same as In
February.
Last month, the nation's unem·
ployment figures took the sharpest
jump ln sill years, rising from 6.7
percent in January to 7.3 percent in
February. The ne""l triggered a
j:ollticai 311d economic squabble
over the cause.
The White House ca lled the jump

RIO GRANDE - A native son of
Gallla County urged business and
community leaders to capitalize on
,the area's assets _and seize opportunity when it arises in order to
stimulate economic growth and
development.
"You have lo make opportunl·
ties, reach for them and recognize
them when they, occur," said
Stanley E. Harrison, president and
chief operating officer of BDM
Corp.,.McLean, va ., duringthe49th
annual Gallipolis Area Chamber 1of
Corrunerce banquet at Rio Grande·
College and Community College
ThursdaY.
'
"I suggest that the Gallipolis area
market ltsel!," he said. "Tell

·everyone you know or who you
meet that you're from a wonderful
pari of the world."
Harrison, bom 56 years ago this
November and raised on a farm off
Lincoln Pike in Harrison Township,
said Galllpolls ·and Gallla County
have many advantages in attract·
lng new firms to set up shop,
primarily a positive attitude toward
·new business, a good political
outlook and an .eager' workforce.
These are just som~ ·of the things
companies look at when C'astlng
about for a new location or
expansion, he explained.
"A lot of people think the large
corporations don't want to rrove to
the small towns," Harrison said.

.,

I
r

\

funds, the number of shut offs Is reduced and paying
customers are not burdened with uncollected bills.
Chema called the program Innovative for
establishing strong public-private partnership and
said "no matter how the market conditions are,
. people are always going to have difficulty pay ing
their fuel bills."
•
Hofman said the money Is most useful oow because
after April 15 utility companies are allowed to cu i off
customers for not paying tbeir bills, and he expects
more families will request assistance.
The program allots up to $150 per family and Is
available to those that already have exhausted aid
from the company's own assistance program,
federally supported programs and other forms of
assistance.
·

an "aberration." The Labor De- heavy rains and Ooodin!J ihat
partment ·said it was "unusual." drenched Ca lifornia this winter
Labor economists disagreed over may have been part of the cause,
wha't it meant and who was to bul state officials downplayed that
explanation of the increased jobless
. blame.
· In advance of releaslng the rate In California.
Overall, the February figures
figures, Labor Secretary William
showed
a weakening labor market
Brock cautioned against "making
with
sharp
Increases In unemploydecisions based . on one month's
ment
In
agricult
ure, construction,
statistics."
mlnlltg
and
manufacturiljj,
In a television interview, Brock .
The Dun &amp; BradsIrret Corp.
said, "Th have one month drop out
issued
a forecast Thursday predictot'llie like last monlh, It's really
ing
that
"unemployment will probdangerous to overstate"tre lmpor·
ably
be
In
Ihe 6.5 percent rate at the
tance of that. You need several
end
of
the
year."
·
months, maybe a year, to establish
The
Owt
&amp;
Bradstreet
employ.
a trend."
February's unemployment fig· ment forec ast also sa id AmNican
businesses planned to create nearly
ures showEd that three slates 3
million new jobs in 1986, a I mlllion
California, Texas and Illinois car·
Increase
over ti&gt;:' 2 million jobs
ried two-thirds a Ire Increase.
added
In
1985.
Mosl jobs would Ji
Those states have been hurt by
added
by
small
businesses, the
layoffs In the energy and electronic
forecast
said
.
manufaclurtng industries.
in ad~ll lo n , federal officials said

Leaders urged to capitalize on assests

In pink. blue, lavender and prints.

~DI E ID'f.

?

Appllcams !IUUghi
It was anrounced that applica-

SCUFFS and .ALLERINA
. STYLES
.

ElblfFifdt

FREE PARKING

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

just ID get cable.
Cundiff suggested that Marty
j:rawford of the cable rompany
meet. with council at the earliest
possible date.
Bill Amott, councilman L&lt;; direct·
lng a letter to the Ohio Attorney
General regarding the situation.
Arnott said "talking 'Is not going to
do any good. I know if we write the
Attorney General we will get
results."
·
It was also noted by Cundiff that
WOUB Is part of the basic service.

Spacial

•·

2 Sections 12 Pages

Syracuse council
objects to change
by cable company

SLIPPER SPECIAL

2·0°7(lo 0Fr

.

.

\$1 million dOnated to pay citizenS' gas bllls ·

®

,.

•

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Friday, April 4, 1986

l

,
•
"" ,
i

\...---" Select your favorite style
now during our sale. Sizes29
tc 50 ih gym shorts. coaches
shorts. jams, tennis, dress"
shorts and more. Coordinate
with knit shirts sale priced.
Regular IS.CIS to IICI. CIS

JOGGING WEAR

_$ 1749
"

'

Hooded aweaUhirt jackets, sweat
panu, crew-neck sweatshirts, shons
and-vests.
COMPLETE RANGE OF
CHILDREN'S SIZES
Reg . •&amp;.00 Jogging Wear .. .... . '4.79
Reg. '8 .00 Jogging Wear ....... •&amp;.39
Reg . '1 1.00 Jogging Wear ..... •a.79
Reg. '14.00 Jogging Wear .. . '1 1 .19

Pre-washed 100% heavyweight denim. Straight leg. Waitt sizes 26 to
30; lengths 30 to 36 . ·Genuine Lee
Riders.

....

-MEN'S
.
SHORTS

SALE-CHILDREN' 5

DENIM .JEANS

SAlE/
I ERILINE

SALE!

KNIT
SHIRTS

BOYS' "LEE"

The brand that fits:•

Knit tops, tank tops and printed shirts.
Sizes 2T to 4T and4 to 7
Reg . '4.00 TOPS ............ Sale 13.19
Reg . '6.00 TOPS ... ...... : .. Sale '4.79
Reg. '10.00 TOPS .. ....... . Sale •7.99
Reg . *13.00 TOPS ........ Sale ' 10.39

MEN'S
SHOn SLEEVED

SWIM
TRU.NKS

Vo1.36, No.247

•

t

a1 y · enttne
.

By KATIE CRQ\\/

Big SeleeHon

BOYS'

GIRLS'

SALE

S•ve .0• Our

·Speelal Sale I

'

TOPS

SPORTS
WEAR

Quality brandt Include Crttt,
Guild and Pro Whitat. Pont
IUito and drottn Separates
include slocko, tops. skins
ondllb
Sl111 4 to 20 and
12V. to 28V.
REG. '14.00 to '46.00

MISSY AND JUNIOR SIZE

$488
LlnLE BOYS'
SPRING

WOMEN'S

$500--.
JEANS

TlNIIS,

JEANS

100% Cotton. Pre-washed in waist sizes
34 to 50. Save now on these man fit
jeans.

SAVE THIS WEEKEND

Sizes B to 20 in a fin~ style and color selection. Camp
sh.orts, gym shorts, jllmS and novelty ttyles. Special
pnces.
BOYS '6.96 SHORTS .......... ... ............ SALE '4.70
BOYS '7.96 SHORTS ......................... SALE '6 .30
BOYS '8.96 SHORTS .. .................. .. ... SALE '7.10
BOYS '9.9.6 SHORTS ........ ................. SALE •7.90

I \ .1
'. _.lit·~·
., j;.,,:(:

I

SWI'M·TRUNKS

·aoYS' SHORTS

I

.I

Sale!

'

FULL CUT

DENI

•

e

MEN'S "LEE" AND "WRANGLER"

BOYS' SHORT ,SLEEVED

''
l.

*SHEETS
*TOWELS
*EUREKA VACS
*IN-STOCK DRAPERIES
*FURNITURE THROWS
*SHEERS

*CUSTOM MADE DRAPERIES
*WALLPAPER
*KIRSCH DRAPERY
HARDWARE
*CAPE COD CURTAINS
,\&gt;THROW RUGS

"Actually, there are a lol of
advantages lo moving out of the
city."
Falrlax County, Va .. the base for
Harrison's company, Is now one ri
the most highly business-oriented
sectors In the Washington, D.C.
area because It capitalized on its
location near the natkln's capital
and a good ltighway ~stem . But Its
beginnings were almost as tmdest
as Gallia County's at one time, he
added, noting that In 19ro a
directory listed mly 44 business and no major industries - in the
Falrlax area.
Currently, there are 2,376 companies operating rut c1 that county,
man~ of them ~n -smokestack

firms ciferlnl( services such as
engineering, communications,
computer science and Hnance.
Hal'1'i50n moved BDM to the area In
19'70· and made It his oorporate
headquarters lwo years later be·
cause of the growth and tre healthy
attitude in the county toward
business.
Harrison cited BDM as a klrid of 1
business Gallla County might want '
to attract. A diversified firm
heavily Involved in national defense
research and service, Including
work on the oo-called "Star Wars"
space defense program, BDM also
. handles such du ties as drilling and .
gathering data lor the t:J.s. Depart·
(Continued on page 12)

•

�</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="40174">
            <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="40173">
              <text>April 3, 1986</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1031">
      <name>bowles</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="67">
      <name>bryan</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="419">
      <name>hutton</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
